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PRESIDENT FJJLLEI Threatened With L< and Sight From the Ravages of 6 Catarrh. / ? n Pe-rn-na ^*??**4 Cared Him. A GREAT many remedies to temporarily relieve catarrh have been devised from time to time, such as sprays, snuh's, creams and other local applications, but, as a rule, the medical profession has little or i. **' . no enmosidsm m uie ireuumut ui i?wnu. It is generally pronounced by them to be incurable. It therefore created a great sensation in medical circles when l)r. Ilartman announced that he had devised a compound which would cure catarrh permanently. The remedy was named Peruna. and in a short time became known to thousands of catarrh sufferers north, south, east and west. Letters testifying to the fact that Peruna is a radical cure for catarrh began to pcur in from all directions. Thousands of such letters arc on file in the office of The Peruna Medicino Co. Rev. E. Stubenvoll, Pella, Wis., writes: "I feel obliged to extend you my personal thanks for my complete restoration. All through the winter I suffered from throat and lung trouble, but recovered ray entire health by the use of your excellent remedy. Peruna." The following letter from a prominent gentleman of Los Angeles is a case in point: Mr, J. W. Fuller, President of the .Tew.elers' Association cf Los Angeles. Cal., 'has been in business in that city for sev entcen years out of the forty-five that he fhas been engaged in business. Concerning 4iis experience with Peruna he says: 4tl was troubled with catarrh of the head for many years. It affected my sense of smell, hearing and sight. 1 SOLID PACTS! S) ALL WEARESS - OF. THE ORKiHM I . (M ? Ii'l ? g?; in mi? ?ll? CLOTHING (BU?CX 0* YtLUDW) BAY IT IS TKE BEST IN THE WOSLD 2537*?^ and say it E?*S?HAT!CAU_Y1 A. J TOWER CO. BOSTON. MASS, US,A. ?5 TOWjER CANAPZAft Ca,l??n. 30B0HT0, CAR wmmKKmBBoaBBtaBsatmBmamKsemB j A Golden Rule i I of Agriculture: I Be good to your land and your crop will be good. Plenty of ! Potash A "Wtiite Star" Buggy FRFP On Jnly 4th we will give, Fbeb, one of our WHITE STAR" Top Buggies to the person composing the greatest number of English words from letters contained In the sentence: 44WATCH THE WHITE STAR BUGGY." Anyone who will devote an hour each day to this pleasant 9tudy can win the buggy. No conditions to comply with except mafce up the list of words. If this offer is not understood, any buggy dealer in your town who has the agency for the "WHITE 8TAR" Buggy will give you a copy of the rules. ft hen you have made out your list of words give them to our agent In your town, who will send them to us. On July 4th we will notify every contestant who the'wlnner Is and number of words that won the "WHITE STAR" Bagvy. Eyif you write us. enclose postage for reply. ATLANTA BUGGY CO.. Atlanta, Georgia. eS25 Every Day Can bo ?aaily made with our Well Augers & Drills One man and one horse are the only makers of the Titfin WellBoring ana Book-Drilling Machine. Warranted tl?e De?t on Eortb t Men y of cur cuatonseromakofroia 030 to S40 day* Bock and Circulars FESS. Add row. LQOMiS IfiflCHIKE CIL/TIFFIN, OHIO. SBEEsaBoaaiaa# CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS7 E Bc3t Congh Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ?? K3SBE22ES?HS^?i !) OF THE ! If JEWELERS' ASSOCIATION 4b Like a Young,! SliPMff Msui 'I ; spent lots of money with doctors and i the use of local applications to rej licve me, but to no purpose, until mi/ 1 attention was aulled to the wondcr~ 1 Jul effects of Peruna. ''I must say that 1 met with most ' j surprising and satisfactory results. ^ Peruna took hold of the complaint 1 and drove it entirely out of my sys- 1 lent. ( "Although well along toicara me \ allotted span of man}s li/e 1 a tit J pleased a< a child over the results, 1 i and /eel like a young man again."? 1 J. If*. Fuller. ( ( SucJ/ letters as the above are not used for publication except by tho written permission of the writer. A pamphlet "tilled with such letters will j be sent to any address free. This book . should bo read by all who doubt the cura- < billty of catarrh. ( If you do not receive prompt and satis- j factory results from the use of i'eruna write j 1 at once to Dr. Iiartman, giving a full state- ; f ment of your caie, and he will be pleased j to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Iiartman, President of The Iiartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. The poems of the March Lippin, cott's Magazine are well-choscn and j readable. They