ONCE IS ENOUGH TO SEE Gostava Dore't portrait of DanU is worth teeing one. But one b enough. Bom each look yon notice on the faces of thoM who hav suffered, and it HI Buffer, much physical pain; people subject to rheumatism, gout, neuralgia, periodic headache, Inmba go, or pain from some old lesion. ThU pain habit putaiU marks n them, as the custom of handling ropes crooks a sailor's fingers ; or as too much riding of a bicycle stamps a worried expression on certain faces. No wonder people said of the Italian poet us he passed along, "There goes THE MAN WHO NEVER LAUGHS." The complaints above named all yield to the action of Benson's Porous Piasters, and quickly too. Not only those, but cokls and coughs, kidney and liver affections, all -ongeUons and muscular strains, diseases of the chest, asthma and all ailments which are open to external treatment. It is fre quently said that lirnnon't Plattrr ii J'ain'$ Matter. It cures when others are not even able to relieve. For thirty years the lead ing exUruul remedy. The old-style plas ters, as well ns sulves, liniments, oils, etc., have little or 110 efficacy as compared with it. Use it. Trust it! Keep it in the house. Ask for Benson's Plaster ; take uo other. AU dniKK'i'-ts, or we will prepay postage on any number ordered lu the United Slates on receipt of 'c. each. Seubury t Johnson, Mi. Chemists, N.T. PIMPLES Cured in FIVE DAYS by the use of Dr. Thomas' Faci al Ointment, apply at bed time; cures while you sleep. PiFor a short time we will send a Rftycent box by mall, postpaid, on receipt of thirty five cents. Address, Barker Cl;en;i(;al Co., 1324 Xorth 55th St., West Park M-ttiou, I2 o-20t. Thiadelphia, i'a. A vniil mlultnriitidii mid wholesale ntvl retail protii Uy buying your wlii-kry tlircet from tl.e illHtillery. Nee Hie lliiyner iMntillitin Co. an nouncement in this paper, which ii plain how to net four full UuK-i of pure Seveii-Yenr-OUl Kyu Whinkry, (jipretM prepaid, for H. They Kiinruutee pure k 1 uikI full ineuHiirc. IlK.ttAltKftHI.K I KK OH HOI l. A Mule Iloy's Life Suved. I Lave f few words to say reg'irJ ing Chamberlain's Cough Itoiueily. It saved ni.V little boy'a life and I feel that I cannot praise it enough. I bought a bottle of it front A. K. Steele of Goodwin, S. and when I got borne with it the poor baby could hardly breathe. I gave t e medicine as directed every ten min utes until he "thre" uf" UI I thought suro "e was going to choke to detvi ,.VVe had to pull the nhlegm o'1 of 018 mo"th in great loii ori 'g"' f'am positive that if I had not got that bcttle of cough me dicine, my bov would not be on earth to-day. Joe Dkmont, Inwood, Iowa. For sale by the Middleburg Drug Store. Enterprising pine m-acrs in tnt west are said to be arranging a storage trust of quail. Several states have adopted laws forbidding the slaughter of Hob White for two years, and these men are preparing to accumulate big stocks of the birds before the protective laws go into effect. They expect to control the prices of quail in the principal cities of the country for a considerable period. A recent dispatch from Ealclgh, N. C, announced the final decision of the will case of Mr. Ice Snow. The dispatch also mentioned the names of other members of the family ns Hail Snow and Uain Snow. In the fame connection other curious names "of people living in Xorth Carolina .were mentioned, namely, Sharp Blunt, Sink Quick and Early Dawn. Such names are funny. T At Fall River, Mass., the other day, Daniel McMulIen, aged 00, was -cent to the state farm as a vagrant. .The complaint was made by his mother, aged 62. , She told the judge that she did not feel like supporting any longer a "worthless boy" who was too lazy to help her In the house work. Daniel pleaded guilty. A current report aaya that Nathan Church, a man of scholarly attain ments, and the colleague of Blaine in the Maine legislature, is now working as street cleaner in Minne apolis at a salary of $1..'0 a day. BAD TH A II FT and aa i nre simply won- t.rsm Br I lusiia h.Hll iisli.ir I' (Ml1 til B7lft n mlM un1 I'tlf-i iv( ;.i.t;ii i ve i (my nre simply won Jarful. My tiauuht 'r ;lpi I were bothered with utiriuu iiimikki' i i 'uir imiiiviru nun kick siomti'-h a ml oitr bt";tiM w.it. ver biut. After tuiiiiitf a f'W of iiMMrt'is u hare Improved nouutiluUy. 