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NATURE'S SIGNALS. Tho first indication of kidney disDrder is often backache. Then comes pain in the hips and sides, lameness, ___ soreness and urinary troubles. These are fcrfSLt '"4" the warnings ? naJ&G& wrh ture's signals for }-Sy help. Doan's Kidney Pills should bo used at the first | J Is 7 A. Treitlein, 84 I J V\ Rosett St., New Hafip ven. Conn., says: "I A M{w!mn,rr was propped up In a ;hair for 23 weeks. So intense was iheyiain when I moved that I thought [ would pass away. The kidney action ffas irregular and the secretions scalded. Three doctors gave me no relief. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me, ind for ten years the cure has been permanent." Remember the name?Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. * TOO LATE. Dr. Piliem?There must be something radically wrong with your system to have your hair fall out so. You will have to diet. Skantlox?Dye it? I'm afraid, doc. there's not enough of it left to dye. Doll House Library. A search for a child's short story, 'The Griffin and the Minor Canon," in a volume all by itself revealed to a persistent city shopper the thought and money that are expended on the ' Furnishing of dolls' houses. Dook stores had not the story in a single volume, but in a department store one young woman interviewed had recently been transferred from the toy department and was able to contribute a helpful hint. "I think," she saTd, "you can find It In one of the dolls' houses downstairs." Curiosity had by that time become a sauce to literature, so the shopper hurried downstairs to inspect the doll houses. Three of the most expensive houses contained libraries consisting of a score of diminutive books and each book contained a child's story complete. One of them was "Th? Griffin and the Minor Canon." One Side Enough. Senator William Alden Smith tells of an Irisn justice 01 uie peace uut In Michigan. In a trial the evidence was all in and the plantiff's attorney had made a long and very eloquent argument, when the lawyer acting for the defense arose. "What are you doing?" asked the Justice, as the lawyer began. "Going to present our side of the . case." "I don't want to hear both sides argued. It has tindency to confuse th? coort."?Wasbingtonian. And They Wondered. Judge Nicholas Longworth, who used to sit on Ohio's supreme bench, looked unnaturally grave, and a neighbor, in recognition of his facial depression, named a pet owl "Judge Longworth." It was the very next day that an excited maid broke up his wife's garden party. "Oh, madim," said she. "Madam! Judge Longworth has laid an egg." Included Her. "Why did she get angry at th? stranger in town?" "She asked him if he had seen her daughter and he answered that he had seen all the sights of the place." Game. The Creditor?Will you pay this bill now, or never? The Debtor?Mighty nice of you to give me my choice, old scout. I choose never. You Know Them. "Is that a new hobby he Is riding?" "No; same old frayed hoss. It's the new bit and bridle that attract attention." Good intentions are always hot stuff; that is why they are used for paving material in a certain locality. Convenient l?rkiw A fi-sr Post T oasties Are ahvaj'S ready to serve right from the box with the addition of cream cr milk. E s p ec i a 11 y pleasing with berries or fresh fruit. Delicious, wholesome, economical food which saves a lot of cooking in hot weather. 4'The MemDiy Lingers" POSTT'M CEP.EAT. CO.. j V . J Crisis in L. W., Insulted by a Judge, the Man Who May Become a Supreme Court Justice Nearly Abandoned the Practise of Law. "Now that Lloyd W. Bowers, the solicitor general of the United States. Is being t?'?:e'.l of as a probable Taft nomination for the Supreme court. I am reminded of an Incident in Mr. Bower's career which furnished the | crisis of his life, and of that incident; I have personal knowledge" remarked a lawyer of national fame who once was very close himself to becoming a Supreme court justice. "I think 1 am safe In savins," continued my informant, "that there is not at the bar of the United States, and never has been, a man of greater delicacy of sentiment or of more constant and yerfect recognition of the rights and feeling? of others than Mr. Bowers. Me also has a high sense of personal honor, ;:nd it was due to the combination of these characteristics (hat there arose the crisis in his life I of which 1 speak. "Following his graduation from the i Columbia law school, ho had been for i some time managing clerk of a lead: ing law office in New York city. There he was highly esteemed and a ; great career was predicted at the bar for him. And.there he appeared one day, displaying every evidence of a ; sense of humiliation, the manner of a | man who had met with a grievous per! sonal insult. "His friends flocked around him? what was the matter, they asked? j Then, in efTcct, Mr. Powers told them that he had that day had such an unhappy experience in court he had de! cided to abandon forever the profesI sion of the law. He had appeared in j court, he said, to ask that a long; pending matter be decided by the j court, stating that it was of no real 1 consequence how the matter was de1 cided. but that it was imperative that i the decision should be made, that the I accounts in question might be settled I and money necessary for the living ex| penses of bis client be released. ' Rut I no sooner had he made his statement, j Mr. Bowers went on to say, than the court visited its anger upon him, i shocking and humiliating him so that { ho had decided to abandon the law, because he did not wish ever again to be placed in such a position where he could be insulted, while at the same time it would be Impossible for i him to resent the Insult. "Mr. Bowers was perfectly sincere | in his expressed purpose to give up ! his career as a lawyer, despite the | bright future that was before him, and j When Wash I General Broke Down, Fearing He Would Lose the Battle of the Brandywine Unless Discouraged Soldiers Were Paid. A year or so before the venerable C. C. Clarke, now in his eighty-eighth year, retired, in 1900, as vice-president of the New York Central-railroad, he called me into his office and pointed to a paragraph in a newspaper containing some reference to Robert Morris, the financier of the American revolution. "In the late thirties when I went to college in Geneva. N. Y.." said Mr. Clarke, "I made the acquaintance of a man of the name of Brown, who had for years been postmaster of the village, and who was then well along in the eighties. In the course of this acquaintance I found out that he had been a clerk in the office of Robert Morris at the time when he was exhausting his fortune in behalf of the fighting colonies, and many an hour I spent with the old man listening to his anecdotes of the great financier. And then, one day, my aged friend told me this story of Robert Morris and George Washington, which I have never seen in print " 'One afternoon, shortly before the Battle of the Erandywine, which took place in the fall of '77,' said Mr. Brown. "General Washington, unattended, came to Mr. Morris' office. He seemed to be in great anxiety, and he i hastened to explain to Mr. Morris that unless he could hove some money with which to make at least a partial payment to his soldiers, he did not believe that it would be possible for him to gain a victory in the approaching battle, ~ho soldiers, he said, had boen many months without pay. They had New Uses for Alcohol. j The Germans, having no natural supply of petroleum or natural gas. have I sought i. substitute for those fuels ir I alcohol, which they can produce cheap ly from the potatoes that luxuriate in the sandy plains of their country. The result was seen in an oxhibition of the industrial appliances of alco hoi in Berlin, where there were shown alcohol driven motors for stationar> enginos as well as for automobile car riages, portable alcohol engines farm work, domestic utensils, such a. fiatiroTis, heated by alcohol; alcoho cooking rai.ges. incandescent lamp; for house or street use, in which thr mantle is combined with an alcoho flame, and many (xhibits of chemica preparations derived from alcohol. Although as a fuel alcoho! has thro retically only three-fifths of the heat ing value of petroleum, it has beei fount', that for motor purposes : per cent, of the theoretical energy o ' alcohol can ho utilized as against onlj ^ 15 per cent, it: the case of petroleum j What hUo Lcr. cme of the old-fas'.i | ioned i hra.s'j of "law a:;cl onlorV" J Bowers' Career to 6eek a livelihood in some other way. His friends, realizing his sincerity, attempted most earnestly to dissuade him from his purpose. They asl>3d