HARRY AND i ,A nmutlful Cnimdinn catarrh or the Lunps by re-ru-iia. 1 yJ i . j trk. crr. MISS FLOREM'E KENAH. " Miss Florence E. Kdi.ili, 4:11 Maria ''A few month an I rawi'it ft aevere rob!, which eettle.il on my !tnf and remoftteii there go iiersfit'eiiff w that i became alarmed. 1 tnofc ttietll elne without benefit, until my lf?rsm'0 orgiini bwame upset, and my head and back bernn In ache nrverely and ;n quently. "I trai adulnnl to try IV run a, a nd atfiouuft I And little faith, I felt to tick that 1 wae ready in try anytltinri. It brought me blemed relief at nee, and I felt that I And lie right medicine, at Inst. Wtthln three weeke Z wai completely restored and h:tve en fayed perfect health ulnre. " 1 now have the rente! faith in feruita." F. K. KEXAM. VI TOM EN should beware of contract y ln catarrh. The cold wind ami rain, slush and mud of winter nro es pecially conducive to ratarrhiil de rangements. Few women pgcape. Upon tlie first symptoms of tatclilns cold I'eruna should tie taken. It fortl flea the system against colds and ca tarrh. The following letter ptves one youn(x Woman's experience with I'erunn: Mlgg Itoge Oer'iiluK lg n popular soci ety womnn of Crown Polut. lud., and the writes the following: "Recently 1 took a lone drive In tin country, and being; too thluly clad I caught a bad cold which serl led on my lungs, and which I could not seem to hake off. I had heard a great tlnnl of Peruna for rolda and catarrh ami I An Accommodating Messenger. Henry Neal, Speaker Henderson's eelored messenger, has occupied his present position ever since his appoint ment by Mr. Randall. Then he said be hailed from Pennsylvania, and as succeeding Speakers were chosen he promptly changed hla birthplace in the various States from which they came. It rather stumped him when he was in formed that Mr. Henderson was a na tive of Scotland, but he compromised by declaring himself a resident of Iowa. On March 4 next he will doubtless transfer his allegiance to Danville, III. He has hardly ever been out of Wash ington In his life. Hay is the most profitable crop in England. Capsicum Vaseline PIT IP IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES. A Bnbwtltnt for nnd Vniwior to Muiturtl nrttny ther pU"ter, nd will not bl inter th uiont dHtriite) kin. Tb pain nilvtnn-nd citrl1v quilltif at tht ftrtlrl tr wonderful. It will itop th tooth ftcbs t anvm tnd rl.vt ht4v4'hi and a-!e.tla. Warronimfnd1t a th bMt and mfent irrnM Conn tr-l nit ant known, alio an an eitmnal ri viv for paint in tne meat ana rommn ami an riifu tnatic, nruralirlr and muty com, 'Uinta. A trial will rova wliat wa rlalm for It, and H will ba found to pa lnTaiiiama in 'um nimirnniu. 31 suit paopia "It la tU twat of all your r"t arationa." PHo, 1A rents, at dnisrfrit, or ntr ricMlTS, or hr aandlnr thla amount to ua In noaiaura atautua wa will aend von a tub by mail. No article annnld ba arrtitd by the ruhltc nnls tha aama carnaa uur Ubal, aa otharwliia it la not ranaina. 17 State Street. New York City. Tke (knume TOWERS POMMEL SLICKER HO MEN ADVERTISED AND J OLD FOP A QUARTER OF A CENMY. LIKE ALL ,SlWATl!PK)OF aOIHING. It l atit of the but 'Mentis, m bUckortlow. fulh euanntcci nd told ij fcluMc 4ekr exrwherc. TKH TO TMl 5IGN OF TKt FISH. WWWMMUWMMWWWMMU POTATOES! $2.60 Bbl. II TMftata, Ivalta, HHtrtil Wki.t, as k ft.. Vmv 9HM A.IAjJflEt.gCM.m Wla. GREGORY'S Found nluibl CCThC (nrtorMm Nw EZ. CZ- MJ S CtUimfW tML. J. t. U. twtwy 4, . SALESMAN WAN 'j Ksoellaat epportanlty for to anaratir man. En 1 anarfatir man. En On 8110 111. ltfth Htrvat, PATENTS H. W.T.-tannar.Waah iufton, D.C. Haudttil ei miliar. gooa ian luay iuak yuu liuU. P. N. U. 10, '03. i,;,s toHti F in u (his. BMtc CouKh Bjrup. TuwaUuud. CM to tlma. tt'ild by druwliu. tiffli ASP 1 HEALTHY. Girl Saved From street, Ottawa, Out., writes: bought a bottle to try. I am pleased that 1 did. for It brought gpeedy relief. It only took n limit two bottleg, and I cuiiHldered this money well gpent. "Yon have a firm friend In me. and I not only odvlge Its ukc to my friends, but have purchaged gevcral bottleg to give to thoKo without the meang to buy, and have nut Iced without exception tbnt It hag brought nbout a gpeedy cure wherever It has been used." Migg Hose (ierlilng. If you do not derive prompt and snt Isfactory i-priiIIs from the use of I'erunn, write at once to lr. Hartinnn, clvlng a full