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"Peace Hath Her Victories (o tess 'renowned tha war," saicMilton, and n , in the Sw4ing, is th time to get a peacefuf< victory over the impurities which have beer accumulating in the blo during Winter's heart eating. The ban ne of peace is borne aloft y Hood's Sarsaparilla. It brings rest and comfort to the weary body racked by pains of nil sorts and kinds. :s beneflcial effeets prove it to be the reat specific to be relied upon for victory. :ood's necer disappoints. Se't R',etsm-"My mnother w.as serious ty afflicted with salt rheiun and painful run ning sores. No medicin- helped her until Hood's SarsapariPa was used, which made ber entirely well." Ess' E. MAPLEsTONE. 13 Dearborn Street, Chicago, Ill. Tired Feeling-"I had that tired. dull feeling, dysp.-psia, headrachs and sin'.ing sp.1 s, but Hood's Sars.parilla made me a new man. I never was better than now." =oms MAcM, O_s:aloOsa&, Iowa. Hoods Pills cure livt'r i.ls non-Irrirating ad the oniy cathartie to rake with ~ood's Sarsapa illa. "Chouse" Seynur. Seymour, the . acter. was locally known as "Chouse." be cause on one occasion, when playing Othello at the Limerick Theatre. he. in the well known passage, "Excalent wretch! Perdition catch my soul. but I do love thee, and when I love thee not, chaos is come again," pronounced the word "chaos" as if written *chouse." Sey mour hated the nickname, and it is re corded of him when one night he was playing Otl.ello in the dying sece a voice from the house roared out. "That's blessed good, Chouse" Then the audience witnessed a singuiar spectacle. Othcllo sat bolt upright, shook his fist in the direction of the disturber, and in a voice of rage in vited him. if he were a man, to come down- and have his head punched. There being no answer to his chal lenge. the hapless Moor solemnly turn ed over and proceeded to die, to an obligato of t itters from the entire touse.-The Argonaut. Three German cities possess electric rail ways. So. 1. AN OPERATION AVOIDED. Mrs. Rosa Gaum Writes to Mrs. Pinkham About it. She Says: DEAR~ MBts. PINKAM,:-I take pleas ure in writing you a few lines to in form you of the good your Vegetable Compound has done me. I cannot thank you enough for what your medi ine has done for me; it has, indeed, helped me wonderfully. For years I was trou bled with an ovarian tumor, each yeargrow ing worse, un til at last I 9 was compelled , to consult with a physician. He saidf nothingcould , be done for me but to go under tuoperation. In speaking with a friend of min'e abcut it, she recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, say ing she knew it would cure me. .I then sent for your medicine. and after tak ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis appeared. Oh! you do not know how much good your medicine has done me. I shall recommend it to all suffer ing women.-Mrs. RosA GAur, 720 Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal. The great and unvarying success of Lydia~ E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound in relieving every derangement of the female organs, demonstrates it to be the modern safeguard of wo man's happiness and bodily strength. 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. ACENTS WANTED In ev;r"Thrilling Storie A fth a Spaonsh Amerianes by Returned Heroes."onl th,ni Itshed. Frterms and territory, address p. A mmER PB. CO., Atlanta, Ga. tel blo Pin o FT ite the bl01 QT O shc Frank B. Trout, of 103 Griswoi: ' age of fourteen we had to take our health. she weighed only 90~ porgd sid she had antemnia. Finally we Pale Iclc ten she had taken in less than s cured, andi TEXAS RANGERS. His, of the Force and Somethiag of Its Work. The east and north Texas members of the Legislature are in favor of abol ishing the State ranger force. The members of the West and Southwest Texas who know and appreciate the great value of the rangers not only are opposed to the proposed abolish ment of the force. but are anxious that the appropriation for their matu tenance be increased and that the num ber be increased one hundred men. At present there are four companies of rangers in the field. Each company consists of eight men, including the captain. The law creating the State ranger force. officially known as the Frontier Battalion. was adopted by the Legis lature on April 30. 