University of South Carolina Libraries
"prominent physicians USE AND ENDORSE PE-RU-NA. OF WASHINGTON.D.C. f \J | C. B. Chamborlin, 31. 1)., writes from 14th and P Sts., Washington, D. C.: j ' ' i( V/,?" rases have conic under mv observation, ichere Peruna \ * has benefited and cured. Therefore, I cheerfully recommend it for ? t I catarrh and a general tonic."? C. J?. CHAMBEIiLIX, M. D. j Medical Exatniner U. S. Treasury. j suffering. Fellow-sufferers, Peruna will Dr. Llewellyn Jordan, Medical Examiner cure you."?Dr. Llewellyn Jordan. ^ * I ? Oeo 0 Havener, M. D? of Aaacostia, D. : ' and who served1wrK0S: o three years at | The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, 0.: I, West Point, has the | Gentlemen?"In my practice I have had / '' following to say of occasion to frequently prescribe your vain ' ^ mil i Peruna: ; able medicine, and have found ks use bene(y Rv !' "Allow me to ex-1 ficial, especially in eases of catarrh."? v" . (, press my gratitude j George C. Havoner, M. D. i> benefit derived : If :>"ou do not receive prompt and satisi11 from vour won-: factor>" results from th6 use of Peruna, " derful remedv. write at once to Dr- Hartman. giving a trn$\ \ One short month I fu!i statement of your case, and he will &W .f' has brought forth i pleased to give you his valuable ad^'V-s ifr" <> a vast change and v*ce gratis. jpt-v - , 1 now consider! Address Dr. Hartman. President of -?y . Dr. L. Jordan. > mvself a well man The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. -i n ? " o ? after months of j Ohio. ? TS X'l | - Prevented by Shampoos of CUTICURA SOAP and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of emollient skin cures. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else fails. MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, aud dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itehings, and cliafings, and for all the pur * Mill! \\r pTTmTnrrn a poses of the toilet, bath, ana nursery, iuiiuuus ?.u numcu use euuttna Soap in the form of baths for annoying irritatious, inflammations, and excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, in the fonnof washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women and mothers. Cuticura Soap combines delicate emollient properties derived from outicura, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. No other medicated soap is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thu3 it combines, in One Soap at One Price, the best skin and completion soap, and the best toilet and baby soap in the world. Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour, Consisting of cvticura Soap (25c.), to cleanse the skiD of crusts Mia f 11* <1 antl scales, and soften the thickened cuticle; Cuticura Ointment 3 IS B Slill ? (50c.), to instantly allay itching, inflammation, and irritation, and soothe and heal; and Cuticcka Resolvent Pills (25c.), to cool The Set and cleanse the blood. A Single Set is often sufficient to cure 11 5,1 the most torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, and scaly skin, scalp, and blood humours, rashes, itchings, and irritations, with loss of hair, when all else fails. Sold throughout the world. British Depot: 27-2S, Charterhouse Sq., London. French Depot: 5 Rue de !a Paix, Paris. Potter Drug and Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. Ccticvra Resolvknt Pills (Chocolate Coated) are a new, tasteleso, odourless, economical Substitute for the celebrated liquid Cuticvba Resolvent, as well as foi all other blood purifiers and humour cures, l'ut up in screw-cap pocket vials, containing 60 doses, price, 2oc. CuTXCCRAPill9 are alterative, antiseptic, tonic, and digestive, and beyond question the purest, sweetest, most successful and economical blood and skin purifiers, humour cures, and tonic-digestives yet compounded. jjj wiTliS Thompson's Eyo Wator j Mention this Paper Y i?.; *:''/ - I - TWO WHO FAILED. A man failed after trying long. And then sat down and wondered why; He saw not where he had been wronfr. Nor where fair chances had slipped by. All that he did was sit and gaze Upon the hopes strewn 'round him there And wonder on through all his days Why fate had marked him for despair. Another failed and stepped aside And saw the causes ot his woeIIe saw where efforts misapplied Had aided chance to bring him low? And, taking