WALKED HOME IN COCK8 Portland Man Falls Overboard and Loses Wa Boots. Mr. Albert Wallace of Peaks Island had a rather disagreeable experience Monday night on his way home from the city. Mr. Wallace went down on the steamer at 6:15 o'clock and tied his dory at the stern of the steamer. On reaching Forest City landing, and in attempting to step from the steamer into the dory, Mr. Wallace stepped on to a slippery place on the steamer's guard rail and was thrown Into the water. Captain Qreen and the crew of the steamer rendered as sistance instantly and succeeded In getting -Mr. Wallace on board. When Mr. Wallace fell overboard he had on rubber boots but he kicked those of. The crew of the 6teamer wanted to take him to a nearby house so that he cculd have a chance to dry his clothing and get warm, but Mr. Wallace insisted on going home, which he did, walking about half a mile In his wet stocking feet. Portland Press. Sh-rrs ond Flats. After sizing up his neighbors a man censes to worry about his own inferior ity. There is always hope for a man so lcrg as he can look at things with the eyes of a child. Its a queer kind of humility that leads a man to hide his light when the lest are seeking it. H. TT. Gheex's S0.V8, of Atlanta. Ga., are tLe only successful Dropsy specialists In the world, fcco tiieir liberal offer in advertise dene in aaotuer column ol this paper. If a married man admits ne'a a fool it is his wife's duty to agree with hio. Mrs. Wlnsiow s soothing syrup forchildren teetnin-'.so.tuii uie .ums.ieduceslnllaTnma Uoj. tuiuys 1 a;a,furci4vsiicl colic. itic.aDottle Don't trust to luck to do anything you can lo yourself. Tiso"s Cure is tbebestmedi'-inewe ever used lor all allectioiis oi tnroai hiid lungs. Wx. O. j-SiibLLV, Aanbureii, Hid., ieb. 10, 1100. An egotist is a man who expects a wom en 10 Uiaiiy him lor himself a. one. Any one can dye wuh 1'UTKAM Fade less "l)v us; no experience required. Th average man has no use for a chronic kicker iia-es sue is a ballet girl. T.onms Lare. Worried by the frequent nppenr anoe of typographical errors in his newspaper, a Kansas editor says that a typographical error is a hard thing to iinil in a proof, but In the printed and completed "paper it looms up like a fat lady in a croup of vegetarians. E-wr of o; nt"nM for Catarrh That int:i'n Mercnrr, cs nrreiiry will surely destroy tho S3ve ot FTreil andco'-nnletely deranscethe whole sys tem w-:en enterinsit through the raucom surface?, fcueh articlesshouid never be used xcert on r3?firirtions from reputable pby Eicifin?.. a the d;vma''e they will do is tenfold to the i-ood you eau possibiy derive from them. Kail's Catarrh Cure, manufactured ty T. .7. CSseney & Co., Toledo, O., contains roiuereury, r.nd is ta'iea internally, acting oireetiy ut on the blood and mucous surfaces cf thesystena. In buying Hail's Catarrh Cure le sure you cet the genuine. It is taken in tern illyl r.nl mads ia Toledo, Ohio, by H". J. Cheney fc Co. Testimonials free. io'd by Dnv-r-rists: pri'-e, 75e. per bottle. Tako Hairs Family Pills for constipation. Locks Suspicious. A Chicago man refuses to testify In court whether he had a bank ac count of $2,000,000 or not. on the grounds that he might incriminate himself. Must not have had It. Any man wilh that much money Is In no danger of lipin Incriminated. FTT'nirT!T-,:,v rpr!. vn ftt rtrnfnron r-poa s"t 1-t.Hv'4 nsof Tr. Klfnu'a fJr.t KerveTJ3torr.?2 trial bottleand tratisefree Dr. Tt. If. K trxK. Ltd-.M1 A -oh q.. PhiU..pa Every o!d woman Hire to tell how beau tiful siie was when a pirl. To cnn rfp'i-'ip iflps. tak a r'wi ?a-. Ti-ori'h old "of ton ndsnread th laoe (a"i ',,,i" rr if-. Cft the bott'e in warm Ivory Fov f-i-lc Rd fv,-p for an bo-ir. Tf stains firf din"- f-o T-nr,v. pla-- in the buu and and thv will dlsaiear. Einse by dipping the bottlq ia clear "vatr. F.LFAVon R. Pakxzr. Ahont rre-trnths of what people saj doesn't amount to anything. '.al'm t'd'i Wesr Sh-iai One "'".e sn iller after nslni Allen's Foot Eae, a no-rder.. It makes tisjht or new shoes er'.sy. Curo s.vollia, hot, sweating, achin? feet. tn-rrowin-T nain. conn and bunions. At nil dru -.'gists and shoe stores, 25e. Pon't ac cept any substitute. Trial ractta?e Fbzk by mai!. Add-os, Allen H. Olmsted. LeBoy, N.Y. If fault finding were a paying occupation more people would be wealthy. OdJsand Ends. Dead men pay no doctor bills. Sin is no more essential to salvation than disease to health. A woman may look her age, but she seldom looks tue age she says she Is. When a man thinks he is the whole church he is apt to ignore the Head of the