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I t No Hair? "My hair was falling out very fast and I was greatly alarmed. I n then tried Ayer's Hair Vigor and ? my hair stopped falling at once."? 1 Mrs. G. A. McVav, Alexandria, O. |j The trouble is your hair | does not have life enough. I Act promptly. Save your | hair. Feed it with Ayer's I Hair Vigor. If the gray g hairs are beginning to show, Ayer's Hair Vigor will restore color every timC. 11.00 a bcllle. All dragglkls. If your drugpist cannot supply you, scnd'u* mio dollar and wo will express yo. a bottle. llosuranndelvotbo naino of vour nearest express ofiico. Address, L .i.e. A.YEKCO.,Lowell,Man. K i. flyan?rt?MMMd?amscptnsQW ?Jl Liver IJiiis Thcif'cwhat vnn nond snmp thing to cure your biliousness. You need Ayer's Pills. ?i ?i?? -?-? _i m? * > i_i __ m i_, Want your moustache or beard a i beautiful brown or rich black ? Use Biictagtaia'sDye SOctj ot drugg'jtsorr' P Hall&Co Nashua.N.H i ^11^^ SOUTHERN MADE for SOUTHERN MAIDS Tbe Best Lfdies* Shoes In America for {1.53 TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. IF VOl II DKA 1.1'. 11 DOliN NOT < AltltY I Illtin, A HOST A I, CAItn TO I:K OII.I. TKLL YOI WHKRK YOU CAN liliT TIIKM. O O O O CRADDOCKTERRY CO., /TAKERS. LYNCHBURG, VA. ""^lO WRIll FOR CAT. & SPECIAL RATES f ^'lu'11'ons SfcCURPD I C-'Vy \ for nr?<1n?tc? or tuition I rf > 1 refunded. We |n\j H.K. Fin. I lun<!<!CV business V ylflflUUL I COLLEGES BIRMIHCHAM.ALA. RICHMOMO, VA. HOUSTON, TEX. COLUMBUS. OACOMMERCIAL COLLEGE OF KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY. ^ LEXLNtiTOM, KT. Highest award at Wot Id * Exposltloa. _i i J ti Rook kaaoioi. Business. Short baod Ttdo * Wriuai abJ T?l#frKPh? iiaini. 1000 lit a deoia. IS teachers. 10.000 Gradual#* lu Bustae*-. //##An .Vot* Addrsaa W1LBCU 1L SMITH. Praa i. UilaeUm. Kw. oieotso*otsol?oJso*oUoV?o*oUo*c?? ! HEADACHE. c*?? s O n FEVERISH CONDITIONS ? ? I I AND COLDS CURED BY o 2 UC A P IT D 1 IN E o tt Sold kf all Drutilili. 41 to*oRoKoatoatoatoatoieoBtoatoaeoaio < ? '?? ;t*!!!*Ml CCC, Merer sold In balk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something Joet as food." A Springy-step in "QUEEN BESS" ??*?? $2.50 Shoes. BCwNBnnRQESH So. 41. la Boot Oou#h gjrrtip. Tumi Good. Un B Fj to time, gold br drogglniK. |*| ^BBBIZHElSBSaBBegi WHY ~A SUFFER. A with v RHEUMATISM, The G CATARRH, E.ff?cl INDIGESTION, . ltP| CONSTIPATION, *??d Actic KIDNEY and . LIVER TROUBLES, BLOOD DISEASES. " Hheutna tirtie In *ta t turn In ra w until it ?i MAOIDK. ? the troub ? A however, i since. FHEUMACIDE is (or sale by all Druggists, o ORtITT CrtCBRICAL 4 B&jK ' . , > "> > , >. / POPE DID NOT WANT NEW QOWN9 L**1! Disinclination to flpend Hon*/ fO* Ills Own U***. This story is told to Illustrate the pope's dislike of spending money on himself: The other day Plo Centra, his old and tried personal attendant, opened the discussion while dressing him in the morning, by remarking that his gown was not as new as it might be. "I suppose I have yourr holiness' permission to order your gowns for the jubilee?" he added. "What gowns for the jubilee?" replied Leo XIII. sharply.""I have three sets already, and certainly require no more. Why should I spend good money for what I do not want?" "But, holy father,' protested Centra, who knows his master's weakTiPcn ,,?iinnnnlmy citmn nnn nf thu groat personages who are rereived by your holiness should notice a defect such as this (pointing to an Invisible spot on one sleeve)? He might think you had put on your old clothes, not j considering him worthy of the best." After a pause I,eo XIII. said with a sigh: "Well, perhaps you are right. ' Order them?but only one, mind you; and my poor people will have to go without so much bread. How dreadful to be obliged to spend so much money on one's clothes." ! CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH It. It. It. Cnrcn Drnp-Scutail Onset Ktneelnlly?To Prove It It. C. It. Sent Free. '1 liese diseases, with aches and pains in bonA, joints and hack, agonizing puius in shoulder blades, hands, fingers, arms and legs cripp'.cd by rheumatism, lumbngo,sciatica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting,nose bleeding, ringing in the ears, sink stomach, j deafness, noises in the head, bad teeth.thin I hot blood. all run down fooling of catarrh ! arc sure signs of an awful poisoned condition of the blood. Take Botanic Blood > Halm. I B.B.B.) Soon all aches and pains ; stop, the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure is made of the worst rheumatism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of | eases cured by taking B.B.B. It strength- j iens weak kidneys and improves digestion. I Druggists, $1 per large bottle. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co, 14 Mitchell j j St., Atlanta, Cla. Describe trouble and free 1 \ medical advice sent in sealed letter. A single perfume factory at Cauues I | uses ^00,000 pounde of tlower petals in a I tea ?on. A. 51. Friest. l)i gglst. Slielbyville, Ind.. ' says: "Kail's Catarrh Cure gives the best of i satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials, as it cures every one who takes it." Drug| gists sell it. 75e. ' The average longevity in the United ' I Slates was 35.2 in 1000. ' FITS permanently ourod.No fits or aervousnessafter llrst day's u?j of Dr. Kline's Great ] NerveHestorer.tiatrial bottle and treatlsefroo : Dr. It. H. Ki.?i. Ltd., 931 Arch at.. Phi a.. Pa. The man who expects bad luck usually gets it. H. II. Quern's Sons, ?"J~'V'" <la.. are the only successful Drops>rrT,^JU,lsts in the world. See tlielr liberal o d(uM^.dvi-rttseI inent in another column of i^pptper. Stockings were first worn in Italy about i j 1100 A. D. 5Irs.Vrin.slow'sRoothlng fiyrup forohildron | teething,softon the gums, reduces inllsmmstlon.ullays paiu,cures wind colic. 26c. a bottle I lie wiio cultivates his memory increases ; his chances of unhappiness. 1 do not believe I'lso's Cure for Conautnp- I tion hasan equal for coughs and cold.* -Jo as F. Botes, Trinity Sprlugs, lnd., Feb. 1ft, 1skk). | He Is most a servant who boasts that he has no master. Putnam Fadei.f.ss Dyes color Silk, Wool and Cotton at one boiling. The weather man is seldom greeted with a storm of appliUse. Millions of Buffaloes. In 1868 Inman, Sheridan and Custer rode continuously for three days through one herd In the Arkansas j region, and in 1869 trains on the Kansas Pacific were held from 9 in the morning until G at night to permit the passage of one herd across the tracks. Army officers relate that In 1862 a herd that covered an area of 70xc30 miles moved north from the ' Arkansas to the Yellowstone. Catlin and Inman and army men and employes of the fur companies considered a drove of 100,000 buffalo a com: mon sight along the line of the Santa Fe trail. Inman computes that from St. Ixiuls alone the bones of 31,000,000 buffalo were shipped between 1868 and 1881.?July Outing. Senator Hoar's New House. Senator Hoar has bought a house on Connecticut avenue, Washington, a three-story brick structure of a dozen rooms. He borrowed the $18,000 which It cost, but hopes to make a profit by I selling before long. He and Mrs. Hoar have hoarded for thirty-three years in Washington hotels. Much disappointment is felt in the capital because Senator Clark does not Intend to build a residence on the site of the old Stewart castle which he purchased some time ago. Finishing touches are being put to his splendid home in New York, and It is said the senator will . ? 1 not build again outside Montana. reat BLOOD PURIFIER. Will a Quick and Permanent Curt. jrlfles the Blood. Neutralises the .Starts the Kidneys into Healthy ?n, and builds up the Nerves and .ntire System in a short time. (Jukensboro, N. C., July 2Ctli, 1002. ' CHEMICAL OO. mkn : ? It gives mo pleasure to recommend ,oid?\" for tho euro of rheumatism. Kon>o? year 1901. I had a aov ere case of rhounia- ? yanklos, which I neglected for some weeks, t ?t so I could hardly walk. I tried K1IKUi and had not taken half tho laittie'before ' le was.gone. I finished taking the bottle and 1 have not had a nartlclo of tho trouble Very truly. K. P. PAKK Eli. r sent by Express prepaid on receipt of $t .oo. SO.. BALTIMORE, MD. BILL ARP'S LETTER. Matters Discussed By the Bartow Philosopher HE WRITES VERY INTLRES1INGLY Much tlood Reasoning; and Practice! Common Sense, Written in Cheerful Language. Atlanta Constitution. GoldEtntth. in a short and pretty preface to the "Vicar of Wakefield." says: "There are a hundred faults in this thing and a hundred things might be said to prove thom beauties. A book may be amusing with many errors or it may be dull without a single absurdity. The hero In this story unites In himself the three greatest