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ARP ON THAT FIGff Not Disgusted With Tillman For Bis Fight in the Senate. FORMERLY WAS GREAT WRONG But Nowadays Most riembers of That August Body Get There On Account of Their Wealth. I was ruminating about the fight. It is common property and everbody has tho right to talk about it. Tillman did wring in Jumping over three desks to strike McUaurin. About one desk was the limit of property. Three desks gives ?. man time to cool and that makes it | against the law to fight. As to the time j and place, that is or no consequence now. There was a time in the days of j Webster and Calhount and Tom Hen- , ton and Henry Clay when the United j iStates senate was ,as sacred almost as j a church, but now a large majority of , Its members get their places by conduct indefinitely more disgraceful than ' fighting. Bribery and corruption have got so common that a man can't get there without using a big pile of money and making a lot of promises. Of course, I do not include our southern r%pnntnrQ for thnv lmvon'f trr\t tVir* money. If we had some millionaires in Georgia, Clay and Bacon would have to stop down and out. And I am not so disgusted with Tillman for fighting in the senate chamber. He had reason to | believe that his partner had received | promises, and I reckon ho had. lie certainly had great expectations or he would not have flopped over to th" re- j publicans so suddenly. Politicians have to be paid for their votes. Tillman is :i true man, but he is not a great and good man. I admire him for some traits In his character. He cannot be bribed or intimidated. He dares to say what he believes and he uses his pitchfork with impo.rnlty. He is impetuous and com- j botlvo. but he is sincere and everbody j admires a sincere man. Sincere is one j r*.f fhn ctrAH*A(it ?wl ' ... ...... omuubcdi ?-?'?? i?-o?. nuiuo 1" ul" j language. It literally means unsealed? without wax?for In the oldon times loiters were sealed with wax, but 1' It contained no secrets It was not sealed j at all, for wax cost money. Tillman is-j a bold, defiant, stubborn man, but bo . Is not great. A great man like Webster or Calhoun would have said to Me- i I-aurln, "Well, sir. If I nm a liar 1 do- \ nerve the epithet. If 1 am not. then you deserve It. but I shall not stoop to give 1 It." I wish we were all . that great. This thing of resenting the charge of lying with a blow Is a strange perversion of propriety. A man may gain his ; ends by cheating, swindling, overreaching hypocracy, bribery or concealing tho truth, but you must not call hiir a liar. He may break all the command- , ments. but dont call him a liar, though that is not in tho Decalogue. AH that I recrc't about the tight Is that Spooner did not rail Tillman a liar anil get manle.1 for it before McLaurin canto in. I wont somebody to wh'p Spooner. TTe was the teaser that brought on the fight and was delighted that it oecnrrew between the two Carolina senators. With his party It Is no cimn to shoot down trn thousand Filipinos, who ro- | fuse to give up their country, but it shocks them awfully to have & litttc fracas In the senate chamber. v Well, there are some great men end there are many good men. but greatness and eeodmss are rarely combined, i Addison says It tabes both to make n man cotnoWe. Such, for examole. as Washlnrten and Robert E. T.ee. Job says gres.t men are not always wise and he mlrrbt ^"Ve added most of tHr.