FIT 3 permanently cured. No fitcornervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer, # 2t ri al bo 11le and treat ise f roe Dr. R. H. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Areh St.. Phila.. Pa Freight trains carry 1.230,000,000 tons per year Ladle* Can Wear Shw?? One ?ize smaller after uslnsr Allen's FootEase, a Dowder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25o. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package Free by mail. Address. Allen S. Olmsted. I.eRoy, X.Y. One passenger is killed for every 2,000,000 carried. Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchiidren teething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain.cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle Ne w York is going to begin her $101,000,000 canal in August. Piso'sCure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.?X. W. Samuel. Ocean Grove, X. J.. Feb. 17. 1900. Public benefactions in America during ton years aggregate $610,410,000. Down Eaat Doing*. Fifteen murders were committed in New Englaud during the month of March just passed, most of them without apparent motive. In only seven cases were arrests made of suspected persons. Five of the victims of the murders were women. How'i Tl?i?? We offer On? Hundred Dollars P?eward for amy case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Cat&irh Cure. F. J. Cheney k Co.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 16 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wist & Tbuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0, W aiding, Kixnan A Mabvis, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hell's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces. of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. TV:..' Hall's Family Pills for oonstipatlon. A Close Shave. A Chicago mau went into a barber hop and called for a close shave. The building tumbled down about bis ears and after he was dug out by the firemen be was of the opinion that be got all he asked for. From California Is reported the death of Dorsey, trial 2.09 1-4. brother of the double-gaited California gelding Ottinger. Mrs. Haves'First Letter Appealing to Mrs. Pinkham for Help: ' Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam :?I have been under Boston doctors' treatment for a long time without any relief. They tell me I have a fibroid tumor. I cannot sit down without great pain, and the soreness extends up my spine. I have bearing-down pains both back and front. My abdomen is swollen, and I have had flowing spells for three years. My appetite is not good. I cannot walk or be on my feet for any length of time. " The symptoms of Fibroid Tumor given in your little book accurately v describe my case, so I write to vou for advice." ? (Signed) .Mrs. E. F. IIates, 253 Dudley St. (fcxbury), Boston, Mass. Mrs. Hayes* Second Letter: " Dear Mrs. Pinkham : ? Sometime ago I wrote to you describing my symptoms and asked your advice. Vou replied, and I followed all your directions carefully, and to-day i am a well woman. "The use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound entirely expelled the tumor and strengthened my whole system. I can walk miles now. "Lydia E. Plnkbain's \ egetable Compound is worth five dollars a drop. I advise all women who are ufflieted with tumors or female trouble of any kind to give It a faithful trial." ? (Signed) Mrs. E. F. Hates, 2152 Dudley St- (Roxburv). Boston. Mass. ? 95000 forfait If original if abeee litters proving genuineness cannot i>' produced So. 29 Inexpensive Summer Cabins. For those who are planning next Summer cabins for mountains or seashore, an example of each type is shown in the August Delineator. The former is of rought, unhewn logs, and the atmosphere of the woods is wrought Into the interior and the furnishings with excellent effect, birch, which is found in the vicinity, giving the keynote of the scheme of decoration. The cnbin having a water front is built of wide, smooth boards, with trees laid horizontally for an underpinning. The interior is furnished in Indian wigwam effect. The decorations and furnishings o! both cottages, as illustrated, are simple and artistic. S 0 D P botanic jf j DUDBDi BLOOD BALM S The Great Tested Remedy for the speedy ? ? and