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; UNCROWNED ENGLISH QUEENS. Mo Leu Thaa Savin Hure Bltiiad the Uaior of Coronation. I Aa a rule, most English queens have Seen solemnly crowned, whether they rvijgned in their own right or as wives ?? royal husbands. To this rule, however, there are seven exceptions. The first was Margaret of France, he yonnfc, plain, amiable second wife of Edward I. He had spent so much money In conquering Wales and in trying to conquer Scotland that he oould not afford the expenses of a ! OTtmatlon lor hiB girl bride, and she bad to do without the splendors of the pageant. King Henry VIII took care that Anne Boi'eyn should be crowned with extreme magnificence. He desired to how the world how much he loved ber and how very much he defied the bishop of Rome. The four wives who succeeded her were never crowned at all. For one thing, money ran short, and, for another. there may have lurked, even In I Ills masterful mind, a sense of the ""fitness of things," which may have j caused him to shrink from publicly crowning so many ladies in such very rapid succession. At any rate the beloved Jane Seymour. the despised Anne of Cleves, the girlish Catherino Howard and tho wary Catherine Parr were never consecrated in public as queen-consorts of i England. Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I, refused to be crowned. She was young, she was pretty, she was a FVenrh princess, and she declined to j take part in a state function, which would compel her to partake of the sacrament according to church of ; England rites. Sophia Dorothea of Zell cannot be rei Konra among the seven, because she was never railed quoon of Eng- I land at all. While George I was being crowned, and annolnted, and? j bored, the ladjr of Ahlden was pining Iji her long, monotonous captivity. Caroline of Brunswick is the last, sand most remarkable Instance of the uncrowned English queens. Though <Jeorg?? IV had been forced from popular indignation to give up the bill of pains and penalties against her, nothtag would Induce him to let her share iila coronation. She was not permitted to bo present In Westminster Abbey At all. Repulsed from all the entrances, she j returned to her house, to die within 1 three weeks of a violent fever, brought on by months of fearful ex- I citemi'jit.?Lady's Pictorial. Induatrloui Duuldi Children. The children of Denmark are taught to irnlt when but five years old. Even in the public schools this is quite an Institution. although the private schools made It an absolute rule, one hour each day being given to that Industry. The same rule applies In tue home life, one hour being devoted daily either to sewing, knitting, crocheting. embroidery or lacemaklng. Nor is this considered sufficient; the young woman of the family Is supposed never to be Idle, she must always have something on hand to be taken up. If a chance visitor comes In, or a friend arrives for the day, both have their needlework with them.?Woman's Home Companion. Vutlmico and 1'eraevrranco. Three million pnekages of Putnam Fadeless Dyes are put up every year. To do thl9 TtonertMitates the handling of one hundred thousand i>ounds of dye stuff. The packages are tilled by dipping the dye stuff up with n large wooden spoon and placing in an envelope. Five oar loads of dye stuff handled with a wooden spoon! This is i jsceompllshod ovory yenr by the dozens of young ladies employed by the Putnam Fadelea? l>yo Co., Unionvllle, Mo. The number of railway employes of all Masses in the United States in 1900 was i 1,017,053. Naw Jrmoy Skin Troubles <"iurt resist Tctterina. "I have been troubled with Eczema four years. Tetterlne has done me so much good that 1 Kindly reeommend St-nd another box." W. C. Fuller. Seminole Cottage, Hea Cliff, N. J. 60o. a box by 1 mail from .T.T. Ahuptrlne, Savannah, Ga., if your druggist don't keep it. The new Ameer of Afghanistan has deelarcd .against the admission of missionaries tr his eountry. Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy Cures Irregular Heart Action. At Druggists, 50 cents. riu- jailer should not be known by the eomsuiiy he keeps. Cabinet Ministers in Mexico receive sir..000 a year. rrrrn I i/rgg | ? "I was very poorly and could * hardly get about the house. I was 1 tired out all the time. Then I tried Ayrr's Sarsaparilln, and it only I took two bottles to make me feel I perfectly well."