University of South Carolina Libraries
Vsajfeg^ '/pw&C * **?fc Miss M. Cartledgi yadvice to young girl.' of thousands which so helpful to your arriving at the per Lycfia E Pinkham's "Dear Mrs. Pinkham:?I Vegetable Compound too high tried which cured me. I suffered I felt so weak aad dizxy at timet the usual interest My thought backaches and sinking spells, als In fact I was sick all over. u Finally, after many other : vised to get Lydia E. Pinkha pleased to say that after taking ii for the better took place, and in a felt buoyant, full of life, and fpi glad to tell my experience wit Compound, for it mode a difft Miss M. Cart-ledge, 533 Whiteh At such a time, the grand ham's Vegetable Compound. ] the necessary changes, and is for woman's ills of every i ioang woonen who are ill to w Irs. Plnlvham, Lynn, Mass. firs. Estes, of New Yor "Dbab Mrs. Pixkhah : ? I wri ought to know how much good y< making for years before I was mart Pink ham "s Vegetable Compoii the strain. There is no other worlf how my back used to ache from th< I would hare to scream out from tl terribly tired and weak, and my hea eat after work, I was so worn out frightful etramps every month they i I would hare to give up working ham's Vegetable Compound c Yours very truly, Mrs. Martha Bst No other female medicine i spread and unqualified endors a record of female troubles cu Refuse all substitutions, Ren vited to write to Mrs. Plnkhf symptoms she does not unde: Lynn, Mass. $5000 The raffesia, of Sumatra, is said v 41? ??J moo* motrnlflpf oe me ?tu};coi ouu uvsi, ^ ~o. flower in the world. It is composed five roundish petels, each a foot acre and of a red color covered with nu erous irregular yellowish white sw< ings. The petals surround a cup ne ly a foot wide, the margin of whi bears the stamens. tmrntt+ttttmrntnt* ;; odd botanic DiDiDiBLOOD BALM < i The Greit Tested Remedy for the speedy < l and permanent cure of Scrofula. Rheumai i tpm, Catarrh, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores, Erupi I lions. Weakness, Nervousness, and all <; BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. > ( It is by far the best building up Tonic ar.d ., Blood Purifier ever offered to the world. It . , makes new, rich bloed, imparts renewed vi. ( tality, and possesses almost miraculous i , heahnr properties. Write for Book Of Won, , derful Cum, sent free on application. (I If not kept by your local druggist, send . . Si.oo for a large bottle, or $5.00 for six bottles, i) and mediciur wili ue sent, freight paid, by <. BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. V. .AllAoTTffiUAlAAAAA11-1'-J " " VTW tVtfVf f W?f I HERE IT IS! Want to learn all about! A a Horse? Mow to Plck,jff^W Out a Good One? Know Imperfections and so*^ V Guard against Fraud?! \i Detect Disease and EM Ap""1 " ! feet a Cure when sameu w\ 1 to possible? Tell the w V. a Age by the Teeth? What to call the L ferent Parts of the Animal? How Sho^ a Horse Properly? All this s other Valuable Information can be 1 talned by reading our 100-PAGE ILLt TRATED HORSE BOOK, which we \ forward, postpaid, on receipt of only o ad fa In "BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St., N. Y. Clt: to Dropsy I Y Removes all swelling >n Sit / dayj; effects a permanent a >V In jo to So davs. Trial treat mi Ala jirtn free. Nothingcan be fai iMZmbI '? Write Or. H. H. Orson's Soni Socialists. Box Atlanta. M ~~ H r,tMiw?i!*iui$ !kir B Kjl Boat < <ra*n Byrup. Tastes jood. Ese PJ CO la lima. Sold by drucglsts. p ^pHajHnaajnazBf So. 37. &Mk Thompson's EyoWal * ** v - ^>*i?S4fl?? ' ' ? ?---^ e gives some helpful 5. Her letter is but one prove that nothing is lg girls who are just iod of womanhood as : Vegetable Compound* cannot praise Lydia E. Pfnkam's dy, for it is the only medicine I ever much from my first menstrual period, i I could not pursue my studies with m became sluggish. 