1874. This law provides "'that upon satisfactory eci deuce being furnished the Governor of this State that hostile Indians, Mexi cans or other marauding or thieving parties are depredating upon the lives or property of the citizens of any county or counties upon the frontier of this State the Governor is hereby required, and shall organize or cause the same to be done. seventy-five men f for each county that may be so in I fested, and that the whole number of tuen shall not exceed 750.' Each member of the ranger com panies is required to furnish himself with a suitable horse. one six-shooting pistol, army size; blankets, clothing and ca:np equipage. The State fur nishes all necessary ammunition and also provides each officer and private with an improved breechloading cav alry gun at cost. The captains receive S100 a month. the serbeauts $30. and the privates $30. At the time the ranger force was created the R1io Grande frontier was infested with numerous bands of hos tile Jndians and Mexican outlaws. These marauding bands were commit ting numerous crimes upon the peace able settlers and the authorities we:C unable to cope with the thieves and murderers. The stocl:men were the principal sufferers. fBands of Indians and Mexicans would round up large droves of cattle. beldly drivit g them across the Rio (rande and dispose of them in Mexico. It was alleged that many of the county authorities were in league with the outlaws and for that reason the stealing Wei; permitted to go on without interruption. When the call was made for men to join the ranger companies some of the most nti -'d Indian lighters in the State tolunteered their services. The first companies to be organized were sent to the Rio Grande l4)rder counties. where they were engaged for several years in a ceaseless warfare against the Indians and outlaws. These little hands of State troep:- soon became such a source of terror to lawbreakers thatman-ofthemi fled from the State. To the rangers is due the credit of having i-educed smuggling along the liio Grande to a minimum. They ren de-red great. service to the 'United States authorities in ferreting out and eapturing noted smugglers. The rngersstill are of great useful ness to Texas. They are busy trailing tourderers, thievns and other criminals. They also perfor:u a splendid service to the stockmen in the matter of recov Pring stolen stock. The records of the a djuttant-Generals Department show that the rangers have recoveFed 1.239 head of stolen cattle and horses in the past two years. It was through the efforts of a company of rangers that the political feud in San Saba county. which was the cause ef thirty-four men being killed in that county within the past eight years. w'as b)roken up. In (alveston. only a few weeks ago, the county authorities refused to inter fer-e in a p)rize fight that had been ar ranged tolake place between Choynski and Hall. The G3overnor sent Captain McDonald and( a detachmient of his ra!:' r company to Galreston~ to see that the law was not violated. Cap taiin McDonald and hit; men g:ave the purilists and the promoters of thme con test tounderstand that the fight must not come off and it did net. There hatve been comparatively few train and stage robbheries commniItted ir. Texas and this fact is due to the efficiency o'f the rangers. The rangers are in :h. ::addle every day in the y-ear. Last ye'ar each member~ traveled mere than 2.(o4 mi1e -ar I''se'-c. Five- revolutionary wiows are still alive and 'iraw pensions. The young~ (est is 82 and the oldest 88 years of age. Each draws $12 per month. Sixty dol~ lmrs per month is cheap enough for the privilege of having five revolutionary relicts upon us. A physician who makes the and is honest abcut it can / you that, in many cases,the ber of red corpuscles in the ' d is doubled afteT a couTse :retment with Dr. Williams' s Pills for Poie People That this means good blood - not be entirey cear FTom doctors statement, but a.nf who has tried the pills can tell that it means red lips. bright good appetite. absence of dache, and that it transh s the pale and sallow girl a maiden who glows with . beauty which peTfect health e cangve Mothers whose dtaughters debilitated as they pass 1 ir thood. into womanhoocd l not neglect the pill best ~pted for this partieular all. IAve., Detroit, Mich., says: "At the aghter from school on aceount of ilt s, was paic and sallow and the doctors ave her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for two boxes she was strong enough to x months was something like herself. a big, strong, healthy girl, weighing daoy since."