University of South Carolina Libraries
| A *Jough | m -l-jcxj '*.1 hw\-e made a most thorough S crial of Ayor's Cherry Pectoral and am prt-Tparcd to say that for all dis/ <ras?* tA the lungs it never disapI pot nax." J. Early Finley, Ironton, O. A ycr's Cherry Pectoral won't cure rheumatism; we never said it would. t \U won't cure dyspepsia; 1 we never claimed it. But Sit will cure coughs and n o ?? nrr coias or au kinds, we first said this sixty years ago; we've been saying it ever since. i TDru uisn: ZSc, 50c, $1. All drutilft*. <\wv?oi-t ywir doctor. If ho tako It, ?Jt?i do x* ho ?*y?. If ho toll* you not tnzais* tt, then dtiu't tako It. lio know*. Ijimzni It rltJi h;*i. Wo are willing. J. O. AYElt CO.. Lowell. Mass. II >1 M Cross ? Poor man! He can't help it. Ix's his liver. He needs a liver pill. Aycr's Pills. i?? ? ? 1 Want your moustache or beard a > a kcaitifttl brown or rich black ? Use takiflghain'sOys ntl..?v <^?lnr|jptttcrR. P. Hall & Co . f\'a?hua N.H WANTED S530 Young Mon Ai" ?*-? ai ?ji ?.ltfy for Rood | onltlons which wo x??ll <r*?-riu<iv>n Vn writing undor n $5,000 9* ? n_Hjj.tif piocurp thorn. The (ia.-Ala. Bus. College, MACON, GBOHOIA. oa?oa?oatoHoHoHoHoHoHoHoHoHoH f HEADACHE, ^ l M if CONDITIONS ? 0 | | nr?u tuuus LL'Klil) BY' O * UC A P IT I) IN E o or J?v nil l>rn*sl?i?. 4! WNMD^flltoatOltO^OllO^OltOltOIIO SonhE atanspcd C C C. Nevrr sold in bulk. > gfcnrare of tbe dealer who tries to sell **?ooifithiQg just as good." Free Test Treatment 4RV^7 \ mnitxV'ttiiihL,uaKwg M*mrvurtm r If iou h??e no fnlth in nty method of iJjJt'W w (in'ilu,on^*eu?i me a ol >our uuirttinii urine for nnui)fi?. I will 'VIR ^5* *<** ??? utvl nut -a ?m*L '*! niont 1?V: J *KU Of All COST. Von w.il th?n ?m , A-*^ f\>?tijcod Chiit niy trrntment ourw. _ jfc Al V.\ilim: cntioniid Imtfin for urine - nt wffilB! Pooo Ave., hlbburs, Vjl Pifes or Hemorrhoids wiiwtiicr itriiiMj;. hlm-cling or protmdinc, promptly r.-lr-T! iuii prrnuuir.nty cured by my method without KxjI' or jpcntiir luajistirn. Write me lully rtg.trd\??<l vita crv mvi ! will advise you honestly in the r-susriov. C*M?lt>tieii tree, l'rice of treatment com jW-ee, ranty Satisfaction guaranteed or mouey TtftaiM. Writr today. XW. M. M. TANNER. Edit Aurorn. N. Y. S3 & ?3<29 SHOES Bff At t i x/ijwa arm ffti, standard of the world. M. I.. Dvojclma niuld sad soKl tunru U"n'? Goodl-nr Well v'Miiad Sowed PrtKfs*) ?hoe* lu Ilie first : fiu (wntfK??f TVOS Him anr other manufacturer. ' jfc'S I) ADO BV.W lUJi will ho palil to aniono who ? 1 IfivUw ran iti>|irove thin MiMcment. L. DOUGLAS $4 SHOES CANNOT BE EXCELLED. SI,163,$201 $2,340,000 '"imrt 'm pur ted an I American /father.*. Hcyl's >^Mw? Cldf ii imnf. Jt .* Calf. Cat'. I'ii i S I. Ccrena dtkl'; &*t. tianifaiuu. f-'wnt tutor i>olii? iihoiI. T?rtrW ' Th? awnutno hnvo W. I.. DOUGLA8' * ""- nMiw unci price ntnnipwl en bottom. jUkoe* tig Mil, MtU rrtra. ItttU, Catalog lr<e. -W. a_ DOUGLAS. UKOCKTON, MASS. TAP HH5 CHAMPION OPAIS and PEANUT THKKSmKHH rxcrll all other* bjr the niiu it riw? /na v??tU7 of lit work, uoci durability of ?. three *lxe* for steam and trend price*, term*, Ac. address. 4?CK I* ^ - Bl HlaK^h, Uei?etal Agent, burgess, Vu JUST PATENTED!... A nacliuic For THOROUGHLY CURING OTSWPSIAand INDIGESTION H>in?? mwilwi NadlrOn*. No mcrtloln* what i<wr tjwxll>w mtautc* tlwUy It will <,ulcK ly re tar? iOmof (ha Montrh. Write for circular SwjrtflffS. COM Sax 3?e. TOLRnn. u. So. 4<L H^fik&iKaisMi&K -A. BILL ARP'S LETTER. lie Gels Communication From a Far Away Admirer WHO ENJOYS HIS PHILOSOPHY Bill Then Proceeds to Alorallze on a Number of Tilings That Strike His Fancy. "Keokuk, Iowa, Special.?Major Charles II. Smith. Cartersvllle, CJa. Dear Sir: For several years past 1 have been reading your letters. 1 like very muck your writings about the home life, the everyday events and the many little incidents of your experience. looking backward over a long ami busy c areer. "Although a stranger, of opposite politics and with many different views of life, still your words have inter sted mo and have so many times tout cd my heart that I want to write to you my appreciation. 