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ROVE r DOAN’S FREE HELP.
Those who doubt, who think because other Kidney Remedies do them
of no Doan’s good, who feel discouraged, they profit most by the Free Trial
Pills. The wondrous results Doan merit.
L- Aching backs arc eased. Hip, back, and
loin pains overcome. Swelling of Iko
limbs and dropsy signs vanish.
lag, dribbling, frequency, bed wetting.
Doan's Kidney Pills dissolve and remove
calculi and gravel. Relieve heart pal pita
tion, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness.
I SAUOt, Iwo., Feb. 8, 1903 —“I received
'the trial package of Doan’s Kidney Pills
and I must confess they did me wonderful
good. It seems strange to say that 1 had
tried several kinds of kidney medicines
without doing me any good. I had back
ache, pain in my bladder and scalding
urine, and the sample package sent me
stopped it all in a few days, and with the
package I am now using from our drug
store I expect to be cured permanently. It
is wonderful, but sure and certain the mod-
idne docs its work. I was in constant
misery until I commenced the use of
Doan’s Kidney Pills."—Cn as. U. Cook,
P. 0. Box 90, Salem, Washington Co., Ill.
The Sensation.
"Doesn’t it give you a terrible feel-
tug when you run over a man?” they
asked him.
“Yes, if he's a large man," replied
the automobillst. “It gives me a pret¬
ty rought Jolt sometimes.”
There are, In the United States, ac¬
cording to the last census 126 women
plumbers, 46 women plasterers, 167
women 'bricklayers and stonemasons,
141 women paper hangers, 1,769 wo¬
men painters and glaziers and 646
women carpenters nnd Joiners.
IN NO HURRY.
Fllbbert —Your rich uncle says ho
wants to be cremated.
Ganglelgh—Yes; hut he’s In no hur¬
ry about It.—Boston Transcript.
THE PINKHAM CURES
ITTRACTIIfi GREAT ATTENTION AMONG
THINKING WOMEN.
1 SeOV
(a.-vI %
*
I Q
Mrs. Frances Stafford,of 243 E.
114th St., N.Y. City, adds her tes¬
timony to the hundreds of thou¬
sands on Mrs. Pinkham’s files.
When Lydia E. Pinkham’s Remo-
dies were first introduced skeptics
all over tho country frowned upon
their curative claims, but as year
after year has rolled by and tho
little group of women who had been
oured by the new discovery has
since grown into a vast army of
hundreds of thousands, doubts and
skepticisms have flood, been swept away
as the by a mighty good until to-day
great that Lydia E..
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
and her other medicines are doing
among the women of America is
attracting the attention of many of
our leading scientists, physicians
and thinking could people.
Merit alone win such fame;
wise, therefore, is the woman who
for a cure relies upon Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Implying a Distinction.
"Mr. Hittit, you live in a prohibition
do you not?”
"I reside in one, sir, but I live in n
slate of entire freedom as lo—cer
tainly, I will Join you with pleasure."
At tlie height of one mile the aver
erage velocity of „ „ the wind , , is . fom ,
times as great as at the surface.
Samples Mailed Free.
A Trial Package of Dr. Blosser’s Ca¬
tarrh Cure Will Be Sent Free to
Any Sufferer From Catarrh.
To demonstrate the merits of his
remedy, Dr. Blosser offers to mail,
free of charge, to any one suffering
from Catarrh, a three days’ trial pack¬
age of this valuable medicine.
If the trial package does not con¬
vince you of its curative properties,
you will have been at no expense;
It benefits you, you will gladly order
a month's treatment at $1.00.
It is a harmless, pleasant, vegetable
compound, which is smoked In a pipe.
the medicated smol.e, being inhaled,
reaches directly fhe mucous mem-
branes lining tho head, nose, throat
and lungs, heals the ulcerated parts,
effecting a radical and permanent
cure.
Mr. Joseph Chabot. Kaycee, Wyo.,
writes: “I am free from catarrh, ow¬
ing to your wonderful remedy.” An-
E. Young, Camden, N. J, writes;
“Am completely cured of catarrh after
using your medicine.” Mrs. E. M.
Howd, Water Valley, Miss., writes:
"Smoking your remedy has entirely
cured me.”
