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Two boys Isft Wm with Jul merngh mm; to take them through college, iftor which thcy must d*> pead entirely upon their ova. < They ittadud the collegiate net?folly, pmad to wwiwd thoLdiphnua frw the ulty, also, commendatory letters to o l*r|t ahip-building fins with wUeh they desired employment. Ushered into the waiting room of the heed of the Arm the first wss siren an sa diencc. He presented his letters. "What can yon do," said tho saan of miliiona. * "I would like some sort of a clerk ship." ?* "Well sir, I will tske your name snd address rand if we hare anything of the kind open will correspond with you."* . As he passed dot, he ssid -to his companion, " You can go in and 'leave your address.' " The other presanted himself and his papers. ? LLWhat can you dot" was asksd. "I can io cny thing that a green hand can do," was the reply. The msgnsts touched a hell which w called a superintendent. 11 We went a man to sort ecrsp iron," replied the superintendent. And the college student went' to sorting scrsp-iron. One week passed, and the presi dent caked, "How is the new man getting ont". i "Oh," aaid the boas, "he did hi?v^ work bo well, and never watehsd ths clock, that I pnt him over the gang." In one j*esr the man had reached the head of the department, and an advisory position With the msnage . .merit, at a salary represented by four figurea, while his whilom friend was still out of employment and seeking s position. The Simple Expert. "You ssy this is fine tobacco land!" "The best in the world." "Indeed! Pray how many boxes of cigars will it grow to the acrof" \ In Self-Defense. He ceased to use the hateful weed To pleaae his wife, but then He wore so very large a grouch She made him stsrt again. You never knew a man until you have atarted him talking upon the aubject of hi8 pet enemy. HAD SCZKXA IS TSABS. Iba. Thomas Thompson, of OlarfcavtU* ??.. wrltM, uDdar dtte of April tt. 1(0/: "I Nl*r?d 16 yeara with tormenting eoaema; had Am best dooton to pr*Mrlt>?; bat aoita lag did m? a \y rood until I got Tsrrsaiaa. It oarad a). | am so tbaakfal" Tbovaands of othsrs eaa-tasUfy to ilnlUr MtM. Tbttbbi!?8 is soM by dwjjgtota er aent by nail for Mo. by J. T. Bitotana. Dept. A, Bavannah. Ga. - It is the gentle mind that maket the gentleman. So. 41- '08 ftlrka' Capudlne Cures llcadaebe, "Whether from cold*, heat, stomaob or nervous troubles. No Aocetanilld or daa KoantUugs. It's liquid and acts lame* tely. Trial bottle 10c. Regular sisss J&c. sad 10c., at all drugglsta. Pert Puipipk Notice that most of be men who are Blading pat have comfortablo ?cat*. Failure in laudable attempt ia far from being a thing to be ashamod of. ?Reade. * When you are dealing with a mule it ia wise to see to it that aaid mule has no kick coming. If you oxpect to have to borrow money, better borrow it before you ncod it; it is easier to do so. When we get home and take stock of our cMggers, blisters, burns and bills we are inolined to be glad to think it it oyer. Queer that your next door neighbor should think you are a mean, inter fering wretch when you tell her that little Johnnie has a fire under the front porch. ? I The man who tells a secret to a wo man isn't foolish, but just diplomatic and crafty. It is his way of annoano ing it to the world. Lots of girls are as mild as milk and as. sweet as honey and still they < may have the tabasco sauoe up their ?leeve. Many a hobo would make a good Emperor, but the distressing thing about it is that there is more eall for harvest.iiandt in tbia country than for emperors. v "Some men," aaid Unole Eben, "ain't satisfied to auit when dey's done bought a gold hriok, but keeps Kyin' storage on it an' holdin' it r a riser"?Washington Star. NO QVfUUCR But Tells Fucts About Poetum, "We hare used Postum for the paat eight years," writes a Wis. lady, "and drink It three times a day. W? never tire of It. "For several years I could scarcely cat anything on account of dyspepsia, bloating after