characters on earth?the priest, the husbandman and the father of a family. Strange that the author could write such a charming story about the very three characters he knew least about, for he had no fitness for nor experience in either. It is not recorded that he was ever in love or sought the com pany of virtuous young ladies, yet his ballad of the Hermit in the "Vicar of Wakefield" is admitted to be the tenderest and most perfect love poem ! ver written. My father made mc commit it to meniorj- when I was young and there are at least a dozen versos in It that I ran cry over now and it does me good. It Is a comfort t? weep over these sad. sweet things. Iaiughorn wrote a verse about a poor worvinr, win. o K., K.? .. l.~- I > - 1 ...u.i M mi It I?uwr at UUi Ul CCIBI IllIUC* | ing over the battle Held of Minden for the body of her husband, und wh??n she found bim she knelt by his side and wept and the big tears fell upon the face of her ehild and mingled with the milk he drew. "A child of misery baptized in tears." A painting was made of it, and Walter tsrott says tiie only time lie ever saw Burns he was looking at that painting and crying iike a child. To read the lines and , imagine the painting is enough for me. But if I had been Goldsmith I would have set down the ipother of a family as greater than the father. Evan Howell said he would not vote for a curfew, for his observation that if ; the fathers wo'ulu stay at home at i night the boys would and that song of ''Where is my wandering boy lo j night?" would not have been written, i But the fathers can't all stay at home I at night. They are wanted at the 1 store, the office, the counting room, ' for on them depends the support of i the family. But many a tired mother i can sing. "Where is my wandering I husband tonight?" Alas, too many can | he found at the club, at the pool room or the hotel, while the mother in ! straining her mind to untangle that 1 hard sum. "If A and B can build a ! house In thirty days and B can build j It in forty-five days, how long will it i take A to build it?" Take it all in all, it is the mothers who are the hope of the world?the saviours of the children. They certainly save the girls, for nobody has yet sung, "wnere la my wandering girl to- ! night?" If the fathers would do their j half and save the boys it would be all ! right. Oh. out for the mothers and ! wives and sisters, what would become j of us without them? Since 1 have been j sick sometimes away in the silent ; watches of the night. when, as .loh j says, "Deep sleep falleth upon a man.*' it does not fall upon a woman, for I feel her gentle touch arranging the cover and feeling whether I am breath ing or not. Since I have been sick 1 have never caught her fast asleep and the other night she got hurt with me because I slipped out in the hall a.id called the girls down to make a fire and heat some water, for I was sick anjl suffering, and there was no hot water in the boiler. It is just as Scott wrote: "When pain and anguish wring the brow. A ministering angel thou." And as Coleridge wrote: "A mother is a mother still; The holiest thing alive." I may have written it before, but will write it again, that one night I agree 1 to stay with two dear little girls while their father and mother went out to tea at aa neighbor's. This pleased me, for I am always happy in their company. and they iu mine. When bed time came t undressed them and they knelt by my knees and said their prayers; one of them was soon asleep, but the other lingered and said. "Gran'pa, when papa comes home please tell him I love him." Yes, 1 will," said I. "What must I tell your mamma?" She closed her eyes and said, "Nothing? she knows I love her." That expresses it. That child's father lores those little girls dearly, but he keeps a drug store, and Is the prescription partner. He gbes to the store before his children get up. He has but an hour with them at noon, and has to return to the store soon after supper. No wonder these little girls want him to know that they love him. Boys are very different, and when they get up in their teens mothers lose their influence. Some say it is had associates. Of course that has something to do with it. but Cain didn't have any that we know of, and yet he killed his brothei. Environment is a big word, but it covers everything that a boy inherits or that he gets from association. One