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iWhen to Kill Hog*. The best time to kill hogs is just soon as the season is cold enough, winter the cost of increase in ight is greater than in summer/and j nearer the approach of the animal maturity the slower it gains in pro*tion to food consumed. ^ Plant* Affected With Insect*. iVindow plants that appear yellow do not h^ve a healthy appearance t overmat^red or affected with in:ts. The pots should be examined order to discover if the drainage perfect If is not necessary to have i earth wet, but simply moist, and allow the earth to dry some will no harm. The dust in the rooms 1 settle in the leaves of the plants, ich makes it necessary to give each I ant a thorough washing occasionally. The Solids In the Milk. Although the law may fix a miniim percentage of solids in the milk Id in market, yet milk varies accord5 to the kind of cows and the food d water allowed. It is possible to iter milk through the cow, and the lk from'one cow will vary day after y. The highest percent of solids in lk found In England when tests re made was 14.49 and the lowest ? 11.02. The proportion of fat lged from 2.20 to 4.85 percent, show\ that some of the milk was more in twice as rich in cream as others, the United States the percentage both solids and fat have been ?ter where tests have been made. Hake the Pisr Uroir. Jive tlfe young pigs a good start, will be to your interest to do so. roung pig that has once been stuntwill never wholly outgrow it, no tter how good the subsequent care y be. Any animal being grown for at should have feed enough to make jood gain every day from birth to lighter.-. If there is ever a time in t animal's life when no gain is bemade hi weight, all feed consumed ing that time is practically lost, for profit all comes from the feed t makes the gain above the amount uired to maintain the animal's ds. In other words, a certain gp amount of feed necessary to keep tne animal alive, and the profit must all ?k come from the little extra feed that P makes the gain in flesh. A young ani mal will gain more on a given quantity c. of feed than an older animal on the same feed. I * think we iright safely say thef lounger the animal the greater the gain for the feed consumed. That is why it pays better to feed young stock.?Swine Advocate. Ren* Stop Lwjrinc. There is some cause why hens sud: denly stop laying, though certainly not always a lack of food, as the cessation "m^y happen in a single day. ^Neither.is It due to disease, as the hens may be very healthy. It is nothing more nor. less than a lack of warmth, the heat produced from food ?f being necessary to keep up the ani?' mal heat, leaving nothing toward the production of eggs. E&j' 4 certain amount of heat is due the body of the fowl and should tne building not be sufficiently warm, then that food which should go toward B| producing eggs is devoted toward supglv plying heat for the body. One cold night with insufficient protection for the hens will stop their laying fox fully a week, this occasioning a loss far greater in the end than ' would have been the cost of a warm building. * Don't neglect the hens in winter if ; you expect to have them lay eggs, v.. Watch carefully for each sudden change in t?e weather and change the house Accordingly. During the day keep the hens hustling from daylight, till dark and the cold will have Hpr no effect on the egg supply. ~ Let the morning feed be very light, mr only one-third of a full meal, then it will not" be difficult to keep them [ ' busy.?Home and Fam. nj The Valae of a Clover Sod. The report of the weight of stubble and roots on a clover field after the P last crop had been taken off in the jiff: autumn, as found in the experimental farm of the late John B. Lawes at Rothamstead, England, has often been ? published, but it has been so long _r. since we have seen it that it will probably be new to many of our readers. They found in the stubble and J*; waste on the surface of the ground ? 2669 pounds per acre. In the first nine BpV inches below the surface 3017 pounds. In the next nine inches 275 pounds, and in the third nine inches" 191 pounds, or in all 6152 pounds. Accordjv ing to .analysis this vegetable matter Ik would have enough phosphoric acid for more than two average crops, enough nitrogen for more than foul* ' average crops, an?l potash enough for more than six average crops of wheat ? Thus we can see the value of a clover sod plowed - under for the wheat or corn crop.. It-the clover, which produced 500f';pounds of*hay to the acre, had been plowed In that would have v- added 108 pounds of nitrogen, 28 If pounds of phosphoric acid, 97 1-2 p pounds of potash, 96 pounds of lime and 34 1-2 pounds of magnesia, but it would certainly be more profitable ft. to feed out the clover to animals and save their excrements to use on the land.?American Cultivator. Wiftter Rhubarb. Do yon like rhubarb? Do you remember how pleasant it seemed in the early spring days when nothing like it was to be had? Would it be pleasant to have it even earlier, when the first spring fever comes on, or as winter begins to slacken its grip? Can you spare two or three hills from the garden? there ought to be plenty there, so that they will not be missed. If so, go and dig up these hills, or even one 1??11 4VA twliAn VIA orrAii?