are from such well! liked-and-known singers as Marie Van | Vorst, Florence Earie Coates, Edgar ^ I Fawcett, Albert BIgelow Paine, Chas. j j ; Francis Saunders, Charles Mcllvainc, j . j Hilton R. Greer, Agnes Lee, Alonzo i ; Rice, Alden Charles Noble and Wil- j j liam Lucius Graves. j j ROUGH, j iriT.pf Pnmon A<->tor?Hnnqt lend me , 1 r 11 Ol/ iWUiUll A?VVV v - 4 the price of a shave. Julius? i Second Roman Actor?Verily, Calus. I have not a denarius about me. E First Roman Actor?This Is rough. ; I Here I must play Queen Hecuba to- ! j night, and I've got a two weeks' beard J c ! qn my chin.?Tit-Bits. j , ii WOMAN'S WAT. Si He?I hope you didn't believe what they said about me. She?I make it a point never to believe more than half I hear. He?But the trouble is you women generally believe the wrong half.? j Brooklyn Life. n an operation for Ovaritis, teils l how she was cured by Lydia E. j Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.!? " I am so pleased with the results I obtained from Lydia E. Pinkliam's I Vegetable Conponnd that I feel it ; J | a UUtji auu u pxuiv^v/ w (i * i w jvm | about it. i t 441 suffered for over five years with * ovarian troubles, causing an unpleasant discharge, a groat weakness, and at times a faintness would come over me which no amount of medicine, j diet, or exercise seemed to correct, f Your Vegetable Compound found the S weak spot, however, within a few weeks?and saved me from an operation ? all my troubles had dis- f appeared, and I found myself once more healthy and well. Words fail to describe the real, true grateful feeling i that is in my heart, and I want to tell 1 every sick and suffering sister. Don't J dally with medicines yo\i know nothi ing about, but take Lydia E. Pink- v I barn's Vegetable Compound, and I take my word for it, you will be a ! different woman in a short time."? j J Mrs. Laura Emmons, Walkerville, Ont. I ?$5000 forfeit if original of above letter proving genuineness cannot be produced. ^ Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything j about your ease which you do [ ; not understand. She will treat ! you with kindness and her adj vice is free. No woman ever re- i 8 j gretted writing tier and she has I helped thousands. Address is j Lynn, Mass. ! f APUDINE Cour 1 jv CURES Stomach j, - AND - I I. . Indigestion io, 23 and 50c. at Drugstores. - NAVAL ACADEMY SLANG. Localisms Which One Hears MlcSdics Use at Annapolis. Slang among college men, slang among street gamins and slang in society ha% been referred to and the terms quoted in public print, but there are slang terms at the Naval Academy at Annapolis which have not yet, and probably never will, become common property. However, the dignity of the future admirals of the navy will not permit of it being called "slang;" therefore it must be Known only as "Annapolis localisms." Here are a few of t.he "localisms" cf the "middies." ? The "yacht" is the training ship employed for summer cruises and for winter drills; the "brig" is that part of the berth deck where the "plebes" are sent for light punishment, such as for smoking, drinking, spitting on the floor or deck, taking "French leave," "playing a little quiet game" and getting caught at it, etc. Each ship in commission also has a "brig," to which only the sailors to be punished may be sent, the officers being confined to their rooms when under punishment. To "shake a leg" means "to trot n rnovo nn " tn hurrv To ho "r>ro jccted" cr "hung on the Christines tree" Is to be posted for low mark; "sat" and "unset" are short for satisfactory and unsatisfactory; "skinny" means chemistry; "sup" Is nice, "Holy Joo" refers to the captain, and "holystoning" the decks applies to the use of a big block of sandstone, with a ropo or toggle at each end, by which it is hauled back and forth to scrub the decks white on every Sunday morning, or when the President of the United States or some high crucial is expected to visit the ship; "grub" signifies food and regular meals; "salt horse" is the designating term for salt beef; ''plumduff" means a sort of rolypolv pudding, a mixture of dough, without shortening, and through which, if one wants to stop to investigate, may be found here and there a raisin; "spuds" means po tatoe; "tag ends" is the name of a book of jokes published at the Naval Academy a few years ago; "binnacle list" is the list of sick made out by the surgeon each morning after lie has inspected and examined the tongues and pulses of those who complain of a pain in the back, sick headache cr a