him to come to no decision until he had given very careful thought to the matter; at last they gained this concession from him, and I have always believed that it was this advice that finally persuaded Mr. Bowers to abandon his purpose to leave the law. Story of Old . Senator Bulkeley's Discovery of Little William G3rlow, Who First Demonstrated for the Hartfords the Vaiue of Bunt. One day, in the early spring of 1S74, when Morgan G. Bulkeley, now senator from Connecticut, was backing almost single-handed the Hartford (Conn.) baseba'.l nine, which two years later just missed' winning the championship, being only two games behind the Chlcagos, he took me to see a game between the Hartfords and a semi-professional club. We sat in the scorers' box. "I have brought you here," said Bulkeley, the most enthusiastic fan I have ever known, "that you might see at work the new youngster I found playing with the old Atlantics of Brooklyn. He's out there at shortstop now; and I want you to keep your eye on him. I don't mean that you should keep your eyes glued on him n-Viilo ho ie nlnvinp shnrtston. al though he is very good In that position. But when he conies to bat don't take your eyes off of him." Pretty scon the youngster in question, slight of bui'.d and only a few Inches over five feet, came to bat. "Now," cautioned Mr. Bulkeley, "you will see something that you have never seen before. I don't know whether it's right or not. according to baseball rules, but he does it?and there you are." The boy stod at the plate, with the bat oustretched directly in front of him, like a musket at present arms. Thus holding the bat, he let the ball hit it squarely after one or two balls had been pitched. Immediately the ball dropped, Jumped in front of the home plate, and Barlow was within safe striking distance of first base before the pitcher could recover the ball. Mr. Bulkeley beamed all over. "Nov,'," he shouted above the uproar, "you will see the captain of the other nine making vigorous objection." Sure HBlglXJIl V endured many hardships. Their privations, their dire need of money had in a measure demoralised and discouraged them. " 'And right here, and all of a sudden,' said Mr. Brown, 'General Washington broke down completely. He put his hands to his face so that he might conceal his emotion, but I saw the tears trickling down between his j hands. He was completely overcome, and I was so awe-stricken at the spectacle of the commander-in-chief of the Continental army in tears that I stood as though I were transfixed to the iloor. I looked at Mr. Morris, to see j how ne was affected, and found him j trying to relieve the situation by ap| poaring to be busy arranging some papers that had been spread before him prior to General Washington's entrance. Then, as suddenly as he had broken down, General Washington regained his composure, and went on to say that If Mr. Morris could find within twenty-four hours sufficient money to pay ench man in the army a little of what was due him, this payment would do much to revive the army's courage and morals, and. If this were accomplished, there was little doubt but that the British would be held in check. .T* Tt-oe? c-l i'ur ? uiuuicui Am. iuui110 inlent; then he replied that he himself was without funds, that he did not know where he could raise oven the small amount asked on such short notice, but that he would do the best he could, adding that he did not feel justified in encouraging any hope in General Washington's breast that the money could be secured. " 'General Washington's reply was simple, 'i know tliat you will do a'.l i you can?as you have done already," | The Sting 1 An eastern fable tells of a potentate who demanded that there should 1 be brought to him tbr sting? of p thousand bees killed because one of their ' colony had dared commit lese-majeste by stinging ilie hand of royalty. When 1 I thov were brought in a tiny golden I thimble tho kint? was so amazed to ] 1 find that a thousand of tho hypodermic joints made such a little mass ' that he? issued a manifesto to the ef! kct that thereafter no person within the bounds of the kingdom rho\:M complain at tho sting of a b >e. The ! le::ons of the fable is that petty ani noyances hurt because they are exagi gerated in the mind, that when they *! are seen in their actual proportions * | they are so plight, as to merit only con! tempt. How much comfort would I r come to the mnjoiity of persons i!' they could but see the tiny size of the j bee stings that load them to act.; of j pet.:il'?nce. old? of anger, expressions of reproach. Tho bee sting annoy.' j r.r.ces hav?