/l liu gc UlHi ai LUC uiuc nuvu iuc giuuuu freezes. Let it He on top of the ground exposed to the cold until thoroughlyfrozen, then take it to the cellar, banking a little moist earth around the roots. Some of the weaker crowns and roots may first be trimmed away, since they will not produce good stalks. If* there is a furnace in the cellar, long before spring comes these hills will1 produce fine stalks. They will wasta.no energv in extra leaf surface; nearly all will be bright, crispystalk. If the cellar is too cold and they are slow in coming, a barrel may be set behind the kitchen stove, one hill placed in this and a canvas thrown over the top. If the appearance of a barrel in the kitchen is obpectionable, a more pretentious cabinet may be made of lumber, which will answer the same purpose. Simply see that the eon is kept moist, and soon there will be rhubarb ready for harvesting That which remained in the c; Slcr will hi along a little ahead of that outside, even if th? cellar is cool, and in either case will well repay the slight effort needed to get it.?Fred W. Card, Rhode Island Agricultural Experiment Station. The 011 American Farms. American farmers are the most wasteful in the world, and American j farming the most wasteful business | in our wasteful country. They waste j land by keeping many acres unused on which they waste money by payI -:ng taxes. They waste their crops by r leaving a large r.oition to die and dry up in the fields, or they leave their i grain standing until wasted by wind, i rain, insects and fungi, or shock it ' and Idave it to take the weather as i it comes. They waste seed after sav| ing to feeding it in a wasteful manj ner. They waste fertility of their j fields by careless methods of cropping, ! while the home suppiy of manure is j permitted to waste oy means ui su.i I and rain. They waste their substance by buying on credit (for which privilege they pay a liberal tax in overcharge) or borrowing money for which they have to pay interest as well as principal. They waste tools and implements by leaving them exposed to weather, and then must further waste valuable time working ineffective tools. tVaste is found in the kitchen and in every department of the household as well asTn the fields and barns. The success of German farmers, Chinese farmers or farmers from any other country is mainly attributable to their practice of a system of farm economy, learned where economy or starvation were alternatives. Here the alternative is not so exacting. It is merely economy or comparative poverty. In-this country a farmer may live and emerge from the year's business without actual loss.and at the same time waste enough to feed a foreigner or several horses, or enough to fatten a beef or two, or several hogs. Rigid economy may not be actually imperative here, but it is judicious.?Farm and Ranch. To Kill Weeds. * -* *- ? -* ?- ?_i it is not quite baie iu jj i u a 5. c mw the use of chemicals for the destruction of weeds. It is possible to do more harm than good. We have known some fine trees, vines and shrubs to be killed by the careless use even of kerosene and of common salt. Mr. L. R. Jones names some solutions, with directions as to the strength and use, that- are worth preserving. "In fields," he says, "weeds can usually be killed more cheaply by cultivation or digging, and chemicles used in sufficient amount to destroy the weeds are liable to injure the grain. An exception to this lies in the use of blue vitriol to destroy kale in grain fields. It is said that a 3 percent solution of blue vitriol in water sprayed over a weedy , grain field will kill the kale without | injury to the grain. We have not ' tested this ourselves as yet, but propose to do so this summer. The hawkweed or paint-brush may form another noteworthy exception, since it is readily killed by sprinkling with salt in an amount which does not injure the grass. In general we advise ! cultivation to destroy the' hawkweed, however. Chemicals may be used most advantageously in gravel walks, drives, tennis courts, paved gutters and similar places. Common salt, applied dry, can be used for the purpose, but it