-ri mean. srl^sh, heartless and abmitloua. Lord Bacon. for instance, who bank bribes wMlo on the bench, and Cromwell and VanoVon. Webster was a very great n*an and long has been my ideal of creators. ITe was called the Ood- I like, but sometimes bis human nature 1 overcame bim. And so with Henry Clay and Hob Toamb^. The great weakness of t^e neoeh. is' Idolatry. Partisan or nect'onal or religions Idolatry. Every man who climbs high nn whore the pv-onie nn see h'in Is either n sn'nt or a s'nner. according to our politics, our sect'on. our creed. One man Idolizes the character of Lincoln or of Grant, finothcr holds ho'h nf them In fintempt. I suppose that thr* e-fourths of tho northern people pav 1 mnaco to the memory of old John Brown for what thev cull his rrv>:l Intentions. :uid every northern b'story and enrvdopelu apologizes fro* Mm. and even "rt rood <1 man as McKinley ore used himself for not nttend'nsr the reinterment of his bones on the ground ('"at the pressure of official d"t'es would not permit h'tn to leave Washington. V>*?s* port^e-n men still deno' neo John C\ Calhoun as The author o' seerss'ra and histlfy Sherman In bnn'ra Coh'tnb'a. Here In Georgia t^'s hlotatrv is <'-e ?':y *.ak'TV? shape in ocr silly hurrahs for our candidate 'a- "-vorrvor. M'1*. ns usual. Cm loudest s^e t-r-? hoy avrS ja gr'tld and .are dU'.s'mtdy m-oemd in sett'ne traps to eat eh Ihe nrr.ote. fSut this is the shadowy side of pol'tics end ! won't ruminate any further about If. If the ground was dry enough 1 would work some In tho garden, and not brood over thlnrs that will soon pass away. I thought lhar spring had rome two weeks a?o. and 1 exclaimed. "HaJl. gentle spring." But slm didn't hall?she only sleeted?and they say that old winter is lingering in her lap ? the old raseal. He ought to he ashamed of himself. My best relief nnd romfort Is to play with the gronehildrcn Our ltttta oC-1 '*? ' " A *? If'.' "??? iii.il ^ii? KJi, .? iroo i:uu HIT IllllC1 toolings hnrt. and is very indignant at what her Cousin Will sa'd. She told ;no about It: "Grandpa. I told Cousin Will that when ho pot to bo a van and I pot to ho a young lady, ho must msrry mo. and whnt do you think ho said?" "I don't know. What did ho say?" "Why, ho said ho would soc about it. Wasn't that mean? He ought tx> ho glad to marry mo. If ho don't mind, I will marry ray Cousin Ralph: and thon I re*d on . ho won't soo about it. He's mwn. o.in't he. grandpa?" Another: littlo chap was saying his prayers the oiher night and prayed for God to bloes grandpa and grandma and Aunt Mary and Cousin .^john and sovoral others, and then !;e mild-."That's all, Tx?rd. Ain't that all. I papa?" "No, you didn't pray for your I Otvtsin Jenny." "No. papa. 1 won't pray I 1*1 ? for her. she's mean; I wish God would I send a cow to butt her over." All of our little ones are going to school no>w. and.1 feel the'r consequence. I'm taking more interest in our public school than I ever did. Our 12-year-old. who lives with us. Is absorbed in her studies, and loves her books and her teacher, and is proud when she gets marked perfect or away up in the nineties. Of course I help her with her sums every night, for some ot them are verv hard, and sortor strain my old mind. Thero are fifty-three pupils in her grade (the sixth), and yesterday forty-six of them had the sums done onrrectly. and when the teacher asked those who had no help to hold veir bands en not a ^"nd was held up. They all had help. That makes fortyseven teachers for one grade and 1 am pleased to l>e one of them. 1 wish that the school teachers of these children could realize how much influence they have over their pupils. The teacher can make the school life of pupil pleasant or miserable, and I am glad to beliovo that our teachers are kind and conscientious. I have several grandchildren there, and I take note of their prog-ess The days of old Isliam are past. The old man was a stem and rigid disciplinarian. Ho wore slippers in the school