1 wish you could visit Iowa?go over it from the >.!itsissipr' to the Missouri river and me?t the people of n republican state. You would, no doubt, soften voir writings about tho northerners.' You would find as warmhearted and generous a people as you have in Georgia. "You would find a people that aver- j as<- in intelligence with any people on earth. If you could interview the fathers, mothers, brothers, sigters or wives of those who had fallen in the war of the rebellion, you would not find bitter resentment; you would not find that these men. who had given their lives, had done so with any hatred toward their southern brethren, but you wpuld find that the great reason for their sacrifice was in the cause of the union of all parts of this great country and liberty for all liu inanity. This is northern sentiment. | and God. who rules wisely, ordered that the result should ho as It Is. "It is certainly a greut curse to have so many illiterate, low-lived nc- ! groes in your state; but how true it ! says 'the sins of the fathers shall he visited upon the children unto the \ third and fourth generations.' To my j mind, the forefathers' of Georgia sinned in purchasing and owning , slaves, and now their children's chil- j dren suffer the consequences. "I trust you will receive these I words as they are meant, with the greatest kindness and good will, and I wh?h you many inoT years pj hap piness with your good wife, children and grandchildren, and further hope that 'Bill Arp's Letter' will continue to visit us for very many years to come." That is a good letter. A good man ' wrote it. I could neighbor with him and his folks and never say n word to give tliein offense. But I would teach ; them something they do not know? : tench them gently line upoS\ line, precept upon precept?here^ a little and there a little. NMw, lft?e is a gentleman of more tha;L ordinary intelligence and educatioi *fbo ' does not know that the sin of slavenr- ii?o-nn ir> - ? ? - ' ? / "* New England among f<?jrfathers?not ours?ami from tlu'.'^^as gradually crowded southward until it got to Georgia, and that Georgia was the flrst state to prohibit their importation. See Appleton's Cyclopedia (Slavery and the Slave Trade), lie does 1 not know that long after New England and New York had abolished slavery their merchantmen continued to trade with Africa and sold their ear goes secretly along the coast ami never dbl but one reach Georgia and that one. "The Wanderer," was seized and confiscated and its officers arrested. "The Wanderer" was 1 built at Eastport, in Maine, was 1 equipped as a slaver in New York and officered there and a crew employed. , lie does not know that Judge Story ; chief justice of the United States sr.- , prcnie court, when presiding in Boston in 1S:?4. charged the grand jury j ixai niiMUUftll i>IUS?5fienUSOJTS llUd freed their slaves, yet. the slave trade with Africa was still going on and j Boston merchants and llo3ton Chris- ; tians were steeped to their eyebrows in its infamy. He does not Know that when our national existence began t hefeeling against slavery was stronger in the southern states than in the northern. Georgia was the first to prohibit it. but later on the prohibition was repealed. New England carried on the traffic until 1845?and Is doing It yet. if they can find a market, and can get the rum to pay for them. The last record of a slaver caught in the i act was in 1861 off the coast of Mada- ' gasenr. and it was an Eastport ves- I sel. The slave trade with Africa was for more than a century a favorite and popular venture with our English ancestors. King James II and King Charles II and Queen Elizabeth all had stock in it and though Wliberforce and others had laws passed to suppress it. they could not do it. New j England and old England secretly carried It on (see Appleton) long nf- ( ter slavery was abolished in the col- j onies. Thev could afford to lose half j their voss Is and still make money. No. no. my friend. If slavery was a sin at all. which I deny, it