BIOATKn WITH nnoi'sv. firs ' MWV Thr Hurt VTas Badly Affc-rtrd Vhen the Patirnt Hogan V'sing lon's Kidney fllln. Mrs. Ellxabe'h Maiwel., of 4t& West Fourth St., Olympla. Wh.. -i a-yr: "For oyer three year 1 suffered with n dropsical condl- r lnK aware that If was due to kidney trouble, '"he early utagei were principally backache and hearing down pain, but I went along without worrying much until dropsy set In. My feet and ankles swelled up. my hands puffed and be came so tense I could hardly close them. 1 had great difficulty in breath ing, and my heart would flutter with the least exertion. 1 could not walk far without stopping again and again to rest. Since using four boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills the bloating has gone down and the feelings of dis tress have disappeared." Sold by all dealers. BO cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. H- Knew A Secret. The mother had taken her young est hope, aged but 3, with her when she went to do certain errands, never t. linking that, his bright eyes would discover nor hlB sharp ears hear what she said to the clerks. That evening at the dinner table the tiny boy'a elder sister greeted her father wide-eyed. "Daddy," she said, Santa Clans has my doll. He want ed to do something to it to make It prettier and he came and got It." '"Deed he didn't,", responded the 3-year-old. blithely; "mamma tooked It to the dolls' hospital to have some turls put on It. I know 'tause I went wld her." , ALMOST A SOLID SORE. Skin Disease From Birth Fortune Spent on Her Without Benefit Doctor Cured Her With Cutirura. "1 have a cousin in Rockingham Co. who once hoif a skin disease from her birth un til she was six years of age. Her father had spent a toll line on net' to get her cured und none of the treatments did hci ny good. Old Dr. ti suggested that he try the t'titicurn Remedies, which he did. When lie commenced to use it the child was almost in a solid scab. He had used it about two months and the child was well. 1 was there when they com menced to use your Cut km. i Remedies. 1 stayed that week and then returned home and slaved two vceks and then went hack and stayed with lliejii two weeks longer and when 1 went home 1 lould harMy believe she was the same child. Hci skin was as soft as a baby's without a scar on it. 1 have not seen her in seven teen year.;, hut I have heard from her and the last lime 1 heard from her she was well. Airs. W. 1 Ingle, Burlington, N. C.j June 16, 1903." Dr. Otter On Diet. Comparing the human body ana the steam engine in a lecture at the Worklngmen's College, Prof. Osier said one differentiating feature was that while the engine hnd only one furnace, and a large one, the human body consisted of myriads of little furnaces that Is, cells. Milk was the original food of man. It con tained the four things that were nec essary as food fat, curd, sugar and salt- all dissolved In water. Dr. Weir Mitchell once showed him a robust-looking patient and he remarked, "He looks as if he had been livnlg on the fat of the land." "No," replied Mr. Mitchell, "on the fat of the cow." That patient had a five years' milk .diet except on Sundays, when his wife insisted on rice pudding. If vege tarians would eat their vegetables nnd say loss about, it they would do well. Many vegetarians wore not as robust mentally as physically. Alcohol was quite unnecessary. If all the beer and spirits; could be dumped Into the Irish Channel, the English Channel, and North Sea for a year, people in England would be Infinitely better off. "If," he con tinued, "on the second day you dumped all the tobacco into the sea It would be good for you and hard on the fish." London News. What llulzac Said Of Women. The man who can govern a woman can govern a nation. A man who can love deeply is never utterly contemptible. A woman full of faith In the one she loves Is but a novelist's fancy. When a woman pronounces the name of a man but twice a day, there may be some doubt as to the nature of her sentiment but three times! Houston Post. NKVEIt TIRES Of the Food That Restored Her to Health. Salting the Horse. All horses need salt and often suf fer for the want of It. A lump of mineral salt or a salt brick may be put In one corner of Che stall where the horse can take it when he likes: but do not put the salt where it will mix with the grain, for In that case the horse will get more aalt that' he wanti. This method of having salt always before him will prevent him from eating too much at one time. The next best plan is to give the horse all