Newspaper Page Text
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r GOOD POTATOES » j
WRING FANCY PRICES
To protf a large crop of rood potatoes, the
•oil must (ODtaiO plenty of Potash.
Tomatoes, melons, cabbage, turnips, lettuce
—In fact, all vegetables remove large quauti- M
ties of Potash from the s oil. Supply u
Potash
ahemlly !>y the u«e of fertiliser. actual containing Potash.
not It ii /*•>» 10 per cent, yields
Heiier and mu.e amfiuMe are sure to
O"* remptile lets are not advertiKing circufari
bo<»‘ ing gp* dal fertiJ.*«*rs ( but contain v.ifu-
e inform. 1 ! non i' to larttier*. fe«nl free for the
asking. Wr ite now,*
HERMAN KALI WORKS
New York Xu Nassau Strict, or
Atlanta, Ga,—South Broad St.
Malsby & Co.
41 South Forsyth St., Atlanta. 6 a.
1
IS as m
Portable and Niailonar.v
-
hmrines * l>()IICf*^
c' cl W iViliIS nm *ll
j
ANO All NINOS OF
Compute line Carried, in stock for
tMMKHH TK DKI.l VEll )’.
Best Machinery, Lowest* Prices and Bent Ter
Write US for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.
/ lluHiiies*. .Nliorthfiml and lelo
ft iftphy College, I/<>ul*vllJe,Ky ,open the wiioie )
year. Students can enter any timo. ('ataloff free
* NEW '^"Z7A',U. K. FI re c*r*i. iiria «i I
In.t.n wi <M.w>prnr. J 'pi
CflTrt* l 111 ! produced from »n ijr place
j**rfornn :*r dfflffM, Full liidfruofl'inHfiuut by mull for
$ i. A <Mm il.il. \ lum ii.Tiu m e*, Fla,
Y! Will service give in you proper best
Shoes. Ask your
dealer to fit your
feet with shoes which will givo you Comfort,
Style and Longest Wear. The Right Shoe
for all sorts of wear will be found in
“ALWAYS JUST CORRECT”
CLOVF.lt BRAND
SHOES
If your particular dealer really means to glue you YOUR KONEV’S WORTH
he will sell you CLOVER BRAND. Buy a pair of M AMIGO” SHOES today
Ufrtbfimi'r-S’utartfi (£n.
LARGEST FINE SHOE EXCLUSIVISTS
ST. LOUIS, U. S. A.
Truths that Strike Home
Your grocer is honest and—if he cares to do so—can tell
you that he knows very little about the bulk coffee ho
sells you. llow can ho know, where it originally came from,
how it was blended—or With What
I •—or when roasted? If you buy your
coffee loose by the pound, how can
you expect purity and uniform quality?
'Ht V* i LION COFFEE, the LEADER OF
AIX PACKAGE COFFEES. Is of
B necessity uniform in quality,
strength aud flavor. Fox* OVT.R \
QUARTER OF A CENTURY, LION COFFEE
has heen the standard coffee tn
W4 - *. t. millions of homes.
/ LION COFFEE pocked
'j l® carefully
® •» until opened In
at our factories, aucl
your home, ha?i no chance ot bclnfj adul¬
terated, or of coining In contact with dust,
dirt, Qcrm», or unclean hands*
In each pack arc of LION COFFEE you pot one full
pound of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting tho genuine.
(Lion head on every package.) premiums.)
(Siivo tbo Lion-heads for valuable
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
YVOOTJSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
(At 14-’05)
PILES
for oX, constipation. 5fta n. In thn F court® 1 WaSSStMa of iirr«l 1 uotieoa
the have pile* done ibey beg-tu wonder* did i ____forme. to not ““CT/ f 1 »ui rBtlroiy S$L tKei; cured 4i\a
foei like * tie* tfeort© Kryder, bftpoleoa. O.