Church. - Tt takes a fast man to beat a board MIL So. 20. BE WARNED! need natnrp's warning! Pain tells of lurking disease. Backache Is kidney pain a warning of kidney Ills. Urin ary troubles, too. come to tell you the kidneys are sick. Constant weariness, headaches, dizzy spoils, days of pain, nights of un rest, are da nger sig nals warning you to cure; the kidneys. Use- Doan's Kidney Tills, which have made thousands of permanent cures. Frank D. Over bausih. cattle-buvcr and farmer. Catskill. N. Y., says: "Doctors told me ten years ago that 1 had Brigbt's disease, and said they could do nothing to save me. My back ache J so I cculd not stand It to even drive about, and passages of the kid ney secretions were so frequent as to annoy me greatly. I was growing worse all the time, but Doan's Kidney Pills cured rue. and I have been well ever since:" A FREE TIM AL-of this great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Overlmugb will be -.mailed on Application tc any part of the United States. Address Foster-.Unburn Co., 'Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all dealers; price 50 cents per Los. AUHluULTUriAL ft Kalslnj; Squabs. To raise squabs successfully a house that will be free from dampness and rats Is needed, for if rats once get a squab it Is almost impossible to keep them out of your house. It is best to have two ov mora uests for each pair, for some pairs breed very fast, and if there are not enough nests they will fight Instead of breeding. It pays to keep your house clean aul free from lice. Feeding- Little Chicks. There is greater danger of over-feeding than underfeeding little chicks. A chick, like a baby, comes into the world With. its digestive organs both empty and weak-, hence it is necessary that it be fed with the greatest care, and not too much. . By following this plan it will be seen that the digestive organs will be able to dissolve and ab sorb the food that goes into them in a satisfactory manner. A newly hatched chick is a very insignificant creature, if its sixe and present con dition alone be considered. The true fancier, however, will look beyond the days of the downy coat and will strive to assist the chick in its efforts to at tain full maturity as a healthful speci men of its kind, and the critical time of the chick's life, after it leaves the shell. Is the first ten days. If it starts off all right and passes the ten-day mark it is all right, provided sudden changes are not made in its food. On this subject we hope to publish the views of some of the most practical and successful poultry raisers in the future, for these are they who know whereof they speak. Green's Fruit Grower. I.ow-lleacteft Apple Trees. Green's Fruit Grower proposes to continue talking about low headed fruit trees of all kinds, and particularly about low headed apple trees. The day is passed when intelligent fruit growers can be found training their apple trees so high that it requires a balloon to get high enough to gather the fruit. Think for a moment of the difference between gathering the fruit of the tree whose branches almost rest upou the earth," and the gathering of fruit where the first branches are from ten to twenty feet high and the top branches thirty to forty feet high. Nearly double the amount of apples can be picked by one man in a day from tho low headed trees than can ba picked from the high headed trees. Then consider the danger in picking from those very high trees, and the time speut in going up and down the ladders and in moving tall, heavy lad ders around. The ordinary planter used to head his apple trees at about five feet from the ground at planting. In future years be kept cutting away the lower branches, constantly raising the head of the tree. My advice is to start the heads of apple trees not high er than four feet from the ground, and keeping the head low. Morse in Demand, The outlook for the horse industry Avas never before more promising. With the progress of national develop ment has materialized increased de mand for horses. So pronounced has been the enlarged use of horses for the past five years that domestic con sumption has nearly exhausted the supply. The surplus is so light that prices have remained nominally sta tionary, while other classes of live stock have declined in value materi ally. All the modern industrial de velopments of civiHzed nations were made possible by the use of horses, and the future demand promises to be of increased proportions. Horses for general .utility use are indispensable, and as nations advance in wealth and affluence the