room, and sometimes world slip up behind a boy who was making horses or docs on his slate and would suddenly mash the boy's face down on the slate and rub the pictures out with his uose. He used to have fights with the big boys, and loved to maul obedience into the-ir rebellious souls, ami there was Reman and Judge Warner and my father and William H. Seward, all yankees, who had to subdue the big boys by hard fighting, and if a teacher couldn't whip a boy and subdue him he was turned off as incompetent. My opinion is that I got mo3t too much whipping when I was a school boy. 1 still remember how John Norton whiplied me on a boil and bursted it. and I ran homo yelling and my mother cried as she doctored it up and my father made me co back. Rut John Norton was a good teacher, and he had a hard t.ime with Jim Wilson and Jim Craig and Jim Ward law and my brother Jim and Jim Alexander, the doctor who diod last fall in Atlanta, and several other Jims. I never knew a boy named John who wasn't develish at school. Verily there is something in a name, and now Jim Smith is going to run for governor. Better not tell a lie on hint; he would jump over forty desks to whin a man?Bill Arp in Atlanta Constitution. An effort is now being made by the London school board to provide special sc hools for crippled children. Since 1M92 special classes for mentally and physically defective children have i>rt>n in operation, nut the mingling of the mentally defective with the crippled children had a most unfortunate effect upon the latter. Chiefly through the instrumentality of Mrs. Humphrey Ward, who is connected with a settlement at which a very successful school for crippled children has been maintained, the law was amended so as to permit the board to establish separate schools for crippled children. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. fentral Time at Jacksonville nnd Savannah. Kaitet n Time at Other Points. Srhrduh In Klfect Juno Moth, lft'l. north notryn. No.:u No a# j Daily Daily Lv. Jacksonville (K SI 8ooa 746p " Savannah ^So. Ky.j U'Aip 12:iua " Ham wo. I U.VSp i i.sn " Blnokviile 4 12p 4 2>a Ar. < '..;iunl)ia_ f?..up 6 15a Lv. Cliam-ion. ,So. Hy 7 Ova 11 <wp " Summer villo 7?aiaK?s " rl: nnolivtl.o 9 OJft 2 Uun Oi nncoburjj <i 2Sn . 4.r>a " Kline villi' 1j . la 4 0>* WnMumlito .. 11 Ki? J> -ton Lv."An.".is;a, (So. By.*) 2fiop ?jop Lv. Hrnur.ovillo I! 2>p lo 15y Lv.Aikeu ;<nop Lv. 1 ronton H.Vip 11 OUp ' Johnston 4O.'p 11 2op .... Ar. (Columbia f> 4op 2 hia L\. l .\iiiil.ia, .Bid* Si o.Vip 0 25a " NViiinaboro (I.Hip 7 25a . " Ohener 7aNp 8 i;H| Koole 11111 85 >p 8 08a[ Ar. Charlotte UQdp 9ft5a| Ar. Danvil.6 'u'toa T"..27>i AV. Kioiuiiontl fluua iM.^p) Ar. Washington TTtxip " Baltimore (Pa. Bit) V l&R 11 8.~>p " Philadelphia ll:t'?o 2.Via " New Y rk , _ j nap u aia Lv. Co uun Ma ..".... .7.7 11 3ja"7 20ai Ar. Spartanburg H iilp 10 2ua Abbeville 7 I5p 2 0jp j Ar. Kiiorviiie 4 uAa 7 loj | Ar 1'un'inna i " T.wp b lua At. l.ouiayiEo ....... , ,vjp "JTiua socTiinouNn. N?33|No.!15 Daily Daily *?v. l."iiii.i;i<' . T'ifia 7 ;i7j> ~~ Lv. Cincinnati TToi *1Tu6 > 7" Lv. KnoxviLe 1 ;k4?| ? 2.? ' >?iievu..t ? (finl 3UJn .... " binnunbhrg l>dSa fll.St) .... Ar. ( ? umhia 2 lljw 9duu w iyrk(l a.it.ct) I i>my Ul..ut " 1 Oi?>i? U injo " P-aillinoro A'-Vp Lv. \. aahl > < n r'o.Kyl | itiiup 11 l.? Lv, Ki' anntfij. . ...... ^ iiajpjirLim Lv .m . .. _4.fia'.> i'.> Lv. iJivuri .t o , a-u? WoiiG ""rk Hill 0 lun lu ij> " Chester I* 44K 11 lip \\ mnabnro b> 1.'oln AH, Qpivunbut, (Bldg St...... II 86a 1 (fin Lv. Ooiuinuin, (U. D.) llu?n 8 5i? " Johnxioa 140y iiu'4 1 rrulon 1 52-, fi ffla Ar. Aikon 2?>v 7 ikn Ar. Grnnlteville 221p rt& n .... Ar. Aayum ao.p 7 ..