PE-RU-NA CURES CATARRH OF KIDNEYS EVERY TIME. mm mBKBi DANGEROUS KIDNEY DISEASES Pe-rn-na (rriitliiir a National Sna1lim In Ihe Cure of Chronic Ailment of the klilnij. Mn.lor T. H. Mnts. of the First WIk rounln Cavalry liniment, write from 142. DnnnliiK liect, Chicago, 111., the following letter: "for yearn I Buffered with catarrh of the kidney contracted tn the arm ii. Mr (Urine did not help me anil until a comrade who had been helped by Peruna adrlned me to try it. I bouaht name at once, and noon found bleated relief. I kept tnktna it our month, and am now wetland ttrana and ret better than I hare done for the pat twenty year, thank to i'emna."T, II. Mar. Mr. .lohn Ynnce. of Hnrtford City. Itirl., Kayn: "My klilncy trouble In much lietter. I tinre improved bo much that everybody wiiiita to know what medi cine I am using. 1 recommend I'eriinn to everybody, and amiiv h:ive com menced to use It. The folk all say that if Pr. Unit in mi's medirlne cures lue It must be Brent." John Vance. ilr. J. Urake, of I'rtrolea, Ontario, t'anatln, write: "Four year ago I had a nevere attack of Brlnht' di cuhc. which brounhl me o low the doctor Hiild nothing mora could 6c done or me. I betian to take Peruna and Maual In, ami in three month 1 wan a welt man, and have con tinued mo ever Hfiicc. " J. lirake. At thcappearanceof the first nyniptom Color Photography Invented Again. A SwiyR amateur photographer, M. Adolphc Gartner, residing at Heine, has, It Ih until, discovered the secret of color photography after a numlioi of years of experiments. The inven tor takes hia pedographs on gla'-'s. porcclnln and paper, and In any color: the best romilm. however, being ob tained from blue, red and yellow. His Vrodurtlons on plans are veritable pictures, being tine to nature In every detail. Kvcn the shndca of coloring In a rose are canity distinguished in the photograph. The photograph of a landscape, viewed from a dlftnnce, re- Kembles a, painting. Some of the hol der colors give better results than the quieter ones, and Mr. (tart nor is nt present oreuplcd In remedying this partial defect. The secret lies In the "bath," and In llio developing pro cess, for iho photon, It is stated, are taken with nn oivlimiy camera. Many continental firms arc taking a great interest In the discovery. Much Marked Nots. Mi r, Snrah Know lex recently rerciv od In change an Interesting five-dollar note. No. 613,024, serteg of 1890, says the New York Press. It Is covered on both sides with 'the names of per sona who have handle l it. On the face Is stamped "Moon Kader Sultan, Sing apore," In blue Ink. the design Includ ing a number of Indian characters. Underneath Is Iho trademark of "Oor don & Co., Sydney, X. 8. v" Then follows a signature. "Manuel Prleto, an Salvador, Salvador, C. A.," and the date, "Juno 7. 1!mo." "Solon Leon, Graband, Prag Praha." Is the fourth mark. The filth in wrltton In so largo a hand that It covers the others: "Louise Morcau, Avenue du Troea doro, 7, Paris." On the back of the note is this: "Paid by Fred Nolmcycr to Ella 1-arkin, Washington, October, 28. 1901." A gentleman said to a waiter when eating some hnre; ' Walter. Is this hare three weeks old?" " "I dont ' know, sir; I have, only been here a foTtniiiht," returned, the waiter. Dark Hair " I have used Ayer'o Hair Vigor for great many years, and al though I am past eighty years of age, yet i nave not a gray Hair in my head." .. Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md. Vf7 mron o'l tht t-IVi dark color your hair used to have. If it's gray now, no matter: tor Avers Hair Vigor always re stores color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long; and it stops falling of the hair, too. SI.MlkeUU. All srai(tts. If your druggist cannot supply yon, and us on dollar and we will express joo a kuttla. It euro sodfrlvt the name oi sou nearest express office. Address, J. U AVlUi CO.,IwU, Iha, ' with TlrnB..!!.!. C. W. 4.. Hi IfM, I IIIIU If )1SI CURED of kidney trouble, Pe runa photild be taken. Till remedy strikes at once the very root of the dlene. It nt onrere-lievcMhccti-tnrrlinl kid ney of the s t it (Mi n n t blood pre v o n t I na the escape of