permanent cure of Scrofula, RheumaA tisin, Catarrh, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores, Erup- A 49 tiuns. Weakness, Nervousness, and all ? ' % BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. f It is by far the best building up Tonic r.r.d X 1 Blood Purifier ever offered to the world, it X makes new, rich blocd, imparts renewed vi BX tality, and possesses almost miraculous BX healing properties. Writo lor Book of Won- 1^ derfui Cures, sent free on application. | V If not kept by your local druggist, send IX $1.00 for a large bottle, or $5.00 for six bottles, a and medicine will be sent, freight paid, by BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. |> v SOUTHERN / a rO/?/CS Of INTEREST TO THE PLANT k Inrrcasinj Cotton Crop. Personally, we believe that large crops of cotton, as well as other crops, should be grown by making the whole land rich through a systematic rotation in which leguminous crops tind their regular place. It would be folly to abandon such a rotation in order to plant more cotton, for fertility of the land must always be of first importance to the successful farmer. In this article, however, we are trying to point out how best to increase next season's cotton crop, and must take the land as we find it. While it is undoubtedly better farming to first build up the land in order to make a big crop, still, this takes time, for which, in the present instance, we cannot wait. An increase in the amount of fertilizer used per acre will increase the crop, we know, for we have tried it. We also know that it will yield a haudsome margin of profit. In 1900 we made, with 200 pounds of fertilizer per acre, 375 pounds of lint cottoii. while where we applied 500 pounds of fertilizer per acre, we made 500 pounds of lint. Here 300 pounds of additional fertilizer made an increase of 125 pounds of lint cotton, which is worth at present prices about $15. It will cost no more to cultivate an acre where the larger amount of fertilizer is used. It gives a much larger margin of profit and is, in our opinion, the most practical way to increase the | crop. If you will look around we think you will admit that the farmers who prepared their land best and used the most fertilizer made the most cotton the past season. Now, if we are going to use more fertilizer, we want it to bring us the best possible results, and to this end we must use care in applying it. Open a furrow six inches dop, and put the fertilizer in the ground under the seed, where there will be plenty of moisture to dissolve it. Be careful that it does not come in direct contact with the seed, as it will be likely to Injure them. Where a large quantity of fertilizer is used it is best to mix it with the soil " * 1. f.twnTV Tvitll Dy running ituuugu me luiiu.. a scooter. We must also be careful that it does not blow away, and when applying by hand, should use a tin guano horn. There are also several excellent horse fertilizer drills on the market, which will apply the fertilizer more evenly than can be done by hand. Whether you plant your cotton in the furrow or on the bed, be sure your land is broken deeply and put in good physical condition so it will retain moisture. Plants take up all their food in a liquid form, and we must have water to make the fertilizer soluble. Much can also be done to aid the soil in retaining moisture by keeping the crust broken, and a fine earth mulch on the surface, thus preventing evaporation. This, after cultivation, is just as important as the preparation. We must learn to cultivate our crops to make them grow and not simply to kill grass. We will make more cotton by planting only what we can fertilize and cultivate properly than by trying to increase the acreage.?F. J. Merriam. Editor of the Southern Ruralist. Bone Meal as a Fertilizer. Mr. Groome, of Warrenton, Va., recently wrote the Bureau of Soils, at Washington for an explanation of the reason for the long continued appreciable benefit derived from the application of raw bone meal as a fertilizer. The following is the reply re'ceived from the soil chemist, and will no doubt be read with interest: In reply to your favor of the 12th inst., I would say that we recognize that such fertilizers as bone meal will continue to exercise an influence