the salt ho wants once a week, say Saturday night or Sunday morning. Have some regular time for this, or elsa you may forget it. White Holland Turkeys. "My food was killing me and I didn't know the cause," writes a Colo, young lady: "For two years I was thin and sickly, suffering from indi gestion and inflammatory rheuma tism. "I had tried different kinds of diet, plain living and many of the reme dies recommended, but got no better. "Finally, about five weeks ago, mother suggested that 1 try Grape Nuts, and I began at once, eating It with a little cream or milk. A change for the better began at. once. "To-day I am well and am gaining weight and strength all the time. I've gained 10 lbs. In the last five weeks, and do not suffer any more from indigestion and the rheumatism Is all gone. "I know it is to Grape-Nuts alone that I owe my restored health. I still cat the food twice a day and never tire of it." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. The flavor of drape-Nuts is pecu liar to itself. It is neutral, not too sweet and has an agroeable, healthful quality that never grows tiresome. One of the sources of rheumatism is from overloading the system wish acid material, the result of imperfect digestion and assimilation. As loon as Improper food Is aban doned and Grape-Nuts is taken regu larly, digestion la made strong, the organs do their work of building up good red blood cells and of carrying away the excess of disease-making material from the system. The result Is a certain and steady i return to normal health and mental j activity. "There's a reason." Read the little book, "The Road to Well- ' vllle," In pkgs. The Fattening of Hogs. The cheapest method of fattening hogs is to feed a variety of food. On the majority of farms the hogs are pushed forward after the fall is nearly over, but they are not always penned in a condition in which to fa cilitate the fattening operation. One method of using corn is to "finish off" with It, thereby hardening the fat. To really fatten a hog It should be fed In such a manner previous to being penned as to force growth. First build up the frame for the re ception of the meat that may be laid upon It, feeding such foods as should not only forward growth, but also keep the animal in a condition that will entail but. little expense when the time arrives for getting it fat. To do this in the most economical manner pumpkins, beets, turnips, carrots, water squash and parsnips, togpther with finely cut clover hay, may be fed with good results. It will not do, however, to feed such substances In a wasteful manner. A cauldron or steamer may be used for cooking a large quantity of roots, and a warm feed should be given early in the morning, the mass thickened with ground grain or some of the well known mill products rich In protein. At noon a feed composed of chopped roots, fed raw, but not too cold, will be sufficient. At night they may be given a liberal supply of corn. Such foods will not only keep the hogs in good health, but will be the cheapest diet at this season that can be al lowed, as the varied articles will rap Idly push them forward while the weather is not severe. Do not crowd the hogs, and feed in a manner so as to permit them to eat without com petition. The farmer should ' utilize anything on the farm that r ill nerve to assist In making growth or fit, and should not overlook the fact that the market prefers hogs whic.h contain a fair proportion of lean meat as well as fat. A Home For Pekln Ducks. A yard fifty feet long and ten wide will be sufficiently largo to pro vide exercise for a small breeding flock; and the wire netting need only be eighteen inches high, which will not cost more than $1.50. Though the fence need not be high, it must be very securely fastened to the ground; for ducks seem to pos sess abnormal powers when It comes to creeping under anything. A trio of good ordinary market stock should be purchased for about 17. Ducks are not like hens they do not la,- all the year round; but when they start they are attentive to the business of egg production daily, so that a couple of mature Peklns will provide you with a sit ting In six days. As you will want to keep some of the young one's for next year's stock, ask the breeder you buy from to ship you birds two - ears old, as their progeny is stror.st.. Peklis never want to sit; so Inns mist be used for hatching until your stock is large enough to fill an In cubator in a few days. Artificial duck-raising is without doubt the best. There is one farm in Massa chusetts