demand for horses is in tensified. There are no substitutes to eliminate the noble equine in his sphere of usefulness in the progress of mankind. The .equine fashion of the twentieth century will be repeated in the succeeding cycle and the future of the industry is brilliant with encourag ing promise. The breeder who raises good horses of any commercial class is assured cf a stable and remunera tive market for his . surplus and has every encouragement to intelligently exploit the Industry. Drover's Journal. fovellr llord. A good servicable shoveling board to be attached to the farm wagon for scooping corn, potatoes, etc., is made as follows: For a wagon box twenty four or twenty-six inches deep make your board thirty inches high and just as wide as the outside measure of tha box. On each side nail a piece of good tough plank six inches wide at Ihe bottom and tapering to a point at the top: make thesa pieces two inches longer than the shoveling boards, al lowing the projection at the bottom. Two inches from the bottom of these boards and even with the bottom of the shoveling boards saw a notch three inches deep from back side of the board andsplit out to the bottom: rext nail a 2x4 under the back end of the wagon box 'allowing- half of it to project behind the box for shoveling board to rest on; also make it long enough to project three inches beyond the sides of the box for notches in the side pieces of shoveling board to hook over. Now get two old top props off of an old buggy top (if you have none you can get them of almost any black- 51D6 BOARD Smith for almost Dotbing) and put on as in illustration. When end gate is Up the long part of the prop should be bent down fo it will not come open; bending this tod throws the elbow in direct line with the other hinges which will hold end gates up. Bolt brace on to the outside of the wagon box and mortise a hole through the floor of thoveling board on each side against the side pieces;" make hole about half an inch wide and two inches up and down. Now bore a small hole through the edge board' through centre of mor tise and into the edge of the bottom board and drive bolt in, In dumping corn, Kowtr board, pull out at bottom, and put on top of wagon box. Tba hinged Joints allow it to go up easily. 0. E. Richardson, in The Epitomlst. Pare Breed Co-- The cow thatjccupies a stall two years and gives only one-half as much milk or butter as would a first-class animal, is more costly than a cow raised from a calf, forshe will not only have occupied the stall for a year without profit, but also entailed an ex pense of perhaps fifty dollars in her purchase. If the dairymen would con sider that by breeding their own stock they could save expenses and secure larger profits they would no longer fill their stalls with unprofitable cows. A calculation will demonstrate that it is hot profitable to buy cows instf.ad of raising good stock. It must be a good common cow that will give thirty pounds (about fifteen quarts) of milk daily, but the grade or pure breeds have been' to yield more than double such quantities. If, in the period of seven years, a pure-bred cow is pro duced on the farm, she may require but three years for growth before comb ing in while a purchased cow, being ready in the beginning, gives milk during a much longer time, but from the time the pure-bred cow comes In, though occupying the stall much less time than the native, she will yield a larger quantity of milk on the aver age, or, to put it plainer, she will give more milk in four years than the na tive will in six, while her value will be much more. If the period is extended to ten years the difference will be still greater, and it may be added that the pure-bred cow will also give a larger Quantity of milk in proportion to food consumed. Philadelphia Record. Care of Farm Tools. The following illustration shows a box which may be readily made at home and in which may be kept many things now without a proper and regu lar place. While the illustration shows a box of considerable size one of small er dimensions may be used if desired, and it can be made on the same plan. No instructions for making are ne cessary for thecut shows plainly how it is put together. Several dry goods boxes would answer well for the pur pose. The drawers may be used for holding blankets, curtains and robes, and the shelves or compartments for brushes or small tools. If desired a lid may be placed over the opening at the ton of the large box, to keep out the dust, and this commodious space be utilized for anything desired. If care is taken in