-Detroit Ezenir:g New:. inI Pills foT P&Ic People are eT alwahp beatsng direct from the tiN 5'per box. e JIM BOWKER. Jim Bowker, he said of he'd had a fair riow, An' a big enough town for his talents to grow, And the least bit of assistance in hoeiaA his row, Jim Bowker, he said, He'd fill the world full of the sound of his name, An' climb the top round in the ladder of fame. It may have been so; I dunno; Jest so It might been; Then ag'n But he had had tarnal lupk; everythia' went ag'n him, The arrears of fortune they allus 'ud pin him: So he didn't get a chance to show what was in him; Jim Bowkdr, he said, Ef he'd had a fair show you couldn't tell where he'd come, An' the feats he'd 'a' done, an' the heights he'd 'a' clumo. It may have been so; I dunno; Jest so it might been; Then ag'n But we're all like Jim Bowker, thinks I, more or less, Charge fate for our bad luck, ourselves for success, An' give fortune the blame for all our dis tress. As Jim Bowker, he said, Ef it hadn't been for luck an' misfortune an' sick, We might 'a' been famous an' might 'a' been rich. it might be jest so; I dunno; Jest so it might been; Then ag'n -S. W. Foss, in Cleveland Leader. HUMOR OF 'THE DAY. She-"How do you like her voice?" He- "Still. "-Yankee Statesman. Dewey opened up the ball, Dewey caused Manila's fall, Dewey shows us by what's past That the first shall be the last! Penner-"He once seemed to be a promising young poet. What stopped his career?" Skribes.-"Baldness." -Judge. Miss Passee-"They'say marriages are made in heaven." Miss Pert "Ah, then, you have one more chance." -Syracuse Herald. "Quite polite, isn't he?" "I should say. He is so polished that he can't tell the plain unvarnished truth." Cincinnati Enquirer. Louie-"Fred must be an auc tioneer." Nelly-"Why?" Louie "Last night he said he was going three times before he went." "A man is as old as he feels," said the gentleman of the old school, "and a woman as old as she says she is." Indianapolis yournal. "Why is the villain in the play al ways a dark man?" "I guess it's be cause villains are naturally opposed to the light."-Chicago News. Hibbler-"Does your wife help you in your work?" Scribbler-"Yes, in deed! She always goes calling while I am writiing."--Brooklyn Life. The girl who keeps her birthday, g, Wyhen a merry little elf, Keeps It still when she grows up, But keeps it to herself. -Chicago News. Horrified Mother-"I should like to know how you happened to let young Simpkins kiss you?" Daugh ter-"I-I thought no one was look ing." "Won't your wife sing for us?" asked one of the callers. "I guess she will; I just asked her not to," re plied the knowing husband.-Yonkers Statesman. Hingso-"He's a queer fellow." Jingo-"You bet! He told me yester day that he didn't like the solitude unless he had a girl with him. "-Syra cuse Herald. "How did you find business abroad?" "Well, I noticed that everything was Looking up at Naples," "Indeed?" "Yes; at Mount Vesuvius. "--Cleve land Plain Dealer. IH-" If your head aches, my dear, I wouldn't go to the tea mceting this evening." She-"Then the other woman will be sure to talk about me." -Bosten Traveler. Mrs. Crimsonbeak-"Mylife, John, is an open book." Mr. Crimsonbeak -"That's the trouble; I wish to good ness I could shut you up some time!" -Yonkers Statesman. "That woman tried to beat me down on the price of quinine. She said I ought to make it ten cents cheaper because she had to pay her little boy to take it. "-Chicago Record. Little Rodney (who has an inquir ing mind)-"Papa, what is the proper age for a man to get married?" Mr. Henypeck-"Not till he is old enough to know better, my son."-Puck. Duzby-"' Jabbins, do you remem ber that joke I sprung at the club din ner last week?" Dooby-"Ycs; and 'll never forget it. I've remembered it for over ten years."-Roxbury Gaz ette. Pollywog-"What's the trouble be tween Van Clove and his wife? I thought she was the light of his life." yollydog-"So she was, but she went out too much."-Philadelphia Forth American. An African King. King Lewanika's costume was rather remarkable. On his head he wore a black, broad-brimmed felt hat over a scarlet night cap. A long, bright-blue dressing gown, much em broidered with scarlet braid in Man chester style; a flannel shirt, tweed waistcoat, trousers and aggressively new yellow boots completed his cos tume. This was evidently his holiday attire, for on other days his scarlet night cap was replaced by a blue Tam o'-Shnter and the dressing gown by a shoddy ulster. We seated ourselves opposite the door looking out on the river, while the rest of my party were grouped in a circle round us. It was not etiquette for any but the King and his inter preter to enter the hut, so Letia and the councilors remained outside while we carried on desultory conversation on the subject of our respective jour Ineys, hunting, etc., enlivened by the Igentle tinkling of the piano and the subdued singing of the King's choris Iters.