note of all the past, And turning into newer ways, He tried again and fill -d at last The hopes of all his eager days. \ MY NEW HOUSEKEEPER, } t i $ l \ Br Horace Eaton Wai.ker. ' ^ ^ * Of course I do not claim to be a model housekeper; but Adolphus well knew that I was the child of aristocratic parents, and he had fair warning. too, as my father said, on giving me to him,, that I was a good girl, an educated young lady, and with a little patience and perseverance could be developed into a real helpmeet. "I take her for better and for worse, my dear Mr. Hartshorn," he said, "and I really believe that none of us will live to regret my union with your only child." Of course, we all hoped so and believed so; for Adolphus Marston was a fine young man, of good family, and with habits of life above the average. So matters were consummated, I becoming his willing bride. At first we took our meals at the nearest restaurant, as our new cottage was not yet fitted, to the requirements of my fastidious new husband. I had resolved from the very first not to ruffle his temper; and while mine was not 1 of the sweetest, I being to some intents and purposes a spoiled child, I decided to hold my peace if the heavens fell. I saw a growing impatience on his part, however, and could easily see that taking his meals at a cafe was decidedly annoying on account of the delays of orders, the muddy coffee, the impertinence of waiters, and other disagreeable etceteras. Finally I ventured to ask him if he was tired of taking his meals out. He was very tired, and was now ready for business, the business of housekeeping. ".But, uoipny, may 1 asK me uamc of our housekeeper?" "It is Adolphus Marston!" I simply stared, for so far as I was aware, he knew little or nothing of the culinary art. I patiently awaited coming events, which were now rapidly easting their shadows before. Not long after this we were happily settled in our new home; the restaurant was abandoned for all time, and our larder filled to repletion. Of course our first venture was breakfast, and 1 wondered at his remaining in bed so late; as it was an excessively cold morning, the sitting room and kitchen fires would both need tending, and lie was due at the office at 8 o'clock. I was later awakened however from a light nap by hearing Adolphus moving hurriedly about the sitting room. An intense chillness was in the atmosphere, and there seemed to be trouble of some kind. I wondred what it was, but I did not wonder audibly. Silence seemed to be | golden at this hour. Presently I heard * J -1- *Vi a Iritrthon ctoirc Aaoipuus UC3LCUU IUC and arising, I inspected the sitting room. It was a sight to behold. Ashes to right of me, ashes to left of me, ashes everywhere. I could have sat down and cried; but as he haa not lose .. patterree why should I? So, on hearing his returning footsteps hastily retired, and when he re-entered the room loaded with kindling wood paper, shavings and a whole box of matches, I was as unconscious as the seven sleepers. But poking his chilled nose through the portieres Adolphus announced: "Hortense, the sitting room fire is out." "Indeed!" "And the fire is also out in the kitchen stove." "Can't I help you?" "Oh, no! I'm the housekeeper for one week. At the end of that tim I shall either commit suicide go to a lunatic asylum or fall into a high fever." After more noise than a threshing machine, and dust, smoke and some remarks Adolphus announced to himself that the fire was going, as soon as he left the room I arose and dressed, not to receive callers, but in my commonest gown, as from present indication I knew that the unexpected was sure to happen, and it did. I understood very little about a broom, and much less about a carpet sweeper, but between them both I managed to make the sitting room presentable. Then a call from the kitchen. "Hortense are you up? " "Yes, dear." "How much water do you put in bis cuit flour?' "Just a little, so it will knead, Dolphy, dear." A rattle of dishes, a noise of spoons and moulding board, then,? "Hortense, how much cream of tartar for a batch of biscuit?" "I guess a teaspoonful." "How much soda?" "I gless a teaspoonful." "You could tell me what a quaver, a demi-semi-quaver is in musi<\ a bar, a breve, a crochet, a chord, and not guess at it. So don't guess a teasponnful, but how much