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*zt... every walk in life. 1 . . A. A. Boyce, a farmer. living three end a half miles from Trenton, Mo., annble to walk nt .11, and every make bift I tried and all the medicine I took bad not the slightest effect. My hack continued to grow weaker until I began taking Donn's Kidney Tills, and 1 must say I- was more than surprised nnd gratified to notice the hack ache disappearing gradually until It finally topped." Dean's Kidney Tills sold by all dealers or mailed on receipt of price, 5.? cents per box. Foster-Milburu Co., Buffalo, N. V. New Snlim?rln? for frnnre. Fra nee lias just ordered tlie construction of six submarines of a new type? that devised by Naval Engineer Mangas. They will be the largos* ret built, as when submerged they will have a displacement of 4~0 tons. The contract calls for twelve knots an hour under water. nrnf'i??? n? Cnr?<l t?T locula-vnlloatlon'j as they cannot reach tha diseased no rt I on of the ear. There Is on'v on a way to euro d?afness, and that tsbv constitutional ro nedios. Deafness is cruised by nn Inflamed condition of the mucous Hnln-'of the Kustnehlan Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have n rumbling sound orlmnerfeot hearing. and when It Is entirely closed Denfness la the result,and unlessthe inflammation can be taken out and tlila tube reetored to Its normal condition, hearing will t>e destroyed forever. JClne cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which Is nothing hut an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any ease of Deafnaasfonusedby catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send f?>c ?ir2utara free. P. .T. CsbkktACo., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Fa-nllv Pills are the best. The fJIft of Making FrlrmU. Blessed in the tmin who lias the gift Ti making friends, for It In one of God's best gifts. It Involves many Shinto i...? ? -II I uui nuu>c tin im me power or Koing out of one's self anil seeing and appreciating whatever is noble and lovable in another man.?Thouias Hughes. \ usellne. Everybody knows ihe great value of this remedy in the household, but everybody docs not know that the imitations of It, which some second-class drug fists dishonorably palm off on their euaomers, have little or no value. What hould bo understood bv the public is, that it is not a mere question of comparative I Jralue between "Vaseline" and the imitations, but that the imitations do not eifect the wonderful healing results of the worldrenowned "Vaseline, ' and that they are not the same thing nor made in the name iwray. Besides this, many of the imitations mre harmful irritant and not 6afe to use, prhile Vaseline is perfectly harmless. l'erfect safety, therefore, lies in buying nly original bottles and other packages jput up by the Ohesebrough Manufact'g Co. Attention is called to their Capsicum Vaseline advertised in another column. President Dias savs that Mexico needs thousands of Chinese to work in bcr mines and on plantations. An Old Field Weed. Many seeing that old field weed, the mullein stalk, never consider the good it is accomplishing in curing lung troubles. It presents in Taylor's Cherokee Remedy o? Sweet Gum and Mullein the finest known remedy for coughs, croup, colds and consumption. At druggists, 25e., 50c. and $1.00 a bottle. Americans imported $2.">,412,770 worth of precious FtTtnsrm?r?nt'vi"i'H I. Vo l| ts or nervousness attar first dsv's use of Dr. 'Cllne's Orev llorvbTloStorar.^Sf'-talho'tlsand tre?tl-?efr?e Dr.R.H. Kuss. Ltd.. 931 Arch St., PtUla.. P t. The U> 'ted States will sell shout $10.000,000 worth of fruits to Europe this year Mrs Wlnslow's HiotMn 'Svruo tor enlldren toetMn ".soften the rums, re.luooslnflnmnutlon,allays rutin,ou .-es vlnd ?!!<?. 25c. a hottl a Germany, nrcordinr to statements, is the country consuming the most potatoes. It yon want creamery prices do as the creameries do, use JuNK Tint ilUTTKB CtoT.on. New Orleans nnd Galveston now export more wheat than Xew York. I msuro'Msn'sf'ure forCossumptt nsaved my life three years nco,?Mrs. Thomas T!nr. ixh. Mapln St., Norwich, N.V.. Feb. 17,100O. Ho.?"It eertninly was a protty wedding, and everything was so nieeiy arranged.' She.?"That's just what I think; . and me music was especially appro prtate." tie.?"I don't remember. What did they play?" I Sho.?" 