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Teace a Her Victories Vko les.; enowned than war," said ly'ilton, and now, in the Spring, is 'he time to get a peacefut victory over the impurities which have been accumulating in the blood during Winter's hearty eating. The ban ner of peace is borne alofi by Hood's Sarsaparitlay' It brings rest and comfort to the weary body racked by pains of all s;s and kinds. Its bene:lcial effect; pro' .c to be the rent speciie to be reli1l yi,on for victory. RoOdI's nerer dC.iapo," S-tt Rheun--M mother wns serious t ah:ct-"d with aaitWhe :n and paiuful run a sres. No .liciun h'"lped her u1ntil is Sar apM -. was u-ed, which made her entirely 1." Esst; E. MAPLEsTO.E. 05 Dearhorn.-:eet. C'hicat. 11. T;r't feeling-1 had that tired. dull feeling - usp.-s::i, head-u"s and snking sp- Us -Lt Hood's Sarss ari!a made me a ne" nl. I neve^r v.a betler than now. o M. cs, osaloosa. iw. floods Pills cure I,t if~!s" ancu:rr.tdin?r :and the only cathart.:. to ak." :t h ood" $arsaparIlia. "Ctouse' Scyinur. -"eeymour, the actor, was locally no w u as 'Chots::." br iause on one occasio, n pl1 :ayin Otilello at the Limerick The:tre. lie, in tlle well known passage. "ExcedenlIt wNrettch: Perdition catcli U V soil, ilut I do l ve thee, and wii.n I love the t nt, chaos is come agai." ronounced the won "chaos" as if written c'coe." S-y imour hated the nickname'. :uui js re corded of him when one night lie was playing Otl.ello in the dying sce:e a voice from the house roared out. "That's blessed good. Chouse"' Then the audience ritue.sed a singular spectacle. Otheilo sat bolt upright, shook his fist in the direction of the disturber, and in a voice of rage in cited him. if he were a man. to come down and have his head punel;d. There being no answer to his chal lenge, the hapless Moor solemnly turn ed over and p1roceeded to die. to an obligato of t itters from the entire house.-The Argonaut. Three German cities possess electric rail ways. So. 1?. AN OPERATION AVOIDED. Mrs. Rosa Gaum Writes to Mrs. Pinklam About it. She Says: )EARt MIns. PIXlH.D:--I take pleas lire in wr-iting~ you a few lines to in form you of the good your Vegetab'te Compound has done me. I cannot thank y-ou snough for what your medi ine has done for im; it has, indecd, helped me wonderfuilly For year; I was tr-ou ovarian tumor, eachyeargrow ing worse, un til at last I ' was compelleen to consult with a physician. He said nothing could .'V be done for me but to go under :-operation. In speaking with a friend of ine -abcut it, she recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, say ing he knew it would cure me. I then sent fo your medicine, and af ter tak ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis-. appeared. Oh! you do not know h-ow much good your maedicine has done me. I shall recomnnend it to all suffer ing women.-Mrs. RlosA GAUM, 720 Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal. The great and unvarylng success of Lydia E. Pinlhham-s Vegetable Com pound irreliving every derangement of the femaTe organs, demonstrates it to be the moderna safeguard of wo man's happiness and bodily strewgth. More than a million women have been benefited by it. Every woman who needs advice about her health is invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. GENTS WANTED A ev, n "Thrilling Stories of the Spanish American War by Rtre eos"""a?2 D. E. L.UTh1ER PUB. CO., Atlanta, Ga. )A 176"Mtefl .dis|iliMNEaE"a bloe of' t th~e P you hen. AM'into RMk the 6 CF/S2BBY& aeon shol Frank B. Trout, of ::oj Griswold .) age of fou:teen we had to take ouri + halth. she weighed only gopogd said she had an-emia. Finally we . Pale People. when she had taken leave her bed, and in less than si: -~ To-day she is entirely cured. anrd is T ISTNNWAY. On TIis Occasion lie Felt lie Was Fortified by a Circumstance. "U, you don't mind my entioniug t r-imarked the cheerf.ul passenger who was holding on to/a strap. as be leanel down to speaato a young man