putting this contrivance to gether it would be practically rat proof and could be used for seeds if one wished. There are a dozen uses HAXDY BAKN BOX. to which the box could be put and as the expense of it is largely in labor there is no reason why such a box could not be in every farm barn. If every farm contained a tool house, in which every tool was kept in its place when not in use, there would be a great saving of time dur ing the busy season. It often happens that the value of the time lost in seek ing some tool not in its place is greater than the cost of the tool. Much of the loss of time and exposure of tools is due to lack of some suitable place for storage. It costs but little to build a toolhouse, as it need not be proof against heat or cold, the main point being a good roof, so as to protect the tools and implements from dampness. Poultry Notes. To treat fowls for health is better than to dose them for disease. Season soft food with salt. It sharp ens appetite and aids digestion. A handful of sunflower seed now and then adds luster to the plumage. Hens will pay well for table seraps. It is wa'steful to feed them to mong rel dogs and cats. Litter in which there is tough, wiry hay is not safe to put on the scratching floor. If eaten it causes crop-bound conditions. An active breed Is less liable to be come overfat than the larger sized, sluggish fowls, hence should be treated accordingly. It is a mistake to wait until hens are lousy before using insect powder. Constant prevention Is the only safe method to pursue. To renew the vitality of a flock it is not necessary to cross-breed and make them mongrels. Better get males of. a different strain or family of the same variety. Save the droppings; they are valu able for fertilizing purposes and will come in handy In the spring. Store them in a dry place in boxes or barrels. There is no better fertilizer when prop erly xised. Dirty windows in the poultry house prevent the fowls from getting the full benefit of the sun's rays and make the house cheerless and uncomfortable. It is a good plan to place the dust-bath where the sun can shine directly into it during some part of the day. Clean the windows and let a little sunshine in. : . JfeW Saccharine riaut. '' The new saccharine plant discovered in South America contains a consider able quanaity of saccharine matter, is not fermentable, and is unusually sweet. The plant is herbaceous, grow ing to a height of eight to twelve inches, and its scientific name is Eupa torium rebandium. It is expected to prove of much industrial value. It was discovered by the director of the agri cultural institute at Asuncion, and his experiments indicate that the sugar yielded is from twenty to thirty times as sweet as ordinary cane or beet su- A Good Roads Leader. tojft. 3E Massachusetts Highway irrJj Commission is entering into O rI1 43 sympathetic and hearty co- K operation with the friends OWT of the Brownlow bill, which proposes the organization of ft national road bureau and an appropriation of $24,000,000 to be used in conjunction with the different States for road building. It is entirely in harmony with the purposes of that measure on the main question, but proposes quite a number of minor amendments, in order to harmonize the bill with State laws, and the law of our own State in particular. The original con flicts with our own statute, inasmuch as it provides for advertising and con tracting by the director of the good roads bureau instead of the Massa chusetts Highway Commission, and that would prevent the State from be coming a beneficiary under its terms as at present formulated. The commission of no State is better qualified than that of our own to make practical suggestions for the better ment of the bill. It has achieved more proportionally, if not absolutely, than any other, and in the process of edu cating various communities in good road building it has also educated it self. It is now building better roads and building them more economically than when these enterprises were first undertaken, and its experience ought to be of great value in any practical attempt to broaden and even national ize the movement. The commission has sent a draft of the Brownlow bill, with its own suggested amendments, to every Representative and United States Senator, with some excellent arguments in its support As we have already said, there are two questions to be settled before the bill should be favorably reported, which are: Is ii a proper service for the government to engage in? And, if so, is it expedient? Both these questions-are