> r.n: -ed life-long hrvuv^ s i nf |'i idii...-!;!;>, they h:;ve biolcen up j nf ic, | "Anyway, soon after the Incident In the courtroom occurred, Mr. Bowers went to Minnesota and in a little while became counsel for the Chicago & Northwestern railway system. Within ten years he was general counsel in Chicago for -.he whole system. Now he Is solicitor general in the department of justice, and in all probability will he named within a few years at. the most as an associate justice of the Supreme court. Yet, you see how narrowly he missed the distinguished career he has made as a lawyer." . (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards.) Baseball Days enough vigorous protests were made, tfMfVt/Mtf nvnil uul wuuuui a t an. Again, in his proper order, the youngster stood at the home plate. But this time, instead of holding the club rigidly in front of him, he tossed it at the ball just before it was over the plate. That swerved the ball so that it rolled rather slowly towards third base. 'He will get to first base before the third baseman can pick it up," announced Mr. Bulkeley confidently. And the youngster did. I looked at Mr. Bulkeley in wonder; in all my baseball days I had never seen anything like the batting of this lad. Mr. Bulkeley smiled enthusiastically. "They call that a bunt," he said. "Some baseball players think that it is all right. Some insist that it isn't fair. It is an entirely new freak in baseball and this boy has invented it. His name is Barlow." I In these days when the scientific j bunt is one of the important features of the nationaf game, it is probable that Morgan G. Bulkeley, senior senator from Connecticut, when things i grow a little duil in the senate chamber, recalls with a considerable de- j gree of satisfaction that It was with j his first Hartford baseball nine that j little William Barlow demonstrated fully the value of the bunt in baseball to the player who knows how to employ It skillfully. This Barlow did in less th^n one season, for a serious Illness did not permit him to play long with the Hartfords. Yet In the short while that he was with the team he taught the secret of the bunt to his teammates, and It was one at the tricks that speedily made the Hartford club one of the country's best for a few years. (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards.) Poetry Interpreted. Willy?Why is it the shades of night are falling fast? Nflly?Because the1 girls inside are going to bed.?Yale Record. he said. Then he took Mr. Morris' hand, held It for a moment, and went nwnv without nfrnlri snMlfln? " 'I never knew whether Mr. Morris secured the money or not.', Mr. Brown added. '1 do know that he went out of the office immediately after General Washington had departed. Two days later, I think it was. the Battle of Brandywine was fought. General Washington was defeated, and the British occupied Philadelphia. Maybe it was all because Mr. Morris was not able to get for General Washington the little money that he needed so badly for his soldiers. But I cannot say for a certainty.'" (Copyright, 1310, by E. J. Edwards.) Bitter. Miss Anna Held, at a tea on la Provence, praised the French. "The only French quality I dislike." she said, "Is cynicism, and sometimes I think French cynicism is preferable to Anglo-Saxon sentimentality. " 'The mushy Anglo-Saxon idealization of stage hero or book here is, in my opinion, falser to human nature than the cynical French woman's remark: " 'Nothing equals the skepticism of a married woman, unless, indeed, it be the credulity of an unmarried one.'" World's Wine Production. Last year the production of wine in the world was half a billion gallons less thr.n in 190S. The chief reductions were scored in Austria, Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Portugal and Spain. The United States kept pretty well up, Algeria producing six times as much as this country gained. Greece and Servia gained. Chile produced GO per ccnt. more than this country. of a Bee families and caused anger and resentmem to take thu place of love and fealty.?Baltimore American. W. C. Day, superintendent of