day n iriena 01 mine, a Hebrew. saui to me. "Major. I pelieve you does love your ohildutn better dan aybody in dr town." "Oh, no. I reckon not." said I. Don't you love your children?" "Vy, vea. of course: but I uelieve you vould die for your ahildrun better dan anybody in de town." "Oh, no, I reckon not." said I. "Don't you love your children?" "Vy, yes. of course, but I pelieve you vould die for yours?" said I. He pondered a while. "Yes, I pelieve I vould: dat Is, for all?except Frank." Frank was his had boy and gave him troudle; but Frank turned out to be a good boy. and Ish one of the nest citizens of Atlanta. One of my best old-time friends wgs a Norwegian, and was killed during the war. He had some good, amiable daughters, and had two sons, who were bad, very bad, and, as I was mayor of the town, they Rare m# trouble. Their father was a member ?>f the council, an elder in my church, and I had favored his boys as much as possible; but one night, just before ChrlstifaaS. they broke into a hardware store and stole a keg of powder and hid it in their stable loft. They had planned to blow up the calabooa^. The city marshal (old Sam Stewart) found it and arretted the Soys and brought^Jiigfii before me for trial. I Dut it off until" next morning. 'That nigbt I went to see the father and mother/ She cried, of 66'utse. and he choked up ob she talked. "Mffif1 Root friendt?I has been prayTtt" over dls ting about mine poys and it seems to me de goot Lord say mine poys is goin' to queet. Dcy tako it all from nie. I has been in de calaboose in Stockholm a hundred times, but von day 1 qucet. I shost qucet rigt off all a sudden, and I pelieve if you will try my poy3 ono more time dcy will qucet." And sure enough they did quit, and grow up to a good manhood. One of J hem is the cashier of the largest bank in Memphis, and the other the head of a hardware house in Louisville, Ky. Sometimes I think that it is'the halo of a mother's prsyers that reclaims many a wayward boy. If the young mai would only atop and think?think or the watches of the ni?ht when he was a teething lnfan. tuvging at an empty breast for milk while the r.oor, tired mother rhninred hlrn from ?idr? to side and longed for the morning. I have wondered how they survived it. and why they would go through the ordeal again. A man wouldn't, and not all of thorn will help and comfort the poor r-otlier when she feels for the first time her first horn's breath. But we must not give up the v>~?* May be they will, like the prodigal son. come to themselves and "aucet." BILL ARP. ( , i A writer in the Revue de Paris d?- I rlaros that many Frenchmen hope that some day Spain, the most fertile ami most ill governed of European countries, will bccom? Fr. nclt soil. Tho older we grow the more we i wonder at tlte enthusiasm of er their blrthdaya. ...,v'? J^.'. for s NEW PENSION LAWSruI Apply ?o NATHAN Hl( KFOHD, ?14 F HI., Wuklniltn, U. C. 600 YOUNG MEN PrtcllMl Hallway Intlllnle. InllMtpnlli, Ind. JHKBBHBm THE F.I.IJH enAMI'ION QPAIN aad PEANUT I (IE THRKfl>'KRa rxcrll all other*by tho <iuaaI llty ant! qnaltfy at lu work, ami durability of lia oonatruru >n Ihrranlara for atoatn and truari em war. For frra t-alaloy nr. prlpct, larma. Ac. addrraa. wKO. 1'HUKni-. Uana7alAcanl.Bariesa.Va "iff oiTlS ThiwpswftEytWtttr PE-RD-KA HECESSA A Letter From Congressman PE-RU-NA IS A HOUSEHOLD SAFEGUARD. No Family Should Be Without It. PERUNA is a great family medicine. The women praise it an well as the men; it is just the tlnng for the many little catarrhal ailments of childhood. The following testimonials from thankful men and women tell in direct, sincere language what their success has been in the use of Peruna in their families: Lours J. Seherrinsky. 103 Locust street, Atlantic. Iowa, writes: "1 will tell you'briefly what Peruna hag dene for me. I took a severe cold which gave me a hard cough. All doctors' medicines failed to cure it. 1 took one bottle of Peruna and was well. "Then my two children had had coughs accompanied by gagging, llv wife had stomach trouble for yours. She look Peruna and now she la well. "I cannot express my thanks in words, but I recommend your remedy at every opportunity, for 1 can conscientiously sov that there is no medicine like Peruna. Nearly every one in this town knew about the sickness of myself and family, and they have seen with Hstoni-slunent what Peruna has done for us. Many followed our example, and the result was health. Thanking you heartily, 1 ass." ? L. J. Seherrinskv. M r?. Nannie Wallace, Tulare, Pal., President of the Western llaptist Mis luuiu \ ounciy, wriu'i; "l consider I'eruna an indispensable article, in tny medicine cheat, it is twenty medicine* in one. and lias so far cured every sickness that has been in my home for five years. I consider it of snccial value to weakly women, a* it luiilds up the general health, drives out disease and keeps you' in tlie best of health."