Best For
m m. Th« Bowels
KOdcom©
^ CANDY CATrUNTlC
^OHKWHIU^
PAlatftbU, Pot*nt. 0(>od ,_T>o
Sa ohi in bulk 11 The'«inolne table* et4»inr<!d beck. Co5f
ftrantood to cure or your money
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 593
ANNUAL SALE. TEN MILLION BOXES
NEEDLES, ) ri, R NE A v LL s, SE j VI ^ c r
REPAIRS. l^- T c ?o
“* mm ip® u «>
CONSUMPTION
sg/tSThouipson's Ejo Water
OPERATION AVOIDED
EXPERIENCE OF MISS MERKLEY
81)6 Wee Told That an Operation Was
Inevitable How She Escaped It
i When a physician tells a woman suf-
fi ring with ovarian or womb trouble
that an operation is necessary, the very
thought of the knife and the operating
table strikes terror to her heart, ana
our hospitals are full of women coming
for ovariun or womb operation*.
♦ BflM 1
I
& *S> j '(•(
VI
H
:■ M
u,
/WtiiAfargi'et Aferkhy
i There are cases whe.re an operation
j is the only resource, lmt when one con-
! aiders the great number of eases of
) ovarian and womb trouble cured by
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com¬
pound after physicians have advised
operations, no woman should submit to
: one without first trying the Vegetable
Compound and writing Mrs. I’inkham,
Lynn, Mass., for advice, which is free.
Miss Margret Merkley of 275 Third
Street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes:
shooting "^JW’SSSr«... pains through tho pelvic
compelled organs,
iiwiring down pains and cramps
mo to seek medical advice. Tho doctor, after
making an examination, said I had ovarian
troubleiuid ulceration and advised an ojmra-
lion. To this 1 strongly objected and decided
to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable healed, Com- ail
(tound. The ulceration disappeared quickly and I
tho bad symptoms well.” arn
once -more strong, vigorous and
Ovarian and womb troubles are stead¬
ily on the increase among women. If
the monthly periods are very painful,
or too frequent and excessive if you
have pain or swelling low down, fn the.
left side, bearing down pains, leuoor-
, a , don’t uegleet yoursel Compound. f try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
NO WONDER.
H-e—Peck is a confirmed woman-
hated.
She - A crank old bachelor, eh?
11 Oh, no, he’s nArried.-
Taylor’s fherokoe Remedy of Sweet flum
and Mullen is Nature’s great remedy—Cures
CoUtfb** CoItjH, ( ruUD nml (. OHSUnU>tlOn,&Q<1 druggists,
•» threat and lung troubles. At
2fiC., fc0c. Slid $1.00 J'Or bottio.
_________________________________
Most Japanese otHcora aud many of the
men can speak lUiftsian.
THE STRAIN OF WORK.
Prat of Books Give Out Voder the Burden
ot n.iiy Toil.
Lieutenant George C. Warren, of No.
3 Chemical. Washington, I'*. C.. says:
"It’s an honest fact that Doan’s Kidney
Pills did me a
great lot of good,
and if it were not
true I would not
recommend them.
M 6 It was the strain
♦ r jNy. of lifting that
brought on kidney
trouble and weak¬
ened my back, but
since using Doan’s
: Kidney Pills I have lifted 6tX> pounds
aud felt no bad effects. V have not felt
i ibe trouble come back since, although
! I had suffered for five or six years, and
s other remedies had not helped me at
all." Price 50
for sale by all dealers.
cents. loster-MllburuCo.,Buffalo,N.Y,
Shot and 8h«ll.
Tt will probably be found that a
now record has been estnbllshod In
tho matter of round* discharged by
tbo Port. Arthur garrison and tha be¬
sieging army.
Tho rapidity of modern gunfire
must eclipse all prevjou* figures.
Tt was considered wonderful at tho
Sleyc Of St. Sebastian In 1812 that tha
breaching battery of ton guns should
average 350 rounds per gun in fifteen
and a half hours.
Tho Germans dropped 197,000 pro*
Jortllos Into Mexico, killing, however,
only with each 900th discharge.