over crops for a considerable length of time. But taking fertilizers in general, and especially the more soluble *+ oaatno *a ka o rronoro 1 ]oir thfit VUCO, Ik J5VCU1CJ IV wv U %* .? V they prove most beneficial in the initial stages of plant growth before the plants have developed a large and vigorous root system and are, in a sense, better adapted to looking out for their own food supplies. Raw bone meal is essentially calcium phosphate, and is slightly soluble itself. But it is one of a class of substances which is readily acted upon and decomposed by water, forming, in this case, lime and phosphoric acid; and while the lime goes into solution to but a very slight extent, a fairly large amount of phosphoric acid-is dissolved. The amount that will be dissolved depends largely on 1he proportion of solid phosphate to the volume of water. While it takes some days for the solution to dissolve all the phosphoric acid it can. the larger part is taken up in a few hours. Carbon dioxide, which is always present in the soil and soil mixture, helps to dissolve phosphoric acid from calcium, although this would not be expected on the basis of current theories. In Pointed Paragraphs. (Chicago News.) Many a truthful woman travels under false colors. A woman's idea of a rich nma is od'. who has everything she wants. No man enjoys kissing a girl who j has her hair done up in curl papers. Every year of a woman's age con; tains from 18 to 20 months. ! A man thinks long and speaks short; a woman thinks short and speaks long. 1 1 I ? 'ARM /VOTES. ER, STOCKMAN AMD TRUCK GROWER. A five hours, at ordinary room temperature, we have found that a mixture of equal parts of lime phosphate and lime carbonate, when treated with "2o0 times its mass of water, gave about two parts per million of phosphoric acid to the water, but when carbon dioxide was also passed through the solution, about forty-two parts per million, or twenty times as much, was given. Therefore, on account of the slight solubility of lime phosphate on the one hand, and its decomposition by water on the other hand, a substance containing it will yield a comparatively steady, small supply of phosphoric acid for a relatively long time; that is, until all the phosphoric acid has gradually gone into solution. I think the above statements meet your inquiries, and I shall be glad to assist you further if you may require it. By order of Chief of Bureau. Frank K. Cameron, Soil Chemist. Preserving: Eggi In Water Glass. The most simple and efficient method of preserving eggs for several months is by covering them with a solution of water glass. This preparation has been tested by various experiment stations, and has proved to be the best of any methods yet discovered, except artificial cold storage. It Is being used to some exteut in a commercial way, as well as by many farmers and housekeepers who wish to pack away eggs in spring when they are cheap and plentiful for use during the fall and winter months. Strictly fresh, clean eggs are necessary to put down. Stale or dirty eggs will not keep well. Eggs should not be washed. They should be packed, preferably small end down, in a stone jar or other suitable vessel, which should be placed in a cool, dark place. To ten or fifteen quarts of water, which has been boiled and cooled, add one quart water glass (sodium silicate), which may be obtained of most druggists. A good grade of water glass should be used. The vessel should be kept tightly covered to prevent evaporation. If the eggs are kept in too warm a place the silicate is deposited and the eggs are not properly protected. The solution may be prepared, placed in the Jar and fresh eggs added from time to time until the jar is full, but be sure that there is fully two inches of the solution covering the eggs. The eggs may be taken out from time 10 ume as neeueu. aucj nm uir v.u.- ( ere That on!}* one will get it. 1 ?Catholic Standard and Times. Amonc Our Obligations. The Professor?"We owe a great (lea to chemistry " Friend?"Yes, indeed. To chemistry for instance, we owe a great many of our blondes."?Jtn'.ge. Known Among the Cannibals. Cannibal Chief?"There are too many of you around that boiling pot." Canibnal Chef?"We are preparing a treat for your excellency." "That's all right, but too many cooks spoil the missionary, you know."