--Mrs. Nannie Wallace. I'eruna protects the family against 1 cotidhs, eolns. catarrh, bronchitis, catarrh of the stomach, liver and kidneys. It is just as sure to cure a, rase of catarrh of the bowels us it is a case of catarrh of the | head. ^ets (Jer 7 S P &X I M* : Acts truly ; ' '* ft / Syrup of Figs appe; : / well-informed and to ti iSliSti / Ponor>t parts are siny cause it acts without el tions, as it is wholly fr quality or su wfflBErv. Viw manufac lurin mtSr^ *wYt>A pleasant to tl ^OTlV virtues of S &%\ from an exce W&/ l ttW. known to be / j/?? /&' "' >> act most ben< >' / /fi J fq&l To Ret its \H& ^ :ipN genuine?mai V^v |fp ^ _ ^JFORTflAfW jiavilU. Ky?** l*l?- by all dru^iitA. Price- fi HHHHBHS99I j Any Position.. is a comfortable one to the woman who weara the . . Royal K Worcester 1 or Bon Ton H j Corsets. I Straight front, | Ease, grace and elegance. flj Ask *r>or drilerto *how Cr them to yog. ^ 9 Royil Worcester Const Co., I ... Worcester, Mat. I JUST PATENTED!./. A riathlne For THOROUGHLY CURING DYSPEPSIAandINDIGESTION Works wonder*. No dieting. No medtrtne wbaterer. I'sed three rolnnte? dolly It will quick ly rr> duos the slse of the itoiusob Write for circular DIILPO .MFG. CO.. Bet S79. TOI.BDO. O. So. 41. ^DROPSY k, ^ W 10 OATS' TRtATMUT FREL L/ ? xy _HtTcmt4eDrop,y andStsoom !3Mk Z* plIoatioM a ?prc.fclty far ttrantT T T?ar? with to# melt wond?rfv} ^ wyw. BknetridnujaiiU' (flBiiiK4o""i B.X.OBXWIMVS, Box B Atlf.au, (J a RY TO THE HOME. ^ White, of North Carolina. \ HON. GEORGE H. WHITE. | Congressman lleorge llenry White. of Tarboro, N. C'., writes the tollouing letter to Dr. llartman in regard to l!i?' merits of the great catarrh c ire, !' ?. . $ House of Represeut.it i.? *. ' Washington, l'"eb. I, 1X'1\ ! Gentlemen?" I a rn more I ha n sn I I tilled with i'eruna, a ml /Iml it to be an excellent remedy Jor the get/? tttnl catarrh. 1 hare used it tn my /amity and they all Join me in recotn mending It as an e.rcellen I remedy." Very resyeetj ally, George It. White The lVruna Medicine Co., Columbus. l>.: i'eruna is an internal, scientific, systemic remedy tor catarrh. It is no palliative or temporary remedy; it is thorough hi its work, and in cleansing the diseased mucous membranes cures the catarrh. If,you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of lVruna write at once t<> Dr. Ilnrtnian. gixmg a fu'.l statement of your case, and he will be p'eiised to give you his valuable advice grat is. Address I)r. Hartman. President of The Hart man Sanitarium. Columbus. Ohio. vtly\ lea,sa^?\tly*. BerveficiaJly; 3kS La^xaAive^. ils to the cultured and the le healthy, because its comple and wholesome and beisturbing the natural funcee from every objectionable in me process or g tigs are used, as they are le taste, hut the medicinal yrup of Figs arc obtained llent combination of plants medicinally laxative and to L'ficially. beneficial effects?buy the nufactured by the 5yrjjp(? si. Alew Vork.N.V. ifty ccrvta per bottle.. KtKVn A year ago last June I was troubled greatly with indigestion after meals. Often upon retiring at night I would be seized with dizziness, which often kept me awake for hours. I was recommended to take Kipuns Tabules by one of my friends who had himself found use for thein. I immediately found relief in their use, and have since had no return of my complaints. At druggists. I'hc Five-Cent packet in enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a rear. J . Wo buy lion illy I Wttrnmli likuou to iol e illeri of the Mexican anfl Mexican j entitled, Including belre. it . Write for urtlcv.Ur* Veterans Ti* wim und co. Atlantic Baildlni) *-- _ _______ W?hliigten, P. C. run MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVEB ~W?TAKE HLiXIR BABEK. ^ Known nil orrf America ne tbe e?rnet ewe for n<l dieeneee end yrwnufwr imhwnmela