?Mrs. N. S. Swin1 ncy# Princeton, Mo. Tired when you go to ft bed, tired when you get I up, tired all the time. | Why? Your blood is impure, that's the reason. Vou are living on the border line of nerve exhaustion. Take Avcr's 8 Sarsaparilla and be quickly cured. . Ask your doctor whet he think* of Aver'* ft?re*perHl?. lie knows *11 about thU ?r?n J 1 ol4 fMnlly medicine. Follow hi* advice end we will be ?*tl?8e<l. | J. C. Atkr Co., Lowell, Mm*. So 14 i)ED SEAL CATALOQ^&fiSr DEATH OF CECIL MODES The Famcus South Alrican Millionaire Expires in Cape Town. BROODING OVER BOER WAR FATAL The " Kmplrn Builder" Dltl Not Llvo to Ztcnlize His Ureatn of a South Africa, All British?Story of Ilia Career?Ills Fart In the Jameson Ilalil, Which Brought on the 1'resent War. Capo Town, South Africa. ? Cecil John Rhodes died nt his home here. At noon his physicians announced that he lind hud a good sleep in the mornlug and that his condition was unchanged. He slept again during the afternoon, but his breathing became more difficult and his strengtli diminished perceptibly until he passed away at 5.57 p. in. Cecil Rhodes, the fourth son of the Rev. J. W. Rhodes, Vicar of Bishop Stortford, Herefordshire, was born on July 5, 1853. In 1870 he went on a long sea voyage for the benefit of his health, at the end of which he Joined his brother Herbert, who was a cotton planter in Natal. When his brother grew tired of cotton raising and started I for the diamond mines near Colesburg Kopje. Cecil Rhodes followed hini. The young man prospered exceedingly in the diamond fields and soon begun to show the bent which was to be characteristic of his life?the dream of extending the British Empire in South Africa and founding a British colony which should include all the land south of the Znmhesi. Cecil Rhodes never wished wealth for the material comfort which it might bring him; he desired It merely as a means to an end. "There's no use having big ideas," he said, "unless you have the money 1j carry them out." Once he drew his hand over a map of the scattered States of South Africa, on which the British colonies were colored red. i Rhodes once said: "That is tny dream i ?that all red." The tlrst great step toward his final ; goal was the amalgamation of the diamond mines of Kimberley. He worked I for thirteen years at the project, and in 1S88 the consolidation under the ; name of the D?* Beers Consolidated , Mines was effected. The supply of ' diamonds was henceforth regulated in | accordance with the demand, and the prices kept up where thy company wished them. Rhodes was elected a member of the Cape House of Assembly for the district of Berkley West near Ktinberly. ; nr uiiue ins nrst spcccu iu tlie Assembly on April 10, 1881, only three : months after the defeat of the British by the Boers nt Mnjuba Hill. In 1880 j gold was discovered in the Transvaal. When It became apparent to lthodes that neither the Government at home nor that at Cape Town appreciated the danger of the absorption of a vastly valuable region by the Boer Republic, he with the heip of the Rothschilds and other capitalists, formed the British South Africa Company. This company. known popularly as the "Chartered Company," had enormous powers, which comprised the right to colonize the vast laud to the north of the Limpopo River, not even stopping nt the Zambesi. This tract was then under j the rule of Lobengula, the king of the ; powerful and warlike Matabele tribe, i Rhodes persuaded Lobengula to place ' his country under Great Britain, granting valuable mining privilege.? to the j Chartered Company. When the great j trelc of the Boers toward Matabele be- J gnn Rhodes threw all the police of the i Chartered Company into the drifts of , the Limpopo River, and the advance i of the burghers was checked. In 18J0 ! Mr. Rhodes was chosen Premier of | the colony. lie was thus Prime Min- ; later of an important portion of the British Empire at the age of thirty- ; seven. At this time lie undertook the formation of a Cabinet, In which both I races should l>e represented, aud