Newspaper Page Text
CURES RHEUMATISM ANP CATARRH
8.H.8. Core* Dacp-Xuntcd Chm Kxpeclal
if-To Prow It B. B. B. Seat Free.
Those diseases, with schcs end peine in
bonce, jointe and bock, ejoniziog paint in
■boulder blades, hand*, finger*, arm* and
lege crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sci
atica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting, note
bleeding, ringing in the cure, sick stomach,
deafness, noises in the bead, bad teeth,thin
hot blood, all run down feeling of catarrh
are sure signs of an awful poisoned condi
tion of tho blood, 'fake Botanic Blood
Balm. {8.8.8.) Soon all aches and pain*
•top, the poison is destroyed and a real
permanent cure is made of the wont rheu
matism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of
cases cured by taking 8.8.8. It strength
en* weak kidneys and improves digeation.
Druggists, $1 per largo bottle. Sample free
by writing. Blood Balm Cos, 14 Mitchell
St., Atlanta, Oa. Describe trouble and free
medical advice sent in sealed letter.
An orange tree, in full bearing, has been
known to produce 18,000 oranges, and a
lemon tree 0000 lemons,
, It is natural that the medical student
•liould be quite a cut up.
*# y’
y *Yvw_
™ Mrs. Tupman, a prominent lady 9
of Richmond, Va., a great sufferer with
woman’s troubles, tells of her cure by
Lydia E. Pinkham/s Vegetable Compound.
s “Dkaii Mits. Pinkham: For some years I suffered with backache
(. torero bearing-down pains, lcuootrhoea, tut;! fitiiing or the womb. I
any positive relief.
“ I cbmnionowt taking T.ytllu 1-1. lHiikliniii’N Vegetable Compound
in June, 1001. When I had taken the first half bottle, I felt a vast im
provement, and Imre now taken ten bottles with (1m result that I feel
liko anew woman. When I commenced taking tho Vegetable Com
pound 1 felt all worn out. and was fast approaching complete nervous
collapse. I weighed only OS pounds. Now I weigh 1004 pounds and
am improving every day. I gladly testify lo tho benefits received.”—
Mrs, 11 (}. Titfmait, 423 West 30th St., Richmond, Va.
When tv medicine lias been successful In more than a million
cases, !* It justice to yourself to say, without trying it, “I do not
believe It would help me ” ?
Surely you cannot wish to remain weak and sick and discour
aged, exhausted with each slay’s work. Yon have some derange
ment of tho feminine organism, and Lydia E. IMiiklmm’s Vege
table Compound will help you just as surely ns It. lias others.
Mrs. W. If. Pelham, .Tr., 108 15. Baker St., IMeliniond, Va., says:
“ Dbar Mas. Pinkham : —1 must say that Ido not behove there is any
female medicine to compare with Lvdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
®l I return to you my heart felt thanks for
our medicine lias done for me. Before
the vegetable Compound I was so badly
lat I thought I could not livo much
r. The little work 1 had to do was a
en to me. I suffered with irregular
dr nation and leucorrhcoa, which caused
irritation of the parts. I looked like
ho had consumption, but I do not look
at- now, and I owo it all to your wonder
i took only six bottles, but it has made
mo feel like anew person, I thank
God that- there ia such a female helper
Be it, tlserefore, believed by all
women who are 111 that I.ydla E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Is tho medicine they should take. It lias stood the test of time,
and it lias hundreds of thousands of cures to Its credit. Women
should consider It unwise to use any oilier medicine.
Mrs. Plnklmtn, whose address is Lynn, Mass., will nnswer cheer
fully and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women.
Perhaps she has Just the knowledge that will help your case
try her to-duy lt costs nothing.
flrAAfl FORFEIT If w© cannot forthwith produce tho original letter* and signatures of
\nllllll Above testimonial*, which will prom their absolute gonuinm©*.*.
tPvUUU IsjdUk E. riukhnm Medicine Cos.. Lynn. Mua.
WINCHESTER
FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
j “New Rival" "Leader" "Repeater"'
nF you are looking for reliable shotgun am
munition, the kind that shoots where you
point your gun, buy Winchester Factory
I Loaded Shotgun Shells: “New Rival,” loaded with
Black powder; “Leader” and “Repeater,” loaded
with Smokeless. Insist upon having Winchester
Factory Loaded Shells, and accept no others.
L ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM
m are just comfortable In the warmest SsSSSSSSty t
us in the coldest. Wc have
been making thc-e corsets for nearly
half n century, and we know just why
■ every stitch is put Into them. *
p k Aik your dealer to show them to you.
HO TELLER.
Mrs. Hicks—What do they call that
man In the bank a teller for?
Kra. Wicks—l’m sure 1 don’t know,
Mrs. Hicks—Well, l don’t either. I
Went in there yesterday to ask him
how large a balance Mr. Hicks has
now and ho said right away that he
couldn’t tell me.—Somerville (Maes.)
Journal.
NOT TO BE KEPT.
“What do you expect to do about
those promises you made?”
"X don’t know,” replied Senator
Sorghum.
“Aren’t you going to keep them?”
"Keep them?” he repeated, absent
mindedly. "Well, my boy, you know
I am not collecting souvenirs.”—Wash
ington Star.
A SUFFICIENT TEST.
“is he competent?”
"I don’t think so. He was indig
nant when I offered to make a few
suggestions.”—Datrolt Free Frets.
* AGRIGDLTDRAL *
Trial Crops.
The largest trial crops have been ob
tained where fertilizers were applied
liberally, and in every case the in
creased crop more than paid for the ad
ditional expense of fertilizers. The
plants do not tise all of the fertilizers
the first year, npd tho succeeding sea
son assists in the gain from the appli
cation.
Slt as a Fertiliser.
There are many Inquiries about salt
as a fertilizer. Salt Is rarely of any
use as a fertilizer proper. ■The ele
ments of which It is composed are
found in most soils in sufficient
amounts for all except for such plants
as asparagus, whose natural home Is
by the seaside. But salt Is found in
practice to have much more value than
would ho supposed. Its effect Is best
on rich land in vegetable matter, which
the salt, In the small amounts usually
applied, helps to decompose. In larger
quantities salt Is a preservative from
decomposition, hut no farmer would
think of applying enough to Injure his
land.
Warms as Soil Renovators.
Earth worms are not soil formers,
for they are seldom met with in soils
that are destitute of organic matter.
They are simply renovators. Every
time a worm Is driven by dry weather,
or any other cause, to descend deep. It
brings to the surface, when It empties
the contents of its body, a few particles
of fresh earth. At the same time it
fertilizes the subsoil by opening up
passages which encourage the roots of
plants to penetrate deeper, these pas
sages being lined with excreted mat
ter, which provides a store of nourish
ment for the roots. On meadow land
Darwin found these worm casts
amount annually to eighteen tons an
acre, and on good arable land to about
ten tons.—American Fertilizer.
j qAU*
A Small Work Bench.
A small work bench Is very conve
nient tor doing small Jobs of repairing.
Oet n long, deep, but narrow, empty
grocery box and mount It upon legs
upon its side ns shown. This provides
not only a work bench, but a shelf be-
JjjgjL
low It for keeping tools. Tlic cover of
the box can be hinged to the front for
the purpose of keeping the tools more
secure. There Is not n farm In the
country that can afford to bo without
at least, u small Ueuch ou which to
make repairs and to construct the
small articles needed In carrying ou
farm operations.—New York Tribune
Farmer. ,
>■
(.rowing niuebarrlea From £•#!.
The Maine Agricultural Experiment
Station reports that they have found It
comparatively easy to grow blueber
ries from seed. They used good pot
ting soil, to which leaf mould had been
added, washed the seed from the pulp,
and allowed It to freeze during tho
winter, then sowed It In the spring
thickly on the surface of the soil,
packed it down with, a board and cov
ered with a slight sprinkling of soli.