'Tho Last Hopo." '?Christ | mns Lipplncott's. T_YPFWHITFRS CHEAP! 1 ot ec nd-l'a <1 Much tie* of II mikes tMk-n a? pi't t> it for the OIlT. r ' ? In* f??r quick hn*?T?. J. b, < UAt'l oN, i l?i. lotto. N. C. 6?o G ?. Sil'."!!r'.RAW FURS Wanted nrl'in i'U January a O, o?a- ni Mu?kr?t. Iln.k Stfc?it?*. Kio'cnon ie I i>t i?n, iIIk i?-I o .?h prl.-e paid Write A T Hum ha. dOUIn A J.I, Cli.clnnull," H?P? IT IS! Wont to learn ill shoot s a a Morse? How to I'tok out a yj >. OoodOne? kuow lu?perloi-vii'',v 1 " t Hons nit ao Gnaril a/aliiit \ I Fraud* Detect Dl?ea?ean4 / \ " I \ Marl Cur* when * ?? is / \ / \ posit' lo' Tell the Aj;e by \ / \ Che Teeth? What to call th? Deferent Parti of thAnimal" How to Sli.m t Horse Property? AII thl ml other Valia .) Infor n* i?n m i be obtained h> wading our IJ >- I' Vl?K I l.'.I'ST!* AT Kl< II liliK DtlOUi w ilr.t we will forward. pv?tfrail. on receipt of only do rente ta eoautpa. BOCK i*t ii noiiNt-:, 124 Leonard Si., N. V. City. REPORT ON COTTON. Bureau Gives Out Much Valuable Information, QUANTITY GINNED TO NOVEMBER 14 Over Seven flillion Bales Already Accounted For?The Value of Ginning; Statistics. Washington. Special.?The census bureau has issued a report on the quantity of cotton ginned from the growth of 1903 up to and Including November 14, showing the total commercial bales of 7,070,437. Of these 6,519,322 were square bales and 510,555 Sea Island crop bales. There weie 29,506 ginneries operated this season up to and including November 14. The cotton ginned In 1902 as reported by tho census bureau was 5,928,872 commercial bales up to October 18, nud 9.311.835 commercial bales up to December 13. Count inn round hnlrs t ho number this year is 6,Sir>,692. In this report no account has been taken of tho quantity of linters obtained by the cotton seed nulls by reginning cotton seed, but statistics of such cotton will be Included in tho final report for this season. This report will be followed by two others showing the quantity of cotton j ginned froii the growth of this year, i and to January 16, 1904. No estimates are given of the amount of cotton remaining unginned. Tho census agents were asked to submit these estimates, but the census bureau has not even computed them as returned, turning them over to the bureau of statistics of the Department of Agriculture to aid chat office in the annual estimate of the cotton crop to be issued tomorrow. Tho reason for this as announced by the census bureau, is that when the final reports were received a year ago "it appeared that the estimates of the agents made in October were six and four-tenths per cent, short of the actual crop grown. A margin of error so large as that is equal to the difference between a short crop and a normal crop and under the peculiar conditions existing In two cotton markets today, the census bureau does not feel warranted In publishing any figures In which s? large an element of error may exist again. The policy of co-operation between the census and the Agricultural Department is adopted on the recommendation of Secretary Cortelyou of the Department of Commerce and labor, to avoid conflietinc renorta ?_o f?r oc nnooiiiin The census bureau announces that 1 it ought to be possible In the January 1G report "to cover practically the entire cotton crop of 1903-1904, and this will be two months earlier than we were able to do a year ago. It is to be regretted, in view of the cotton situation. that no canvass corresponding to the one now reported was made by the census ofllce a year ago." Canal Treaty Signed. i Panama, By Cable.?The canal treaty was signed at 11:30 Wednesday. There i were no amendments to the treaty. When every preparation had been completed for the actual signing of the treaty a government decree was adopted. setting forth that: "Whereas, a guarantee of the independence of the lsthumus has been ob- | tained. and whereas, celerity is indis- I pensible to secure an efficacious and j 1 immediate fulfillment of this obliga- j tion on the part of the United States biiu me junta or me provisional government, formed by the unanimous , will of the people of the inthmus and possessing full, sovereign powers over the isthmus territory, be it, "Resolved and decreed that the treaty he approved in all its