1 had headaches, o pains in the back and lower limbs. remedies had been tried, we were adm's Vegetable Compound, and I am b only two weeks, a wonderful change I i short time I was in perfect health. I and all work a pastime. I am indeed h Lydia E. Plnkham'a Vegetable jrent girl of me. Yours very truly, all St, Atlanta, Ga." est aid to nature is Lydia E. Pinkit prepares the young system for the surest and most reliable cure lature. Mrs. Pinkham invites all rite her for free advice. Address, I k City, says: be to yon because I believe all young girls sur medicine will do them. I did dress- ( -ied, and if it had not been for Lydia E. ind, I do not believe I could have stood that ia such a strain on the system. Oh, i b bending over! I would feel ss though le pain, and the sitting still made me so .d throbbed like an engine. I never could i. Then I was irregular, and had such vonld simply double me up withpain. and . and lie down. But Lydia E. Pinkhanged me into a strong, well woman, t as, 513 West 125th St., N. Y. City." n the world has received such wideement. No other medicine has such red. Sold by druggists everywhere. lember every woman is coraiauy mtm. If there is anything about her j rstand. Mrs. PlnkbanPs address is thwlth produce the original letters and signatures at prove their absolute genuineness. Ljdia K. Pink ham Mod. Co., Lynn, Ma? to j Odds and Ends. :nt | When you have Christ's compassion of j then you may speak His words of con- ! ?ss | demnation. j People who look up to God for little fI'*. need to do a lot of looking out for a^*' themselves. ch, ; pits permanently cured. NoflHorne; voilm 1 ness after flrsi. day's use of Dr. Klino's Great ? NeiTeKestorsr,(2irialbottleandtreatisefres I1 Dr.li.li.KLi?E.Ltd. 031 ArchSt.,Pkila.,?a. To insure accuracy naval chronometers are kept on ice. i do not believe Tiso's Cure for Consump1 tlon has anequal for coughs and colds.?Johm F.doyeb, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1000. J Poisonous moilusks purify the water io | which they live. Uncomfortable Sheep's Talis. A species of sheep common in Syria ! is so encumbered by the weight of its tail that the shepherds fix a piece ol i thin beard to the under part, where * it is not covered with thick wool, tc K : prevent It from being torn by the ? ! bushes, etc. Some have small wheels j affixed to facilitate the dragging ol | these boards after them. The tail ol - * ? * Ortrf- IICllO'In I & common soeep ui imo ov>n uau?.>, . [ weighs 15 pounds or upwards, whllt V that of a larger species, after being j] ! well fattened, will weigh 50 pounds ) I FROM MISERY TO HEALTH. )if- I to 1 A Prominent Club Woman of Kansna City ind : Writes to Thank Doan's Kidney Pills jg^ 1 For a Quick Cure. fill Miss NeiHe Davis, of 1210 Michigan 26 avenue, Kansas City, Mo., society ck of Doan's Kidney to I *ecte<l a complete re' hort time when ij | 1 was suffering " j frotu kidney troubles brought on by ? ! ? cold. I bad severe pains in the back j'l ; and sick headaches, and felt miserable a* all over. A few boxes of Doan's Kid1 ney Fills made me a well woman, jfc without an ache or pain, and I feel compelled to recommend this reliable remedy." (Signed) NELLIE DAVIS. ? A TRIAL FREE?Address Foster. Milburn Oo., Buffalo, N. T. For sals by all dealers. Price, 00 cents. A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE Efr_THE REV. JOHN BALCOM SHAW. D. D. Subject : The Ash-Can Bible?History of a Volume of Holy Writ That Is Unique In Church Annals?Warning Against ? Common Type of Family Deterioration Nf\v York City.?The following splendid sermon was preached Sunday morning by the Rev. John Balcom Shaw. It is entitled "The Ash-Can Bible." His text was: The word of God which liveth and abideth forever?I Peter 1:23. Tbis book, rather than the words I have read from it, is my text. Not the Bible in general as a theme to be discussed, but this particular Bible consisting of paper, printing and binding, as an object lesson to be taught. This Bible has a history. It was a gift to the church under the uniquest conditions. Indeed I doubt if there is another church in the whole world that came by its pulpit Bible in the same or in anything like a similar way. This is its history. One morning last spring a woman, a newhoider, but not a member of this churcn, came into the minister's office, where I was keeping the pastoral hour, and handing me a package neatly wrapped and tied, asked me if I could make use of its contents in any way. Opening the package and finding this beautifully Bound Bible inside, I, of course, v1* swered affirmatively, and suggested that I band it on to some mission church or poor, struggling congregation, for use as a pulpit Bible. Sne then tola me its story. That morning upon coming out of the apartment