meals, palpitation, alck headache?In fact was In such misery and distress I tried living on hot wat er and toast for nearly a year. "I had quit coffee, the cause of my trouble, and was using hot water, but this was not nourishing. "Hearing of Postum I began drink ing it and my altmente disappeared, and now I can eat anything 1 want without trouble. "My parents and husband had about the same experience. Mother would often suffer after eating, while yet drinking coffee. My husband was a great coffee drinker and suffered from Indigestion and headache. "After he stopped ooffee and began Pc?tum both ailments left fclaa. He will not drink anything elae now, and we have It three times a day. 1 could write more, but am no gusher-?only state plain facta." Name given by Poetum Go., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvllle," la pkgs. "There's a Rea son." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They lure genuine, true, and tall of busM Interest. MARCH OF SCIENCE PRAISES GREAT ACHIEVEMENTS Meeting of Sdttliata Adjovrna to AwwMi Next at Waahington, D. C., Special.?JThc International Tuberculosis Congress, which has been in aeaaion here eloaod Saturday to meet next in Rome. One of the most pleasant surpirsca of the closing sscncs of the congress was the appearanee for the first time daring its proceedings of Presideut Roosevelt. In a eharacteristic address Proaident Rcoaevelt paid a notable tribute to tbo assemblage of so many scientiata of intcnational reputation. The President spoke in port as fol lows: "It is difficult for os to realise the extraordinary changes, tbo extraordi nary progress, in eertsin lines of so ds 1 endeavor during the last two or three generations; snd in no other manifestation of human activity have the change!*been qnite so far-reach ing a? in the ability to grapple with disease. It is not so very long, messuring time by history, since the sttitnde of man towards a disease such ss that of consumption was one of helpless acquiescence in what he considered to be the mandates of a supernatural .power. It is but a short time since even the most gifted members of the medical profession knew as little as any layman of the real cause of a disease like this, and therefore necessarily of the remedies to be invoked to overcome it. "Take, for instance, the work that the United States government is now doing in Panama. The Isthmus of Panama, ?which was a by-word for fatal disease, has become well-nigh a sanatorium; and it has become *o because the investigations of certain medical men which enabled them 10 find out the real causes of certain diseases, especially yellow fever and malarial fever, and to take measures to overcome them. The older doc tors here when they were medical students would have treated the sug gestion of regarding raosquitos a? the prime source of diseaes like th.vf [ as a subjeet of mirth. These utterly unexpected results havo followed pa tient laborious, dangerous and extra ordinary. skillful work that has en abled the cause of the disease to be found and the diseases themselves to be combat ted with extraordinary suc cess. "At this moment in the middle of the great continent of Arfrica there is a peculiarly fatal and terrible disease (he sleeping sickness, a disease which if it had been known to our ancestors in the middle ages would have been spoken of as the black death was spoken of in the middle ages?as a scourge of God, possibly as something connected with a comet, or some sim ilar explanation would have been ad vanced. We all know that it is duo to the carrying of a small and deadly blood purasite by a species of biting fly., ' "And the chance to control that disease lies in the work of Just such men as, and indeed, of some of the men who, are assembled here. You who have come here, however, have come to combat not a scourge confin ed to the tropica, but what is on th^ whole-the most terrible scourge of the people throughout the world. But a few years ago hardly an intelligent effort