requires so heavy an application that it is liable to wash into and injure adjacent grass borders. Either of the following solutions are more effective than salt, more enduring in their action and do not wash. They may be applied with | a watering pot at the rate of about eight gallons to the square rod, and one or at most two such applications during the season will entirely prevent weed growth. (a) Crude carbolic acid, one pint in four gallons of water. This is very powerful and quick acting, but not quite so lasting in effect as the next. It may be objected to on account of odor; this disappears after the first day, however, (b) Arsenate of soda, one pound in eight gallons of water, (c) White arsenic, one pound; washing soda, two pounds; water, nine gallons. Practically the same as (b), less convenient but a little cheaper.?Farm, Field and Fireside. WAYS OF CATCHING COLD. A Physician Tells of the Danger of Be- ! coming Chilled or Damp. The various ways in which a cold may be brought on are thus described , by a physician: "A little knife blade of air blowing in through a crack in 1 a window upon some part of the body ! will chill that part, and the blood ves- , sels of that region will become con tracted, affecting somewhere in the in- ; terior of the body an area in reflex ; relation with this portion of the surface of the body. "For instance, the blood vessels of the skin of the top of the shoulders and the chest are associated with the blood vessels of the lungs, so ifcat whatever happens to the blood vessels of $he skin of the shoulders and chest happens also to the blood vessels of the lungs: If there is a contraction of the blood vessels of the back of the neck, there will be a contraction of the blood vessels of the top ,of the shoulders, and the shoulder blades there will also be a contraction of the blood vessels of the lungs. When the influence of the cold is continued, this contraction is followed by congestion. "When one puts his hands into cold water for a few minutes, they are first pale and then red. This is reaction. The longer the application and the , more intense the degree of cold the greater will be the contraction and the congestion. So if the back of the neck is exposed for a long time to the Influence of cold, one is likely to have a cold in the nose and throat. If the shoulder blades and the tops of the shoulders are exposed, one is likely to take cold in the lungs and suffer from congestion of the lungs. If the cold is long continued, it may cause not only a congestion, but an inflammation of the nose or the lungs. "So if the bottoms of the feet become wet or chilled a weakness of the bladder may result if there lias ever been a trouble there, or a weakness of the stomach if there has been a catarrh of that organ. He Had Jnst Gone Ont. A woman entered the elevator at the district government building and said to the boy in charge: "I want to see a gentleman in this j Vmiidine- 1 do not remember his name : and I do not know where he works. Pei haps you can help me find him." "There is no use looking for him." . replied the boy, "he has just gone out." "Oh. thank you," said the woma* ! absently, "I am sorry, but tell him I ' will come again."?Washington Corw- : spondence in Chicago Raowd. ? JOINED THE PROCESSION, The fashion ho never would follow, Ho Vowed in a positive tone. While the top of his skull wasn't hollow. But would dross in a style of his own. He put himself quite in a passion. But to some slight extent he backslid? lie never would follow the fashion, But he followed a woman who did. ?Chicago Record. Gold: Gold! Gold! The latest El I>orado is reported to be on th; Nome City Beach, Alaska. Thousands of people are lift-.toning there; many of whom return broken in health. i?f what avaii is gold when Health is goueV Guard your health with the best of all medicines, Hostetter's fttomhch Bitters, it will regulate the bowels, stir up the liver invigorate tb.e kidneys, and Absolutely cure indigestion, constipation^ malaria, chills and fever. It's a good medicine to keep on hand. Knew His . Miss Peeks?Johnny. dear, do >\ u think I n.m the best teacher >ou ever had? Johnny ?No. ma'am.' Experience is the best * _ * l?l H.. .I . . ?. i.. I*.. I uma^r. ? 1 *iu?:uirtj*iAta THE DUTY GF MOTHERS, What suffering frequently results from a mother's ignorance; or more frequently from a mother's neglect tc properly instruct her daughter ! Tradition says "woman must suffer," and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely she needs treatment, and her mother should see that she gets it. Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examination ; but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. I'inkhnm and secure the most enicirnt advice without charge. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass. Mrs. August Pfalzgraf, of South Byron, Wis., mother of the young lady whose portrait we here publish, wrote Mrs. Pinkham in January, 1399, saying her daughter had suffered for two years with irregular menstruation ? had headache all the time, and pain in her side, feet bwell. and was generally miserable. Mrs. Pinkham promptly replied with advice, and under date of March. 1S99, the mother writes again that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured her daughter of all pains and irregularity. Nothing in the world equals Mrs. Pinkham's great medicine for regulating woman's peculiar monthly troubles. Dr. Bull's Cough Cures a cough or cold at once. ^ Conquers croup, bronchitis, y | II fj grippe and consumption. 25c. J ~rr-\ <rr \ ... ?* 7 Every cotton planter should write for our valuable illustrated pamphlet, " Cotton Culture." It is sent free. Send name and address to GERMAN" KAU WORKSrsj-Nassau St., N.Y. | Constipation | A le easily cared and the bowels restored A V taa'bcalthy condition by the use of'^ ^ the natural remedy lor all stomach, ^ A bowel, liver and kidney troubles. By A 7 our method of concentration eacli 6 02. 7 A bottle is equivalent to three gallons of ? A Sold bv all drujr- A A gists. Crab apple i A trade mark on mnr m&muam A I every bottle A J CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO.. Louisville. Ky. J PEMDADF25S! 8M-iS -|_ per. TON 1 Greatest, Cheapest Food m Earth for Sheep, Swioe. Catfk* WTl he warth COO to yea to nW what SaJx?r'ac?Ulo??Tiabcir rape. BSiSion Dollar Grass will potOireJy mike yoc rioh; U too* of bajr and loiaof pa?tar* per acre, toalm Broarua, Peaoel, Spelts (tuO be. earn, 960 bn. oata per a.,) eta., etc. For this Notice and 10c. , we mall bis caia'oe and 10 Farm Seed UoTeltfca, felly worth >10 to get a Mart For 14c. 7 splendid eegatakli and 3 toflllant flower teed packagea tnd catalog. l?er Seed Co^sr* FREE ELECTRIC BELT OFFER iXdW1THTCH DAY'S FREE WEARING TRIAL in your own home, we afeiJKbtoBmrfLSJlatB furnish the genalno and only llWDKLDBEfl ALTJ?B5lTIxl^^aHOLNQ ctuaaT KLICTKIC BELTS to any reader of this paper. 5o noorj la adraaee; rerr lew eo?t; poiltlrojmarmmtM. COSTS ALMOST NOTHING comport with most all other treatments, Cores wheu all other aUa. trie bete, appllaoera aod remedies falL QUICK CORE tar moro than50ailments. ONLY Sl'BS CUBS for all nerrooa diseases, weaknesses and disorders. For complete sealed confidential catalogue. eut ibi.mdoct and mall leoa. .SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., Chicago. $ F F D SwEvnLLemTYOUA?ISS rJS? FARM Collection of 8BBDR FREE of money cost, asking only that you sell*) Q Packets of Vegetable Seeds for ue at 5c each. NO X MONEY In advance. Write usa postal accepting A this offer ana we will Mall You the 50 Packets zr at once and will also send Catalog, > ull InstrucT tlons, and 12 Due Bills for distribution among T your friends In order to Induce them to buy the ?Seeds of you. ADDRKH* T. J. Kl'tU CO.. RICHMOND, VA. A GOOD SlITef Clothes O OItsb for Selling It/O Packets. SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. "Eucain" is a newly-dieovered i anaesthetic, by injection of whic.a pain is deadened to a degree that greatly promotes the work of surgeons. Its successful use in Philadelphia hospitals is reported. * The sun's heat raises from the earth every minute 37.000,000.000 tons of water, cr say a weight equal to six times that of the Great Pyramid, Such heat could only be produced oil earth by burning 60,000,000 cubic lniles of coal per second?that is to say, a r.ico little block 200 rvi'es long, 200 miles hi?h hnd 200 - - ... - /^Art AAA AA/S miies broad, weignmg i:s,uuvj,uuv,uuj tCGS; A recent number cf the Chemiker J.eitung describes an accident resulting from the explosion of chemicals while in transit, which is net without interest in view of the recent catastrophe in New York City. Nine cases cf sodium peroxide, each weighing HO kilograms', and intended for Japan, were being unloaded, when one cf the cases exploded with a loud repoit and seriously injured a number of workmen, besides causihff a fire. The cases were merely labelled "chemicals," and under the German law it is thought se:iou3 consequences will befall the shipper. The engineer in charge of the iitiproveiuc'.t of the Yellowstone park denies that the geysers are approaching extinction. An article to this effect appeared in a French paper and was widely copied throughout the United States. It tends to create an impression that the Yellowstone wonderland, for far as regards the hot springs and geysers, is practically a thing of the past. This is an excellent example of .how a scientific observer