They were handled once, and later In
the summer were transferred to a cold
frame, where they were covered with
titter durlug the winter. The next
spring they were transplanted Into
beds, shaded until established and
made a good growth during the sum
mer. They say the low blueberry,
"Vacclnenm Peimsylvaulcum," will
fruit in three or four years, while the
tdgh bush, "Vaeelueum corynbosuin,”
requires from four to six years. We
think the shortest period they name for
either Is at least a year too loug, but
will not dispute the matter. Both
these varieties are relatively easy to
transplant either from swamps or up
land. and they may be propagated by
grafting or division of the roots. As
we called attention to the possible cul
tivation of these berries several years
ago we feel an interest in this matter,
and hope to stx“ them grown as com
monly as strawberries and blackberries
arc now.—Tlic Cultivator.
Systematic Storing **f Humus.
One o.’ tbe greatest advantages I ob
tain from n cover crop Is the constant
storage In tbe soil of humus. A soil
rich iu humus is also a soil properly
drained. In mnuy soils the lack of
humus permits the best elements of
fertility, no matter in what form ap
plied, to leach out and go to waste.
Sometimes they merely leach down to
tho subsoil, but even there they are
wasted to most crops. Our surface
feeding crops will not go down to the
subsoil after rich humus or fertility
leached down there, because of a too
porous and open surface soil. The
cover crop plants the humus In the sur
face soil, and thereby holds the fertil
izing elements of potash, phosphoric
acid and nitrogen. They are held there
In a position where the roots of the
plants can most readily reach and util
ize them.
Any cover top will do ibis work.
Some, of course, nnswer the purpose
much better than any others, but a
crop that furnishes an abundance of
green foliage will in time fill the soil
with rlcll linmus. Therefore cover
crops have been used by me continu
ally for systematic storing of humus in
the soil. My land is so open and por
ous that nearly n.ll fertilizers would
quickly leach through if it were not for
this practice of plnnting cover crops
to prevent the waste. Humus in the
soil gives strength and vitality to
plants. It furnishes the bone and
marrow to the soil, and makes it rich
Iu possibilities. When the soil is
drained steadily year after year, and
no new humus added. It becomes life
less, and no amount of artificial fertill
zatlon will compensate for the loss.—
S. L. Andress, In American Cultivator.
HOT GOOD FRIEND3,
The Saflorman and the Shark Cannot
Come Together.
”Sailor3 certainly hate sharks," said
a man who has returned from his va
cation over the lake. “It was off the
pilot boat, on the bay side of Ship
Island. Tony, one of the sailors, had
rowed two amateur fishermen near a
lot of old piling where Spanish mack
erel were supposed to bite at the rate
of sixty an hour, but where, as a
matter of fact, only lady fish were
anxious to snap up the bait and whers
big sharks broke hooks, snapped lines
and shattered poles. Tony had been
gradually working himself up into a
fine rager against these dogs of the
deep. Time and time again his hooks
and lines bad been taken. He had
began to exec Tate the sharks In
broken English, but finding this inade
quate a choice flow of Italian pro
fanity was directed at the shovel
nosed maurauders. Tony Is a sailor,
and all sailors hats a shark; but in
this instance Tony's natural hatred
was intensified by the discomfort and
annoyance of having to rig up new
lines for MxnseU and tho amateurs.
In desperation he dived Into a small
locker In the boat and produced a line
as big as a young rope, with a hook
that would hav3 done for the hanging
up of meat in a butcher stall. Toay
then cut a big lady fish In two and
fixed tbe tail to the hook. When he
threw the Hr.a-Mnto the water he re
marked with frills, that he intended to
do up one of the leather-skinned devils
of the deep or die. Having thus fixed
a trap for the-sharks, Tony relaxed
himself and went to pulling in lady
fish for the sport of the thing, leav
ing one end of his shark line tied to
the boat.
"Oh, da old devil,” cried Tony sud
denly. The big line had gone out like
lightning. Tony threw down his pole,
grabbed the line and began to pull
with all his might. Soon the ugly
nose of a five-foot shark was seen near
tbe side of the skiff. Its wicked little
eyes were glaring with rage. As Tony
drew it near the boat- it turned over
and crushed its teeth against the gun
wale. The amateurs wanted to shoot
with a revolver, but Tony prevented
them. He was now as-mad as the
shark. Ho was standing In the boat,
cursing at tbs writhing fish and at
tempting to get a grip on its head.