Only two people dropped at Trou*
vllle from the discharge of 27.000
shells.
Sedan was much more deadly, 240,*
000 projectiles accounting for 9,000
rnsualtles.
The Americans, who pride them*
selves on their marksmanship, er*
pected that Virriblo casualty lists
would result from their firing in the j
war with Spain. Well, at Santiago j
they bombarded for two nights, and
their machine Runs alone were re*
sponsible for 25,000 rounds. But only
sixty-eight of the enemy succumbed.
Who Own. the Railroad*? |
«• T* Newcomb, of the Dlstrlct of I ,
&“.a.%««iS p ss M , sir i s
savings banks cf six Eastern States are
directly interested in the Joint owner*
ship of 8442,354,080 of steam railroad
securities, that insurance companies
doing business In Massachusetts hold
•5-845,881),0.38 of steam railroad stocks
and bonds, and 74 educational institu-
lions depend on $47,408,327 Invested in
similar securities for a portion of their
Income. Other fiduciary Institutions
own enough railroad securities to bring
such holdings up to more than a billion
and a half dollars, about one-sixth of
the entire capital Invested In railroad
property. These Investments represent
the savings of the masses, there being
twenty million holders of life insur¬
ance policies in the country, as many
more of tire insurance policies, and an
even greater number of depositors in
banking and trust institutions, where
Investments are largely In railroad se¬
curities.
Not All Love.
Wlien tho average young couple got
married they Etart out on the false
assumption that lovo is a habit, like
the dope habit, that nothing will
break up, and they will never want
any other amusement in life more
thrilling than holding each other's
hands.
This is a mistake. You can tire of
squeezing the most lily white hand in
mighty short ordor, and even the
diversion of gazing into another’s
eyes palls upon you pretty soon,
when it is always the same eyes. It
is then up to both husband and wife
to keep things moving if they want
to bo happy.
Nothing is going to happen of itself.
If tho woman wants to keep her
husband interested sho lias got to
make a home for him that is com¬
fortable, attractive and cheerful.
When you hear a man say that ho
had rather go home to dinner than
eat at a fashionable restaurant, It Is
a certificate of domestic happiness so
strong that you could draw money on
It at the bank.
If she wants to make married life
Interesting for her husband a woman
must keep up the charm and allure¬
ment with which sho caught him.
Even the recording angel must
wink at the peccadilloes of the man
who lias to go home at night to a
fault-finding, peovlsh, fretting, nag¬
ging woman In a wrapper.
WHAT, wit a t INDLLD. India pm
"I don’t know what is coming to
us, sighed ^Mrs. Jones, as she hand-
ed the paper ovei to her husband,
‘ I'm suro things is bad enough, al-
ready."
"Why, what’s the maker now, my
dear',’ murmured John, with a
mouthful of muffin.
"Matter, Indeod!" snorted Mrs.
Jones. "Just like you men; haven t
the poor rate, water, ami other rates
all been increased, and now the pa-
pers say the birth rate is going up?
T'hen they ought to— Now, John,
what are you laughing art"—London
Tit Bits.
Avoid cheap «ash curtains with
handsome inside curtains and vice
versa.
CHILDREN AFFECTED
lly Mother's Food and Drinlc,
Many lmbies have been launched into
life with constitutions weakened by
disease taken in with their mother's
milk. Mothers cannot bo too careful
ns to the food they use while nursing
their babes. The experience of n Knn-
sas City mother is a case in point:
"I was a great coffee drinker from a
child, and thought 1 could not oat a
meal without tt. But I found at last
it was doing me harm. For years I
lmd been troubled with dizziness,
spots before my eyes and pain in my
heart, to which was added, two years
ago, a chronic sour stomach. The
baby was born seven months ago, and
almost from the beginning it, too, suf-
fered from sour stomach. She was
taking it from me!
“In my distress I consulted a friend
of more experience than mine, and she
told me to quit coffee, that coffee did
not make good milk; 1 have since ns-
certntned that it really dries up the
milk.
