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ft Mimi im tifo PLANTER'S X LOAN ?ND * SAYINGS ? BANK, $ Augusta, Ga., ? i 1111 li I H 1111 ll H 1118111 t ni gum ii hf PAYS INTEREST I ON DEPOSITS t ACCOUNTS SOLICITED J" L. C. KAYNE, PBESEDEHT. Chas. C, Howard, $ CASKJLBB. '" '.???'.??.".i;.j.s:-irfjg?l-?; : 1 i' i. y ,Tir. ? . :: THE NATIONAL BANK i Sf AUGUSTA, GA, ! X. O. HAYNS, President. ! ; ; FRANK G. FORD, Caabkr. .. CAPITAL,.$250,000 \ ; ; Surplus and Profits, . .$140,000 ; . i We shall bo pleated to bare yon open aa acosta* > i ? with tai? Baak. Customers and eonesaooaaMD a? sji i , iuroJ of ey err coni-loay-and accommodatioa snssS? JL , , ble nader conservative, modern Banking mrftwOa JL 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniT VOL. 70. EDGEFIELD, S. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1905. NO. 49. 9 A BOND THIEF Thc Graft Microbe Penetrates to South Carolina's Capital HE WORKED SMOOTH GAME Daniel Zimmerman, Former Employe in State Treasurer's 05ice At Co lumbia and a Member of An Old South Carolina Family, is Charged With Fradulently Abstracting $12, 500 Pins Interest. Columbia.. Special.-A warrant was issued Tuesday afternoon for the ar rest of Daniel Zimmerman; funner bookkeeper and confidential clerk in the State Treasurer's office, upon an affidavit sworn to by State Treasurer R. H. Jennings, charging him with a breach of trust with fraudulent inten tion arid the theft'of State bonds of the value of $12,500, which,,with'ac crued interest, aggregate $10,403.75. Zimmerman, who is' % member of one of the oldest and most highly re spected families in South Carolina, is about 62 years of age, and has resided in Columbia with his family since -1891, coming here from Orangehurg count)'. He served in the capacity of bookkeeper from 1892 until 1902, un der three different State 'Treasurers, W. T. C. Bates, W. H. Timmenuan, and the incumbent. The officers are liable fer any shortage during their terms of office, thc liabilities being about as follows: W. T. C. Bates, $1,200; W. H. Timmer'man, $10,500; and lt. H. Jen nings, $1,400. It is alleged that Ihe fraud was committed when a party having bonds might prefer 11 State stock" in ex change. The pepers would be pre sented and "the transfer made. Then, instead ot canceling the bond, the clerk in charge apparently would take out one of the bonds when there would be large packages and at some convenient date would put it on the market as if it were negotiable in strument instead of a bond. The bonds of the State arc payable to bearer, just as a bank note or other currency, and the stock being payable to order only. It :s said the irregularities were discovered some time ago, and efforts had been made to get Zimmerman to explain them, but it is alleged that he failed to keep several engagements to visit the office and clear up the matter. Just before issuing the warrant Tuesday two of the former Treasurers visited Zimmerman's home to prepare him for what Avas coming, and to make a last effort to settle the matter outside the law, it? possible. Reaching his home, they were informed that he was at a local insurance office, in which he is now employed. Going to his office, they were told that Zim merman had just left. Up to a late hour the warrant had snX?l .been served, the Sheriff being 0kaj?fe?t? locate Zimmerman. p^*"' .-W -."" Lnmb/nr Men Meet. NorfoJi^Special.-The North Car .^duiir'rine Association controlling all the big lumber mills in Eastern Virginia and North Carolina, met here and elected E. C. Fosbury, of the Fos burg Lumber Company, of Norfolk and Berkley, president, and R. J. Camp, of Franklin, Va., first-vice president. Mr. Fosburg succeeds John L. Roper resigned. The association ratified the detailed plan for the con solidation with the South Carolina Pine Lumber Association, and the two organizations meet in Columbia, S. C., November 16th, for final action. Carolina-Northern Sold. Lumberton, Special.-The Carolina Northern Railroad, extending from Lumberton to Marion, S. C., a dis tance of 42 miles, was sold here Tues? day at public auction and was bought in by a committee of first mortgage bond holders, of which Howard S. Graham, of Philadelphia, is chairman, for $26S,000. Supplies Prohibited. Washington, Special.