If you wish to try the remedy and
get full particulars, testimonials, etc.,
write to Dr. Blosser Company, 32 Wal-
ton St., Atlanta, Ga.
fit $25 Every made with Day our
Can be easily
Well Augers & Drills
j Worrontvd the B«*,t £80 on Earth #40 I day.
taok Many of our cmBtomerts make from to a
and Circulars FREE. AdareBs,
U00IJ1S MAGHINE C0.> TIFFIN, OHIO.
1 PAY SPOT CASH FOR
ILITARY^ LAND WARRANTS
BOUNTY
■led to soldiers of any war. Also Soldiers’
■Jtional Homestead Rights. Write at once, , i
IK H. HEHSR, P.O.Box 148, Denver, Colo.
South Baktonvili.k , Ii.l., Feb. 8,
1908.—"I received the trial package of
Doan’s Kidney s Pills and have bought
now j can wor k „ll day and my bock doc*
not get the least bit tired." Bird Gray.
! FREE-TO MAKE YOU A FRIEND.
:
j
i
j
j
j
Ff .ATER-Mn.BU** Ca, Buffalo, N. Y.,
j trial rieacn box Doan'g (tend uio Kklney by mail, Pills. without charge,
t
I Name.—
j Post-office
State
j (Cut out Foster-MUts coupon on dotted linos and mall to
ium Co., buffalo, N. Y. )
Medical Advice Free— Confidential.
Poisoned by Nurse Maid.
That it. Is dangerous to Intrust a
child to a nursemaid who has been
given notice was proved in a startling
manner when the little boy of M. and
Mme. Rlcard became suddenly and vio¬
lently 111. A physician discovered that
the child had been given a dose of
tincture of iodine and with difficulty
saved Its life. Meanwhile the nurse-
maid, who had fled, was arrested, and
she confessed that when Mme. Ricari).
gave her notice to leave she tried to
kill the child out of revenge.—Paris
Correspondence New York Herald.
CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH.
Jl.Il.H. Cures Deep- Stinted Onueu Eepuolallj
—To Prove It II. II. II. Sent Free.
These diseases, with aches and pains in
hones, joints and back, agonizing pains in
shoulder blades, hands, fingers, arms and
legs crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sci¬
atica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting, nose
bleeding, ringing in the cars, sick stomach,
deafness, noises in the head, had teeth, thin
hot blood, all run down feeling of catarrh
arc sure signs of an awful poisoned condi¬
tion of the blood. Take Botanic Blood
Balm (B.B.B.) Soon all aches and pains
stop, the poison is destroyed and a real
permanent cure is made of the worst rheu¬
matism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of
cases cured by taking B.B.B. It strength¬
ens weak kidneys and improves diges¬
tion. Druggists, $1 per large bottle. Sam¬
ple free by writing Blood Balm Co., 18
Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble
and free medical advice sent in sealed letter.
The man oiir who affairs says is he good feels a bit friendly of nuis¬ in¬
terest. in a a
Thero is more Catarrh tn this section of the
country than all other diseases put together,
uud until the last few years was supposed to
he Ineu rable. For a great many years doctors
pronounced It a local disease and presortbed
local remedies, local and by constantly failing to
cure with treatment, pronounced It in-
curable. Soienoe has proven Catarrh to be a
constitutional disease and there fore requires
constitutional treatment. Rail’s Catarrh
l ure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co.,
Toledo, O., Is the only constitutional cure on
the market. It Is taken Interna lly in dose*
ly from 10 tho drops blood to and a teaspoonful. It acts dlreot- the
on mucous surfaces of
system. • They offer one hundred dollars for
any ease It falls to oure. Send for circulars
ami testimonials. Address T. J. Cheney A
Co., Toledo, O.
KCy ruu Ire the best,
An explorer order doesn’t lmvc to be a aor*
rover in to discover the eon pee of s
liver, j
_
FITS permanently ourod.No fits or rtervoua-
Nerve iioss after Restorer. first day’s trial use bottleand of l)r. Kline’s Great
$2 treatise free
Dr. B.H. Kline, Ltd., Dai Arch Bt., Phils.,Pa.