'I'hcy itM M , ,u Ui'ni iu tlio family." With u.v t ten., M . i.tiuiiuatl, Ohio. f. V'A I. ? '. tt.M v-. .S, ' .1 I MATH RCOIkTlnEO Ml. ('..(.Mil 'I'Mvtl' i;tHl, llo ii. A i.fii. i ! .r.ie. '.'oe. Wc. OBSTIPATION. ... ; IIi'Mirilr ; 1 a5- LAYING TILE DRAINS. Careful Atteatloa Mail Re Paid t the 1" roper t'oaatrartlon of lalt-ta aad Ontlrla. Xo one will question the value of tile for drainage pipes. In laying head end of tile, it is a mistake to dump in a few pieces of broken tile and mud duff from the slough bed with the "idea of packing; to make nearly waterproof. Many have done that in this section and the water, failing- to run off, a complaint is WELL-MADE TII.E INLET. made that the tiling docs not pay. I have known men to dig tip whole ditches of tile and replace them with larger ones, when a little work in the riplit way would have brought thing's out nil rijrht. A correctly built tile inlet and outlet are absolutely essen tial for success in drainage. Where foil is of a mucky nature, the illus tration shows a (food plan of filling in s round the inlet. This plan, however, rs not necessary where soil is mossy. DI'RAliLE TILK OUTLET. About four or five feet of tile should be covered with conrse gravel to within six or eight inches of the sur face, so the plow will not strike the stone. This will let the water off freely, yet keep the soil in good shape. A large stone should be placed at the end of the tile. rtfj outlet, .vjtlld aiso De kept clean of roots and bars of netting so placed that the vermin may be kept out. If this is done and the tile prop erly laid, water will have easy going and the farmer will go his way re joicing instead of "cussing" the tile which he- thought was too small. I red Ristrim, iu Farm and Home. MANAGING A DROUGHT. Som Lriaoni I.rnrnrd by an Iowa Farmer Dnrlnu the Hot, I)r) Days of Last Summer. The shortage in crops especially tht of corn the result of the extreme Jruught of the pa.st, and the inability of the farmer to cope with it, has been to them a very severe and costly les son, and proven that they are very ignorant iu some things. How to man age these things that we may be ready for such another calamity has been a theme of much controversy between myself and brother farmers, and near ly all agree that for com and similar crops, surface cultivation is the only way, and if we cultivate often enough to keep a good mulch of dust on top, it will bring you through any drought that visits this country with a good paying crop. There is much fall plow ing being done, and with the thought of a dry .season visiting us again next year, we ask, in order to hold the most water in store till cultivation begins in the spring, should we plow deeper in the fall than in the spring. In answer to this it has been thought that deep plowing would be the better, for a dry mason, as it looMnt up the ground to that It will Bold ell the water that may fall upon it, and retain the moist ure from the melting snows till the more compact ground below will have time to take up the water and hold it In store for the coming crops, and where the water goes', the air goes, and these supply the growing crops with nourishment. Another good way of keeping the land in good tilth, a well as to assist in retaining the moist ure i to spread barnyard manure over the field. Xow the question arises in our minds does manure make the land richer, or does it put the humus' into the soil and make it loose, lij;ht and friable, that it may bring forth abun dant crops? In time the land becomes hard and cloddy again and corn will not prow, and to bring it back to a enrn-growing condition again. It can be sown to clover. To sum it all up. It dimply appears that the water ami the shading are tlio principal rcrpii sitrs for tnakiii" the 'land productive in any kind of a siason. John I.an nin:!', in I'm " ri Farmer. Torn Co!m for MHU Ccmn, Corn-eolis coarsely ground contain coiis.lde'ruble nutritive matter, and in some sections of the country this cob meal is fed tluriiiir the winter tu milch cow.