Too Mtiflll lor Tin. "I sec that thirteen lyncher! have been arrested in California." "I suppose you want me to say it's an unlucky number." "No. I was going to say that twelve weak jurymen can do up thirteen husky lynchers at any time." HairSplits "l bave used Ayer'a HairVipor for thirty years. It is elegant for hair dressing and for keeping the hair from splitting at the ends." J. A. Gruenenfclder, Grantfork, 111. Hair-splitting splits friendships. If the hair splitting is done on your own head, it loses friends for you, for every hair of your head is a friend. Ayer's Hair Vigor in advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop it. tl.M a bolllc. All anwlitf. If your drutrjrl.t rnnnnt unppljr yon, snd ut one dollar and we will expraaa you a bottln. Be oure and jrlva the nam of your nearmt furpmaa clflce. Addreee. J. C. A YER CO., Lowell, Halt, Mm ''r Small crops, unsalable veg etables, result from want of Potash. "Vegetables arc especially fond of Potash. Write for our free pamphlets. GERMAN KAU WORKS, 93 Nasiau St., New York. HOTEL EMPIRE, ' BROADWAY AND 631 ST., li. Y CITY. ABSOLUTELY y MODERATE FIREPROOF. RATES. Ffom Grand Central Station tiVe fan marked Broadway and 7lh A v., 8ven minutes to Kuiritre. On rroBlng any i.f the fsrrh-a. takathrHth Avenue Elevated Hallway to SMh Ht., from wbloh it la una minute' walk ti hotel. The Hotel Empire invtaurant t noteil for ita ex. oellent cooklug. efficient service and moderate pricoa. Within ten milium of amnc:nout and aliupptiig centres. All ran pami the Empire. Bend to Kmptre for descriptive Uookleta. W. JOHNSON (Jl'INN, Proprietor. MUHllMIill M. KELLY, Ifauagor. Wills Pills Are You Sick? Send your name and P. O. address to Tho R. D. Wills Madlaino Co., Hagerstown. Md. . " O. nOllIEl Improved i-atif?- Beit up.tiHlate level made. - ...... . a. m K 4 nr. I. m tftJ4'v doactrlptlva olmnlnr. 13 North Eoroyth St., Atlanta, G. nDADCV NEW DISCOVERY; M f J J 1 quick raliftf mid curm wmut omh Btxu of tUiutotiii 10 till)"' troalmout V.ee Dt. U. Ji. UKMEN'MOHI. Box . AiltvBi. Ofc God MetUI nt II 11 Colo Exposition. McILHENINY'S TABASCO ADVSHTI35 IN THIS IT DAYQ PAPER. tl MV. ii rmo :iiHi S. WnkKE ALL LSI IA IS, I Beat CouKh Sirup. Tiatet Good. i time. nil r-r n rifty Cnt a Yr-I.J THsn s Wrnny j Number. THE SOUTHS LITERARY WEEKLY PublisHod at Atlanta, G.-CircuUtion Over 50,000. tm SUNNY SOUTH Is the Great Litorstry WaClr Oftht South. It Is devoted to Literaire. Romance). Fact and ricHon, and gives the best of all that Iscurront In its field. Among its contributors the most noted southern writers uppoar--Joel chandler Harris, Harry Stlllwell Edwards and others ofgrowlna fame. Serial stories from Anthony Hope, Maurlcs Thompson, Sidney R. Crockett, Mrs. George Corbeltand Arthur W. Marchmont have appear ed, and others are In waiting from the pen of authors of national note. A short story contest brought out nearly Dye hundred splendid short aiorias, all worthy a place In ez. SUNNY SOUTH'! readable col umns, other contosts are contemplated that will successfully exploit the ripening field of talent that only noeds such fostering to Illustrate the wealth that Is shy to assert Itself. XSh4 SUNNY SOUTH teems with the Ufa of the greit south. The gen ial sunshine warms everything Into activity, and the season Is never cold enough to check the hand of Industry. The paper comes fragrant with the breath of the magnolia aad pine, and gives out the very air of the orange, pa'm and bay. The beauty and pathos, the romance and my story of the land where the corn vtores up the golden sunshine ill the cotton whitens in the moonlight, will be glvon In the well-filled columns of this faiclnatlng weekly. The subscription prica is Only rifty Cants a year, alike to all persons, ajenls, newspapers, postmasters and evory one else. Clubs of live, accompanied by the lull S3. B0, entitle the club raiser to the paper one year gratis. Sand on a Postal Card the names of six of your neighbors who would appreciate the opportunity to read a copy of The sunny south, and one sample will be mailed free. You cm get your club of five out of these very people. Vf 'sUNNY SOUTH enters over 50.0CO American homes now; and during 1902 is sure to be welcomed In lully as many more homes, as the great weekly foast of good things, the Southern Literary Weekly, whose columns for 1902 will be the most readable of all the papers that come to