was made or could be made to war against this peculiarly deadly enemy of the human race. The chance successfully to conduct that war a roae when the greutest experts in the medical world tuxried their train ed intelligence to the task. It re mains for them to find out just what can bo done. ''I feci that no gathering could take place fraught with greater hope for (he welfare cf the people at large than this. I thank you all. men and women of this country, and you, our quests, for what you have done and aro doing. On behalf of the nation I greet von, and I hope yon will un derstand how much we have appre ciated your coming here.'" _ Tencoese&n's Brutal Crime. Bristol, Tenn., Special.?A special Prom Johnson City says: L. A. Bay tess, a magistrate attacked his broth er-in-law, Bcrney Bayleaa, while the latter woe asleep in bed at bie homo n this city and almost literally cbop oed hie head off with an axe. He then attacked Baylesa' wife, fatally wounding her. Turning the weapon upon his own wife, who was in the House, he struck hor several blows, :nflicting probably fatal injuries. Rayless was arrested and half an Hour later was found dead in his cell, Having hanged himself. Young Mm Killed at Oil Mill. Vienna, Ga., Special. ? Millard Sheppard, the night foreman at the Vienna Cotton Oil Company, was caught in a belt at tlie mill early Saturday morning and instantly kill ed. The body was badly mangled, one aim being torn from the frame and nearly every bone being broker.. Young Sheppard wr.s a member of J prominent Peolcv countv family and had a large circle of friends here. Ccct cf lhaw Trial. New York, Special.?The total C03t to New York county of the prosecu tion of Harry K. Thaw for the shoot ing of Stanford White has been $>!, <*37, according to papers submitted by District Attorney Jerome to Justice Mills at Newburgb. The purpose of Mr. Jerome's application to Justice Mills was to have the appronehin* trial on the question of Thaw's ment al condition transferred from Wca1 chester to New York county. nrorr cnr ram Washington, flpaaisl Crop t!o% 69.7;. ??til of Win ginned, 3,282,000. Theee are Ike rsporte ie I by tkt government Friday morn ing, the erqp eonditicm Wing beeed until September 20th end number of Mas ginned until September 2Stk Compered with the reporte leaned on the eeme dete last year the erop condition is 2 per eent higher end tin nnmber of belee ginned one million toes. The ivporte had an inspprerie ble effect on the market. The rerience in the number of belee ginned this and last year is attributed to the feet that the weath er this fall baa been much more fa vorable to the gathering of the etaple then et the eeme time laat seeson. In many section* of the eountry it is stated that'a large part of the erop haa been gathered. Cotton Ginned During Year. Washington, Special.?The census bureau Fnday announced that 2,532, 668 balee of cotton had been ginned from the growth of 1908 to Septem ber 25th, as compared with 1 ?32,602 to the corresponding dste laat yeer. The number of eetive ginneriee re porting is 23,650. Condition of Cotton Crop. The Crop Reporting board of the bu reau of statistics of the department of Agriculture reports, the average condition of the crop on September 25th at 69.7, as compared with 76.1 on August 25th and 67.7 on Sep tember 25th, 1907. North Carolina 69; South Carolina, 68; Georgia, 71, and Texas, 71. New Georgia Railroad Opened. Valdosta, Ga., Special.?The Geor gia & Florida Railway, a newly con structed line running from this place 100 miles northwest to Haxehurst, was formally opened to the public Friday. A special train brought 500 representative citizens from points along the line to this city. Work it rapidly progressing with a view to uniting the newly constructed road with other divisions now in opera tion, which will give a new short line between Madison, Fla., and Au gusta, Ga. Uncolnton Men Interested in New York Corporation. New York, Special.?According to official report of the Secretary of State "The Mutual Farm Commis sion of New York City,*' capital $10,000 has filed articles of incorpora tion with the Secretary of State at Albany with permission to incrtarfe capital to $200,000. The directors chosen are named as Daniel J*. Rhyne and James A. Abernethy, of Lincolnton, North Carolina, and Frank Guy Hull, of 1644 Nineteenth avenue, Brooklyn. To Extend Trolley Line. Spartanburg, S. C., Special.?The street car company will soon begin the work of extending its North Church trolley line to the fair grounds. Preliminary work is now under way and a large force of hands will be put to work shortly and the laying of the rails will be rushed. The county fair will open November 3rd and continue until the 6th. Indictment of T. Jenkins Hains. New York, Special.?District At torney Dorrin appeared before tho grand jury in Queens county and de manded tho indictment of T. Jenkins Hains as accessory before the fact in the murder -of William E. Annifl, who was shot and killed by Peter C. Hains. The principal witness against him before the grand jury was Mrs. Aonis, widow of tha victim. rear KiTed on Ohio Central Toledo, 0.. Spccial.?Four persons are dead and two fatally and threoe seriously injured as a result of a wreck on the Ohio Central Railroad at 8ugar Ridge, when an extra freight train plunged into the rear of a special passenger train. The dead are George Cosier, Richard Ridrout, Thomas Crano anJ Leslie Fuller. Texas Raises the Quarantine Against Cuba. Austin, Tex., Special.?The State health department, through Aetiug State Health Officer J. H. Florence, raised the yellow fever quarantine which has been in effect against Ha vana and other Cuban points for some time past. This action was based on a message received from the surgeon general of the marine hos pital service conveying the informa tion that the government had raisei the embargo existing at Havana. Officer Kills Ono and Wounds An other. Hart well, Co., Special.?James K. Carter, a prominent business mAiV, while acting ah a special policeman, Friday ph<ft and killed John Tcasley, and seriously wounded William Hall, both negroes. It is said Carter fired in self-defnnse, the r.cgroes having made an attack on him. He has sur rendered to tho sheriff. The Failaxo of an Eastside Bank. New Yoik, 8pecial. ? Following close on the failure of three Eamt 8ide private barking institutions, n rftoivcr ba? been appointel to ex amino the offaiis of tho bank of Ed ward Rtscnfeld on the lower Ea*t side, and throngs of excited aliens gathered in fiont of the building, shrieking threats and hut ling epithets at >he bankiupt. Rosenfeld ban no? been seen for two day;}. About $30, 000 of the savings of the poor is in volved. iu mm iMi Tiki a look it tha wheat field that m Mm brought up to ptrfwtiw, as it ataada. Y?Uew as gold, with tk? ?keen of the mo, billowing tna sky tine to aky-Hne like on omu of gold, where the wind tooehes tko rippling wot? erects with the tvood of invisi ble feet, la California, in Oregon, in Washington, in Dakota, hi the Ca nadian Northwest, yon may ride all | day on horseLaek through the wheat Aelda without a break in the flow of | yellow -heavy-headed graip. No fenee tinea. No meadow landa. No ahads trees. No knobs snd knolls and hills; and hollows of Rrasa or blaek eart)i? through. From dawn till dark, from sunrise in a burst of fiery splendor over the prairie horizon to sundown j when the crimson thing hangs like a huge shield of blood in the hase of a heat twilight?ryou ihay ride with naught to break the view between you end the horizon but wheat?wheat. It is like the gold field*. It goes to your head/ Tou grow dizzy looking at it. You rub your eyes. Ia it a mirage f Billowing yellow waves seem to be breasting the very aky. You look up. The sky is there all right with the* blaek mote of a mead ow lark Bailing the asnre aea. He drops liquid notes of sheer mellow musie down on your head, doea that moadow lark and that gives you back your perspective, your sense of amaz ing