may draw a wrong conclusion, if he has not studied the subject sufficiently. The names given to such natural, objects as geysers are very apt to be misnomers. The geyser acting on the shore of the Yellowstone lake is more vigorous than it was ten years ago. A San Francisco inventor has devoted a quaiter of a century to the perfection cf a device which he believes will store up wave power for use in running machinery, street cars, electric lights and the like. As described in brief the arrangement consists of two buoys attached under water to a plunger, and as they rise and fall with the waves they move the plunger up and down in an upright tube and compress the air therein. This tube is connected with a pipe which runs along the sea bottom to a reservoir for the compressed air. The latter can be converted into any form of power. There seem to be people with money who believe that the scheme will work and that the day is at hand when fuel will no longer be required to turn the wheels of industry. An interesting report was recently presented before a meeting of the Institution of mining engineers of Great Britain, in which the condition of a mine after being tightly closed for 15- months was described. At the reopening of the mine the air was analyzed and was found to contain 84 percent of nitrogen, 12 percent of fire-damp, and 4 I percent of carbon dioxide. These gases were greatly compressed, and it is believed that about 1,500,000 cubic feet escaped frojn the first borehole in 24 hours. The condition of the contents of the mine wa3 found to be practically the same, and no danger could be traced to the gases. Bread was dried hard like biscuit, but cooked- bacon was as fresh as when left, and the water for the horses had not evaporated. Iron had not been attacked by rust, nor was the fodder in the stables in any way changed. Automobiles in the Army. Indications continue to multiply that automobiles may be made extremely serviceable in war. The experiments conducted during the past three years by the military bureau of several nations prove that, in numerous ways, the self-propelled vehicles arc superior to those drawn by horses and that hereafter they will constitute a part of their armies' equipment. The saving of time in transportation is a matter of importance, and here the value of automobiles is greatest. For the purpose of conveying orders, transporting troops, provisions, artillery and ammunition, and for hastening the removal of wounded soldiers to hospitals the value of the new machine appears to be pretty thoroughly established. In Germany, particularly, the adaptability of motor wagons to the requirements of the battlefield has reI ?j ?~ nnviof ceiveu Vfcir.V UlUSC xuuv government has recently purchased seven automobiles for transporting food and ammunition, and in the last few years has experimented with the horseless vehicles extensively. The scarcity of horses in Italy is one of the reasons assigned for the war department's employing automobiles there to assist in carrying material from one place to another. In the Belgian C<fngo stale, wherever transportation by watef is difficult, the self-moving carriage will be used in place of boats, and regular automobile routs will be laid out. Throughout the civilized world the ability of the automobile for quick travel is being recognized by military authorities. Not- a month passes, moreover, that does not mark its improvement and development in one respect or another.?New York Sun. Story With Only One Side to It. "I remember on one occasion I had been translating a Chinese book bearing on opium-smoking, and I said to my Chinese writer and teacher: "Now, I want you, if you will, to get me some book that represents the other side." "He said: 'What other side.'" "'Why,' I said, 'there are a great many of my countrymen \yho say that opium does not do harm in all cases, but this book gives a very bad account of what opium does. I want to hear the other side.' "He said: 'There is no other side.' "I said: 'My countrymen say there is.' "The Chinaman replied: 'No Chinaman says so, and you could not find book in which suchstate mentoccurs. a book in which such a statement occurs.' "?The Inland. Enjlnnd Once Owned Java. From 1311 to 1318 Java belonged to England, which gave it up out of ignorance of its value. Little Holland has retained l'or three centuries a, colonial emnire as large as France, and with a population of 6,000,000. The worn-out uniforms of the British army, when sold, bring back into th(? war office treasury close to 8150.! 