parts." j Minister of Foreign Affairs Espcrilla arrived here from Colon yesterday with the new canal treaty. Scnors Arango and Arias, with some of the ministers of the new republic, met the party at the railway station. Senor Esbrilla drove Immediately to the government palace where the chest containing the treaty was placed on a table in the main office. Members of the Junta and of the ministry assembled in the grand salon of the palace. The chest and two small tin boxes, addressed to the members of the Junta by Minister RunauVarilla. Charlotte Cnr Strike. Charlotte, N. C., Special.?All the motormen and conductors on the lines of the Charlotte Consolidated Construction Company went out on a strike on Wednesday morning. The cause of the action Is due to the failure of the cur company to turn the heat on the cars. No disorder Is manifested among the strikers. Wllliams'on's fl'll. At a recent meeting of the directors of Willlamston mills a semi-annual dividend of 3 per cent, was declared, payable on December ..ist. The management of this groat enterprise, under the presidency of Mr. Jan. P. firs. , sett, has been gratifying indf'-d to the stockholders, as is evinced by the fuel that, although the mills have been en larged the second time within the past year, yet hire is a sufficiency of r.n divided profits to deelnre the above stated amount as their first dividend, and it Is the policy of the manage ment to pav out their dividends semi annually lieraflor. Collision at Sen Pcnsacola, Fla.. Special?The American schooner Sadie C. Sumner, Cap* McLean, reached port in a dlanbl condition, having collided with an un Vr">wn steel bark on the night of N?? VQMbcr 20th, when 40 miles southers of Tortugas. The fore rigging of fischooner was carried aw^y, boats c>; mi s stove in. The identity of the t r could not he learned by 'he capla'n, a' though he made repeated efforts to a; certain, but the bark paid no atteutic; to the lights shown by the schooner. DOWIE A BANKRUPT. Frederick N. Blount and Albert D. Currier Appointed Receivers. BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS BEGUN Zlon City Has a Population of 10,000 and is Said to Represent an lix? penditure of $20,000,000, Chicago, Special.?Financial difficulties which began during the crusade of John Alexander Dowie, the self-styled "Elijah II" and his restoration host to New York a month ago and which havo been rapidly increasing since Dowie's return, culminated in the Federal Court's taking possession of all the property controlled by Dowie in Zion City, 111. This town. whleh was founded two years ago by Dowie, has a population of over 10.000, is the general headquarters for Dowie's Church miu is Sitiu in i rjiri's* in ?ii A4"" 111111111 * of $20,000,000. Frederick M. Blount, cashier of tho Chicago National Bank, and Albert n Currier, a law partner of Congressman Bouteli. were appointed receivers of the property. Their bonds were fixed at $100,000 by Judge Kohlsaat. of the United Stales District Court, who made the appointment in the petition of several creditors. The receivers left for Zion City at once to take possession of the property. The bankruptcy proceedings agn!n;< Dowie were based on the allegation that he is Insolvent and that while in this financial condition be committed an act of bankruptcy by making a preferential payment, on November 2. to the Streeter Lumber Company for $3.770. Dowie has been hard pressed by his creditors, espei inlly since it was announced that his recent mission to New York had proved unsuccessful, financially. Dowie is known to have accumulated a large sum as the head of the Christian Catholic Church, the assets of the organization being estimated at between $20,000,000 and $30,000,000. Thert w:i? :i lfiriro nutlnv nf mnni'V hnwevnr when Zion City was started. The lace and candy industry were started and as both of these ventures have never been a paying Investment a great deal of money was tied up. Last Wednesday Dowie's first confession of weakness was made at a rally In the tabernacle at Zlon City. "A lot of you people have cash in your pockets." Dowie said, to his followers: "Dig down and get it out. It is God's and we need it in His work. You are cowards if you do not give it up. Deposit it." Dowie talked in the same strain for more than an hour, tears