-. .Its value inerea-t d by ;idi;ing a (pi.-.n of corn meal tu a pick of cob meal. This served nilr a nd morning with half n bu.-lnl of cut hay or well curud corn fodder, 11.1! n,y with 15 pounds a day of long hay. will not only keep a cow in pood condition but wilj Increase the Us flow. Ohio Farmer'. Sv,i. NAMING THE FARMS. Oas ! Ik Maay Gaod Thlasrs R altlasr fraat tap EatablUkmeat f Raral Delivery, Letter boxes now appear at the gateways of farms throughout many districts in Illinois, along the coun try mail routes recently established by the government, and one of the first results of the innovation is de cidedly interesting. No sooner had the mail boxes ap peared than the farmers began to take a deeper interest in the gates and the general style of entrances to their homes. The boxes were new, looked fresh, and seemed to give a dignity to the gateposts that they never possessed before. The con trast, in the great majority of cases, was not pleasing, particularly to the womenfolk and the younger men, and most of the farmers set about making improvements whieh would bring the surroundings up to the standard of the letter box. This was one step in the right di rection. Then it wus natural that the mail carrier sometimes made mis takes, because there was neither name nor number to guide him fn the delivery of letters, newspapers or packages. Some of the farmers nailed up rude "shingles" bearing the n;i nies of the occupants of the house at the upper end of the lane. Other farmers ordered neatly painted signs bearing the name of the head of the house. Xow it appears from a letter ad dressed to the Milledgeville Free l'ress, progress has taken a more de cided step ulong this line. The fann ers in the vicinity are christening their places and displaying the names chosen in handsomely painted signs on the gateposts. "I have concluded to name my place '.Midway Farm," says the writer of the letter referred to, "not because it Is sporty or tough, but because it is located just nan way between Milledgeville and fhndwick, also half way between Lanark and Coleta." I'erhaps we are at last tinon Ihi threshold of the time, so loner looked forward to in the United Slates, when country life will take upon itself the habiliments that adorn it fn the older lands. Perhaps the mail box and the farm name ere but the precursors of other improvements, in the agricul tural regions, which will give the United States country homes w'ith beautiful surroundings. Chicago In ter ucean. ANCHORING WIRE FENCE. j riie Way Here Dencrlbed and Illn- Iraled la One of the Best That , Has Been Discovered. j We tiotloa that a rrnf monv f -.- I ers who use woven wire fences have them staked down by criss-crossing small stakes over the bottdm wire. Those who have these fences in use any length of time find that to make them positively hog proof they must fasten the bottom wire down in some manner. Staking down temporarily answers for the time, but these stakes soon rot off. A much better - - n . 1 . . f-, 1 1 1 1 1 ft- ANCHOR FOR WIRE FENCE. way is shown in the illustration. Heavy galvanized wire loops are made 18 inches in length (requiring about 40 inches of wire for each loop.). These loops are placed around the bottom wire and extend below into a hole dug below the front line, where a weight Is attached to the loop as shown at A, and covered up. Almost any farm will furnish these weights in the way of small boulders, old castings, etc., and when used iu this manner are useful and buried out of the way. If the posts are ex ceptionally far apart, two of these loops may be attached. George V. Brown, in Ohio Farmer. Fertilisation ef Flowers. Insects are necessary to the fertil ization of most flowers; and were it not for inaecti, especially honey bM, many of the crops we now have