it see.ns certain that lie thought that a confederation of the South African States might be peacefully brought ; about. The Jameson raid, that futile foray j Into tlie Transvaal, which was intended ! to rally all the Outlanders into revolt and i\ hich General Cronje and his j burghers turned into an ignominious defeat and the rapture of ali who were j not kill, is the blot on Ithodes's j career. Although he was not Immedl- j ately responsible for the "raid," yet lie planned the movement which brought i it about, helped smuggle arms Into Johauuesberg and made the police of the Chartered Company ready to join the movement. After the Ignominious defeat of Jameson, Rhodes resigned as Premier and as Director of the South ' Africa Company, and the committee of the House of Commons which sentenced Dr. Jameson to prison censured severely Khodes's conduct in the whole matter. Rhodes returned to South Africa in 1897. and in 1H9S was elected again to the Assembly, and again as a Director of the Chartered Company. Since that time he has devoted himself to the Interests of the Chartered Company, Ids greatest project beiug the scheme of the Cape Town to Cairo railway. . _ toko Ship* to Carry Oro, A number of ships have been withdrawn from the grain trade on the Great Lakes, having been leased for ore transportation for the season. The event marked the success of the United Steel Corporation in Its long battle with ship owners. CONVICTED OF BRIBERY. St. I.oul* Couacllnon Sentooced to Thres Years' Imprisonment. St. Louis, Mo.?The tirst of the boodliug eases, that of Councilman Kmil Meysenburg, indicted for bribery in having received the sum of 59000 from Philip Stock, legislative agent of the Suburban Railway, for aiding 'n ihe passage of Council Bill No. 44. resulted In a verdict of guilty, with three years' imprisonment in the penitentiary as the punishment. The defeuse will appeal. AN EASIER" STORM I Does Serious Damage to Property in j Pittsburg FORTY PEOPLE BADLY INJURED Wrecks a Church During: Services and a Panic Results? Heavy Damages. Pittsburg, Special.?Oono of the fiercest wind storms ever known in this section struck the city just before noon Sunday and did almost incalculable damage to property and inJued many people, some of whom may die from the effects of their wonuds Scores of houfces were unroofed, many trees were blown down, mill stacks toppled over and telegraph and telephone wires generally disabled. The most serious accident reported up to 9 o'clock was the unroofing of the Knox- j ville Presbyterian church, in Knox- i ville. The church was tilled with an Easter congregation numbering about 600 persons. While the minister was in the midst of his sermon, a strong gust of wind blew over the large chimney, and lifted a portion of the roof off the building. The bricks from the chimney crushed through the roof and carried a huge piece of the ceil ing, measuring about 40 by 20 feet, j down upon the worshipers in the pews. An indescribable panic en- I sued and a frantic rush was made for ! the doors and windows. The excite- : ment was soon quieted and the work of rescue begun. At least 40 persons ; were caught by the wreckage and , moro or less injured. Of this number j live may not recover. The more seri- ' ously injured are: Dr. R. J. Philipps, aged 40, coucussion of brain, may die; Curtis Hay McKnight, 4 years old, internal in juries, both legs crushed, probably 1 fatal; Clarence McNulty, aged 17, ! internal injuries, badly crushed, may die; Fletcher llryon. fracture at the i base of the brain, serious; David ' Smith, 32, arm broken, head cut and badly battered. serious; Joseph Adams. 21, badly crushed; Albert j Schmidt, 14. both arms broken and ! head cut; John Meyer, 17, head and j faco cut; Thomas Meherlin. 