Finally the strong right band of Tony
had seized the shark with a grip of
steel, and pulling with his left hand
by the line amt raising with his right,
managed to get the shark partly over
the side of the boat. He then reached
down quickly and with his left hand
caught the shark by Its tall. Tony’s
teeth gritted wllh anger. He batted
the head of the shark against the side
of tho boat, crusing the fish to make
frantic endeavors to escape, while tho
blood ran from its jaws. Tony was
asked by or,© of the amateurs to let
tho shark go, lmt he w-aa not finished.
It was only after the shark had been
ripped open with a knife that Tony,
with a final Italian denunciation, cast
him overboard. Even then tho sea
devil swum on top of the water for a
long time before giving up the ghost.”
—New Orleans TU> - Democrat
ACCIDENTAL INJURIES.
Mishaps From Which Little Children
Are Wont to Suffer.
Aside from the defects which are
born with the child, by far tho great
est number arc the result of accidents
and injuries. Owing to the softness
and elasticity of the child's frame he
escapes much that would prove seri
ous to adults. Yet the greater part of
the serious aSHotlons of childhood,
aside from the contagious fevers, arc
the outcome of injuries to tho bones
and joints. In children’s wards In the
hospitals the majority of the little pa
tients are suffering from tho dis
eases which make deformities. These
are the different inflammations of the
spinal column, which cause the vari
ous curvltatures of the spine; the in
flammatory conditions that, occur
ring In the hip, givo rise to hip joint
disease, and the malformations which
occur In the foot, giving rise to the
shortening of a leg, causing the child
to limp. Many of these conditions are
due to an accident, such as a fall or
a bruise; some arc present from birth.
A child's frame is much like that of
the young tree or sapling. It can be
trained and shaped while young and
pliable, but after it Is full grown this
is not possible. Parents should use
every means in their power to relieve
and overcome the deformities which
will be such a burden to their children
all their lives. Mothers should con
stantly inspect their children to dis
cover any of these troubles which re
sult so disastrously. When the child
is undressed, make it bend over so as
to curve the spine, which makes the
little projections of each vertebra
stand out in relief. See that they
make no deviations townrd one side or
tho other. Sec that the shoulder blades
are In a like position and not project
ing too much. Look also at tho ribs,
especially where they are attached
in front.
It is well to have the seemingly
healthy children gcue over by the
family physician once In awhile to see
that growth is progressing as It
should. If the spinal curvatures and
the hip joint troubles are discovered
early great suffering and the attend
ant deformity can be avoided. These
diseases, which cause the greatest
part of the deformity of childhood,
are Insidious In their approach and
are often not detected until their
ravages have progressed to such a
degree that their remedy is difficult,
even if possible.—Philadelphia In
quirer.
LAUGHTER. •
••Laugh and the world laughs with
you
Sometimes. But you’ll laugh alone
If the j;-st of chaff at which you,
laugh
Is a stupid thing of your own.
Press.
lll Miii (hi iii siN m i lfifl|plrf3 HTlm
Alligator Extinct In the South.
alligator is said to be practi
cally extinct in the South. To Dame
Fashion may be attributed his passing
away. The demand for shoes, satchels
and pocketbooks of alligator akin has
been such within the last ten years
that we will probably goon be com
pelled to visit onr museums and zoos
to hunt up the creature, which has un
justly earned an evil reputation as
the terror of Southern swamps. Mr.
J. Knight Perkins, of Kalamazoo, thor
oughly searched the southern portions
of the country for 14-foot alligator*
In all New Orleans he could find but
one alligator 10 feet long. He discov
ered that even little alligators from
four to eight inches long had disap
to the census reports In The Insurance
American.
HER SAVING WAY.
Mrs. Scale-Downie —I will have to
get another girl, trough only tem
porarily, perhaps a month or so.
Mr. Hcale-Downle—Three dollars
more a week and board! What do
you want an extra girl for?
Mrs. Scale-Downle—l have found out
bow to make just the loveliest little
hanging cabinet you ever say, at a
cost of only %i. but it will take me
several weeks to do It.—New York
Weekly.
POOR FOOD.
Jinks—“Do you believe that men
really become part of what they eat?”
Blinks—" Yes, that's my belief.”
