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say consanption can be cured. Nature alone won't do it, it needs help. is the best help, but its use must be continued in sum mer as well as winter. Take it in a limto oold milk or water GtasmaHbottle Dow. All Druggsts DON'T GIVE A MORTGAGE. Don't give a mortgage. Do not go Into debt. Make sacrifieces this year, says National Co-Operator, that you may be free and independent the bal ance of your life. You do not know how easy it is to make sacriPees until you try. And right here listen to a litt!% -tcry: A good farmer man and h13 good wife live in 11arrison Coun ty, Texas, not far from HalIville. It was in the younger days of their mar ried life, although three boys and per haps a daughter, were growing up about them and would eat. Every: year their little cotton crop had to go to their merchant for the supplies they had bought daring the year, and not a cent did they have left over. After four or five years of this pro cedure, the wife said, when they be gan to pitch their little crop, "Not a dollars' worth of anything is bought on a credit this year. All we eat we'll raise hereafter, except those things we can not raise." The husband looked askance at her, but he knew when the little woman put her foot down, things had to be that way. When the coffee and the sugar gave out. she sent some eggs and 'c-hicians and butter to town, and, se'ling them, ex pended the money for these things. Not a cent's worth of anything was bought on credit that year, and never has since. They sell their cotton to whom they please, raise everything possible at home, have raised their three boys and their two girls, giving them good educations, and there are not three better ycung men in Texas, nor sweeter, better women than the two daughters, both married. Now, what that couple did, or rather that good little wife, every couple can do, i they will try, and it is so easy to do when you once commence.-Na tional Co-Operator. In the Fortune-Telling Business. Just as a matter of curiosity a woman who lives across the street from a fortune teller counted the per sons who called to consult the seer in one forenoon. The number aston ished her. In the afternoon she, too, I vidted the woman. "I shouldn't think," she :-emar-ked, "that you would have such a brisk trade these hard times. I should think that pe4ping into the future at your price per peep would be a luxury that tuost people 'Would cut out." "On the contrary," said the womaa, "trade increases in har-d times. When everybody is prosperous people ar-e as.tisfied and don't care especially to apend money in finding out if there is any ill luck coming, but when times are hard they will spoIhd their very 1ast ecuar-ter ta fInd o'nt Ii there is Tort ured OnA Horse, "For ten yen:s I coulon't ride a horse without being in torture fro-a piles," writes L. S. :Sapier, of Rugless, Ky., "when all doctors anI <ther remedies failed, Buckleni' A-nica Salve Cured me." Infallible for P Ies, Burns, Scalds, Cuts, 14oils. Fe:ver -Sores, Eczem i. S'alt Rheum. Corna. 25c. Guiarar4teed by all Drugg:sts'. A 15 to 50 pound hog needs 293 pounds of feed for 100 pounds of gain. A 150 to 200-pound hog needs 482 pounds of feed for 100 of gain. A 250 to 300-pound hog needs 511 pounds ot feed for 100 of gain. These figures carry their own,moral. - With good swine and proper feed, pork can be produced at 3 cents per pound or less, and need not be sold under 6 cents per pound. Here is a profit of 100 per cent on feed con sutued.