where she lived she spied an elegantly bound book on the top of the ash-can that Stood awaiting the coming of the garbage cart. Feeling it was a shame to allow so fine a book to be disposed of in that way, she went to the ash-can and turned its title round toward her. What was her amazement, her horror, her sense of desecration, to find it was a copy of the Holy Bible! She opened it and found that several leaves between the Old Testament and the New had been cut out, and the explanation came to her at once, an explanation which the janitor afterward fully confirmed. It seems that a family, apparently respectable and well disposed, had moved away from the apartment house the day before, and desiring to throw away everything for which they had no use and which increased the bulk of their effects, had seized upon the family Bible which had been in their borne for years, as a thing that could be as easily got along without as anvthing else, had cut out the family record that it might not be lost, and sent the book down to the janitor as rubbish to be thrown away. He, either because he had failed to recognize it or becaus^ he had a low estimate cxf the Bible's value, had deposited it in the ash-can, and was looking for the city's cart to come at any moment and take it away. A new interest immediately attached itself to the Bible. I put it into the minis o"'--. wAAm a nn-aif cAmo nrnviHontin 1 nn. VV1 9 1 Will kV UK UIV OVIUV p> V <?v? v ?<_. wr portunity to dispose of it. That opportunity was not long in coming. When this new pulpit was s'et in place upon my return it was found that not one of the three pulpit Bibles that had been previously presented fo the church would fit its book board. I then went to the minister's room and brought out this ash-can Bible. It was just the thing. Besides being of the right size, its gold edges and richly embossed covers made it peculiarly suitable to mount this pulpit, and here it will stand as itself a memorial?the pulpit a memorial to a family who loved the Bible, guided their lives for fifty years in this community by its counsels, and sent forth into it streams of Christian influence that will never run dry; the Bible which rests upon this pulpit speaking to us of a family who flitted into this neighborhood, and after a restless sojourn of a few months, more probatdy of not more than a few weeks, flitted out again without having done anything to help it, and who thought so little of God and goodness, desired so faintly, not onlv to light the road heavenward foe others, but to have it lighted for themselves, that they threw away their family Bible and moved on to drag down the religions tone and temperature of some other community. Robert Browning, in his great poem, "The Ring and the Book," tells the story of finding a rare book at a stall in the Square of Florence, and, after reporting its contents, he gives rein to his poetic mus-. ings upon the life, character and history of the persons figuring witllin its narrative, punctuating with marks of exquisite strength and beauty the lessons of their lives. This strangely discovered book starts no poetic strains within me?I have no such strings to vibrate?but it does set my sou! to musing, and those musings seem to me to take tne path of likeliest fact and truth. They carry me back over the earlier history of this book. It may have been, it doubtless was, a wedding present, given probably by a pious father and mother long since among the sainted dead. It had been in the home through all the years of their family history, and had become as familiar an object as the silver on their table or the pictures upon their walls. Again and again they had gone to it through the passing years to inscribe within its sacrea pages the records of their home. With tne daintiest touch they had put in their own names while the honeymoon was still on. Later when that little life came to them, their first born, and the glow of parenthood flushed their souls as with a baptism from heaven, they dipped the pen as if into some love fluid ana wrote out with pride the dear little one's ngwly chosen name. A few years passed and the angel came and took the sweet soul away. The funeral over, the father one evening when they were alone and the house was si'.ent, Went through into the parlor, unknown to his