was not our sin. nor that of our fathers, nor were we cursed with so many iliitornte, low-lived negroes as you suppose. Our slaves were not educated in books as tliey were in manners and morals and industry, and. mark you. there was not a heinous crime committed by ther.i from the Potomac to the Rio Grande. We did not have a chalngang nor a convict in all of the land and now tht re ere 4,400 In the state of Georgia. Who is responsible for that ? General llonry It. Jackson said In the great address he delivered i > oinnin Sn 1*M: "During the four years of war. when our men were far away rrorn home and their wives sad daughters had no protectors but their slaves, there was not an outrage committed in all the southland. Where does history present a like development of loyalty? Does It not speak volumes for the humanity of the master and the devotion of the slave? If 1 had power to Indulge my emotional nature I would erect somewhere In the center of this southland a shaft which should rise above all monuments and strike the stars with its sublime head and on it 1 would Inscribe. 'To the loyalty of the slaves of the Confederate Stai^j during the years *62. 'G3 and " Hut this will do for the first lesson to my friend. It may take some time? weeks or months?for us to harmonize. and we will not until we Ret the facts straight, but I know that he is a gentleman and I think more of Iowa and her people since I received his letter. But my friend is lamentably ig norant about the condition of our negroes before the war and their condition now. I must resent any slanders upon our slaves. They were not lowlived. They were affectionate and loyal. I believe that ohr family servants would have died for mv wife or for me or our children. They were born hers and expected to die hers. Tip was my trusted servant during the war and was twice captured and twice escaped, the last time swimming the Coosa river In the night. But I have done for this time, for I am not well and the doctor says 1 must not mil I ? 1- ??1 bwuiii in; luum. jjiii --vi l> in /vuuuvu Constitution. FREMONT SCOUT GONE. Richard L. Owens, Last Companion cf the "Pathfinder." On June 1). i car Circlcville, in Jackson county. Kan., death claimed Richard I.. Owens, who was probably the last living member of John C. Fre* mon't exploring expedition of 1843, as also the last among those who pionceri'd the Rock Mountain region. Richard Owee:- was born in Maryland in is 13. avoiding to a biography published by the lloltou Signal. When he was one year old his parents moved to Ohio. In young manhood he went j to Inu< pendenee, .Mo., and from there ! started for the Rocky Mountains with j a trapping and trading expedition in 1834. From is."4 to 1819 he trapped,! scouted and traded with the Indians. ! He became the bosom companion of ! Kit Carson, and. with that famous scout, joined the party of Gen. Fremont in 1843, again in 1S45, and again ' in 1818. He was with Fremont in Cali- j fornia when the intrepid commander I routed the Mexicans and raised the j American flag. He was made a cap- i tain of artillery by Fremont, and accompanied his chief to Washington j when he was taken there under arrest I for his alleged improper assumption j of authority in California. Returning from Washington he was 1 entertained for a week by Senator Beuton at his home in St. Louis. Fremont's reports and writings- are filled j with allusions to Owens, who is spoken of as a brave man. a skilled scout and a dead shot. In a letter to his wife in 1S49. after his ill-fated attempt to find a new route across the Rocky Mountains, Fremont wrote: "1 find my- j 111 1I..1 iil.lo* r..i 1- ? -* I ... .... iiii'inl Ul IIR'IHIS IH'II' ill Taos. With Carson is Owens, and | Maxwell is at his father-in-law's, doing 1 a very prosperous business as a merchant and contractor for the trooj.s. Owens goes to Missouri in April to bo married, and then by water to Callt'or- , nia." Owens returned to Missouri, but a sweetheart died before the wedding day. He went to Uinois in 18.r?4 ; and found a wife there. In 1S72 he