-Exportation of arms, ammunition and munitions of war of every kind from any part of the United State and Porto Rico to any port of the Dominican republic is,prohibited by a Presidential procla mation. In an explanatory memoran dum to (he effect Ilia this action has been taken after consultation with the Dominican government, with their concurrence, and is intended to as sist them in the enforcement of their .regulations designed to prevent the revolutionists of thc island from get ling warlike supplies. Plan Not Decided On. New York, Special.-Thc steamer Havana arrived from Colon having on baoard thc Isthmian Canal com mission and the board of consulting engineers returning from their tour of inspection. Thc chairman of en gineers said they had made a careful inspection but have come to no de cision as to thc lock or sea level plan and can say nothing about it until the report is made known. . Gen. James D. Glenn Dead. Raleigh, Special.-Just after mid night Wednesday General James D. Glenn, brother and private secretary of Governor Glenn, died as the result ol' an attack of acute indigestion suf fered Sunday., morning. . S.rx Burned co Death. St. Louis. Special.Mrs. Alice Hart man and her five children were burn ed to death and their home was des troyed by fire at Port Royal, a vil lage in Franklin county. Played With a Pistol. Anderson, Special.-While playing with a pistol late afternoon Weldon Kay shot and fatally wounded Joseph Shcdd at the Anderson cotton mill village. Shcdd lingered for few hours, and died. Thc coroner investi gated the killing Friday morning, but after having satisfied himself that it -.vas purely an accident ho decided not to hold un inquest, Boys boys lived in the mill vita and wm ab?ttt 13 y$m el aga* > ft Mimi im tifo PLANTER'S X LOAN ?ND * SAYINGS ? BANK, $ Augusta, Ga., ? i 1111 li I H 1111 ll H 1118111 t ni gum ii hf PAYS INTEREST I ON DEPOSITS t ACCOUNTS SOLICITED J" L. C. KAYNE, PBESEDEHT. Chas. C, Howard, $ CASKJLBB. '" '.???'.??.".i;.j.s:-irfjg?l-?; : 1 i' i. y ,Tir. ? . :: THE NATIONAL BANK i Sf AUGUSTA, GA, ! X. O. HAYNS, President. ! ; ; FRANK G. FORD, Caabkr. .. CAPITAL,.$250,000 \ ; ; Surplus and Profits, . .$140,000 ; . i We shall bo pleated to bare yon open aa acosta* > i ? with tai? Baak. Customers and eonesaooaaMD a? sji i , iuroJ of ey err coni-loay-and accommodatioa snssS? JL , , ble nader conservative, modern Banking mrftwOa JL 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniT VOL. 70. EDGEFIELD, S. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1905. NO. 49. 9 LABOR WORLD. Texas and Oklahoma farmers have labor unions. New York's bologna makers are thinking of going on strike. A union of shoe workers was formed lu 'Yanco, Porto Rico, recently. Laundry wagon drivers of Los An* geles, Cal., have been reorganized. The strike in Moscow ls spreading and agitators are openly preaching a revolution. The strike of workers in the harbors of Buenos Ayres and Rosario is still in progress. At Waltham, Mass., the Master Ma sons will hereafter be included in the Masons' Union. In Holland- the textile workers have an independent organization number : ing about 2000. The Strike Committee of the Social Democrats, of Germany, has published a report for 1904. To-day the miners' unions in Illinois hold nearly 250,000 of the best organ ized men in the world. The strike of carpenters and Joiners at Glasgow, Scotland, has been settled by mutual concessions. Victoria, B. C., has been chosen for the next convention of the Dominion Trades and Labor Congress. A $1,000,000 plant to employ 580O persons will be erected on Staten Isl and by the Proctor & Gamble Com i pany. The idea of compulsory insurance is being adopted against great opposition by several American labor organiza tions. - Residents of Elsdon, Ul., drove out of. town every non-union man ready to take the place of striking switchmen of the Grand Trunk Road-. William Huston^ a member of tho Na. tional Board of the United Mine Work ers of America, has been organizing the coke-workers in Pennsylvania, Palmetto Briefs. A Greenville special says: Super visor Walker has called the election to be held under the Brice bill provis ion for November 14. The South Carolina Temperance Law and Order League, will hold its second annual meeting in Columbia Wednesday night of fair week, the T. M. C. A. hall