wife, and put in the record, leaning over the open book till the tears began to soil the page, and then turning over a few pages into the book that adjoined the record, he read over and over again those dear and holy words, "Suffer little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven," and those other words so inseparably associated with them, "Their angels do always behold the face of My Father." It was the Bible, too, out of which the minister had read at the little one's funeral, and in this and a hundred other ways it had taken on a hallowedness and built itself into the whole life of the home. But five years ago the family moved into New York, and the decay of their home life began. Sentiment, association, memory, though sacred and tender, could not run a race with the evanescent, migratory life of the metropolis. They had moved often, and every time they moved they had left something of their tyome life behind them. Age ceased to give anything its value; it was the ease with which it could be transported which determined that. Their religious life had declined, and they never opened the Bible of late. They had even neglected to record the last death that had taken place in the family. They had been weanea Jrom tne cnurcn through frequent removals, and religious thought and feeling had become strangers to their hearts. Their consciences had been dulled, and what had once seemed impossible to them was now second nature. They used to think they could never allow tne Sunday paper in their home, but now tbey read it themselves and allowed their children to read it without the least qualm of conscience. To stay away from church once was a few years ago an act of backsliding, but they had not long been in Xew York before whole months passed without their crossing the sacred threshold, and yet it gave them no compunction whatever. Time was, and not long since, when they were most punctilious about sending their children to Sunday-school. The wildest wind and the foulest weather would not pass with them as an excuse for allowing the boys and girls to stay at home. There was no such strictness these last years, but weeks of Sabbaths went by and failed to record a single present mark for any of the children on the rolls of the Sunday-school. Therefore, sentiment gone, association and memory having loosened their grasp, their religious life having become a thing of the past, and their consciences having grown sluggish, thev had no more use for the Old Book. It was too bulky to move: they would keep the family record, but the sacred pages and covers which had given it its inelosure and setting, they would throw away. Were there ever a sadder storv? It makes one ween to think of it. And yet it is the story of a thousand homes in this community, of a hundred thousand homes in this city. It is what some of you are coming to. dear friends, unless you take warning. Let this Bible give you such a warning to-night. May it ever be a warning to every family of this church. As often as the eyes of those worshiping here shall rest upon it, mav it speak to them its solemn message with a voice that cannot be drowned?let not the fire burn low on your hearthstone, but keep up the fireside glow. See that your home is in touch with the church. Suffer not your family altar to become a ruhi. Have a family Bible and use it. Take care that mildew spots, like those which I find here that are always signs of disuse, are not al lowed to mar it. Kead tne uia cook to your children. Read it to your own soul. Without it your home life will grow hollow and unlioly, your children will deteriorate, your own soul shrivel up and die. Thus this Bible shall stand as a memorial to a typically deteriorated New York home, and as a warning to the families that have not likewise deteriorated, but shall it not also be at the same time a memorial to something higher and more inspiring?to the glorious character and ministry of the word of God as an abidihtr and ever expanding power among men? Here is a fountain that was long sealed, but it has begun to flow, and itq streams shall water not one home but a thousand. This book so seldom used before shall be onened with every recurring service within this house of prayer, to be read, expounded and applied to the multiplying hundreds that shall worship