18, arms and head eyt; Evan Jones, 22, seri- I ous scalp wounds; Mrs. Kachacl ; Schultz, 35, arms broken. None of the j other injured are seriously hurt. In none of the other accidents re put icu iiuuiiKiiuui nil' cny were mere any serious injuries to persons, j though many narrow escapes are re- l corded. The towboat. Belle McGowan, I was blown over in the Ohio river op- i posite Mill Run and completely wrecked. Her crew narrowly escaped drowning, but all were finally rescued by harbor boats. The corrugated iron roof of the union bridge at the point, was lifted from its fastenings by the wind and portions of it carried a dls- i tance of a mile. The Whittler School, ' near Mount Washington, was unroofed and its walls badly twisted. Jones & Laughlln's had 14 of their furnanee stacks blown down, necessitating the shut-down of a portion of their plant for weeks. Reports from near-by towns are not coming in, probably on account of the crippled condition of the wires. It is feared that much damage has been done in those places. As Rev. J. W. English, pastor of the Robinson Run Union Protestant church, near McDonald, was raising his arms to pronounce the benedic- ; tion, lightning struck the church spire j and it toppled upon the roof, crushing ! it and injuring a number of worship- I ers, two of whom will die. The injured are: Robert Patterson, aged 10, j skull fractured, will die; Leon Averill, j 11. skull fractured, will die. Mrs. | John Patterson, mother of Robert, severely bruised about body; Mis. J Mary Patterson, arm broken and I badly bruised: Miss Mary G. Wal- ! lace, badly bruised; Mrs. Averill, 1 mother of Leon, head and arms cut and bruised. The spire and portions of the roof i of the Union Protestant church at f McDonald was torn off and the build- j ing considerably damaged, but no one . was injured. The Noblestown Presby- : terian church was also unroofed, but ! the congregation escaped injury. j The Forest Oil Company had between 200 and 300 derricks blown down in its McDonald region and considerable damage was sustained by its pipe system. The offices of the Monongaheia Con- j necting Railroad, on Second avenue, j this city, were destroyed by fire dur- ; ing the afternoon, because no alarm could be sent in either by telephone or telegraph. The Armstrong Cork Company's plant on Liberty avenue, between Twenty-fifth and Twenty- j sixth streets, was unroofed nnd much damage done to machinery and stock. ! Reports from the different railroads tonight show that all suffered more i or less from broken telegraph poles and crippled service. All, however, i were in good shape and trains run- I ning by 8 o'clock. The baseball park in Allegheny i lost one of its fences and a portion , of the grand stand roof. More than \ 2..r>0o lights of glass in the Philipps' i conservatory were broken. The Mon- | tana apartment house at Pennsyl- I vania avenue and Fairmont street, i Mast End, and the Idaho building, i which adjoins it, were partially de- | stroyed. The damage in the Monon- j gahola and Turtle creek valleys will reach thousands of dollars, but no specially bad Individual loss is re- , ported. Almost the entire eastern dis- | trlct of this city is in darkness to- ! night, the electric lighting system j having been put out of commission by the storm. The down-town portions were reptared early in the afternoon. The storm, which came upon the city very suddenly, came up through the Ohio valloy and passed on eastward. It lasted only about SO minutes, only five minutes of which was nt a velocity unusually high. In that five minutes prctlcally all tho damage done was accomplished. f p;"" CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATAJtRfri To Fro?e It-?Medicine FimT Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) kills the poison In the blood which causes rheumatism (bono pains, swollen joints, sore muc;?>o nCBes and pains) and catarrh (bad breath, deafness, hawking, spitting, ringing in thn ears), thus making a permanent cure after all else falls. Thousands cured. Many suffered from 30 to 40 years, yet B. B. B. curou inem. Druggists $1 per large bottle. To prove it cures, samp's of B. B. B. sent froo by writing Blood Balm Co., 13 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ca. Describe trouble and free medical advice given. B. B: Bsent at once prepaid. Silk is the strongest of all vegetable or animal threads. It is three times as strong as a flaxen thread of the same size. Ksrllrit Itusalun Millet. Will you bo short of hay? If so, plant n plenty of this prodigally prolific millet. 