-Prof. John Michels. Bucklen's Arnica Salve The Best Salve In The World. Often The Kidlneys Are Weakened by Over-Workt Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. (Weak and unhealthy kidnevs are re ~/ sponsible for much sickness and~suifering, . therefore, ii kidney 1. - trouble is permitted to continue, serious re -sults are most likely to follow. Your othcr -~ organs may need at S tention, but your kid nes mt,because - shuld aveattention - frst. Tlhere:ore, when your kidneys '.ro eekca cr cu;t of order, you can under tend how <iuickl,-vyur en tire body is affec'.cd Cnd how every crean seems to fail to do its dutv. ' If you are riaz or " feel badly,," begin4 taking the gres.t kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swn:n;-Rvot. A trizl will con vince you oi its great merit. Tlie mild and immediate effect of Swamp-Root, the great kidney anid bladder r,::Ey, is soon realize'd. It stands the highest because its remarkable health i-estoring properties hav-e been proven in thousands of the most distress ing cascs. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in . fifty-cent and one-dol- 28 lar siacs. You may .are a samp>le bottle > v n!ail fre'e, also a >:to 'nd ot if yoa have kidney or dder tron4:e. Mm:i:1 this paper far-n writ:!g t:> lI. kilmer & Co., -f bu emme thnme Swamp as fltand don't let a dealer sell you sr ng~ in place of Swamp-Root--if yuwill be. disappointed. - Shake Into Your Shoes Mien's Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures painful, swollen smartijg, nervou feet and im-tantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions and makes walkirg easy. Try it te-day. Sold every whi re; Sample FREE. AdIdres, Allen S. Ol step, LeRoy, N. Y. The Heritage of the Cent'ries. Every city in Australia should be an ideal and model municipality. The cities of that vast comnionwealth are heirs to the greatest lierita,e :>f the centuries. In planting their :: : a of human life and activity h. : h: had the best of all forms -verniweit to draw from and living illustrations of the worst to avoid. But the seeds of an old world city are not only town, but, alas! the tree of city preblems flourishes on all sides. Yes, the evil of human beings sweated into eternity looms large upon the horizon of city reforms. The unbridled slirit of gambling is abroad. Youths are in the swim of the relentless desire to get "something for nothing." The drink curse has created the slum. 'he Sunday Strand. Lif- 10),03 Years Ago. Scietits alive found in a cave in Rwit z.-rland hone<z( of nion. wh. li v4d ; ),) i y)-ar. 4'c, when life wa, in con. sant 41 in,re! fr i,m wi heista. o-day the ri-an.er is si-,% ii n by \. W. Brown of Al x mn.ler, Me., s 1.i.rgev from d. -d lv diSe;-S -. "If it hl1-1 no bt-e for 1)r. King's New I>s'very, which cured mt. 1 et-uild not h )-v live,- he wt ite-, ".tur fering as I !il fra-iu a sva-t ' .f tr)I ble aad btuho u cough." To cure S-r L l-. ob1 ist- Coughs. aal prevenlt pnin nia, it I Iil h t n icine* 4 n aarthI. .'0 and. $1.0). G ;uar ia teed by all Iy u:g-t-. Trial bottle free & Most Vauable Agent. The glycerine eimploy,ed in Dr. l'ierce's nedfiiw-s grt-atly -rihances the medicizid pro)erti-s which it extracts from native medicinal roots and holds in solution much better than alcohol would. It al:r possesses medicinal propertit-s of its own, being a valuable deniuleent, nutritive, nntiseptic and antiferment. It adds greatly to the efficacy of the Ulack Cherry bark, Bloodroot, Golden Seal root, Stone root and Queen's root, coitained in "Golden Medical Disco;.ry" in subduing chronic, or lingering coughs, Lronchial, throat and lung aflections. for all of which these agents are recommended by stand ard medical authorities. In all cases where there is a wasting away of flesh, loss of appetite, with weak stom ,as in the early stages of von sum n, there can be no doubt that ily cerine acts as a valuable nutritive and aids e G Iden Seal root. Stone root, Qui 's t and Black Cherrybark in prom *n igestion and building up the esh an s rength. controlling the t and brin g about a healthy conditi-n of the w le system. Of course, it must not be e cted to work miracles. It will not cure nsumption except in its earlier an a mesore t igreness.in acutecougns 1 sntsoeeue is in the lingering hang-on coughs, or those of long standing, even when accomnpaniedi by leedinig fromt lungs, that it h:as performed its must marvelous cures. 