touch of malaria. That it is best to be careful and discreet in the use of "Annapolis localIsms" when in public is chown by an instance of a midshipman who received leave for a few days some time ago. Stopping at a restaurant, the voting officer said to the waitress who appeared at his table that he would have some "spuds" with his ham and ?ggs, ai d when she hesitated to catch ihe meanJng of the latter part of the irder he sputtered out: "Come now; ;.hake a leg." She did hurry, but to make a complaint of this apparent udoncsg to tlie proprietor, and the I lext moment the "bouncer" of the *afe was giving* the "middle." a "lift" jut of the door.?New York Tribune. Juct One Little Word. There was a lull in the shopping met the two salesladies became confilential. "Oh, Mamc. Is It really true that you lave thrown over that joung man at .he ribbon counter?" "Sure thing." "Really?" "Yes, really! lie's the hardest ;oung nan to please I ever saw!" "Really?" "Yes, really!" "Oh, Mame, do tell mo!" "Well, he called the ether night, and >efore I coulu guess what he was gong to do he dropped right down 011 lis knees before me!" "Oh, Mamc. really?" "Ye3, really! Oh. Jen. it was Just ike the real thing in the drammer!" "Really?" "Yes. really! He said he couldn't ive without rae! Honest he did!" "Oh. Mame!" "And that I was the light of his oul." "Oh, Maine, really?" "Yes, really! All he said he asked >f me was to whisper one little word? ust one little word of -hree letters Ic said it was such a tiny word that ought to be willing to oblige him." "Oh, Mame, did you?" "Sure I did!" 1 f uu, fl'iame, ruajiy: "Yes, really. I said 'nit!' " "Oh, Maine, really?" "Yes, "really! And then he got' oad!" "Oh, Mame, really?" "Yes, really!" Then a fat lady with a red face and , thirst for bargains interrupted tV.o onversation.?Detriot Free Press. Vital phases of America's immlgraIcn problems are discussed in the larch Century by such authorities as acob Riis, who describes scenes and onditions at Ellis Island under the aption 'The Gateway of Nations;" histave Michaud, who tries to answer What Shall We Be?" and Franklin [. Giddings, Professor of Sociology at k>lumbia University, who makes investing and valuable comment upon Ir. Michaud's statements touching .merica's dominating race characterKott'b TliIsT We offer One Hundred Dollar? Reward for ny ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by lairs Catarrh Cure. F J. Cheney & Co., Prop?., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J.Choiey for the last 15 years, and believe him perectly honorable in all business transactions nd financially able to carry out any obligaion made by their firm. Vest \ Tiiuax, Wholesale Druggists.Toledo, Ohio. VALDiNO,Ki>*NA>*AilAnviN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, actng direotly upon the blood and mucous suraces of the system. Trico, 75o. por bottle, sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall s Family Fills are the best. A man may have a large following sim>ly because he doesn't pay his bills. FITS permanently curcd.No fits or nervousaess after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat ^ervellestorer. $2 trial bottleand treatise free Dr. B.H. Kline, Ltd., 081 Axck St., Phila.,Pa. Keep out of the frying pali and you von't get into the fire. Mrs.Winslow's SootiiingSyrup for children eeining.soiieu lll? gums, ?ium.co iuuu?.ui? | .ion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 2jc. abottlo Lots of people become 'sadder without >ccoming any wiser. Piso's Cure for Consumption Is an Infallible nediolne for coughs and colds.?S. W. samcel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, l'JOJ. The gift of gab often results in a man living himself away. June Tint Butter Color makes top )f the market butter. When you cast your bread upon the vater don't tie a stone to it. SvTWhite to Dk. Tabeu Mro Co.. Peoria, 11., for free sample Tabor's Pepsin Comound, the guaranteed cure for i>yspepsia, ndigestion and ali stomach ills. It is quite natural that the father of wins should be lacking in repose. THE CRY OF THE AGE. What shrill I do to be just? Whnt shall I do for the pain Of the world?for ltd sadness? Teach me, O Seers that I trust! Chart me the difficult main Leading out of my sorrow and madness Preach me tho purging of pain. Shall I wrench from my finger tho ring To cast to tho tramp Ht my door? Shall 1 tear olT each luminous thing To drop in the palm of the poor? What shall I do to be just? Teach me, 0 Yo in tho light, Whom the poor and the rieh alike trust: My heart is aflame to bo right. ?Hamlin Garland, in the Outlook. I QUOY'S DRAGON: J ! $ ..IN.. ^ i PELL STREET. 