(? ... Lr. f joitanibin (ho. Ky) jUr? 1 ..j, Kingvilie 3?}p 2 |Ka " Ornn^oburg 4 4 >p 3 4.V, ** Hrnn. hvliin 5 25p 4 27.1, Huimnorville i\4^ 6 57u if. Charleston 7S0p 7tk?a Cv. Oolunibta (So. ity.) 1 fik?n 1 loo TTT! ' Blarkvillo imp 2 6i? " Barnwell 1330 3 07b !!... Savannah .. Uifip1 4 .Vjo .... Ar. Jftckionvillf (P. 8.) . .. ?4?tp if Ita Car Service. Exoollont daily i>nai?ongor Mtrvioe between Florida and New York. Viw X.< iin.l A1 N...... ...j ui.jj. ? 41- M m >41 n null r liiruiA bl pro-* l)rawinir-r?>oin a.eoplng ears betaroo: Augusta and New York. Pullman drawing room sh oving cars between Port Tampa. Jaek sonviile Savannah \\ aV itigtonnnd YVw York Pullman sire iiig en in between Charlotte nn< Kmbmond and ' narlotte and Norfolk. Dinint tars l*<t\ve< n i hnrlotte and Savannah. Nos. it> and .vi?U. M. Fast Mail. Throng! Pullman drawing-room butYot sleeping ear*lie twoon Jacksonville ami New Yorlc aud Pull man sl< eiungears between Augusta and Char lotto and Oharlotto and Kiraniond. Dinini ?ars ixirvo uU tuoala enroute Pullman sloop tog car.* boWvou .Jacksonville and Columbia tnrouro daily between JuoksonyHloandCincin oafi, via Ashcvllle. riiA.N'K 8. CANNON, 8. H.DAT*?ff"iCK, Third V-P.JkUen. Mgr., t*?n. Pas Agt., I Washington, l) 0. Washington, I). (' V,. 11. T A -< 'E. H. W. HUNT, As'VCon. i'ns*. Aipt., Lhv. Pass. Ag't.. Atlanta, lia. Charleston, 8. C. ^ ! I _ l Coughs j "My wife had a deep-seated cough 8 for three years. I purchased two 8 bottles of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, I large size, and it cured her com- g pletely." S J. H. Burge, Macon, Col. 9 Probably you know of 1 cough medicines that re- | lieve little coughs, all 1 coughs, except deep onesI 3 The medicine that has I been curing the worst of I deep coughs for sixty S years is Ayer's Cherry a Pectoral. Three ?!xes: 25c., SOc., SI. All ?Jrn?ir.ts. 3 ? 1 K Consult your doctor. __ If ho *nys tako It, gt men no m nn says. u no ;cim you not I] B to take It. then rtor.'t take It. Ilc kuuvri. R I L?a>-It wl.h him. Wo ate willing. B J. C. AY Kh CO., Lowell, Mass. D " " "Tm 1 HS Galls on our ?'orso or Mule nuioklj cured with Or. DiiulcU' *.?? 1 t urn. II Dca ere. ?r pent hy mall with Dr. an.el9bnok,"i lien os of Horses. > utt'.C. >hoei> ami serine and II w to Tr.vit Them." upon receipt uf 25 cculi. A. C. 1WMLLS, 1 StanlCord St., 1IOMMX, <TI ASS STUDY LAW " our < o iris. K.tsy | terms Entc now. Only thee In '.mm t , need apply. Add ess W.(i,t ULLINUS, I Ho* GUI. NOIt t OltK, VA. IFK&3A! Ji^RtDSEALSHOIS ypm ncsi < 011101 t*yri!i>. Tn>lo? I.<><?:. I'm i --i! llcj In lima Sold liv rtru7Kl*-t-. pHI ^pKi2jj?g3!Ea2^si^a DO YOU SHOOT If vou do ycu Should send your na winch GUN CATALOGUE. It illustrates and describes allihediffei Ammunition, and contains mucll valu Winchester Repeating Arms Co.. hi ? r Koir.ethint; N< w o>i Jupiter. The great planet Jupiter has frequent surprises in store for those who watch it closely with telescopes. Its vast belts, composed apparently of cloiuls, are continually undergoing changes. anil occasionally an extraordinary apparition rewards tlio patient observer and sets j him to wondering what is happening on the giant planet. During the past summer a conspicuous dark spot has made its appearance in the southern hemisphere of the planet, and its motions are being studied with much interest by astronomers. Some twelve years ago a similar spot sud- ! dcnly sprang into view and drifted, with reference to the surrounding surface, very much as the present one is doing. When it passed the celebrated great red spot it seemed to ho driven from its course and afterward became strung out in a reddish strenlr If the new spot lasts until next July it will also overtake the red spot and