seated near the ea sto:e. "you have a very icmarkabl mustache." "Hey W' t's that," growled the young il. - ooking at him sidewise. "I say ou have a remarkable mus tache." "",.tist let it alone, will you'" /Yes. I'll Ict it alone. I'm not a bar ber, you know. Still, there can't be any harm in telling a man, when he's got a mustache like yours, that it's something worth while looking at. You'll pardon me for calling your at tention to the fact that it grows straight out from your lip for about an Inch, at a right angle, and then most of the hairs turn directly up, while the others turn directly down. That shows it's natural. It couldn't be waxed so as to stand out that way. It's like the long arm of the letter F". A man couldn't train it in that shape in a million years. I don't suppose, now, you ever took two looking glass es and stood so as to get a side view of that mustache, did youy' 'None of your business." responded the young man. "I'll thank you to at tend to your own affairs, if you have any, and let mine alone." "JvCt so," placidly repiled the other. "Some people like to have their pecul iarities pointed out to them and some don't. It's all in th way you look at it. You are not asking ny advice, of course, but if I were in your place I should trim that thicket, that chap aral,'that .:heval-de-frise, as we would bay in French, close to the lip. and then it wouldn't attract general atten tion. Most men, I dare say, look bet ter with a mustache, but that's prob ably bec-ause it hides their mouths. In your case, now, it doesn't hide the mouth at all. It runs right away from it. It's out of the question to" "Say, if you don't want to get your head punched. you shut up: You've got more blamed gall than any man I ever saw. Mind your own business." "Certainly, certainly. That's all the thanks a man ever gets for trying to be an altruist in his own way. I re member I once called a fellow's at tention to a wig he was wearing. I told him it was all right, considered as a wig, but he didn't think it fooled anybody. It was so palpably a wig that it gave itself away as soon as you looked at it. I could see that he thought it was a perfect imitation of the natural hair, but it wasn't, and somebody oughl' to tell him it wasn't. That was the position I took. lHe got angry, just as you're doing. bat I didn't mind that. I'm always getting peopile down on me when i'm trying to do them a favor, -just in that way, and I suppose i always will be'. I don't let it bother me as much as I used to. Still, .young man, I wouM adv'ise yout not to go punching heads.'' "Why not, sir?' demanded the owu er of the bristling mustache belliger ently. "WXhat would you do'" "Nothing. B~ut some of these women who are standing up might slip into your seat. Then the man who wa s tr'ying to benefit his fellow man straightened up grasped the strap still more firmly, ani, during the remainder of the ride, said nothing. and merely looked pleas antly at the young man. or raher through him. without seeir-g his' flow to Raise Lettuce. Lettuce growvers who have held that sandy soils were the only suitab)le me ium for forcing this salad crep will be surprised at results reached in ex' por;iments at time New York agricul tural experim3ent station. Geneva. In tests continueid thr'ough four crops of ed lettuce grown in the forcing house upon soils of different textur'e it was found thatt the best iresths were secured from a soil of i-at her compact uture (a clay loam basis) which :ontaned a good proportion of line sand, clay and silt and was moderate y lightened with fairzy well rotted .aanure. In fertilizer te.sts carried on at the same time. the same factor, texture of the soil, exerted more of an influence than dlid the source of the plant food. 1'hat is, upon sandy loam soils the :omerial fertilizer plats did better than the stable manur-e p)lats, wb"~:e * pon the clay loam plats the lighten ng of the soil by the stable manure -ave bectter' results than the manur-ed lats than upiia those treated with hemicals. Little gain camne from s of bo0th manure and chemicals. 