you. Jtddrwtt JUl Cammunleatfns tm mo SUNNY SOUTH, Atlanta, Ga. Tow le SpM's ( ! it. 1 An old army surgeon who was fond of a joke, if not perpetrated nt his own ex pense, was one day at a mess when a wag remarked to the doctor, who had been somewhat severe in his remarks on the literary delinquencies of some of the officers appointed from civil life: "Doc tor, are you acquainted with Captain G.?" "Yes, I know hini well," replied (he doctor, "But what of him?" "Nothing in particular," replied the officer. "1 have just received a letter from him, and I wager you a case of wine that you cannot tell in five guesses how he spells cat." "Done, said the doctor; "it's a wager." "Well, commence pucssing," said the officer. "K-a-douhle-t." "No." "C-at-e." "No, try again." "K-a-te." "No, you've missed it again." "Well, then," replied the doctor, "c-a-douhlc-t." "No. that's not the way; try once more ; it's your last guess.' "C-a-g-t' "Well," said the doctor, with some petulance of manner, "how docs he spell it?" "Why, he spells it c-a-t," replied the wag with the utmost gravity, amid the roars of the mess, and. almost fhoking with rage, the doctor sprang to his feet, exclaiming : "Gentlemen, I urn loo old to he trifled with in this manner." Chi cago Tribune. NnmoTChnt Pen. "I see that a millionaire who died re cently left a handsome sum to a man who had befriended him when a poor bov." "Wasn't that sweet of him I Was the man a very poor boy?" "No. It was the millionaire." "How funny. How could he be a poor boy if he was a millionaire?" "Can't you understand? When the man befriended the millionaire he was a poor boy." "Oh, yes, I see. The man was a poor boy." "No, he wasn't. It was the million aire." "Of course. The millionaire be friended the poor boy. How good of him." "Say, what's the matter with you? Listen. There was once a poor boy, and a kind-hearted man aided him. When he grew up he did not forget this kind ness. He became a millionaire and when he died he left him some money. See?" "Of course I see. Was the boy still a boy? Why, where are you going, dear ?" "I'm going to the club; that's where I'm going." Why Hl Wlf Shrieked. "Good story they got out about the professor, hey?" "What's the matter, did he forget again ?" "Naw. Better than that. His wife got up the other morning and was slip ping her shoes on when she gave a lit tle shriek. 'What's the matter?' he asked. "'Why, I was putting my shoe on and a snake slipped out of it," she cried. "'Only one? said the professor. "Why, there should have been three. I put them there last night to keep them warm.' " Tetterlne) Curea Quickly. "Only two applications ot Tetterlne enred a bad caso of King Worm from which I !art "itlTored." Julian M.Solomon, Savannah, 6a. M i a box by mall from J.T. Shu ptrino, Savan nah, Oa., If your drugirlst don t keep it. An ordinary rnilror.d engine will travel i.buut- l,COO,Oui) miles before it wear out. Brooklyn. N.Y., Jan. HOth. For many year flarlleld Tea. The Herb Cure, has been earn ing a reputation that Is rare It Is untef rsally praised ! This remedy presents unusual at tractions to those In search of health j It Is made of herbs that oure In Nature's way by removing the cause of disease ; It Is pure ; It cleanses the system, purines the blood and es tablishes a perfect action of the digestive organs; It Is equally good for young and old. It is estimated that of the whole popu-. lution of the globe about 90,000 die every day. Many School Children Are Sickly. Slother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, nsod by Mother Gray, a nurse In Children's Home, Now York, break up Colds In 2i hours, cure Feverlshness, Headaoho, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At all druggists', 25o. Sample mailed free. Address. Allen H. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N.Y. The practice of punishing pupils by de ducting credits for scholarship has been forbidden in the San l'rancisco schools. FITSpennanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat NerveKestorer.tU trial bottle and treatise free Dr. It. H. Kline, Ltd., 9.11 Arch St. f hlla.,Pa. Sir Thomas Lipton savs there are "no girls like American girls. Mrs. Wlnslow'a Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gumt., reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, oureg wind oollu. 