soda." "Enough to suit the taste." "Tastes differ." "So do cooks." A half hour passed away, I did not dare to descend to the kitchen; the noise there was simply overwhelming. I could hear him bang the roller over the moulding boarcT"*then crash! He had dropped a dish, and I heard him say he didn't see how a dish could break into so many pieces. Later I heard the oven door snap to, a few hasty steps, and then a deathly silence. What could it mean? Why this stillness? Had he fallen in a fit from mental excitement? Or was he quietly strapping his razor preparatory to cutting his throat? The suspense was horrible. I could not bear it! How cruel of me not to share his morning's troubles! "Hortense!" The name came with double exclamations, and the voice seemed natural. "What, dear Dolphy?" "Breakfast is ready!" What a relief! I repaired to the j room below; sitting in front of the i stove, his chair tilted back, his feet elevated to a level with his breast, a glow of culinary satisfaction over, spreading his face Adolphus said: 1 "Hortense. the new cook presents the compliments of the morning, announces his bill of fare as consisting of hot biscuit, hot coffee, new creamy ~t butte.*,. and the complete solution of the servant question. Please be seat ed, while I, at the head of the table, will pour the coffee, pass the butter, tender the biscuit, and as maid of all work, carry off the honors of the day!" I was only too glad to acquiesce, for I had developed something of an appe? tite. and the prospective succes Bof our first housekeeping venture filled MS with those indescribable ^Motions every new wife must feeh "I certainly congratulate you, dear Dolphy," I said, seating tayself at the table, upon which was steaming coffee, rows of plump biscuit, and, bearaI ing over all, my husDand's glowing ' countenance, "Hortense, we have settled the ser' vant question forever and a day." "How?" "If the servant faileth, and the new wife is not a cook, turn immediately i to the new husband, and if possessed ; oi any Drains, ne win suuu sum. ciuiug J room and kitchen Arcs, prepare hot i rolls, gems or biscuit, as the case may ! be. Eureka! I may well exclaim.) I Hortense, allow me to assist you to a [ beautifully golden biscuit!" j They were golden, and no mistake, i The soda had not been spared, and the ; hot oven had done its work. "Are they all right, Hortense?" j "Very fair, considering " "Considering? Do you mean to say i his toots? Try the coffee. The aroma i I have not beaten the cafe man out of | is beyond compare." It did have aroma, but as coffee it was flat, va"pid. and altogether without character; and the creamery butI tcr! It was the poorest kitchen cookj ing butter! i could not eat. "Dolphy, let's go down to the restaurant. get a good square meal, return i home, sand for your mother and my j mother, and hold a meeting, preparatory to taking our initial steps in successful housekeeping; for you cannot cook, I cannot cook, and therefore somebody must come who can. Am I unreasonable?" "I guess not." "Shall we do it?" "By all means." And it all resulted in the fact that our mothers secured us a cook, a i chambermaid, a washerman, and i though Adolpus has not solved the 1 mooted servant question, I am still alive, and he has not committed suicide nor made any more golden biscuit - Waverley Magazine. AN UNFINISHED STORY. A Point Where in Telling It the Rer. Dr. Harrow* Always Stops. The Rev. Dr. John Henry Barrows, president of Oberlin College, who fori merly preached to a Chicago Congregation, tells a little story concerning an experience of his own that may be worth passing along. It was at the time that Dr Barrows was making arrangements for the holding of the great congress of religions here. He had an immense correspondence to take care j of, and found it necessary to employ a stenographer. The young lady was pretty. It is not to be inferred that i there arc any but pretty lady stenoj graphers, but the one employed by j Dr. Barrows was especially cbmely. The doctor fitted up a workroom i on the third floor of his house, where i he and the stenographer toiled hard ! day after day, undisturbed by callers i and well away from the noises of the | streets. . Tho Ti-nrlf nt nrpnnrinc fnr t.hft ron j gress was still going forward on the j 14th of February, when the doctor's lit! tie son became excited over the sendi ingand receiving of-valentines.