'ith one good supply of plant food is a waste to supplemnent it with an wy Girl Can Tellt A physiCian wrho makes the and is honest about it can/ you that, in many cases,the er of Ted corpuscles in the i. is doubled afteT a course' -eatment w-ith Dr. Wiilliams' .j Pills for Poale People-. Tht this means good blood not be enti'rely c lear VTom d.octrs5 statement, but aniy* ) iho has tried the pills Can.tel1 that it means Ted. lips, bTight good appetite. absence of jache, and that it tT8tnS- -3 is the pate and sanlow~ girT a maiden who dlow~s with beauty which pei'fect health can give. Mothers whose dtaughteT6 r debilitated as they pass Sgiilhoodl inlto womanhood lO. not neglect the pill bestV ted. fo' this partiuar idL A-e., Detroit, Mch., says: "At the a-.ghtr from school on account of Bit was pale anjd sai!ow a d the doctors, a-e her Dr. Williams' i ak Pills for two oxes she was strong cnou.gh to :months was something like hersel f. a big strong, healthy girl weighixng d day sice."D i Eenng.t.. 1w' Pmis~ for Pale People are whys bor'mg fr~om t.he Cpe?r bog. a Iy - GOOD ROADS NOTES, I State Aid For Good Roads. The progress ma'e in the develop ment of good rural highways by thos, States that have adopted what is knowi as the "State aid" system furnishe abundant evidence that the systen embodies the only plan that will pro vide a State with country roads tha are of any permanent lue to the agri cultural interests.1 It has taken an endless amount o agitation and education to convince th, farmers that old methods of road building must be abandoned. WhilE admitting the need of better highways the average farmer has always resentei any atempts to impress upon him hi obligations to the State at large in thi matter of supporting practical scheme: for road construction. He has alwayi regarded road building as his owi affair. to be carried on according t< his individual whims and convenience As a rule he has subordinated the mat ter of highways to other work on thi farm, unmindful of the fact that im proved roads add immeasurably to thi value of his land and its products. That the State aid system has solved the problem of country roads improve ment to the farmers' satisfaction i shown by Otto Dorner, chairman o the national committee for highway im provement of the League of Americal Wheelmen, in an article in the Forum This system has been adopted in vari ous for_., by New Jersey, Pennsyl vania, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York and Massachusetts, whili in many northwestern States, notabli Wisconsin and Minnesota, constitu: tional obstacles to State aid have re cently been removed. The systen divides the cost of road improvemen between the State, the county and th owners of abutting property. Improve meats are made only upon a petitiot from' the o.-ners of abutting property, stating the character of the improve ments to be made and consenting to ar assessment of their property to cove, one-tenth of the cost. When the im provements are completed the Statc pays to the county one-third the cost the county paying the remainder oui of its treasury. The system properly leaves the ini tiative in the hands of the farmer, ani relieves hini of the largest part of the cost. As the success of the systen ha: been amply demonstrated it wouli seem that Illinois cannot afford to las very far behind the procession of States that are certain to adopt it iv the near future..