2So a bottle. No large comet has appeared within our environment since that of 1882. "THE IRON DID SWIM." Rev. Dr. Tilrnafe Tells of Some ol (he Wonders of Divine Power. Superior to Every Law of Nature Which He Has Made for Mankind. Washwotos, D. C In this discourse Dr. Talmsge makes practical use of an oc currence in the Orient which has seldom attracted particular attention; text, II Kings vi, 6, "The iron did swim." A theological seminary in the valley of palms near the River Jordun, had become so popular in the time of Elisha, the pro phet, that more accommodations were needed for the students. The classrooms and the dormitories must be enlarged or an entirely new building constructed. What will they do? Will they send up to Tcrusnlem and solicit contributions for this undertaking? Will they send out agents to raise the money for s new theo logical seminary? Having raised the money, will they send for cedars of Leb anon and marble from the quarries where Ahab got the etone for the pillars and walls of his palace? No; the students propose to build it themselves. They were rugged boys, who had been brought up in the country and who had never been weakened by the luxuries of city life. All they ask is that Elisha, their professor and prophet, go along with them to the woods nnd boss the lob. They start for the work, Elisha and liis students. Plenty of lumber in those regions along the Jor dan. The sycamore is a stout, strong tree and good for timber. Mr. Gladstone asked me if I had seen in Palestine any sycamore tree more beautiful than the one tie stood under at Hawarden. I told him I h.id not. The sycamores rear the Jordan are now attacked by Klisha's students, for they must have lumber for the new theo logical seminary. 1 suppose some of the students made an awkward stroke, and thov were cxtemnorized axemen. Stand from under! Crash goes one of the trees nnd another nnd another. But something now happens so wonderful that the occur rence will ini the credulity of the ages, so wonderful that numv still think it never happened at all. One of the students, not able to own on axe, had borrowed one. i on must remember that while the axe ot o'den time was much like our modern axe, it differed in the fact that instead of the he'.ve or handle b?ing thriirt into a socket in the iron head the head of tho axe was fastened on the hnnd.o by a leathern thona. and so it might sliD tho helve. A student of tho seminary was swinging his axe against one of those trees, and whether it was at the moment he made his first stroke and the chins flew or was after he had cut tho trrc froi all sides so deep that it wis ready to fall we are not told, but the axe head and ths handle parted Being near the riverside, the axe hend dropped into river and sank to the muddy bottom. Great was the student's dismay. If it had been his own axe, it would have been bad tnourrh, but the axe did not be' long to him. He had no means to buv an other for the kind man who had loaned it to him, but God hclDS through sonic good and sympathetic soul, and in this case it was i.ltsha who was in the woods nnd on the river bank at the time. He did not see the axe head fly off. and so he asked the student where it dropped. He was shown the place where it went down into the river. Then Elisha broke off a branch of a tree and threw it into the water, and the axe head rose from the depths of the river and flouted to the bank, so that the student had just to stoon down and take up the restored property. Now you see the meaning of my text, lhe iron did swim." Suppose a hundred years npo some one had told people the time would come when hundreds of thousands of tons of iron would float on the Atlantic and Pacific- iron ships from New York to Southamp ton, from London to C'nlcutta. from San Francisco to Canton. Tho man making such a prophecy would have been sent to an asylum or carefully watched as incom pctent to go alone. We have all in our day seen iron swim. Now, if man can make hundreds of tons of metal float, I am disposed to think that the Almighty could make an axe head float. "What," says some one, "would be the use ot such a miracle? VI vast, ot inn nitc, of eternal importance. Those stu dents were preparing for the ministry. Tliev hud ioined the theological seminarv to get all its advantages. They needed to have their taith strengthened; they needed to be persuaded that God can do every thing; they needed to learn that God takes notice of little things; that