affirmatively, and, it seems to us, conclusively answered in the commission's analysis of the project. It contends that Government aid is no new thing in the United States, and had it not been extended at the proper time "millions of acres of productive laud would now be in a state of nature instead of supporting a population of 10,000,000 souls." Of course, we are all familiar with the fact that the Government Is a regular and liberal supporter of annual schemes for the improvement of rivers and harbors. We likewise remember the princely concessions and grants made to the transcontinental railroad companies, in order to develop the great West, and we are sensible of the value and even the vital importance of this policy, but not so many of us are aware that Gov ernment aid to the construction of highways was one of the earliest acts authorized by the Government for the internal development of the country. In the commission's brief it is de clared that "the building of a road from tide water to the Ohio country was a pet project of Washington." He did not live to see it acted upon, but in 1811 such a road was begun, and seven years later it was completed at a cost to the United States of $7,000,000. For thirty-four years subsequent to that time it was the one great highway over which passed the mails and the bulk of the trade and travel between the East and the West, and like the $7,000,000 paid for Alaska, the pur chase price was repaid to the people of this country many fold. That seems to at once establish the propriety and the expediency of the proposition. The commission states very truly that the money appro priated for roads Is largely wasted, for the reason that the local roadmas ter does not know how wisely to ex pend it, whereas in those States where aid has been given under scientific di rection for this purpose "it has worked a revolution. The roads built have convinced the most sceptical that they not only cost less to maintain, but reduce the cost of hauling from twenty-five to fifty per cent." That the nation would be repaid for expen diture of this kind in "increased pros perity, enhanced values and a general raising of the moral, the religious and the educational tone of its people," we do not doubt. There is almost a dis cernible difference to-day between the citizen who lives on a good road and the one who lives on a bad one. They have different aspirations and differ ent standards of business. Cood roads are among civilization's best mission aries. Boston Evening Transcript, laboring Under a Mistake. Some friends of the good roads movement hesitate to join in the de mand for national aid because they are appalled by the enormous expense involved in macadamizing the entire road milage of the country. These persons are laboring under a mistake. The national aid bills now before Con gress do not propose to construct any particular kind of road. They simply propose to "improve the public roads" and provide for "investigations and experiments to determine the best kinds of road material and the best methods of road building." In a re cent article Representative Brownlow says: "My own individual opinion- Is that some of the principal thoroughfares ought , to be macadamized. Well in formed road experts ha,ve estimated that if one-tenth of the road mileage of the country were macadamized and tho other nine-fenths were improved, in other a'ad cheaper ways, using the besit local materials available, the cost of haulieg the farm - products of the United States to market would be re duced to oneThalf." If this estimate is correct, the sav ing o the farmers would be enormous, and vrould in a few years be sufficient to rer the entire expense of making the improvements. Besides lessening the cost of hauling, good roads wiil bring to the people of the rural dis tricts pleasures and benefits which cannot be measured in. money, Jfexr York Tribune. "I Ilavo Every Roason io Praisa Pe-ru-na," WRITES MRS. KANE, OF CHICAGO. - , r... If i ' J GRACE. EDWARD. MYRTLE. CEORGE and REEVES VMlSflyf "H 172 JcborSt. Chicago. 111. 7 I Mrs. K. Kane, 172 Sebor Street, Chi- J t cago, 111., writes; "Fertinct nan been used so long I in our family that 1 do not know X how I coiiUl jet along without tt. ; i have given it to all of my chit- I drenat different times when they J I suffered with crottp, colds and the ? many ailments that children, are subject to, and am pleased to say t ha t It has kept them in splendid f. . . . . Iff. ff I. i. . si h f .... 