that markets fifty-five thou sand young ducks annually, sells two tons of feathers and keeps twelve hundred breeders. Would such an Immense business be possible in the old way? Though Pekins don't need water to swim in, they must have quanti ties to drink, always fresh and clean; which means that drinking puns must be refilled three times a day, and be so constructed as to enable the birds to submerge the whole bill In the water. Why? Because there are twd small holeB in the base of the bill which become clogged with feed or mud, and unless they can rinse these out when drinking the poor things smother. A man who had a broiler farm near our place three years ago bought a hundred ducks' eggs, hatched out a flue lot of youngsters, and lost every one within two weeks through using a water fountain In the brooder that was too shallow. As I had lots of ducks at the time, he brought some over tor me to see. There was nothing whatever fits matter with them except that their nostrils were all stopped up with the soft food. So pray remember this very Important direction when you are arranging drinking water for ducks, young or old: they must not be ablp to get into the pan with their feet or bodies, but their entlro heads must have free entrance. The Self-Supporting Home. "Can't Kill 'Ems." It Is important, for the beginner garden making to choose varieties of plants and vines that are not deli cate. It Is, to say the least, dishearten ing to get one's grounds Ifl apple-pie order, to dig and fertilize the soil at cost both of time and money, to build delightful plans for color and succession of bloom, only to have It all come to naught because one was not careful In the selection of plants that do not require pampering. Foolish. Indeed. Is It for the ama teur to waste his time and energies on uncertainties when there are so many interesting varieties that are absolutely sure to succeed even un der the most unfavorable conditions. A young woman whose garden Is renowned for the great variety, quantity and beauty of its flowers (she takec entire charge of them herself), when asked the secret of her success, replied : "Oh. I always grow 'can't kill 'ems.' " "What in the world are they?" I asked. She replied: "They, my ignorant friend, are the things that make nnture do the work instead of me. In plain English, they are the plant that will grow pretty much any where, except In dense shade or un der trees; and some of them will even grow there. "You wish me to name some of them, do you? Well, the real 'can't kill 'ems' are perennials. Among the best are Coreopsis lanceolata, HemoroeaHls fulva (orange day lily), perennial phlox (especially If the color Is bad), rr.onarda or liergamot, peonies, golden glow, funkia, sub cordata or day lily, honeysuckle and trumpet vine. "The following annuals will also grow almost anywhere: Sweet alys sum. Calendula (pot marigold), Cen taurea eyanus (cornflower), Convol vulus major (morning-glory), Esch scholtzia (California poppy), In, pa ttens (balsam), ladysllpper, mignon ette, Shirley poppy, portulacca, Ta getes or the marigold (African and French), Tropaeolum (nasturtium) and zinnias. "Now, don't you tell me after that list you can not have a garden. If you can't, it's just because you're a hoodoo. For, really, those flowers should do well under the worst con ditions." "Well," the writer laughed, "I might be able to grow the flowers, but I never could reel off all those awful names." "Oh, yes, you can; it will only be too easy to you after a while. In deed, you'll have to lie racking your brains to remember the common name, lest people think you are try ing to show off." Indianapolis News. ANTKIXPK HERDS I COIOKAIKJ. So Plentiful That There is Agitation For an Annual Open Reason. Railroad men running Into Denver on the prairie lines from the East aay that antelope are becoming so plentiful In the vicinity of Fort Mor gan, Wray Brush and Akron that herds of from thirty to fifty are no uncommon sight, and many of them have become so tame that they race along the railroad tracks for miles. The law against the killing of an telope contains a clause allowing their being hunted from October if. to October 25 In 1907, for the first time In several years. During the past few years the antelopes have been Increasing rapidly. They fre quent the neighborhood of the smaller towns, and many families in Fort Morgan have captured young ante lope and raised them as prts. The havo also Increased In the South. Middle and North parks, although they frequent the prairies more than the