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Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Is a positive cure for all those painful ailments of women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Com plaints. Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements and conse quent Spinal Wealkness. and is peonli arly adapted to the Change of Life. It will surely cure. Daokaohe. It has cured more cases of Female Weakness than any other remedy the world has ever known. It is almost in falHble in such cases. It dissolves.and expels Tumors in an early stage of development. That Bearing-down Feeling, causing pain, weight and headache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circum stances it acts in harmony with the female system. It corrects Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Periods. Weak ness of the Stomach. Indigestion, Bloat ing, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility. Also Dizziness, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude. " don't-care - and " want-to-be-left-alone "feeling. excit ability, irritability, nervousness, sleep lessness. latulency, melancholy or the "blues," and backache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the organs. For Kidney Complahsts and Backache of either sex the Vegeta ble Compound is unequalled. You can write Mrs. Pinkham about yourself in strictest confidence. LTSIA I. PINEHAX XED. CO., Lynn, Nasa So. 3-'06. - Salutes and Corsets. - Among the odd official decisions published in Berlin is that of the Prussian railway administration on a point of etiquette advanced by a sta r tion master on the lower Rhine, who asked for a ruling as :o whether the ypung women subordinates in his of fice should not recognize him first on the street, instead of waiting to be saluted, according to the prevailing custom. The government directed the station master to salute first. The principal of the girls' high school at Searbruck inquired of the provincial government if she was au. thorized to forbid young women to wear corsets during gymnastic exer cises. The government authorized their rigid prohibition.-New York Tribune. The Pekin robin is becoming naturalized' in the parks of London. ;> . itobbed in Churen. .A Just think what an outrageit-sn be robbed ut all the benefits o~ut by continuous coughing - congregation, when Ant-i teed to cure. Sold ev r b $ Springfield, Mio. . So .. " " , Chinese students in .Japan now number more than 3000. Dreaming and Doing. "Those who dream do not do. Those who do have no time to dream." These epigrams from a recent ar ticle by Sarah Bernhardt apply not - only to the art students, for whom she wrote it, bat with equal aptness to the woman ordering a home or the business girl earning her livelihood out of the home. "It seems to me," she continues, "that the successful ones are those who never think at all about success, but simply work. They love art, and they toil. They make no speeches, never seek to impress others with the certainty of their own success; never, In fact, bother their heads about oth ers or the opinion of others at any time.. They work patiently, they work year after year; their work improves little by little, and they wake some day surprised to find themselves suc cessful." Menelik Names Successor. Emperor Menelik has nominated his successor to the throne of Abys ainia. He is a young man named Migg Manu, Menelik's brother, and is shortly to be named negus of Kiffa, of which country Menelik took posses. ion in 1894. All the f'un of hugging a girl is . guessing whether she really- means you mustn't or not. LOST Throug] Some people question the statement' that coffee hurts the delicate nerves 01 the body. Personal experience witi: thousands prove the general statemeni true, and physicians have records 01 great numbers of cases that add to the testimony. The following is from the Rockford, ill.. Register-Gazette: Dr. William Langborst, of Aurora, has been treating one of the queeres1 eases of lost eyesight ever in history. The patient is 0. A. Leach, of Beaeb County. and In the last four months he has doctored with all of the specialists shout the country, and has at last re turned home with the fact impressed on his mind that his case Is incurable. A portion of the optic nerve has beez ruined, rendering his sight so I~mited that he is unable to see anything be fore him, but he can see plainly any s'u., 8:.rmu. Cares Ta-1 Itreath.-VositIve and Ynataut Cure Free-No 1)ru sr..CUTes by Absorption. A sweet breath is priceless. Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will cure bad breath end bad taste instantly. Belching and bad taste indicate offensive breath, whih is due to stonach trouble. MNll's Anti-Belch Wafers purify the stomach and stop belching. hy absorbing fou: -ases that arise fron undigested food, and by siu)plyin; the ii-stive organs with naira so-lvents fcr food. They relieve sea or car sickness and na.:ea of an" kir.d. Th-v quickly cure headache. correct the ill e~eet of excessive eating or drinking. Thev will destrGe a tobacmo, whisky or orin breath inscantly. They stop fermentation in the stomach, cute indigestion. cramps. cole. gas in-the stonmeb and ir.teatines. distended ab domen. heartburn. bad complexion. dizzy spells or any oth-r affliction arising fron1 a eliqeaced strnaon. We know Mull's Anti-Beeh Wafers will Co this. hnd we wantyou.to know it. Thh nifer may not appear again. GO31) FOR 25c. 1431 ruil 'llis coipon with your name I awl address a-nd your druggist's name I and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we I will suppl you a satople free if you have never' used Mull's Anti-Belch Waters. and will also send -ou a cer tificate goo'l for 25c. toward the pur l chaQe of nore '.ech Wafers. You will 1 find them invalnable for stomach trou- I I b:e: cires by abs6rpticn. Address I Mul's GRuAr. Toxic Co.. 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, 1l1. Al: ruizagits. 50c. per box. or by mai upon receip-; o: price. Stanips accepted. Murders and homicides decreased more than 2,000 in the United 'States in the past ten years,. Lynth ings decreased one-half. AN EVERY-DAY STRUCLE. Too Many Women Carry the Heavy Load or Kidney Sickness. Mrs. E. W. Wright, of 172 Main Strect, Haverhill. Mass,., says: "III .1869 I was suffer ing so with sharp pains in the small of the harl. and had sueh frequent dizzy spells I could scarce 1' get about the house. The urinary passages were also ,uite i: regular. AIonrhiy periods were so distressing I dreaded their appro.(ch. Thliswas my condition for four years. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right away when i began with them, and three hsxes cured we permanently.' Sold '>y all dealers. 50-cents a bo::. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalic, N. Y. Celery is the cultivated variety o the English weed. smallage. FITpermanentlycured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer,$2trial bottle andtreatisefree I D)r.R.H.KLINz, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The world's prod n:al in 1880 A Guarant l9l5 eX~ ' Itchingr, Blind i Druggists are Pazoointme o T iablets. D~a~t it fIt fails t o cure. E. YGk's signature on each box. 25e. O asgow, Scotland, spends on drink $16, 000,000 a year. Why Not Sign "Y'rs?" In these days, when economy of time and space are of the highest im portance, it seems to me that some of the conventionalities of correspond ence might well be abolished. Why should we write "Dear sir," and then make a pause and begin a fresh line? Why could not all we have to say flow straight on in the same line from "Dear sir?" Again, why should we take three lines-and this, perhaps, is more Im portant-over the conclusion of ouw letters? It strikes me that it would be infinitely simpler and more con venient if you concluded a letter thus: "I am. dear sir, your obedient serv ant, Ed'ard Cuttle," all in one line Can anyone tell me the reason of this custom and when it was originated! -London Graphic. Two Famous Pioneer Trees. Two of the most famous pionee: trees in the west heve a well merite< place In history. These were th4 LnJaktree and the Lone Elm. The first Is In western Missour and the second In eastern Kansas. J good pioneer horseman might hav4 covered the distance between then in a day. At the Lone Jack tree great battle was fought during th4 civil war. At the Lane Elm caravanr over the Santa Fe trail halted for th< night and here were united tw< branches of the famous old trail. Kansas City Star. EYE; 1Coffee I been but few cases of its kind be Ifore, and they have been caused b3 whisky or tobacco. Leach has neve: used either, but has been a great cot fee drinker, and the specialists havi decided that the case has been caused by this. Leach stated himself that foi several years he had drank three cupi of coffee for breakfast, two at noot and one at night. According to thc records of the specialists of this coirn try this is the first case ever caused by the use of coffee. The nerve is ruined beyond aid and his case 's incurable. The fact tha1 makes the case a queer one is that th< sight forward has been lost and the side ight has be-en retained. Accord ing to the doctor's statement the young man will have to give up coffee or the rest of h?is sight will follow and the "Our wills are ours to make them athine. I Laid on Thine altar. 