Frrnm ikhii tlie blood. rcrtinn stimulate the kidneys to ex crete from the blood the acctiiniilntiiiK poison, and thus prevents the convul sions: which are sure to follow If the poisons are itllowed to remain. It gives prrat vltcor to the heart's action and digestive system, both of which are apt to fall rapidly In this disease. lVrunn cures catarrh of the kidneys simply because It cures cniarrh wher ever located. Tf you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of re runn. write nt once to lr. Hnrtmnn, giving n full statement of your case, mid lie will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address lr. Iliirtinnn. President of The Ilanmnii Kaultarlum, Columbus, Ohio. Woman and Plow. j An Iowa tinvelcr back from the new northwest frontier relates some of the hardships nf life there. He says: . "I . saw u colony of Gallclnns til Sas ; Uairhewnn. and they gave me tho most I extraordinary exhibition of human pa j tionce and fortitude I ever beheld. I ; saw from a dozen to fifteen women j hitched two and two on an IX intji breaking plow, nnd they marched j straight ahead through tho tougli ground with that p,lov. tearing up five acres a day on an average. There was i a man holding the plow. The work these people did was as effective as j could have been done by horses or i oxen. The women seemed to lake 1o i their hnrd labor as a matter of cinir.. :Tliry are very chccrlul over it. I am mid thnt sroros of. these women who dnw ploAfi all day have vitality enough, left to dance thvotigli the suvnu r pan of the night." The District's Flag, in responre to n suggestion that a Has should be adopted for tho Dls t.'lit of Columbia, corresponding to the various SlPte flags, District Com-ml-slr. ier MncKnrlnml said the other day: "The American flag Is the flag of the District of Colombia. It has never had any other. Tho States have State flags, some of which are very much older than tho United States flag. Rut tho national flag seems to he all sufficient, for the na tional capital, which is its special heme. People in tho district have never hern tempted to divide al legiance between two flags, and no such temptation should ever be of fered. "Dr. August Kornig'i Ilnmburj Breast Tra," writes Mr. F. Batxch, of Horiron, Wis., "enabled me to got rid of an obsti nste cough; we feel very grateful to the discoverer of this medicine." Used Wrong Stamp. In the Prussian town of Ranpln, In the province of Ilrandenbtirg, there is nn official, the overlapping of whose duties has recently produced a re mnrkahlo complication. In one ca pacity he is inspector of butchers' meat, and In another he has occas ionally to place the official seal on marrlago certificates. On one oc easlon he used the wrong stamp, and Instead of sealing the nuptial con tract ho certified that tho spouses wcre-free from trichinosis. The high court of Ilerlln has had to be sot In motion to rectify the error. Msy Be Made a British Colonel. A movement is on foot in London to make President Roosevelt a colonel in a British lino regiment. A precedent for such action is being; inquired Into. It Is a custom among European powers to confer honorary commissions on monarehs of other nations. Thus King Edward is colonel of a German regi ment and Kmperor William is tho nom inal commander of a BrltlHh regiment. A Serious Joke. ' Mark Twain protests that his letter ro the Secretary of tho Treasury was entirely serious, and that ha con siders tho coal strike In no sense a laughing matter. "Some of us" he added, "may find consolation In the thought that after we die we may be sufficiently warm, but I don't aee much prospect of our being over heated In this world." I eMmnr iti iliw fnnti. The silence of rmerspful farming, n well as success In any other line, recognizes the nll-importatft factor of rfonomy. Everything must be made use of; nothing he allowed to go to vaste. The bran of lite mill must be turned Into feed, the manure to soli and so on; everything must be put to tits, tnvftfttlnt In t'nrin. The beginner on a farm usually es timatis t.ie cost nf the farm as th largest pcndlturc, but ft farm Is an Incumbrance If the owner has not sufficient capital