would be wanting. There are a good many flowers that produce pollen that has no means of getting from flower to flower except by the mtdium of in sects1. On the other hend, some plants throw off great quantities of pollen without the help of the insects. Prof. James Fletcher relates that when in Rritish Columbia some people came to him and asked him to explain a show er of sulphur that had apparently fal len during the preceding night. He assured them that there had been no thower of sulphur, but that what looked like sulphur was in reality the pollen of pine trees'. How to Cure n lli.lky llorae. When a horse balks, no matter how badly he sulks or how ugly he is, do not beat him, do not throw Mini! in his. ears; don't use a rope on his front legs, or .even burn straw undt r him. Quietly go and pal him on the head 11 moment; take a hammer, or even pick up a stone in the street; tell the driver to sit still, take the rt'ii.s and hold thera quictjy while you lift up either front foot. Give each nail a ight tap, and a good smart tap 011 the frog;, drop his foot quickly, and then chirp to him 1o go. In 0!) cases out of 100 the horse will go right along about h's business, but the driver must keep his lines taut and nut pull or jerk him hack. John Haines, in Fnrm and Home. The cows that are the heartiest eat ers usually show th; jn-calej.t prolit on feed eaten. I ... A Subjugated 4t Man. By MRS. M. X RAYNS, IT HAPPENED in this way. The Deans were sitting at dinner when Mrs. Dean remarked: 'I bought a new cook book to-day. An agent called and " "Edna," interrupted Mr. Dean with several distinct notes of alarm in his voice, "I hope you have not been buying books from on agent when I have repeatedly warned you not to waste your time and money in any such investment. A subscription that only costs ten cents a week may sound very alluring, but when it runs for two years, you will find that you are paying twice over " It was Mrs. Dean's turn to inter rupt. "My dear Herbert, you should go into politics; you would make a tine stump speaker. Tint this is an other story. I have wanted a certain kind of cook book for a j'enr, but could not find it in the bookstores, because it is a subscription book. And here it enme walking right in, as you might say, so I bought it, nml it is complete in one volume. I paid spot cash for it and never expect to see the agent ngaiu." "That depends. Was she n woman with a mournful whine nml 11 dc- I","'U """"....me, ..,. l r,..., trving to pnv off n mortgage on her .1 -.1 bouse or sewing machine or some thing?" "No, sir; she was young nnd well dressed, but so timid I felt sorry for her. Oh, you needn't laugh, she was a lady. It must be dreadful to have n door slammed in your face when you nre trying to make nn honest living. She had another book, one that I really wanted, nnd I wish 1 had nsked her to como ngnin." "She'll come," suggested Mr. Denn, "now that you have left the bar down I mean left the door open she'll come, just ns often as s';e has a new book, until 0110 or the other of you dies of old age. Yon will hesitate and be lost. Edna, I see your finish." "Is that your experience?" nsked Mrs. Denn, curtly. "Mine? JCo, indeed! I would like to see the book ngent that could get into our building!" "But they must reach you some times, and try to sell you books, or you would not know so much about them and their methods." "Oh, in my bachelor days I dare say I did squander my substance on them occasionally. Hut now I am uo bo piotfigal as to buy bdoks that remain on the office shelves for no body ever reads them. I have a dis tinct recollection of purchasing a volume on the care and treatment of horses, when I couldn't hnve owned a toy equine." "Co on," Mrs. Dean was amused, "confession is good for the soul. Hut really, Herbert, I gave thnt poor thing your office address, nnd asked her to call nnd sell you a copy of 'The Compendium of Universal Knowledge.' " "Ednn! I thought you bad ngrced to let me run my business in my own way? I should be vexed if it were possible for