"So I quit coffer, and tried tea and
at last cocoa. But they did not agree
uitlt me. 1 hen I turned to Postum
Coffee with the’happiest results. It
proved to be the very thing I needed.
It not only agreed perfectly with baby
and myself but it increased the flow
of ,»> milk. My husband then quit
coffee and used Postum, quickly got
well of the dyspepsia with which ho
had t>een troubled. I no longer suffer
from the dizziness, blind spells, pain
in my heart or sour stomach. Postum
has cured them.
“Now we all drink Postum from my
husband to my seven months' old baby.
It has proved to be the best hot drink
we have ever used. We would not
give up Postum for the best coffee we
ever drank." Name given by Postum
Co.. Battle Creek. Mich.
There's a reason.
Get the little book “The Road to
Wellviile" in each pkg.
feiaeieiaaa o i o^^
Her Lone Nmiho.
The signing of the marriage register
In the case of a prospective English
bride will be something of a task ordl-
warily, as Miss I.yonelle Tollemaehe Is
the possessor of no fewer than nine
Christian names. She belongs to a
family noted for the number and
qualntnesg of its Christian names, and
Is herself burdened with the following
appellation: Lyonelia Fredegunda
Cuthberga Ethelswytha Ideth Vsabel
Grace Monica do Orellana Plantagenct
Tollemaelie-Tollcmache. — Washington
Times.
A Ifancly Utile Blouse.
T 011 happen to have seen the
_ “town and country blouse," that chaste
nn(l delightfully simple Ideal in blouse
e ' elution ? It is a severe tailored af-
falr fts trim atl( l simple as a man’s neg-
s I'Spe ° ft < shirt, olors * yet n "'hlch dainty It and Is exploited. girlish in the
T it is ; made perfectly plain, with a
very shallow yoke across the back and
shoulders. The sleeve has no more
fullness than a man’s shirt sleeve and
doses with a plain little wristband.
There Is a soft, lay-down collar, a box
e;/™ p 011 *. 10 ^ ront •«««*»*» - making
11 temptingly boyish and becoming for
country walks and sports,
Those seen were in white, tan and
delectable shades of blue, silli-striped made of pon-
gee, line flannel and alba-
fross.—Washington Times
A Hint is Knough
Paris has sent out not a hint, but the
merest suspicion of a hint, that long
skirts are sweeping back, ever so slow¬
ly, but inevitably, into favor. But it
takes about live years to exhaust a
radical change such as the marked
change was to short skirts, and “trot¬
ting skirts” have a year and a half to
go. All of the newest models show
short skirts, and most of them show
increased fullness about the hips, al¬
though that is one point on which there
is the greatest imaginable latitude, the
conservatism of one city revealing it¬
self in fullness soberly held down by
pleats, the swing and dash of another
shown lit an accentuation of tho full¬
ness.
After all, the very full skirt belongs
to a type, not a general style, and the
woman who looks well in it is stun¬
ning. But you of the largo hips—let
them alone. As long as fashion per¬
mits adaptation of this point, suit
your style rigorously.
Sleeves are impossible to describe,
for all sorts of picture sleeves are be¬
ing worn. Sleeve styles refuse to re¬
solve themselves into general rules.
There’s a marked tendency, though, to
shorter sleeves. — Rochester (N. Y.)
Post-Express,
Molialr For llit8ino6* Suit.
Judging from the few advance mod¬
els the late spring and summer skirt
will be fuller than ever about the hips.
So far they have kept within the limit
of the figure and the fullness has oc¬
curred just below the hips. Sbirrings
and pleats are inevitable and are laid
more deeply than ever. From Paris
conics the announcement that figures
are not considered at all and that as
long as a gown displays a quantity of
shirrs it is in direct keeping with the
latest fashions.
Skirts have even reached the stage
of being ten yards around the hem.
This lias become quite a feature in the
Parisian, capital, and there are very
few gonws which do not employ many
yards of material for the making.