5 to 8 tons of rich hay per acre. Price, 50 lbs. $1.90; 100 lbs., $3.00: low freights. John Afc Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. A. The Christmas tree was tirst heard of in England about 1444. Heat 1'or the Ruwala. No matter what nils you, headache to ?t cancer, jou will never get well until your bowel* are put right. Cascabktb help nature, curs you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements,cost you just 10cents to start getting your health back. Cabcarkts Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stumped on it. Beware of imitations. Electric cab service in Paris has proved very unprofitable. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Croat Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatlsefroe Dr. It. 11. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., 1'hila., Fa. The metropolitan police of London look after 8200 miles of roads and streets. Putnam Fadeless Dves are fast to sunlight, washing and rubbing. Sold by all druggists. Shetland's shortest night is five hours, but licr longest is over eighteen hours. Fiso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.?Wm. O. Endsley, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. Ratio of mortality in Switzerland has decreased one-fourth iu thirty yearn. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, i Lucas County. f ' * Frank J. Cheney, make oatkthat he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J.Cheney A Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm Will I1HV th? ?i?m nf i.ark for each and every case of catabhii that cannot ba cured by the use of Hall's Catahhh Cube. Frank j. Cueney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my , ??. . presence, t ids 6th day of December, seal. - A. 1)., 183C. A. W. Gleasok. ?>?- ' Notary Public. HaireCatarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. j. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Drugpists,75c. Hall's Family Fills are the best. Messrs. \V. W. Gregg of Memphis, renn., and I. J. Harwood of Birmingham. Ala., have incorporated the l^eeds Woolen Mills, with capital of $50,000, to manufacture wool and engage in merchant tailoring. /wokty i bontoncoi 1 STRAIGHT FI M Excel and outsell all other corsets on the market. This speaks volumes for their merits. Ask your dealer about them. Royal Worcester Corset Co. ^^w^Worooster, Mass i winch l \ CARTRIDGES IN > from .22 to .50 loaded with cith J - always give entire satisfaction. t j| v modern manner, by exact machii kg they shoot where youhol lil > I1 i < 1 t ALABASTi i | Tho Only Durable Wall C< T Kalsomincs arc temporary, rot, rub off X Write us and see how helpful w< t in getting beautiful and h T Alabastlno Go.) Departmen X? |. ? j. ] ? I' So. 14. ninn rnrirnn ; JIJ c 1 * V * -Yftf-J rcm<>ves from the soil ** f Zenl <luant't'ts ?i* Mf Potash. * ' he fertilizer apy^ e-\ plied, must furnish i") cnouKh I'otash, or the fix \ 'a,ul will lose its proMu \ \ ducing power. Re?d carefully our book* 9/ on crops?wnl frtt. |S?Lm|B^4 GERMAN KALI WORKS, I N?mu St., New York. I # _ _ _ Mrs. Francis Podn T. U., Saranac Lak H er-Health to Lydia table Compound. R "Dear Mrs. Pinkham : ? Fo was born I felt a peculiar weaknes. before, with severe pains in the ov " I tried the doctor's medicine wasted. A friend who had been cv Pinkliaiu's Vegetable Coiiip so, also your Sanative Wash, anc such relief before. Within six we felt young and strong and happy o "This is several years ago, bi Compound is my only medicine. doses brings instant relief."?Mrs, $5000 FORFEIT IF THE AD()i When women are troubled wit menstruation, weakness, leucorrhues womb, that bearing-down feeling, in bloating (or flatulence), general deb tration, or are beset with such sympt excitability, irritability, nervousnci gone" and " warrt-to-be-lcft-alone,1 they should remember there is one Plnkkam's Vegetable Coinpoum Refuse to buy any other medicine, f ?**?? *?>?***? | Capudine^ g * U O <r% ^ ^ ?* - ? i ioauaui iut>, s' & LaGrippe, Colds, etc. S & Money back if Itfalla. ir> A 2V. All Drugstore* 91 WE PAY R. R. FARE AND I-ndek $5,0C0 ^ Deposit, (tutrnnlft (/y ad//t a nd/ 200 h KEK ROH OLAIISH 1 I'M, IIOAKIl AT COST. Write t^iilc-U to OA.-ALA. miSINKSK (OLLKI1E, MACON. OA. HPHPQV NEW DISCOVERY; gi?