--Blackwood's Magazine. I Valuable Engravings. The most valuable engravings in the world are the four impressions of Rembrandt's portrait of a man leaning on a saber. The fourth was recently scd for $10,000. The original plate made by Rembrandt was cut down first to an octagonal oval and the pic tures from it sold for $130. Then it was sliced off still more and the prints sol fo. $lZ -nt of the original plate horses Suffer from tatarrn. Horses are very subject to nasal catarrh. and it is a widely prevalent belief among coachmen that if a horse goes into a fresh stable. and especially if a horse which has been out at grass goes into a stable with other horses. it will be most likely to develop a cold. So, too, it is noticed, will horses bought at a fair, and this is popularly attributed to the draugis to which they have been exposed. As it is ad mitted, however. that any otlier horses which may have been in the stable generally catch this cold from the newcomer, surely it is more reasonable to suppose that the latter ha.s in like manner received the infection from some of its neighbors while on sale. A medical friend of the writer's lately made an interesting expe riment. le has two horses. and has been in the habit of turning one out for the summer months. When he brought it in again for the winter it used invariably to develop a severe cold. Coachmen will tell you that this is due to the unaccustomed warmth of the stable, which makes the auimal "nesh." Last year, however. before bringing in his h.-rse. the doctor had his stable thoroughly disinfected and lime-washed. and lut no ot,her horse into it. The one which came in from grass then remained perfectly free from any symptoms of catarrh.-Lon don o tor. Chinese Telegraphy. The Chinese, owing to the multiplic ity of the characters in their written language, have solved the problem of telegraphy by using numbers for trans mission over the wire instead of char acters. The numbers have to be re interpreted into characters when re ceived. To facilitate the operation, types are used. On one end of each type is a character; on the other end is a number. By reversing and im printing the types upon a sheet of pa per the change is readily effected, with a high degree of accuracy. ulfWORMS "A tape worm eighteen feet long at least came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This I am sure has caused my bad health for the past three years. I am still taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of dotice by sensible people." GEO. W. BoWLEs, Baird, Mass. CANCY CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REGISTERED Good Never sicen ieaken .or Gr!p.lc 715c. c. ..CURE CONSTIPATION... Sterling Remaedy Company. Chtengo, MontreaI. New York. '513 COTTON is and will con tinue to be the money crop of the South. The planter who gets the most 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% ata Potash will insure the largest y-ield. We will send Free, upon application, pamphlets that will interest every cotton planter in the South. (IERn'AN KALI WORKS, o.t Nassau st.. New York. w H EfIFFERENCE ENEWFRORENCE ~TAND ANY GTHER W~AGON. H E NEW FLOR ENCE has sprints Ounder Sand Bolster in front and b 4 tween the Holster and Axle behind which Screates a live weight.mnakes the Draft li;;It er. saves the Tream a nd prevents 75 per cent. or the usual breakages. If yourdealer does eot handle this Wagon write direct to FLORENCE WAGON WORKS, FLORENCE. ALA.. 2and receive full information with Cuts. Spalding's -a I Trade-Mark Means "Standard of Quality" on Athletic Goods Insistupon Spalding's Handsome Catalogne Fre3. A. G. sPALDING & BROS., New York. Chicagn. D)enver. Bes Cogh yru. 'astes Good. Use l'aper Ulath Rtobes. Bath robes made of paper are now manufactured, and their use is becom ing quite a fad. The kind of material used resembles blotting paper. .It 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. -W MPA An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficia effects of the well known remedy SYRUP OF FIGs, manufactured by th< CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP 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 tothe taste and acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually dispelling colds, headaches and fever; gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom fron every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting. on the kidneys liver and bowels, without weakeninf or irritating them, make it the idea laxative. In the process of manufacturing fig are used, as they are pleasant to th taste, but the medicinal qualities of th4 remedy are obtained from senna an< other aromatic plants. by a inethoc known to the CALIFOR.NIA FIo SYRU Co. only. In order to get its beneficia effects and to avoid imitations, pleas remember the full name of the Compan printed on the front of every package CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CC SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORE, N. Y. For sale by all Druggists.