1 ( f Tiiis Chinaman lived on the top floor of a house in Pell street. He had one room there all to himself?a remarkable luxury in this particular tenement, dignifying him beyond al the yellow faced denizens of that crowded warren. Front his grimy window that had never been cleaned since the house had been built he could look across a sooty bristle of chimney pots and a frayed tangle of clothes lines to the tall buildings cf the Bowery. From the narrow street below ho could hear the gabble of his blue bloused countrymen, rising gutturally tr\ him tVio vo??tVtr?r rwrnittpfl an open window. All day they lounged down there, in doorways, puffing their long bamboo pipes and chattering, or dodging in and out of the untidy shops whose back rooms reeked with the sweet smell of opium smoke. At night they were likely to have other amusements?he could see the lights across the street then in. Jim Quong's place, where he knew they wtsre slapping down long, black backed fan tan cards in the midst of a heavily breathing crowd of men. Sometimes there was a sick man at the Joss house for treatment, and the bong banged and shivered interestingly in his ears. At other times the patrol wagon came amid much uproar, and the street filled at once .with chattering Chinese and frightened sightseers and beetlebrowed whites from the Bowery. There was always something for Qucy to look a: from his top floor window. Ho could not go down stairs because he was a very sick man witfi several diseases, the surest being consumption. A Cantonese?a fellow -townsman of his?brought him liis food and opium for a certain consideration, and burned sticks in the Joss house for him now and then. But he could never find Quoy's money, even when he crept in after the old man's pipe had rolled out of his hand, and one could see only the whites of his ejos. The only thing beside Quoy who knew where the money was hidden was the dragon. No one ever saw the dragon except Quoy, and be only at certain times. His father had been acquainted with it?it would seem?in Canton; it was such a family institution that Quoy's solitary, whole-room grandeur would ha.ve been too lonely without it. Quoy himself had first known it across the Black Water at home. It had followed him to America and he was touched, when he thought of it, at its devotion ! in a strange land. The split matting ! he lay on might grow more and more ragged; the little jade snuff bottle might break and the odd far-traveled Lares and Penates might fall to pieces, but the- dragon was always the same. So long as he bent the black smoke pipe with the lotus mcu-h-piece, and the small can of opium, and the peanut oil lamp at hand, the dragon would come and keep him company. Every night when he was tired of his window and felt a little lonely he he would light the peanut oil lamp beside tbc mat and cock one fat, bubbling pill of opium after the other on his needle and smoke slowly. The occasional time-killing pipes of the day no more kept the pains out of his lungs, and it was the evening's smoking that was the day's event. When the air was close and sweet . smelling from successive pip?s and the small ramp flame grew misty, then at last, out from behind the battered grimy screen across the room, Quoy's dragon would come crawling little by little into view, through the floating smoke streaks and dusk, with his pink and burnished scales rasping, actually, on the rough floor. When he was all In view, his bulk seemed out of all proportion to his screen hiding place. His great head, with its horns and long teeth and the saffron beard from its chin, was very near the little lamp between the two big fcurpaws. Behind, the scaled back and the folded wings, ar.d long, silky tail blended with the smoke streaks and darkness. So, -very sociably', it would settle down on one side of the lamp while Quoy, on the other, rolled his pills and looked sleepily into its big red eyes, and talked to it about Canton contentedly. At the dragon had known his father and Canton city from the Wall Pagoda to the Flower Boats, Quoy, in isolation and solitude from his fellows, was never positively lonely. One night, nearly 20 hours after the dragon had gone, Quoy woke up from a long dream a very sick man indeevl. The several diseases and the Black Smoke had pretty nearly finished him, and for once the pipe was almost too far away for hira to roach. When his fellow townsman came