statement of your case and he will he pleased to give you bis valunhle advice gratis. Addresg Dr. Hart man, rreslrtent of The Hartinnn Sanitarium, C.'olumbng.O. Paris' Tree-Lined Streets. In Parts wide tree-lined avenues bare been made in every district. Nothing of the kind sxists either in London or New York. Foreigners, who only know the luxurious quarters. Imagine that the boulevards and avenues of the western part of the city are the only ones that have trees, says the Archi tectural Record. They would be sur prised to see that in the east and south working-class district there are similar broad roadways, the same roomy sidewalks, the same lines of trees and that the Place de la Nation, the Place d'ltalle, the Place de la Re publlque and the Place de la Bastille have no need to be Jealous in this re spect of their more aristocratic sisters, the Place du Trocadero and the Place de l'Etollo. For the most part, the tree employed especially in the cen ter of ParlB is the allanthus. There are, however, also many plane-trees, and, in the wider avenues, chestnut trees. In 1890, the trees lining the public thoroughfares numbered 84,9.10, besides thoso growing in the public squares, gardens and parks. Dut the art of making a city beautiful must be practiced down to its minutest detail, and therefore do not let us be afraid o go down on the street and see how t is ornamented, lighted and rendered pleasant and commodious; in a word, how it is furnlBhed. A promenade through Paris will teach us much, and in this respect American cities. New York first of all, can protlt by the ob ject lesson which this Is going to give them. Tills 'Will Iiltnal Mother!. Mother (tray's Sweet rowdr for Children', nned by Mother Gray, a nur In Children's Home, Now York, eur Conatlpatlon, Fevsr ishness. Teething Dliordera, Htomaoh Trou ble and Soatroy Worms; 80,000 testimonials of cures. All druggists, S& Samplo Fbkc. Address Alien 8. Olmated, L Roy, N. Y. It's ray enough to be good-natured if you always have your own way. 100 Reward, S)100. The renders of tbls paper will be pleased to Jearn that there Is at least one dreaded dis ease that soienoe has been able to cure In alt Its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is tue only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's CatarrhCure Is taken inter Bally; anting illrootly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ng the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up theoon ititut'on and assisting nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith In Its curative powers that they ofTer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, bend tor list of testimonials. Address F. J. CasxEt 4 Co., Toledu, 0. old b) Druggists, lie. Hall's Family 1'IIIm are the best. We are too apt to throw bouquets at the dead aid mud at the living. FITS permanently ourod. No fits or nervous rets after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerveltestorer.t'trial bottleand treatisefree Dr. B.H. Klims, Ltd., Ml Arch St., l'ullaf a. The man who gives up his seat in a crowded car sn't always so polite at home. M rs. Wlnslow's BoothlngSyrup for shlldrea teething, soften the gums, reduoes Inflarnma lion .allays paln.eures wind oollo. 26c. abottle The oftener Cupid bits the mark tbs more Mrs. he makes. Jam sure Plso's Cure for Consumptlonsaved my 111 three year ago. Mas. Thomis Hob. tikt, Maple Ht., Norwlun, N. Y Feb. 17, WOD. All men may be bjrn equal, but they don't stay that way long. Economy is the road to wealth. Put fau Fadeless Dicks is the road to econ omy. An intellectual feast depend largely uuon the mental dilution. . Growing Cabbages. If cabbages are set ont one yard each way ncnrly 6000 can be grown on onn acre. Such being the case. It Is a profitable crop when successfully grown, nn this vegetable not only sells well, but :n nct'ount of it keeping qualities BfTunls green food In winter for animals and poultry, as well as for the family. Lambs In Winter. When winter sots In I separate the lambs from the flock, nn-.l every morn ing nnd evenlnK clean out all the mangers (ait the cheep tire very dainty), nnd throw t!ie rubbish to the liorses. They will clenn It nil up with a relish. Feed the lambs some kind of screenings. I generally use screen ings gathered from under the thresh ing machine, and they do well on It. In enso of shortage upo