glistening on his cheeks as he told of I the financial straits in which the Zion Industries found themselves. Instead of frightening many into depositing. this appeal sent a long line of people to the bank on Friday, where they lined up at the paying teller's window, drawing out their money. Less than $3,000 was deposited in the hank on Friday, while the amount withdrawn was twice as much. Late In the afternoon A. W. Graham, of Waukegr.n tried to withdraw his account of $r?00 and was told he would have to give SO day's notice before he could get his money. Monday another effort was made by Dowle to pet funds but the depositors who appeared were few and the deposits were chiefly In trivial amounts. Tuesday Dowle ashed the members of Zion more urgently than ever for money. He declared that he must have $500,000 without delay. In the efforts to remedy the condition of affairs at Zion City hundreds of letters were sent out daily to Howie's followers in other parts of the country. Tn these letters all Dowieites are urged, almost commanded. to sell their farms, stores and everything else and coine at once to Zion City and take up the work of the Church. It is declared that the employes of the manufacturing industries have not hern paid in from four to six weeks. What little they have, received is said to have been paid entirely In the Zion City coupon books. Knrly in the week before last Dawie made a trip through the various shops. He told his followers and others that they must either wait for their salaries or must endure a substantial cut in wages. This was agreed to. The receivers, v/ith their attorneys npd Custodian Redieske. with six dep? t> inuis! a'.s, v ent out to Zion City Tuesday night to serve upon Dow'e the notice of the receivership. Redieske and his deputies went to the bank, while the others called upon Dowie at Ms residence. As the off leers were about to demand admission to the hank, a nmn ran from a rear door. One >f the deputies overtook him. and a second man came running from the hank, shorting: "I.et me have those moors: I will ret away with them." "ed'eske threatened to place them nder arrest unless they returned at nee to the bank, which they did. He 'hen placed the bank, and the three men in it. under a guard. While this was taking place at the bank, the re eivers and the attorneys enlied upon Howie, and read to him the petition and order of the court which placed /.ion in the hands of a receiver. N \v* Notes Governor Odell snvs he will he "more active" in New York polities, hut Piatt will remain State leader. Ambassador Joseph Choate gave n uneheon in honor of Hon. William J iiryan. The German Antarctic expedition ia charge of Prof. Doygalski, arrived in in Kiel. A lunatic shot at Kenneth Grahame the secretary of the IJ&nk of England in bis office. OPEN LETTER TO PUBLIC. Free and Independent Labor Should Be Given Protection. Just previous to adjournment the executive committee of the Citizens' Industrial Association which recently assembled at Dayton, Ohio, resolved against members placing the union label on article* of their own manufacture. They also took ground in opposition to the eight-hour hill now pending in Congress. They provided for the formation of a labor information bureau for the use of members. A platform was adopted as an open letter to the public which says: "The present condition of industries has become so deplorable by reason of indefensible methods and claims of organized labor that the time has come when the deploying interests and good citizenship of the country must take immediate and effective measures to reaffirm and enforce those fundamental principles of American government guaranteeing free competitive conditions. "in its demands organized labor is seeking to overthrow individual liberty and property rights, the principal props of our government. Its methods ji.i sn-ui in?; liiis revolutionary ana ho- i cialistip change in our institutions are i also those of physical warfare. Re- > cause of this warfare the industrial interests of the nation during the last year have bet n injured to an irreparable degree. Many firms have been driven to bankruptcy and the cases arc innumerable in which working men have been disabled and even murdered, while numerous families have been rendered destitute by reason of the