there in no emergency of life where Ho is not will' ing to help. Standing on the banks of that Jordan, those students of that day of the recalled axe head had their faith re-enforced, and nothing that they found out in the class rooms of that learned institution had ever done more in the way of fitting them for their coining profession. I hear from different sources that there is a, grant deal of infidelity in some of the theological seminaries of our day. Thry think that the Gnrdcn of Eden is an alle gory, ond that Mot.es did not write the l'eniiiteuch, and that the book of Job is only a drama, nnd that the book of Jonnh is mi unreliable fish story, and that' water was not turned into wine, although the bartender now by larga dilution turns wine into water, and that most of the so calli d miracles of the Old ond the New Testamvnls were wrought by natural mimes. When those infidels graduate from the theological seminary nnd take the ptilpiu of America as expounders of. .the lloiy ScnpuireH, what advocates they will bo of that gospel for the truth of which the martyrs died. Hail the Polycarps and Hugh Latimcra and John Knoxes of the twentieth cen tury, believing the Uihlo is true in spots! Would to God that some great revival of religion might sweep through all the tlieo logical seminaries of this land, confirming tlic faith of the coming expounders of an entire Bible! Furthermore, in that scenp of the text God sanctions borrowing and sets forth the importance of returning. I do not think there would have been any miracl.t performed if the young man had owned the axe that slipped the helve. The young man cried out in tho hearing of the pro phet, "Alan, master, for it was borrowed!" Ho had a right to borrow. There aro times when we have not only a right to borrow, but it is a duty to borrow. There to times when we ought to lend, for Christ iri His Kormou on the mount- declared, "From him that would borrow of thee turn uot thou awny." . -..-'-w.wna It is right that one borrow the mesas of getting an education, as the young stu dent of my text borrowed the axe. It is right to borrow means for the forwarding ot commercial ends. Most of the vast roi tuues that now overshadow the land were haii'l.fd out of a borrowed dollar. ' Thoe students in the valley of palms by the .Ionian had a physical strength and hardihood that would help them in their mental and spiritual achievements. We who are toiling for the world's better ment need brawn as well as brain, strong bodies as well as illumined minds and con secrated souls. Many of those who are now doing the best work in church and tlute got muscle and power of endurance from the fact that in early life they were compelled to use axe or plow or flail or hammer, while many who were brought Up in the luxuries of life give out before the battle is won. They are keen and harp of mind, but have no physical en durance. They havo the axe head, but no Preslriont on roataga Stampa, If President MfKlnley'e portrait la put on one of the postage stamps of the country, as dispatches from Washing ton have said is likely to be done In' case the poatofflce doparttnent brings out a tew issue, his portrait will be the ninth of a president to be used in that way, suys the New York Sun. Ever since Uncle Bain's postofflco began making stamps In 1847 or thereabouts, the face of Washington has appeared on one ot the stamps In every regular lue, and with a single exception on a a-did ot low value and ssnaraJ u handle. The body it the handle of the soul. Do not feel lonely because your nearest neighbor may be miles sway, hecauso loo width ot the continent may separate you from the place where your cradle was rocked and your father's grave was dug. Weakened though you may be by lion s . i T Vt .1 'ill 1 I- uar ur inuiuei btivuhi, vtiiu win uciff you. whether at the time the forest around you raves in the midnight hurricane or you sutler irom something quite tneigmncnnt, like the loss of sn axe head. Take your Bible out under the trees, if the weather will permit, and after you have listened to the solo of a bird in the tree tops or the long meter psalm of the thunder, read those words of the Bible, which must have been written out of doors: "The trees of the Lord are full of sap, the cedars of Lebanon which He hath planted, where the birds make their nests; as for the stork, the fir trees are her house. The high hills are