her to rench me, hut, you know, a sign is in every hnll of the building like this: ' it eV;o X Ks,' p'k'i ViVlkrs and nook' ' : : ACKNTS : : NOT ALLOWED IN THIS ni'ILDlNO. : "Yes, nnd it's perfectly disgrace ful. Don't you go out to solicit trade, and haven't those people the same privilege?" "Beggars, too?" suggested Mr. Dean, who was angry. "The poor ye hnve with ye always," quoted his wife.softly. "I am sure, Herbert, you will not be rude to the young woman when she calls, and you will buy the 'Com ' " "I will not. She may force ' her way into the office, but rIio will not sell me a book, however charming she may be." "Who said anything about charm ing? She will make you a business proposition, nnd you will treat it in a business way." "Yes. I will call the office hoy to show her to the elevator. Come, Edna, give me music, your soul needs soothing. We will not mention this subject again." nut, Herbert, you will buy that book?" "Never! Not even for your sweet sake. Is thy servant an idiot that he should do this thing?" Nothing more wns said and the evening was devoted to happy music, but Herbert, turning the pages, could not see a little devil of mischief thnt lurked in Edna's eyes. A week later a lady wns shown into the swell office of the Amalgamated Ttye Biscuit company. She wore an automobile cont, a black and white feather picture hat, a white chiffon fnco veil, nnd carried herself like nn empress. There was n commotion among the clerks in the inside office ns they saw her enter nnd the word ".st iniving"' could be distinctly heard. The office boy turned a handspring In his baste to get her a chair, then touched hi- chief on the elbow as he announce! i 1 his choicest argot: "A loid ' ''hen 11. ' his paper . in tin: a t n virii ty , tit h'.. thought re." widow who h." chasing stock 1 it'f ynu, thir." ' v ' 'd ):','. h, nil frn-n 1 f frir.H' cxi'itcnu in c. mil niv tli" (U - , ni',1 n ; 1,! i her .r; a rich .1 u tlosin.i!. C iur- iuo A. II. 1!. G J.'u welcomed lier wiih cfruuen, in.-r her lv the :::ir.c of 11: '! - - I'rjj'a :o"rcsvjondcnt Jj'You are mistaken, Mr. Dean," she aald in a rich contralto, "I think Mrs. Dean may have mentioned me as a a lady who sold her a cook book and was requested by her to call on yon with a opy of the Compendium of Universal Knowledge.' " She 'deftly produced the volume from the folds of her long stylish coat, and laid it on the desk before Herbert with slim, elegantly gloved hands, while he stabbed the air with his suspended pen and breathed as if suddenly overtaken by acute asthma. Oh, my countrymen, what a fall was there! At the same moment he was aware of the subtle brushing of an angel's wir.g. It fanned his anger-, stained cheek and troubled the depths of his sensitive nature. Oh. Edna should know to what annoy ance she had so thoughtlessly ex posed him. "I cannot understand, Miss Mad am, how you obtained access to my private office on such an errand. I cer tainly consider it an irregular pro ceeding to intrude upon a business man in this way!" "Mrs. Dean" "You will please lenve her name out of this transaction. I have said that I" "One moment, sir. Suppose for argument's sake that you do not want the book, can you not take one copy and give a fellow toiler in the great struggle for bread tho prestige of your honorable name? Call it charity if you will, but. suppose that, it were your widow -who was trying to earn her living and some prosper- ou8 (o whom , comps eaR. ., .. . ,.. , ily were to refuse her ns von are re fusing inc. (Sob.) S-t-rike, but henr me! I-am giving you for two dollars a complete library. Just to show such n book to nn appreciative per son like yourself is to create a de mand for it. Something so novel and entertaining it should be in every house. Chapters on art, literature, Imsiness, travel, poetry, sentiment and song, suited to the church or the fireside, the lullaby you learned at mother's knee, elocution and ora tory, how to be happy though mar ried, recipes for cleaning silver, how to make soft sonp. 