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r l '. vt Vent For the KonMi. Ko matter what ails yoa, headache to a *n?*sr, you will never get well until your bowels ate put right. Cascaukth help nature, cure 1 yon without 'a gripe or paiD, produce cosy tuUnra.l movoments, cost you just lOcents to start getting your health buqlt. Cascaiikts Oandy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal fcasKo, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on JL IVware of imitations. The infant named for a great statesman mr hero often carries the name to oblivion. u?rii<?i iiumiun millet. Win you be short of hoy? If bo, plant a ' pfcnty of this prodigally prolific millet. 5 to ? tons of rich hav per acre. Prlco, 60 lbs., 4LS0; 100 lbs., eS.Od; low freights. John A. Saber 8ood Co., La Crosse, Wis. A It has been observed that, as a rule, aingk women live longer than aingle men. Fmrsix FanxLxaa Dtxs do not stain the Xkantls or spot the kettle. Sold by all druggtat?L The duration of an ordinary wink is fourtMmthM of a second. TITS permanently cured. No fitsornervouskwi after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Grout Bhr-/voiles tor or. flit rial bottle and treatisufroo JDr. U. IL Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., l'a. Most spiders have eight eyes, although onrrve speci%> have only sir. Ido not bollovo Plso's Coro for Consumption has an nnual for coughs and colds?John K_ JJoyku, Trinity Springs, Ind., Fob. 15,1900. j The medical profession furnishes the i greatest number of suicides. Hopes may be blasted without the use tlynamite. AT MHAKKSl'KARK'S 1IOME. " Stratforil-on-A von." T am finishing a tour of Europe; tho best ftlxtag I've hail over hero Is iv box of Tetterlno S' brought from home."?C. II. MoConnel). Mot. Economical Drug Co., of Chicago. III. 'Tnsllcriae ourcw itching skin troubles. 50c. a X)ti\ by mail from J.T.Shuptrlno, Savannah, tka.. If your druggist don't keep It. The original mince pie was made of mutand baked in the shape of a manger. Tjocr'a Dyspepsia Momedy Cures IrroguBai Heart Action. At Druggists, 50 cents. You c.an't make the father of twins bc?iere that a man cannot serve two masters. SlO.l Reward. SIOO. TNe renders of this paper will bo pleased to fcsorn that there Is nt least one dreaded dls'***+ > that sclenco has been ablo to euro in all ntetstageR, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh is the only positlv'o euro now known to *kr. medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con-.jCctutionnl disease, requires a constitutional fcjr*-tUment. Hall's CatarrhCure Is taken internally, acting directly upon tho blood und ranoucmsurfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving Ah* {ovtiont strength by building up the conijtatwtion and assisting nature in doing its work. Tho proprietors have so much faith In it? "curative powers that they offer One Hunifcr l Dollars for any case that it falls to cure, for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold bv Druggists, 75c. EiaU's Family Pills ore tho bost. Tho use of "K Plurlbus Unum" on ! coin was never authorized by law. Its finvt. known use was on a New Jersey i??nt struck off in 1776. Cabinet Ministers in Mexico receive 3tr>.uC") a year. Sfceep-strallng is not soul-saving. TO MOTHERS 3Irs. J. H. Hashing, of Chicago, 4 111., President Chicago Arcade Club, Addresses Comforting Words to Women Regarding Childbirth. ** Dear Mrs. PuriinAM : ? Mother? not dread childbearing after they < "kotow the value of L.ydi(i E. Pink- j flam's Vegetable Compound. While I loved chlldron I dreaded tlio rvlcal, for it left me weak and sick MRS J. II llASKiKS Ibr months after, and at the time I | th ought death was a welcome relief; but before my last child was born a I ( jikmI neighbor advised I.ydiali.Pink* , VcRCtivblc Compound, and } A used that, together with your Pills anil Sanative Wash for four months before the child's birth;?it brought m* wonderful relief. I hardly had an j ache or pain, and when the child was ( bra days old I left my bod strong in health. Every spring and fall I now take mbottlcnf Lydin IS.Plnkhain's Vegetable Compound and liiul it keeps ' jnr in continual excellent health."