to derive the most from the land. Tjere Is a heavy out lay to be considered for buildings, horses, cattle, wagons, machinery Im plements, seeds and labor. The cost for the first year may exceed the val ue of the farm Itself. It. i better to begin with a sm.tll farm where the capital Is limited than to undertake ton much nnd lose nil by going into debt. IMril end Wril eH. While all birds aid the farmer In de stroying Insects It. remains for a num ber of them to rat weed feeds and thus help keep the weeds in check. The fnmlly of birds that do the most toward ' this arc the native sparrows. The Enpllsh sparrow is not to be tinsFed with them In this regard. Eng lish sparrows do harm, also, when In large nninhers, In driving away the native birds from their nesting plai-es, tints expiring them nnd their young to danger In more exposed nesting ites. They also ent grain and are more harmful than beneficial. On the other hand, the song, vesper and chipping sparrows, as well as the field bunting, consume great quantities of weed seeds from the time they first tipen until late In tee tall, and the song nnd tree sparrows with the snow bird pracihally subsist on them during the winter. The retlwinged blackbird also eats 1: tge quantities of weed seeds, and tne meadow lark and brown thrasher both tensnme tome during certain season of the year. It Is pleasant to tee and hear these birds, but It In pleasantnr still to real ize tiint tin y are preventing the growth of a grett deal of noxious vegetation. II. K. Havdixk, In New York Tri bune and Farmer. CivHtllitg Crnnm. To ry the same price for rancid i ream as for sweet cream la manllestly unfair and ruinous to the whole busi ness. To absolutely reject all off grade c-fam will Improve the grade of but ter made. Hut off flavored cream has r.ome value, although Icfs value than good cream. Only three things are possible mix oil together and dam age the whole churning, return the ;or grille nnd lose the patronage nnd insure h-:nvy loss to Ihe patron, or t:iade and pay for each grade according to approvlmate value. It. takes a man with a trained nose end trained taste to grade cream. It can he done by mechanical tests, but practically tnc human Bcnses are to be relied upon, and a man without these senses well developed Is out of phun In a creamery. We are speaking of r.elhered ("(am plants, nnd believe that an ambition to get Into the beat class, best in honors and best In payment, can bo stimulated among the patrons, and that time put In showing the pa tron how ho can get there and stay thcro will be very profitably spent. This is something more than theory, fo;- it has been made an accomplished fact in ho many cases that It must he acknowledged to he practical. We do not mean that grading cream, holding it; different vats and churning sepa rately, have become every day prac tices in creameries, but that keeping out the worst and (hurnlng It after ward can be done, and that rushing direct for the home of a patron with a road horse and road cart has done wonders lr improving the cream of those patrt ns. In all such cases the rutter maker should not stop to argue or talk much, but r.pcak to tho point and leave at once without listening to excuses or recriminating palaver. Creamery Journal. OverOcilina; of 4;lili knt. The overfeeding of chickens go sel dom happens that it may seem a little strange to call attention to It, but over feeding In connection with too little exerclso is so common that many might profit by considering the ques tion. Feed the chickens with a liberal diet of corsmeal, mash, oats, bran and middlings, and If they do not take too much exercise they will become dumpy and heavy, and some will actually dlo ever night without any apparent cause. Some chickens are naturally active enough to take all tho exercise they need to keep their (systems in gov.l condition, but tnere are others consti tutionally lazy, and they will fatten themselves to death, and nover at tempt to work off tho great amount of food accumulating in their systems. They become laiier the moro they eat of the heavy food. Onl must in such Instances eitner reduce the quantity and quality of the food or maXeS, chickens take more exercise. 