? Yonkers Statesman. A Fine Distinction. "I didn't think you would write an anonymous letter." "I didn't," was the indignant reply. "But you didn't sign your name to tt? V "Xo. F.ut I signed tlio mime of one of the neighbor?."?Washington Star. BoRton Men. Burgess- "Xo, I never aw Filbert's wife, but I supposed sh? h a decided brunette, with a slender figure." Morris?"Anybody tell you anything about her?" Burgess?"Oh. no. but Filbert is forever raging over blondes of a full nabit."?Boston Transcript. Taking: Xo RNk. "John, dear, the Harkers have invited us out to dinner Sunday." "I am afraid of their vegetables, Maria. "But they raise their own vegetables." "That is the very reason I am afraid of them."?Chicago Xews. A Leap Year Proposal. Harry?"Here Is the newest conundrum: When is two an odd and lucky number?" Cella?"You know I never can guess conundrums." Harry?"When two are made one." Cella?"Oh, Harry, this is so sud( den!"?Town Topics. u Get Baiy." "What would you say if I kissed you?" "There's a better way to find out than asking me."?N. Y. Journal. IT He Only Could. "How's my boy getting on?" asked the farmer of the ohy merchant. "Oh, he's all right. Does just what he's told, but seems to lack judgment of his own." "Well," replied the farmer, "he knows a whole lot if lie count outy think of it."?Cleveland. Lender. Kather Vealjr. "What I would like." sr.iu the young author, whose first story had just been accepted, "is that the binding of the book be in keeping with the siory. Do you grasp my meaning':" "Ob, yes," replied the intelligent and accommodating publisher. "I'll have it done in naif calf."?Chicago itecordHerald. Th? Main Qnevtion, "Somebody wants to see you. sir," said the office boy. "Did you get his name, Jimmy?" "No. sir. "You've been guilty of a serious over, sight, Jimmy." "He said he wanted to see you." "But that's comparatively unimportant, Jimmy. The% main question is, do I want to see him?"?Chicago Post The Thankful l'atrnn. Citizen (in the street cat office)?"I am a patron of the Prospect line. This morning I stood at the corner of limitington street and?" Manager (interrupting)?"And they didn't stop for you?" Citizen?"No. they did not. But liore is a little r.ote or tnanus i wjsji you would have delivered to the tuotonuan of ear 990." Manager?"Why do you want to thnuk hiiu when l:e didn't slop for you?" Citizen?"For not laughing at me when he went by."? CI eve laud Leader. Prolonged HersiMi!, "Henry, why don't yen do heroic and win one o:' those Carnegie prizes?" "There are various kinds of heroes, my dear." "And what do you claim to be?" "I think I'm a morai hero, my dear." "A moral hero? Well, you've lived with me thirty years now and I've never known you to do anything heroic yet." "That's just what I've done, my love." "What have you done?" "Lived with you thirty yenrs.", Cleveland Pain Dealer. rThe World's 1 Catarrh R Should Be h Home, >/ j I . In Use 20 Years. Positive C'nr? Free tvner'sdysf M ''^ ^, KKGLI-AKfiOcSIZK. Write s outh ernde^ t i If you are Interested In obtain! for free catalogue of full liwru I Aoomm DR. 9. W FOSTER, Deas, 100 NOR' D0CT0R8 DO TASTE DRUGS. Physioian Corrects an Impression Which Is Widespread. "Do doctors know how their own medicing tastes?" was a question put to a group of physicians. "To be Bure," said one, "but we have hard work to convince our patients that we do. If you only knew : how this beastly stuff tastes, doctor, j you wouldn't ask" me to take it'?that is what they say. And they are hard-headed people, too, who say that ?people who are by no means raving in delirium. It's hard ever to con vince them that a doctor has a tasting acquaintance with his medicine. " 'How did you find out about it?' is one of their trump questions. 