? 1 Jfns. J. II. IIaskins, 3248 Indiana Ave., ( ><Tlvir?go, 111. ? $5000 forfeit If above test I mo- j mimt is not <jermlr>9. ' <*are and careful counsel is ! what the expectant and would-be ' another needs, and this counsel j she can secure without cost by writing to Mrs. l'inklmm at Xornn. Mass. soriEs?'u7r,UT,rrj" ' ft w57 v\ Wrlto for rr1< n>. JK88H. MA HI) F.N , .t0?-4 ! '.! s. ? bivrl-? St.,DAUT!Mour. Mu. HPftPQY NEW ?If COVERT; *>* <> , 4^ % \/ C? I quick ro'lof ontl rurrouorM ?? ? Hunk of totlinnni* *nd IO iln * *" Irrnlmml ' Irrr. Dr R H. OIUk'1 IOKI. toil! \Unit. (it I MO. 11. Hold Meilnl nt liultulo F.xpoot (Inn. McILHENNY'S TABASCO .??Baj^a?E5Effip^ ; (VM CUHtS WHtftt Alt USE fAILS. KS <fi5a Hurt Coutih S> rup. TaxM* Oood. Cm) R In time. fold hr .l'uiif into. F. }Uv?Sm7S? i Thompson's EyoWalor t ARP'S MARCH TALK Bill Does Not Like the Month of Bluster. THEN ME WRITES OF MYTHOLOGY ' Tells How the Month Got Its NameThen He Tells Some of the Stories of Mythology* March has no friends. It is a disagreeable, uncertain. blusterlug month. It was named for Mars, the God of War. who was the son of Jupiter and was always hunting around lur a ngnt. He was believed to be the | father of Romulus, the founder of the | Roman Empire, and hence was held ; in great reverence by the Romans, ' March was named for him. Those old ! Greeks and Romans had no weeks? nor days of the week?no Sundays or I Mondays or any other day, but they divided time by Calends and Ides. The | Calends were the first days of the j month and the Ideas were the fifteenth. All the intermediate days 1 were designated by these, as for instance, the third day after the Calends of May or tho fifth day before { the Ides of March. The Roman Senate always began its sessions on the Ides of the month, except that after ! Julius Caesar was murdered the an- J niversary of that dav tho idoa ?.f i March were observed as a sacred 1 day. I want the young people to know and remember that we got our months | from Roman mythology and the days j of our weeks from the Scandinavian mythology. Now listen to a part of I this wonderful story, for it is classic I and more dasciuating than the Ara- ! bian Nights. Two thousand years ago i it was the faith and religion of mil- j lions of people. Jupiter was the god of the Greeks and the Romans and , Woden was the god of the Norsemen j and each had a son who was the god I of war. There was the son of Woden. Wednesday was named for Woden and it was originally Woden's day. 1 Thursday was named for Thor and Friday for his mother. Each of these mythologies had a hades or infernal region for bad people and evil spirits. Pluto presided over the one and a woman named Hela over the other. That is where the word Hell came from. It seems an awful thing to put hell in charge of a woman, but they said that no man was as bad as a bad woman. Her father was named l,okl and she had two brothers. One was a i serpent so big and so long that it i wrapped around the world and then swallowed its own tail. The other was I wolf, so strong that he broke the j strongest chains just like they were cobwebs. Then Woden got the moun- | tain spirits to make another chain ( and they made It of six things. The : noise made by a cat walking, the 1 beard of a woman, the roots ot' stones, the breath of fishes, the smiles of bears and the spittle of birds. When the chain was finished it was as small and smooth and soft as a silken string, but no power on earth could break it. And so they chained him ami killed him. llut listen what kind of a homo Miss Ilela had. Hunger was her dining table. Starvation was her | knife. Delay was her man servant? , Sloth her maid servant. A precipice | was her door step. Care her bed, and Anguish the curtains to her bed J chamber. No wonder she was cruel , and always wore a stern, unhappy j and forbidding countenance. This is Just a Bample of their my- j thology. It fills up several books. Now, where in the world did that peo , pie get all these wonderful stories, j Away back in the ages they must have had poets more imaginative 1 than Homer. Some of our most learned | men say they got the foundation of | many of them from the Bible. For J the story goes that away back in the ages the people got so bad that Jup!