a refuge for the wild goats and the rocks for the conies. Thou makes! darkness, and it is night, wherein all the beasts of the forest do creep forth. The young lions roar after their prey and seek their meat from God. The sun ariseth, they gather themselves together and lay them down in their dens. Man goeth forth unto bis work and to his labor until the evening. O Lord, how manifold are Thy works! In wisdom hast Thou msde all. The earth is full of Thy riches." How do you like that sublime pastoral? My subject also reminds us of the im portance of keeping our chief implement for work in good order. I think that voung theological student on tho banks ot Jor dan was to blame for not examining the uxe before he lifted it that day against a tree. He could in a moment have found out whether the helve and the head were firmly fastened. The simple fact was that the axe was not in good order or the strongest stroke that sent the edge into the hard sycamore would not have left the implement headless. So God has given every one of us an axe with which to new. Let us keep it in good order, having been sharpened by Bible study and strengthened by prayer. The reason we sometimes fail in our work is because we have a dull axe or we do not know how aright to swing it. The head is not aright on the handle. At the time wo want tho most skill for work and perfect equili brium we lose our head. We expend in nseleiS excitement the nervous energy that we ought to have employed in direct, straightforward work. Your axe may be a pen or a type or a yardstick or a scales or a tongue which in legislative hall or business circles or Sab bath class or pulpit is to speak for God and righteousness, but the axe will not he worth much until it has bcn sharp ened on the grindstone of affliction. Go right through the world and ga right through all the past ages, and show me one man or woman who has done any thing for the world worth speaking of whose axe was not ground on the revolv ing wheel of mighty trouble. It was not David, for he was dethroned and hounded hy unfihal Absalom. Surely it was not Paul, for ho was shipwrecked and whipped with thirty-nine strincs from rods of elm wood on his way to beheadment. Surely it was not Abraham Lincoln, called by every vile name that human and Satanic turpitude could invent and de picted by cartoonists with more meanness than any other man ever suffered, on the way to meet a bullet crashing through his temples. But I have come to the foot of the Alps, which we must climb before we can see the wido reach of my subject. See in all this theme how the impossibilities may bo turned into possibilities. That axe head was sunken in the muddiest river that could be found. The alarmed student of Elisha may know where it went down and may dive for it and perhaps fetch it up, but can the sunken axe head be lifted without a hand thrust deep into the mud nt the bottom of the river? No; that is inmossible. I admit, so far as human pow er is concerned, it is impossible, but with God all things are possible. After the tree branch was thrown upon the surface of Jordan "the iron did swim." Some one asks me, "Did you ever see iron swhn?" Yes, yes; many a time. I saw a soul hardened until nothing could make it harder. All styles of sin had plied tha. soul. It was petrified as to all line feeling. It had been hardening for thirty years. It had gone into the deep-, est depths. It had been given up as lost. The father had given it up. The mother, the last to do so, had given it up. But one day in answer to some prayer a branch of the disfo'.iaged tree of Calvary was thrown into the dark and sullen stream, and the sunken soul responded to its pow er and rose into the light, and, to the as tonishment of the church and the world, "the iron did swim." . I have seen hun dreds of cases like that. When the dying bandit on the cross beside Christ was con verted. When Jerry McAuley, a ruffian graduate of Sing Sing prison, was changed into a great evangelist, so useful in recla mation of wandering men and women that the merchant princes of New York estab lished for him the Water street and Cre mornc missions and mourned at his burial, amid the lamentations of a city. When Xcwton, the blaspheming sailor, under tho' power of the truth was brought to Christ and became one of the mightiest preachers of the gospel that England ever saw. When John Bunyan, whose curses