having been secured for the purpose. Where He Got Them* Jones sat working at his desk when a Hebrew flower peddler stuck his head in at the door and asked if he was going to the big Yale-Harvard football game on the morrow at New Haven, "if so, he would guarantee for $1 a bunch of twice as many violets as any one else. The offer was taken, the violets delivered and worn to the game by a young lady who not only used them that day but the following Sunday. A few days later the Hebrew again called, and Jones said those violets gave excellent satisfaction, but if you have no objections I would like to know how you were able to sell so many violets for so little money on a day when they command a high price. His reply was, "I get 'em oil corpses." Ming ? and accurate camera lan. Good enough to photographers, yet so can use it. % x 3X? inches. 1 ight with film I idges. I ;us lens, and shutter stops. t lodak Catalog FREE dealers or by. mail. VIAN KODAK CO., Rochester, N. Y. ?re. r annual he Edgefield ?st them call to see when in Augusta, iOODS: Dinestics to Finest Dress Goods, y are right. ?ERY: [ with the newest and latest styles. i Suifs from $2.00 to $18.00, Honks, Reefers, and Walking eadie's Skirts. e city from $1.10 to $5.00. Spreads and Comforts. in the price, quality or style, 3 and colors, t yrur rooney's worth. m THE SMALL FEEDER. The man wlio regrets seeing bis ant mais cat so much is the same fellow that regrets that his bank account ls so small at the end of the season. SEED POTATOES: Varieties of potatoes may be prevent ed from running out and even improved by selection. To select potatoes, dig by hand-picking which will separate and select the seed from the best hills. In a few years by this process the yield of merchantable potatoes can be vastly improved. OATS WITH GRASS SEEDS. If you want to get a quick lawn sow oats with your grass seed. The oats should be sown very thick, say five quarts of oats to one quart of grass seed. The ground should be smooth and well prepared. Then sow your seed, rake it i:a and roll over with a hand roller to make the ground level and free from lumps. When the oats, come up mow witb fhe lawn mower and you have a green lawn which will last all summer-until the grass gets well started-Embree B. White, in The Epitomist. ~ THE FOOD PLANTS OF BEES. You naturally ask what bees feed on. Well, there are the usual spring flowers and some fruit blooms, then comes red raspberry, and I want to say that the bees were just swarming on it in the woods. Then comes white clover; when it Is at Its beat, basswood begins to bloom. The goldenrod is just open ing; there are miles of it, and .sand wiched in with it are catnip, milkweed, thistles, buckwheat, etc. In short, lt is a wild feed instead of a cultivated one that we depend on. Those having fields of their own can take advantage of adverse conditions by seeding ground to honey-producing plants which will produce crops of forage and hay nearly equal In value to those now produced, and the added honey obtained from them by the bees will often more than balance any loss otherwise.-F. G. Herman, in the American Cultivator. A PROPER DRAIN. 0"pen sink drains are an abomination, yet they are found about many farm houses. A cesspool can easily be made by home labor, and a plumber's bil! for connecting it with the kitchen sink will not be large. Locate the cesspool on ground lower than the house. The opening should be some five by nine feet inside the stones, if in porous soil. Dig down about six feet and build up a wall, as shown, to within a foot and a half of the top of the ground. Lay cross pieces of heavy cedar across the narrow way,- cover"with cedar planks, "and on mes? pl?ceellrih M? Bod to' the level of the ground. The wall is not cemented. If the cesspool is lo cated in a gravel soil, it will seldom need cleaning out. CRIMSON CLOVER IN CORN. T. E. C., a Pennsylvania subscriber, writes me: I sowed crimson clover seed tn my corn at the last cultivation of the corn given in June. I sowed it ahead of the two horse cultivator, run at the usual d?p'th of about two inches. Do you think I covered it too deeply, as lt has failed to come up? As our season since the sowing of your crimson clover has been ideal for the crop, much more so than it has been for harvesting, I am inclined to