came to Kansas and settled in Circlevllle^ in Jackson county, where lie died on June 11, at the age of ninety i years. THOSE BIG CA-fCHES. Men Who Make Them Never Think of the Future For Other F;shermen. As a rule we do not print the notes which come to us of tremendous cat dies or trout and bass, but now and then tbey are given place to show that the count fishermen are still in the land, and ate actively encaged in lining what they can to prevent '.lie rest of the world from having any fishing after thoy have got through. To impute to such anglers any deliberate motive of this nature would be to do them an injustice. The man who snakes out his two or three hundred trout, and tells it with gusto, in all probability has no thought of what is to follow liis own fishing. The idea never enters his head that the intemperance \. i 11 have any effect whatever upon the fortunes of anglers. This is illustrated in the case of the correspondent who reported the other day the taking of several hundred trout at a Maine resort, and then recommended other fishermen to visit the same place. Such a person simply does rot think. He is a good fellow who would like to have others share his good fortune, so after fishing to his own satiety, he invites others to come and take his place and have some of tlie great luck after he has departed. li is char. then 'lint the remedv lies in education. The unthinking, foolish and improvident angler must l>e made to recognize the principle of the thing. He nuist be taught to apply to fishing the ABC axiom that you cannot eat your cake and have it too. The only way to accomplish the education is by everlasting proclaiming the doctrine of temperance in fishing. The principle is accepted more gonerally now than ever before. It was not so many years ago that the success of fishing expedition was conventionally reckoned by the score of the fish taken. Rut among the vast majority of intelligent anglers today there exists no spirit of emulation in count fishing. The men who catch their hundreds and tell of it in public are invidual personalities who are out of their place in history. They belong to an angling time which has passed.? Forest and Stream. You can't have your calce ann eat it. but you can oat your own cake and swipe tho other fellow's. Germany row surpasses Franco in th? export of kid gloves. * B. B. B. SENT FREE. Care* Itlood tml Skin Dltcaim, Cancers. Itching Humors, ltonc t'niii*. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures Pimples, scabby, scaly, itching Eczema. Ulcers, Eating Soros, Scrofula. Blood Poison, Bono Pains, Swellings. llheumatlsm, Cancer. Especially advised for chronic cases that doctors, patent medicines and Hot Springs fail to cure or help. Strengthens weak kidneys. Druggists, $1 per large bottlo. To prove it euros B. B. 15. sent free by writing Blood Balm (v>., 12 Mitchell Stroot, Atlanta, (is. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent iu sealed letter. Medicine sent at once, prepaid. All wo ask is that you will speak u good word for B. B. B. , While a cow's hide gives thirty-live pounds of leather, that of a horse yields only about twenty Dourids FITS permanentl? cured.No illscnervous11 ess after llrst day's use of Dr. Kline's lireat NorveKestorer. $2trial bottle and treatise free Dr.lt. H. Ki.isk, Ltd.. Ml Ar.-hSt.. 1'lilla.. l'a. Torquay has 33,000 people, of whom there are 7000 more women than men I'utsam Fa?i:i.ess Dyes are fast to light am! washing. The Mexican lapdog is the smallest known variety of dog. Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup foreliildrei; teething,soften the gums, reduces iuilmnmation.allays pain, cures wind eolic. '2V. a bottle In baseball the pitcher is the power behind the thrown. We will give *100 reward for any ease of eatarrh that cannot t>e cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken internally F J. Chkn'ky A Co., l'rops., Toledo, O. A honeymoon is often a calm helore storm. 