-Chicago Timea. Herald. Our Great National Enemy. Mud is the greatest enemy this na tion has to contend with. Tho alleged wrongs inflicted upon the Cubans and Filipinos, by Spain, are as nothing tc the want, squalor, ignorance and dis tress occasioned by' mud in this, ouw own fair land. Mud impoverishes our farms, de stroys business, breeds disease, fos ters isolation and ignorance, and thereby increases crime. Mud costs this country more money every year than it would have re quired to purchase Cuba peacefully. The most humane, Christianizing, civilizing "expansion policy" this na tion could inaugurate would be one for expanding the good roads from one end of the country to the other. Mud has imprisoned and enslaved thousands of families in our own proud domain. "Freedom" to them is but a dream. They are bound and shackled-by mud. They are not per mitted to enjoy the privileges of a jail "trusty." They cannot go to the neighbors and the neighbors cannot come to them. The postman cannol convey to them the daily papers and other great voices of the living world. They cannot con verse with their fel lowmen. Their ears and their month! arc bestopped w:ith mud. Millions for war, but not for peace, External expansion, internal decay. The mnost up-to-date warships; the most out-of-date mud roadAs. Every thing~ for the heathen; most any oh thi:im for the folks at home. The legislator who votes million! for foreign conflicts and opposes ap propriating a few thousauds for in ternal improvement, in the way o bettering the highways, is a man wh( would rather- daub war paint on hi~ face than to receive the grace of Go in his heart. As has alr-eady been re marked, "We want good roads."--L. A. W. Bulletin. The Crusade in Brief. Give the[open drain a good fall to free outlet. Lay tile uinder drain! where needed. Do not leave the gravel or broke> stone just as it drops from the wagon sread the metal. Drain thoroughly. T IKeepithe~rca< surface dry. Kieep the earth under neath the surface dry. Crown the road with a rise of on, inch to the foot, from side to centre so as to shed water from the roadwa: to the drains. Specify the width of grade, amoun of crown, plan of drainage, kind width and depth of material to b used. and see that these specification| ar-e carried out. With the money which can bi spent, bujild permanent culverts, per ma-nenit bridges, buy machinery, bu: gravel pits, prepare gravel for haul ing, construct drains, operate the ma chinery. Owing to recent rains and sofi weather, the roads on Long Island N. Y., have been so bad that cross Island wood-carters have been able t< deliver but a half load at a carting Even that is a double burden for th< poor horses and scarcely pays for thE time and trouble. Some work has been done on pub lic highways by the convicts of Clin ton Prison, New York. and by the in mates of several jails in that State So far the undei taking has proved successful, but the experiments havt been conducted at nearby points. s< that the convicts could return a night to their respective prisons. It is impossible to do satisfactors work on clay roads which are ver. wet, or which have become baked ad hrdened by heat and drought. Th perator o'f the grading macia: should have instructions to commen:e vork on clay rocads as r-oon a; th ground has become sau1icieutly settle in spring-and not to leave this wvore til the gronna is hard an~d dry. J ABOUT PEOPLE. Paul Villars, the correspondent in ondon of the Paris Figaro, has re eived the order of the Legion d'Hon -eur. King Humbert of Italy has conferred he title of duke of Apulia upon the afant son of the duke and duchess of Losta. Mr. Watts, R. A., who is over 80, is oing to devote himself to sculpture >r a time, the subject to be a life 'ze statue of the late poet-laureate, ord Tennyson. Mr. Waiter Roper Lawrence, C. I. E., ho has been appointed private sec -tary to the new viceroy of India, is ne of the most brilliant men who cer passed into the Indian civil ser ce. He passed in first and rose from no high position to another, until in few years' time he became officiat -?g secretary to the government of udia. He gave up his splendid pros ects in India to become agent-in :ief to his grace the duke of Bedford, ith whose consent he is accompany -g Lord Curzon. The duke, the vice cy and Mr. Lawrence were all con emporaries and friends at Baliol. Sergey Friede, the explorer, who is uying all the supplies for the build og of the great Manchurian rail -oad