barley and bran mixed, care being taken not to over-feed at the beginning. Nothing needs to be ground for elieep. Feed the grain morning and evening. One pound per day of the grain feed Is tsttfllclcnt for each head. I feed them all liny both morning and evening. If there are any poor ones among the cwea, they are turned In among the lambs. They are all turned out in the day time if the weather Is flno. C. Manson, in The Cultivator. Success With Lettuce Under Glass. The dimensions of our let tuce houso are 102 by 15 1-2 fpt, In which we grow 3500 beads of lettuce, each crop, planted 8 by 8 Inches. The house Is a three quarter span, the back Is B feet high, double boarded and lined with papor; the ridge la 8 1-2 feet high, back raft ers 6 feet, front rafters 12 feot; south side 2 feet 3 Inches high, and Is all glnRs; sills are 3 by (I, studs and plate 2 by 4. rafters 2 by 3 Inthes; the 12 foot rafters are supported In tho mid dle by a purlin of 1-Inch Iron pipe sup ported at intervals of 9 feet; the ridge is aupported by 3-lnch Iron pipe. Tho ventilating apparatus is in two sections, operated by wheel and spiral screens. Thermometers are placed about 10 inches above the soil. The only walk is a line of bonrds 10 Inches wide extending the length of the house. For heating we have a corru gated fire-box boiler. The house con tains a little over 1000 feet of 2-inch pipe, four rows of which are on the south side and 6 inches along the north. On the north side directly over the pipes we have a bench the entire length of the house, 20 inches wldo, on which we grow a quantity of Easter stock, besides several thousand bed ding plants. The temperature main tained is 40 to 65 degrees. Dean Ferris, In Now England Homestead. Handling Frozen Cream. The following account of how froxen cream from the hand operator is han dled in Finland Is reproduced from an English dairy journal: It may Interest your readers to know that in Finland this is practiced with considerable mioress. I have seen cream arrivals at the dairy practically a solid froxen mays, after being five days in transit from tho farm to the dairy. This syetem of sending frozen cream. Instead of milk, to the dairy. Is a good one, as It saves carriage. The cream is refrigerated In the following manner at the farm: Nearly every farmer has a separator. The cream is run into the can in which it will make its Journey. This can is placed in a specially designed wooden tub and small pieces of ice packed closely around It. Over this ice a common kind of coarse salt Is eprlnkled, which intensifies the cold. A careful record of temperature, both of the freezing mixture and the cream is kept stirred from time to time, until the required degree of cold is reached. The trains are provided with spe cial cars to take the cream. The tem perature of these cars Is capable of being lowered or raised, according to tho time of year. The cans of refrig erated cream on arrival at the dairy are first weighed, then graded, as we would butter. The qualities are usu'l ly first, second and third. After grad ing, the tins are placed In the thawing room. Great rare is required not to tbaw too quickly. When tho neces sary temperature is reached, the cream Is taken to tho ripening-room, and after this the process of butter pro duction Is tho same as in any dairy. It la not recommended that cream should be frozen solid, aa the result ant butter is not of such a good quality as from the semi-frozen article. The cans used vary in size from a pint to five gallons. They are very strongly made, and capable of being eaElly cleaned. Tho smallest farm In Fin land has his hand separator. Fodder Foods and Bran. Whether a farmer should sell a ton' of corn and buy a ton cf bran when both are worth the same In the market must depond largely upon the cost of transportation. There la also a differ ence In the bran from winter and spring wheats, and tho value of bran lH also largely Influenced by tho pro cesses used for removing it from wheat at the mills. The true value of bran to the farmer Is the proportion of protein and ash (mineral matters) contained. If corn Is exchanged for bran, and bran la used on the fanm as food for stock, thero Is brought on the farm more protein than is con tained in corn, as well as a larger pro portion of the phosphates (bone-forming elements) than the corn contain. The manure