- i tor got dreadful mad with them and I resolved to destroy them. So ho summoned all the gods to come to him, and they came from al parts of the i heavens, traveling on the milky way, i which is the street of the gods, and i after taking counsel together they do- i tormlned to destroy all mankind and stnrt with a new pair. So Jupiter was about to launch a red hot thunderbolt j at the earth and burn it up .but one / af the gods told liim that he had better not, for he might burn up heav- i an. too. So he concluded to use ! water instead of fire, and then came ! the flood which drowned every human being except Deucalion and his wife, who were good people. They escaped ' t othe top of a mountain called Bar | nassus and were saved. That is very 1 much like the Bible story of the flood and of Noah and Mount Ararat. And t just so they got Hercules from Sam- : son and Vulcan and Apollo from Ju bal ami Jubal Cain, and the Dragon 'ro mthe serpent that tempted Kve. ' and the giants who tried to scale the j ivalls of heaven from Nimrod and his J ower. Kvory great henthen god had ' i favorite son just as our Christian Sod has a Son. There is something nihlime nnd comforting in even be J ievir.g or imagining that a great and ' rood being is somewhere in the heav as overruling the earth and its peo- ' >le, prospering the good and punish- ' ing the e\ 11. The fact that this all ! powerful being is invisible makes Hit ?xi8tence the more impressive. Jupiter <at enthroned on Mount Olympus. Woden hail a beautiful palace of gold , mil silver at Valhalla ami it coule I inly be reached by walking on a rain low. And we pray to our Clod, saving. 'Oil, Thou who dwellest in the henv , ins," and not in the temples made with hands. History gives no account if any people who did not put their | trust in some Ootid, and tilts proves mr confession of weakness and our J need of strength from some superna i tural divinity. The more cultured and 1 enlightened we become the more con j scious we are of our weakness. Cliil < iren depend absolutely on their parents until afar up in their teens. They j lo not need any other God, but by i ind l>y the parents pass away or fail ' !o supply their increasing wants and ; j then comes that feeling of helpless , i ness and the want of a protector. Re 1 tlei tlon comes with age and the more reflectively a man becomes and the 1 tnoro Intollingent from study and culture the more ho must realize his lg# I w nor a nee and dependence. Therefore. I cannot understand how such a cultured gentleman as Ingersoll can be so irreverent, so careless and prayerlcss ? K^.,4. I.t? 1-4 * * A uiiuiii ins uivii c*i5iniie, lor ne cannot tell by what power he raises his hand or closes his eyes when he wills to do so. He says he would have planned many things very different. He would have given man wings and the power to fly. He would have made health catching instead of disease. He would have made infants colic proof and they should be as lively when born as lttle chicks when they come out of the shell and the old men should always be calm and serene. In faot, he would have mado everybody happy during life and i every death a painless one. He ought to have gone a little farther and abolished death and then created more worlds for the never dying people to llvd In. But we are here and have to submit to things as we find them, and, as Governer Oates said, "Mr. Ingersoll, what are you going to do about It?" And now I want this month of March to hurry up and pass away. It Is aggravating my grippe and I feel more like writing "an ode to melancholy. ' j It conthacts and withers my charity for my fellow en. I don't care a cent ! for Roosevelt and Tillman, nor Spcouer _nor the Atlanta depot. But as the old Persian prophot said, "Even this i shall away." Fifty-three years ago today my wife and I were married, but on our account the weather was as j lovely as a Lapland night. I was one ! of ton children?my wife was one of ten, and we have ten, and they have twenty, and no great calamity or af- 1 diction hath befallen us. thanks to the good Lord for His mercies.?Bill Arp, in Atlanta Constitution. Chicago has developed a habit of losing streets. In some cases, lands once plotted and turned over to the city as highways have been with drawn formally from bucIi uses. In others, a quiet eneroaehraeut on the part of abutting property-owners, carried on from year to year, has caused tho streets to disappear. The process , is variously described as absorption, assimilation, or plain grab. Some thoroughfares have been wholly blotted out; others havo been converted by grace of the assimilators into prl- ' vate ways, and trespassers incontinently warned to keep out. In certain tracts tho absorption has been conducted, nominally, at any rate, under tho terms of a law of 1874. That permitted property owners who had plotted their lands and laid out streets to "vacate" the premises, which action being recorded, revoked the filing of j the plot and caused the lands thus dedIcated to public uses to revert to private ownership. For a much larger number of disappearances, however, the records afford no h.:'di e\plana- ! tion. The streets have simply been j lost. The compensation received by :he city from the present occupants is vaid by the officials to be inadequate. There should be no time for depresfing retrospection. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. fentral Pima at Jacksonville find Savannah. Baste* n Time at Other Points. Sohcdnle In KtTVot Juno 00th, 10.1L KOUTn WOUND. KltoUy Lv. JnckaonvliTe (P. 8) 8 urn 7 46p * Savannah (So. Ky ) U2Sp 12 OJn " Barnwell 8Mv 4 la? " Blank ville 4 12p 4 23n kr. Oolumbla 6oOp fl lsa Cv. Charleston, (So. Hy 7 uJn 11 oop " Bummorvtlle 7 41a lAiuot ** Brnnrhvtlle 0 00a 2 OOa " Orangeburg It '51a 3 42* " Kluirrllle 10 24* 4 00a kr. Columbia 11 10a J> tUi Lv. Augusta, (So. By. ) 2 6up ^IWp Lv. Oramtovlllo 3 23pjl015p Lv. Aikou 3u6p' Lv. Trenton Hoijp llOOp " Johnston 407pU20p .... \r. Columbia t 45p 2 lua UtT Columbia, (biilg St ~b 66p (1 26aj?..... ' Wlnnsboro tl50p 7 121a! " Chester 7 !fcsp 3 17tij " ltock 11111 Sftopi 808n! kr. Charlotte ?OopI It 55aI kr. Dntivlllo 12 4nnl To2pl kr. Bichmoiul .. 0 4>'p' ir. Washington iTikjilltoJp ' Bnltlmoro (Pa.UK) It l.'m 11 8op M Philadelphia. '11 3.'i? 2 Ma " New York 1_2 Ottp' 6 23a' w. Columbia 11 3oai~7~2Qa| Ir. Spartanburg 8 lOp 10 2Un " Ashevillo 7 15p 2U0pi ktv Kno.xville 4 05a 7 !(/>?] kr. Clnctnnail 7 slop 8 lui .. Ir. LonlavtUe . . ... ; .->i/p ITioal ... aoum hound. 8^|8SS A'. I/ouisvillo 7 4i>n 7 Hop -.v. Cincinnati ~ 8 (An HOftp 7*. Knoxvillo 1 66a 8 2Jo * Asheville 7 06a 8U0p " H part an burg 10 8S? 6 16p kr. Columbia 2 lflp Oaop , ,v. NewTorkiP^B.itT 7 ..i aimiTJlfcti i .. ?hll?*l?lvhia J ?08d 3 Gun . Balttmox* I ?2Tp| r>2in 1 > . Waahl gt a (Ho.Ry) .. 1 9a0plll t.'-o ! -- Uirhm'?"d ,.t .. ' 11 II rp lAMn, I ,r. I>anvlUe 7dR: Tgp ~? -J- W h*Il2,V.? ~ ?-?*i "7777 ? 0 lOallOAtp - w if >r 9 41a 11 ISp , winnsboro. 10 28a'12 Ola i V_^,fijju'nhin. 1 Hl(ly St 11 Ute 1 06n 777 ?v. Columbia, (If! D.T.77777. faint 8 60a 1*77777 ! Johnston 1 4l)p fl , T^CnUm lWp fl?a tr. Aiken 2 30o 7 ?? ^r.umnitnviii, 777 an? ?& 77: 1 hr. Augnata snip <u> Lj. <>?lnmhia (bo. U.j) 3U0;. TS5? 7777 , Kingrllle BiflrY it'. - Orangeburg ...7. 4^ 3 ^ I Hrnnchtrllle ai&p ?rirrvliifl S?P'5wH::::: fcr. (- harlH-ir.m 7 30pl 7 (iur\ ^fl ?MT 7777 ' Hlftfjcvillo 1 *??>, <) VJn I j B^rnweii .777 i? 3^2:::::: 1 Savannah . au\t> i "kki ^r. Jaokv<iiTlll<M P.jS.1 T?op' > 15n I Slo?plnf; Car Sorvlos. j'"lllrJ,!"