in China, came to America not ong ago with orders for more than -1,000,000 worth of materials to be iseC in the construction of the rail -oad. He believes that the United 'tates will supply all the materials hat will .nter into the construction f the great railroads that will be -uilt in Siberia and European Russia. re afso predicts that San Francisco -111 be one of the great-ccmmercial de ots of the world. A Simnia: Eitrct. "Which would you rather miss, -rain or your dinner?" "Well, I don' .aow, Either would be likely to giv r a sort of 'wona f-1t;r' "-Tife TAPE uWWORMS "A tape worm eighteen feet long at least came on t.^ scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This I am sure has eaused my bad health for the past three years. I am still taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people. s d GEO. W. BOWLES, Baird, Mass. CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE MARX REGISTERED Goode erricn WYeaken. or G ri. lc 2e- t- e. ..CURE CO'MSTIPATION... Sierling Itemedy C018panly. rhicago, Montreal, New York'. S13 N0-O.BA b aifaem " lug COTTON is and will con tinue to, be 'je money Scrop of the - uth. The planter who gets the~ mrost cot ton from a given area at the least cost, is the one who makes the most money. Good culti vation, suitable rotation and liberal use of fertilizers con taining at least 3% actual will insure the largest yield. We will send Free, upon application, pamphlets that will interest every cotton planter in the South. GERilAN KALI WORKS,I . o Nassau St.. New York. IIfII IHEUIFFERENCE BETWEEN A flNEW FLOR ENCE AND ANY OTHER WAGON, S HELOWFRENCE has Springs O udrsand Bolster in l'ront and be tween the Bolster and Axle behind which ocreatesalive weight,makes the D)raftligcht er, saves the Team and prevents 75 per cent. If your dealer does r.otihandle this Wagon Qwrite d'reet to FLORENCE WAGON WORKS, 4 FLORENCE. A LA.. Sand recei full information with Cuts. 1Pri'cs ar.d Te~stimonialb. S paid ing's - Means ' "Standard of Quality" on Athletic Coods inlsist upon Spaldinlg's Handsome Catalogue Frex . A. G. SPA.LDING & tEROs., N ew Yorkc. Chicago. L'enver. UEWHRALL ELSE FAILS. Bes Coghsyrp.Tastes Good. Use l'aper IUath [Robes. Bath robes made of paper are no~w manufactured, and their use is beco. - ing quite a fad. The kind of materi ,1 used resembles blotting paper. ] t quickly dries, the body, and as the pa per is a bad heat conductor the much dreaded cold after the bath can be avoided. Whole suits are made of this paper stuff, including coverings for the head and feet. One advantage of the fad Is the cheapness of such a gar ment, making it possible for the poor est person to own one. To cnre. er - 'P ~- NM- Z An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy. SYr,P oF FIGS, manufactured by the CALIFORNIA FIo SYnur Co.. illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa tive principles of plants known to be medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system. it is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, without weakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants. by a method known to the CATIroE:1A FIG SRTU Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, Y. NEW YORE, N. Y. For sale by all Druggists.--Price 50c. perbottlS Edison's Plan for Removing Snow. Edison's latest suggestion is that snow can be removed from city streets not by melting machines. but by port able steam power compressors, which will scoop up the snow in steel scoop buckets and squeeze it into cakes 12x 12x12 inches in volune, which will be practically solid ice. Carts and men following the compressor can take up the cakes with tongs as they drop to the street, says Edison, and a market can be found for enough snow cubes to pay the interest on the cost of the machinery. Beauty Is Blood Deey. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it.. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all in purities fr"om thc body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarcts,-beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaran teed, 10c, 25c, 50c. There is a vast differee between speaking "one to another" and ono about another. To Cure a Cold in One Dlay. Take Laxative flrcmo QuIrino Tablets. Anl I)rugg ists refur.d meney iZ it fat!is to cure. 25c. It is stated that nine-tenths of the mohair plush used in tthe United States is manufac tured at Sanford, 3M. Don't Tobacco Spit ad Smoke Your Lire Away. To quit tobacco cas.iy andi forecrr, be mag netic, full of life., nerre and vigor, talke N~o-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or SI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York The Cargo of the first ship of the new line between San Diego. Cal., and 3Manila. con sisted of whiskey and beer Educate Your Ilowels Witi Cascarets. Candy Cathartie, cure con,stipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C C. fail, druggists r'efund moneY. Hereford, End., bricklayers get 15 cents per hour. No-To-Bac far Fifty Cents. Guarateed tobttec.chabit cure, makes weah men stror.g, b:od pure. S0c.851. All druggists. Batltimore, 3Id., is to have a home product show. Tro Care Constipation Forover, 'Pske Cascarets Candv Cathartic. IOc or 2.5c. f C. C. C. fall to cure. dru:sists refund money. A Texas ranch has an area of 5.000 square miles. Mr'. Winslow5$octhin-c yru p for ch ildsen it iing,softentsthe gum's, reducing inflama ion. allays pain.cures wvi ud colic 2~,c a bot:2. H. HI. GRhEEN's SONs, of Atlanta. Ga.. are fne only succ. ssful Uropsy Special:sts in the world. See their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this pape!r. I am entir ely cured of hemorrhage of lungs byPiso's Cure for Consumption.-LoLisa LISDax , Be thany, 31o.. January 5, 1894. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reacin.ho diseased portion t.ft1.he ear. There i:< only oue way to cure deafness, and thatis by constitu tioal remedies. Deafness is caused by an in fit aed condition of the mucous lining of the Fstachian Trube. n hen this tube gets In flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fet hearing. and when it is entirely closed Deaness is the result, and unless the inflam maton can bie taken out and this tube re stored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten ari causd by catarrh, which is nothing bat an intamied conditionot' the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars f or any case of Deatfnesa caused by cattrrh) that can not be eur.:d by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. 1. J1. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. H all s F a mti il y P ills atr e th e b e st. Sprauied his Back and A'nkle. Knok ced one of Hits Fin,ers out Joint-Usedl GOO%E,.GREASE L2NlMENT and was out in (e. daiy. It cures Ei ery Timie if Tou Will Use It Right. Use Plentxy of it. DYSPEPSIA ! M*ha~a t"whi"' t 3 Stomach Tr.ruble,i. No, Frie Fakei. 11one0t ood gure Deal. One we"-ks treatni.ent. One D)ei!nr. i.y .1al *ridress N. j. CII.' (o.. FO.\ (iiv!annla,o. SONEW DIsCo vERY; gires DROP ;ei:kre'if and cures worst cie. Bnok of testa,nonialsand 14) dn us' treatment Free. Dr. H. H. G Rt.5.N'S sotNS. Box D. Atisr.ts. Ga. 25,000 Song Books for Soldiers. Recognizing the good results that accrue from soldiers singing when on the march the minister for war of England has just ordered 25,000 books of patriotic and military songs as .an experiment. These will be distri buted to the men in infantry regi ments and classes for singing will be instituted in the barracks. A similar experiment, made in France by Gen. Poillowe of St. Mars, has been at tended with marked success, the num ber of stragglers on the march being reduced by '70 per cent owing to the A DONKEY IN O1-FICE. A certain king had a philosophei upon whose judgment he dependeu. It happened that one day the king took it into his head to go htuting. and after summoning his nobles and making preparations 11e called hi Philosopher and asked if it woulu rain. The