'o family should be without it. Please don't interrupt me. One hundred illustrations not found in any other book, 500 large double-column quarto pages, 50 half tone photographs, eight full-page color plates, not sold in any. book store, and only two dollars; religious, realistic, dialectic, didactic. Oh, thank you kindly, nnd the book is delivered, and I assure you I will never osk you to buy another, but you will always bless me for selling you the 'Compendium ef Universal Knowledge.' Thanks and good-by." She tuffed the two-dollar bill into i-.tiny purse, Jilew- a k!sa from h Jr finger tips to the astounded and sub sidized Herbert and whisked out of the office with an audacious flutter of silk skirts and an aroma of white rose perfume that left the dazed clerks simply bereft of their senses. Herbert was the first to recover. He called up the mite of an office boy and thundered: "If this ever happens again out you go and you stay out. Do you understand?" When no one was looking Herbert took the "Compendium of Universnl Knowledge" and fired it to the top of the office bookcase, where it was last to sight although to memory dear. Thnt night Mr. Denn was so crnnky at dinner that his wife took him to task. "There's no sense in visiting your ill-temper on me," she said. "If things have gone wrong, tell me, and let me help you to right them. What happened to-day? Tell nie everything or nothing." "Everything is all right but I I think a storm is coming. You know that always affects me unfavorably." "Well, dear, it won't be a domestic storm. Oh, have you been getting me some new perfume? I smell white rose. You're a darling to think of it when you must have so much on your mind!" Herbert looked annoyed. "I wish you were not so whimsical, Edna. Ybu know I especially dislike per fumes." "Then where did you get that?" asked his wife, sternly. "I must have sat hy some fool woman in the car coming home." Edna laughed hysterically. "Oh, yes. Hy the way, Herbert, did my book ffent lady call on you?' I This was a crucial moment for poor Herbert. To tell or not to tell of his downfall? That was the ques tion that perplexed his soul. Alas, that lying should be to easy and truth so hard. "I told you she could not get into the office, did I not?" Then Edna drew herself up until she was half a foot taller than her usual self, and in a voice that made her husband tremble and turn pale, demanded: "Where is the book you bought from an agent this afternoon, and why did you not bring it home?" "Edna!" "Oh, you dear stupid man, if I had only made n bet with you I would have won it too easy. I caine so near' breaking down nnd telling you what a dear old. goose you were just like iny other man in the same circum stances. And yon never suspected me through nil that rigmarole?" "Kdnn," Mid her husband, gravely, 'I tlimt l.t you promised me that ' V'd vonlil no; n''t npain; that your: ilast apiicartiaco wits Unul." i ; "My ilcar. nil a'i'trosses nre allowed j ' several farewell taurs before they I ; ft 'Lire forever from . the footlights, Ua yri 0o offer such splendid mate-, : rial for 'melodrama. And. surely,! rt'rt, my audience to-day was ns elect as even yon could desire, Exeunt all." Chic 'o Eeeord-IIerald. ' . A WOMAN'S THROAT Ts her fortune if she chances to be a u or Albani, and that fortune is guarded ana nigm who me rtcru-si care. . iw.d Irifrhtcns a singer so mucn as a cough, livery woman ought to be afraid cough. It is nature's danger signal. - does not know of some sn-ect woman 1 silenced forever by disease which b with a slight cough. The use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Mt, Discovery will ensure a permanent cur the most obstinate and lingering cut, Kven when the lungs are involvi J there are hemorrhages and emacia' "Golden Medical Piscoverv" is gctn effective in restoring the diseased nr to sound health and strength. Tin no alcohol in til " Discovery nml entirely free from opium, cocaine an other narcotics. "I am frcliiisr quite well," writes Miss 11 A. Lewis, of No. 1129 24th Street. Wabhin U. C, "ami I owe it nil to Dr. Pierce's (. Metlical Discovery. I had been quite a h; for a lone time, ami after rVaitiirir Dr. lv Common Sense Metlical AUvier thought I u try m tjoio.cn AUtncai Discovery. 