There is going to be a wide divergence
between the tailor made gown and the
walking suit. The former will bo
plainer, shorter of skirt and, generally
speaking, more mannish than one has
been accustomed to of late. For young
women the simple short skirt and bo-
lero jacket seems to he the best kind
c f a spring suit. These skirts clear
the ground by several inches and are
not trimmed excepting -for a row of
braid, perhaps.
Nothing makes so satisfactory an un-
lined skirt ns mohair. It Is one of the
most difficult materials to handle, and
It must be skillfully dealt with. Never-
tlieless it is indeed wortn the trouble,
They wear splendidly and always carry
their freshness and neatness. The new
importations of mohair show blues,
browns, blacks and grays galore, and
for a business woman’s suit nothing
mote suitable could possibly be select¬
ed. If made with the long tight-fitting
coat and short untrimmed skirt one
would feel the greatest satisfaction.—
Newark Advertiser.
.
A {FRILL% I\
*r
V i'V- * or ■Ag¬
(- Q 4
New leather wrist bags have come
over the seas-new in shape and in coi-
ors.
Handkerchief lineu, embroidered by
hand, makes the newest and best of
the new blouses,
l'or practical morning wear, cotton
poplin and cheviot blouses, smartly
tailor made, are much in vogue this
season.
Rich colorings have supplanted the
modest browns and decorous blues
Us0< 1t,r s0 ni;ul V seasons past in evolv-
mg street costumes.
A long pongee coat, severely plain,
" as lined with gray and white squirrel
fur. the lining being entirely concealed
" hen the Coat was closed,
A new toy for babies is a “menagerie
ring." a small hoop wound with a rib-
Hon. with half a dozen rubber animals
-the kind that whistle-hanging on.
Evening hats are growing prettier
especial those with two-toned brims,
rmu uuri wlth the flnff of lnarabout
J^es feathers or with nfnk roses and
i In tlie outer wraps this season coats
are worn loose and baggy, with dol-
man-shaped sleeves, aud capes of the
regulation coachman cut cover the
gown almost entirely.
The duller tints of the season just
passed are now brightened by touches
of vivid shades, and whole costumes
ot reds, purples aud new and striking
blues are taking their places in the
wardrobe of the smartly gowned
woman.
TWO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN ESCAPED
pCJ l /|0 PATAQRU RY Alfl
I
Female Weakness Is Usually Pelvic Catarrh. Pe»
ru=na Cures Catarrh Wherever Located.
l m w/imm in
■-j
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T1KS.
11 ABLE\
\BRADFORD.
» + + + + + + + + + * + + + + * + + + + +
. Mrs. M.vble Bradford, 13 Church street, Bur-
J lington, Vt., Secretary Whittier Oratorio Soci-
* ety, writes:
} ‘Teruna is certainly a wonderful medicine
.for the ills of women. I have heard
1 spoken of in the highest praise by many,
| and of certainly good word. my experience is well worthy
J a have pains
• “I began to severe across my
| cold, back and about each a year subsequent ago, brought month on by a
j and distress.
J me pain
t ‘ Your remedy was prescribed, and the way
♦ it acted upon my system was almost
♦ good to be time. I certainly have regained
} my health and strength, and I no
{suffer periodical pains and extreme
Bradford.
Itoui«»a> of Women CnroiI Ewry
Year by Correspondence—This to is
What Dr, Hartman Proposes
Do For You Without Charge.
Women who suffer should read the evi¬
dences presented here. We have thousands
of letters from grateful friends who tell the
eame story. the ills that peculiarly woman s
Half catarrhal are character. Female
own are of a understood for
weakness was not many
years. Dr. Hartman deserves the credit of hav¬
ing determined its real character. He has
A Siberian Chicago.
A British company, with a capita,
of 10,000,000 rubles, is founding a
mpnf, preserving establishment, fitted
with the most modern machinery,
about 120 miles from Petropavlosk,
District of Akmoiinsk. This estab¬
lishment will be joined to the Trans-
Siberian Railway at Petropavlovsk by
a servee of motor wagons, each with
a carrying capacity of six cwts. Ma¬
chinery and utensils for this estab¬
lishment are said to be arriving daily.