think that the trouble lies not so much, in your work as in the seed. Crimson clover seed sown in Pennsylvania in .Tune was of necessity almost old seed. Being old, it may have been last year's or some other year's. I have frequent ly sown year-old seed with perfectly satisfactory results. I have covered good seed very lightly, covered it an inch and covered it two Inches or more, In such a season as the present, and have noticed no difference between the different depths; but my invariable rule now ls to cover it at least two inches when possible. In your case I am sure the trouble was In the low or nil vitality of the seed. Sowing this clover at the "laying hy" cultivation of the corn saves labor, and if it hits is all right, but when it misses, the labor has been saved at a cost of loss of seed and the very much greater loss of the crop. I prefer walting for the new crop of seed, and give the corn a special working to cover the seed. I am now (July 18) sowing my seed in twenty acres of corn, and covering with a one-horse harrow, expanded to fill space between two rows of corn. The later sowing has one disadvantage when the corn is large and a storm has blown it, a horse cannot be got through and that field wiil miss its clover and have to put up with a winter covering of rye. Seeds often disappoint us. Last year I bought more German millet seed than I got sown. One bag was carried over to this year, kept in a dry, warm room In store. This year a neighbor wanted some millet seed quickly, and got two bushels from my bag of old seed. He sowed lt lu good ground, and has ab solutely no crop.-W. F. McSparran, iu Tribune Farmer. "Unpaid0 Parliamentarians. * It is impossible to get together 2C0 M. P.'s, some of whom markedly dab ble in journalism,, writing "political notes" for one paper and "Par liamentary notes" for another, and yet secure secrecy as to the proceedings. London Saturday Review. Guanajuato, the ruined city in Mex ico, which was destroyed by a cloud burst, furnishes one of the ghastliest curiosities of the world. The New York iSun says: The not surprising excitement at Tokio simply proves anew that ?be whole world of human nature is akin, pagan and Christian mobs, as for example those of the draft riots la New York during the civil war, the pagan Japanese of Tokio .seem to have been les?> hysteri cal, less brutal and less Diocd-thirsty. Simultaneously with the Tokio des patches telling of tho riots there carno tho report of tho burning at th9 etsto ?? a negro in tax?? by a mob STOPS BELCHING Br ABSORPTION -MO DRUGS-A NEW METHOD. A Box of "Wafer? Free-Have Toa Acnte Indiceitioo. Stoinncli Tron?le, Ir regular Heart, Dilly Spells, * Short Broatb, Gao on th?. Stomach Bitter Taste-~Bad Brerrth-Impaired Ap petite-A. feeling of fullness, weight and ?iain over the stomach and heart, some i maa nausea and vomiting, also fever and sick headache? Whet causes it? Any orje or all of these: Excessive eating and drinking-abuse of spirits-anxiety and depression-mental ef fort- ipent?] tvorr]' and physical fatigue bad aiii-insufficient food-sedentary habitu -absence of teeth-bolting of food. If yon suffer from this slow death and miserable existence, let us send you a sam ple box of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers abso lutely free. No drugs. Drugs injure the stomach. It stops belching and cures a diseased stomach by absorbing thc foul odors from undigested food and by imparting activity to the lining of the stomach, enabling it; to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices, .which promotes digestion and cure.'i the dinease. SPECIAL OFFER.-The regular price o? Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box, bul; to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will ??'end two (2) boxes upon receipt of 75c. and this advertisement, or we will send you a sample free for this coupon. THIS OFFER MAT NOT APPEAR AGAIN', 10283 FREE COUPON 128 Send this coupon with your name and address and name of a druggist who does not sell it for a free sampl? box of Mall's Anti-Belch Wafers to i MULL'S GRAFF. TONIC Co., 328 Third Ave., Rock Island, Ul. O ive Full Address and Write Plainly. Sold by all druggists, 50c. per box, or sent hf mail. The Interstate Commerce Commis sion resumed the investigation into private refrigerator car lines. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature's great remedy-Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lang troubles. At drug gists, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. Sir Henry Irving, the foremost English actor, died suddenly at Brad ford, England, aged 6" years. p - BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA Fnce Llko Kaiv Beef- Thought Sho "Would Loso Her liar-Hen led Without a Blemish-Mother Thanks Cut leura. "My little girl had eczema very bad when she was ten months old. 1 thought she would lose her rizht ear. lt had turned black, and ber face was like a piece of raw meat, and very sore, lt would bleed when 1 washed her, and 1 had to keep Hoths ou it day and night. There was not a clear spot on her face when 1 began using Cuti eura Soap and Ointment, and now it is completely healed, without scar-or blem ish, which is more than 1 had hoped for. (Signed) Mrs. 'Rose Ether, 201 Eckford St., Brooklyn, S. Y." The Pekin robin is becoming naturalized in the parks *?f London. How's This? - -- We ofter One Hundred Dollars Reward toe anyoaseof Cutarra thai cannot bo cure!by Hall's Catarrh Cura. F. J. CHENET ? Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F.J. Cheney tor the last lt,years,andbellevohim perfectly honorable in all business transac tions andllnauciaily able to carry out any obligations made 'w their Arm. WEST <fc Tauxx, tioleaale Druggists, To? ledo, O, WELDING, ?INNAN .t MARVIN, Wkolesab Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cur?is taken Internally, a it? Ingdirootly upon the blood and macoussur laces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price,75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Peacock feathers are said to bring ill luck. v FITSperrnanently cured. Ko Ats or nervous ness after first dav's use of Dr. Kline's Great Ken-eRestorer,'S2trialbottleand treatise free Dr.E. H. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phlla.,Pa A bee, unladen, will fly forty miles aa hour. Mrs Wins ow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething 'ofteusthegnms.redncosiuflamraa tion.nlla' s naJn^ures wlndcoHc.Mc. a bottle The bijreest cannon ball ever made weighed 2600 pou:.ds._ riso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken >! ,facoughcure.-J. Wi O'BRIEN 322Thirl Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn.. Jim. b.l lJ), The Russian alphabet contains thirty five letter? H. F. GREEN'S SONS, of Atlanta, Ga., ?ire tho only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. Petition Six Miles Long. Six miles is the length of a petition promoted by the Brtish national ca nine defense league in support of Ihe bill for the prohibition of the vivisect tion. of dogs. A STRONG STATEMENT By Col. J.. M. Guffey, Democratic Nation, al Committeeman of Pennsylvania. Col. J. M. Guffey, of Pittsburg, Dem ocratic leader of Pennsylvania, and one of the greatest ^i^^Sp^l^ Producers in t?e ^BAT9=world of oil, coal ar I gold, writes: Gentlemen: lt is a m pleasure to endorse S Doan's Kidney Pilis. Having found th em ig of great value I have always been glad to recommend them to my friends. They are excellent. (Signed) J. M. GUFFEY. Doan's Kidney Pills, a specific for backache, bladder troubles and all kid ney disorders, are sold by all dealers. Fifty cents a box. Foster-Mil burn Co.. Buffalo. N. Yi Linking of Coincidences. Fire broke out on the roof of F. E. i"ou*g's blacksmith shop at Enosburgh Falls, Vt., on July 25. Exactly three years previous to a day a fire broke out on the same roof in the same spot and, stranger yet, the same customer, Edward Brady, was having his horse shod at the time. BACK OF ME ATKINS SAW Twc centuries of patient and conscientious effort to produce tho best Saws in the world. Teu generations of blood and brains. The largest plant in the world exclusively devoted to saw-making, employing many hundreds of high-class, high-priced craftsmen and equipped with costly special machinery. A world-wide business aggregating many millions of dollars every year. A reputation built up through two centuries of steady growth, valued more highly than any other asset of this greiit institution. The guaranty of this Company, which is respected thc world over. We make all types and sizes of saws, but only one grade-the best. Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor Scrapers, etc., are sold hy all good hardware dealers. - Catalogue ou request. E. CATKINS CSL CO., Inc. j Largest Ssw Manufacturera in thc Worl.l. Foetory nu] Executive Offices, Ind?nr.poli?, India BRANCHES: New Yorfc, (Jnlpstfo, Miimeupoli fortland, (Oregon!, Beattie, fcsn Krancivco, Memphis atlanta uno Toronto, [Cacada) A?rtbt H? SybilNe^Inib? en ita Alkl? Brand fited, Nezvous Mothers MaKe Unhappy Homes-Their Condition Irritates Both. Husband and Children-How Thousands of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous Prostration and Made Strong and Well. A nervous, irritable mother, often on the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care for children ; it ruins a child's di.sposi tion and reacts upon herself. The trouble between children and their mothers too often is due to the fact that the moth er has some female weak ness, and she is entirely nnfit to bear the strain upon her nerves that govern ing children involves; it is impossible for her to do anything calmly. The ills of women act like a firebrand upon the nerves, consequently nine tenths of the nervous prostration, ner vous despondency, "the blues,'' sleep lessness, and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. Do you experience fits of depression with restlessness, alternating with extreme irritability? Are your spirits easily affected, so that one minute you laugh, and the next minute you feel like crying ? Do you feel something like a ball ris ing in your throat and threatening to choke you ; all the sensss perverted, morbidly sensitive to light and sound ; pain in the ovaries, and especially between the shoulders ; bearing down pains; nervous dyspepsia, and almost continually cross and snappy ? If so, your nerves are in a shattered condition, and you are threatened with nervous prostration. Proof is monumental that nothing in the world is better for nervous prostra tion than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound ; thousands and thou sands of women testify to this fact. Mrs Chester Curry, Leader of the Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 42 Sara toga St., East Boston, Mass., writes: , Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "For eight years I was troubled with ex treme nervousness and hysteria, brought on by irregularities. I could neither enjoy life nor sleep nights; I was very irritable, nervous and despondent. "Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound was recommended and proved to be the only remedy that helped nie. I have daily improved in health until I ara now strong ana well, and all nervousness has disap peared." Mrs. Charles F. Brown, vice-Presi dent of the Mothers' Club, 21 Cedar Terrace. Hot Springs, Ark., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I dragged through nino years of miserablfl. existence, worn out with pain and nervous ness, until it seemed as though I should fly. I then noticed a statement of a woman trou bled as I was, and the wonderful results she derived from Lydia E. Piiilcham's Vegetable Compound, I decided to try it. I did so, and at the end of three months" I was a different woman. My nervousness was all gone. I was no longer irritable, and my busband fell in love with me all over again." Women should remember that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the medicine that holds the record for the greatest number of actual cures of female ills, and take no substitute. Free Advice to Women. Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., invite? all sick women to write to her f oradvice. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experience with female troubles enables her to tell you just what is best for you, and she will charge you nothing for her advice. Ask Hrs. Pinkham's Advice-A Woman Best Understands a Woman's Ells. Is the Best Remedy on Earth. Kills a Spavin Curb, or Splint Very Penetrating. Kills Pain. fiRrEARLS/stO?r?.eirrAt?AriY'Srrl?Er; ??| ?? PRICE:, .? . 0 CURE THE GRIP IN ONE DAY IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, m GOLD, HEADAOHE ?HD NEURALGIA. . "..^ ^ , 1S, ryvpn I won't sell Aatl-Grtptnc ton dealer -who won't Guarantee lt. HAS NO GQIiAL FOB Hr?DAlfiflE mVC< Cal1 for your M03??Y BACK IP IT BOESX'T CUKE. "-?ygyV _F>^ F. W. meiner, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Mo. Our "SIMPLE SELF-INSTRUCTOR.' Wm thom* any Chord M #A* TVa?