here. This Bible i was disowned, desecrated, cast out as rubbish into the street, only to be recovered, honored, set in a high place, elevated to a public throne from which it will issue a verdict of condemnation upon this home j and every home in this city that has turned God *from its door, but will speflk comfort, hope and strength to those with- ] in which the word of God dwells and exer- j ciees its heavenly dominion. While this hook shall utter its admonition, then, let it also speak forth its word of encourage- : ment and triumph, telling all wljo shall j henceforth behold it that the word of God liveth and abideth forever; that however j much men may attack it and seek to de- 1 stroy it, it shall come out of every battle ; a thousand fold stronger than before, and j light a circle that extends far beyond its j former perimeter of influence. "A e'ory jrilds the sacred page, Majestic as the sun: It gives a light to every age: It giveth, out borrows none." j Alone With God. This is the quiet hour in wirich T ?:t j alone with God, writes Charles Kdwurd ( Martin, in the New York Observer. He hears my whispered plaints and listens to I my love. He maketh me happy in my love, | wnich ever goeth out to Him as quietly and constantly as the river flows or the 6tar shines. This is the hour that I talk with the loving Father about myself, of victories won in the open field, when He was my deliverer ana my strength, and of the sorry failures and defeats wnich were mine when I sought safety within unstrcngthened ramparts of my own construction. I acknowledge His marvelous strength and own my own wavering weakness. | I was too impetuous, too impatient. I ( would rush heaulong and heediess, follow- j [ ing my own plans to my own shame and j dishonor. It would seem that I could not ? I wait. But I will now learn the value of time?the wisdom of taking time to do all things in obedience to His plans, and to do theni well. In this quiet hour I will tell Him all. But I will not speak of my plans, Alaa for me! I have too many plans! I will simply and humbly ask for Ilis love and guidance just for to-day. To-morrow I may be with Him in paradise. I will say: "All-wise One, all-loving O^e, Thou who makest and warmest the a fleet ions of the human heart, I submit myself to Thee. By Thy grace I live, and by Thy mysterious quickening will I ply my task with loving faithfulness and care. Let Thy love, and it so be, Thy approval, be my reward. 0, teach me to understand Thy love! Make me to love Thee more and more. Make me as Thcu wouldet have I me, dear Father, and I shall be satisfied. Thy ways shall be my ways. Widen my narrow thought. Unchain the self-made Al-?i on?l trof mv V? A1 ff letters mat uam^ ?uu nv? Teach me that true and lasting happiness cometh only with those things which are f(leasing unto Thee. Lead me in those io'.v footsteps that bear the print of the nail!" _ What the Bible Is. Some writer gives the following analysis of the "Book of books," the Bible: It is a book of laws, to show the right from the wrong. It is a book of wisdom, that makes the foolish wise. It is^a book of truth, which detects all human errors. It is a book of life, and shows how to avoid everlasting death. It is the most authentic and entertaining history ever published. It contains the most remote antiquities, the most remarkab'e events and wonderful occurrences. It ia a complete code of laws. It is a perfect body of divinity. It is an unequaled narrative. It is a book of biography. It is a book of travels. It is (he best covenant ever made, the best deed ever written. It is the best will ever excuted, the best testament ever signed. It is the learned man's masterpiece. It is the young man's best companion. It is the schoolboy's best instructor. It is the ignorant man's dictionary and every man's directory. It promises an eternal reward to the faithful and believing. But that which crowns all is the Author. He is without partiality and without hypocrisy, with whom there is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.?Religioue Intelligencer. The Way of Peace. In proportion as the perfect obedience of the life of Christ comes, through humility and prayer and thought, to be tne constant aim of all our efforts; in proportion as we try, God helping us, to think and sp^ak and act