< f % ^31 quick r?M*f and euro* worn mm*. Bjok of tevtlmoaia and IO dajra' lraatn.nl free. Dr B I' onuil't eotb. toi B. At iota. Oa UftFTft iKv ESTERI ALL CALIBERS 8 ; D A H,v++-!,++++,W,++++4i{-++++++++ I y EC smalI POX t ? ^ EL-i nnd other disease T ^ . germs are nurtured X i EVilTing and diseases dissem- 4* and scale inated by wall paper T ; can 1*. at no cost to you, $ ealtliful homes. Addrers 4* t d, Grand l^aplds, Mich, f MjjHM; 11 I I HI HtH I M M 1 t EftRTH MM I'CTARTLiNG JJj Thousands of children an vk Worms. Symptoms ar?^ scldon + child's temj>crament and upon the van * tines. I ose no time! Adopt safe a S DR. ItOYKIN'S V * A SURE. SPEEDY AND SAF^ DE3 * IN USE OVER 30 YEARS j ACC1 25c BE8T VERMIFUGE KNO , I I' : 1 lore, President W. C. e, New York, Owes . E. Pinkham's Vegeead Her Letter. r several years after my last child s, such as I never had experienced aries and frequent headaches. ;s and found it money worse than ired through the use <>f ound advised mc to try it. I did 1 I must say I never experienced eks I was like another woman. I nee more. it Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable If I ever feel bad or tired a few . Francis Podmore. VE LETTKR IS NOT GENUINE. h irregular, suppressed or painful displacement or ulceration of tho flammation of the ovaries, backache, ility, indigestion, and nervous prosoma as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, <s, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all' feelings, blues and hoiielessness, tried and true remedy. Lydia E. 4 at once removes such troubles, or you need tho best. My family physician told me to try Ripans Tabules, as he had found them of great benefit in several obstinate cases of indigestion and dyspepsia. I felt better within a day, and was soon greatly relieved. I have always been subject to bad sick headache until I began taking the Tubules, and you don't know what a relief it is to be entirely free from these. At druggists. Tho Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. Tho (amity bottle, <V0 cents, contains a supply for a year. ^?50ZKfadr?fcM6c^\ It 1* a fact that Raiser'* regctahle and flower seels are found in mure garden* CSBDB and on more farm* than aur otbrr JffT la America. Then* Is reason for IMj. kfl ) t \ We own and operate over Mu) acre* for XjjU HV' the production of onr choice seeds In /f(V ?t order to Induce yon to try them Mnl wrMnake U*t following uupreo- ^KH5 h" "TVi For IS Cents Postpaid Mfm H I | I M Mati at nrwl lutltM nttelin, nijH ' I [ / I* M|allHil sartlMl !? *, H "" / \ II pmlfw ItlliM orttllM, /w/it (_/. / lltptodld bwl Mrti, B)Uj| F3 / *i ( rgesasly IwAitir sl lew aeeg*. Ujyj3 'S A In all ICO kinds pnslttrely fnrntMiing tiffl S Jtt bushels of rharming lluaer* and /Vym HI aH lots and lota of cltofce vegetables, AJmK j B together with our greet catalogue/A] | LB telling all at>ont Teoslnte and 1'ea V\A .is .1 NV t'at and llmitiu* and Speltz, onion ^.wl ?*. Jo! d. *ec.l nt doe. a pound, stc., all only aTVjlJ for 1 fle. In stamps. Wrltetixlay. (gysfl fYMl\XX\\ ?OMN A. SALZER SEED CO.. ?* LlvUl 11JJJJ La Cross*. Wis. fSl 250'" FREE SCHOLARSHIPS. A|>J>ly at once to TliK LANIER SOUTHERN Ill'SINESS < OLLRUK, Macon, Oa. Ho kko?i>Inir, Hanking. Penmanship, Miorthnrul ly|iewrliluK. Telegraphy. MutlinmulUv, Grammar Mid IliMlnonK < orrospondeneo thoroughly taught. Hoard to $10 per month. UR1N0PATHY EfflA ^ In the ne*v scienceol detecting :in<l *cfi\ curing diseases from a CHEMICAL, and MICROSCOPICAL analysis of the urine. Send 4 cents lor mailing ri5T case and bottle for urine. Il<?>k free. Consultation Irer. Fees reason able. Medicines 'urnished. \ <1 dress ? F. SHAFEH, M. D.. IT'Ja uiCI A32 Penn Ave.. Pittsburg, Pa. McALLEN'S business COLLEGE, Successful School. No malaria. Catalogue free. S^CUHE s'wrtTfn* I ffsi^ Heat Tough Hyrup. Tantes Good. Us? In time. Sold by rimgglsla. I?1 KEEEcaaaaEnHyi A NTT'S PATENT ^COTTON PLANTERS ?AND? Guano Distributers I Write for Prices ntul CatnloKiio. The Gantt Mf'g Co., & > MACON, - GEORGIA. ij? J. T. (iAN'TT, Proprietor. FACTS" 1 tit e bcintf gnawed to distraction by jij i reliable. They depend upon the ? ety of worms present in the intcs- ? nd sure course by usinq VORM KILLER. J TROYER OF THESE MONSTERS. 2 ?PT NONE BUT DR BOYKIN'S. * WN SOLD EVERYWHERE.