* mr Qegmnjvf* *r tttmin *' fA* ttSBMBU **** ?**.n*m. OS lt: lU ClOtttU. wfcM *rur1??ml?U A? Uti tM ??Ml *\mjU LUAJ I mt m,m* C C n?n* tm* Hukr, Url HC *riwc T?w IMCTW mr li wwtfc MO *. Ul ?urfi*j lt U\r* to ji* j ?lu 4m' C K DWlte, Um* *M?i C ?ultf "Twll^WI. UiOttUt it \m* mmt\ lit tiru ImpfU? lt UMtUffe *U ifekfkit k*MMU*W?%?m4 fljuu uU IM? lim to mtm pi*1 Hm .Wi? milk in ?**" Mu* miktt UfWra Git tfctM Ow Ctori I? . tmU*4?4 ?Ut OM tor RM? wt Or?* a? Pilli i imri mitt muf, Wftto itt tpttitl pm** MkuWU OPCOIAL SIXTY DAY OPFTfl : TV. ptitt mt mmt (MtrMtor li il I?. Ut il ff* ?nfl ?rito H mr%mi??t to tl** tl lt few ?J f?w (riataft. WM Mt fkcM If O-SflM. vt *H ftU jr% Mt M rttt'tfi ti 2 ??*?* nff+A, *t lt tmt M<M ?to?**. J i i mt mt tau, fW/r Music CoMTAtty. 0 CHARLOTTE, sonni MIOU.VA. The Genuine T0WER5 HAS BEEN ADVERTISED . AND SOLD FOR A QUARTER OF A (MUE LIKE ALL asm lt ii mode of the best materials, in black or .yellow, fully guaranteed, and ?old by reliable dealer* eyer/where. STICK TO THE - SIGN OF THE FISH. ITOWPR CANADIAN COLiMIWL A.J.TOWER CO. TOBONTO. CAM. ?03TON.MAJJ.UliC COM: Y ISLAND SOUVENIR POST CARDS. Six beautiful colored srens? for ?Sq. . Coney Island Postal Card Co.. Coney Island, ??.?. '3-i?&'3? SHOES B W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to "^SUp+^j?&f? their sex, used as a douche is marvelously sue cassini. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrhoaand nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL, USES _ For sale at druggists, ?0 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Pre?. THC R. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON, MASS. WU! TP Q A PHY Shorthand and Bookkeeping, ihhhu??ril L A thorough business course, Railroad accounting. Ourgraduates cover the South: Position?? guaranteed: catalogue free. AMERICAN TELEGRAPH AND COM MERCIAL COLLEGE, Mllledgeville, Gt?. ?I MT PH Address of Ol persons o? fin I KU" liait Indian blood who are H ll I tm h! not living with any tribe. (S) of men who were drafted in Kentucky, (B) of mothers ol! soldiers who have been denied pension on account of their re marriage. (I) of men who serv ed in the Fed eral army, or (fi) the nearest kin of such soldiers or sailors, now deceased. NATHAN BICKFORD, Attorney, Wu* li int to ii, ll. C. CURED G ? v a 8 Quick Relief. Removes all swelling in S to 20 days ; effects'a permanent cure in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment given free. Kothingcan bc faire? Write Dr. H. H. Greon's ConG, ! SD eel a ll sis, Box B Atlanta. Qa reestablished Ju ly 6.187?. W. L. DOUG LA S MAKES ANO SELLS KORE MEM'S S3.BO SHOES THAN AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. $1 fl linn REWARD to anyone who can vj>IU,UUU disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ex cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 shoe In the world. They are just as good as those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 -the only difference ls the price. If I could take you Into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In the world under one roof maklng*men's fine shoes, and show you the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is mode, you would realize why Wi L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced in the world. If 1 could show you thc difference between the shoes made In my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on th? market to-day. W. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoes for Mon. $2. GO, $2. OO. Boys ' School & Oreas Shoos,$2.5Q, $2, $1.75,$1.BO CAUTION.-Insist upon haring 'W.L.Doug, las shoes. Take no substitute. Nono genuine without his naine and : 1 ice stamped on bottom. WANTE O. A shoe dealer in every town whert W. L. Douglas Shoos are not sold. " Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon request. Fast Color Eytlrts used; they will not wear brassy. Writ? for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. W.I.DOUGLAS, J?rockton, Hass. So. 43. .MM8 WHIR?,JU flSE FAILS. Bc&Coagb *f?p, 'vueles ioocLi i ?;x A century's experience with successful results is the be,-it testimonial. Sold bv all druggists, Crab Orchard Waler Co., LOUISVILLE, KV,