in presently and chased the shadows off the mat by lighting the peanut oil lamp, Quoy fixed hi.m with his eye and said: "Go to the missionary man tonight and tell him to come here. Tell him that I shall want him to take my - 1 j money and imy me a coma ana senu me back in it to China/' His friend sat down on his heels and peered prospectively into the opium can. "I would dc that as well as the missionary man," he said solemnly and plainly. Quov's face cracked in a ghost of a smile. "No," he said. "I would not put a shadow on my friends', conscience. Bring him here quickly or no one will ever find it." The friend got up silently and went out. Quoy managed to pick up pipe and needle and 'o light the lamp. He smoked his make-up pipe fehely. Once he stopped and said, half aloud (which showed that he was not himself): "Many hide money in matting and clothes and screens, but who would hide it in the queue en his head?" A little noise startled him and he looked up to see his fellow townsman grinning in at the door. The man came in and deliberately unwound Quoy's rusty queue, while Quoy dragged at his hands furiously, but too weakly. When he found the tight roll of bills he laughed and jumped back, while Quoy jabbered fiercely at 1 im and then coughed himself to pieces. By a foolish word ho had thrown away his hope of hing in sacred ground outside the Canton walls, something he bad looked for ward to Witt grim Celestial comfort for years. Now his neighbor had found the money after many searches, and finally Jim Quong would got it. The man was moving toward tho door when there was a rustle among the shadows behind the torn screen. He stopped, and he and Quoy held their breath. The peanut oil lamp and the trickle of street light from the window hardly lighted the room, but there was something scraping out from the screen toward the door slowly, with the thud, thud of great paws cud the dragging of a mighty tail. Now it was before the doorway! The police came loaning up the tracking the wild shrieks, to the tenement's top floor. As they reached Quov's door the last one died away inside. They found Quoy on his mats, his long*nails drumming happily on his pipe and his breath whistly. Scattered about the room were unpleasant relics of his Canton neighbor that made oven the police shiver. That was a'l there was?Quoy, the relics and some ripped up screens and matting. "Under the slice," said Quoy placidly to Jim Quong, who had mounted with the rc.et, "is the roll of my money. The man tried to steal It. It Is to send me back to Canton in a carved coffin." Jim Quong was a Tong man, but the look of the room was on his nerves in srite of that. "Who did it?" he asked between two shivers, while the police stepped back, lifting their boots. Quoy smiled and dug his needle feebly into the opium pot. But before he could cook the pill something stopped him, and they never found out.?New York Evening Sun. OLD AFRICAN GOLD MINES. Evidences cf Extensive Operations Carried on Many Years Ago. Rhodesia, or British Zanibesia, ranks among the chief gold-bearing countries of the world. The ancients mined and carried away enormous quantities of the precious metal, but under the scientific mining systems of the present day their operations will be greatly surpassed. In the recently published work on the "Ancient Ruins of Rhodesia," the authors, Messrs. Hall and Neal, endeavor to discover who the ancients were and whither the gold went. Perhaps Rhodesia was the ancient land of Ophir, the land of the mysterious "King Solomon's mines," but the theory is strongly combated by some investigators. The ancient gold workings are the basis of modern workings. For every ten square miles of Rhodesia there was one ancient mine, that is, there are 75,000 old holes, which means that a stupendous wealth was dug out of the earth before the days of Cecil Rhodes. Much of this wealth must have gone to the north and south it was probably wrought into the crown of the Queen of Sheba and filled the coffers of Solomon. The ancient smelting furnaces are still easy to recognize. They are sunk into the floor. The furnace blowpipes are made of the finest granite-powder cement, and the nozzles of the blowpipes are covered with splashes of gold. The linings of the holes are covered 1? TTt1> firef lin_ Wltn SpGCKS OI g'JlU. vv ucu me uioi mi ing became worn by the heat, a fresh lining of cement of an excellent quality, which has outlasted time, was smeared round on top of the old lining. One can take an old lining, split off the