reality. Yon are literally, ab solutely, really, in the midst of s sea of living gold. It is y?w -nd not the lsrk that is the mote. You begin to feel as if your special mote might be a beam that would get iosr iu In finity if .tou staid there long; and so you ride on?and on?and some more on?and by and bye fomc out of the league-long, fenceless fields with an odor in your noltrils that isn't exactly like incense?it's too fugitiv'% too fine, too sublimnl of earth. It is aromatic, a sort of attar of rose*:, the imprisoned fragrance of the bil lions upon billions of wheat flowers shut up in the glumes of the heavy headed grain there. And that's the odor of the wheat?From ''Harvest ing the Wheat," by Agnes C. Taut in The Outing Magazine for October. Insignificant Work. Big men do big things, but how many big things are big failures. The biggest ship that ever was built was uo profit to anybody until it was sold and broken up for old junk. Many a little ship during the same time had made good voyages, and brought profit to its owner. A man writes a big book; he is a. great man, but few people ever read his book, yet it is learned and bulky, and perpetu ates the man's fame through genera tions. Another man writes n little letter, a pamphlet, an epistle, which can be read in an hour, carried in the pocket, copied in a little while, scut through the mails, or printed on a few pages, and that little pamphlet is translated into hundreds of lan guages, scattered by millions in ev ery quarter of the globe. Paul, chained to a soldier in his hired house at Rome, wrote no big books. A dozen pages would contain the largest tratise he ever wrote, and yet the thoughts there embodied and the truths there declared, live through all ages and go to the ends of the earth. A seed is a little thing but in it there is the promise of a waving harvest through all the years to come. A granite monument is a i^eat thing, but it has no advance ?? ent, no promise, no growth. Let the man who does little things wait on God, who can make little things great, and accomplish his own purpose of grace and goodness, work ing wonders by means of the feeblest instruments through his matchless wisdom and his powerful love.? Chirstian. ? Practical Kind "That patent medicine works mira cles." "Ycu don't stay." "Yes. It found the proprietor a poor man and left him worth at lenst a million." Fluctuating Measuro, "Ho is having a pock of trouble." "And in trouble how much is a peok?" "Oh a bushel and a half or so." ?yrup?ffTgs ?^0'?xW?f'?enna acts Oeatlyj/ot prompt ly on the bowels, cleanses the system effectually, assists one in overcoming habitual constipation permanently. To get its oeneficial effects biy tke genuine. ^Manuf netured bytho CALIFORNIA fio toup Co. 60U) BTLCAOINO ORUC<HMS-6(H ^BOTTU Who Om Foretell? And wko can foretell vkat fashions for women are yet to comef A? pres ent the tendener is toward as few garments as possible (although this does dbt in anj way diminish the ?4>et of woman's clothes). The lin gerie waist haa became a mere cob web; skirts crow more abbreviated I every day. There is said to be a new silk underskirt which will admit of; being drawn through a fine rintr.1 fHosiery is thinnest lace, and ladies'; shoes are pumps of such narrow! margin ss to scarce conceal their, rosy toes. The oldest inhabitants do j say the elimate is changing, and that I we never have such cold winters as we used to?fifty years ago. Are these things to be taken in conjune- j tion, and are women gradually cvolv-, ing toward that form of dress which i obtained in priatine Eden f?From j "Do Women Dress to Please the j MenY" by Louiae Casa Evans, in The Bohemian Magazine for October.1 Deafness Cannot Ba Cored bylocal applications aa theycannot reach the diseased portion of the sar. Thereis only one waytocoredeafneaa sad that is by consti tutional remediea. Deafness is caused by sa '-fi?r*1 oondition ot the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tabs. When this tubeis in> flamed you hare