Petropavlovsk is the center cf the
steppe cattle-rearing district of west¬
ern Siberia. The preserved meat, it
is said, will be despatched to Lon¬
don, application having already been
made to the authorities for favorable
freight rates.—London Globe.
State of Ohio, Citv of Toledo, ( I ss.
Lucas Cooxtv. oath’
Frank J. Cheney make that he U
sonior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney A
Co., doing business in tile City of Toledo,
County aud state aforesaid, uud that said
firm will pay the sum of one hunched dol¬
lars lor eaoh and every case ot catahhh
that caunot ha cured by the uso of Hall’s
Catabbh Cube. Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before mo aud subscribed iu my
—•—, presence, this 0th day of Deoam-
J seal. .• her, A. D., 1330. A. W. Gleason,
1 — 1 Abfary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure blood is taken Internally, an i
aetsdlreetly on the and. mucous sur¬
faces of the systo n. Send for testimonials,
free. F. J. Cheney -V Co., Toledo, 0.
fioldbyall Druggists, 73o.
Take Hall’s Family Fills for eo istinatioa.
WANTED—REDISTRIBUTION.
“I think it such a pity that poor
men don’t know enough to remain
single.”
"Yes—and that rich ones uo! ’—
V Gel Premiums ^
with
Your Baking Powder
Buy Good Luck Baking Powder and get the beautiful premiums
we are offering absolutely free. Good Luck is unquestionably the
purest baking powder possible to manufacture. Bread made with it
is light, white, wholesome and nutritious. It keeps longer and better
than other baking powders and raises the batter quickest and very thoroughly.
Good Luck is only 10c a pound. By giving the best at the lowest cost Good
Luck is now being shipped in car load and train load lots to all parts of the
country. It is the idea of getting these beautiful presents free, in addition to
the high quality and low price, that makes this a remarkable premium offer
j , 00 D LUi GOOD
JB 5 Vi / ONE LUCK
t SPOON 1
|
!
r Baking Powder
\ the
is packed in 6 oz. and 1 ,b. cans. The coupons necessary to get
i many useful gifts, are printed on the label of each can. Cut out W
these coupons. Save diem. A few of them will get yon a hand¬ a
J some free premium. For details read the little book to be fonnd
j >V’ ,/p in every can. Don’t forget to ask for Good Luck next time.
I Save worry, save money, and last but not least save the cou¬
i w pons and get the beautiful gifts. If your grocer doesn’t sell
it, send us his name and we will see that you are supplied. J
j «.C,riM.DOCIUOI'W>«OPOw6cRff1 s*
; ssifsasstsasss m
! ^ we- CO
j a xCiixi- .iL-rriABC- y r
j This is the coupon found on every can.
HI % a THE SOUTHERN MANUFACTURING CO.
MCHMOW), VA.
Mo., Mrs. “I found writes: Lizzie after Redding, trying 3134 B Clifton diffmnt Place, medicines St. Louis, !
many j
to restore me to health, that Peiuna was the J
only thing which could be depended upon. I be- « *
gan taking it when I was in a decline, induced »
by female weakness and overwrought nerves. ♦
* ^ began to feel stronger during the first week {
♦ I took Peruna and my health improved daily until «
; now 1 an in perfect health and enjoy life as I nev- ♦
er did before.”—Liszie Bedding.
'*>< i
V I
m MP-
util
Mi tslihlHUi m 1
■
, including pelvic catarrh, a
» eases,
* life long study.
j„ body. ^°.i o«
IInan
Pe-ru-na, a Natural Beautifier.
Peruna produces facial clean, raucous and mem¬
branes, the basis of symmetry a
perfect complexion. have been slow to dis¬
The women not will do
cover that a course youthful of Peruna more all
toward restoring beauty than
the devices known to science. faded
Many a girl has regained her
beauty, many a matron has lengthened by using the
days of her comely appearance
Peruna.