Jinks—“Well, If that's the case I’ll
never Vcome rich."
Blinks—“ Why not?”
Jinks—“l iive at a boarding house.”
HER LIMIT.
“Mrs, Storm Is a great advocate of
woman's rights. Have you ever heard
her discourse on the subject?"
"No. I’ve never heard her get any
further than woman’s wrongs."—
Brooklyn Life.
• 100 Reward. SIOO.
The renders of this paper will be pleased to
lesm that there Is at West one drewded dis
ease that soleneo boa been able lo euro In oh
lt stages, and thnt Is Catarrh. Halt's Catarrh
Curs Is ths only positive eure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a eon
stttutlonal disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s CatarrhCureistakeninter
nally, acting directly npon theblood and .nu
cona surfaces . .f the system, thereby destroy,
log the foundation of tho disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature In doing Its
work. The proprietors have so much faith In
tts curative powers that they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for any ease that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. Chessr A Cos.. Toledo, O,
Sold by Druggists, 700.
Hall’s Family Pills are tho best.
Persons in Morocco ere required to pay
the policeman who arrests them a fee oi
twenty-fire cents.
FlTfipermanently oured.No fits or nervous
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Orest
Nsrrsßest orer. tit rial bottle and treattsetre s
Dr.lt. H. Kami, Ltd .MI Arch St.. Phlla., P*.
Any fellow who uses his feet can walk
with a measured tread,
Mrs. Winaiow’s Soothing Syrup for children
leethlng.softenthe gums, reduces Inflamma
tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. nbottle
It’s oplv natural that there should be
spring* m the bed of s rive.-.
Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used
for ail affections of throat and lnngs.—Wa
0. Kxpsi.it, Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
Some wealthy men show their sharpness
by cutting their sons off.
Jose Tint Butteb Cocoa makes top
o{ the market butter.
Connecticut has seven former Governors
living. Massachusetts has but three.
1,000 Per Cent. Profit In Pocket,
Hill.™ SXD Plusoss is paid bv fresh,
luscious, home grown Strawberries allowed
to ripen thoroughly on Iks vines. We sell lho
Plants packed to carry fresh anvwberein
ttaeU.B. Our 150-page Manualffree to buyers)
makes growing lor pleasure or profit plain to
sit. Plant now. C’a’alogue Strawberries,
Asparagus,etc..free, i’ostinkxtai. 1 i astCo
No. HStrawberry Heights., Klttrell, N. U
The people who never have anything in
teresting to say generally manage to say
it.
Bad Coughs
wmmmmmmmammmmnmmmmmma
“ I hid a bad cough for six
weeks and could find no relief
until I tried Ay er's Cherry Pecto
ral. Only one-fourth of the bottle
cured me.”
L. Hawn, Newington, Ont.
Neglected colds always
lead to something serious.
They run into chronic
bronchitis, pneumonia,
asthma, or consumption.
Don’t wait, but take
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
just as soon as your cough
begins. A few doses will
cure you then.
Tire* sim: 25c.. 50c , 11. Ail tfranists.
Consult your doctor. If h© say* take It,
then do a* Je says. If h© tolls you not
to take it, then don't take It. Me know*.
Lmt© It with him. W© aro willing.
J. C. AYER CO.. Lowell, Mas*.
WANTED
300 Young Mon
At one* to qualify for good loetttone which w©
will guarani©© In writing under a $5,000
depoitt to promptly procure them.
The Ga.-Ala. Bus. College,
MACON, GEOIIGI.V .
Genuine stamped C CC. Never sold In bulk.
Beware f the dealer who tries to sell
"something jast ss eood."
HAMLINS WIZARD OIL,
DIPHTHERIA. CROUP
At-L DbUGC. O
GOVERNOR OF OREGON
I
CA.PITOL BUILDING, SALEM, OREGON*
A Letter From the Exec a tire Office of Oregon.
le-ru-na ia known from the Atlantic to
the Pacific. Letters of congratulation and
commendation testifying to the merit© of
Pe-ru-nt as a catarrh remedy ere pouring
in from every State in the Union. Dr.
Hartman ia receiving hundreds of such let
ters daily. All classes write these letters,
from tiie highest to the lowest.