shocked even tho profane of the fish mar ket, was so changed in heart and life that he could write that wonderful dream, "The Pilgrim's Progress," in such a way that un counted thousands bave found through it the road from the "city of destruction" to the "celestial city." In all these cases I think iron was made to swim. I worship tho God who can do the impossible. You have a wajward boy. Only God knows how you have cried over him. You have tried everything for his reformation. Where is he now in this city, in this country, or has he crossed the sea? "Oh," you say, "I do not know where ho is. He went away in the sulks and did not say where he was going." You havo about made up your niiml that you will never hear from him agaui. Prettv hard pay he gives you for all your kindness and the nights vou sat up with him when he was sick. Perhaps be struck you one day when you were trying to persuade him to do bet ter. How different was the feeling of that hard fist against your face from his little hand in infancy patting your cheeckl Father! Mother! That is an impossible that I would like to see God take hold of, the conversion of that boy, for he will never be .: anything but a boy to you, though vou should live to see him fifty years of age. Did you say his heart is hard? How hard? Hard as stone? "Yes," you say, "harder than that. Hard as iron." But here is a God who can lift the soul that hss been deepest down. Here is a God who can raise a soul out of the blackest depths of sin and wretch edness.' Here is a God who can make iron swim,' the God of Elisha, the God of the young student that stood in dismay on tho banks of the Jordan at the time of the lost axe head. Lay hold of the Lord in a pray er that will take no deuial. ' Alas, there are impossibles before thou sands of people called to do work that it is impossible for them to do, called to bear burdens that it is impossible for them to bear, called to endure suffering that it is impossible for them to endure. Read all the gospel promises, rally all your faith, and, while you will always be called to wor ihip the God of hope, to-day, with all the concentered energies of my sou), I im plore you to bow down and worship the God who can turn the impossibles into the possibles. It was no trivia) purpose) but. for grand and glorious uses I have spoken to you to-day of the borrowed, the lost and tho restored axe head. J lOosvrlrht. ISO. I. Klnparh.) Benjamin Franklin's face has always adorned postage stampa ot low value, and has tWus become familiar to peo ple who send or receive letters ever Since 1847. Presidents other than Washington whose faces have appeared on the stamps are JelTerson, Jackson, Lincoln, Garfield, Grant, Madison and Tnylor. Of the stamps of higher values tho 8-cent stamp now bears Sherman's picture, the 10-rent Webster's, the 16 cont Clay's, the 30-cent Jefferson's, tie f0-cent Jefferson's, tho dollar stamp Perry's, the two-dollar Madison's, and the five-dollar Marshall's. Old ,to, tlic NlRlit Wnrclimnn. (From the Pall Mall Gazette, Ixmdon.) How often on returning home late on a dreary winter's night has our sympathy gone out to the poor old night watchman as he sat huddled up over his cage fire, overlooking the excavations which our City Council in their wisdom, or otherwise, allow the different water companies to mako so frequently in our congested streets. In all weathers, and under all cli matic conditions, the poor old night watch man is obliged to keep watch over the companies' property, nnd to see that the red lights aro kept burning. What a life, to be sure; whet privations and hardships; they hBvc aches and pains, which nothing but St. Jacobs Oil can alleviate. "Old Joe" is in the employ of the Lam- both Water Works, and is well and favour- j bly known. He has been a night watch- I man for many years, in the course of j which he has undergone many expe riences. What with wet and cold, he con tracted rheumatism and sciatica, which fair ly doubled him up, and it began to look a serious matter for old Joe whether he would much longer be able to perform his duties, on which his good wife and himself depended for a livelihood, but as it hap pened a passer-by, who had for some nights noticed Old Joe s painful condition, presented him with a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, ond told him to use it. Old Joe followed the advice given; he crawled home the