0 my Lord divin,. Accept this gift to-day, for Jrcsus' sake. I have no jewels to adorn Thy shrine., Nor any world-famed sacrince to make: But here I bring within my tremblirg hand ThIs will of mine-a thing that seemieth small And Thou alone, 0 Lord. canst under stand. H-ow when I yield Thee this. I yield mine all. Hidden therein Thy searching gaze can see Struggles of passion, visions of delight; All that I have or am or fain would be. Deep loves. fond hopes and longings infinite. It hath been wet with tears and dimmed with sighs. Clenched in my grasp till beauty hath it none. Now from Thy footstool where it van quished lies. The prayer ascendeth-may Thy will be done. Take it. 0 Father. ere my courage fa'l. And merge it so in Thine own will, that e'er If in some desperate hour my cries pri vail. And thtu give back my gift, it may have been So changed. so purified, so fair have grown. So one with Thee. so illed with peace divine. I may not know or feel it as mine own, But ining back my will may nnd It T .ine. The Careless Writer. Oh. careless. supercareless wightI Why dost with pen or pencil write, As either comes? And paper use Without.-distInction. none refuse? Why do you likea.: board as well As desk inlaid with torto!se shell? Why write alike amid the bloom Of grden and your cozy room? In ne, lest you get somewhat -mixed. Why haven't you your ha.bits'fixed? Why should you? Simple! Don't you know That if some day fame's trump should blow. And some few people speak your name With loud and most admired acclaim, And from the papers came around Reporters with a look profound And didn't find your stuff you wrote Always upon a special "note." And used a certain kind of pen. Wrote always in your favorite "den." (Which den. of course, with artless craft, All ready to be photographed In disarray you ever keep A state to make a housewife weep!) And all the other smart details They hand the people but in bales Why don't you know those persons bright Could not a single colurmn write. And, missing them. most folks would say: "He ain't no lit'ry man: Go 'way." -New Orleans Times-Democrat. UNABLE TO WALK. Terrible Sore on Aukle Caused Awful SIf. ferlig-Could Not Sleep-Cured by Cuticora in Six Weeks. "I had a terrible sore on my ankle. and had not walked any for el'!vea months. I tried neary everything -ithor.. any beie lit and lia a doctor, but he did.i't seem .o do any good. lie said I would have to have iry limb t..ken off, and that I would never --alk agam. I sullered aw ful, and at night I could not sleep at all. 1. thought the':e was no rest for me, Lut ;,s soon as 1 be-:un to ntie C'iticura Scap ..nd Ointment it comn.enced healing nice ly. I -.. .ned the ar.kle with warm water and Cutir.a Soap, ::.d hen zpplied Cuti cura O:ntment to the affected part, and laid a cloth over the sore to hold it in place. Ater two weexs I could walk around in my room real good, and in six weeks' ume my ankle w:.s en&.rel-- cured, and .. was walking around out of doors. Mrs. Mary DXkerso::, Louisa C. H., Va., April 22, 1905. ' A man's wife never contradicts him e agrees with her So. 3.-'06. ed in 30 minutes by Woolford's t ~'oion'; never fails. Sold by ~ig aL orders promptly filled 09a~tary af hias traveled 100,000 mile. ~ \~ ~~faAs dhief Peril. The cief 'peril to which man is ex posed is that of profar:ation of what is holy, from which he is shielded by shutting himself up in the circle of his senses, and restricting himself to the shallows of his reason. Within that circle, and in those shallows, he acquired what he believes Is wisdom, puir sues what he names ambitions, suffers what hie fancies are naitns anTir sorrows, wreaks what he intends for ievenges, commits what he calls sinsB, indulges what he mistakes for love, tnd, in a word, lives what it is given him tf. Imagine is human life. Yet In al'. that span of existence there is but a handful of hours when he truly lives the life that is his own and rot a pretense, an evasion, or an erro'r; and those few hours appear to him -save at the instant of their revela tion-as hallucinations. Nevertheless they are the porticos and pillars, halls and gardens, sun and stars of his heaven; which lie pragmatically and complacently puts away from him, and turns himself to what seems to him hIs heaven, but is his hell. Truly, this is a pity and a loss! UP IN THE AIR. "Is he still superintendent of ti at powder mill?" "No, he's traveling now." "Indeed!" "Yes; at any rate, he hasn't come down since that explosion last week.'' -Philadelphia Press. Gulf of California Pearls. The whole coast of the gulf of Call fornia abo'unds in pearls, and last year $350.000 worth was harvested In lower SGCH rinking. Let it be remembered that the eyes may be attacked in one case and the stomach in another, while In others it may be kidneys, heart, bowels or gen eral nervous prostratior. The reme&. is obvious ania shoula be adopted be fore too la:e. Quit eoffee if you snow incipient disease. It is easy if one can ''ave well-boiled Postum Food Coffee to serve for the hot morning beverage. The withdraw al of the old 'rind of coffee that is doing he harm aind the supply of the elements in the Postum, which Nature uses to rebuild the broken cdown nerve cells, insnres a q'aick return to the old oy of strength and health, and it's 1well worth while to ha able again to I"do things" and feel well There's a reason for POSTUM THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR JANUARY 21. Subject: The Boy Jesus, Luke II., 40-52 Golden Text, Luke 11., 52-Memory Verse, 51-Topic: The Bay Jemvs a Pattern For Youth-Commentary. I. The growth and advanceme::t of Jesus (vs. 40. 