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r- ' * No Hair?\ "My hair was falling out very fast and 1 was greatly alarmed. I then tried Ayer's Hait Vigor and my hair stopped falling at once."? Mrs. G. A. McVay, Alexandria, O. The trouble is your hair a.a l does not nave lire enougn. Act promptly. Save your hair. Feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor. If the gray hairs are beginning to show, Ayer's Hair Vigor will restore color every time. $1.08 a bottle. All dniuUts. If your druggist cannot supply you, send us one dollar and we will express you a tx>ttle. He sure and give the namo of your nearest express office. Address, R I J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mass. U j Liver Piils j That's what you need; something to cure your biliousness. You need Ayer's Pills. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black ? Use i Buckingbam'sOyej iOcU ef drugjutior? P Hail Ac Co . Naihua.N.H SOUTHERN MADE FOR SOUTHERN MAIDS Tbe Best Ledies' Shoes in America for $1.5} TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. IF YMI'R DKALRR DOES NOT < ARKY 1 HEM. A POSTAL CARD TO IS WILL TELL VOL WHERE YOti CAN GET THE.tl. OOOO ! CRADDOCK-TERRY CO.,' nAKERS. LYNCHBURG, VA. WWTE FOR CAT. & SPECIAL RATES- : f -S'ttjat'ons SbCURED i C '/J 1 for or tuition { nr jZS / 1 refunded. We jay It.K. Kara vr^vuaisss in rmuunun VI BIltWIBUlAWI.RLA. niunmum/, HOUSTON. TtX. COLUMBUS, CACOMMERCIAL COLLEGE OF KENTUCKY UNIVFRSITY, K a, LEiUCOTON, KT. Sjftlfl > ^3 H if ben award ?' World. KipotUlcs. VReob bwglnc.Bwfljw.Sfccrt-liEBd Ty?? MTrltlSf EM T.tofrEpbt uuxBi. I boo 8l? dealt. 13 t<*EObor?. 10 OUO Orfl?tt?t In 8a>tu<r--. ?%o iMr? VVULBCB IL 9K1TH, fiWt. UiUr^n. lit0*0*C*0*0*0j?0i?0^0V?0*0*0*0* 1HEADACHE, *?* r ? m feverish conditions % I oil AND COLDS CURED BY o * "CAPUD1ISE o * Sold by all Drnec'bla. 4! stosto*o*ono*o*o*osto?to?toito?to Genuine steamed ccc. Merer sold ia balk. j Bea ut of the dealer who tries to sell something just as good." A Springy-step in 'QUEEN BESS" m*ca $2.50 Shoes. BlWTWTffSIPHTCTfSTWTTH niHii *3U Wftifyia So. 41. B ln ttnie."by drncglsu. ^^xzBcaaalEnegi WHY 6 h SUFFER f WITH \ W RHEUMATISM, The Gr CATARRH, Effect INDIGESTION, ltPu CONSTIPATION, ^clda ACtlO! KIDNEY and LIVER TROUBLES, RORRITT BLOOD DISEASES. | GENTI.E* " Kheumac time in the tlem in my ^ until It got MAC IDE, i' the troubli SfHk however, a since. R^EUMACIDE is for sale by all Druggists, or BOBBITT CHEMICAL C r / POPE DID NOT WANT NEW QOWNS Leo's Disinclination to Spend Money for His Own Uses. This story is told to illustrate the pope's dislike of spending money on himself: The other day Pio Centra, his old and tried personal attendant, opened the discussion while dressing him in the morning, by remarking that his gown was not as new as it might be. "I suppose I have yourr holipess' permission to order your gowns for the jubilee?" he added. "What gowns for the jubilee?" replied Leo XIII. sharply. "I have three sets already, and certainly reaulre no more. Why should I spend good mnnftv for what I do not want?" "But, holy father,' protested Centra, who knows his master's weakness, "supposing some one of the great personages who are received by your holiness should notice a defect such as this (pointing to an invisible spot on one sleeve)? He rfiight think you had put on your old clothes, not considering him worthy of the best." After a pause Leo XIII. said with a sigh: "Well, perhaps you are right. Order them?but only one, mind you; and my poor people will have to go without so much bread. How dreadful to be obliged to spend so much money on one's clothes." CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH B. B. B. Cares Deep-Seated Cuei Especially?To Prove It B. B. B. Sent Free. These diseases, with aches and pains in bon&, joints and back, agonizing pains in shoulder blades, hands, fingers, arms and legs crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica. or neuralgia; hawking, spitting,nose bleeding, ringing in the ears, sick stomach, deafness, noises in the head, bad tceth.thin hot blood, all ru:i down feeling of catarrh are sure signs of an awful poisoned condition of the blood. Take Botanic Blood Balm. (B.B.B.) Soon all aches and pains stop; the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure is made of the worst rheumatism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of cases cured by taking B.B.B. It strengthens weak kidneys and improves digestion. Druggists, $1 per large bottle. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co. 14 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. A single perfume factor)- at Cannes uses 300,000 pounds of flower petals in a ceason. * A. M. Trlest. I> rgist, Sbolbvville. Ind.. says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure gives the best of satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials, as it cures every one who takes it." Druggists 9ell it. 75c. The average longevity in the United States was 3S.2 in 1000. FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great ?ierveRestorer.$2trial bottlo and treatisefroe Dr.R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Ar :h St.. Phlla., Pa. The man who expects bed luck usually kc13 jl. H. H. Gbeejc's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga.. .ire the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertisement in Another column of this paper. Stockings were firit worn in Italy about 1100 A. IX Mrs. Winslow's Soothing 8yrupforchildren teething,soften the guins, reducosinflammation,allays paiu.cures wind oollc. 25c. a bottle He who cultivates his memory increases his chances of unhappiness. 1 do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption has an equ al for coughs and colds?John F. Botes, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1803. He .3 most a servant who boasts that he has no master. Putnam Fadeless Dyes color Silk, Wool and Cotton at one boilinz. The weather man is seldom greeted with a storm of applause. Millions of Buffaloes. In 1868 Inman, Sheridan and Custer rode continuously for three days through one herd in the Arkansas region, and in 1869 trains on the Kansas Pacific were held from 9 in the morning until 6 at night to permit the passage of one herd across the tracks. Army officers relate that in 1862 a herd that covered an area of 70xc30 miles moved north from the Arkansas to the Yellowstone. Catlin and Inman and army men and employes of the fur companies considered a drove of 100,000 buffalo a common sight along the line of the Santa Fe trail. Inman compute? that from St. Louis alone the bones of 31,000,000 buffalo were shipped between 1868 and 1881.?July Outing. Serptor Hoar's New House. Senator Hoar has bought a house on Connecticut avenue, Washington, a three-story brick structure of a dozen rooms. He borrowed the $18,000 which it cost, but hopes to make a profit by selling before long. He and Mrs. Hoar have boarded for thirty-three years in Washington hotels. Much disappointment is felt in the capital because Senator Clark does not Ir.tend to build a residence on the site of the old Stewart castle which he purchased some time ago. Finishing touches are being put to his splendid home in New York, and it is said the senator will not build again ouuiae munuou. eat BLOOD PURIFIER, Will a QuicK and Permanent Cure. rifles the Blood, Neutralizes the >,3tartsthe Kidney* into Healthy a, and builds up the Nerves and atlre System in a short time. Grkexbborq, N. C., July 26th, 1902. CHEMICAL CO. ibn It give* me pleasure to recommend ! ilde," for the cure of rheumatism. 8omei year 1601. I had a severe case of rbeumaankles, *blch I neglected for some weeks, ; so I could hardly walk. I tried RHEUand had not taken half the bottle before 9 was gone. I finished taking the bottle nd I have not bad a particle of the trouble Very truly, B. P. PARKER. sent by Express prepaid on receipt of il.oo. O., BALTIMORE, MO. & ; ~ ' 1 t Broken Stone Building. \ -jc WRONG method of construe- 1 I \ tion is to roll down the centre first, which has a tendency y to flatten out the road and 1 destroy the proper cross slope grade. 