000 a year. THIS WILL INTEREST MANY. To quickly introduce tho famous blood purifier. R. JB. B. ("Botanic Blood Balm) into now h.mie.s, we will give away 10.000 treatments. B. It B. will positively euro all | Llo..il and skin troubles?ulcere, scrofula, ! eczema, eating sores, itching humors, swellj lngs, pimples. b >i;s, carbuncles, bono pains, [ rheumatism, catarrh, blood poison, affecting j throat, bones or mucous patches, cancer, I swelllDgs, persistent pimple or wart. B. B. B. I makes tho Mood pure ana rich, heals I every sore or'eruption, and stops all aches j and pains. Druggists. ?1. For free treati ment. address Blood Balm Co., 1 Mitchell St., Atlanta, (la. Describe trouble, and free medical advice given until cured. B. B. B. cures old, deep-seated cases that refuse to hea! tinder patent medicines or doctors' ! tre .tmeht, It costs nothing to try B. B. B. Medicine sent at eneo prepaid. Write today. 111?. GUN. Bill?Did you say that gun of yours would shoot 1,000 yards? Til, ...Knt T /lid .Jill 111.IL 5> II 1111L l Hi". | "Well, it's marked to shoot only uCO j yards." "Yes, but there are two barrels."Youkers Statesman. 'In Cure h Cold In One l>nv. Take I.AXATIVR BROilO QriXINR TaBI.ETS. All druggists refund the money if It falls c> cure. K. \V. Grove's signature is ou eacu box. ?>o. Til'eW Them Both. Ptishaway?"Ilero comes Cawkerly. lie pnj*s that yon i.itd h? were thrown togeiho r quite a good deal last summer." Cievorton - Yes. We were both engaged to the same girl."?Detroit Ft en Press. The best is the cheapest. Tartar's Ink is the best, yet it costs no more than the poorest. Where Ignrtranci- Is Bliss. Mistress (astounded) -You can't read; Norah? Good gracious! How did you ever learu to cook so welt? , New Cook?Share, nmni, 01 lay it t' not bein' able t' rade th' cook books. Each package of Puts am Fadeless Dye ! colors either Silk, Wool or Cotton perfectly at one boiling. Sold by all druggists. Dead Ea*y. "Jinks has no faculty for keeping money!" "Lets it go to whoever asks lilm for it, I believe !" Why, I'm tild that even his wife can get ? , L.I II l.? |. |?l money jiuiii mm, it no um i? I am suro Plso's Cure for Consumption sat <1 my lif? three years ago.?Mrs. '1h?s. Robbi:ss, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y., Fob. 17, l'JJO. Sustaining Darwin. A monkey in the Philadelphia 200 has died of tobacco heart," remarked the observant boarder. "How human!" exclaimed the crosseyed boarder.?Pittsburg Chronicle, NERVOL W&MES CURED BY Dp. Q NERYURA nervous, and debilitated, torturec by headache, neuralgia, backache |J Hero lies the great strain u Q They have little or no rest; their I duties here, duties there, duties v such women go to bed &t night refreshed in the morning! What wofcen need is thatgreat strengthener am. invigorator of womankind, Dr. Greene's* Nervura blood and nerve remedy ?that remedy which rebuilds health and strength, purifies and enriches the blood, gives strength and vigor to the nerves, and the strong vitality and energy to the system which will enable women to do their work and yet keep sti cine they need. Nothing else in ' MRS. M. D. PERKINS, of 1C " I was completely run down and me sick. I did not sleep at night an retired at night. My head and back i hausted if i tried to do my housework I was excessively nervous and very we* " Then I began to take Dr. Greene cannot say enough In its praise. I ha present time, thanks to this splendid n " I can now eat and sleep soundlj I do my housework, which is now a p! My weight has increased about twelve pounds in the last two mAnfko T tsnn!/) ro. M commend any one of- ESB8fiSP59f flicted as I have been ?i 9so<9 rem^^^8 wonc*er^u* 8 Dfm Greene . I Will Advise W&$gs2^ I You Without I Dr. Greene'sspecial H advice is at the disI posal of every sick- E^'j?Iil& ly woman, and it is D wall to write for it II | or call and see Dr. B Greene at his office, H 35 W. 14thSt, New 3 ing so may shorten ^ S the time required Wlr I for recovery of full V jwgSlHK 9 strength, and give 9 Information which M will guide aright in // dESft I the future. Abso > n lute confidence is A/ I observed in all con- f / JSf M sultations, and no V I charge is made. i / ^^ ^ellsillatoiitWIi Send name and address on a postal i WINCHESTER REI xfc WINCHESTER AVENUE HMMaiaBnBHMnanBMaaai ENGINES BOILERS Tanks, Stacks, Stand Pipes and Sheet-Irot Work; Shafting, Pulleys. Gearing, Boxes Hangers, etc. Mill Castlnes. tB^Cast every day; work 200 hands. LOMBARD IKON WORKS & SUPPLY C< AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. h man /$50tol00mo- > <ount*> \VK MEAN UlXAE^and will pay you 4 fi 6-ilary to Start with. Write us at once giving k y age. occupation and references. Be quick, we r\ want only one man to a county. We warn good ? W trust-wi.rchy men, and wtllpa^ such men well f /. and keep tlietu employed4\K \\ I'L A.Nti. \\ rite < M to-day, W.'i' Huul) <V CO..Richmond. Va. P HDADCY NEW DISCO VEltY; ?t.t? w