'Jno lat ter Is not always satlbfactory, because of the effect ltjtas upon their egg lay ing. The best method is to study the food question. We must learn something about tho individuality of our flocks lu order to understand their needs properly. Soma breeds are so much more active and nervous than others that the same rations and treatment will not rfpply to them as to some oth ets. The nervous, restless chlckeni should be made to flock together. They would pine away and din If confine ! In a narrow enclosure where tho dull, hravy chlikenn might find Ideal quar ters. A defective flock needs heavy feeding to bring them up, and nn over fed flock r-eeds smaller rations nnd a little more exercise. As the flock Is fed It will be found that some Individuals will show pecu liarities ff their own, nnd they should lc separated 'from the til hi rs to pre vtnt Injury to the others. We ran do no better than to study the flocks In this way tnd gradually sort out. Cm prolific layers, the ncllve nnd nervous, ones, and the dull phlegmatic om tn form new flocks. Annie C. Webster. In American Cultivator. Ornharits In tli Tn'.t. During the late fall Is the best and most suitable time for giving attention to the trees, not. only because there Is belter opportunity for so doing, but. etso because the pruning of the trees nnd the removal of diseased portion ran be done less hurriedly than In the Fpring. Neglefllng the orchard Is tho cnuse of trees htlng unprofitable, but where farmers have recognized the or i hnrds as sources of profit, and regard ed the trees as something more than ornaments, or as occupying tho ground from custom, the returns have been setlsrnctory. The land used for the oirhnrd Is frequently forced to bear two crops the year, one of p.rain nnd cne of fruit, the latter crop coming be cause It Is natural for trees to attempt to benr fruit, even tinder unfavorable (iicumnUnces, while the grain was In tended for market. When land Is thus taxed It will be but a few years before It Is exitiusted, as It is better to cut the trees down and give the land whol Iv to grain than to leave the trees lo tiniice the grain yield nnd at the same time produce only unmarketable fruit. Oraln and fruit irops on the sume kind remove the fertilising materials of the soil very rapidly; yet farmers celdom apply manure on orchard land, preferring to use It. on other fields. The on hnrd must tnkc care of Itself, he coming the prey of Insects and dis eases, and the trees make but llttbt growth, or die. when they could, with care, be made to produce good paying 1 1 ops at less cost for labor than grain. A rrop of grain or grass may bo taken from the land occasionally, but If requires time to establish en or chard ; heme It Is a serious mistake to neglect trees and allow them to become dbcaned when the labor of making an r.tchard ar.d the loss of time waiting for the t.ees to reach the bearing stage )a Kinsildered, When an orchard has become overrun wllh weils. or the trees show signs of decay, the first v.ork should bo to rut away all dead or diseased limbs and then plow the gtound, applying 10 bushels of lime per acre, or Jj bushels of wood ashes, har rowing th.' land. Work In an orchard Ir difficult, on account of the rootn, but it. Hhoiild lie plowed as well as ro.'tdiile, f,i as to break tip the hard surface sell. Itye or crimson clover iltr.,,1.1 tUnn l.n I... 1 I. I .. riKiun, 'I 'I Ml' Pfflt-U, l III ,p 1UII, I and the ground plowed again In tho I rpn.ir. tuning the rye under. Cow ft as may then lie sowed on the ground, I efter dnnper of frost .t over, and If I ni sired th low peas may be fed off by tdieep. us the animals will relnrn a urs" proportion of the crop to the soil as 'iivtniire. With the application of Planum 'r fertiliser the orchard may then be ti eded to clover, but. no or chard should be kept permanently In piE-s. The proper plan Is to plow the clever (or uny grass crop) under, and then grow Into potatoes, cubbnges or con'e oilier crophiit Ih cultivated be tween the row and which requires mn u u ring. Peach trees thrive bent when given clean cultivation, like