1'rof. Finley Ellingwvood, M. D., of IBen nett Med. College, Chicago, says of gly cerime: " In dyspeDsia lt serves an excellent purpose. Holding a fixed Quantity of the peroxide of hydroge-n in solution. It i., one of the best manufactured products of the present time in its action upon enfeebled, disordered stom achs, especially if there is ulceration or ca tnrrhal gastritis (catarrhal intiammation of stomxach), It is a most eflielent preparation. Glyeerine will relieve many case.s of pyrusNs (heartburn) and excessive gastric (stomach) acid it.v." "Golden Medical Discovery " enriches and purifies the blood curing blotches. pimplpes. eruptions. scrofulous swellings and old sores. or ulcers. Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce. of Buffalo. N. Y.. for fr.-. booklet telling all about the native medicinal roots composing this wonderful medicine. There is no alcohol in it. BABY BORN IN HISTORIC INN. Fifth Generation to See the Light in the Old Home. Born in the house of his great-great grandfather and rocked in the cradle that lulled his great-great-grandfather to sleep away back in old Connecticut before the beginning of the last cen tury, Is the patrician beginning of wee Edward Griswold McCullough,. who made his appearance on earth Sunday in the old Griswold inn at Worthington. He is the son of Ed ward Miles McCulloug~h, says the Co Lumbus Dispatch. In all the romance of old Worthing ton there is no gzeater halo than that which hangs over the Griswold inn. It was built in 1806 by Ezra Griswold, who came from Connecticut with the pioneers who settled nmich of the western reserve and central Ohio. The family was an old one even for old Connecticut and Ezra Griswold was a sturdy representative of it. lHe brought this family into the '"great west" with him and his son, Georgo ariswold, was reared in the inn. He was eight years old when his father rought him to Ohio. George Griswold, in turn, inherited he duty of perpetuating the name. nd when his father died he fell heir o0 the inn property and lived through ut his life where his father had build d so well. His son was WVorthington 'ranklin Griswold, who, as his father and done, inherited the Inn and lived n it. To him and his g od wife was orn a dlaughter Harriet, who was -eared in the home of the family, and vho continued to live there when she >ecamne Mi-s. McCullough. Now she is the happy mother of a on and she is rocking him in the riswold cradle that was brought to )hio along with other household pos sessions by Ezra Griswold when he rove his ox team overland fronm Conhecticut in 1800. No one knows now long the uni<que heirlcom had een in the Griswold family beforo hat time, but it is suipposed that Ezra Griswold was himuself roced in t when he was a baby long before revolutionary timies. When little Edward Griswold Mc "ullough is baptized he willl wear a 'ttie white dress that was madte for' :he baptismal cer-emteny of his gra::d-1 ather-. by his great-ghrdothier--a :ress that has been handed-~ down int he family with great care and wh:ch will be treasured more dearly than ver when another epoch has been ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. Aege table Preparation nmr;tcI similaigteodandRepgua - t'IigtfliUteStomrchsam9owesof SPfomoesDigesion5ee&f nessandest.Containsnein:r ; Opium.Morphine nGrMleral. NOT NARCOTIC. Aielk s AperrectRe medy 16rC ns,3I tion, SourSt%omach.Diarrl ; WI Worms,Cwkvuls1,i13ns. r rss and LOSS OF SI. FacSimi\e Signatre or NEW YoRK. 2 t wdranteed iuier Food Exact Copy of Wrapper. Cheap Excursion Rates Via Southern Railway. Seat tl, Wash. an ! i:-turn: Accoun Alatka-Yuk,ow-Parctfie Expozition. Tk ,.ts on sale May 2-i i until Slpt. :.0 h Ainal liti-it rutirinig ctoiber : 1. 