*,;lK"r service between Florida and Mow \ork. I No,. aj and m?New Y<jrk ami Florida Kx ; press. Drawing-room Bleeping oar, b.-.-ween hugusta end Now York FnTln.an drawing room sleeping cnr* between P rt Tampa. Ja. k lonyllla. rmvann.-vt Wn-hington nnd Vow York Fui.ii.:.n s.ce; Inu oars U-. wo, ? Chariot:.; an 1 Kichmond and ( hnrlotta and Norfolk Dining tors between Charlotte an.l Savannah. pdlwUvh a^5<L.'*5~^" *\ P>asl Mail. Through i ' riillman (irftw1ni?*n>orn bufYot *lc<;:>inc? curs bo tw?on Jacksonville and New York and Full nan uloentng cars between Augusta and Char i lotto and Chariot to and Richmond. D?nma . Bars serve all ineals enroute Pullman sloop tog cars between Jacksonville and CoinmUa kr.route daily between Juc.k*>nvtllonnd Ctnclu ttotl, via A short lie. r?^.N?v8?!*fSNO?/ ? H. HARD WICK, Third V-P. A d?n. Mgr., Uon.Pua.agt., &*}?Washington, D. C R W.HCNT, Atft Gen.Fsss. Ag*t., Dir. Pass. Ag'V. I Atlanta. tla 'JhurlasUm. tL CL I CHEAP FOOD FOR HORSESandCATTLE Ctemson College Makes an Important Suggestion to The Farmers. Tho following communication. Issued by the Assistant Agriculturist of Clemson Agricultural College, Is of so much value to the farmers of thlj State on account of the present high price of all Feed products for farm animals and stock, that I have determined to get you to publish It: As some of the products made up In the ration as made by Mr. Connor may not be available to every planter I suggest that any such planter write to Mr. Connor and state what Food products are available to him, both rough forage and concentrated food, and Mr. Connor will take pleasure in making up a ration to suit his needs 1 as he has done in this Instance. Yours { truly, C. FITZSIMONS, General Manager of the Southern Cotton Oil Company. Columbia, S. C. To the Editor of The News and ! Courier: Farmers from various sections of the State have been writing asking about the advisability of feeding horses and mules on cotton seed meal and hulls, and also asking for a cheaper ration than corn. The following prices are given In a letter from Seranton, S. C.: Corn, $40 per ton; oats, $15 per ton; wheat bran, $25 per ton; cotton seed meal, $25 per ton; rice meal, $20 per ton. Of course, corn and oats arc out of the question as a food for horses and mules at the above prices?so some- I thing cheaper must be looked for. The analysis shows that rice meal has about the same composition as corn meal, and we have found that it is just as good for feeding pigs. We , have fed it to horses with good re- i suits. 1 think we are sate ih saying ; that it may be used in place of corn, j pound for pound. If no hay or fodder is used In the ! ration and hulls are resorted to as roughness, some nitrogenous food, I such as bran or cotton seed meal, must , be used to supply protein. Hulls may be fed without any fear of injury to 1 the animal. Should they refuse to eat the hulls a little corn meal or bran sprinkled over the surface will help to break them to it. A good ration may bo made up as fellows: Cents. !5ix pounds of rice meal, costing..6.6 ?our pounds of wheat bran, costing 5.0 , Two pounds of cotton seed meal, costing 2.5 , Ten pounds of cotton seed hulls, costing 3.0 Total cost of ration por clay 17.1 The above is for a horse or mule of 1,000 pounds live weight. It is evident that a ration made up of corn and fodder and containing the same amount of digestible matter as the above ration would cost much more than the above. The North Carolina Experiment Station has fed cotton seed meal and hulls to horses with good results, but the experiments along this line have not been extensive enough to say that cotton seed meal can be fed in unlimited quantities for any length of time without injury to the animal. Numbers of farmera. however, have , reported that they have fed cotton seed meal and hulls to mules and horses with good results. C. M. CONNOR. Assistant Agriculturist South Cam lina Experiment Station. Clemson College. LABOR WORLD. The strike of the diamond polishers in