1 When the finished road has been tested ' by the engineer nnd found deficient ' *f.. lino /in 1V nno nf two courses is open to the engineer to bring ' the road up to the established grade? ' either to disturb the entire surface or to put on an additional quantity of J screenings. It is seldom that the first course is resorted to, but too frequerly the latter. A road brought up in this way with screenings will always be an object of great solicitude and an expensive road to keep in good repair. The practice of centre rolling has a ( tendency also to leave the outer edges and three or four feet of the macadam very loose in their construction, while Ihe centre, when the road is first turned over for travel, is the best part of the road for use, which by use in a short time breaks its bond and works out toward the sides, and then trouble commences. In building macadam or any other pavement there are no little things, from the plowing up of the road to the last rolling the road receives. Very much depends even upon the dumping of the load of metal in the roadbed. Under no consideration whatever should a load of stone be allowed to be dumped on the roadbed proper, unless every part of the load, before ?m ?_ ? ?,?/l -riMt), ruillllg, IS 1CU1U>CU ?uu [/mvvu ??.%?. shovels In the place it is to occupy, for the simple reason that, when dumping is resorted to, whether from a cart or from a reach wagon, uniform roller pressure cannot be had upon ail parrs. The part which is brought to the established grade by shovels will respond to the rolling, but where the body of the stone fell there will be resistance, which in time will develop a weakness in the road. Every part of the road should receive equally the same amount of roller pressure. He has used telford only in special cases where the foundation was uncertain. A thirteen-incli telford road will not wear as well as a seven-inch macadam road upon a gravel or mixed earth or sand foundation. The rigidity of the thirteen-incli pavement conduces to the destruction of the road, while the elasticity of the foundation of a seven-inch macadam tends to its preservation; so he has not extended the system of telford roads any further I than was absolutely necessary, pre ferring to use good sub-grade material, with plenty of rolling, and to extend his system of macadam at a less price than if the roads had been of telfovd construction. If a macadam road is properly built there is no necessity for the application of screenings in maintaining the road. Screenings placed ui>on an old macadam road must lie upon the surface, where in dry weather it is dust and in wet weather it is mud. The time to repair a macadam road is when the stones begin to show bare, when the screenings or wearing surface of the road has been lost. Then, instead of screenings, stone ranging in size from one-half inch to three fourths inch, longest diameter, should be used. If tlie three-fourths inch stones are spread upon the surface of the road, over the full width of the traveled part and to the depth of about three-fourths of an inch (no greater depth should be applied), thej' will not need water or rolling. The point of contact will be so near the point of resistance that the full crushing force of the hoof or the weight of the load upon the wheel will fracture the stone. The fracture will yield just a small amount of dust or detritus, which falls quickly to the under surface and is protected from the heat of the sun, so that it will not dry out, and from the wind, so that it cannot blow off. In a very short time, the ordinary travel will reduce all this, of course, and a gradual healing process will go on over the entire surface. He has tried this method in Connecticut, and has not found a single failure. It yields a very large return for the money invested. If a road has broken up?which condition, however, should not be allowed to occur?there is only one thing to do, and that is to apply whatever stone is necessary, and, of course, go through the process of screening, wetting and rolling.?Abstract of a paper-by J. H. Macdonahl. Highway Commissioner of Connecticut. Farm Value* Enhanced. It is a well known