109 Diver., routes with Stp')'4v-r l iv il1-ge-. Svnmmer excursion ratt-s in tict-. May 29 to September 30tl. linal limlit Octobi-r 1.4, 190. Convenient schedults and suipetior train service to all points in all directi ns via SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Fur information in detail. c:ll on any I agent of the Southern Railroad or ad dress J. L. Meek, W. E. McGee. Atlant.. Ca. Augusta, Gt. A G. P. A., T-" P. A., Name a Stumbling Block. "Since coming to America, said the young Englishman in his most transat lantic accent, "I have purposely taken to pronouneing one word wrong. I don't say 'G3rieg' any more. I say 'Greg.' Before making the change I said to several persons I happened to be talking with, 'I say, do you know Grieg?' and always they answered: No, they didn't know Greek, and for goodness sake don't ask If they know Latin because they'v'e forgotten all of that they ever did know.' They thought, you see, that I was asking if they knew Greek. So finally I took to saying Greg, which is enough to make the poor old Norwegian shout out a correction from his grave: but it pre vents further misunderstanding." John Sharp Gettirg Busy. "The fact Is," saidi John Sharp Wil liams to a gentleman who had twice ineffectually sought to gain his at tention by calling him "senator," "I haven't got accustomed to the title. But I've begun to accustom myself to the atmosphere of my field of labor to be. To-day I went over to the sen ate chamber, slipped into the cloak room on the Democratic side, and tried to feel at home." "Did you tell a story?" was asked. "No, I didn't." "Well, you can't hope to rank as a senator until you have a cloakroom story and it has been printed." "Well, I did borrow a cigar from a new senator. Then I sauntered over to the Republican side as carelessly as I could, took a seat alongside a brand new senator there, almost as new as I will be. and chatted with him with as much of an air to the manner born as my per-turbed condition would permit. From time to time I shall repeat the visit, in the hope that I shall be able to fully accustom myself to the change w~hen it conmes." -Washington Post. Botanic Blood Balm (D. 3. B) Cures Throughbthe Blood Blaod Poison,A BONE PAINS, CAN CER,SCALY SKIN, ~ : PIMPLES, Rheumatism, Eczema, Itching Humors. I; IB. i tii .-i - i.> i b .0 h <n'v Bl.-"d R.nd'tht i!s heposo ing a i al of Jport. i-h L'""t .uitet to be sk-in~ s' fa*~- . he Joi:'s n't -:-h-aI n cur d - 1ins an' I aches P,.. lB. aml- .lv c-h'ani'rw t he h y th.' skin thi ::ebi. r~ed ! ne of perfect BTHiC BLOOD BALM-B BBJ 0, e.. : ::-!i 1t, ii ; pu h an-I enr he th- io a. M . B :tre-:t hent the neteVC 2i-' - 1I t - iL.iGE iiOTTVLE with diren. t~ins for hrom:e cure. SonM at All Denug Stores. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of * In I)1afn 12 ot : Car byi hwi..I ; iic:itiior-s, as they: em AMk' \ one was to cur, I aft D)ea[n.ss ist caused byv an i,. iinei e. F. Fastachmt Tube. When th 5 tub is i: 1) ae yo ave a rC mlin inn:ol. imnperfect h iring, aml, w1'he In i h I t ly clo's-il, .D)ea'in s< is te nt stlt. Ao unless the ji I lmatiWt can Ih ta: (out and this Lube resi.ored to its no:n ever; uine cases out f t n an c<it e i 1 C.ltarrh, whiTh is nothing but nS il:umed condition of the -,,itnus sii fatces. Wne will give Ot itiolundra I talr fot antis casei if h-refned o ( :.! hd catarrh) that comt'; he ear.. l 1i h Ca:tarrh Cure'. Semii for P t.be::!