It costs $1.23 to telephone from Berlin
to Paris.
RESTORED HIS HAIR
Scal}> Ilumor Cured b.v Cutlcura Soap and
Ointment After All JElse Failed.
“I was troubled with a severe scalp hu¬
mor and loss of hair that gave me a great
deal of annoj-ance. After unsuccessful ef¬
forts with many remedies and eo-callcd
hair tonics, a friend induced me to try
Cuticura Soap and Ointment. The humor
was. cured in a short time, my hair was
restored as healthy as ever, and I can glad¬
ly say 1 have since been entirely free from
any further annoyance. 1 shall always use
Cuticura Soap, and 1 keep the Ointment
on hand to use as a dressing for the hair
and scalp. (Signed) Fred’k Busehe, 213
East 57th St., N. Y. City."
A SUFFERER.
“Madam,” said the haggard man
at the door, “could you give me some
assistance? I am a survivor of the
siege of Port Arthur.”
“Why,’ said the woman, suspicious¬
ly, “you ccuidn’t nave reached here
in this time.”
“Oh, kind lady, I was' not at Port
Arthur, I was the war-rumor editor on
an excitable newspaper,”—Judge
Ttrh cured in 30 minutes by Wool ford »
Sanitary Lotion. Never r ai!s. Sold bv all
druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly filled
by Dr. E. Pefcb on, Craw fords ville, Ind.
Earl Beers, of Bangor. Me., runs a worm
farm. Ho raises them for bait.
Dahlias, 20 kinds,$ 1 . H. Burt,Taunton, Mass
Vienna. Austria, has the largest public
I bath in Lurone.
T
•y
f
m m
;■ mlm mm
fiii
ffi s mm iim
ilfil wm ■ 1
m :m
m
H my.
Lizzie
s, redding.
In Peruna these women find a prompt
and permanent cure. testimonials to this effect
Thousands of
axe received by Dr. Hartman accomplished every year.
The good that Peruna has in
this class of cases can scarcely be over¬
estimated.
VWWVIWI—A—
J If you do not derive prompt the and of
{satisfactory results from use Hart-
J Peruna, write at once to Dr.
$ man, giving a full statement of yoflr
{case, ! and he will advice be pleased gratis to give
you his valuable of
* Address Dr. Hartman, President
t The Hartman Sanitarium, held Columbus, strictly
JOhio. All correspondence
{confidential.
THE WAY THEY
Edna—What did Dr. Dlx mean
when he spoke of that “vast waste of
humanity?"
Maud—Bachelors, of course, dear.
FTTH permanently cured, tiollts or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s treatise Great
NervoBestorer,%2trialb9ttle and free
Dr. It. H. K like,L td,,931 Ar c hBt.,P hila., Pa.
More than half sale of Russia’s export profits
come from the of grain.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething,soften thegums, reduces Inflamma¬
tion,allays paiu,cures wind colic,25c.abottle.
The wildest birds generally make the
tamest pets, and vice versa.
1 do not believe Rise’s Cure for Consump-
(lonlms .me-pi-il for coughs and colds.—J ohs
F.Boxer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900.
A Forest School ha-, been established in
the suburbs of Berlin. Germany.
On the Trait trail “I followed from Toxaa tho
<wlth a Fish Brand brand
f c*t> t 8lickcr, used for
JrommelollCkCP cold, an overcoat wind when coat
"■ a
when windy, a rain coat when it rained, to bed,
and for a cover at night if we got
and I will eay that 7 have gotten more
comfort out of your slicker then any Other
one article that I ever owned.”
(The name and addn os* of tho wrltor of this
unsolicited loiter may y bo htd on application.)
Wet Weather Garments for Riding, Walk*
ing, Working or Sporting.
HIGHEST AWARD WORLD S FAIR, 1904.
The Sign of the Slab
A. J. TOWER CO.
BOSTON, U.B.A
TOWER CO., Limited CANADIAN - U»
TCEONTO, CANADA
854