'You have never been laid up with all the diseases in the diotionary. How did you learn what the different remedies taste like?' It never occurs to the average patient that tasting drugs is a part of the medical student's education, and that no man is qualified to practice until he has learned the flavor of the medicines he expects to prescribe." Or. Biggers' Huckleberry Cordial The Grea* Southern Remedy. Cures all Stomach and Bowel Troubles, such as Chronic Dysentery, Cholera Morbus. Bloody Flux, and also children teething. It seldom falls to make quick and permanent cures of all stomach and j bowel diseases. See testimonial of tha late HEJVRV W. CRA.Vy. Dr. Walter A. Taylor, Atlanta, Ga. Dear Sir: This Is the first certifcata : inn i nave ever given as w ui? of any medicine, but I take pleasure in recommending Dr. Blggers' Huckleberry Ccroisl. I consider It the best remedy 1 that I have ever used In my family for Stomach and Bowel Troubles. 50c In- 1 vested In a bottle of this medicine to be | used In the beginning of any stomach trouble wlil often save life as well as a large doctor's bill. I have a friend whose | life was. In my opinion, saved by the prompt use of Dr. Blggers' Huckfeberry Cordial. For sale by all Druggists. 23 and 50c oer bottle. (Signed) HENRY W. GRADY. | Atlanta. Ga.. May 23. 1E37. Haltiwar.ger-Taylor Drug Co., Prop., Atlanta, Ga. i I ""Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet i I Gum and Mullein will cure Coughs. Croup : and Consumption. Price 25cand SI a bottle. HEADACHE | "Myfdtherbadbeen atnffererfrom itckheadacbe i for the last twenty-live years sod never found any I relief until he beran taking your Caecarets. Since he ha* began taking Caararcta he hae never bad the headache. They have entiiely cured him. Caecarets do what yon recommend them to do. 1 I will give yon the privilege of nsing hie name." | i S.M. Dickson, 1120 Retiner St., W.Indlaoapolts, lad. ftThe Bowels 4 TOjW vvve rVWv CAHPV CATtuirnc^^^^^ Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, Taste Govd. Do Good. Kever Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c. 2Se. SOc. Never sold In balk. The genuine tablet stamped OCC. , Guaranteed to cure or yoar money beck. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 598 ! ANNUAL SALE, TEH MILLIOI BOXES CHILLS J* AND FEVER. , and All other form*of Malaria are speedily cureil by | KI.IXIK it A HEK. Porsale at all drugstores We. a U.tue Prepared by KLOCZEW8EI dfc CO., Wusblngton, *>. V. I medical department TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA Its advantages for piaetlr-al Instruction, both la ample laboratories and al undan. hospital maI tntials are unequalled. Free access Is given ic inaruy HI'IJHIUI iw.ii irj ui >.! a;ti.000 i'atleaty annually. ."iKoiel in:t:U'.t!oi> Ir riven daily Bt the hedc! > rr ?; .* sick. The u? r.: n N-gln* C-rttilifr 2d. 11*' 1. j'nr e:ilulciKU% and Information. a-W.tiPicf. S. K. PHAtl.l.K, M.D.. Lean. P O. L>:ev.tr 2hl, N>-w Oiieatu. La. .'. f,rrria cuncL1 v H? fj* r? ft r f e i- o s 2>tr- ^ j* r'fjicf 2v^V. Y Removes ail .swcliirijc in S'.gzu V*-' / days; effects a ;*r:na?ei:t cure yV in 6; davfi. '?ri.it trtaiuient , v. given frt N< ttis:i*".*r. in fa-re* V.. s:e Dr.it. . v7\ ha Best Couiin syrup. i o.?..-3 _ro;>a. lsj k? : x=. ?0!il 'iv i i:?r *?p> ~amous m -j No Heroics. | ir.scn why Peruse hes found nt use in sc many homes Is alas no nsrccilcs of any kind oerfectly harmless. It can bo d ngtb of tins without acgu/r/ag^^^ > for all STOMACH TR0UBLC9. i" 'i >EPSIA REMEDY ?*? I 'ix ! I 3*' ^ XL COLLEGE, SS?S& Ing a dental education, write ' \- -X ictlou. , 7"H BUTLER STREET. ATLANTA. GEORGIA* : 3 HI lit \mm t 01 Tortirii;. Dis^irK; | h?b mi (urn Every child born into the world with an inherited or :S early developed tendency to torturing, disfiguring humors ^ of the Skin and Scalp, becomes an object of the most tender solicitude, not only because of its suffering, but because of the dreadful fear that the disfign- .3 ration is to be lifelong and msr its future happiness and pros* perity. Hence it becomes the duty of mothers of such afflict* Jf ed children to acquaint them- ft selves with the best, the purest, and most effective Vj treatment available, viz.: the CUTICURA Treatment, consisting of warm baths with CUTICURA Soap, and gentle anointings with CUTICURA Ointment, the great Skin Cure. Cures made in childhood are SDeedv. oermanent and eco nomical. Bold througbnut th* world. Curfcurm So**, II*., OM* B?ot, Mc., Rnolront, 30c. (la form of Chocvlolo C fC x ; if vfinrsdocsiiot, tfoad to usf'-rlU Dtat ta?sa>ulotti.it0?there is nothing likcPaxthta. '< Wrile for ihe I'reo llox of i'arttine to-day. H. PAi-ON CO., 7 Pcpe Eld?., Bcjtca. it*'"-. Thompson's Eye Wafer M . . IK