-The boy had been running about the neighbor hood handing love tokens to the childj ren he knew and many had come to j him. when he remembered that he had j a father up on the third floor, in addii tion to the One in Heaven. Going to | his mother, he proposed that they 1 send up a valentine. "Well," said Mrs. Barrows, "it is very j nice of you to remember father. How | would it do for me to write a valentine ! for him and let you take it up?" The boy was delighed at the idea and j his mother wrote upon the sheet of j paper: I "Please kiss the bearer." This she placed in an envelope, 1 which was properly sealed and addressed to the doctor. The boy started up! stairs with his valentine, but he had j been running around a good deal durj ing the morning and his legs were j weary. When he had reached the secj ond floor he met the pretty stenog rapher, who had started out after pes | tage stamps or something, and asked j ii she wouldn't be kind enough to ; hand the note to his father, i She took the envelope, gave the j child a pat on the check and ran back i upstairs, where?perhaps prompted by J some feminine curiosity?she waited 1 while Dr. Barrows opened his valentine and read, in his wife's handwriting: "Please kiss the bearer." Here is where Dr. Barrows always cuts the story off.?Chicago RecordHerald. PEARLS OF THO JGHT. Genius is only great patience.? Buffon. A good man does good merely by | living.?Bulwer. J Genius is only a superior power of seeing.?Ruskin. Every brave man is a nan of ills word.?Corneille. Forgive thyself little and others i much.?Ivcighton. The education of the humand mind | commences in the cradle.?Cogar. I No thoroughly occupied man was I ever yet very miserable.?L. E. Landon. If you do what you should not you I must bear what you would not? j Franklin. j If the poor man cannot always get ! meat, the rich man cannot always di| gest it.?Giles. Every duty which we omit obscures j some truth which we should have ! known.?Rnskin. We can hardly learn humility and J tenderness enough except by sufferi ing.?George Eliot. He that is selfish and cuts off his own soul from the universal soul of | all rational beings is a kind of volun! tary outlaw.?Marcus Aurelius. j Mere Opinion. j It is no disgrace to be poor, but it ! is often inconvenient. ; A few touches of nature smooth j many a wrinkled skin, j Experience is a school. It is also trying, at times. I Absence of your wife's relatives ! makes the heart grow fonder. The sweetest meat is not always In ; the largest nut. A great peuigree may i contain little virtue.?Chicago Record| Herald. The Frendi T^e^lon of Ifonnr* j The largest order of merit in the world is the French Legion of Honor, ! which now has reached half a million | members -?^ s I SCIENCE AND INDUST*/. It is calculated that the rivers (A \ Italy, If harnessed-, wbUld be cdllec! tively capable df deveidping 2,640,006 horse pbweh 6'o fa" ohly about 300,000 horse bower has been utilized for bbmmercial purposes. The sea is a great denuding agent; but its work is more constructive than destructive. It is the workshop where nearly all the stratified rocks have been accumulated and ranged in layers of strata. The rivers and ocean currents continually bring in fresh supplies of debris, even for hundreds of miles. The temperature of the earth i3 estimated to be at least 5000 degrees Fahrenheit at a depth of 50 miles, and in many places comparatively high temperatures are found very near the surface. The utilization of this heat is one of the great problems ? - rifiiL . row in tne nwnas oi engineers. wiui the direct and economical conversion of heat into electricity on a large scale, which is looked for in the near future, the earth's hot spots should become important manufacturing cen tres. As the result of studies oh New Jersey mosquitoes last summer. Professor John B. Smith of Hutgers college says that, not only will the insects travel long distances from their breedingplace, but on favorable evenings largo swarms rise and are carried during the night by winds. The direction in which they go is often seaward. Swarms have been met 15 miles from the shore, a.nd they are common five miles from shore. Migration of mosquitoes, with the aid of the winds. Professor Smith regards as of much importance, and as