from bran Is also much more valuable than that from corn, and when a fair price can be obtained for corn It should be to the advantage 1 of farmers to sell their corn and buy bran fo- stock If bran does not exceed ' $15 per ton. 1 The crop of fodder from a field ot corn should be equal In value to the grain taken therefrom, anil yet the : fodder la wasted and the grain saved. ' In fart, If the fodder Is given no bet ter treatment than It receives on some farms, It would be cheaper to drive Into the fields, pull the ears from the stalk's, throw them Into a wagon and haul direct from tho field to the crib, leaving the stalks standing, than to ex-, pen.l labor In cutting the corn and putting it Into shocks, with the ad (II- , tlonal work of husking the grain after , the corn la shocked, as it will save , labor by so doing, If the fodder la to be wasted. It Is a very disagreeable task to husk the corn in the field in cold wectlier, nnd It Is an easy matter to pull the ears from the standing rorn, which can bo husked more con veniently at the barn. Careful experiments made show that the fodder crop Is more valuable than may bo supposed, and that a larger proportion of the fodder would be con sumed If It were properly cared for, fo as to be kept in a bright condition. If hay were treated In the same man ner as fodder 1t would be rejected, but even In the condition In which fodder Is given to stock they accept and consume a fair quantity of it. Farmers who have been careful with their fodder have found that when It was cut up fine with the feed-cutter and fed in connection with ground oara and bran, not. only to cattle, but horses, have been brought safely through tho winter In good condition, and at less cost than with any other kind of foods. It Is a willful waste of labor to carefully shock the fodder and then leave It, for even if not de stroyed by winds) and rains In the field It Is so deteriorate?! In quality aa to be unacceptable to stock. Corn fodder can bo made to assist the hay as food, but the point to ob serve, nnd which Is known by all ex perienced farmers, Is that corn fodder must be bright. Economy of feeding with fodder la to make It assist hay, as the morn fodder used to advantage, tho more hay can be sold or used for additional stock. The main point Is to preserve the fodder In winter, and make It assist In producing a profit on the farm. The greater amount of protein In bran as compared with corn, should make It more suitable than corn for cows which produce milk that Is sold dally, as a largo proportion of nitro gen Is carried away In milk. There Is also n gain In the mineral elements tn tho use of bran, as corni Is deficient in that respect For young and grow Ing stock tho foods that contain the mineral elements should be preferred, but where Unseed meal and closer are) nsed there will be no necessity for feeding bran. A large number of fann ers purchase bran, and it will be to their Interests to endeavor to know something of the various kinds on the market, as a falling off in the nutri tious elements of the bran used may really cause It to be expensive. A great many farmers feed the ground material Independently of the coarse food. It Is considered more la borious to mix all tho feeding mate rials together, for the reason that If the ground grain Is to be mixed with the hay and fodder the latter must be pae3ed through the cutter and re duced to a fine condition. Of course, there are objections to so doing, yet the cutting of the food' Into short lengths will effect a saving that would more than off-set the cost of labor, as the stock would eat more and cost less. But there la a gain In feeding ground grain with cut hay and fixlder in another manner. When the grain Is mixed with the coarse material it Is more easily digested, as It l divided and carried into the stomach tn a con dition which permits of the gradual action of the digestive organs. The long provender also being in a fine state, a greater proportion of nutrition is thoreforo extracted, and the system of treating the whole together will prove economical. Philadelphia Rec ord. Poultry Notes. Roasted corn, fed while warm, Is ex cellent for laying hens. Have a good house and a comfortable scratching shed for the laying hens. Clean out the bouses evory day. It requires only a little time each morn ing. Don't forget the grit box, when