Amsterdam, Holland, is still on. The city government of l>e Soto. Mo , hi> agreed to hire none but union ftlv't.. Who elevator boys of ISoston have icgnuized, and start off with a membership of eighty live. Labor organizations of Cincinnati, dliio, have Increased from lifly-Iive to , fighty-one during the year. lJostc printers are willing to work for SIS a week in book and job oilhes if an eight-hour day Is granted. Journeymen bakers of Roston lind a friendly feeling among employers toward granting iliem an eight-hour Jay. Five thousand ship and iron t*orkfrs have now been on strike in .ton Kranelseo for over seven mom lis for a uino-hour day. Aii city work in Cincinnati, Oliit., !s : now done on the nine-hour basis, and ; jigarmakers have gained the nine-hour ! lisy without a strike. Mill and laundry workers, of Okla- ! Snua City. Okln.. are organizing and tiohling open-air meetings for the ben- I nit cf the union label. The general condition of labor in l'W? ; Ida is ??:ih1, and a large increase of trif.i'.berslilp among the trade unions U reported by the Organizer of the federation. There Is not a single I trl&e or lockout in the State. The genera! -0101)11011 of labor Is lllll ill Montana nnrf ir>iil?rlir .11........ - ' -J ; lu? lumbermen. All of tlie other craft* ire well organized r.nd about 1-ttO \ workers in Western Montana have rereived an increase of twenty-five cents XT day. Tom Cooper, the circuit champion of the I'nlted States in 1900, but who jcemed unable to "make good" against Taylor and Kramer last year, lias taken to coal mining and in a practical ivay. lie is a part owner in a mine >%/?<?? Vf AtilxAaa { 'q I She Draws the Lir.c. A Wisconsin real < state dealer's widow has refused to p.iv for the stone she ordered placed over liis grave liecause they carved upon it the words, "By his deeds he is known." She probably doesn't br'lev > in running devotion to business into the ground.? Chicago Record-Herald. Thoroughbred dogs arc less intelligent than mongrels. , t J I m t'1 ^Uf?raU Raises Die Things. Cal i<?rnla raises the largest of every thing except pea beans. Her pea t>ean* are the smallest, but they ere nteVer priced than any thai grow this sldC of that state. I CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. To Pmt? It?UedlolM Free! Botanic Blood Balm <B. B. B.) kills the poison In the blood which causes rheumatism (bono pains, swollen joints, sore muscles, aches and pains) and catarrh (bad breath, deafness, hawking, spitting, ringing In the earn); thus making a permanent ouro after all else! foils. Thousands cured. Many suffered from 30 to yoora, yet B. B. B. cured them. Druggists $1 per large bottle. To proVe It euros, sample of B. B. B. sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., 12 Mitchell St., ^Ulanta, Do. Describe troublo and free medical advice given. B. B. B. sent at onoe prepaid. 1 American ctlocks are to be found in the most remnt/1 li n ml?to in Si.ni Christ's c^ll is His servant's consecration^I The lovltatiotn to lean ou the Lord In for the weary and foot for the lnry. Bo. 11. ?**? 1 CapudinecAu[ls * 1 Heaidaches, i ? LaGripbe, Colds, etc. $ 2 Moneyback If tifalla 15ft2^-.AU Drugstores 5 I ||Potash I RJ ^ St., N?w York **'- -/. H T Y$1 Galls .. H on > oor H <4rt?e or Mule quickly ; * 1 j curM wlt3i|Or. OnulclO ?.r 1 H Cum. *11 L'en era. or emit by U in All with itr. I Aniel?boolf,"'!/lp. -??L et-e?t of t nttle. cheep i ami v wine acd Hi w uTTTr^nat Them." upon receipt of 2 5 couii. ] , A V C. LMMKLS, I Stnulford St.. BOSTON. .T1ASS. | THE LANIER (SOUTHERN j SJ'O adtiicdd \^?&//ty/e j MACON* F;A. | Thorough In nl App<<1i>*mentA. Burtncss ] men io. ognlro onr olplnUtns ah a tetttlmontql of Ability end ?Mli All t>rHn< hos taught. Full Information Heerftally furnished. a cniam,cqininl?xh,sk kkouoh to pmo. fu uUmnildjlUN IHICH lleurt Failure for nl .nlf-nien havlou time (oi 4|dc line.Staple good*. "MA.M'FAl TtltKH H4.