tyranny and seditious attacks upon society by {he strike organizations. A ! condition of anarchy has existed continuously in some States for months past, and in fact, the acts of lawless- i ness committed under the sacred name i of labor are of such frequent recur- ! rencc that the public sense of their enormity has become blunted. The period of great prosperity brought about by the unrestricted operation of the law of supply and demand is also ; being destroyed by the acts of violence of organized labor and as a result we ! are now confronted with the possibility j of a period of depression. "While wo most emphatically ob- | joct to being classed as enemies of j organizations of labor that are conducted upon lawful and beneficent lines, yet we are unalterably opposed to the present programme of violence, boycotting and the tyranny now be- i ing carried out by the majority of labor unions.We, therefore, urge the rapid organization of those who believe in the faintenancc of law and order and the perpetuation of our free institutions to the end that they may yield their full and proper influence upon the destinies of the nation. It is only through the machinery of organization that we can hope to ex- i pri'lso -i nntrnt -i r.,1 1?.,? I over public thought and the conduct of public officials to the end that the rights of the American citizenship | can be assured to free and independent labor, the rights of property protected and legislation of a socialistic nature prevented from being enacted into law." Notes and Comments. Tbe Diamond Match Company has just completed a sam mill in Butte county. California, which will cut 150,0(10 feet, of lumber in a run of ten hours. The company is also building box factories and other enterprises. The I'russlan war department finds (hat in every 1,000 young men arriving at the age of military duty seventeen are suffering from heart disease. Striealer, who has been studying the subject, declares that the cause of the groat prevalence is the increasing degeneracy of tho nervousness of the youth of the land. The harvest of wheat alone engages about 1,000,000 men and 50 000 teams three months of the summer, while at I least 10.000 women are needed to prepare food for the workers. The harvest of other crops employ less m<n, but the entire number of harvesters need eel in gathering the crops of the United States has Iv en estimated at 1.520.700 ?that is. exclusive of the farmers that reside on their own land and aid in the harvest. Mayor Low, of New York, will go out of olllee in January a much poorer man than he went in. On taking the olllee he sold out whatever interests lie had, ami they were largo, in corporations likely to have business relations with the city, and as this was quickly done it was at considerable saeritice. Mayor Low is also reported as having spent $ 100.000 of his own , money to maintain the dignity of the ' office in the entertainment of distinguished guests of the city, such as Prince Henry of Prussia, and as his ; salary as mayor is $ 15.000 and he held the office but two years, he is con- I siderably out of pocket. Being a very j ri/'K m o r* ' /w* * ... .. ...uu, iunutei, ne can niiorcl 11. A unique spot In Europe is the village of Altenberg on whoso border three countries meet. It is ruled by no monarch, has no soldiers, no police and no taxes. Its inhabitants sp?ak a curious jargon of French and Herman combined, and spend their days in cul- I tivating the land or working in the ! valuable calamie mine of which the | village boasts. The Archbishops of Canterbury and | York celebrated their respective silver ! weddings on the same day last we k. J It is an interesting fact that while i these prelates have precedence of every peer in the realm, coming next after the royal family, their wives have in all Court functions to come after the wives of the latest knighted grocers or drapers, and while the Archbishops nre addressed as "Your Grace." as a duke, the wives arc only "Mrs." j Commissioner Ware has explained j that he's getting out of the pension . office because be knows when he has j had enough. "There are a number of | intelligent, educated, cultivated mefi ' living in the State of Kansas whoso j hearts I want to make glad with this announcement," he says, "I won't say just when I'm going to resign, but 1 think that another year will see ine hack to Kansas. I shall have received my (ill by that time and shall pass this alleged sinecure along to some other gentleman who is anxious to t hold it for a while." 