-, im So'ld bev all !h u..reis 75 akiei hall's il it PJ -,>rov,tl which could sitand being plowed utide1 good and deep in 'the fall and tuunec over at least once during the winter and still come up in the siring read3 for its work of destruction. Py plow ing under all the g-rein stuff that yo can you enrich the land andl prep)arE 'It for the next crop, and if yant wi break up the bug some tm durin;. the winter, he will b,e gathered to hi. fathers mighty quick. Have you an open mne-tin. 'l:mnea for your local? It is ahour i-a- hV. time in your life to DO) IT NOW. This life is not calcula:.cd to makel( angels of any of us. butt t.Le xt:in. !r-. down cuss that fails to mnak'' th im prisoned live stock eomimw table suffering for a few (lays cat of doors1 in the rains and hal f ra: ians in h belly. That wou!d helIp him a ;:r'at deal. Every shipload of immig.ranitr ens-~ ing to America raies the ;jiah of land. thus enriching 1V land spc'ala tor, while increa;ing the burdens that the homieless Amiericarns ane their families must bear bc-fore th y enn ever obtain homes. Yet those home less ones get together in ions an.i resolve against the foreign imigraV, but are silent concerning their real enemy-the land monopolist at hume. Don't play into the hands of the implement and vehicle trust by lind your impilements and vehicles i- to ruin for lack of shelter, paint and repair. The implement and vehicle men all wear good trousers, but the belooming Idiot, to whom it is too much trouble to take care of his things., can always feel the north wiind mighty plain when he happens to faca the south. It is a mighty sorry' bunch of farme rrs who, can no)t get toge:hc: ant:l it: their comubine:l credit far anythintg they may need ( to. Is the wvater and the wool l - hede to your pIr'ter acs th-7'y e::t i' no't. one of~ the,'e Liny r i.; a mighty gCt.d tHfi to lix c:t .G r will be: andt( you are ai po.ere pro Un:on maan if :;ou are in' 1!. ha. : she is not moan enousa to 'e ia and hami n you he bjad forL Iou at help.fulr ess. "Itt.I wuS i ehrd<v * h I., , eb i e ym' b r i 'Fb. he v iP vi,r:.' orgaml, c ire Live'r a:nlit1 'I '' troh t a pe.ite On:e . 0' at all D:).a REMINDS HiM OF HIS YOUTH. Recollections Co..- to 'Man at Sight of a Grir:-.one. "Down in our h-aeia:-d," said :he 1in who '2. --1 a reminder of my boyh- o ,. .I a-. 1 u t i b:iefoo: - indle-l.: d d ; i , a gi.1; 0 t!ne. "Thre's a boy in r om.r houwho turns that grindstone Ea!Urly and Et he is down thtre rool:.t %itll it. ilo dr :-', t hav t ohi%( 1 ir:1 i:. i.itIs whyI IN is so ;-.I:Vy m o 00 o T (iSe. If 1: I:ail 1 tu n it as I tiid when ai boy he C ouHII iinc!<k to Irioach it onlt1r:.:h the per ;uiV application of a st nick r th en i a leailier sap. The boy next duor :: his partner in thosf grint"stone stiunis. They sharpe.n knNiv's. The next door bory h1ol;S I.e ini wi::ll our b:w tmrns thl ;(:, I. Tih , .:ve Ihr' ti Srent :Iis toI0 woerk on. :nly neither of ihesr i:--pons s eV r ud fo :ny....ing exel grinding. TIley are the sharpcst !:ni-:es I ever sa-w. In tho days wli I turned a griid 'C(,h I turned 1o so:lie good pnrpose. Te i i 1 ::. 1 for sharpnl e'd seybe :sv~ i :r'* .:.i inebr's; kni's anWl thi::- bu i n'r .i tho.s i ii - n i s . :.r :o. ::(-h. !i C o C)sharpii as t!w kniv(s ilwse ho.s owI. "r0m hoy a:n' the b:. next door gt n go d -e0 of funl ();t or, thl-ir:ri - WnI but mis. unty C.f the in eW nt 1at eniv::< (lOt own tC.+ -~ ~ ~ ~~.I uIV:h t:d:iy ein.thes 't i :e a ht:y to enff Thu .. "n cufr C ;- . - -. :r :c v -!! r up T n fa:4 till I litt . 