* 168. Covlngt n. ay i I'KHFKFT MKWINJ1 StACHINK l.rfi. J\ with .?lf-threaillitir needle. l|Vw? all tndj of ftae ewlnir. Aaenle make t*.W wWfkly . ? Write lor particulars. NATIOWAL AylOMAlIO ft EEDLK CO.. lit) lttM-tu ?tre*k, Htjw Xork. C I fl fl fnr Hi I' J"""' eefinot make JIM for *IUU Tor ^ erwry (1 >-*>u pay na irr teaching yon, we'll refund jour inoo?jr. Send for taeta C. C. HITTER, Fulton Hill. fc-Xinond. V . I f IMany Imii ff (No Equals if Worcester Healthful and yp to date. ^^Rojai Worcester Corbet Co., wore. RTi trfSSSP ^ALA' VtQTORi U ANwl in nillrtfthrtKl ol BH -JhKML ^^H^Inth|Mn, In Tlm-r and It l-OMlhl* In K p' V (far j ami rati] all c.v*r ai (jiar.t Sncarn jgS X . ViV ' *jE3u rrodncci ft 'itivlant P3| i ;J* \ S'-ysywi within *ix week* aft JkJgL- M *. Veliki M<1 lot* Of BMturm Wgc, ?,,?. Fodder Sf*-i . Hj- ' ">*/ ?>r.r .-etalotrcft l? ?r .infill of I Rj *?j?' ft-'* ?orfi ?# TIcmi-jiixI 11?-j* ; 1 Kalx. Hn" MAKER ll rM(oMarjMM? PatOtl; ftp RfL_^?gaMate& uuil 4 tons of Ley r? r acre, Billion S.iJrcr'fi Gr.'j Hf V i. l.line tons of maicnir.oer.t hay an 1 an nuilnu Bromua Inemtio?6 I Ttx> met rrr"* of tli*cantory,growing wh<nr*n ant M? wMaawaka AmfltaM irwaVoiwr or farmer, tan. receipt of but lucenu postage. aff* Catalog (Uodu s < | JOHN A. SALZER SEED C m i * j [ Asthma ] a "One of my daughters had a I I terribly case of asthma. We tried I I almost evervthina. but without r*. 1 Ilef. We then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and three and one-half bottles cured her."?Emma Jane Entsminger, Langsvillc, O. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral certainlycures manycases of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak, lungs, whooping-cough, croup, winter coughs, night coughs, and hard colds. Three stars: 25c., enough for en ordinary cold; SOc..Juet right for bronchitis. hoarseness, herd colda, etc.; $1. moat economical tor eluonla cases end to keep on hand. J. C. AVER CO.. Lowell. Mass. I Pan ii in ii???w?mJ One day an old friend said: "Are you troubled with dyspepsia?" I said: "Yes, and I don't ever expect to be 1 " U ~ 4-^1,1 a- ? UUICU. Ut IU1U IUU IU gU across the street and get a box of RipansTabules. After using Ripans Tabules for three weeks I was satisfied I had at last found the right medicine, the only one for me. At dnunrlste. The F.ve-Cent r?oko? Is enough tor en nrd'.ii?r> avwlnn. The Inuitly hot -le, tW < ontitln* ut"-ly f<-r > > ear. w~? . H CACTIOXI // ^ fr* Vl The primlne TNtf t ^ SHOES rf .. UNION MADE. A'otice inert.is* of salts in tulle leltr.u ; IBBBn 1 IH.Intl t^-v. 1 H'JII ? 8t?8,183 IIra. I lWfel IBJU hairs* 1001zzi 1,560,720 1'nirs, Business More Than Doubled In Four Yearn. THE REASONS t \\. 1,. Douglas makes and sells more men's $3.00 and 93.50 shoos than any other two manufacturers In the world. W. I.. Douglas 53.00 and $3.50 shoes placed side hjr shle with 55.00 and $fi.OO shoes of other innkes, are found to ho Just as good. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary 53.00 and 53.00 shoes. Made of tho bent lmath*rm f n nlnrilrtre Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo. if'or ao4 *l-?7. lu.ot Moot, f.?d. W. L. Douttlan fit.OO "Gilt Edtro Lino" cannot bo oqu&IIou at any prlco. Hhoro by muilKJoonru. ? ntnloi ft-co. I- *> , 1., I?yuul.?.. llr?oM,.nr)i|mi r FodderI^ants | w nape & I ' Dwarf Kr** Rape in ,J! ^ I nonrUthlnK quality. It H V row rwine end ?!?? ;? <??*1. y{ '-Tr'" I nenra at le. a lb. It la c-J^.wajfcta.'. D tSalaer*# cataloi; tulle. ' '# '?MfO Ciover n\w rrop three foot tall Iff 1 V ? i?l cr wx-iiln/ mid lota JiVtf * * r / ifj J\ .IrJ jo all cummer Ion* \f,^ \\ f 1 I' B fJ til kiiyvriicrr. l'titc T sfV'WS11 /f a 7vers and Plant* | lliorottghly toete.l fnrm eeeda "?TMt ?cf^ 5 V I Teoatnte, prodnrlnK w> tone of I rlB" oil/., with ItnSO liublirlaof train J ' FRICND ?] Dollar (Inui, etc., etc, iso Klxturoo amount of paeturec* on any farm In America, bj tons of Hay par Aero I la found. Our irrnat catalog -, worth 5100 to I ailed to you with many farm coed i¨ea. upon Ul art la for ptatoct. OMPANY. La Crosse, Wis. | / v