rendering the control cf the mosquito nuisance a state rather than a local affair. The Anopheles mosquitoes continue to breed long after frost has set in, and even a covering of ice on ponds is not fatal to their larvae and pupae. Some of the meteorites that fall upon the earth possess a peculiar structure, indicating that they have more than once been in a molten condition. Dr. Berwerth of Vienna concludes, as the result of his studied of this class of meteorites, that they came originally from a volcana situated in some distant part of space, but that before reaching the earth they were subjected to great heat which metamorphosed their structure. To explain this he suggests thpt in the course of their celestial journey they may have passed through the atmosphere of a. sun, or may have been fused through the sudden birth of a new and neighboring star. The heat developed during their fall through our atmosphere is not sufficient to explain the changes that they have undergone. Hitherto Ihe United States has had the distinction of possessing both the remains of the largest land vertebrates ever known to have existed, the giant dinosaurs of the west, and the smallest living vertebrates of either land or sea, certain cyprinodont fishes of the Florida and South Carolina coast, liut lately the United Slates fish commission has received from the Philippine Islands specimens of a new species of fish, belonging to the goby family, which are smaller than any vertebrate animals yet known. They wary from less than 10 up to abou-. 15 millimeters in length. Their d umbers are so numerous that they form an important article of diet for some of the natives, who catch 1hem in close-woven nets. It is proposed to call this new fish mystichthys, from two Greek words, meaning smallest fish. AUSTRALIAN MINZ TRICKS. Cvtenen Atnuftiitgl.v Shown In Efforts to Pe'rand. In a recent case in which a certain mine manager was sentenced to two years' imprisonment at Brisbane for obtaining money by false pretences, amusing particulars of the method in which miDing should not be conducted were given in the following letter, which was. found locked in the prisoner's safe and which was read in court: "I am pestered with visitors, all watching progress, and my presence both at drill and shaft is absolutely necessary. For instance the shaft in which we obtained that splendid return of gold?you know it was compulsory that the ground should 'cave in'?well, that made it imperative that I should do the work myself, and after the small-sized timber had been put in over night I made tho remark that the ground was. running, and was afraid that it might 'cave in.' "It did?because I went down in the middle of the night and knocked every prop out. Then down it came, and what a beautiful mess it did look next morning! The men said it was not safe to work in?exactly wnat I warned. I had to 'salt' the mine, and to do it carefully, but I did it, and did it well, too. I quite understand your anxiety, but the moves were made with diplomacy, and we were fully protected. Mind, old mm, the mine is a payable one without salting, but actual returns would not have moved the market. * "Now, today I got the biggest shock of all. S 's brother came. I was working on the wash and was in a duece of a fix. But I professed to be glad to sea him and invited him to take a dishful and wash it. He did so. Meantime I made a clay pill, put a grain of gold in it, and put it into my mouth. When he handed me the dish I promptly did a sneezing fit and the pill accident ly fell into the dish, and you ought to have seen his face when he washed it! He behaved like a schoolboy, shook hands with me and generally played the fool. I invited him to try another dish. But no, he was more than satisfied, had taken the dirt himself and had washed it.' I impressed upon him the utmost secrecy, with the result?as a matter of course?that he promptly rode into ? ~ ^ onH nut thpm all eveiy uuc ixc uici, ?uu ??? ? in a fever. From this you will gather that I am pulling the ropes correctly." ?London Mail. Coronet* to Order. There ::s a sign in a Piccadilly shop window which says, simply but magnificently, "Coronets to order." Samples, too. are in the window for all grades, from the duke's down to tho baron's. The apeal is irresistible. A shop, at all events, is a democratic