n rumbling sound orimper* (set hearing, and when it Is entirely closed Deafness is the remit, and unless the fofism* mstioa can be taken cut and this tube rw> stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten srecanssd bycatarrh, which is nothingbut sn inflamed condition of the mncons surfaces. We will give One Bundrtd Dollars for any caas of Deafness (canted bycatarrh) tbatCan not be curedby Ball's Ostarrh Cure. Send for circular! free. F. J. CankT Ss Co. .Toledo.O, Bcld by Druggists, 75c. Ti\ko HalTsFamily Pills for oonstipatloa. Miss or Mr.? "Fighting Bob" Evans, during his last stay in Washington,, was one evening a guest at a house where lie met a number of the younger sot of the Capital. As the admiral was leaving, he chanced to pick up from the floor a very dainty handkerchief, edged with lace. He was gravely in specting this "trifle light as air," when a rather effeminate-looking young man hastened forward to claim it. "Your sister's, no doubt," said the admiral as he handed it over. "On, no," said the young man; "it's mine." Evans scrutinized the young man closely. "Would you mind tell ing me what size hair-pins you use?" he asked after a pause.?October Lip pencott's. RAISED FROM SICK BED After All Hope Had Vanished. Mrs. J. H. Bennett, 59 Fountain St., Gardiner, Me., says: "My back used to trouble me bo severely that at last I had to give up. I took to my bed and stayed there (our months, suffering In tense pain, dizziness, headache and inflam mation of the blad der. Though with out hope, I began using Doan'a Kidney Pills, and Id three months was com pletely cured. The trouble has never returned." Sold'by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Fostcr-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A burned child dreads the licking he's going to get when dad finds out he has been playing' with matchcs. Aft?lt Trees Are Imi Urm How etn an apple tree growf I lure a few of the trees planted by Qeooodoah, the Onieda chief, with Dominie Kirkland, the missionary, in 179K Theae trees, now eonaid erably over one hundred years of age, still bear hn abundance of fruit. The wood is in good condition, notwith standing many years of neglect. The average age of an orchard, * as gen erally planted and eared for, rarely exceeds fifty years. I am inciiued to think that the more sturdy sorts can lie made to exceed one hnndred and fifty years. In order to attain any such age there must be a selection of varieties, aud they must be graftal high up on tough stock. Opr father's apple trees were grafted in the tops; but the spples planted in these days are grafted in the roots. However, one must not cling too long to an old tree. I love any fine old tree, espe cially an apple tree, but when be yond usefulness, it is a ain to let it cumber the ground. Jesus laid down a great horticultural law when lie cursed the bsrren fig tree, (i. e., con demned it to being cut down). There is no room for second-rate stuff in the orchard.?E. P. Powell in The Outing Magazine for October. HIS SKIN TROUBLES CURED. First Hsd Itching Rash?Threatened Later With Wood-Poi*r?n In T/cr? Relied on {Taticura Remedies. "About twelve or fifteen rftr* ajo I had a breaking-out, and it iic'ied. and stung so b?dly that I could not have any peace he cause of it. Three doctors did not htln tne. Then I used *or?e (,'ulicnra Snap. Cutieura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent and l>e C*n to get better rigf?t nwav. Tlie.v cured me and 1 have not been bothered with the i itching sine?, to amount to anything. About two years a?o I had la grippe and pneumonia which left me with a pain in my side. Treatment ran it into inv lep, which then swelled and hesan to break out. The doctor was afraid it would turn to blood-poison. 1 used his medicine l<ut it did no good, then I u??l <?<(* Cuticurn Remedies three^mes and cured the break ing-out on mv W7. 