corn, a crop of any kinii sometimes doing harm. Clean cultivation, with n mulch crop, such a rye. sowed In the fall and turned under In the spring. Is usu ally beneficial. Diseases sometimes almost imper ceptihly spread in winter. No mat ter how careful the grower maj be he will frequently leave fallen fruit, dead grass, leaves or any other refuse ma terials around the trees In winter. They are the vehicles pf germs, and as tho winds scatter light substances to other locations the failure to clean away the refuse from a Blngle Infected tree may cause the spread of disease over the entire orrhnrd. It Is useless to cut away dead limbs and burn them If the H'ows of fungus diseases can be scat tered broadcast by materials that cculd easily be cleared up and in a si ort time. Work during the winter can hs done to .good advantage tn de stroying the borers, and the eggs of the millers whlca proriuco worms can he cleared from tho trees; In fnct, every tree will bo benefited by scraping and washing with a strong solution of lye, while paintlns the trees In winter with crude petroleum is claimed to bo a remedy for the pcale Insect, The trees o? an orchard usually show tho effects of stood treatment. The peach, which Koraestrrfes appears to succumb to no cause.lll respond to severe pruning ar.d take on new life. Many trees, es pecially those lit old orchards, bio just as they were when first set out, never having been trimmed. They can be Improved by pruning, but It should be dene Judiciously, and not fiV going iuto the orchard with an ax and saw to cut ivyay tho tree Indiscriminately. Or chards that have never paid a dollar ran be made to give good profits if the same labor is given them aa is be stowed on grain crops. Philadelphia Itecord. ' A H.ll.t. Currle Iilghead Is quite a charac ter, is he not? Peter Yes. He Is one of those fel lows that are willing to make fools of themselves to show their Individual ity. Judge. V ft-' s.. WHITE PASS RAILROAD. Its Construction a Wonderful Feat of Engineering. The building of this remarkable rail way over Iho White Pass was 0110 i;t Ihe most wonderful feats or engineer ing in the history of tho world. Tho tirst 20 miles is a continuous upgrade of nearly 2m feet to the mile. It cost $i;n,noi to tho mile, a total of fl.2m,. (mhi. Tho construction from the sum mit to Dennett, ii. C.. has an average downgrade of 2 per cent, or ttiu ti-et to tho mile. This part of tho road Is 22 miles in length, and cost 14:1,000 to the mile, making a total of fli'ift, nn. From Dennett to White Horsu, the 7'-:nllo stretch cost over $1!I,immi to the mile or n total of $l,:!"8,oiio, bringing tho total cost of tho 112 miles, with equipment, ready for. business, to Jfi.lO.VlMi'i. Ki was started In April. ISlis, and complotcd In June, liw. This Is the northernmost railway on the American continent. It. hips ono of thn ilehit mineral districts upon tho globe- the tipper Yukon basin, which. In less than live yours, has produced enough gold ta glvo more than a dol lar to every man. woman and child in tho I'liited Htutes, If distributed per capita. I' to tho present time the principal revenue of the road has been derived from hauling rrelght, but the Wmnlnlriil ...I , - .. , , ,,, rii-ini' MM WllllilgOH oi tne I louto are beginning to uttract tho at-! trillion oi loill'lsis. Prof. I.nthnm. In his ethnological dietetic Indifference. Kffete nation loso their alimentary conscience, nnd at last become omnivorous llko plga Hiid Chinamen. According to that theory, regeneration ought to begin with tho revival of dietetic scruples, and In-Chile, where tho Spanish race has almost recovered tho physical prestlgo of its ancestors, fastidious ness In food matters ha nctm.nu mado progress enough to astonish Cas- nun immigrants, -me InsiVctor of the Valparaiso provision market treats adulteration mongers as a bank com trollnr would treat a forger, and a Dickie V( ider. trvlnir tr. .i. color, of his cucumbers with verdigris, runs a risK ot expiating his sin in a chain gang. Honey peddlers often ex hibit hive combs as black as pltih, nn can oe reueq upon to shun glu cose, if they valuo their license. Per- uapa nownere