mountains. It is said that the cactus covoroo plains In lie counties in the eastern part of Colorado furnish the best adapted place In the country for the rearing of the young of the antelope. The young are usually born In a hol low scooped out of the sand by the mother, In the midst of a thicket of cactus. In this way the baby antelope art safe from the depredations of prairie wolves and coyotes, who arc not able to penetrate the cactus thicket, while the mother can jump over the hedge without Injuring her self. The coyotes are only feared by the young antelope, the older ani mals being able to protect them selves. An agitation Is now spreading among sportsmen to have the short open season for antelope provided for next year permanent for a week each year. They claim the animals have increased so in the last few years that no Injury will be done in the short open season. The season for quail, however, which will also open In 1907, will probably be abolished by the coming Legislature. Denver Republican. The Compass Boxed. Hotel proprietors have absolutely . no right to stick their labels on one's luggage. The fact that you have stayed at this or that hotel does not j entitle the owner to ubc your prop- erty for advertising purposes. When one has been abroad for any length of time, one's trunk is so covered i with partl-colored scraps of paper j that it is impossible to find space for I an ordinary railway label. You want to Inform all porters, whom your movements ought to concern, as to J your destination. You don't want to j announce to all and sundry (Includ I ing your wife) that you have stayed at this hotel at Romeor that at Monte Carlo or the other In Paris. If you have actually put up at these I hotels, the chances are that you will wish to economize at the next hotel 1 where you stay. Certainly von win be opposed to spending any large sums of money on toques for your wife. Let us be firm about this. Let us not allow hotel managers to treat our trunks as hoardings. If I buy somebody's brain pills I don't permit their vendor to clap an ad vertisement of their merits on my silk hat. Pall Mall Gazette. Movable Poultry House. My best all round poultry house is a movable one, and if I were to build more houses I should copy this one. It holds a dozen fowls. It is 4x9x5 feet high In the middle. Three feet at one end is lattice or netting. Three feet from the end near the door is a partition, giving a A Simple Solution. A Scottish lawyer, with a liking for billiards, had occasion recently to visit a' small town in the west of Scotland. While there, seeking to pass the time, he found a new and excellent billiard table. Upon Inquiring if there was any body about, who could play, the land lord referred him to one of the na tives. They played several gaihes, but the result was against the lawyer. Try as he might, the countryman won every time. "Mr. ," the lawyer remarked, "I've quite a reputation at home. They consider me a good billiard player, but I'm hot in your class. May I inquire how long you have i played?" "Oh, for a while back," replied the native. "But, I say, I dlnna want to hurt yer fcelln's, but you're the first fellow I ever beat." Movable House. litle room 3x4 feet, which Is for roosts. Nest are here also, fastened to the wall by a large wire nail and easily pulled down for cleaning or moving. The roosting room has a floor, the larger room has none. When moving to a fresh spot the fowls are shut into the roost room, or the house can be moved in the evening, a couple of boards and some small rollers being used. In winter the house is set on a little raised bed of gravel, is floored with litter and banked outside with leaves. In sum mer the door and windows are of netting, making a coo) bouse. I. A. L., Middlesex County, Conn., in the American Cultivator. Ireland Grows Good Tobacco. Five years' extension of the facili ties granted by the late Government to Ireland for the purpose of tobacco growing ought to convince the most skeptical of what experts already know viz., that good tobacco can come out of the sister isle. If we had been more mindful of our neigh bors and less of the Virginia planters, j that fact would have been demon- I strated long ago. Less than 100 ; years ago more than 1000 acres was ! under cultivation in Ireland. The average profit was 160 per acre, but I In some cases aB much as 100 per ' acre was obtained. Moreover, during ' the distressful period, Wexford, where the weed was in greatest culti vation, suffered less than any other part of the island. Pall