1'. llcnnen, .Milan, Mo., May 13, 19C7." Between heinp ov?rfed nnd under fed we seem to be a much distressed and long suffering people. nicks' Capudinc Cure* Women's Monthly Pains, llackachc, Nervousness, and Headache. It's Liquid. KtTects imme diately. Prescribed by physicians with l>est results. 10c.. 25c., and 50c.. at drug stores. Wise Girl. "It is never too late to mend, my | daughter.'' "I know a hotter one. mother." "What is it ?" "Never to late to pot new ones." l'c Drive Out Miliaria and Uuild Up the System Take the Old Staudard Ukovk'h Tast* lkss Chill. Toxic. Yo.i know what you ?re taking. Tho formula is pl;unly firintoi*. on every bottle, showing it is simply C^ui uineunU Iron in a tasteless form, a?I\i the most effectual form, for growp people ana ciuldreu. 50o. Its Main Attraction. The children who are glowing up Will on the past look hark AikI speak about tlieir childhood a* The a^ of eraekerjaok. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup ?*?r Children teething, soft en* I lie gums, re luces iiil!iiiutii;i tioit,alla) spam,tuied wind colic,23c a bottle Matrimonial. Mrs. Visitor?I)o the girls in your school have any training that will lit them for the duties of a wifef Miss Yaxsar?Yes. Every graduate from this institution is an authority tn fairy talcs. THE J. R. WATKINS MEDICAL CO. WINONA. MINNESOTA. kWnkea TO ftlflfer nt Ai-llclrat Ifouseltnlrt Itriardlev Flmorlug | Exlrnrli all Ktuila. Totlrt l'rc|>Mrut Ions, Klnr Ngup?, I'tr. CanxJafjerj JYanted in E%)ery County. 40 Yours RxpcrteucPt 03,000,000 Output, BEST PROPOSITION E2?5 AGENTS American Cotton and Business University and School o! Telegraphy, Consolidated MILLEDGE VILLE, GA. PATTONt Wo guarantee to complete an? on* with good ?>r?l?ht In ?0 <?aja how to rrmle. elnaalff, vv i I Vlii average, ?hlp, buy and ??)I cotton. and b? nl>!e to protect theiorolree in any fli?tclcM p>ark<t. We nlno tcai h ht-w to (rraiir rr tton l>y ? C<-rr< a < niU-nce Cc>ur?<\ Onr rniuplf rooina under ri|>vr| octton men. All aamplee DnHlf If FtPlNITi BidjIb an l ?1< ? .i? entr>. t iiMciti, r< i pi ?>?! rpjH>?U ua grn^ed i'KKK. DUwMvtit.rl''V-?J nlre I t>> I uni.ira men to |i? ih" bot. COS*. MfcRClAL LAW and all MTKRARY bran< hpe HHOK'llIAND, TYVRWRriJMl, Oreaa aud K eitrlr, Telegraphy and Railroading! tiOT&UtfwIfl wire#,' 4lie bosl equipped achJul lu lU-> aouth. a.ipen??< rcaaonable. Wriln for Catalogue. hp I at.ite counte doMrod. ? m 1 1 Young Men #?d Ledlee of apibltlnn ihould sna?t?r Telegraphy apd I nOm I fklflfinOrinlf B. Arrranllwi Id rat of <ur Jn?tituip#. linat icernty of oie I Hill II I HIHIII nllllV \<>L*- We pirrale dm ?< fcooN undit i IriK-t fUJ?ejr*ialon of Ralli Lull I II IOIUUI UUlly Official* Vinlp.lir.e wire* In rll our xhool*. Ffwitl<n? alxolut Jit* ?^-? rooicteut. Worklrr board, ftnuintui fr.e. National Telegraph Institute, (Dept. A? N.) M(nM {-In?,at r. LIGHT RUNNING. SIMPLE. DURABLE SIMPLEX PRESS COMPANY, Inventor* and Manufacturer* of the Simplex Newspaper Press. HAND OR STEAM POWER, 107?1Q0 ?. M., At'ant it, On TbMO of u? wlio tmvo boon ailvlhly# our renders to pntronlei horn? |nJi>atry, now Lrtb n chnnoe 'o -?how cur fnlth by our work*, by pn'rouUtnii n "homo" In ilufltry tbnt Is turning out a product tlint wo believe Is rt,unl totlio U<f-t, If nottbo beet tl.lnj? on the market for our use.? Th? News, Fulrburu, On., Juno 5, 13)9. GUAR AFTBli) ^A^A^ITT YoooPbS HOUR Fatal Twm the verdict of the neighbors He'd drawn bis final breath Thai he lived ao strenuous a life He'd lived himself to death. 