layers with a knife and find gold splaches in abundance. Apparently the ancients wasted gold lavishly. Gold has keen found in large quantities in the form of pellets as large as buckshot in the vicinity of the furnaces, and also thrown away on the debris heaps outside of the old buildings. The tools of the ancient workers which have so far been discovered include a small soapstone hammer and burnishing stones of water-worn rock, to which gold still adheres. There are evidences that the ancients carried on an extensive industry in the manufacture of gold ornaments and utensils. Thirty-five thousand dollars' worth of gold ornaments have been taken in the last five years from the ruins of Matabeleland alone.? Youth's Companion. i PEARLS OF THOUGHT. A short absence quickens love, a long absence kills it. Waste of time is the most extravagant and costly of all expenses. . The earnestness of life is the only passport to the satisfaction of life. There is no greater disaster in love than the death of the imagination. The most cowardly lone wolf is the bravest when he has a pack at his back. Originality largely consists in seeing things as they are and telling the truth about them. There is no joy like the joy of real virtue, and no music like the music of a good conscience. . When there is love in the heart there are rainbows in the eyes wnich oover every black cloud with gorgeous hues. Before we passionately desire anything which another enjoys we should examine into the nappiness of its possessor. The grandest warrior is be who fights against and conquers the petty passions which would compromise his dignity as a reasonable being. A selfish heart never understands the pain that others feel in giving necessary pain, nor can such a heart see things from others' point of view. Common sense, thrift, indomitable pluck, great good nature, devotion to friends, frankness, generosity?these are things that people like in a man uaooage i-ieia nero. An old English soldier tells how he missed the Victoria cross: "I was once sent out to India with a regiment to be pushed forward" to the front, as a fierce war was going on. But one night we were suddenly attacked, and I got separated from my comrades and wandered about in the thick scrub for nearly three hours, until I suddenly came into the open. I then laid myself fiat on the ground to listen, as it was very dark. But I suddenly fancied I could see the enemy in front ol me kneeling. I sprang to my feet, determined to cut some of them down beff-rc I was overpowered and shot; and. dashing forward, I slashed right ani? left until daylight broke over me, when I found that I had beheaded 500 red cabbages!" A Finger Clock. A novelty in the way of an alarm clock has been perfected by an American jeweler. It is about the size of a hazelnut. It is made to wear on the finre;*. The alarm is not a bell, but A sharp pin, which pricks the finger at the time the man or woman wishes to rise. V BOne of the essentials of the information as to right living a health and happiness. With recreation, of enjoyment and o to that end and are of not less wholesome foods and the selec when needed. With the well-ii / only when nature needs assisl cleansing the system effectual! [ long been known, yet until wi to resort to oils, salts, extracts which were found to be obje< increased quantities. Then physicians having lean and carminative principles wei I principally in the leaves, the C a method of obtaining such prim ' of presenting them with pleasan most acceptable to the system a Syrup of Figs?as figs were u because of their agreeable taste. This excellent remedy is nov best of family laxatives, because \\ and sweetens the system e?fe< H functions and without unplea9ai tinued when it is no longer reqt All who would enjoy good he that it is the one remedy whi approve and recommend and u alike enjoy, because of its pi ! beneficial effects. Syrup of Figs is for sale by j of fifty cents per bottle, in orij the remedy?Syrup of FigsCalifornia Fig Syrup Co.?print CSisros I Louisvill USE TAYLOR'S S: REBUILDING A TREE. Broken Down by an Ice Storm, It is in Its Oldtlmc Beauty. Every passing storm seemed to wreak its vengeance on the big elm tree that grew by the roadside. One late winter morning we awoke to find the world transformed by ice on every tree and bush. In wonder and amazement we looked abroad. Eut in front of us the elm tree lay a shapeless mass, broken and splintered by the weight of ice. Already ihc tree had been endeared to us by its many hardships, in which