public buildings and grounds, has at last discovered the second of the historic j howitzers, the cannon presented tc the republic of Texas in provincial | (iays. A letter from Gen. William Cro ' -.ier, cliief of ordnance, conveyed th<; | information that this historic obi I Texas cannon is now mounted in fronl of the war department building a! Washington.?San Antonio Express. I I Marian has several perfonnnnees s'^e can render en occasion*. There came a time, however, when tin? worm turned. Or. heinK remiestei! to sprrtU fur a visitur, she iviasid. The j coaxed in vain, Finally the visiror' ?aii!: "I don't 1>'!ieve Marian fan! r-j.. :J: r. piece." I'pui this Marian i<v>ii her iiiijr.-r ni:f i f l.'-r month an.I 1 liircil:!''. "Mr:-. XV' 1 c:ui, L::i i t'jii ileccrJ. ; WAGON BED COI | INTO I I Agriculturist Has Often Foum to Buy or Build Ni Required c A convertible wagon bed which can j be changed into 15 different kinds of s ! bodies for different uses around a < I farm, without adding to it or taking < j from it a single picce, has been de- < I signed and is undoubtedly the most < radical improvement made in farm 1 wagons for a decade, says Popular Me- 1 chanics. 1 In a few minutes it can be trans- s formed from a hay rack into a wagon i for carrying live stock, and with equal ; quickness it can be converted into a vehicle for carrying a large number of i passengers who can be provided with i Unloading A [u ' , I^oi^ uj J Wings fe.zter.ucd for use as Hay luck A Wagcn Eed < comfortable 6eats along the sides for i picnicking, etc. 1 1 The remarkable versatility of the : new wagon bed is secured by hinged s i malleable iron pieces attached to the I sides. These support two folding sections on each side. The strain which is put upon these pieces when heavy loads are placed on- the wagon makes it imperative that they should be of strong, dependable material. RIDDING FARM I OF GRASSHOPPER! Favorite Remedy, Recommended | By Colorado Agricultural College Is Arsenic Bran Mash. (By S. ARTHUR JOHNSON, Colorado Agricultural College.) In spite of the fact that a great deal of work has been done by experiment stations on grasshoppers, no royal road to control has yet been found. Each attack has to be considered on its own merits and relief j sought through the most promising ; channel. One of the favorite remedies is ar- | senic bran mash. This is made by * mixing one pound of white arsenic with 25 pounds of bran. The arsenic is so near the color of the flour in the bran that it is not easy to tell when the mixing is well done. To j overcome this difficulty, the arsenic ( may first be collected by adding a lit- 1 Mfl ilmf noinf ( tic uij yuan. * % After the bran and arsenic are well I i nixed they should be moistened with j < water. Put In just enough to make I ' the particles stick together. This ! mixture should be scattered where j s TILE DRAINS 1 no1. . I I. tr?: -I ?1 T" ' '.] ? ?#ljpl ^ ^ I ?!$$ = drdir ?xindrt &?$ * soil undraineJ wAen drains clraihcd The illustration shown herewith is from a bulletin of the Ontario De- ! partir.ent of Agriculture and shows c how the water table of the soil do- s ponds on the location of drains. If in a field that is underdrr.ined three feet i deep a number of holes are dug it r would be observed after a heavy rain r that in those nearest the drains no a water woiug remain, in uu uum ml- i. uated half-way between the drains at C would hold considerable water for a few days. In a clay in fairly good condition it will be found that the slope of the t water table is about 1 foot in 25. in r luam 1 foot in about 33. The illus- i tratlon represents a clay soil with i drains A and IJ 100 feet apart. Wells v are dug 12.5 feet apart. At the end i: of 48 hours after a heavy rain the t water will stand about as indicated r by zig-zag lines, in a gradient of about t 1 in 25, and hence will be two feet n deeper in the centre wall than at eith t cr drain. Hcr.ce if tlie drains are c three feet d;;n there will bo three c feet of drain*: : roil ever A and II, but only one fool at X. Capillarity and .oil resistance to wn'.or i!ow play an important part in holding the water highest half way between the drain.'. 1 and the gradient 1 in 25 represents' I their combi:i"ii s:?vn?:ih in clay. 1 i.imcc a??*T 'bis: gvnii'Mit i.