institution, and yet here is a shopj keeper, silently crying for custom, ofj fering coronets literally to the man ! in the street and stimulating his imagi ination until he can almost fancy himself going in, asking to be shown a few, and trying them on like hats.? Manchester (Eng.) Guardian. ' Nearly 10 percent of all children learn to walk by the time they have | reached their ..enth month. LIFE INSURANCE SOLICITING A5 AN UI*-TO-DATE BUSINESS j There Is Plenty of Room at the Bottom?Some Interesting Facts by Jas. W. Alexander, in "Success." ! In the other professions, it is said | that there is plenty of room at the top. | In life insurance, there is plenty of i room at the bottom; that is, for young j fellows just beginning. To one man who is insured for his life, there are many who might be. Even in New York city, where there are more agents in proportion to population than anywhere else in this country, not one-tenth of the 1 Geld is covered. It is a field that keeps constantly renewing itself. Young men who are taking upon themselves the responsibilities of married "* ' ?M/1 nam ho i me neea i:ie lu&uiautc, auu v.<?u convinced of the fact. Men who are | already insured almost always take out larger policies as their incomes grow. Thus an agent obtains a clientelago which is a continuing source of income to him. The time is past for regarding life insurance soliciting as a temporary occupation. None but men who are sure I that the fle'.d offers them a complete j career and adequate reward fdr theif ; output of eliergy afid taieilt thrdUgh the whole bourse of their working years can succeed nowadays in busij.\s. w. Alexander, it, and unusually |,,esldeN;wEffibleLife'great returns to men who have the courage, perseverance, tact, hopefulness, up-to-date methods, and ability requisite to build up a life insurance clientelage. There is a considerable number of men in this country who earn, as life insurance aeents. more money every year than is paid to the president of the United States. The income of a few is nearly double the president's sa'ary. Almost without exception, these men began with no capital but brains and energy. Of course, they have excep tional qualities, the chief of which are energy, will power and common aense. Hardly any of them can be said to have unusually brilliant minds, and very few of them are college graduates. But they know the world and know men. They have confidence in themselves, j and strength of wi'l. The best companies make a constant endeavor to discover the men who work with this spirit; and, when they find them, they try to show them that their services are appreciated. If they j desire a change from field to office France Prefer* Oar EDglne*. The ten locomotives recently sent to France have been found satisfactory, and as this shipment is only part of an order for fifty ol them, it proves that foreigners appreciate the value of our products. There is alsc another American product that is much appreciated on account of its efficacy in cases of stomach, liver and bowel complaints, and that is Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. It cures indigestion, dyspepsia, constipation and biliousness. Don't fail to try it.* Opium is produced in seven countries? India? Turkey, Persia, Algiers, North America, Australia and China. Ask Yonr Dealer For Allen's Foot-Ease, A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions,Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous,Aching, sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute. Sample mailed Free. Aadress Allen S. Olmsted. LeKoy, N. T. A Paris editor complains that almosl half the people of Paris were not bom there. Seaboard Interchangeable Mileage Tickets. Seaboard Air Line Railway has placed on sale 1,003 mile tickets at 625.00, whicl tickets are good over its entire system ; and j-Iso over the linps of its important connections, representing in all approximately 15.000 miles. Full information as to these tickets maj be obtained upon application to any agent or representative of the company. I* FITS permanently cured. No fits ornervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer.$s2trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R, H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa There has been no women rulers oi Russia since the death of Catherine II. Mrs.Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup forchildrer teething, so ften the gums, reduces Inflammation,allays pain,cures wind colic. 2oc. abotth The father of a bright baby is alwayi a firm believer in heredity. Thirty minutes Is all the time required tc dve with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Sold bj all druggists. The man who seils alarm clocks 3houIc do a rousing business. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of thijAHB^ungs.?Wm. 0. Endslxy, vanburenflh^HI^^p, 1900. More than 25,000 persons in Switzerland are engaged in wood-carving. Tetterine Cures Eczema, Ring Worm, Barber's Itch, Scaldhead, Tettei and thoso itching skin troubles so unpleasant and disgusting. 50c. a box by mall from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga., if your druggist don't keep it. The Belgian locomotives have two whisJ ties, one of a softer tone than the other, j to be used near railway stations. mi ii !! 11 iii ii ii ! I Tired Out f" I was very poorly and could hardly get about the house. I was tired out all the time. Then I tried Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and it only took two bottles to make me feel perfectly well."? Mrs. N. S. Swinney, Princeton, Mo. Tired when you go to bed, tired when you get 8 up, tired all the time. I Why ? Your blood is imI pure, that's the reason. | You are living on the ! I border line of nerve ex1 haustion. Take Ayer's I Sarsaparilla and be | I quickly cured. gfiiSSt* j FT* 7o^doctor"wliat ho think* of Ayer's I Q Sarsaparilla. He know* all about tills grand | B, old family medicine. Follow his advice and ! || we will be satisfied. J. C. Ayeb Co., Lowell, Mass. i KoKoaeoseoatoitoatoatoieoitoitoiitoieo ! I r.APUDINE Sgf ' Jf LaORlPPE, COLDS, ETC. o If Dora Not Affect the Heart. * ! ? Sold'by Druggists, 15 an j 25c bottle. JV | o*o*o*o*oiio*c*o*o*oato*o*o5 iimrit" v " Lydia E. Plnkham'a 1 It will entirely cure the worst fc $an troubles. Inflammation and Ul< j of the Womb, and consequent Si %/vr ^ IB has cured more cases of Ba Other remedy the world has ever kr cases. It dissolves and expels tumoi Of development, and checks any ten Irregular, Suppressed Or Pain Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, .Fk ache. General Debility quickly yield Womb troubles, Causing paiii, H lievedand permanently cured by i acts in harmony with the laws that harmless as water. It quickly removes that Bear tude, "don't care" and "want-to irritability, nervousness, Dizziness, melancholy or the " blues," and bac of Female Weakness, or some dera medicine always cures. Kidney Complaints and Bad Compound always cures. No other female medicine widespread and unqualified ei has such a record of cures of fen Those women who refuse 1 warded a hundred thousand tin: ?a cure. Sold by Druggists eve a*. DragjUtt Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Ravar* nf Aeii 1f>r who tries to Sell "something just as good." work, they are given it when possible. Nothing is left undone that will help the agents, for they are, of course*the 1 bone and sinew of the company. We ' are all workers together for a com: mon end. If, in addition to ability as a field worker, a man has executive ability, he may achieve position in the insurance business of unusually large rewards and great power. He may become, first, a general manager?that is, the manager of a certain district, * directing the work of all the agents therein. These places are much ' sought for, as the general agent usually receives a commission on the re; turns of all agents under him, and has an excellent vantage ground for the writing of a very large personal busi. ness. There are, of course, various I grades of districts, the best men work[ ing up to the control of the most re. munerative ones. The man who re| gards the work as a makeshift is the , one who fails. An agent must be able, to some extent. to direct and mold the mind of the "prospect" who has not been educated up to the insurance idea. To accomplish this, it is obvious that he must inspire confidence and possess a nprsnnaiitv of sufficient force to give f "" ? _ his words weight. The men. who have 1 won the remarkable success in the in. surance field go beyond this. They are aiways enthusiastic and optimistic; and, as surely as a burning flame ; will light a match, they