-Price 50c. per bottl Edison's Plan for Removing Snow. Edison's latest suggestion is the snow can be removed from city streel not by melting machines, but by por able steam power compressors, whic will scoop up the snow in steel scoc buckets and squeeze it into cakes 12 12x12 inches in volume, which will 1 practically solid ice. Carts and me following the compressor can take u the cakes with tongs as they drop the street, says Edison, and a mark can be found for enough snow cubes pay the interest on the cost of tl machinery. Beauty Is Blood Deeb. Clean blood means a clean skin. I beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Catha tic clean your blood and keep it clean, I stirring up the lazy liver and driving all il puritics from the body. Begin to-day banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackhead and that sickly bilious complexion by takir Cascarets,-beauty for ten cents. All dru gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. There is a vast difference betwee speaking "one to another" and o; about another. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative B3romo Quinine Tablets. .A~ Eruggists refund money if it fails to cure. 2 It is stated that nIne-tenths of the mobs plush used in the United States is manufi tured at Sanford, Me. Don't Tobacco Spit and Sn:oke Your Life Away To quit tobacco easily and forever. be mi netic. full of life, ncrve and vigor, take No-'J Bac, thc wonder-worker, that makes weak m strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guari teed. Blookil and snmple free.- Adldre Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New Yoz The Cargo of the first ship of the now II between San Diego. Ca]., and Manila, cc sisted of wiskey andl b.eer. Educato Your P.owels With caseareta Candy Cathartic, cure constipation foren' l0c,75c. If C. C. C. fail, druggistsrefund mon4 Hereford, End., bricklayers get 15 ce: per hour. 3ro-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit curc, makes we men strong, blood pure. 50c. S1. All druggis Baltimore. 3Id., is to have a home prodi show. To Cure Conetipation Forever. Tiakce Cascarets Candy Cathartic. IOc. or 2 if C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund mouw A Texas ranch has an area of 5,000 squt miles. M rc. Winslow'sSoothinlg syru p for child1: iething.softens the gums, reducing I ifn tion, allays pain.cuires wind colic t5o a h.st H. H. GREEN's SoNs, of Atlant.A, Ga., tne only aucct ssful Dropsy Specialists in 1 world. See their liberal offer in adverti nment ila another column of this paper. I amn entirely cnred of hemorrhage of iut byPiso's Cure for Consumption.---Lo'r LNnAMAN, ethany, Mo.. .January 8, l4. Dearnes Cannot Be Cured by loc:' applications, as they cannot reach t dises,sd portion of the ear. There ia only o way to cure dea fr.ss, and thatis.by conseil tional remeerlies. Deafness is caused by an I flamed condition of the mucous lining of t F.netachian Tube. wh-:n this tube geta i flamed you have a rumbhlitn; sound or impE fect bearin.?. and when it is ent:reir c!os Deafness is tho result. and unless the intial mation can be taken out and this tube1 stored to its normarl condition, hearing will destroyed forever. Nine cases out ot ten a caused by catarrb, which is nothing but inflamed condition of the muacous surface Wec will si ve One Hund red Dollars for a ase of l;eafness (caused bycent1rrh) that ca not be cured by Hali's Catarrh Cure. Se: for circulars. free. F. J. CHEENEY & CO., To:edo, 0 Sold by Druggh-.ts, 75c. Hall's Family Pills ar.e the best. Sprained lis Back and A nkle. Knoe ed one of His Fingers out Joint-U.s< (.OOSE GREASE LINIMIENTa: '.as out in few day'. It Cures E ery Time If Tau Will Use Riht. Use Plenty of it. PDY SPSSIJw aejstwatyounee sriuare Dea1. one week's treat ment. Onre Ih:ll,ar. Mail. Ahddre ss. N. E. Cur;. Co.. Box 7. eineininat.1 D pYPSYO NW DISCOVERY: gi' -quickcrelief ad cures we caes B.,nk of testu,nooial,and 3 iad:v' treatmt Free. Dr. H. Ii. Gr.r.r.'S so58. Br- D, Atlanta. 