-; ivnclu d *t ilrainage be:-;!!: rs v< ry. very ;:!ow, and j ' ?!:e water t'ibl* :;f::?ds i;>. *!iirregu- v brr shup<* until lov.t! by rv.j 'J UK- yru J':i i i*i.i u?.;u::;v * r.icMiiS of \; '.il. /' \y ::it ! j < J'.!! ", v.-ju m iiv- i* *??3" ;;t ; " 1. si;:Tnco pit i'.c *> -it* :* I fi?r J AVERTED AFFERENT USES d It Hardship to Be Obliged imber of Vehicles m Farm. The agriculturist has often found 4t i hardship to be obliged to buy or build i number of wagons for the multifarious requirements incident to the operation of a farm. The wagon that :ould serve to carry boxes or crated vegetables and berries to market tvould not be of any use when haying :ime came around. When it was necessary to carry calves or live stock, still mother wagon must be called into service. While reapers, threshers, and other 'arm implements have been continually improved, the farm wagon has re3 a a Uukct W??oa l] Aa ? H?y Rick (jj Wj>co Folded O??r ?or Beg$, Cheep. Etc. )f Many Uses. r.ained practically at a standstill. Peri?.ps the fact that the automobile has nade such wonderful progress has served to overshadow the humble beast )f burden and his reliable wagon. Old Dobbin may be a second rater now, nut he will continue for some time to ill his particular sphere of endeavor ,vith a faithfulness which the mo:or car cannot always be relied upon ;o give. he grasshoppers are thickest. If he insects are invading a garden or jotato patch, it is well to scatter the )ran mash about the borders. In he fields of alfalfa or grain, the jran should be scattered where the grasshoppers congregate on ditch tanks and dry places. All the in;ects will noc find and eat it, but many vill and often the crop can be fairly veil protected. The writer has never ised this preparation against young grasshoppers, but some iarmers state hat the crops may be completely proected by its use, while others claim hat they will not eat it. Of course, it will not do to scatter lis substance where chickens will je likely to pick It up, and none of he mixture must be left where doliestic animals are apt to get it or je fed from the vessel. Good Exercise. There is no harm in pigs rooting if :hey are in a field where rooting will io 110 harm. Pigs can secure much ^eed by rooting and the exercise will lo them good. Where troublesome -oots infest the soil they will often eradicate them if allowed to do so. rhe fattening hog should not be alowed to root, as the exorcise con utiles too much feed and energy. iToaFsoir~ Tonmvii1 -ii- - -fV"'" -r'.'1'XU v#vr \ed coil finecl soil ere 100':feet apart; Aul* they arc SO feoi apart >vaporation, none is drawn from beow for this purpose, hence during the arly months of growth the water * /J ~ (UA J 11 iictiiud <id iuuii;f.itu uj iuc uuucu lint? ^XI3. Consequently root development s hampered at X, as 1 foot of soil is iot enough. There are two ways to emedy the defect, either to dig A md 13 deeper or else put a drain at C lalf way between. Value of Birds. 'A French naturalist assorts that if he world were to become birdless, in line years' time man couM no longer nhabit it. This seems a very sweepn.T statement at first glance, but \ hen we come to reflect upon* tbe natter wo find that it is doubtless n rue one. Insects and slugs would multiply so fast, notwithstanding all he sprays and poisons that eor.ld he carufnctured to ar.r.ihil;.i? them. th:;t hey would di'stroy the onhards, forsts and crops. The land would bec:::e one vast des-rt. Farm ?rcblerr,s. The main problem of agriculture i" o shew how a farm may he made to ?ny a n asoiia')'.?! rvturn <:i t!:e invcxrin-.'it am' on :^ 1:: 1 >*?r pc,:'. rincd. !:: I wii ' wrli ?:?>?ivn il?o ?? r-:ili ! i?' In ' ;",v. ;":ioil. ! it th : ! ?! cl t! " ;ry t'irjv \ til !iu-k r! I*:" -..! , ; ;!,< , t!::r,-v :i. o ili".!