521. 40. -Te bibi' grew." From this verse and ver5se 5 we lea"n that Jesus had a human body and s, .. Hei was a genuine boy and grew hke other boys, but le was sin less. Evil had no place in Him. *Waxed." An old English word for grew. "Strong in spirit." "In spirit" is omitted In the Revised Version. but spiritual strength is meant. He be came strong in mind and understand ing. "Filled with wisdom." He was eminent for wisdom even when a child. "Grace of God." Grace commonly means favor. God was pleased with Him and showed Him favor and blessed Him. 52. "Increased in wisdom." This refers to His spiritual and inteilectual development. Some one has said that "wisdom Is knowledge made our own and properly applied." "And stature." There could be no increase in the per fection of His divine nature, but this is spoken of His human nature. His body increased in stature and His soul developed In divine things. "Favor with God." Though. His entire being was in the favor of God, yet as that being increased in amount, the amount of favor increased proportionately. "And man." His character -and life were beautiful and the better He be came known the more He was admired II. Jesus at the Passover (vs. 41, 42). 41. "Went-every year." The Passover was one of the three great Jewish feasts which all males over twelve years of age were required to attend. 42. "Twelve years old." To a boy who had never been outside the hills of Nazareth, the journey to Jerusalem, the appearance of the city at this time, a sight of the temple, the preparations for the feast and especially the feast itself, must have been an imposing sight. III. Jesus lost and found (vs. 4.3-46). 43. "Fultilled the days." The Pass over week (Exod. 12:151. "Tarried be hind." Jesus was so intezsely inter ested in the teaching of the rabbis that He failed to start with the earavan on the homeward journey.. "Knew not of it." This shows the perfect confi dence they had in the boy. 44. "In the company." The people traveled in caravans. Jesus evidently had been allowed a nore than usual amount of liberty of antion, as a child, by parents who had never known Him to transgress their commandments or be guilty of a sinful or foolish deed. 45P "Found Him not." They had probably left in the night to avoid the heat of the day, and in the confusion Jesus was lost. 46. "After three days." An idiom for "on the third day;" one day for their departure, one for their return and one for the search. "They found Him." Jerusalem was overcrowded with millions of people packed into a small area, and they had none of the means to which we would at once look for assistance in searching for a lost child in a great city. "In the temple." Joseph and Mary evidently knew where they would be most likely to find Him. Jesus was probably in one of the porches of the court of the wom en. where the schools of the rabbis were held. "'In the midst of the doe tors."' Teachers of the law. JTewish rabbis. "Hearing-asking." But it is not said teaching or disputing. Hie sat not as a iloctor,. but as an inaulrer among the doctors. IV. .Jesus astonishes His- hearers (vs. 47-50). 47. "Astonished." The Greek word Is very forcible. The import is that they were in a transport of astonish ment and strutck with admiration. "At His understanding." He brought with Him a clear knowledge of God's word. 4S. '"Amazed." To see such honor given to their boy, and to see such boldness in holding a discussion with these learned men. "Why." etc. This was the mnildest sort of a reproof and probably giveti privately. "Thy father." Trhis form of speech was necessary, for how else could she speak? '-Souight Thee sorrowing." The word here rendered sorrowing is ex pressive of great anguish. 49. "How is it that ye sought Me T' This is no reproachful question. It Is asked in all the simplicity and boldness of holy childhood. He is apparently astonished that He should have been sought. or even thought of, anywhere else than in the only place which He felt to be properly His home. "Wist." Know. '"About My Father's business." See Rt. V. "In My Father's house" un necessarily narrows the'fulness of the expression. Better; i the things or affairs of My Father, in that which belongs to His honor and glory. These bear with them the stamp of au thenticity in their perfect mIxture of dignity and humility. It is remarka ble, too, that He does not accept the phrase "Thy Father" which Mary had employed. 50. "Understood not." They did not understand His mission. V. .Temvis subject'to His parents (v. 51). 