25,000 Song Books for Soldiers. Rlecognizing the good results th accrue from soldiers singing when< the march the minister for war England has just ordered 25,000 boo] of patriotic and military songs as experiment. These will be disti buted to the men In infantry reg ments and classes for singing will 1 instituted in the barracks. A simil: experiment, made in France by Ge Poillowe of St. Mars. has been a tended with marked success, the nur ber of stragglers on the march beir reduced by 70 per cent owing to tI singing. manaY iretnnaed bY !our'. Commander P flip's Disciplict An intimate friend of Commodore John W. Philip tells the following anecdote of the gallant ofiieer. Though CoLnodore Philip's roligious side has it"r-n much eipl'hasizcd and comuient eJ eLn of lato. he is a dcictrmined man 1 and will brook no opposition. Once. when he was in charge of the Pacitic mail steaner China he carried two passengers of fortign nationaoty, who pl'rsi?"d in smoking in tiieir sita" rooum during th' hours wh . 4 Snokn w\as prohibited. Philip. then cadaii. catllt'd their" atteitiol to the fa t. but instead of hee'din:g his warn irn- .ne answered him impudently. Nothing further was said at the time, but the next inoriiug the offen ,ive passenger was handcuffed to the upper deck for rltree hours. a1' for the remainder of the trip that parti -ular person seemed to have lost all lesire to indulge his craving for a u.oke.-Philadelphia Saturday Even The charge, 'Mast':r, yorj- Looks arc hard to read," has een brought against a fhncus writer of to-day. A German newspaper gives an interest " ing parallel case: "it was written by schoolboys, and took the for.e of a pe tition to Emanuel Geibel. !mpioring t the poet to desist from writing poems. The boys found the poems of Geibel hard to learn, and as there are so many beautiful poems, they expressed 1 the hope that he would not object to deserting the muse." It cannot be de P nied that the schoolboys had the right 1 notion about lucidity and clearness. But hon bout some of our modern painting ni3 goz af our modern mu sic? - lca c('ld water tar,.v into the ecomz a.b of any animal retards its digestion.I The Pionee x is Ayer's i Before sarsa tfifty tIol in III [TeSaspfil - 9 r. lee f e obt jrt thm ews oE Ia r ictr s Br have c nfidecetor expe 1.me pta buyl. y yo wan a cue o I i~rs neesy aterr to a dum tht rmed y h L"erF rodru raelhtie oer. The m~dWn.anactrer -ofg2 nbCalrcr leae i obts wrhve en ' tt peria ~*C0neay n cIsomr.'itre i ed on tra - wh oc hav r'fnecetlywritte BusRp ounta ' -1t<.O C.o.r Airgstr.A.Darsa rom-y -anenttu merhari~nt,~e acon Ga., W.R. Breh eumc.idt~Wet. Wning ur mmot. Manuf ptoetu iThe li Drth CI.O.'t sElG.H. N.gC Soed by Drudstgneraly Praie 1poer.tl mer n ., sirr o t tr i? IT GOSTS YOU NOTIlNG But a postal to find out youz are paying", r doubleourprces on FTrniture, Carpete, t, e o Itug.LceCurtaias, story Goods,pBed dng, Crockery, lotg SnIne ie tures, Mirrors. Baby Carriages,.Befrtg ators, Stoves, Ti ware Lamp. Bicy cies,Axanoa,Organs. Shos Hats, tere Furniehicirs. etc. We pay Freight on Carpets and Draper Largest Size lee, and expreaage Reed Rocker. o ado to-order Citig($5.50 to _r Prbcc $1.19. $14.80), 9&Uarateed to 8t. Why are wo doing business in every '' state and territory in this country? Why has our busi tness doubled itself : during the pastyear? Our Free Catalogues tellthe story. Which " do you want? Write today. Address this High Grade way, 8 Nachne, upwad from $8.50. ' JULIUS HINES & SON, Baltimore, Md. Dept.310, Saw M ills $129 TO $929.00 With Improved Rope and Belt Feed. SAWS, FILES and TEETH in Stock. Engines, Boilers and Machinery All Kinds and Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys, Belting, Injectors,Pipe", Valves and Fittings. LOMBARD IRON WORK8&8UPPLY CO., AUGUSTA, GA. LOST ANROOD CURED. $3 box, 1G doeetor b$1 post paid. DR C.S. SEIDEL, Reading. Pa. ~r Mledicine >arsaparilla parillas were known, years ago, it began its work. Since if thenyoucan count the sarsa parillas by the thousands witbevery variation _ of imita ( tion of the original, ex cept one. _-They have, never been able to im itate the ~ quality of Sthe pioneer. C When- you 2see Ayer's on a bottle of sarsa parilla that is enough; fbucan ce. If you want an ody's Sarsaparilla; if must buy ic aeSarsaparilla famous]' Bi.shopwor a &e . nd hand wheels, go P ~ ~ ~ t,I a w~, eeuthaeim (~~54 aits z byi e p i ngWi 'tse my f ee K. F. MIead Cycle Company. Utdcago, Ill. TISTOPPED FREE *D KLN' te3B Instanute of 5-Art.'.sn0Arch se..ri.nde t .. ODstandard of the vori . . Also all sizes of Circuslar WSSaws, and the celtated Horse Powersforoper ters, Corn Shelrs." RALLEY Mg.co., 5..Nsks,ainisere,Wia. nU~E-eo f 5health thtEP45S Co. 1ewY.rk, for 10 aamples and 1OO5 testimonials. lent andiavor u.. S.13 "s * Thompson's Eye Water a$C I0 Price 5Ow