The outdoor laborer, the indoor artisan,
the clerk, the editor, the statesman, the
preacher—all agree that Peru na is the ca
tarrh remedy of the age. Ths stage and
rostrum, recognising catarrh as their great
est en-my, are especially enthusiastic in
their praise and testimony.
Any man who wishes perfect health must,
be entirely free from catarrh. Catarrh ir.
well-nigh universal; almost omnipresent,
le-ru-na is the only absolute safeguard
known. A cold i* the beginning of ca
tarrh, To prevent colds, to cure colds, is
to cheat catarrh out of its victims. Pe ru
ga uot only cures catarrh, but prevents.
Every household should be supplied with
this great remedy for coughs, colds and so
forth.
The Go senior of Oregon ia an ardent ad
mirer of Pe ru-na. lie keeps it continually
cJfmMwm
IlSaui
M^„ oes . -
/ /Jnk THE BEST SHOE
/ AMERICA
(i \ TAKE NO
j SUBSTITUTE
II II IF VOUR DEALER DOES
\\ J I II *° T CA "* V THtM -t
Vv A POtTAL CARD TO UB
J/ WIU. TILL YOU WHMI
YOU CAN OET THEM.
CRADDOCK-TERRYCO.
LEADING
SHOE MANUFACTURERS
OF THE SOUTH.
LYNCHBURG VA.
r Situations Secured
lot graduates or tuition refunded. Write
at once for catalogue and *peci*l offer*.
GisiccOV Buelnesß
ITIUIkJCj Colleges
Louisville. K,. Msntgsmtm. Ala.
Houston. Tax. Columbus, Gx.
tlchmontf.-Vs. Birmingham. Ala. laoksanvlll*. Fla.
pi* HI
J ant HKADACHES. j
, fft Sold by all Prngglats. jg
h*m%***ik***xxxx*xfix*x*ma*
| ''' -I_ W© buy Bounty I,and
j I H arrant* issued to tol
I,T • 1 dler© of IU Mexican and
Mexican
iw.tivuil natM 9textr^d 7 or tllo#e :
i entitled, including heirs
17 j Wrtt© for rarriouCr*.
veterans Tbe c#ni*s und c.
Atlantic Stull,ling-, i
TssklaFsn, D. ( .
pfeDROPSY
10 mrs 1 Tf.tATHINT FREE.
P . JTJ Hare Bad© Dropty and it* cotn-
UffiNk S pi'Citlcp* &pcciJu'.y for treaty
T 7M3With to* nott *ond*rfol
A x A wade**. Havomodmaoytbots
ftad case*.
X&.2LB. OMSK'S CONS.
-r i ia> Box B Atlanta, Qa.
Have U Seen Oar
LSHOC COJ
Mocey Savin’ Catalog
1Z INVESTMENT
The Preferred Stock of the
W. L. Douglas ®co. e
Capital Stock, $2,000,000.
$ 1,000,000 Preferred Stock.
5i,000,000 Common Stock.
Shares, $ 100 each. Sold at Par.
Onlj Prewired Stock offered for rls.
W. L. Douglas retain i al! Common Slock.
The Preferred Stork of the W. L. Pongla* Shoe Com
pany pay* better than HaTing* Hank* or Government
Bonds. Kvety dolUr of siot-w offered the pa bile has
behind il more than a dollar ’s
worth of act nal aAtetn. W. L. i
£*■■ kEk Vagina continue* to o '
Mfe. - one-half of Hie bumrteew<-'
'*S >* ,n remain the act,**- N
ifisTt I m xEa of lite concern.
hu*ine*s t* not an on
I**-'/ w** '*Wl developed proepect. ft M •
C 2 v %rl demonstrated dividend pur
' Ay er - Thi* it the >.reu
DJLWILk in the worldjsroaoeiru? Men’*
f (looltmi Ww(Hk>4
P , J FroreiM) fti.oea aim] has al-
I ways been ini;>n**lT profit-
A able. There La* not bee,; .i
//Mb., year In the pant twelve when
iflHEfa v - the tmrr.ewi Ism not earned
Jk: Actual caah nneh more
th.-lii the amount nereewy
liS3,w\ YHffsr/ /wrA'lm.'to pay 7 per rent annual
dividend on the preferred Dock of ffl.oft; OCO.