eiso In America 1m slaughterhouse stock an .....r..n.. selected. And that sunltary rigorism "oiiiuiiiiiig moro than selcncu en forced 11 Don n senil.liurltai-m.a hyglonle InstlncU assert themselves among the working classes of tho pop- lllatloll. and thn riluxnt-ari nt ....! fed on brewery swill would be apt to i""v"i" a aiou riot. Burled on Horseback. Lord Daere. who Hbi tn- i, i casUrlans at Towton, England, in ji-i, uirocien mat ir he were killed in battlo his favorite nu,. i.... ' . fFi t)houli be burled in the same grave with him. According to his wishes. uut-mieni tcyoK place In Saxon churchyard after the battle a tremendous grave was dug and in it tho warrior was Imriori muj .... right on his horse. For centuries re- iieciiouH were cast upon the accuracy of this tradition but a few vn.,.- while excavations for new graves wore ooing maue, tne report was verified by the discovery ot the skele tons of a horse and rider. The eynnrt of enal la l.w.. i , v. .a UJ Verv Imnnrtatit In latin., a t .... , - - ... ,...,, uiuwuilliiip. In value, as It did In 1900, to $ 10,241,- i u, a iuimc proportion ot mat tiaj been sent to China, British India, Wnn it Won a mnA iha Mmn i. . r. csi uiu VllinillUUr iu other co'uUrles in the Eastern seas. Al m: jrv.. I. tfc -v A A A A THE CHILDREN ENJOY Life out of doors and out of the games which they play and the enjoy tttcnt which they receive and the efforts which they make, comes the greater part of that healthful development which is so essential to their happiness when grown. When a laxative Is needed the remedy which la given to them to cleanse and sweeten and strengthen the internal organs on which It acts should be anch aa physicians would sanction, because its component parts are known to he wholesome and the remedy Itself free from every objectionable quality. The one remedy which physicians and parents, well-informed, approve and recommend and which the little ones enjoy, because of its pleasant flavor, its gentle action and its beneficial effects, is Syrup of Figs and for the aame reason it la the only laxative which should be used by fathers and mothers. 8yrnp of Figa is the only remedy which acts gently, pleasantly and naturally without griping, irritating, or nauseating and which cleanses the system effectually, without producing; that constipated habit which results from the use of the old-time cathartics and modern imitations, and against which the children should be so carefully guarded. If you would have them grow to manhood and womanhood, atrong, healthy and happy, do not give them medicines, when medicines are not needed, and when nature needs assistance in the way of a laxative, five them only the simple, pleasant and gentleSyrup of Fig. Its quality i due not only to the excellence of the combination of the laxative principles of plants with, pleasant aromatic syrups and juices, but also to our original method of manufacture and as you value the health of the little ones, do not accept any of the substitutes which unscrupulous deal ers sometimes offer to increase their profits. The genuine article may be bought anywhere of all reliable druggists at fifty cents per bottle. Please to remember, the full name CALIFORNIA FIG SYR. VP the front of every pack age. In order to get its beneficial effects it Is al ways necessary to buy the -ennine onl v. tv ' .rn in i !.n : it .'V-i . Tho motto, "Dleu et Mon Droit." was first assumed by ICdward III. of Kngland when he took tho title of Klnpf of Krence. There u unite a nitterenee tie?Trrn a shrewd mnn and one who marries a tihiiiv. SrTF er Omo, OittT or oledo, f.iiess fJo7KTT. I ' Fbank J. t.'sssRT.mskn nntht'mt he Is senior nitrtnnrof the firm of F. J. Cbsvi'.t A :o., doing bnstness tn tho :ity of Toledo, ( oulitT and Htats nfornsnld, and tiuit said firm will piy the. sum of ork niTNnnRn eoL I.sns for each and overyeasoof cATAnnnlhnt ennnot he enrcd by the use ef Hall's C'atarsh Ccrr. Frahic J. Chf.xkt. Kwnrn to lifore me nnd suliseriheil in my . - prftsenen, this Oth day of Deeember, SCAL. A. !., IrtHO. A. W. Cil.EASOK, Notary 1'nrilie. Hiill'sCatmrh ru re Is taken Internally, and nets directly on thn blood nnd