1. ft. Maxwell. Atlanta, Ga., sayst ?affered acoiy wttk a severe tee* of e aa. TitodiU atmst t*a?dt?i aal la tepair. vM a neighbor told ma to try Shiepinne's Tsrraaisa. After uiat II worth of yoor tbtthxwb and soap I am completely oared. I cannot say too muoh In 1U praise." Tbttbbimb at dnsgtot* or by mall GOo. Soap SSc. J. T. tfaorraa*% Dept. A. Savannah. Qa. It is a bsd hen that cats at your house and lays at anot herDutch. WOMAN'S! BACKACHE The back is tlio mainspring of woman's organism. It quickly calls attention to trouble by aching. It tells, with other symptoms, such as nervousness, headache, pains in the loins, weight in the lower part of the body, tlint a woman's feminine organism needs immediate attention. In such cases the one sure remedy which speedily removes the cause, and restores the feminine organism to a healthy, normal condition is LYDIA E.PINKH AIM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Will Young, of 0 Columbia Ave., Rockland, Me., says: " 1 was troubled for a long time with dreadful backaches and a pain in raj 6ide, and was miserable in every way. I doctored until I was discouraged and thought I would never get well. I read what Lydia E. PinUhum's Vegetable Compound had done for others and decided to try it; j-.fter taking three bottles I can truly say tlir-t I never felt so well in mj* life." Mrs. Augustus Lyon,of East Earl, Pa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " I had very severe b.ic'.iuchcs, and pressing-down pains. I con <1 not sleep, and had no appetite. Lvdia 11. Pink ham's Vegetable Co:-.pound cured uao and made n:c feci lileo a new woman." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN*. For thirty years Lydia JC. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, in Hammat ion, ulcera tion, llbroid tumors irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that l>ear Jng.down feeling, flatulency, indices. tion,di/.ziness,ov nervous prostration. M.? ilcmp J '.ct* ? iiinrtir. Out* Su.l Slump Puller FMfc.ry Is U>? ?m>4 n.sv.in* llinr oi-n n?l CuUaa. Uiu'iiitc*4 foi to*; lur?? pew*r itrilt, CaUlufu* ??J ditronnU. MIim i CURED Given Quick Re! (of. Remove* all Mvctllnjf lit 8 to 79 rityi; elTrctn ? p<Min~anent cur* in.to to foilivt. T11 iltreatment igiven frrr. Nothing-sin be Wnif Dr. H. H. Orcsn'j Soni, iSoetlaiitls lio* a Atlanta; Op liMMERMANN STEEL CO.. ? Lone Trig. low*. W. I*. Dongla* tn-iko<? and .Hl? more ini>ii'i 13.00 mi I shoo* Mihii hij other iiinnt'fnctu.-or in tlio world. l>o cause IIipv hold tholr shiipo, (It better, nnd wetir loii^c;' t'wn :*??> other make. 8ha??at All .'or Evj.-y Kj.nbcr of tha Funnily, Men, Goya. Wjmcii. f. ;8'*s3 Children W L Do?|l?? 14 60 ?iirt (1.00 Ol'.t K-i/t 3'ic#j cunnot b? ?qatlltl *r./prlj?. W. I.. Dnu;U? 11 CO kSA $'2 00 iho?i arc the t*?t In the warid f(|*f Color tCyrtrti t'ftl I'jrti/?Jr.?f(/. ty-'l'.lkr Mo M'lci It ?!???. W. I. nnma nn<l prl'*?* l? M?inn?"t on K>Uo:ji. s >11 er?ty<rher?, H!ioe? inmlwl fior.! r-\ctory to n?y part of ibo woiH, if lr> > W. L, DOt;OLAS, Ii7 S-mk S:.. I ?rktri. Mc*?. AI.W-IV* JIIN'III N TI!?h im fmi whi'ii uriilnu \?! vcr(iKrrr, nnu In buying Aiilcli'n idvrrlinril In t oI iiin us twite only i lie <? I- N I I n I. ml DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES! So. 41 03. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color mora (rood* brighter and faatrr colon: Ciiv? any other <lvo. Ono I fc% p i"!c:ufO colon J> nh?r*. Ihey <!yo 111 cohl walrrtcllcrlhan r?nv ?>t>irr Jjrc. Yom 0*u dy? nny garment without ripping m>?rt. Vt'rlto for free book lot -How to l;yo. Ilruo > oikI Ml* Color*. DlO.ltOl. iMtlli CO.. Uriiiicy. Illinois. Malaria Makes Pale Blood The Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the system. You know What you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it J^imply^Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual foqu. For adults and children. 50c. A Simple Remedy B 30 Cardui is a purely vegetable extract, of certain medicinal ingredients, with a specific, curative influence, on the womanly organs. It is a simple, harmless, non-intoxicating remedy, acting gently and natural ly, and is recommended to girls and women, of all ages. .To them we say: Tako Wine of Cardui for wdmanly pains, dragging feelings, nervousness, and any other form of sickness peculiar to females. Mrs;. A. 0. Beaver, of Marbleton, Tenn., writes: "I suffered dreadfully, but took Cardui and recommend it to all ladies with female troubles.*' U/Dll'L' CAD CD 171? DAHI/ Wrtt? for Pr? 64-p?n Boot for Wwntn, giving trmptomw, cmti, honr treatment and WKUfc tVK rKH, BUUK