the bnd weather prevents the hens from (jetting out. Watch the hens and see that they do not catch colds. Colds are fore runners of roup. Oyster shells should be kept In the poultry house whero the bona may help themselves. Private customers, hotels and res taurants pay the best prices for early broilers and frosb eggs. Keep the yards dry and clean, so that the bent will not soil the eggs when they go on nest Don't lot dogs worry the hens, espe cially during cold weather, and drive thorn out of the warm house. Coarse food of some kind is essen tial to the health of the fownt. Hay will answer If there is nothing better. Eggs should be dollvered within 24 hours after being laid, and on very cold days they should be gathered ev ery hour. Do not trouble yourself about the way your neighbor keeps fowls. Use a gonorous supply of common-senre and you will succeod. Don't neglect the hens and then abuso them because they do not lay. Don't stop caring for them as soon as they quit laying. Look for the cause and remedy it Letter Written In Wrath. Because everybody does no know or remember the story of Abraham Lin coln and Secretary Stanton, we tell It once more. It Is good for use. Stan ton had been exasperated by the con duct of one of the generals In the field. He complained of him to President Lin coln, and said he was going to give it to him hot. "That's right," said Lln coln. "Write him a letter and tell him Just what you think of him, Make a clean breast of It." With heat, Sec retary Stantop wrote his letter, and showed It to the President. Then he folded It to bo Inclosed and directed. President Llnroltj said. "What are you going to tio w'lth that letter, Stan ton-" "Why, I am going to send it to him, of course." "Oh, no," Bald Lin coln. "Put It In the waste basket. You never ought to send a letter of that kind. You've got the thing oif your mind now. Let It drop." In ninety nine times In a hundred the place for a letter written In wrath Is the waste basket. On the Vert; of Brlght'e niseaie. A (Julrk Core That Lasted. CASE NO. ao,f.ll.-C. E. Boles, denier lu grain nnd feed, Qd.'i South Water street, Akron, O., made the following statement In IS'ju; ho snld: "Eier slnrc tho Civil War I have bud attacks of kidney and bladder trouble, decld rdly worse during the Inst two or three years. Altbongh I consulted physi cians, some of whom told me I was verging on Krlght's disease, and I was continually using stnndard remedies, the excruciating aching just ncross the kidneys, which radiated to the shoul der blndcs, still existed. As might be expected when my kidneys were In a disturbed condition, there was a dis tressing nnd Inconvenient difllculty with the action of the kidney secre tions. A box of Homo's Kidney Pills, procured at Lnmparter A. Co.'s drug store, brought such a decided change within a week tlmt I continued the treatment. The last attack, nnd It was particularly aggravated, disappeared." Three Tears After. Mr. Boles says in 189!: "In the earing of 1800 I mndc a public stnte rnVnt of my experience with Doun's Kidney rills. This remedy cured me of a terrible aching In the kidneys, in the small of my buck, In the muscles of the shoulder blades, and in the Ifmbs. During the years tbnt have gone by I rtin conscientiously say there have been no recurrences of my old trouble. My confidence In Doan's Kid ney Pills Is stronger than ever, not, only from my personal experience, but from the experience of many oth ers In Akron which have come to my notice." A FREE TRIAL of this great kid ney medicine which cured Mr. Boles will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. For sale by all druggists, price 60 cents per box. Preachers Learn Trades. A prominent Philadelphia clergy man strongly urges all young men who Intend to enter the ministry to learn some trade either before or after their ordination. He has examined the statistics of the various Protestant de nomination, and has been appalled by the number of ministers who are without a charge. - He thinks a trade would be a good thing to fall back on in such cases, besides standing the preacher In good stead in many ways while still in the pulpit Bailey, Atlanta, Qa., tells how she was permanently cured of inflamma tion of the ovaries, escaped sur geon's knife, by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " I had suffered for three years with