fact that good roads enhance the money value of adjacent real estate. That this is so is denied by none, and already many testimonials to that effect have been given and a few more will be appended. Frofessor Baker _ claims this should not be given as a o/lvonto trn Viiinonca iu o I UU T UUIUQV lHA,?UOt 11 10 w measure of all the other advantages A combined. H. H. Brown, Old Bridge, N. J.: , Property has almost doubled In value ? (since the advent of good roads) and travel has more than doubled. Dennis Long, Union, N. J.: We have a county road in my own neighborhood of which we are very proud, and near which property has advanced I fifty per cent, of its value before the road was laid. ^ , n Origin of Modern Ink. Pi Modern inks only date from 1798, at ^ which date the researches of Dr. Lewis i in the chemistry, of ink began. * y - # IA&E LIVING BY CRACKING WHIPS arlooa Trad* Discovered by the Follco of Franco. The Paris police have recently been oformed by one af the fraternity of srhip-crackers that such a calling exsts and claims recognition as one of he "professions" by the exercise of vhich men earn their livelihood in Trance. Whip-crackers, it appears, are men who possess strong wrists and are willing to crack whips all day long, if required, on receipt of a suitable fee. M the commencement of the shooting jeasoo, when the proprietors of neighboring demesnes are not good friends. :he one who bear3 ill-will to the other jngages a whip cracker, whose duty it is to erack a whip so as to' frighten away all the birds at the approach of the disliked sportsman and his friends. The whipcrackers are also found useful by farmers aClicted with dls-1 eased cattle which they cannot sell. Having engaged a whipcracker, they turn out the sick boasts on the most frequented highway they can find. The cracker follows with his whip, ostensibly to guide the cattle, really to drive them under the wheels of a car- j rlage, a motor car or a tram. This he I does by cracking his whip at the j critical moment so as to frighten the ; beasts and drive them to destruction, j She Was No Gordon Bleu. Several ladies sat in their club a ! few evenings ago, discussing the vir-! tues of their husbands. "Mr. Bingleton,' said one of them.1 referring to her life partner, "never drinks and never swears?indeed, he has no bad habits!" "Does he ever smo!:c?" someone nsked. "Yes. He likes a cigar just after he has eaten a good meal. But I sup-' pose, on an average, he doesn't smoke j more than once a month." Some of her friends laughed, but i i;he didn't spot" tr. "ndsrstand whv, I ?' 1 /y >a^'S^1 '"^ / ^-^k*^.;'*4f|j??; *.- *l ssfssi Jmij/s 5S;SS v'rr/fv'tv for i inn orucmu i mhcsentI 1Lif I LIlOIUIv Ln iVO FREE pply to NATHAN BK'KFORD, 1)14 F HI., Wubingiou, I). C. >00 YOUNG MEN rite' Adder** Jolm"?on'? 'radical Railway Institute, ind'anapolia, Ind. rUC ELLIS CHAMPION GRAIN aad PEANUT I ilC TI1KKS >ER.S ricell all othen by the quunI tlty and qualify of lu work, and durability of a comtructlm. Ibreeflzrt for steaifl and tread >wer. For free catalogue, prioaa, term*. Ac, addr?>i. Hi). l'.Bl HUb?e. ueueral Agent, Burgeti. Va ',&"3iZ?l Hwaptan't Eft laltr PE-RU-NA NEGESSA A Letter From Congressmai . I PE-RU-NA IS A HOUSEHOLD SAFEGUARD. No Family Should Be Without It. U ERl'XA is a great family^ medicine. -L The women praise it as wen < "= men; it is just the thing for the many little catarrhal ailments of childnood. The following testimonials from thankful men and women tell in direct, sincere language what their success has been in the use of Peruna in their families: Louis J. Schcrrinsky, 103 Locust street, Atlantic. Iowa, writes: "I wi?l tell you briefly what Peruna has dene for me. 1 took a severe cofd which gave rne a hard cough. Ail doctors' medicines failed to cure it. I took one bottle of Peruna ajid was well. "Then my two children bad bad coughs accompanied by gagging. My wife had stomach trouble for years. She took Peruna and now she is well. "1 cannot express my thanks in words, but I recommend your remedy at every opportunity, for I can conscientiously say that there is