next morning and bade his wife rub his aching back with the St. Jacobs Oil "a gentleman gave him," and undoubt edly his wif? did rub. for when Old Joe went on durj at night he met his friend and henefactor, to whom he remarked: "Them oilB you gave me, Guv'nor, did give me a doing: they wm like pins and needles for a time, but look nt me now," and Old Joe beran to run and jump about like a young colt. All pain, stifTnesa and soreness hr.d gone; he hvl been telling everybody he met what St. Jacobs Oil had done for him. Old Joe says now lio has but one ambition in life, and that is to always to be able to keep a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil by him, for he says there is nothi g like it in the world. St. Jacobs Oil serves the rich ond the poor, high nnd low, the same way. It has conquered pain for fifty years, and it will do the same to the end of time. It has no equal, consequently no competitor; it has many cheap imitations, but simple fncts like the above tell an honest tale with which nothing on earth can compete. Denmark leads tne world in per capita interest in agriculture. Each inhabitant has on an average a capital of $oSd invest ed in farming. All goods arc it. i e m .,,a FApr.i.r.ss Dvr.R, us they color all fibers nt ouo bulling. Sold by nil druggists. The average annual amount of coal mined in England from 1851 to 1000 is 130, 000,000 tons. How's Thla ? We otter One Hundred Dollars Rownrd for any case of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by Hull's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chensy A Co., Trops., Toledo, O. Wo, tho undersigned, hiivn known F. J.Che ney for the last 16 years, and believe him per fectly honorable In nil business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion madH by their Arm. West A Xanax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Wai.oiso, Kinnan Marvin, Wholesale Drug gists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, not ing directly upon tho blood and iuucouk sur faces of tho system. Price, 75c. per bottle, riold by all Druggists. Testimonials froe. Hull s Family Pills are the best. The population of the German empire includes 3,000,000 who use the Polish lan guage. Bet For the Bowela. Ko matter what alls you. headache to n cancer, you will never get well unlfl your bowels are put right. C'isr aiibth holp onnin'. euro you without a grlpo or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health hftck. Cas casbts Candy Cathartio, tho genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on It. Howaro of Imitations. The shark holds the record for longdis tance swimming. A shark has been known to cover 00 miles in three days. i riso's Cure fs the best medlnlnn we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs. Wit. O. Ehdbley, Vnuhurcn, Ind., Feb. 10, 1000. The hide of tho hippopotamus in some parts is fully tv.o inches thick. In nine of the great cities of the United States thele are 200,100 telephones. The of Syrup of Figs is due to its pleasant form and perfect freedom from every objectionable quality or substance and to the fact that it acts gently ond truly as a laxative, without in any way disturbing the natural functions. The requisite knowledge of what a laxative should be and of the best means for its production enable the California Fig Syrup Co. to supply the general demand for a laxative, simple and wholesome in its nature and truly beneficial in its effects; a laxative which acts pleasantly and leaves the internal organs In a naturally healthy condition and which does not weaken theni. To assist nature, when nature needs assistance, it is all important that the mcdicin.il agents used should be of the best quality and of known value ond Syrup of Figs possoes this great advantage overall other remedies, that it does not weaken the organs on which it acts and therefore it promotes a healthful con dition of the bowel;1, and assists one in forming regular habits. Among its many excsilent qualities may be mentioned its perfect safety, in all cases requiring a laxative, even for the kibe, or its mother, the maiden, or the wife, the .invalid, or the robust num. Syrup of Fig3 is well known to be a combination of the laxative principles of plants, which act most beneficially, with pleasant aromatic liquids and the juice of figs, ajret-'able and refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system, A'hen its gentle cleaning is desired. The quality of oyrupof Figs is due not only j Hie excellence of the combination, but also to the origiual method of manufacture which ensures perfect purity and uniformity of product and it is therefore all important, in buying, in order to get its beneficial effects, to note t!u f'!ll uame of ;he Company California Fig Syrup Co.