0 . - r : of t . o f ' ' t I:o SCi:, c r : -iin-kl a o-scioils y. I . -! up a bi .l flI toi 0. N :-:. I; : I Fr d i ' divl:' no~ b v'i . b ,o h( 1! fim -x. and SO I i C .'S Up an, fr iC . :p:wo of a ca ,or SO - to:lci of lichi:ni:.. ii Cie i, r:ol ios of that r 0 wheel. It was uindCr such diruh-:mtaes t hat i : u:.,e iamiinlmce v:.i:h a :wn smuc ino cen!tiv to p :1way at Thf-ir everla.Sting ;rnli. Their houts with th4. grindlstone are acr-c P>lay. Still, I am glar they 1:e to lay with. Y(,u don't see invny grinlstne%; il New York. :nd it d. a folo- goodl to brsih up agis sonet)hing that hiolr-ii rrmin his ch-r acter." The Closed Season. A rece-nly married West Phila' phia girl was the innocont cause of :ur1irh aniu--moont ! t sumnil dinnor i n one of the dIo.n-towin hotels rcen:, say.s ther P1hiladlel h ia 1l..c1.i ' fathber-i-la-.. hraxi-:: heen narde . I father to the child Cf one of his bl,i neCss i5soiat vs. n~ a:n '-d U give se . 0 pr':-Cln: tr the in;.'.it it ricognhi: of lI honii 'r. I-~ t')i litg thatt '1 oe s 1 1iIO i-i r>wng inigs, spurons, . he.. <imc;!rdl i.t Ih- nAuhill go (Cut rCf fi et Clven!: i-ot line andr. giveie braby a e:h. Iking a '.::. busy' man. he commi-s sIon"' d Ihis dohuightr -ini-lawV to do the buing.Car with iii:urrtionris tir gut avr inE Cone. Duiriu:. a lll in im re r tin a the rinne tI:hi falr-n sahl: "liv--, dId . rn ; e * th b' (arriage?" "Oh. I ia : .*:i a Ci:'' , t:to rrnly t'-n dar .'' v.:. 1x C "You idnt :-. m ii'if r i pi:-i." lt e.e ieia e-nlw "Y o.. ' i. a C rrcd ti: ymnr laJ y "t wil i::C : m:2 - ! y wIe r dHe5tl ii t i 8 : ::' h t o.ne 8n,.d Ti : :n. - "un: -'* whi a oei n -t . :;itn.Igeyu to htil.~, ri. ai1sr- ti by ir'civC ol Jn ion:r~n P.P.PP P. P. P. P.llprynn ' : ou Air prominent C.. airl g:. inenet at P. P. . hPn.rnes li N ie n fetel tai , c-iL !e oee, fh o l always ;. t l' '. . ' i1aim.Srf If yU 0 r ti" r ! t an Chr,:r-v:eo r.len 1P. P. P0. Ifyo ar purti el in the srlng .1' . LPM Tf cu diet'v -ge neeonigup Hunting im Luxury. Prince Demid,;jf. who has bon stay ng at Khartu:n. has left tor the south >n a long hnting xl ditin. The prince, who is only 2:1, is ac on:paLied b" a doctor, a chef and a elit"e'an wu is to operate a fouly uiptped cinematograph appartus, Ahich is to record the princes mi-l 1ents, especially when licl shooting. A private steamier has been hirt,dj it a cost of about ?25 daily. Th.e mtiers expect to bP absent about s': mlienlhs and intend to make their v:' luto the French Kongo an.d thence t.: Lhe Atlantic coast.-Rhodesia Herald. Wise Child. Alb.-rt. who its five years old, wa2 recently accipanied by his grandma to select a birthday present for i mothel. Ie v:anted "son:ething se rul" and, aficr nwmay rcj-,cti:ns, it wac .ggest ed tIat they bu y a pauir o! oporta slippers. when he promptl baid: "No; maninu-a's g-.ot tuo iany of item now. I 'wouldn't mliId getting bi!'ton1 110tSt, tir .hQ ca*L be taken U5 so JhimSity ofSuhCaoli Schoo's f arts. Siuie, Lcation, r 11 -, . lw in , t.I t sStud :; <f -.It-tS *. A B.t ,wd , !lm ar.l Ish-I , $ . oirdt 1 p TU-'b, T Ition a it i t-d inlpl ia 0 u -S' n i - tunl;)Im. Y'or L ' t h II. Ir s< nt, C'ola-: bla. S. C. Sh-all We Put "Swaik" on th: List? Ever. now and then we hear li:ti the word "wank." and it must be ap leoprdy. lP* Iit tx-ems to match the Si: uat ion. But few there are who un derstard its precise meaning. The Lpndon Clobe, however, comes to tl:eir relief, for it says that "swank" is er.lied bluff by Anme-icnns. and until somle ;!,nills Ilrosenf-d the British ia tion with the other word "blt" suf ficed. "S\tanking is the gentlest of all arts. It reifes for its success aly n(st entirely on amiability of de Cei an1!r. A man may smile and smile, andl he a swanker. In fact. he has get to. If he is not cheerful and at. tractive. ie cannot swank. for the swank-e. repelled, edges away, thus rendering his swanking null and vold. It is the wid,, cheery smile, the hearty back slap, and the general ac quicsconro that makes the swanker." I! it wo:th while admitting the word to the vocabulary? Have Ingjenious Arrangement. Recently