The annual busin©** new I* ft.MO 000. it is inereatdng
Tery rapidly, and will etjual fT.OOO 00 for the year UML
The factory is now turning out v*ot* naira of shoes per
(Lit. ami an addition to tbe plant is being built which
will increase the rapacity to 104>e pair* per day.
The reason 1 am offering the Preferred Stock for sale
la to perpetuate the buatneaa.
If you wih to invest in the best shoe bfieineas la the
world, which L* permanent, and receive T per cent on
your money, yon can purchase one share or more In tb ia
great business. Send money M -ashrer i check or certi
fied cheek, made payable to tr. Douglas. If there
la no bank in your town, send money by express or !
post office money order*.
Prospectus giving full information alioot thir great
and profitable business sent upon application. Address ,
XV. L. DOIULA9, Brock ion, Mnu.
fF'Oive tho name of this paper when
writing: to adverU3ers-(At. 44-. ’O2) *
in the house. In & recent letter to Dr.
Hartman he savs:
State of Oregon, )
Executive Department, y
Salem, May 9. 1898. )
The Pe-ru-na Medicine Cos., Columbus, O.t
Dear Sirs—-1 have had occasion to use
your Pe-iu-na medicine in my family 'or
colds, and it proved to be an excellent rem
edy. 1 have not had occasion to use it for
other admenta.
Yours very truly, W. M. Lord.
It will he noticed that the Governor
says he has not had occasion to use Pe ru
na for other ailments. The reason for this
is most other ailments begin with a cold.
Using Pe-ru-na to promptly cure colds, he
protects his family against other ailnfabt#.
This is exactly what every other family la
the United States should do. Keep Pe-ru*
na in the house. l : ae it for coughs, colds,
la grippe and other climatic affections of
winter, and thers will be no other ail
ments in the house. Such families should
provide themselves with a copy of Dr.
Hartman’s free book, entitled "Winter Ca
tarrh." Address Dr. llartman, Columbus,
Ohio.
s3&s3tsfl SHOES W
tV. L. Chuqla'i shoes are the standard tf the world.
Vi. I*. Doagla* made ami sold wore men’s Geo 4
year Welt llend SeirM Free***) hoe in tbs irlt
*l* month* of 1002 (Itin any other manufartutrar.
C l n linn MtWARDwIIIbf paid to an, on* who
y * UtyUll ran ilwrore Ibis lUiriumt.
W. L. OOUCLAS S4 SHOES
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
1* moot M, $1,105,82 {?.* Moallw, ssji'e.oaa
Bes- imported ant American leathers. Hsyl's
Patent Calf. £no met. B>* Calf. Calf, Vlcf Kid, Corona
Colt, hi>ii. Kangaroo. Last Color Eyelet* tisod.
Caut s * n ! Tho hRVfc w. i>. dottglas*
nnm* and price on bottom*
Shoes Ip mail. toe. extra, Unix. Catalog free.
W. L. DOUGLAS. BROCKTON. MASS. <*’
Avery & McMillan,
51 and 08 S. Forsyth St.. Atlanta, Oa.
Alt. kinds of
MACHINERY
Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers,
all Sizes. Wheat Separators,
all Sizes.
Large Engine, and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Mllla, Corn Mill*,
Circular Saw*, Saw Teeth, Patent
Dogs, Steam Governor*. Full line En.
gines and Mill Supplies. Send for
free Catalogue.
RiPANS
I have bcenusing Ripans
Tabules for over two years
medicine for general
ills. I always keep a sup
ply on hand, and find they
Ibme in handy for everyday
use in case of headache,
constipation or a bilious
attack.
At druggist*.
The Five-Ont packet is enough for an
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
60 cents, contains a aupply for a year.
T" E ,o™™? 11 Telegraphy,
Louisville, Ky.. (founded In 186P,wilI teach
you the ptofeaslon quickly and secure position
for yon. Handsome catalogue fr* i.
H UUKtS WHtRt ALL list FAILS.
M Bos * l Lough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
_ fcu tn time, r-old be druggist*. pSI