philos.pher told him itj would not; and the king set out. While journeying along they met. a countryman mounted upon a don key. He advised them to return. "for," said he, "it will certainly rain." They smiled and passed on. Before they had gone many miles, however. they Lad reason to regret not having taken the advice, as. a heavy showe coming up, they were drenched to the skin. When they had returned, the king reprimanded the philosophel for telling him it would be clear when it was not. "I met a count.inan, and he knows a great deal more than you do, for he said it would rain, whereas you said it would not." The king then disi:i sed the phil osopher and sent for tho countryman. He soon appeared. "Tell inc." said the kin1. "how di( you know it would rail t' "I didn't know," said :e ru tic. "Mv donkey told me . "And how, pray, i,d be tell you so?" " By priekin, up his ear::, yeU majesity." Tie king then sent the cCu: tryIan away . and, ret:'!ii:r th:: ":k r piat'tl himl in the oldice tli mo t,Ler hua 1illJ l .:' y. is n 1.ager 1i cr'culation. and will not Ite accepted by the go; euaent after December 31, 1899. The Piones is Aye/s Before sarse ty 0 have confidence at . experiment, buy anyl you want a cure, yo [The Sarsaparilla w .,* F AR M SEEDS ,a1 Sur' Seeds are W~.aated to Produte. * Maho ttr T. T7I3 sohethe wrd S..:ow b 0b eli Big Four oat' J. P .Ider, Mihio .WD,13 bush. ba . tin L..vo S .b wri e' thrx c ga. n . .00 new cuso::-r,. Pe:ee wiLl send on tria 10 DOI, ARS WORTH FOR 100. 10 ph: r -, t e d,Sa Bos1 ri es Ba Shee, * S-i Ca:al; . ue, t ieg oll about enr F'arr. otrt.10O,00lbbl.Sced Potate Please ' becd,lO send this e aion . dv. aF3ng. No.j , PROOF. It is an eas7 matter to claim that a aremedi y h.- wonderful curative power. 'The manufacturers ot RHEUMAOIDE le3te it to those who have been Derma nently and positvely Cured cf RaHF SIMATrsSI to makie claims. A&mong those Swho have recently written us volunta are: Rev. J. L. Foster. Raleigh. NJ. C.; Mir. 3. E. Robinson, Ed itor. Goldeboro, N . 0. Daily Arguo;Mr.A.Daus,a prom Dukea railroad man.Kansas Clty,Mo. Rhleumaeide Will Cure YTou. Manuhturled b e. OBBITT DRUG CO. so d by DruiggltsgeneraUy. Price 8lper botti IT COSTS YOU NOTHING But a postal to alnd out you are ying .. dcubie onr prices on Turniture, Rugs. LaceCurtaini, tortierep d ng, Crookery, Clnth?ng, Silver ware clgocks, Sew" ., in Machnce,Pie rer Mirr rs.by - ar toves,. Tin" " "" ware, Lamps. Bicy cles, J?ianos,Orgaus. " Shoes, Hats, Gents' "!' Furnishinge, etc. z We pay Freighton .4 gstSZ Carpets and Draper r" Reed Rocker. C td Pric0 $1.19- $14.90), gua=ted to lit. Why are we doing * business in every :" state and territory "_' Ln this country? Why has our busi X nesi doubled itself *duringthepestyesr? :. Our Free Catalogues "_ tell the story. Which do you want? Write today. Address this igh Gradt V way e zaMe tupucrd from $.5I, =JULIUS HiNES & SON, Balt mnme; Md. Dept.SlO _ . X"X++++++++++ +x.(*+++ Saw Mills $129 TO $929.00 With Improved Rope and Belt !eed. SAWS, FILES and TEETH in Stock. Engines Boilers and Machinery Al kindsand Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys, Eelting, InJtore,ipe, Valves and F'ttings. LOMBARD IRON WORKS&SUPPLY CO., AUGUSTA, GA. L OSTMIA1HOOD CVRED. Ss box~ IOOdoesetor !! 81 post paid. D] .C. $ SID= .Reading, Pa. ?r ?Medicine Sarsaparilla Lparillas were known, years ago, it began its work. Since J thenyoucancount the sarsa parillas by the thousands withevery variation - of imita tion of the cept one. They have' never been* able to un itate the ~ quality of >~ the pioneer. SWhen you see Ayer's on 2Ia bottle of sarsa parilla that is enough; you can ce. If you want an ~ody's Sarsaparilla; if imust buy chmade Sarsaparilla famous] ord hanld whees god asncrStoSO '0mdl. W .c .Edr It nc.' town r E E .. n ad Cyt e of ods! u.plAr . s t--P .n o i.P aftr aysretaes onshelleri n r.t se 5S7e t B pn G Co., eur . or 1 . Kln.atm ele a enturandaavor un. Bo. 1 WSi 7 SaTwmso nd t-Ee Wetbater Hoy oerfrpe