may suffer a similar fate. Those things are interesting as occurrences on a world nearly 1,-luO times larger than ours. The Pepper of the Earth. This bright particular your.gster 1ms a patriarcliial wisdom concerning the things of this lite, although he occasionally permits himself an Inquiry into something not quite clear to him. One evening he was sitting with Aunt Mary and Aunt Lucrctia. Con versa- ; tion had turned to the subject of unmarried women, and the youngster listened intently. In a pause in tin- talk be looked up and asked: "What are maiden ladies?" Auut Mary replied: "They are ladies w ho never get mar. ried." The youngster's brow contracted, and Aunt Mary added, to make things clearer: "They are like Aunt Luerutia and me, the salt of the earth." Instantly the youngster exclaimed: "Then those who get married are the pepper. I suppose."?New York Post. Christ's call is His servant's eon secration. The shoemaker complains that his life ij awl work an<l no play. A Noted Teai-lier. Prof.Walter Wilson, of th<< Savannah High School,siiy.1?: *'t feel it niy duty to testify t<> the wonderful curative properties of Tetterluc. It cured In u few days my son. whoso feet weaffected with .stubborn skin trouble, afUjT*ainfT other remedies without any bene- I I(jp^60o.ft box by mail from .J.T. Shiiptrinc, Savannah, Ga., it your drug b t don't keep it. There 'B one titled person to every KtO untitled persons in Russ. t. Tyner's Dysnepsia Remedy Cures Sour Stomach and Headache. At I>ruRgiHts. ?0e. There are still districts in Italy where thejieoaants live on chfstnti' -. and acorns. Alcbastlnc. the only durable v l In*, takes tho place of scnlli \al- >m ne wall paper and paint fo v : ' t 1 b. used on plaster, brick, or ?p.;*v \ % v There is more Catarrh in this section of tho country thiui all other diseases put together, ami until tho lust few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors prououueed it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure v.-ith local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to bo a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, O., is the only constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally In doses from 10 drops to a teuspoonfu). It nets directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. Cue.m;v A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7.1c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The* Kaiser's motor ear is geared to four speeds, ranging from lliree lo forty nnlcs i m hour. Best For tlin Bowels. Nomattcrwtaat ails you, lieadacho to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels ire put right. Oascarkth help nature, cure o'.i without a gripe or pain, produce easy laluru! movements,cost you just lOcents to .art getting your health ba<-!;. Cascarrts .'andy Cathartic, the gen vine, put up in metal 1 ioxos, every tablet has C. C. C. stumped on , .t. He ware of imitations. The California giant trees, or Sequoias, | are. in th opinion of Richard T. Fisher. ! probablj oOOC years old. One of the Buenos Ay:v.? newspapers has i consultation room in which the poor can ;ot medical aid and medicine free. Ki'l'S permanently cured. N" tits or n-rvnnssi after Ilrst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great j NflrVeEPStOrnr.SSl rlfil hntu on.I Dr. It. II. Ki.iNK.Ltd./JSl AroiTst "philiL.'pa! He who laughs !ast is slow to see the joke. II. IT. Guken's Sons, of Atlanta, On.. are he only nil ssful Droe y Specialists in the vorld. See their liberal offer in ndvertisenent iu another eolumn of this paper It is proposed to increase the strength of the JSci|unn army to 180,000 men. We refund 1<D. for every package of Pittnam Kadki.v.ss l)\r. that fails to give satisfaction. ATouroe Drug Co.. Unionvillo, .Mo. It takes a level-headed man to survive .1 stroke of good iorcune. Piso's I'll re eannot bo too highly spoken ot as a cough cure. .1. W. O'Dhien, 322 Third Vvenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn.. Jan. C, l'JOO Cupid and ihc burglar both laugli at locksmiths. 