1 11. 1 been sleeping well for a long time. "Took r: ftpooniul of l)r. Pierce's (iolilen Mcilicnl 1): ery nnd l'pt nearly all night without cor ; so 1 continued tnliing it. 1 hnd been ;i sufferer for more than ten venr. 1 tried ! different medicines and different iloctu: did not feel much ttettct. I couched u commenced apittiug blood, but now I feet tA stronger ana am entirely wen." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense M Adviser, in paper covers, is sent fict recetnt of ai one-cent stamps to oav pense of mailing only. Address Dr. R. Pierce, Buffalo, N. V. PURE WHISKEY DIRECT FROM DISTILLS TO CONSUMER. Four Full Quart! $$.20 tD SEX Saw Dmitri' ProU PrtvtnU AittlttratM HAYNEfiS OUR OFFER I Wawlll wart bottle at Hit 7-Ymt-OM DM( DiaWtesI My far 1 exprsaei a'sTUttftJ taata. HaMMtOlici waaeracawaa; ratara at ear axjaast wi ratara ymi Such Whltktjf n't tthi tlmhtri for wis than i. Rsnaaitcci: Thlrt Nat'l Bank.Dayton; Stif nu'i Bast, Bt. Loan; or any 01 in ax. 10 THE MAYNER DISTILLING CO., aaaaaKBM taJ BTIJ4.L. a. M ALlJ 300-311 80. Seventh gt.g St. Louie, Md We (verentee etwve firm will do m It efreei. 'Unmo tinio mm n v rlonrvK caught a SHvere cold. She compla nrl nf rtfiinu in hr c.hpHt nnrl tin bad coutrh. I j?av bee Cbamb Iain's CU'rh Remedy ntrcordint; J! 1 . J 1. ., directions mm 111 two uh.vb b"e it II 1 .1.1- 1- 11 wen Him aui to 1:010 hclo'ii. 1 11 used this remedy in my family the past seven years and have hp known it to fail," says James l'r .lmaaDol cnnM!! f 11 I A Ttnlt It a tici cini f 11 r-1 tun Li ' iiiiuuiiw J- J Jamaica, West India Islands. 1 11 1. . 1: . 1 pain t 111 toe viiHNt lriuivaicu 4pproaching attack of pneumou ...i.:.u u,: ..j WII1CU IU IUIB lU'lHUl't) WHB UUUUU ,.Ar. I..rl 4V 1,.. ril,n.t,.nUi ituij IIIIIUCU JIL IIJ vunujuri'iiv Cough Hemedy, It counteracts! 'euaency 01 a com toward pc monia. Sold by Middleburg i. Store. Try four (ull anuria of Hayner'a 8even-V lid Uye, express prepaid, for 13 SO. For ulara, aee announcement of (ha Hayner I rilling Co., Dayton, Ohio, wbtcb appean ' wuere in una rnaue A (imi RMioitinaendatloii. "I have noticed that the sale Chamberltin's Stomach and Li r Ablets is almost invariably to tbol .vho have once used them, savsl J. H. Weber, a promineut drue? of Cascade, Iowa. What better rt commendation could any median nave ttian for people to call for wheu again in need of such a rt edyT Try them when you reel aw alter eating, when you nave a tj taste in your mouU, feel bilioj have no appetite or whtn trouoj with constipation, and you are i tain to be delighted witn tneproij rel:ef which they afford, lor i by the middleburg Drug Store, Ocrma Carried by Iaaeeti. If malaria is conveyed by mol toet it is probable that other in.'tj may play a like part. A French pl.l clan records that a certain famih a a member who for year was tub?. to frequent malarial attack, and xnree cnuciren in the family ' seized with the disease directlv some oleanders were brought into house. The malaria germ was fo: in lice on the plants. rtrunkennraa in America. Arrests for drunkenness In 12U ei'J of the United States are said tod preo-.uc 312,000 during the last year. A.vansns editor has offered a pr of a fur cape to the young woman sends in the bestl remedy lor llalns. Kextl TOBACCOSfMl and SM0M DON'T YourUfeaa.vl?, I i H 1 Vi Cffa n 1 x Veil can be cured of any form of tobacy" nh,, easily, be made well, strong, iiintriieti'". VAll new life and viiror by taking HO-i t U . ' that malcea weak men strong. a ten pounds in ten days. Orer SOO,Uuyn cured. All druftfrista. Cure auarariief1. 1 let ana navies 1-Kr.n. AOtircM p V in . . 1 .., f 1 C'l UHI.1I' HI an r,u w C bhi T h. K 11 m n ln 'i.l 4 Inli Iu. fruit CI 1 0: I'm' iV () wh TO l am iiuir Tl of an 'out iT c ;iay, U. mi, 1111; '11, 18 r, 11 111 jy. r, H'S, 1 nn! Wr, -', s :.s,. ', S III, n.T. Ii'. I-