terrible pains at the time of men struation, and did not know what the trouble was until the doctor pro nounced it Inflammation of tho Ovaries, and proposed an operation. I felt so weak and sick that I felt sure that I oould not survive the or deal. The following week I read an advertisement in the paper of Lydia li. Pinkham's Vegetable Com found in such an emergency, and so decided to try it. Great was my joy to find that I actually improved after taking two bottles, and in the end I was oured by it I had gained eighteen pounds and was in excellent health." Miss Alici Bailev, 50 North Boule vard, Atlanta, Qa. $S00O forftlt If srpaof a0M Inttr proving f(iuianui cams! 6 pro SWIMS'. The symptoms of Inflammation and disease of the ovaries are a dull throbbing pain, accom panied by a sense of tenderness and beat low down In the side. With occasional shooting pains. The region of pain sometime) thowa aome swelling. Genuine stamDsa C C C lever told (wars of the toiler who tries to sell "sosMtalof Jut Mfooi." U Miss Alice vaW. cowov isssa ' 111',1" -5" AU itoMt, sassi aa aa a la balk. Coughs I "Mir wlfchsri a tn. seated cniiffh for three years. I purchased two bottles of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, pletely." J. H. Burge, Macon, Col. Probably you know of cough mcdjclnes that re lieve little coughs, all coughs, txeept deep ones I The medicine that has been curing the worst of deep coughs for sixty years is Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Tkres sties I 2c He, It, Alt fmrflttt. Cnmult ymir dnrtor. If he ears talis It, than dn as hft tir- If lie tells Tint to lake tt. then rtuti't take It. He knows. Leave It with him. warwlllln. J. C. AYF.H CO., Lowell, Mass. BURS. BATH'S BABY Tired Mother's Anxiety and Suffering. Luticura Brings Blessed Cure to SKin , Jortured Baby and Peace and Rest s to Its Worn Out MotKer. It is no wonder that Mrs. Helena Rath was taken sick. Single-handed, she did all the housework and washed, cooked and mended for her husband, Hans, and their six children. After a plucky fight to keep on her feet, Mrs. Rath had to yield, and early in 1902 she took to her bed. who called at her tidy home, No. "I faired a girl to mind the chil dren and to do whatever else she could- I couldn't stay in bed long. Rick aa I was, it was easier for mu to crawl around than to lie and worry about my little ones. So I got up after a few days, and let the girl go. I had noticed that she had sores on her face, hands and arms, bat I paid no attention to that until Charlie, my youngest, began to pick and scratch himaelf. lie was then ten months old, and the girl had paid more attention to him than to any of the others. Charlie was fret ful and cross, but as he was cutting teeth, I didn't thick much of that. Even when a rash broke out on his face I wasn't frightened, because everybody knows that that is quite common with teething babies. Sev eral of my others had it when little, and I thought nothing about it " But the rash on Charlie's poor little face spread to his neck, chest, and back. I had never seen any thing quite like it before. The skin rose in little lumps, and matter came out. My baby's skin was hot, and how he did suffer t He wouldn't eat, and night after night I walked the floor with him, weak as I was. Often I had to stop because I felt faint and my back throbbed with pain. Hut the worst pain of all was to see my poor little boy burning with those nasty sores. " I believed he hud caught some disease from the girl, but some of the neighbors said he had eczema, aj that is not catching, they told me. Yes, I gave him medicine, and Sut salves and things on him. I on't think they were all useless. Once in a while the Itching seemed to let up a bit, but there waa not much change for the better until a lady across the street asked me why I didn't try the Cuticura Remedies. I told her I had no faith in those things you read about in the papers. She said she didn't want me to go on faith nor even to spend any money at first She gave me some Cuticura Ointment I think the box was about half full and a piece of Cuticura Son p. I followed The agonizing, itching, and burning of the skin as in eczema ; the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis j the loss of hair, and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head ; the facial disfigurements, as in pimples