/ '"O- l i. - "'x ' ' 1 1 a TUBERCULOSIS IN THE PRISON Per Cent, of Sufferera Is Enormous and There Seems but One Remedy. From several investigations that have been made by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, it is estimated that on an average about fifteen per cent, of the prison population of the country is afflicted with tuberculosis. On this basis, out of the 80.000 prison, ers housed in tho penal institutions of the United States at any given time, not less than 12,000 arc infected with this disease. If the Philippine islands and other insular possession? were taken into consideration the number would be much larger. Some of the prisons of Pennsylvania. Kansas and Ohio show such shocking conditions with reference to tuberculosis Vloi tn o n v Tiro p/lftnc + Vvol fhoia tuai luauj v? ai ucuo auiuu kuai places of detention are death traps. Similar conditions could be found in almost every state, and in the majority of cases the ouly sure remedy is the destruction of the old buildings and the erection of new ones. Keeping It Dry. An old woman of a wealthy New Jersey family was going visiting. The coachman, who had not been In this country long, had just been equipped with a new uniform and a new silk hat. Before they had gone far it began to sprinkle, and the old woman told the coachman to fasten down the side curtains of the wagonette. He drove up to a hitching pest beside the road and, dismounting, hung his new hat on the post, and begun tc fasten the curtains. The old woman noticed his bare head and asked him where his hat I XT.7Q C "Oi took it oil me head, muni, sc^au is wouldn't get wet," the coachman replied. Less Lavish. "I saw 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' played recently." "So?" "I think I'll read the book." "You may be disappointed. The book mentions only one little Eva and one Lawyer Marks."?Louisville Courier-Journal. A Treasure. "Your new maid looks very discreet." "Indeed, she is. She even knocks at all the drawers before openingthem."?Pele Mele. TO DKIYE OUT MALARIA AND UllLI) Ul' THE SYSTEM Take the Old fcStandurd uEOVB'd TA3TKJJS33 CHLLL TOMC. You know what you arc taking. Tbo formula Is plainly printed on crery bottle, showing it Is simply (julnltic and Iron In a tasteless form. The Qulniuo drives out tbe malaria and tno Iron builds up tbo system, bold by all doalors tor 30 years. Price ?0 cents. There can bo no greater mistake 1 than to suppose that the man wltn $1,000,000 is a million times happier than the man with one dollar. For COLDS and GRIP Hicks' Capcdine Is the best remedy?relieves the achlnpr and feverlshness?cures tha Cold and restores -normal conditions. It'a liquid?effects lmmediatly. 10c., 25c., and 50c. At drug stores. I no secret oi me i? uui iu uu nua* one likes, but to try to like that which one has to do; and one does like it? in time.?D. M. Crailc. i Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets re?ulat? and invigorate stomacii, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take. Do not gripe. The lamb that plays around ? mint bed tempts fate. \ Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ' Chicago, El.?"I was troubled with falling and inflammation, and the doc? j tors said I could not get well unless I a:i ?Peration. knew I could not stand the strain of jgyKf one, so I wrote to v I'ran ^ & (if: you sometime ago PPsL % Ml!about my health fOliiand you told me MiV ^ J)& wkat to do. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Yegeta. ry i/firMf/ Ih ble Compound and I ' /////////// minod Turifier I am to-day a well woman."?Mrs. "Williazi Ahrf.xs, 988 W. 21st St., Chicago, I1L Lydia E. Pinkham's Yegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and to-day holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases of any similar medicine in the country, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are 0:1 tile in the Pink ham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., from women who have been cured from almost every form of female complaints, inflammation, ul:eration,displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities. periodic pains,backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. Every such suffering woman owes it to herself to give Lydia F.. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. If you would 2i!:c special advico - * sv. .tU'Jin your cuso ivrnt; a couuiucatial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her ad'irice is free* and always iielpful. fOil SALF?SOUTH Gl FARMS 500 ACP.E>. 150 ill caltir.iti >u, .?ix-room ro-Moacc. B<*3: grado p 'MIo land; id'?al home. All convi'iii -n<r If you ilosira choice lnnd in south <? _ ">r';ia, seo tills jdac? Will sell at iviwouuui'! rtuur". F. J. DIViNS, Moultrie, Ga. tK" ? ? ? Alio R rt I 1 1 80 I GET A SAW MILL I I from Lorrbir-'I Iron Worko, Aucus- jj B j la. G.i. is .=Ic- rr .ney cawing nfigh- ? B |j bor's tir.ibor rvi. ji; gin engine ic idle rl u'f.-vr the cropj arc initl hy. I H If nfH;rtp<IT jC'Tfj\lr ofnp M SE/B ttaiet