the New York Tribune made mernticn of a new East side philhian hrol>ie mnovemlent, the Volks lritchen. a ' eosher" eating p!ace for ortl:e<:ox .lows. At first it was be lio-a d 1':1m Sat urday' it could be c; en only: for su:pper: and not for lunch eon, as religious ,i ews (do not handin moniey or tickets on the day of rest. 1lowever, an ingeni]ous 1plan has been devised by mieans of which luncheon can ihe servedl on the Je.wish Sabbath. Tbhis pda n is the si :tt le 'ne of adopt ing htadge o 01 ':sl ln'end of tickets. Ott Friday s:nl4l brdo'~ areo sold for s::veni cnts. The ober'.ant Jei pins ii. en I hi: coat. fror !.1 ; it i is re mfove:i tpon his en - ' tle following (ay. Thus h'" o' :: is Sabbath 11unehorn f:': 1I: '.:s ki teheai with. out breal:9n a n: ri a I ---id Jone u. ..' up to find 'elker---Y'es. but .': couldn't wake.c thle t:.ighbors. Going Sorne. "1 Idint ;:et to the field siorts in tme." 5aid t he hare. 'Was there any "Yes. " relit d the tortoise. "that ig kanga .oo fellow f:oml Australia .. the record in the 100-yard A &'ht ?R'a.er's R'aid 'l t> rob voutt of rt s5. Not so with Dr. Kitits Yew Life Pilis. T:n-y r-over dis 'rss or inconvenience, hut aliway's le .s tiw. e stem,.'U eui:g C tIs. Head ache, ( onstilt:iont. iahlu-ia, :2~>c. at all Druggiss. MayWemon Praise This Remedy , . i ~ i ' t:,- for w.;maln i 'trthrr ir-'. 5 At;s :'t!is n if. I; It a efe andl never-~'failhr. re.tba r .\: Drngssor by mail -~0 : ts. *"l p': p wh.i:e FRE' . ? ddn :s, TIhc .' L Gray Co.. LeiRov, N. Y. Drisicl's New Decks. IMtcl. fai4l. js ej Ic'''-ve 1 -**ompletion ofi. ir:hai's TY oy ,r-: a:n t fae:: n the' .wolda ri: is in e tha fot newi iicc g(11,5 'r!l - r t h is :n. fe l o :: anf 1 ' 'lae :a. Siwc lhast uboia ll tha ah twl aow-:a:al. hin, nit:an:iat Thie M2 I of:a; tia. sl'e e i h th e is ioti st ltiur et n ew Yo and thishi urcpe:at ttia!ecor o:f oden tand a thousan :as,h :e:x 1ous a eareroomN. LQ iJ.i.UiJUJIL'-. UI. Ii W'E'T EQ M RAIS- 4 ra I p.v'T VGAG i*J ..;J . - . a a Lro .A r TA. ow N.. ras.n Xl.,.w:. e IiWi. jN'ndiv pub. n~U F)O>, & 'i; Co., 3r. .r. W.!ia Dhii#, Andes > i. S. C. eir S r--e h-Lv-: b-iard th:at by a i.rai ; !*-f--:i':Z -r, p:m.- -ptIly in .tie dl~r-sn, . . .-t o:- ) b:1Cs of cr.t .m) on s xti arres -i, I v. ar. WO .. ii a;:ree ae ifyou id i;. -i a your , Itigation whIO .n SIii ed i i thi-i crop. wV w.is~ o g:v t!:- p iblit the bmnefit , yur exerwtee ;.s w k it will , an iiiAuten t to I .;,ri to si.le Tw.n -i. ytu in iht- for the ravor of a) va, n t-p.a! .. art, A mi rs .a Phous. & 0; Co.,, .rthi3s m Pha t & Od Co., Ander . h- -a .\, ' f Vt r favor zm~ t' ) 1z tv- ii- li:s. cotton b i% 1,s .p - I .d s-venLy p su .:% : O f s . to 11 i. acre. L th s. i f hiuI whech p : i:. ' Il oM the six I &'aaLreO saty-eighit .i,.ht i. t s::.;f e . I, raver. ni e %4d. t t , : A m,d th:l, whLn th tI lat .. : 1r 101 .-cr I fter m N- i i t 'it will be :-!;- ima le more Jh: . .f Cotton i.i s V . ,i e u S: my costtYon ex . : h i t. w,:l frtiz - . bett., r than .mi. i o iLItr.; rL-frtilizer m ai A.n::.n PhI O.:. 4E ,Nipany frt Tr -4 bJ, w "t.her sta1u-n ard .rs. i , V at y oX anv i:G encein E-0.0,% fert by .ai a uotier gouds J. aV:-e Drake. A n - ,.C. Juie 4. 193). Kr. J. 11 v nts, We wi.: i :Wiv I n )l ;.; 4 to the reu: o :.i very :.n: 15.hl;l u.f Th::i y,n * fort. . tertnIorof ant ttD i.: N H .\ Es AND OIL n \:hs -si st -.i, June s , 10r. inderson 1. iu o. Dos -r \.:\ :av , d Jmt Ste v Jn s an fil-.w : i aon "-if abot 1id wenI) v: hi15h I I . m rcoinul S ide if.- in si I -.!. : :.u:-h. ta the h-- r: r : : b *3 . i g3.r ner . It en - r : 1: - 1 f . i 1.1 fo- r dr e flo M e t twa a n a a iw.1dyN iwrI arn SEIN MACHINE J.LLE STENSON. Sr: z -r . by rbund. the -emorahighegrade sew. STRONGES GRADE. Nazioxa1 Se ing Machine.Co BELVIDEREa ILLINOIS,z