51. "Went down with them." If His heart drew H-im to the temple. the voice of duty called Him back to Gali lee: and, perfect, even In childhood, He yielded implicit obedience to this voice. "To Nazareth." Here He re mained eighteen years longer. These were years of growth and preparation for His great life work. "Was sub ject unto them." There Is something wonderful begyond measure in the thought of Him unto wh~om all things are subject submitting to earthly par ents. "In her heart." E'xpecting that hereafter they would be explained to her and she would understafd~ them u~y. The Dentist and the Alligator. Roy Farrell Greene, the president of the American Society of Curio Col lectors, told at a dinner of dentists an appropriate story. "A dentist," he said, "was once traveling in the East, and in the Ganges his boat overturned and he was obliged to strike out for the shore. "As the dentist swam sturdily through the muddy water an enor, mous alligator suddenly rose up be fore him. The alligator opened its enormous jaws, and the next instant would have been the dentist's last, only-just in time-the man hap pened to notice the great reptile's sharp, white teeth, and an idea struck him. "He drew a probe from his pocket, and, pressing it into the alligator's gums, he said: "'Does this hurt you?' "The alligator screamed with pain, and the dentist, amid Its great agony, made good his escape."-Phladelphia 30oedm4o UOUU LU BAKING PW CUT O THIS CAR AND SAV vIT. TM-V 0000 FOR VALUASLE ARTICLES. SEE EACH CAN. Address: TkE DCPAxrTmNr S THE SOUTHERN MnG CO. 'sa 8s1 Racme4mss N M 0 Nou ThW This is the "car" coupon found on back of each can of genuine Good Luck Baking Pow/--. Each coupon count. for a Sne premium. .I a! These s find some Gift Boo many cou Good any pri< The the cc ment Ii \'aiuab!e dogs are often vacciuated nowa days. Cures Cancer, Blood Polson and Scrofula. If you have blood poison producing eruptions, pimples, ulcers. swollen glands, bumps and risings, burning. itching skin, copper-colored spots or rash on the skin, mucous patches in mouth or throat, fall Ing hair. bone pains. old rheumatism or foul catarrh, take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) It kills the poison in the blood; soon all sores, eruptions heal. hard swell ings subside, aches and pains stop and a erfect cure is made of the worst eases of lood Poison. For cancers, tumors, swellings, eating sores, ugly ulcers. persistent pimples of all kinds, take B. B B. It destroys the can -er poison in the blood. heals caicer of all kinds. cures the worst humors or sup purating swellings. Thousands cured by B. B. B. after all else fails. B. B. B. composed of pure botanic ingredients. Im proves the digestion, makes the blood Pure and rich, stops the awful itching and all sbarp, shooting pains. Thoronghly tested for thirty years. Druggists. $1 per bottle, with complete directions for home cure. Sample free and prepaid by writing Blood Bair. Co., Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice also sent in sealed letter. One of the very best ways to be pop ular is not to be sure you are. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature's great remedy-Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At drug gists, 25c., Z,0c. and $1.00 per bottle. A Game. Spinning the thread of te stars Do you know. little girl, how it'.s done, When the daylight has gone with its fars And the stars blossom out-every one. Aid, sitting so silent, you raise To the sky where they glisten your gaze'? Its simple! Close both of your eyes, Not tightly, till lashes do touch. And thien look at a star in the skies. (RemTember: Dont c.lose them too miuch!) And see what a sight you will win. What a thread all of gold you will spin! Oh. it's pleasant to sit in the gloom Of the long old varanida at night, With mother near by In a room. Or at hand. lest the shadows affright, When naught' the vast silence mars. And spin the gold thread of the stars! Oh. grandma was wonderously skilled With the disraff and spindle, no doubt: But she couldn't, although she had willed, Have spun such a mIracle out As you hy half closing your eyes. When you look at a star in t'he skies! -New York Times-Bemocr'at. Saved. The man dressmaker in his pink velvet coat wrung his bands in de spair. "Here it Is October," he cried, "and I have not yet evolved a new idea in winter gowns." "Master," said the apprentice tIm "What, boy?" "I have thought out a noyel type of gown that will make a woman look like a broken-backed ape with wings." "Superb!" the master cried. "Let us model it at once. 'TwIll take the world by storm."