I V quick reiief and cures won! cases, hook of testimonials and 10 days' treatmsu t ree. Dr. H. H. OREEN'SSOHS. Box B. Atlanta. Gi Use CERTAIN :!? CURE, f - ij Decadence of an Overcoat. "Where do the old overcoats go?" Is i a query that is a natural successor to ! the old riddle, "Where do the flies gd ; in winter':" The old overcoats seern i somehow to fade away, no one know's i jurt how. The overcoat starts its : career on the back of its owner who j paid $45 for it. It keeps him warm and shelters him from cold winds and 1 from storms until it commences to get ; frayed at the edges and the pockets j are torn down the sides. Then the j owner uses the coat for rainy days i only, and no more does he take it to call on his fiancee or to recline on the j back of a chair while he is reading at I the club. He keeps it another sum' mer and the moths get into it, and (j when he takes it out in the fall it has 1 holes here and there, i Cn iho niiTdr it to th#? ianitnr ; ?if the janitor4s not a cold, haughty 1 - man, and the janitor drears it awhile | until his wife gives it to the tramp ' who wheeled out the three barrels of ashes. The tramp wears it until the old coat commences to fall apart. Then I he gives it to another tramp, and it falls apart still more. And then, some day, the coat has entirely disappeared. No one knows how or when. The coat just simply faded away. That's all j I i anybody knows about it.?Chicago Tri- j I bune. . HE WAS THINKING OF THEM, j Boy?Grandpa, I wish you'd buy me i a pony. Grandpa (a philanthropist)?My son, i think of the poor boys who can't even ; | get bread to eat. * . J Boy?I was thinking of them?the | poor little boys whose papas nave ponies to sell that nobody will buy.? Gaiety. _ flow's This? Wo offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for any case 'of Catarrh that cannot be cure.l by Hall's Catarrh Cure. ... F. j. cjiknsy ?fc CO., Props.. Tolodo. 0. . We, the undersigned, have known F J. Cheney tor the Inst 13 yer.rs, and bellere him per frc ly. hoifornl.le In all 'business transactions and ilnattdu'lly nbVe to -carry-out any obligation mttdr by their Arm. West & Trca.x, wholesale Druggists, Toledo,* Ohio. Walding, Kixxax A MakYIJi, Wholesale Drcgpiscs, Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, actinpdirectly upon the bl<x*l nnd mucous surfaces of the system. 1'rlee. 75c. per bottle, bold by all Drup-.-lsts. Testimonials tree. Hall's Family I'll Is are tho best. f ? Isa household B | cares is more g. J 3 than the strongest man I. 3 could endure: and it is H 3 no wonder that women || ? 1 show the effects of work gj S S and worry. g ft Thousands of women g 3 in offices, shops, and fac- B H tories break down in h health under the strain g ancj becomo weak, tired, R 1 with female complaints, or racked || i, and kidney trouble. H pon the nervous systems of women, m life is one continual ronna 01 worsi gn without number. What wonder that tjj fatigued, and wake tired and un- || I Dr. Greene's I NERVURA I I FOR THE BLOOD AND 8 | NERVES. I cng and well. It is this great medi- B the world can do its work. re !0 Q St., So. Boston, Hass., says: ?g could not eat, for the sight of food made d was as tired in the morning as when I M ached all the time. I was completely ex- (9 , and could not walk without being dizzy. B 's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and I H ve not felt so well for years as I do at the Q r, waking mornings strong and refreshed. El leasure instead of a burden as formerly. Eg VHESTER ATALOGUE FREE nrhoefor Sifloc ShntfMS aitrf flfflmBnlflM UUIJtrtflbl MIIIUWJ wuvigauvj iow. Don't delay if you are interested. PEATING ARMS CO. NEW HAVEN, CONN. Malsby & Company, 39 S. Ilroad St., Atlanta, Oa. ' Engines and Boilers ^ Steam lYnter Heater., Steain Pmnpt and Penberthy Injectors. | Manufacturers and Dealers In | SAW MILLS, I Com Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machln'* "'l firaln Sanaratori. I SOI.ID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and - l ocks. Knight's Patent Dogs, Hirdsall Saw > | Mill and Engine Repairs, Governors, Orate II Pars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price 11 j and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue [_ j free by mentioning this paper. \ \ Mention His Paper'" "SSST1 mm >*y- - - . > The Mystery of Life and Death. Strictly speaking, of course, a man can't be ready to die for two different i girls without leading a double life.? Detroit Journal. Tl?e Host Prescription for Chill* /!nd Fever Is ft bottle of GnoTK's TASTir.iw C nnxTOKic. It Is simply iron and quinine In h tuaielebe form. No cure?uo pay. Price Wo. Its the Same Thing. "Man never gets too old to learn." X<>; but he lias to be old enough to