1 3 ii tt tn n. llXLl VI It. A I f I y cc-0V 101.U u T Pe-ru-na Protects the Entire House hold Against Catarrhal Diseases. One of the greatest foea with which every family has to contend is our change able climate. To protect the family from tonis aud coughs is a i ways a serious prob lem, and otteu impossible. Sooner or later it is the inevitable fate of every one to catch cold. Care in avoid ing exposure and the use of proper cloth ing will protect from the irequency and perhaps the severity of colds, but with the greatest of precautions they will come. This is a settled tact cf human experience. Everybody must expect to be caught some wheie or somehow. 1'erhaps it will be wet feet, or a draught, or damp clothes, or it may be one of a thousand other little mishaps, but no one is shrewd enough to ulways avoid the inev itable catching cold. There is no fact of medical science better known than that Peruna cures catarrh wherever located. Thousands of families in all pirts o." the United States are pro tected from colds and catarrh by Peruna. Once in the family Peruna always stays. No home can spare Peruna after the first trial of it. We have on file many thousand testimo- Didn't Utsturb the Dog. A writer tells how a bulldog scared war the guests bidden to a lady's reception. The hostess was waiting in her parlor. She heard carriages arrive, heard the front gate open, but no guests appeared. "The . situation became puzzling, .t last the lady of the house went out to see if perchance the paving and the steps had sud denly crumbled away and left an aching void. Not at all. On opening tho front door she found herself con fronted with the cause of the phan tom visitors Rex, in his most ami able and complacent mood, sitting peacefully and majestic on the top step, whither he had dragged his ken nel, a featherweight to bo powerful a creature, after him. No pedestrian visitor, no card-laden delegate of 'car riage folk had ventured to affront that lordly presence." One woman dislikes calling on an other almost as bad as the other dis likes to have her to do it. WET WEflk COMFORT There is no satisfaction keener than being dry and comfortable when out in the hardest storm. . YOU ARE 5UHt OFTKI5 IF YOU WEAK WATERPROOF ULED CLOTHIN MADE IN MACK OK YELLOW 1 RACKED BY OUR GUARArTTE KT IOVERAADIN CO.Lir.lTEDkT0B0.NTD.CANt If m wil tw)f JUinnlv voil BUST FOR catarrhal difficulty oflongttand- J i in.y and it cuied me in a sliort J time, so i have every reason to J praise yeruna.,)Mrs. K. Mane. G TtH GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad blood, wiad on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dixciness. When your bowela don't mova regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. 'No matter what ails you, start taking CASCARET3 today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowela right. Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or ..r..n. Tk. n.,tna . V.T.. n f f J .. nlA In hulk. filnlfll aDS booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company. Chicago or New York. 5 D For Dainty Luncheons Ste"'voj There are manv dc'icious wava Llbbv's Peerless Dried Beef. Annans! IJbby's Send for our book, "How to iiDDy s Atlas oi me worm sent poHtpaid tor live 2c stamps. Libby, McNeill & Libby. Chicago, U. S. A. t Airs. A. ilobson, 225 Washington St., i Lansing, Mich., writes: 4 ina io inn onlu cnilu. as well asi myselj , tnai l jeet, inuuced to give 4 my testimonial, lie has always suffered jrom catarrh oj the heau and ihrout, and 1 had to use extra precautions so as not to have him exposed to damp or void weather. J X Last year he was taken with la grippe, and as it uasa severe case, J I cauxeil me mucn unxietu. Ao meUicine helped him tut he took J y 1'eruna. 1 noiiceu an improve-f- I ment at once and in thi ee veeks I 4 hewusadijjerenlcinid;the grippe J J it ad been completely, cureu and J noticed that Hie catarrh wastnude better. He kept taking it two weeks longer, when he was entirely 4 4 well. 1 now use ii off and on jot J colds, cramps, ittdiyi stion or gen- era I inalspositton, ana jma it su- per tor to any uoctors or medicine 1 ever tried, it keeps me, as well 4 us my child, in perject health, 4 and 1 gladly recommend it to 4 mothers." Mrs. A. liobon. 4 nials like the ones given above. We can only give our readers a slut- glimpse oi the vast array of unsolicited endorsements we are receiving every month. Mo omer physician in the world has received such a volume of enthusiastic and grateful letters of thank as Dr H?rtman for Peruna. 