mitr-miK sur faces of the syntom. Send for testimonials, fre-i. K. J. OnRKRT & Co., Toledo, O. Huld by lrugitits.7j". Hull's Family Tills are thn best, Ameriean linolype ninchines anl printing presses re nxed in Kngland. FITSfiermnnmitlyetired.No (Its or nervnns. ressaftorllrst tltf't nso of lr. Kline's (treat Norveltestorer.J atrial bottle iiml tri'iitlseTrue JJr.li. II. Ki.irk. l,td.,li:U AreliKt.. I'iiiln., ra. American windmills can he seen in the land nf the .Ionian and llashun. IVtre.WInslow'sSootlilngRympfnrelillilrea teetliing.sottnn the gums, rcdiures iiill.iiiiiiia tiou.nllayspain.eure wind eolie. '23 . a bottle '"'lying fiJi have been known to jump ten feci above the surface of the sen. Putnam Kaucm-ks Dvks produre the brightmt and fastest colors. Smne people who run into dbt are forced to crawl out. rise's Cure nnnnot be too highly spoken M si aeouch euro. J. W. O'IIsikm sii Tiii.l Avenue, N.. sllanepolb, Minn., Jno. a, U 1 'f'he millionaire's chief end is the divid end. Nopaln-oaraof snv' .njhatereriiieceedftil tncsmpsUncwtthST. JacoshOii. Ilsvlrtues turm beea prodalmrd by millions of restored riMrrer. who hvc been cured rf RHEUMA TISM. NFOHALCIA. SCIATICA and msny olhar paialul rfiaeues by its use. It has been aptly tanned Ihe freM conqueroe of pain. From tuosedespeir (Ires way to Joy. It heals quickly and surely. It is simply marvelous. 2Jc. and &Oc sUaa, ns oir.AT nitrriATiso rowtt BEACHES TUC CAUSE OP PAIN. CSTAAUSHE0 Ft ITT IUU. at A CONQUERS 1 tmilHIIIIIHIIHMIHti Ceualas ataaned C C C stover sold la balk. Bewaia fist dealer who tries to (ell "aaaBthJagjaat a good." , c.?:t i of the Company CO. - i printed on 1 A 7 t.' rsTfr r - v i. '-...ttiJ' ! s ': . VJ KNOWN J , 1 S IrfsftC'rULLY BACKEDBYOUR CUARANTU JSZjUjEj .A3, rouR PBALER 7Tfrvf"lJ PARC CAJALnij C50f crrns WANS I have been using Ripans Tahulcs for over two years as a medicine for general ills. I always keep a sup ply on hand, and find they come in handy for everyday use in case of headache, constipation or a bilious attack. At druggists. I'he Fivs-Cent packet is enough for aa ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for a year. U INVESTMENT The. Preferred Stock of the ' W. L, Douglas scho.e Capital Stock, $2,000,000. SI, 000,000 Preferred Stock. S 1 ,000,000 Common Stack. Shares, $IOO each. Sold at Par. Onl Praf rred Stock offered for r!e. W. L. Dauglas retain 1 all Common Stock. Why IfiTTdt )Mmr iinirtey t jt' nr whn thr W. U nuiivft.ui l'rt(trml stiH'k pay 7- nij, m l4liit1 VHaft. Kvt-i vl Uiiror iitM'k !lertNl t tie pu bUc ! -iiiimI u uiom atvtai. . I- IImmI i I'ontim i own svi v l' tltA hllMltif innt u to r nit tlieftivotic vl I iiH (oiieni, I'lim ium -m i not mi nmU Vfilrl r'MK.-t. It IKkV dfliloli ntntirt-l .livulftt (i.irt-r. Ttil i ltl l irUl'41 li ItllU'M III lht W ni l. lirl tvi!i.r l.n'iii.Hti vein WVl : ll Hill Hewitt H'iH-i'4A) lllOf., :un illv:iyi wi ii t tliii'ttMl ir-tluM . TIih lKmlti4si tMtt IlitllMt tl-TVn IIIMlH'llti'lll u iMiininicK, n-ru n it) nut h. n a yvnr In Hi unM IWflVW W 11111 tlttl lIHtltW till iit Mirtifi in n-iicil lmiIi miidi luji-., timii tho aim tint nmt'iiMirr ! imj il .tivlVii t on ula yretnwi alot-k or Sl.nft .iW). J tl ll!lrl ll tMSl.M t. ivy t f. rsllt.llU. It T UK'Is-ilKillff VTV 1.1IH. Ilr. aii wtll finul fT.inniu Jur 11 it yciir IH. I.i fut'torviN iMtw liirmiiic out "Mm ninm of Ui per d iy. ttitl;iil;i UilioTi n L 1 ! )l:(i.l in Winn Imilt wlii. li will liH'ii'inHilm .'upui- ly io id.i.ai itiiirn ikt iur. TUn rmttm I am iiffrrinii tlm iTutvireti Hlovk lir kle la la iHTpfiii.ttt I lit hiuurifiu, U vou wih to invent In tho bent W tMulneu In thn woritl, wlm-fi ib Mr:ntiitetil.'iuiil reeeivi 7'i oil Titiir injney, you un pun-litiM t.tte Mm re .r niom In lln lfrej.1 b,.u.s. Nr-iui mut-itsy Uy (-HMlikTJ.-fw. k..nitte,l ww'r or ney onlerm, mmlit imviihle Ui W. I.. Ionl ji. I urililfHia of ttto.-k will Iw .-m Toil Dy It-Mim ni'ill, Primiieelii.(ivinu lull InloriliJlton iretj, W, J.. UOliJiAii, Urwok&uH, Mum. DROPSY,",?. t-avitM. baoa of tMuanoaialt iu NEW DISCOVERT: ioa .r lunatr irniim Fr. Dr. i. . uiuoji fuut. iM . iu(o,. P. N, U. 45, '02, a.. m I 1 tn time. ild br drasvlets. I I