7 me and address on a postal card for a ; IT'S FREE. cnt Winchester Rifles, Shotguns and able information. Send at once to the New Haven, Conn. | v ^ - A -r "T^ , v n I ;vc:.v 1-1 r I D <// ?x ?' A ' r v " v vr -inn niq >x'l ^ Corn removes lrom the soil a m f htr^c quantities of |P Potash. I AltA plictl, must furnish | 9 Cn?U'^1 ur l'lC I- ffr \ laiul will lose its profiLr\? P.'*ad carefully our books i * on cr<#i?s?sent fyer. m&m t;l UM\N KAl l WORKS, Bf i ^ ' 1 J ; Nassau St., New York. S'inv USEGAPUDINE is 5 5 22 for i.aonirpk, colds, * r rt-.vr.iusiiNEss, a>m> all 6 KINDS HKADAOIIK* ... il M) KlMi l' %n COST. ^ Y Sot<l l?v nil Ilriiss'Al*. g S^lf-Threa-jire Sewing Wachine Heedie! Fi-n-iar- .11 iy * ill "n 1 you?iinplr pu ki*e assorted :ir Irs. iii\-n ii'rotum litue. A-t-ntA w:iut?*l. N?111 A utn;.i.. . !.* Co., Nbsa hi St.,N. Y. City t C I Hfl for "6 1 tf >" " <-:-im??; innko $li>0 lor *i u VJ MM o ? . (>wry vo l t.ny hh fcr toarh.nir yi o, w. 'll re untl jour tumicy. Send for tactn I <'. < V.lTTi:i\ 1'nUon If ill. H rfunond. V . D^HPQY NEW "'^"VEKYnni mtk Lt l IJ I Quick r" ii'f and ctirrs wont CAM** ll.>-k of tctlimoion i Mul |0 ilnym' IrcntniTit 1'r?T. l?r H H. OHIH'f M M, Boib! At ?nl?. (1? f.olil .lirtlnl nf 1 ii II it ut |..x|iti>*il tun. McILHENNY'S TABASCO Ml. 1<>. A Day's Work in Washington. In a latter from Washington. Rill Morgan notes (lie slow manner in vhirh luisln -as is transaeted in the national capital and gives the following story to illustrate it: State Senator ? itzpatriek of Kansas, was in Washington on department business. He couldn't get this business pushed through, no matter how much he hurried. One day he mot National Committeeman Dave Mulvane and complained that during the whole day he hadn't been able to accomplish a single thing. "Didn't you write a letter to your wife?" ashed Dave. "Yes. I ('.id." responded KitzpatricK. "Well, don't kick. You can only do on ? thing a day in this city, and you've done it.? Kansas City Journal. Sanetiflcation is not a shrinking i process. Alahnjdlne can *>e nHod over paint or p- p?r: paint <<r pnp-T ran hr? used ov-! :i? Ppv ?> :n flv( pound pa lc? ag> a, properly inle ci ., r.o suhaiitUU. Mrs. L. A.'Harris, ; of a Chicago AiVoman how Ovarian Trouble out a Surgical Opera " Doctors have a perfect era there is any trouble, nothing but hundred dollars and costs, and incl agony, and often death. " I suffered for eight years with of dollars for relief, until two doctc my only chance of life. 'My sister ham's Vegetable Compound and she strongly urged me to let pound. I did so as a last resort; tive Wash for five months, and was were over and my health restored. E. Pinkham's Vegetable C?ompoun would occur."?Mrs. L. A. Harris $5000 FORFEIT IF THE ABOt When women aie troubled wit menstruation, weakness, Ljucorrhoeo womb, that hearing-down feeling, ache, bloating* (or flatulence), genera prostration, or are beset witji such lassitude, excitability,irritability,nei "all-gone" and u want-to-be-left-alor they should rememl>or there is one Pinkham's Vegetable Compoum t. c c ICTARTLING *** Thousands of children a U> \ju Worms. Symptoms ape seldc ^ chiltl's temperament and upon the vai tines. Lose no time! Adopt .he safe * DR. BOYKIN'S > * A SURE. SPEEDY AND SAFE DE IN USE OVER 30 YEARS- AC< w 25= BEST VERMIFUGE KN m tflaaffiyiSfc c'jy , - i%\v T!i?|rfltfNtcr>M?f I VABWNa w* .