5 Given Away Wit GJ kl Writa na or ask particulars and free sample cara 01 The Sslta ty Wall Coatinff DosiroysdiBsf gerrciand vermin. robs or ecaios. You cay apply It mix wlta oold watT. Beautiful i2Vcie la white end H delicate tint. Not a d.eeaae-breediiig, 001-of-dste bot-iFter Glu preparation. Buy W Alabastrine tn 6 ID. pacxagee. proi-eny w 1 belled, of paint, bard war and drug dealera. Hint on Jje co ratine." ana our Arc 1 sis ideas free. AUeJlttaC9,Gru4Elisftlcb., M 105 Water SUM. GUAR AS. TEED BY A Cl C ff BANK DEPOSIT Railroad Fara Paid " 500 FREE Courses Offered. 3523 Board at Cost. Write Quick GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COtXEGE.Macon.Ga. CURES MALARIA, CHILLS and FEVER. ELIXIR j BABCK i "BAHEK" Is the older',. urct anrl best remedy la America for mal adies f malarial nature, its a posi tive cure for MALARIA. CHILLS and FEVER. nly50c. bottle KLOCZEWSKI Z CO.. Washington. D. C H?Wrlte for testimonials. John W. Atkinson f& Co., RICHMOND, VA. Paints, Oils. Tarnishes, Ac Try Their '.Standurd" Ready Mixed House Faints. NoMoreB!indHcrses?i Bore Eyes. Barry Co., Iowa city, la., have a sure cut r.liSfS WHihE ALL USE falLS Best Cougb. Syrup. 1'asL 3col. Use In time. Sold by druest-ta. bo. 20. THE BOWELS nasMBBBBBBBBaBaaar nothlne'soteinptlngr and satis- JLibbr s Luncheon meats. rotted and uevuea Ham (Natural navor) Food Products Make Cood Thing-s to Eat." no Air . bss TOP Mil mm I H Promoted by And light dressings of CUTICURA,the great Skin Cure and sweetest of emollients. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and dandruff, destroys hair parasites, soothes irritated, itching sur faces, stimulates the hair fol licles, loosens the scalp skin, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp, when all else fails. N. B. Complete External and Internal Treatment for every Humor from Pimples to Scrofula, from Infancy to Age, consisting of CUTICURA Soap, Ointment, and Pills, may now be had of all Druggists for One Collar. Sold throughout the world. Catlctira Soap, 5e.. Oint ment. iJe IiercWrat, SOc. (in form oi Chocoi.te Cr.Tr4 Pills, 25c. per vial ot ft.'). Depots: London. 27 Chirter koue Sq. ; Pari., 4 Rr.e de la Tail ; DoRon, 137 Columbus Ae. Potter Drug Chem. Corp., Sole I'roprietori. 87 Send for " How to Preserve, Purity and Beautify til Skin, Scalp, Hair and Hands." FREE to WORrlER! A Large Trial Box and book of in structions absolutely Free and Post paid, enough to prove the value oi PaxtineToiSet Antiseptic Paxtlne is in powder form to dissolve in vater non-poisonous and far superior to liqu Id antiseptics containing alcohol which irritates Inflamed surfaces, and have no cicsnsirg prop erties. The contents of every box mskes more Antiseptic Solu tion lats longer goes further hai more uses in the family and dceunoregood then any antiseptic preparation you can buy. The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, for Leucorrhoea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we challenge tho world to produce its equal for thoroughness. It is a revelation id cleansing and healing power; it kills all gprms which, cause inflammation and discharges. All leading drugjrista keep Paxtine; price.COff. fcbox; it yours does not, send to us for it. JJon't take a substit ute there is nothing li ke Paxtine-. Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day. XL PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldg., Boston. Kase. A Golden Rule of. Agriculture: Be good to your land and your crop will be good. Plenty of Potash e inthefertilizerspellsquality f and quantity in the har- , h J ; vest. Write us and t.WvS'KI we will send you, V3Wp tiC. free, by next mail, our money winning boots. GEB.MAX KALI WORKS. New York 93 Nassau Si. er Atlanta, C. 22? SfeBrosiSt. :QAU Mil I QSiS: MUmi lYIILLUlarSaw Mil s. with Hege'8 Universal Lor Beams, RectlUn ear, Simultaneous Set Works and the Hea- oock-King Variable Feed Works are unex loelled lor accukact, bimfxicitt, debabu.- j ITT AND KASX OF OFKXATION. Write for full deoriptive circulars. Manufactured by the l&AXEM IRON WORKS.Wtn ton-Sa em.N.C. '(incorporated) O&HTAL STOCK 8SO.OOO.CO. Business v hen you think of going off to school, wi tt" for Collegr Journal and Special ffw o tha teddlns Bu-1 -ess and Shorihand chonl. Altr s KINO'S BUSINESS rOI.LEOE, Raleigh, K. '., or Charlotte, N. G. ( o alsc teacli Jiuclt Iceeping. Shorthand. Etc.. by inSiL CURED GIWS8 Qu!cic Belief. Removes all swelling: in 8 to so days ; effects a permanent cure in 30 to 60 davs. Trial treatment given free. Nothingcan bi faire Write Dr. H. H. P-een'a Sons, Specialists. Box q AiitntatV" Shs of mSfrM Dropsy

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