1'iso's Cure cannot bo too highly spoken oi s a cough cure.?J. W. OT.iukn. 322 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0, 10)) Most men feel that they have more brains than money. Thorough Paced Economy. A young man living in Cincinnati is a close worker in money matters, that is, he stays close to the shore with his expenditures, lie had the good luck to marry a girl whose parents are quite wealthy, and Is at present living with his wife in one of his father-in-iaw's houses. One day not long since, while discussing affairs with a friend, the latter asked: "Did <;he old gentleman give you that house?" "Well-er-no, not exactly," was the answer. "He offered it to me, but 1 wouldn't accept it." "How's that?" asknil t"?o frirtn.l "Well," answered the man who had made tho lucky matrimonial venture. "You see, the house really belongs to mo. I'm living in it. rent lree, and I'll get it when the old man dies, it i accepted it now I'd have to pay t'aa tay.es." A girl doeen't believe a fellow ts seriously in love unless he cuts foolishly. THE SURGEON'S KNIFE Hrs. Eekis Stevenson of Salt Lake City Tells !Io\v Opera i v>i v?ai i?ai ii ?;iiiiics Way Bo Avoided. "T)i:.\n Mas. Pixktiam:?I suffered with inflammation ol" tin; ovaries and womb for over six years,enduring1 aches atul pains wliieli none can dream of but those who have had the same expeMHB. F.CKIS STP.venson. rienee. Hundreds of dollars went to the doctor and the druggist. 1 was simply a walking medicine chest ami a physical wreck. My sister residing in Ohio wrote me that she had been cured of womb trouble by using I. yd ht E. Pinklinni's Vcsretnble Com pound, and advised me to try it. I then discontinued all other med ieinea ?nd pave your Vegetable Compound a thorough trial. Within four weeks nearly all pain had left me; I rarely had headaches, and my nerves were in a much better condition, and 1 was cured in three months, ami this avoided a terrible surgical operation."? Mlis. t EciCtS StkvKNsON, 2.r.0 So. State St., Salt Lake City, l't: h.?ssco# forfait If i above testimonial .s not genuine. Remember orery tvonian Is 1 cordially invited to write to 3Irs. Piiikham if there is anything about her symptoms she does not understand. Mrs. Piiikliain's address is I^ytiii, Muss. WRITE ECR CAI. & SPECIAL RATES. ! [ s?y. \ ^itL'aUons ShClllH) f % for srnttuntcH <>r tuition rr y y I refunded. Wf fajr B.I:. h?rc. BIRf/INCHAM.ALA. RICHMONO. VA. - HOUSTON. TEX. COLUMBUS. CAp n p y gf j v j lui .1 .uj 1 m COMMERCIAL COllECE OF KENTUCKY UNIVFRSlTt, - LEX IN WTO.N. KT. nichwi award at Wait*'* Ktpaaltfsa. f> *m T "t rr Nrrrli t Huilam. S'aort haaJ T?o* tCnua* a?<t Tt\tgr%y>h% iau*b?. 1000 Siulruta. IS tracber*. IR.CW (fraloaift la nu?to#?*. Itecin >Vt? OarcM Wll.liril K. VU1TII. Prr.?. Uk!uClu?i. Ky. 500 YOUNGM?N vied' Ai.lr.'i.* Jolin?o?v i'rarllral Hatlwav Intllluie. IndlaeapolU, Ind. piTnpC RHEUMATISM, LIMCJ CONSTIPATIOr PROMINENT RAILROAD ENGINEER SAYS : lULr.iKii, N. C. I took .1 or 4 liottles of /?hcumaettlr several years ago for a very severe attack of rheumatism in the* muscles of ruy hack, which confined mo to niv t>ed forr.orC weeks. KHKl'MACI l)K HAH j MADE A l'EKM A N KNT Cl'UE. n# 1 have not felt any symptoms of it* re turn. I now take It occasionally as a Konoral TONIC, anil its effects are all one could wish. Yours\orv trulv. C. H. IIBCKHAM. For sale by 1 truj^ists, or scr.t exp ^ BOBBITT CHEMICAL /jr 0 w i Bon Ton c | STRAIGHT I If yon wear them, the Itcauty symmetry of your tigure v. ill enhanced, no nr.ittcr how per Vv il ,s Ask your des fo show them to yen ^^Rov?S Worce: ^WCORSBT CO VVorcasler. M wiNcr rM FACTORY LOADEC ? "New Rival" "L ?.'rf fiTBF you are looking ^ gj munition, the kii 1 was troubled with indigestion and dyspepsia as long as I run remember. I had no appetite, and the little I ale distressed me territdy. j All day long I would feel sleepy and had 110 ambition to do anything. Since taking Itipans Tubules 1 feel decidedly la tter. In the morning 1 tin fresh and sound and my appetite has improved wonderfully. At druggists, l'lie Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a year. So. 40. _ FOR MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVER "W TAKE HLIXIR BABEK. H ^ttDOWntlloTtrimrrletulba tar est car* for all malarial dlaaataa and ? a praventoo aaalaai lypbol.i, i'rti trtil br Ul.fcH ZKU nkFa CO., Aaihlnttr^, 1>.C. tw~ Writ* f?T UMmunimU. i 1 point your gun, |9 Loaded Shotgun Shells: Black powder; "Leadei | fe|3 with Smokeless. Insis ga Factory Loaded Shell: DEALEF I FAT 1 |> E 1 ? Prevented by shamp ^ SOAP, and light drcs S purest of emollient SU ment at once stops S crusts, scales, and dan itching surfaces, stimt ^ supplies the roots wit! ^ ment, and makes th <? sweet, healthy scalp w a IVSiSSSorss c Use C'lJTirrBA Soap, ncdstod br Ci purifying, and beautifying the *Mi scales, and dnuclrufl, and the ri<>| wv whitening, and soothing red, roug lulling*, Mtnl etiadn^'p, III Hip forn ^ 1 nflnnimaUone, anil ulcerative win unliacpUu purposes which readily * Ci'TirriRA Soap, to cleanse the jjr the skin, and t'uri( i'lu Ursol.vkn*. Skt Is often sufficient to cure the burning, and scaly skin, scalp,und 1 C3 Irritations, w ith loss of hair, when i /jgfc SoM throughout th* world. Rrltlth l>?ro Depot: a Hue de la I'slz, Pan*. 1'uTlIS In <2^ er-<"KTlci a? Fltani ts*t Pii ia (Chocnl \J0 economical ubetltnte for thr oeleh-sted lig otlxtr blood purifier* sod humour eu:c?. In D?1*I?A>N& ??. ^7 The Great 7 Blood Purifier , CATARRH, INDIGESTION, <J AND KIDNEY TROUBLES. TREASURER ORANGE CO., N.C.. TESTIFIES AS FOLLOWS: ^ illt.LSBOUO. X. C. I had rheumatism for it number of years. A liout four years mk<> it beeamu <|ilite severe. Was confined to my bed lor some time. I'sod several remedies. I hut never rut nnv iwrmnnini .-..n#.# I until I bcjrnn to tificc KHKUMACIDB ?<n the advice of ft friend, it cured me nt the time, and I foci that it him Improved my irenernl health very much. I rrirurd it the best remedy f?.r rheumatism. Respectfully. E. A. DICKSON. revsage prepaid on receipt of Ji.oo. , CO., BALTIMORE, MP. ^ |>> ONSETS MiliK R0NT 'll, Jr^B fet t V J;'- 'Sysj ;,cr > ) SHOTGUN SHELLS I eader" "Repeater** f? ; for reliable shotgun am- 55 nd that shoots where you si buy Winchester Factory $3 "New Rival," loaded with *" and "Repeater," loaded || t UDon having Winchester .*i s, and accept no others. H IS KEEP THEM JNG | sIR | >oos of CUTICURA f> sings of CUTICURA, ^ :in Cures. This treat- ^ falling hair, removes idruff, soothes irritated, O dates the hair follicles, 1 energy and nourish- 5? ie hair grow upon a hen all else fails. ^ >f Women r> jticdka Ointment, for prcaerving, i, for clcauaing the scalp of crust*, ^ ping of falling Ualr, for softening, I . and sure hands, for baby rasher., JTZ. i of buth* for annoying Irritation*, Qr? nki.esscp, and for many sanative, uggoal themselves to women. akin; CrncnitA Ointment, tohoal r Pills, to cool the blood. a Sinulk moat torturing, disfiguring, itching, Ulood beniour*, rashes, ltcJatrigs, and all else fall*. B t: X 2M. Chart* rhousr 8<p, I .on Jon. Trrneh AK ico a a it t'nia. Coi.r.,t?olr Crops , BoOou fjg^y to Coatrd) fcrr new, ImaUliM. odsurirw. AS*.-. ot>t Ccticcka KawiLTK* r, u w?U t? tar ail l>ork,{ riAla, 00 tiwra. MVE"eaS^IHQ' TRIAL ynnrowi hour, w# fwrV.sh Iho fcr.nIno and only IlKlotlllKiUi ll.TLHNATlNtt CTUIUNT 1.1JHHM HH.lsto srijr reader of this l ipor 5o b^mIh *4?ance| %ery low e?mp?ililwfcir'Bi#n. COiTS AlkiOST HOTHIMO?,"rai*a?^ with n.oHt ill if'lhrv ir* ut merit*. i ur#? el?r n ollotber deetrir hrlti, appllxace* and r? ordkiflll. QTIf It C'l IlK for more (ban SO iltiooU. Orly lurr euro for all nenoua dUratri, KMhiMwi anil dltirdrm. For complete settled eon* fider.tltt! outwlogur, ? ut thl* ml. cut and mail to us. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICAGO. #S^DR0PSY l sn W io DAys' treatment free. l7 ^ HayemadeDropaynndlticoinSsife. S pllcatiopi ft SDCoulty lor twontr J J Vaara with t uo moat wanderrat X - I aacoeit. Ha*o cored many thou* ^41^? Js^andcMei. 0|fe?kgrip3V El n. S. GStZH'S C0K8, Box B Atlanta, Qa. Dependable men wear dependable shoes. ^Hofcaj A 45/?Bir- IICCM ri rA YfSZ HII1U DLL NEW PENSION LAWS ?SS Apply to NATHAN IIUKFORD, Ol4 F Ml.. Wwaklngtan, 11. C.