no medicine like Peruna. Nearly every one in this town knew about the sickness of myself and family, and they have seen with astonishment what Peruna has done for us. Many followed our example, and the result was health. Thanking you heartily, I am." ? L. J. Scherrineky. Mrs. Nannie Wallace, Tulare, Cal., President of the Western llaptist Missionary Society, writes: "1 consider Peruna an indispensable article in my medicine chest. It is twenty medicines in one. and has so far cured every sickness that has been in my home for five years. I consider it of special value to weakly women, as it builds up the general health, drives out disease and keeps you' in the best of health."?Mrs. ^anni? >> anace. Pcruna protects the family against coughs, colas, catarrh, bronchitis, catarrh of the stomach, liver and kidneys. It is just as sure to cure a case of catarrh of the bowels as it is a case of catarrh of the head. |||!7 J?ij /Vets (Je mJpl Acts f igS* I ^ctsiruty I Sympof^ I we?-mfota t ate sit '*??# / P?Mn^k Without #55L/ ?use?&o?y( afljfek , man"'3'1?' pleasant to jp?0 from an exc m 4$f ^?wn*?? ?) vfflW r- act m +^t iff Iw f&m T?^eLm *%k senuine uisvilU. K/^ FVfc,vcUco' ' s*]?, by dru^iata. Price.. Any Position.. | is a comfortable one to the : ^ I woman who wears the . Royal J Worcester | or Bon Ton i If KsUf ?3C?4<3? 1 Straight front, 1 Ease, grace and elegance. J Ask your dealer to sbow B them to you. J Royal Worcester Corset Co., ? I ' ... Worcester,Mm*. . j R JUST PATENTED!... A flachine For THOROUGHLY CURING DYSPEPSIAand INDIGESTION Works wooden. No dletlo*. No medicine wbatrrer. Used three minutes duly It will quickly reduce the sire or the stomach- Write for circular IMILFO .MFC. CO.. Bel 37?. TOLEDO, O. SO. 41. d^DROPSY L| W 10 SATS' TR?ATBCNT FBEL O . l5 Hat* mad* Drop*? aad it* cob* m. ? T . A iBOoesa. Here eared many uout /Jbu A" case*; im^urnr aLiiuariNiL Box B Atlxato, dfc 1 . . < u . s ,Rl TO THE HOncT n Whits, of North CanllK. _ VWVWVWW^WWVWhSiSMNMMAOV 1 | HON. GEORGE H. WHOS. vVVVVVVWVVVVVVVVVVVVVt t ' Congressman -George Henry White, <4 Tarboro, X. C'.,. write* the itdUmiaB ter to Dr. lfartman in regard to the writs oi the great catarrh ewe, Perawu l*rj House of Representative^ ; v Washington, b'eho 1, M90L J Gentlemen?"l um}nort> thmuumtt** fled \cith l'erurtar?n<l /TsmI f > JoteesN*. excellent remedy jw I he fH> mmM catarrh. I havetned tt fn?y;a?Hp and they all Join w*e in remtdmmmm&l 1 (tiff ft as an excellent rranfjt'* Per* re*peeijntljf, .. '4j G?s*ffe JL *?te The Peruna Medicine- G*., Csuaahas, Pit 1'cruDa is an internal, sciralifir, sjstemic remedy for catarrhc. It is as pallb! live or temporary remedy; it is Hum in its work, and in cleansing tieCMHtl mucous membranes euros the ritnrk. If you do not decree ywpt sad satisfactory results fronr the taae ?f Ptnas write at once to Dr. IrLaiazxs. ^liaa. ? full statement of your caaer and Ik wilha pleased to give yoa hi? rshahis nttide <miHs Address Dr. Kartmanr Yroaimkj& 1W -j Hartman Sanitarium. Coinmbas. 'Otmm I p GS 3 rvtlvt 'leaksarvtlyv Ber\eficiaJlvt as a Laxative-* * ?als to the cultured and the the healthy, because its comnple and wholesome and bedisturbing the natural tuncfree from every objectionabfer ubstance. In the process of ing figs are used, as they are the taste, but the medicinal Syrup of Figs are obtained ellent combination of plants e medicinally laxativeandto * neficially. s beneficial effects^?buy the anufactured by the : i *2 " I "Vew.York.ff^r. ' ^ fifty/fcervta pertbotfie*. ,.;;; V ;. A year ago lata Jane I ?u tr?& RjH bled greatly wltk Indigestion after meats. uneu upon re una? as mens k I would be seized wtk itfaatar nfc ; which often kept tar a wafer hours. I was recamueBdod t? tak? L Ripans Tabules fey one of Bay Lj friends who had himself feaad use ? ' for them. I immediately fa?I re- gf lief in their use, and taanrc aiace kad no return of my complaiata. . ^ At druhta rhe Five-Cent packet ? and fa an ordinary occasion. Tfee fanny 00 ceata, contains a supply far a pear. Mexican Veterans ifctnauafti || FOB MALARIA, CHlLliAHfEVEl ' V ^ TAKE HLIXIR SABER. Jd