Mall Ga- sette. Farm Notes. Sunflower seed adds lustre to the plumage. Pullets rarely make good mothers: old hens are the best. All fowls reauliv a variety of food and get excessively tired of using one kind. A wet season is not a good one for sheep. High, dry land yields the most mutton to the acre. A bunch of hogs alike In color, alike In site and alike In condition, will always strain the market up a notch or two. The two-year-old ought to be as gentle as a dog by this time, and it is well to be handling tha weanling and the yearlings. The clover nlaut is the chni.M and must effective subsoil plow that can be used on soils where it will work; runs deeper, Is self-propelling and in passing leaves more fertility than it takes. American Medals In Paris. A special showcase has been placed in the museum of the Paris Mint In which Is displayed a collection of his torical American medals and kindred articles. Among the exhibits Is a gold plaque sent by President Roose velt to the French Government com memoratlng the 200th anniversary of Benjamin Franklin s birth. A new collection just added to the museum contains the seals of Charles I. and VII, Louis XII, Francis II and Mary, ' Queen of Scots. Then there are seall 1 of the Order of the Holy Ghost, oi ' Marie Antoinette and one which oaci belonged to Count d'ArtoIs, the work! of the famous engraver Lorthior. New York World. A Scoop. "Did you see that chorus girl's1 brother's wife's uncle's forty-second cousin?" asked the managing editor. "I did," the reporter replied. "Well? Well?" "She refuses to discuss the niur tier." "Is It possible? We'll have that featured In two colors. Hurrah! .what a sensation It will make!" J Louisville Courier-Journal. Andy And The Dlvvle. Mr. Carnegie's various liberalities have evoked many censure", but none more severe than one now laid upon him of being In league with Satan. This has become a tradition In some of the remoter parts of the Highlands and In the Hebrides. "Andy," as Mr. Carnegie Is univer sally called, has, according to this tradition, entered Into a pact with the evil one to destroy Scottish re ligion by spreading the use of musi cal Instruments and man-made hymns. It Is said that before returning to his native country he asked Satan how he could best aid him whether he should mnke folks dance, btillJ theatres In every parish or teach them to play cards. "Na, na, 'Andy'," replied Patan, "tuke a klst of whustles to Ilka kirk (put an organ In every church). Then my wmk Wall gang weel Hncuch." The fnet that Mr. Carnegie has presented organs to many churches In nil parts of Scotland. Introducing In strumental music and modern hymns """m uirmcny only psalms were vocally rendered. Is taken as proof of the fulfillment of the compnet London Dispatch. What is Pe-ru-na? Is It a Catarrh Remedy, or a Tonic, or Is It Both? Others refer to Pernna as a A Lucky Caliiiinn. Paddy O'Connor, go-as-you please rabble, who gets a fare at the Wal-drof-Astorla when the other cabs are too busy u, Ket It. got a fare last night. He was elected to drive Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stanton, guests at the hotel, to the Princess Theatre, which he did with eclat, and then drove up Broadway ns far as Fortieth Street, dropped his- wagon pole, and wont to sleep. The cabby was slumbering peace fully U'lia,, li .. i I "nr. niuusnj MM IIOlll later by two men frantically crying: Mere it is, nere it is!" They emer ged from the Inside of his cab, held up a gold mesh purse studded with diamonds, and astonished Paddvs "Drive us to the Tenderloin Sta tion," they cried, and Paf.y whipped up. When they got to the station they found Mr. and Mrs. Stanton. The gold mesh purse belonged to Mrs. Stanton, and the purse being worth $750, not counting the cash Inside. Mr. Stanton figured ttiHt IIS was not too much reward for Paddv. seeing he hadn't discovered it. Paddy pocket ed the reward gratefully, and was followed forth by the two nun who woke him up. Paddy was liberal with them, and all three made re polclng. N. Y. World. A Birmingham firm which makes a specialty of hand whistles has a metallic design reputed to "carry" a distance of two miles, which has re cently been adopted by the police force In many of the large towns. I'ewNre of Ointment For Catarrh Tha CnutHin Mercury, as mrury will surely dtttfojf the fens of smell and completely ierangth whole sys tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. ISueli artl.