-Chicago Chronicle U'SCONCIOUS POISONINC. How It Often Happens From Cotee. I had no idea." writes a Duluth man, "that it was the coffee I had been drinking all my life that was responsi ble for the headaches which were growing upon me, for the dyspepsia that no medicines would relieve, and for the acute nervousness which un fitted me not only for work but also for the most ordinary social furnctions. "But at last the truth dawned upon me, I forthwith bade the harmful bev erage a prompt farewell, ordered in some Postum and began to use it. The good effects of the new food drink were apparent within a very few days. My headaches grew less frequent, and de creased ln-violence; my stomach grew strong and able to digest my food with out distress of any kind, my nervous ness has gone and I am able to enjoy ife with my neighboirs and sleep sound * y o'nights. My plhysica5l strength and nerve power have inc'reased so much that I can do double the work I used to do, and I feel no undue fatigue af terwards. "This improvemenit set In just as soon as the old coffee poison had so worked out of my system as to allow the food elements in the Postum to get a hold to build me up again. I ('heer fully testify that it was Postum and Ptstum alone that did all this. f or when I began to drink it I 'threw pysic to the dogs.'- Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. MichJ. Thee's a reason. Read the famous ls ttlebo, "The Road to WelIvIlle," In r1ER r Cm oe r ARE .IST IN TORE or pr Good Luck Baking Pow favorite with good cooks th it to grocers in car load lots. saving to us. Now, to show ou still further increase the sales, we ar< load saving with you in the form of d< I absolutely free if you use GOOD LU Baking Pow rticles are carefully selected, and you are sure ti thing to please you. All are illustrated in th< k, found inside each can. It also tells you hov pons it will take to get the premium you choose Luck Baking Powder is the best obtairable al :e, because strictly pure and always reliablc.. low price, io cents for a pound can, is made pos. oy the enormou:s sales, and the premiums are L merely 2s an inducement to new purchasers at of same being kovered by lower cost of ship n car lots. your groctr hasn't Good Luck, please send us his nam THE SOUTHERN MFG. CO., Richmond, Va. Place honor above wealth. How's Thia ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, 0. We. the undersigned, hav.t known F. J. Chenev for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transae tions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WXIST & TacAx, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, 0. WALDIIG, KINNAN & MAnvYI, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon theblood and mucuous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75e.peibot;4e. Soldby.all'Drnggists. Take Hall's Family Pills forconstipatiOn. Tea at a cent a pound is used by the poorer clas.es in Japan. THE BEST Ant ise ptic Remedy For Family and Farm KILLS PAIN. Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, 6IB Albany Street, Boston, Mass. ACK OF THlE ATKINS SAW Tw. centuries of patient and conscientious effort to produce the best Saws in the worid. Ten generations of blood and brains. The largest plant in the world exclusIvely dreso f hglss. high prie craftsme and eqipe with costly special machinery. Aworld-wide business aggregating many Arputatio buil uperthroug two centuri'es of steady .growth, valued more highly than any other asset of this great institu on. The guaranty of this Company, which is respeted the world over. 'e make all types and sizes of saws, but only bne grade-the best. Atkins Saws. Corn Knives. Perfection Floor Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware dealers.- Catalogue on request. E. C.-ATIIINS @. CO., Inc. Largest saw M4anufacturers in the World. F e i tandt s acco o to ~ n d Accept no e-naist o the AkinsBrand . OLDBY C000 DF.ALERS EE~~t~ SA REF UL experimen many years, h clusively that di POTAsH is esse: duction of big eared .corn. Let us send you our prac many other careful crop-feedir without any cost or obligation Address, GIERM h!ew York-93 Nassau Street, or PRICE. 2Cts DAN IRiP, IAi I woa'SOSll A Cal Sor you 3 . w28m| id Luck Dmiums r You der is such a great at we are shipping This means a big r appreciation and' ! dividing this car :si-able premiums, 'CR der ODL ONE SPOON OUTHERNII CHMOND COTT"ON Icreaou C0 O Values Veld Per AcreP It isa well known fact tbat cotton oanoter crop, produced with VIM - g -niCarol na Iertilizers will bring the highest psible price on the mar pearl cotton with full grown Iand tip udsoft e rncheso th cotton plants, by liberally using Virginia-Carolia fertiinrs They contai all the materiaisnec byrepete cultivto ycarter yer stitute from your dealer. -Virginia-Carollna Chemical Co. Rchmond. V. A tn.Ga. Charleton.'S. C. Memhi . Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, La. COTTON ACENTS WANTED eitk bu~ia wie receve a liberal salary Frederick K. Fish, Jir. & G., M 6BROADWAY, NEW YORK. CURED Retlef s ~~welling i os :s3o o da ys. T ntetS WritD.KH r'8S. - ists, sex B Atlanta. h John White & Co. L.OUISVLLtE. KY. Hmg'er mark prce and Hides. tes, angmgr . ae overGa Inve pr od con-uglsa MATe i era l l seldofk ntial torture ur- o-E RA e. a end adfores Atatve .22 c pr oed con-e i-ibrlusE o GUARANtoE the pro yied ofD EAAB A fNuAll-A