--printed on the front of tvry pi'.ckage. Louisville. Ky. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRI'GGISTS tljjj Rev. Marguerite St. Omer Briggs, $$ Mount Calm Street, Detroit, Michigan, Lecturer for the W. C. T. U., recommends Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Dear Mrs. Fixkham : My professional work has for the past twenty years brought mc into hundreds of homes of sickness, and I have had plenty of opportunity to witness the sufferings of wives and mothers who from want, ignorance or carelessness, are slowly but surely being dragged to death, principally with female weakness and irregularities of the sex. I believe you will bo pleased to know that Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured more women than any other agency that ha3 conic under my notice. Hundreds of women owe their life and health to you to-day, and, there fore, I can conscientiously advise sick women to try it." Marguerite St. Omer Briggs. $5000 FORFEIT IF THE ABOVE J.ETTEU 13 NOT GENUINE. When woniftii aro troubled with irregular or painful menstruation, weakness, leueorrha-a, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bear-ing-dowii feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, flatulence, general debility, Indigestion, and nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Rt once removes such troubles. Xo other medicine in tho world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. liefuse to buy any other medicine. Mrs. Pinkliam invites all sick women to write her for advice. She luis guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. C '1 A J!lSrtay'Jfyr Centurj Oat t.k.. lb. .k. .nl. nrtt fiy7ja?S'"" ?v Ir Jy JrjsSSFW i!lr a-We a, th. bl,.t , iul.br .t.rywh.r.. Th. rt ftaV-SW JTryW V Su. AT l S.li.r'f n.u .ro l.rwl I. j.roduiM Th tt S. n.i'.rt- TfcTvSVSibit-iSfl .Dl.f Af rlcultureel.im. ih.if uiif ..r 100 ifcrnplM bd TlVrfWV Sk i-dj'hMJtijTjr Slnii lc.ie.1. NaUeP'. wr. II-. Iln'i ,eu lik. Ib.l. X5ayN V: ifo X. iA. Vr rrm"J M n.wlf'li Crnt'trf o.l I. b.u.4 U aompl-ulr iS 'SN?7 Iff jr, J tfa tf'lW r.Ti.latlnnli. aroaInK .rut , . pcci tof.nl of f.rtitiri l rprl v'T3l' ft fcVlvt rrj!h-!yk. rjf-V yl.IJ.ln inn ri.niln rromSOO toCOOhu.hctarr .ere Prir. ! 1A : wVYV It 'rfflr'3f'KV 'TVC".ff mt eh..p Bp ib th. uwim nd btir Oil. vtrl.tr this .print M ..II b ttL5vi?t yC' J.or nvlfhtMr. tbo CODlug f.ll far i.d. Il will mr.1 p.J Jon. V MTyjHi fyM Salzcio Mar-jet Wheat 42 bus. per Ccro V'ifyAjl WxV'f A 'm!s7 nl' ,friftt wh " etwih Vhl will y irld pa.ThiKrpnortli tut uniitta j JaCvVl ItV ylfwLtitjl k0'' wtl ni1 1,1 rr atata tu the L'nton. H'e )o hv Utt c.abriUJ Umcv V''4ai tJwll 'Ul Wh"t' 'lelilc ct BWr ''' C' tUB1' fr cra ftQ K iv-V l LA -oi ntuvtlnii etr1 and hmr food tn rarCi, producing hroM dO tm 10 fcaftsU Prr.V& . kC' VEGCTABLE SEEDS ft5l j ij0fdV rft 'rB trowM tnd our aiuok of twrlli Peas, tUftn-s, RwmI arn tu4 yr w vfuyj I tgf 'V VTxV.l " mkiuti vi-eotablei U enormous, Prto g wj lev. Union awvd 60 f'$Lf JF ILrs2 'JMK For lOc-Worth SIO S'Ml lPi7L - Onr tTl ntlofuoiUtUni full d;ripiiaD r ur Btftrd.aaw lUrl-ay, Jfc'gSr7 fC Jw? liJn' ijfyL Ji9i'iia lu '"'': ' Triple In noun Cora, ttui Vhi vuibcli; rff.' tb''S&A 'Tftv'Ci!!i our poifcuwi, jtcUiuf 0o0 buehtli por mt; our R'u aul lor if-rJ-C l'jrViTcV. ''. I'rwduein tuna f iniftntllMiil h; o-r Jftf'MbfSWv VaSvTj JS s$W riwSrV u wilh iu ' J-1'1 TmIW alih Hliaii, JhAVrAJPk' jjr igvySr-jgff Wv (pe-'ti fnldrr par wrt. halter'a rai eoilugua, JrAW'f&F &nrJi' awI Vrd nh-'-f -l. 9",rtit wM ' nr or JS'S&'iw SlS V 'Ms-- V V LEADER " and REPEATER" SMOKELESS POWDER SHOTGUN SHELLS are used by the best shots in the country because they are so accurate, uniform and reliable. All the world's championships and records have been won and made by Winchester shells. Shoot them nnd you'll shoot well. USED BY THE BEST SHOTS, SOLD EVERYWHERE Distinctive Value AiiFORNiA fiG Syrup San Frtvnclsco, Cal. Naw PRICE I ll-TV CENTS ' wr, jj aaMrfc -iwiiimmii INCB1ESIER if York, N. Y. J'ER UOTTLH. ""Iffll! nm. Am - i S" a