11 Coughed I 9 " i had n most stubborn cough I | for many years. It deprived me I | of sleep and 1 grew very thin. I | 1 then tried Aycr's Cherry Pectoral, 1 | and was quickly cured." K. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. 1 1 Sixty years of cures I and such testimony as the I above have taught us what I Ayer's Cherry Pectoral I will do. We know it's the great- I est cough remedy ever I made. And you will say I so, too, after you try it. I There'scureineverydrop. I TircJ sires: 25c., 5Cc., $!. All (Ironists. Consult your doctor. If tie Bays take It. fl R thru do mi lie smy*. If lie tells you not H N to take It. tioti don't take it. (Io knows. H I s i-nve II witti lilm. Wo tire wUIIiir. b < 9; .1 0. AYElt CO.. l.owoll. Mesa. H i ? I Willi I win 11 _ Li IJIi.IJ.HLI Qf/r<?/fr * 1.000 // & Young Man to qualify FOK GOOD /'0S/770AS GUARANTEED IN WRITING. r nn PS?CC SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERER f nik.L WRITE TO-DAY TO GA. -A LA. BUS. COLLEGE. MACON. GA SECOND-HAND 12-h.p. UPRIGHT ENGINE. iifid nil I' I* It <? Il'r 11(111.Kit I.Tllnt-ai* Power. I-'OIC N.VI.I! AT A It A lt?AI\ ! A!; A 34 feet ft inch best double Leather 1 in It. ii.i ml only two weeltH. und two 30-inch Pulleys. All or pure of above nt n bargain. Address. PIKIitlOS I, euro Box 007. C II A It I. OTT K . NORTH CAROLINA. CAPUDBNE a BniRfl Alao ?lrlin??a and r . K E Ikr TraYolera Niuei, dli w linM". nrrviiut ALL HEADACHES 4Coct od bfiiia or hm 10c, 25c and 50c * botlli. iLlQVlD.) ? - "I write to let you know how I appreciate yonr Cave,,reta. I commenced taking theni lint November and took two t-.ii ci nt botes and passed a tapeworm 14 ft. long. Then I commenced taking them agnin ami Wednesday, April 4th. 1 punted another tape worm SI It. long and mtr a thousand small worms. 1'rerinus to my taking Cavearcts 1 dliln ? know I had a lupo-wortn. 1 alwa>? hud a small appetite." Win. H. Brown. 1S4 Franklin St.. Brooklyn, H. Y. The Bowels a CANDY C AT.-UJ4T1C Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste flood. Po flood, Kewor Nii-ken. Weaken or Urlpe. 10c. iSc. S8c. Newer old In hulk. The genuine tablet stamped C CO, Qnaracteed to cars or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 594 ANNUAL SALE. TEH MILLION BOXES 3] Smokeless Powdor ]| nM NITRO CLUB fTTT^i wmm & arrow rail shot shells are winning sJ^Vvvi everywhere nt ti&OY, L I .{J the trap-vhooting tournaments. f|>> ,</T; Lfciv***,]'< I.oaded with i eySSirM^ A ^ Y standard RLS >V'j# smokeless pow- jd i:;'V jS dcr, and for ale j > ' a J for csialog free , ^ t. 11 The Union Metallic Cartridge Co. I >' Briitjfcport, Conn. i Vs CROUCH W/ Marble and Granite Co. xlStjL ?MAN I i ACT' BCttS OF? MONUMENTS, V?U l>, btaiuary, II eudntoiM**, etc., in unv Granite or .>:urbl<*. I>< < III Mask. 11 SntM-iiiltv. (Cag-Mcntlon tula paper.) ATLANTA, GA. j M), r>a CWUSfc^il AlLttML )AIU fcjrf Uo*t ?:*>ut:ti syrup. i mit'n Good. L)?o a"B ^sisSEHiaaB=Eagp fi| RIFLE PIS' . \^ry f] " 3 s^ots ^at ?w? h Rifle and Pistol Cart ' ill a they shoot accurate!/ / ~ \ i trating blow. This is ti ^...i i. jil if you insist on having 1 ? ' =J ALL DEALERS SELL WIi fMCKENS 5! W - --- . i ? - ? n-qnlr VX, -^dollar* !???-nlnfc I'V eiptrlAnre, ?><> yoi W? offer ihi" to von f?,r only 25 cn .i?. fvnn If v? \i merely keep I hem n4 n do you must know somathinir ah ut them. To m< exprnienoH of h prae IohI i oul ry raiser |. ril Lv II mail who I'llt ill: III" nilU'l, n- <1 tl no. mill ItiR? not iih a i no, Imt ii" a Iniflno""?ni.?1 w "k, you onii mivo rnnny < hiefcsunnunlly. m point Is, that you tnu*t h? ntilo to detee i roui a .