-les should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable nhy t Hans, as the ,lamaR- they will d" is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from Itasm. Hull's Catarrii Cure, manufactured hy F. J. Chene - A Co.. Toledo, O., contain no mercury, audi- taken iuterually. ar-tini; directly upon tin 1. ood and mucus surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure ,u Ki'i me genuine, it is taken in ternally and made in Toledo Ohio by F. J. Cheney A Co, Testimonials free. ' .Sold by Druggists; ;rico, 75 :. per bottle. lake Hall's Family Pills for constipation Home people call Pertinn a great tonic. great catarrh remedy. Which of these pc-oplt are right? Is It (MM proper to call Pernnn catarrh remedy than to call It a tonic? Our reply is, that IViiinn Is both n tonic anil a catarrh remedy. In dt-vd, there can be no effectual eatnrrlt remedy that is not also a tonic. In order to thoroughly relieve any ense of catarrh, a remedy must not only have a specific action on the mucous membranes affected by the a tarrh, but it must hare a general tonic action on the nervous system. Catarrh, even In persons who are otherwise strong, is a vreukcued con dition of some mucous membrane. There must be something to strengthen the circulation, to give tone to the arteries, and lo ralw the vital forces. Perhaps no vegetable remedy in the world tins attracted so much at tention from medical writers M HYDRASTIS CANADENSIS. The wonder ful elllcacy of this herb has lieen recognized ninny years, and In growing la its hold upon the medical profession, When Joined with CUHKM and) COPAIBA a trio of medical agents Is formed in IVrunn which constitutes a specific remedy for catarrh that in the prew nl state of medical progress, cannot be improved upon. This action, reinforced' w i.,, renowned tonic as OOLLIXso.MA CANADENSIS, COIiYDALIB PYftlMOSA and CJCDHON SKED, ought to make this compound an ideal remedy for euturrh in all its stages and location in the body. From a theoretical standpoint, therefore. Per ft u beyond criticism. Tire use of IVrunn confirms this opinion. Numberless testimonial from every quarter of the earth furnish ample evidence that this judgment i not over enthusiastic. When practical experience confirms a well-grounded the ory the result is a truth that cannot be sbnken. Nothing Hut The Tratlt, "Before we were married," said the extravagant wife, ' you declared your willingness to go to the ends of the earth for me." "Yes, and that is exactly what I have done," replied her husband, sadly. "I haven't a foot of real es tate left." Chicago News. Dpi 1H iTnifetHtt, Safe, Sure and Speedy. No external remedy ever yet devised lias so fully anil unquestionably met these three prime conditions as successfully as Allcock'e Plasters. They are safe because they contain no deleterious drugs and arc manufactured upon scientific principles of medicine. They are sure because nothing goes into tbem except ingredienU which are exactly adapted to the purposes for which a plaster is required. They are speedy in their action liecausc their medic inal qualities go right to their work of relieving pain and restoring the natural and healthy performance of the functions of muscles, nerves and skin. Allcock's Plasters are the original and genuine porous plasters and like most meritorious articles have been extensively imitated, therefore nlways make sure and get the genuine Allcock's. A woman thinks another is ugly un ;csh she say.s so. muleTeam BORAX In the Laundry Will Sterilize tha Clothttiir, Act hh ftii Antlneptlc and Prevent Odor From Peraplrutlotie All ill ultTh. KHtnplp Borax, Honklet nnd iMiuvpnlf1 Picture In 10 rotors, & rents and jour dr'r's nam. PACIFIC COA8T BORAX CO.. New York. Mrift To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Ouinine Tslileta. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. drove's signature is on each box. afio. Started In For Himself, Acquaintance Were you ever liuncoed? Skinflint Was I? Why, I was buncoed so many times that It taught me the game. Detroit News. HOCLESS LARD The Uppermost Stand ard oi Highest Quality Inipsctid by the United States Government A Wooden God, "They say the Chinese women are idol worshipers." "Well, so are Americans. I know a woman that just worships a stick of a man!" Detroit News. In an Atlanta cemetery one tomb bears at the top: "H':len Va'nce, wife of Harold Vance, 1854. I await you." At the huso of the Inscription some oue has written: "He took his time." FITS.Ht. Vitus'Dance:Nervons Diseases per manentlycuredby Dr. Kline s (ireat Nerve I: ' .' i.r'.'i ' trlul ..,.!.. . ; - ...... nsu urnuis- lire. Dr. H. B. Kline, Ld.,031 Arch St.. Philu., Pa. I Vou can alwaye tell a man of good feeds by the way lie tella you. Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days. Paso Ointment is guaranteed to cure any caseof Itching Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to H days or money refunded. 0o The whole world loves to get the laugh on a lover. Itch cured in 30 minutes bv Woolford'a Sanitary Lotion; never fails. Sold by Drug gtst. Mail orders promptly tilled hv Dr. E. Detchon Med . Co. , Cra wf ords ville, I nd . L Of all men sailors suffer most from rheumatism. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething.sof tens thegiinis.r-il. Re-, nrlumma tiou, allays pain, cures wind colic, 'Jftcabottle Don't hope to please others If you Can't pleuae yourself. "The Blood is The Life." Science has never gone beyond the above simple statement of script ure. But It has illuminated that sta.temcul and given it a meaning ever broadening with the increasing breadth of knowledge. When the blood is "bad" or impure it Is not alono the body which suffers through disease. The brain is also clouded, the mind and ludcement ara jcted. andnianv an evil 1, t or i ,m thoglitNnJHwSirect!y traced to the impoeety ol the bTt l-'ou). impure blood can tie made nure hv tl.e use of Qr Pierce's (.'olden Medical Discovery. J enriches and ooiiiies, 1. blts.il thereby curing, pimples, blotches, eruptions and other cutaneous affections, as eczema, tetter, or salt-rheum, hives and other manifestations of impure blood. 8 ffi In thn cure of scrofulous swellings, on largnd glands, open eating ulcers, or old sores, the "Ooldcn Medical Discovery "has performed tho most marvelous cures. In cusos of old sores, or open eating ulcers. It Is well to apply to the open sores Dr. Pierco's AU-Hoallng Salve, which pos sesses wonderful healing potency when iisod as an application to the sores In con junction with the use of "Golden Medical Discovery "as a blood cleansing consti tutional treatment. If your druggist don't happen to have the " All-rloullng Salvo" in stock, you can easily procure It by Inclosing fifty-four cents In postage I stamps to Dr. K. V. Pierce, t Main St, Buffalo, N. Y., and it will come to you by return Hist. Most druggists keep It as well as the "Golden Medical Discovery." 9 9 9 9 -9 9 You can't afford to accept any medicine of unknown composition as a substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery," which is a medicine or Known . ..vmMii.it, having a complete list of ingredients In plain English on its bottle-wrapper, the otme being attested as correct under oath. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. jeHBrjf r i JJ fsPQejj ny HICKS GAPU DINE CURES ALL ACHES And Marvoaaaaaa TrUl iMiUt io Altrafstm pvaaiiej i.s iuia . Afxa it will par "HOW" can I ever do my work when it v musclm t all iuliaiurd with Kliruinstisiu '.' Johnsons Anoejiniment Rubbed on Briskly will remove the inflsnim.it ion, limber up the muscles, and mskt yen Knott ss now. - . thr-p times m much .10r. All tillers. I. B. JOHNSON &i CO., Boston, Msss- PATENTS PATFsVV"hn, "' about I a 1 k.ms? p0 j-cu wlh in know Alinut Tlonv i i l' -i I Bo vou wlih to km n at., ut 1'KNsfi NK i0 you wtih to know uncut IAY and Bc.lNTV 1 Th-n write to W. . ', AUcrne. -ui.Ln.v I Notary Publl I " lb l'iilw1lti 812 Inrtlina Av. einie. Waliln'" . D. C y. aiiln vi axhlnr ton t'nlon wild lore nuii Kallort war 16I-'-enttlM to penn on nn f . af er they r-aeh 1 2 I I ifKHinner d.'- rts WIfa hv may !. .. n . i 'r half hfl n...-t". An Abundance of Fruit of highest quality, finely colored land flnvored, Is the direct result of supply ing a complete fertiliser containing from 7 to 12 per cent of POTASH to the tree, vine or bush. "Plant Food" is a book well worth a place In the library of any fruit grower. We will gladly mail it to all applicant. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York SAM JONES' LIFE AND SAYINGS HV HIS Will ' (or Caovaaalng IRFlrTC WllTrTn Areata are coining money. Bend 0r I flULfllU flflniLLl Outfit and Contract for territory. m'WrXLXX9 t0 J. B, NICHOLS & CO, ATLANTA I OA. RHEUNATIS! CURED 9 If fltlrlfxt with weak f re use Thompson's EyeWater The Circulation Stimulated and the Muscles e.nd Joints lubricated by using Liiviiiveivt l Price 5c 50c 61.00 V Sold by &II Dealers f "Sloan's TreAtiss On The bWSeni Fret aaress ur.tsrl 5.5lpan.Bos.on,Moss. P Uf NAM UwOf moro gtxxUbrlbtAr autt faster colors ibtJQ mixj oiitr dtv Oft ioc biiud. wiuuhil r:ppiLr mn. vwiu? ror tr FADELESS DYES how r'z&i MfWtfifaXxw