^ronW largo gr?warn of aon HF?k-\y * Dar Brnwm yteWtaC ton? ? -SViL^Mrr. II will crow wh?r*rrr oV;? **" % Rrerr farmer ought lo plant I OnaUpw tain. spi Tha ureal reveal, producing fro* WWiiif .V' J of fc^' M i004 u tlmolhy. per TRIPLE IHCO jSkvLv^ rf<^y^1^T*\ ll.vw would JSO baab*l? p*r ncr?- iuii ?|) l^Wr V"' Hnlrcr-.corn.orta will pro rofxl JTrUFodder Plants, C. /H>^ ha** the largct nrrav of fo I * gy iVaw/ - "' r.rv: i^rvr^/._ ?Vf, '<. ft J / II?-a ''-1 Kal- and !>?arf \ ietoria It.. v. :v'.,: ,a * 7^>- lj*J\) * (Over .'.OUO.lK'O pound, .old tlic |-3?t Yr':?^Vj\^S VEGETVaEmrc lhc largest gmarra. Choice . 1 _ K* f *:": (*''*' *77"" Otir p*eat catalog w "J ^ ^?u(?hf THE LANIER SOUTHERN cWud/jiMd Q$a//(Y/e >1 A ("ON* OA. Thoronph In nl appointments IHiflncHS men re ojmlze < rr . IpiofnM ?m n testlmo* nliiI of nHIUy n'lil w rili .Ml hrim- lies taught Full Informntto i rlionrfallv furmahol. mmr Many aliments. particularly throat and !unc troiitil<??. ar nt'rlb'jtabic to unnanII ir;# wall cover!nn Alabaatlno has :r.i. rifmcnt of physloJauo and sanitarians. ^iiYiwfr>fT7fWffv7V?TV.'i i%i 'jsnnr-iTi _ n i Prominent Member 's Political Club, tells 5 may be Cured withtion. She says: zc for operations. The minute an operation will do them ; one luded in the costs are pain, and t ovarian troubles ; spent hundreds >rs agreed that an operation -vas had been using Lydia E. for her troubles, and been cured, the doctors go and try the Cornused it faithfully with the Sana> rejoiced to find that my troubles If women would only try Lydia id first, fewer surgical operations , 278 East 31st &t., Chicago, 111. HZ L.ETTER IS NOT GENUINE, h irregular, suppressed or painful , displacement or ulceration of tlio inflammation of (lie ovaries, haolcd debility, indigestion, am! nervous i symptoms as dizziness, faintness, rvousness, sleoplessn -ss, melancholy, ie" feelings, blues, and liouelesstiess, tried and true remedy. I.vdia E. d at once remove:; . " h troubles. arer-ttcttt-ttbf tk-C fc- v?- .. v. - FACTS. I lO re being gnawed to distraction bv nil reliable. They depend upon the riety of worms present in the iutesand sure course by usiny m VORM KILLER. ? STROYER OF-* THESE MONSTERS. ''J SEPT NONE BUT DR. BOYKIN S. * OWN SOLD EVERYWHERE. * ulzers# eeds m Vitus I VERMIS Hie orninrr. We are ihc lrtrMn-?r? and the J ^A* \tV ?? tor ?rr<t til America. We ?r? | ra.l.j,,\rier yCV^. |\V f har uit l??t? au?l lota of p*?t.ira r-id- ? p+r'&ifo A W^XNJj ?< it l? {bund. It fa nit acrt-u itmal wonder. Vv';? ) Uw<wH}j It It la a aunty maker Try U fur lui;. '?*\ arx p ft to SO ho^he'e ef f rain on 1 A teat firt. We are the luir?>duccr*. \ \?'y ;30 IRE CORK ' '! ?? " prleMof wn? I farrioia it*,.. < ?iaio| telle. X \^V os and Clover fJ;i? fo'iod In *nr c&Utagn? v * \ the Mtt?n;ifl<ti ri and /I r> A'P'?C-7'' *s*KiAiJ I ?l.?rf rvrodnoe* Kf f 3 ft. Itf o.it *!*< 8 tan? of ha* r >*r '-Q^>^ *1/ ><C " \ c.v&B> Stt? =?WSK " nUn ?*r.l at t>ut*rte. and up ft |<-an* %n?t itiMT Athfr ibooit --?^, ' *t0 jej Ufticrt. iL? kind ih? mftxkftl Wi MTi n t vorxG i's;<?ps.k All I Ml ' who want. t-> make lnu'l/ the most >.f life.-?tad? Book it ? ? i? 1 iiii, 1*1- ii inn iixlit (>, khnrllinnd, Arliluin lir. ? ?? ., V__^T HO.HIC uuJ'T tilt, guidance of EXPlHiEilCEI) TEA? HKU-i. Drake-Bridge School, Room 560, 160 Flf li Avonuo, Nk\\ YORK CITY. T^jyXT"! ?j^ESTER ION TON CORSETS STRAIGHT FRONT e the result of 50 years of experience good corset making. Ask your dealer show them to you. Do not take any ?ers. )YAL WORCESTER CORSET CO Worcester, Mass. Alafcoattne paeVig-es have full d!rp<*tlona Anyone e*n brush It on. Ark pa,"'. Daler for tint on d. "Alaboatlne Rr.>." froc. AlahastJno Co., Orar.d Rapids, MlcU. i : ^ . ? 1 A ; H