die, before he will admit that he doesn't know it all." If you want "good digestion to wait upon your appetite" you 9hould always chew a bar of Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti. Doubtless. Professot?What kind of Iron business Is your taiber In, Mr. Freshman? FreshmHU-Why-er, I think it's metallic Iron' sir.?Philadelphia liecord. Best For the Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to ft cancer, you will nerer get well until your bowels are put right. Cascakbts help nature; cure yod without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, oost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascarets Candy Gatbartlo, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tab* let bus C'.C.C. stamped on it. Beware oI imitations. l*p-fo-D:ite Preachine. "The Rev. Dr. Uptcdate seems to be an able man." Very able. He can tAke any text in the Bible and prove that it doesn't mean what It says."?Pick. For BHioa?neas, Torpid Liver, Indigestion. Si- k Headache, Crah Orchard Water is a specific. I & Speedy, Pr< ? " Acts quicker, ne? MS 9L Aj than any laxative kno ^Its action is marw No remedv will c Ijhhw quickly and with abso Br Bony MjBf " Average Dos*: One-half g Sjt/HHr Every druggist and general fl/fly AC IT lor the full name, My Awn "Honvadi J&nos, Sole Importer: Finn of ANDRI Mb JLJLJL4.fi V ? 9 Save Your Shamp m And light dressings of emollient skin cures.*. 1 stops falling hair, remo dandruff, soothes irrits stimulates the hair fbili with energy and nourisl hair grow upon a swee scalp when all else fails MILLIONS Off I Assisted by Cuticuxa Onmnnrr, for ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp ol stopping of falling hair, for softening and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchir poses of the toilet, bath, and nursery Soap in the form of baths for annc excoriations, for too free or offensive p ulcerative weaknesses, and for many a gest themselves to women and moth induce those who have onoe used thes to use any others. Cuticura Soap c derived from Cuticuba, the great ski ingredients, and the most refreshing soap is to be compared with it for pi the skin, scalp, hair, and hands, no however expensive, is to be comparec toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it coi viz.: TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the ] best toilet, best baby soap in the woz Complete External and Interna _ Consiftiap of Ouncu] i^LJz ? ? kiJm and aoften the1 (uiicura _ THE SET, $1.25 SS Stops Tickling All serious lung troubles begin with a tickling in the throat. You can stop this at first in a single night; a dose at bedtime puts the throat at complete rest. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral : The cure is so easy now, it's? astonishing any one should run: the risk of pneumonia and consumption, isn't it ? For asthma,' croup, whooping-cough, bronchitis, consumption, hard colds, and for cougns of all kinds, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has been the one great family medir . cine for sixty years. Three sizes: 25c^ Sic, If your druggist cannot supply you, send as eao dollar uid we will express a large bottle to 70a. til charges prepaid. Be an re yoa ghre BS year nearest express office. Address, J. C. im Co. lowell. M?m. . ompt and Sure. ( bt gripes and obtains better results wn. dons, its effect immediate. :ure constipation and biliousness so lately no discomfort as adl J?nos lawful on arising in the morning. 1 wholesale grocer in the world sella It. I Dl IIC Labc,*,tb I DLUL Bed Centre Panel. 2A5 5AXLEHNER. 130 Filtoa St., N. Y. I 1' ~ j I * OB ? 9 I ^5 hBK N? Jv Hair with oos of : >: v SUfei AD 4 Ml ' ' CUTICURAT purest of [Tils treatment at ones ves crusts,, scales, and ited, itching* surfaces, cles, supplies the roots iment, and makes the t, wholesome, healthy CUTISURA SOAP preserving, purifying, sod beauttfyw ! crusts, scales, and dandruff and the' , whitening, and healing red, rough, * j igs, and chaflogs, and for all the pur Millions of Women use Cuticura ^ / eying irritations, inflammations, and erapiration, in the form of washes for ntiseptic purposes which readily sag* ew. No amount of persuasion can s great skin purifiers and besotifiera, omblnes delicate emoffient properties a cure, with the purest of cleansing of flower odors. No other medicated " reserving, purifying, and beautifying & other foreign or domestic MM soap, / I with it for all the purposes of the * nbines, in Orb Soap at Ore Pmcx, best skin and oomplezion soap, die Id. I Treatment for Every Humor. u 8<uy (**.), to cImbm the aUa of enuta cai ihktwrf eattck; Cottodba Onmtwrr (fOe.). ii?S, Inflanoairioo. end Irritation. and ootha Mfl BssoLTan (60e.),to eool aad eUuM <b? Mosi. I ^ ItI I I I JjUm