all the family had sympathized. The tree must not perish now. With ropes and pulleys the great limbs, some of them now several Inches In diameter, were drawn back to their places; for every one of them still clung to the parent stock by a strip of bark and wocd at its base. Iron bolts were made from half inch rod*. long enough to reach through branch and stock just above the 3plit. With loDg augur, half inch noies were Doreu cnrcugn me tree mc bolts driven in tight and then ,drawn up by means of a nut and thread. A large head and washer, and another washer under the nut at the ether end, prevented the ends of the bol.t from drawing into the wood. So tightly was the branch drawn to the trunk that no gaping crack was left, and the crease was heremetically sealed with melted wax. Then higher up, between brancher two or three feet apart, other rods were run to hold all the members in place. We knew that if the bolts fitted tightly in their holes no harm would come to the tree; but that if bands were placed about the branches they would soon crease and girdle the parts and work much harm. When the storm had passed the dear tree stood in its customary mood, and all the following summer it grew as if with renewed determination.?Country Life in America. I Asthma I ^^^ neo^my^aughtersh terrible case or asthma. We tried B almost everything, but without re- B lief.' We then tried Ayer's Cheny I Pectoral, and three and one-half 5 bottles cured her."?Emma Jane g Entsminger, Langsville. O. | . Ayer's Cherry Pectoral I certainly cures many cases J of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak lungs, | whooping-cough, croup, | winter coughs, night I coughs, and hard colds. | Three lizes: 25c, 50c, SI. All drnjfists. I Consnlt your doctor. If he says take it, a then do as he says. If he tells yon not B to take it, then don't take it. He knows. 3 g Leave it with hino. We are willing. J ? J.C.AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. fl I t?1 ah $S?. 50k ^Droftlsta Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something just as good." S?ff?;iT2S Thompson's Eye Water j WINCH H FACTORY LOADED M "New Rival" "Le 15 BrBF you are looking H || munition, the kinc MM point your gun, ! 9 Loaded Shotgun Shells: 4 H Black powder; "Leader" g with Smokeless. Insist Factory Loaded Shells, M, ALL DEALERS happy homes of to-day is a fund of nd the best methods of promoting proper knowledge, each hour of f effort may be made to contribute value than the using of the most ting of the best medicinal agents iformed, medicinal agents are used J :ance and while the importance of jr y, when bilious or constipated, has thin recent years it was necessary , of roots, barks and other cathartics \ ;tionable and to call for constantly n ied that the most excellent laxative re to be found in certain plants, ? -2 ? CtmhiA r* 0/*/>TTAt?A^ ' R llTfirn IH fig Ojriup W. uiowrcibu ciplss in their purest condition and t and refreshing liquids in the form nd the remedy became known as? sed, with the plants, in making it, / t rapidly coming into universal use as the i it is simple and wholesome and cleanses ctually without disturbing the natural it after effects and its use may be disconlired. >alth and its blessings should remember ch physicians and parents well-informed se and which they and their little ones easant flavor, its gentle action and its all reliable druggists, at the regular price ^inal packages only, having the name of -and the full name of the Company? ed on the front of every package. San Francisco, Cal. e, Ky. J ;rokee Remedy of Sweet G lghs, Colds, l<a(lrippe & Football and Insanity. During the year 1902, two men In America were killed in prize-fights; and, in a season of three months just passed, twenty-one men have been killed playing football. Fifteen of these died from broken necks or broken backs. How many men have been ruptured and permanently injured iif various other ways no man can say. I know, says Elbert Hubbard, in the March Cosmopolitan, that two young men with whom I am personally acquainted, are now in lunatic asylums as a result of football, and their ravings are the cries and signals of thiJ game. If you still think that football i is manly sport, you might, interview the parents of these young men. THE TEST A Vast SVumber of Kidney Suffering: P say but for the Free Trial they w Golden Merit at your Command t< Columbus City, Ia., Feb. 10, 1903. ? I, : received the sample package of Doan's | Kidney Piffe and took them according to I directions. They did nae