and ringworm ; the awful suffering of infants, and anxiety of worn-out parents, as in milk crust, tetter and salt rheum, all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to successfully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Resolvent are such stands proven beyond all doubt. No statement is made regarding them that is not justified by the strongest evidence. The purity and sweetness, the power to afford immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent cure, the absolute safety and great economy have made them the standard skin cures, blood . purifiers and humour remedies of the civilised world. CCTICUKA KKMEWK8 are sold throughout thn civilised world. PRICKS: Cutlenra Resolv ent, 6110. per bottle (In the form of Clicx-olule (.Vmtod i'llla, -Ibo. Mr vial of em; Culloura Ointment, Ink), mi Ikii and t'utk-nr Soap. tf. per tahlvt. Hend fur the great work, " Humours of the Ulood, Hk In, auii Ht'alp, and Mow UiCilreTliein'Mnsnee 'JUO 1)1 traces, with Illustrations, Taallinoiiiala and liirevtlona In all languages, including .lapanese end Chinese. British Itopot, 27-28 Charterhouse Ho,., London, V ('. Krenoli l"ut,n Kneile la Pais, Paris. A list ralUn Depot, B. Towus Co., Hj.1u.jr. sMTlKH 1UCU ASU CiUCMICAl. COlti-OiUTlOii. boie fn? Wieiurs. Uoetoa, V. 8. A. DE mntf serrs Wmli IHmnd- Sra fVateaea) aioea thmn mny mthm mmmtrmottteee m ins areno. $25,000 REWARD will be paM to anrmie who can dleprove tbls statement. Ilwntise W. I. Doiiglns Is the largest manufacturer he ran buy cheaper ami nnxluee his alines, at a lower rost than other rnn. rerns, vrliirb enables ti tn sell shoes for a :uio eriiml In every wav to those sold else where for Stand Z!i.V. The rjnuvlee eeeret nr-i- mm nt fanning the hnttftm eolee mnUtlCeS l,il.l.n.,..l..h., I nnr K.vlhle end Will The Bales have mire than dmible't the rnntftma year., which pro Ite superiority. Why not Sive w, L. Doutrlaa .hoes atrial and save money. Notlre lnrrenee fWTislwl! .:. "4 In llii.lnr..! iiwu !: .1.04,!t40,S A sulnot a.4,a.n,Aw. . In Font Vfars. W. L. DOUGLAS S4.00 OILT EDOB LINK, Worth se.OO Compared with Other Makes. the In Import! and American Iraihtrt, Hfl Patent Cntf, nnmrl, Bit Calf, Calf, lrl H. Corona flnlt. and National Kamaaroo. fatt Color C tf'eft. Caution: The venulne hara W. L. Douoijia name and price stamped on bottom. Xhon hr mail, Kir. ulra. 1111. ralaloorrt. . XV. lu KOI UI.ASJ, IIKOt KTON, MAM, a a a m i ai centS"! IWf L perJDM on ftarth for 8hepf Swln, GattlOf etc UTTI ht) worth lft0 to rmt ta md what ftlur'i MUloff rwt repels Olllion Dollar Grots Will fWieltlTflf pitk jnn rifbi ! f h and lot pasture pr ftleo hrnmej. r)Mt, Hps? Ill, Macaroni Wheat fr .Nflt lift. eVMll, t bus. 1 rr. Kith rnttjry Oats, t'O r.u. P fr-r tr.4 Ttoiim, Yield 10w lM Grata Jv4tJejf pur ". rortMaNotlconnd 10o. I v mall bit enieJnf n1 l Vnrtm fV4 BJOHN A.5ALZER SCEO CO.Sil i SEND STAMP. 1 henn Farms In Ashtah (jet Mil deeerlDtloiV and nrlee of (Hircholcel limn Farms In Ashtahnla County; baatonunro In Ohio. II. N. BANCKOrT, Jenereoa, Aeblen bula County, Ohio. nmnnriw new discovert: U J eZ9 I qatek re'tef end earee eronej eaaee. Book of tertiennie end IO da ye treatmeejei free. Br. a. a. una s aoaa. in i. Atlanta. oe Touching Story of What followed she told to a visitor, 821 Tenth Ave., New York City. the directions, bathing Charlie and putting; that nice Ointment on the sores. " I wouldn't haye believed that my baby would have been cured by a little thing like that Not all of a sudden, mind you. Little by little, but so surely. Charlie and I both gnt more peace by day, and more sleep by night The sores sort of dried np and went away. I shall never forget one blessed night when I went to bed with Charlie beside me, as soon aa I got the supper dishes out of the way and the older children undressed ; when I woke up the sun was streaming in. For the first time in six months I had slept through the night without a break. " Yes, that fat little boy by the window is Charlie, and his skin is as white aa a snow fluke, thanks to the Cuticura Remedies., I think everybody should know about the Soap and auto the Ointment, and if it is going to help other mothers with sick babies, go ahead and pub lish what I have told you." MKS. HELENA RATH. f M ar' UNION MADI II eV. f . Oauaimm ntakam Mn,. mm,'. Oonrfveee it 1 111 "y- Cvi SH.A"-JTA.. A eh SSSSSS ! GREEN