communicate I their enthusiasm to others. I believe that any man of average s ability, industry and strength of char( acter can attain, in the insurance busit ness, an entirely satisfactory position . in life. The calling is one, above all II others, that has the latchstring out for young men who are beginning life T without special advantages, who are 1 entering the battle, not in automobiles or carriages, or in push carts, with . relatives or friends behind, but afoot. : As I have Indicated, they need not have money, nor a higher education. They need not sit in offices, waiting for : business, while expenses are running on. They need not drift. There is plenty for them to do. The older pro. fessions are, undoubtedly, greatly over> crowded. We are overburdened with , lawyers, doctors, and clergymen. There are not enough fees *to go around, and an undue proportion suffer r the pangs of failure. 1 It is possible to steal a penny and still be in a cent. Malsby & Company, 41 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. Engines and Boilers Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pnmps and Pemberthy Injectors. Manufacturers and Dealers In SAW MILLS, Corn Mills,JPeed Mills, Cotton Gin Machinom/1 (IkIii S*n,ratAT(. SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and Lochs, Knight's Patent Dogs, Bird sail Saw Mill and Engine Repairs, Governors, Grate Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning this paper. '/ ^REDUCTO" Isa perfectly harmless vegetable compound. It positively and permanently eliminates corpulency and superfluousflcsh. It Is a CI' HE ABSOLUTE and as harmless ss fresh air.Thousandsof patients have used this treatment. Physicians endorse it. Write to us for Fill E TREATMENT. Send Ten QrnU to cover postage, etc. Correspondence strictly confidential. ?ver> thing in plain sealed packages. We send you the forn- Mia,If you take our treat ment, and you can make "Reducto' at home if yap desire;knowing the ingredients need have no fear of evil effects. Address, G)nkcntfChem.C'e.,37018Jeff Ave kit LouIs.Mv - ror the race ttosxl Of fife, yon know, Red Seal Shoes uww Are all the go. -7 * < *3 9^30 JZT.& ' r -~i - n 5E5H1 3W Truly the Great ; of Lydia E. Pinki V egetable ComJ Justifies Her OrigMgnature. V-^i fegetable Compound* )rms of Female Complaints, all Ovaaeration, Falling ana Displacement )inal Weakness, and is peculiarly vifjSsK ckache and Lcucorrhcea than anr iown? It is almost infallible in such pa from the Uterus in an early stag? defcoy to cancerous humors? fill Menstruation^ Weakness of th? oding, Nervous Prostration, Head* S to it; freight, and backache, instantly ? ts tise. Under all circumstances it govern the female system, and is as ing-down Feeling, extreme lassi-be-left-alone" feeling, excitability, Faintness, sleeplessness, flatulency, jkache. These arc sure indications .ngemcnt of the Uterus, which this cache cf cither sex the Vegetable in tho world has received such tdorscment. No other raedieina oale troubles. bo accept anything else are reies, for they get what they want rywhere. Refuse all substitutes. Sold by 63 Douglas Stores in American cities, and the best ' -? reta^ s^?e dealers everywhere. \ J/ Caution! The genuine have C>5 1 ": Notice increase of iate? in faMc hetowr 8 asbsmmbsb 1 jjs II.9 I OEB^EmBi ^asHESD! I M= 1X66,720 Pairs. J Business More Than Doubled In Four Yean, ?j ^w5~^*la?n!*lies and sells more men's 9&00 and $3.50 shoes than any other two manufacturers. 5 W. L. Douglas $3.00 a: id SCXO shoes placed side by 8 side wit li $5.00 and $G.oo shoes of ofner makes an . > ?j&3 B found to he just as good. They will outwear two | pairs of ordinary $3.00 and $3X0 shoes. 5a Made of the best leathers. Including Patent . -.rjfi B Corona Kid, Corona Colt and National Kangaroo. I Fast Color Eyelets sad Always Black Hooka Hood* I W.L. Douglas fi "fei'.t Kdge Lime" eaaaot ho c* Bailed. ? Shoes by mail. 23 eta. extra. Catalog ^r^^tV^-m>ITGLASjlroekfonJlM? " -vC B GERMAN KALI TfORKS. B 93 Nassau St, New V^rk Qty. |Good enough | foraipoqy! : m y y -JKHAVANA Fl 1 LLE "FLORODORA"BANDS are of same value as tags from "STAR.' 'DRUMMONO'Natural Leaf. GOOD LUCK" OLD PEACH MONET 'RAZOR"and Z.RICE GREENVILLE" Tobacco. J THE UB1HE IS MY GUIDE J Elector* on m lAltl tWfWIXMPm "IIP TlW r FT. SHAPED, M. a. fyQU 522 Pttta Ave., Pittnbarr. Kb