so much good, II procured a 50-cent box at the drug store and have been greatly benefited. I had the backache so bad I couid hardly walk ; also had urinary troubles, that caused me to get up two and three times of a night. I am all right now. Long may Doan's, Pills prosper. Yours truly, A. C. Sipe. Severe and long standing cases should take advantago of free Medical Advice. | I Grand Rapids, Mien., Feb. 17,1903.? II received the trial package of Doan's Kid! ney Pills promptly and can truly say they 1 are all and even more than recommended. I suffered continually with a severe pain in the back,- which the pills entirely overcame, and I am able to work, which would not have been possible but for Doan's Kidney Pills. Mrs. J. A. Schlamb, 003 j Buchanan St., Grand Rapids, Mich. Malsby & Co.! 4| South Forsjth St., Atlanta, Ga. ? Portable and Stationary Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Complete line carried in ttockfor I if MED I A TE shipment. Best Machinory, Lowest Prices and Best Terms. Write us for catalogue, prices, etc., before buying. ra^Glve the name of this paper when writing to advertisers?(At. II. '03) | WITH NERVES- UNS' a THAT I WfSIT D P W 1\J M" / ^ BROMO-! TA I TRIAL BOTTI ! ESTER1 for reliable shotgun am- m 1 that shoots where you 8 buy Winchester Factory g 'New Rival," loaded with || and "Repeater," loaded g upon having Winchester m and accept no others. || > KEEP THEM J| w few York, N. Y. U urn and Mullein .t and Lung Troubles. Thoroughly tested ire. All Druggists. 2oC, 60c and tl.oOt & -i ONE WAY TO CRAWL. "And is this the first time you have experienced the sensation of love?" she. asked. "It is," ho replied. "Am I the first girl you ever told you loved?'" she persisted. He hesitated. What might not have ^ come to her ears? "You must remem-' ber," he said at last, "how easy it ia :;g for the ignorant and uninitiated to ao- ' tM ccpt a base imitation for the real ?< thing."?Chicago Post. The charm about the Lippincott . ^ nuts to crack in each month's Magazlne is that they are not chestnuth, but Walnuts and Wine. For Marcn there is an appetizing array and not a bad , nut in the bunch. OF GOLD. eople, Cared by Doan's Kidney Pfflsv " * s- - J- A TV. J a ntABna V 8 OUia Sllll DC 111 Aguujf. 1UW ~ 5 Test. Aching backs are cased. Ilip, back, and -yfM loin pains overcome. Swelling of the limbs and dropsy signs vanish. Thev correct urine with brick dust sedf- /< >ment, high colored, pain in passing, drib- ' bling, frequency, bed wetting. Doan'ft . Kidney Pius remove calculi and graveL Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness, .^| headache, nervousness, dizziness. FREE-SCALED WITH FUBL1C APPROVAL. Please send me by mail, without charge i trial box Doan's Kidney Pills. \ Post-office . - 9 State (Cut ont coupon on dotted linos and maC to j .Foster-ailbura Co., Buffalo, N. Y.) " $1 j Medical Advice Free?Strictly CogP^arthfl. f* 210 Kinds far 16c. f ft It is a fact that Salter's seeds are found tnM ' < A more gardens and on more farms thax^-jftf any other in America. There is GS^S^ reason for this. We own and 'erate over 6000 acres for the prodocA tlon of oar choice seeds. In order to AE induce you to try them wematoHHj IrAthe following unprecedented offer AH For 16 Cents Postpaid 9 '"ThS 88sortswe?<erfel ealwe, w JM' Bv til/ 25 Mr<* rsbjbsf i ^ ET"? r \ SS rare luelooa radUh, ANSI .if// SO aalralld btvt aorta. WRq ! h '/ 16 giorlootly kaasllf M flowar i M 4 in all no kinds positively fornUldiw ? ' ja A buslicls of changing floorers and lots /M H ffi and lots of choice vcjrctablea. togfta-#*f| 51 S3 er with oar rreat catalogue tellingall /JIM. N W about MacaroniWbeat,ltlUlo?Bo)-bHH I H lar ttrasa* Teosinte, Bromna, SpdtaT^B tt H etc:'Bll,or 10e? In stamps anf Oaloa kcJ atbnt OOfl. ?pas>4 777-7/ j\yjj\ John a^sal2?r seed ca. V I PAT SPOT CASH FOB MILROUNTT LAND WARRANTS issued to soldiers of any war. Also Soldiers' Additional Homestead Rights. Write at once. FRANK H. REGER, P.O.Box 148, Dearer, Colo. y rRUNG AND HEADSACHE POMEN SELTZER HE J lO CENTS | mmm ?11 FLORIST wmu to know rou, Send 10 BsUTm name* of your Flower-loving CyVvJ friends ana 10c and I will seed Ml WW you a splendid plant of the sgl AMERICAN BEAUTY ROSE. P0b>sM I would send you my Flower Catalog if I knew your name. MISS CALLIE WATSON, &w8lI Tho Southern Woman Florist, MernphU. Ttas ens. DROPSY 10 CAYS'TREATMEHT FBOu Have oado D iopf y and its oat* icaiions a specialty for tTantJ mrswith the Dost wondarfil tccess. Haro cared many thoni* id case:. Box U AUanUb, Q||