as He did, and through all the means of grace to sanctify Him in our hearts, we shall, with growing hope and with a wonder that is ever lost in gratitude, know that even our lives are not without the earnest of their rest in an eternal harmony; that through them there is sounding more and more the echo of a faultless music, and that He who loves that concord, He who alone can ever make us what He bids us be, will silence in us every harsh and jarring note; that our service, too, may blend with the consenting praise of all Ilia saints and angels.?Francis Paget. | WET WEATHER. WISDOM! \ THE ORIGINAL m ROWER 'S ^SH W0 n(%? SLICKER \J \ \- BLACK OR YELLOW (V ^ WILL KEEP YOU DRY MTHsw NOTHING ELSE WILL TAKE NO 5UMTITUTE3 . CATALOGUES FREE SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS. A. J. TOWER ~0., BOSTON, MASS., U.S.A. TOWER CANADIAN CO.. LTD.. TORONTO. CANADA. Riliniisnitts VIHVMVHHVWV I "I hare need roar raloibla Caacarott and flad them pcrfgct. Couldn't do without them. 1 bare nied them for aome time for Indication and biliouaneat and am now complotely furrd. Kccommend them to ereryone. Once tried, you will Barer be without tfaam In tbe family." Edward A. Mars, Albany, H.T. [The Boweto ^ ksmmm CAMOnrCATMAjmC J Pleasant, Palatable, Potant. Taata Good. Do Opod, Merer Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c. tSc. 50c. Never sold In bulk. The canine tablet stamped CGC. Guaranteed to ears or your morv-r back. ; Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago orN.Y. 6o? ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES 1 Atlanta College of Pharmacy. Greater demand for our graduates than wo can supply. Addrera, DR. GEO. F. PAYNE, Dean. Ut Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga fT^I WIN C I JflJE I "I.EADER" AND "REI B The proof of the i B8jpaiB| cause they shoot sc Iff jji 11 Loaded " Leader'* BwOik fi *ess ^>owc^er Shotgu every important j Good shots shoot th ter results, shoot st nEfpvra are more relia il&ftHALwAYs spec,fy wn I ? jMiil M1VA qm.11? Fit! B.I I 'MEN, WATCH I A New Revels W? offer something different, better than la this city. There Is no patchwork about our treatm We do not treat all diseases; but we cure th sure eure la all eases aeoepted tor treatment. Write it you cannot oall and describe you el charge, our dlSgbotls blank. Consultatioi Doctors Leather Hours 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Pnr lior|c Sundays 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Lull llldllt JoyyjNTiup SwsmUMM^ IT THIS BOOK WILL BE SEMT U|U|T I 1 ^TOAWTAOORESSFREE 3 IfHJII I Lha*WWTMajimXilW^I ui,w?^n 11E9SSa""5^S^.i"?SIa thanaamathli V#P riiiiBiB ,.B*A*Rlla# il big bu.lac.e BMIMMMMEBflBMEEiaBHSaLl to yau, and tl explained In a aeetfon OP THC 110 BOOR. THIS PART OP THE B< TOURS, net OURS; The maat llktril ilftrmr heard 16 PAGES?YOUR PAGESS manay by eendlng W uo far geeda. Bow you can maka by getting othara to eend to aa A big chance far a Manay making mad* aaty far ataryaoa, Tha grand eat tha a|a. An etpdrtunlty that la ) aara?aaweUlag that brlaagi QUICKER SHIPMENT ?.?;?? cnandlaa In amaantafar greater than all athar mall ardar camblnad and ?ra Kara factariaa and warahauaaa for tmi ihlpaaent South, Marth. Eaat and Maat we can ahlpyo much quicker tha a any other houaa. If yon aand yodr < ua, no matter whara you lire, you win get your goode I few daya, uaaally leaa than one-half tha time It takaa tat* tram athar heaeea. and on a great many rood* you ortl us you will have tea a than ana-half tha freight chariaa ya hare to pay if you ordarad from any one else, for U your waiehsaast aaar yea, wa will <klp fryw ikawarakaasa aaaraat ya OUR FREE BIG No. 114 CATAI lower, quality aa much higher, why we can flye erar SEND FOR OUR FREE NO. 114 CATAL book will go to yon by retura mall p?etriel<l. free; all our nlty nerer before known. al< will go to yeu freo by retun new Xa. 114 Cetalega*. Tell iMrn'fttin att l> ta' ?.'tkl DON'T BUiA CATALOGUE. teW.? TIMES AS MUCH TO TOU e? all other e,-ml i?. reliant II yau a and for thla FREE Slg Ha. I 14 ue. I.r.n. In your latter or oa tha poual canl glvu :? cue name sf SEARS, ROEBUCK Roanoke college a > for. young women, DANVILLE. VIRGINIA. A Select arid Limited College for the Higher Education of ** omen. 24 Tcacben. and Officers?ALL SPECIALISTS- Last year the moel succesaful in history of Inatitntion. IdesJ K <ne surroundings- ICatts low for adrsntagee offered. Smd for < analogue. 