(I know h -wto remedy It. Till" hook wl'l < ?U*ea?e; to food f >r oj^v's i?n<I also for fa toulii; and evoiylhlng Indeed. y i| sh >uld know on paid for twouty-flve cents in e'nmps. BOOK rtnLMHIKO Cotton Must Have Potash Fotash is an essential plant food which must be added as a fertilizer 4or the soil will become extrue of so We bave books giving valuable details about fertilirthrin free to any farmer who asks us for tbcui. QHRriAN KALI WORKS, Sew York ? l>?t Nn**au Hreet, or .Atlanta, Po. Browit *t | j I A 1. >sti>n physician's tlis I covcry which cleanses and -vr? heals all inflammation of the mucous nr .uiirane wnerevcr located. In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. L'sed as a douche it is a revelation in cleansing and healing power; it kills all disease germs which cause inflammation and discharges. Thousamlsof letters front women prove that it is the greatest cure for leucorrhueu ever discovered. Pax tine never fails to cure pelvic catarrh, nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore mouth and sore eyes, because these diseases are all caused by inflammation of the mucous membrane. Kor cleansing, whitening and preserving the teeth we challenge the world to produce its equal. Physicians and specialists everywhere prescribe and endorse Paxtine, and thousandsof testimonial letters prove its value. At druggists, or sent postpaid 50 cts. A large trial package and book of instructions absolutely free. lVrlt? Tho R. Paxton Co., Dept. Boston, Mass. KipunsTabulesnre ^iJ^'WiTil ,K-'Rt dyspepsia medicine ever made f^mm^ 4Co! A hundred millions af tlieui have been sold in the United States lu a single year. lCvery illucsr arising from a disordered stomach 1? relieved or cured by their use. Sc common Is It that diseases original* 'rom tlie stomach it may lie safely asserted there Is no condition of IP health that will not he benefited or cured ny me occasional use of Itlpanv Tabules. I'liyslcians know them and speak highly of tliem. AH druggist* sell them. The ttve-eent package Is enough for an ordinary occasion, and the Faml'y Bottle, sixty centa, contain* a household supply for a year. One generally gives relief within twenty minutes CAPSICUM VASELINE (rUrtlPI.S OOLUFblBLKllIHU) 1 A substitute foraud superior to mustard or any other plaster, anil will not blister the most delicate skin. '1 ho pal mutinying and cu rati veuual i ties of thisarticle are wouderr it I. It will stop tiie toot hue he at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. Vv e recommend it as the best and safest external ooun tor-irritant know u, also us an ex terns) remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all rheumatic, neuralgic a nil gouty complaints. A trirl will prove what weclsim torit, and it will be found to lie invaluable i 11 t.lio household.Many pcooie-.av *"t tetfcc he- tof alt of your preparations." Price ip cts.. at all druggists or other dealers, or by sendingtbisaniount totisin postage stamps wo willsontl ynuatubeby mail. No article should lie accepted by tho pu Idle unless the atne carriesour 1 abel. nsot iierwiselt is not genuine. ChtiSRHkOUGH MFG. CO., IT Stito Street. NfAV^iKJ^iTnr^ THE NEW DIXIE COOK BOOK V Devised mid Inlinked. J 1TR8 pages. !(*?> illustrations t ii k Waterproof binding; very atT'y |j tractive; 'argely supplemented <1 b>' tested recipes of the more " 4i\j modern Soiituern dishes by well known ladies of the :'outh. alml "fff ! AGENTS WANTED.-^Cl llggjjjftl S2.75, EXPRESS PAID ANYWHERE ?3 Dixie Cook Book Pub. Co. ATLANTA. GA. __ pi Dropsy II t Removes nil swrlling in 8 to so I davs; effects a permanent cure .V in jo'? ho davs. Trial treatment given free. Nothingcan l?e fairex A , S? wi ite Or. H. H. fleet's Sona, 5T ? Stjcuiisls. Box it Atlanta. Q? $15 60LD PILED WATCH FrR 50 Cents! bfi.i1 .V Mt.i.ft Will*- For I ti 1 it'll In r.-t. P.O. U< x .lM. liuAtou. Muhm rOL CARTRIDGES. hit tna'c count. " Winchester ridges in all calibers hit, that is, and strike a good, hard, penete kind of cartridges you will get, the time-tried Winchester make. ^CHESTER MAKE OF CARTRIDGES. MANFY If yon rIvo them help. You ^ 0a?,lOl jo th!* unions you itnnd ?h?m and know how to cater to their cmejitH, and you cannot sr end yearn and j mu-t nnv tho knowledge acquired by other*. Von wiini them to | on ill tr tiwit wny rot." on. In order to hai die Fowl* judiolnu?ly, ret thl* want we am no 11it^r a fnr.k Hiving the >n y -itc )twi<iity flve\eare. 11 wc? writter I money <<> n.?klng a niece ? ot "lncken rn eif v- n will i r. IV l?y h s twenty-live yen's' in ma '? your Fowl* earn d \i*r? for you. TDO1 ilc the P it It r y Ya-d a-, a .?? n? It apnearf, acn V"U. It tela h w to detect and mire c; W ilch f to ray f r breeding I'UrpoSCfc; this a'Jlijeot to maku it profitable. Heat p< nortE, 104 I.eonerd St., ft. T, City. _