4 f f . E. HATTON. A. M.. PH. D . President. A CAVE My, For BOYS j 'RocfoJtlle. Md. IDEAL TRAINING SCHOOL. HOMELIFE. INDIVIDUAL CARE AND '[ \ INSTRUCTION: FITS FOR UNIVER- j SITY OR LIFE. ADDRESS. 1 W. P. MASON. U. S. N. A., PR1N. j Money for the Farmer Who Uses a n t _ * ats *ji w* 1 _ , wooaruii nay tress, Either Mount*;} or Unmounted. Full Circia ^ D able Stroke, Steel-lined box. etronp durable press for it. medium price. See your dealer and buy a press, if he bandies the WOODRUFF FRFS:*. Ii not, write direct to factory and get prices. ^ WOODRUFF HARDWARE CO. \ WINDER, GA. BSjffifjcURES MALARJaT j ELIXIR CHILIS and FEVER, BABEK "BAHEK" |? the oldest. -are* SFS > aaO beat remedy In America for matedles of malarial nature. :u a post?55**** ?Y* cyrr tor MALARIA, CHIUJ SMUMh and FEVER. i.aJySOc bottle KL0CZEWSK1 ? CO. Washington, D. C nr* Write for teadmoolala. A "Spcccns" Training School. Golday College Is a Business and Shorthand School that mases a specialty ?f training ita J atudrn's for "BU8ISE88SUC<?Es8." 120graduates with two Anna. Stuoenta from unor? riu to New York. Write for catalogue. Addrtaat (luldey College, Box AOU, Wilmington, ML So. 87. HESTER PEATER" SHOTGUN SHELLS I ihell is its shooting. Be- I s > well, Winchester Factory B and "Repeater" Smoke- ? n Shells have won almost >rixe shot for in years, tem because they give betronger and more uniformly ble than any other make U CHESTER MAKE OP SHELLS in > , , 'OUR HEALTH! ition for Men. any other specialist! or medical instltu tlom ent. The /core is perfect and pamaneni. D9e we treat. A prompt, permanent and Nothing but curable oasee accepted, r troubles and reoelre by return mail,, frso 1 free. man & Bentley, ;ita and Forsytb Sts., ATLAHTA, EL " EKE BY RETURN KV ?W nn tke IVB HI meet, mot U |H H Kg wee m mm u.ew?; H 21KB BH LO far LESS ITS. Worth suit) SI.00. KawTREEtoaay one for the adM id. oat and tend to as or on a portal card, u;: "Sand ma TddR CalOffrM fro." and It will to to too by twin wail Ihainliiia US SIZE. BIGGER THAN EVER. tfSS ) auatatlona. erar 10.000 llhiatratlana. Oar aaw and n?> prlca making policy folly azplainad; 66 vaat marchandlae dally repreeentad, much largar than arar baton; prlcaa mach >rar befora. Maw and la war pr Ico on ararythlne carriela lefleet atara In tha wartd. Make* all other catalog* ali MAKES ALL OTHER PRICES LOOK VERY MIOH. BELONGS TO YOU rer booghtibytlikig frc; arer do bVlenje I OURS IS THE LARGEST MAIL i < \?l$ ORDER HOUSE IS THE WORLD. 30K Is Ha aail and ahl? mere lead, than all other malt I f. kw-ee In Mi UniUrf lUtiS CUilUMdi I **" Other mail order house* are mere tide (hew* " compared with ourm. If # cry one only knew how ? " * " much greater values are ghre on all kind* of mer/ chandUe than any other hoo**,no other mall orofforof dor houso would over again gats?** a slagUordsr. Mt THE ONLY MAIL ORDER HOUSE tckcon* that owns or controls a vast number of facte* ol tr.tr- rlea located north, aeuth, eaat and ereat sltea ted to that we can ahip many goods from ow mediate factory or warohouae neareat you. making m upoods quick delivery and very low freight chartrea. truer to Southern facterlca and arafthaaaoe far aeuth* n just a ?rn people. Northern factor!** and wareit goods houses for northarn peeplo. ate. erfrom __________________________________ ordar contains goods we can ship from one of our factcrlas or t, kriegtartbagaadiUyeelaadayortweatafavy law height rat* AAIIa explain* why, as compared wtth any ether (IRIlP hausa. are can make prtcose* mock lower. *Mh aVUWw so much auickor, freight charge* a* macs j customer a big money making opportunity. --e nciir Cut this ad. out end Mod Co us. or on a portal carO JDUCo say, ".Send mr your ho. HI Catalogue" and the big now afters, our now mane/ making praposition: an opporM* ) mall, poatpald. Uea't k?/ aa/thlag wkvre aaill yaa gat ear lagatkawa sreUvakere *a>0 Ui; write far ear la. llgCalaiagosa >yone t, IS or 14 emu for a catalogue, when you can gst our HOOK for nothing. fKtt roh THE ASKINO. WORTH 10# Use ooialoguec printed. WRITE FOR IT TODAY, Doltaowu I our old catalogue (If you hare out) To Some Friend and the party to whom you haadad our old catalogue. Addrsmk &. CO., Chicago, III*