A ring on the finger is worth two on the
telephone.
Mrs. Winslow's SoothlngRyrup for children
teothlog.softonthe gums, reduces lnilamma
tlon, allays pain,cures wind colic. 26c. a bottle
Some men work their way up in tha
world by working other people.
I do not believe Plso’s Cure for Consump¬
tion Iiub an equal for ooughs and oolds— John
F. DoYF.it, Trinity Springs, Ind.. Feb. 18,1900.
It doesn't take much argument to con¬
vince a girl that she is pretty.
No muss or failures made with Putnam
Fadeless Dyes.
It isn’t every hero who has sense enough
to stay up on nis pedestal.
'*
Soap and Civilization 'In f Qu»m.
The inhabitants (If Guam are being
rapidly civilized and may soon claim
admission as an American State into
our glorious Union. The evidence?
In the early part of last year some-
shipped $560 wortn of soap to
the island as a speculation. The gen¬
tle Guamites were so delighted that
they Immediately called for more, and
in October 6,000 pounds were shipped.
That will probably be the monthly
order from the island. When a Guam
lady takes to soap the level of clvillza-
tion Is raised the world over. She is
no longer content with the elaborate
costume of nose-ring, bracelet and gar¬
ter. She wants the comforts and lux¬
uries of New York. Beginning with
soap she will soon aspire to the fash¬
ionable. And. of course, the Guam
gentleman will do likewise in his man
fashion. Soap and civilization—the
American occupation has borne fruit.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Colds
“ I had a terrible cold and could
hardly breathe. 1 then tried Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im¬
mediate relief.”
W. C. Layton, Sidell, Ill.
How will your cough
be tonight? it’s Worse, prob¬ cold,
ably. ror first a
then a cough, then bron¬
chitis or pneumonia, and
at last consumption.
Coughs always Stop tend this
downward.
downward tendency by
taking Ayer’s Cherry Pec¬
toral.
Three sires: 25c., 5k.,,tl. All druggists.
Consult your doctor. If lie .says take it,
then do as be snys. If he tells yo u» not
to take it. then don’t take it. He k UOW«e
Leave it with him. We are willing.
J. C. aYKB CO.. Lowell, Bast.
. AGRICULTURAL.»
A Winter Horn Door,
Where big barn doors are blDged and
swing outward, the opening and shut¬
ting of them every time one enters or
leave slhe ham In winter weather is of¬
ten a troublesome matter, especially if
the wind is blowing, tbe snow flying
and drifts piling up In the way. A
_
.
it 3
small door cut In the middle of one oi
(lie large doors and hinged to swing
Inward will he found very convenient.
The mistake Is often made of cutting,
such a door at the edge of the big door,,
with nothing to hold It in place when
the big door is used. It is much bet- 1
ter supported when placed aa in the'
cut.—New York Tribune Fanner '
,11?
Success With Close Stabling.
My stable Is large, airy, well ventil-
nted and warm, The sun shines'
through several windows in the rear'
nearly all day. A six-foot space be¬
hind the cattle the gives ample rooin toj
work and for cows to stand and
lick while loose for drinking. Running
spring water flows continually in a
small stream into a large’tank behind
the cows, and overflows into another:
large lull in the yard where the cattle inj
drink during the summer. Shutters
front close everything up tight so that
manure or water never freezes.
Every morning between 8 and 9;
o’clock I empty several pails of boiling'
water into that already la the tank,
and let ihe cattle to It, two at a time,
when tiiey drink their till, and al¬
though I again let them out to the tank 1
at night, they seldom drink, The
cows are put up the first cold day inj
fall (tliis year about November 15), and
never leave the barn again until the!
warm days in spring, about April 15,!
and then only for a short time. In tliej
summer I soil and turn my cattle outi
only for a few hours daily in a small
paddock, taking then) in at noon, keep-'
Ing the stable cool and free from flies.
I have followed this system for sev-!
oral years. Have now in my herd two;
cows that I have lmd eight years. They!
are now twelve years old and seem
likely to he good for several
more. I never have a sick cow. The'
cattle Inspector visits me often, and!
lias never yet found a “suspect.” Three!
horses and from sixteen to twenty;
bead of cattle stand in this stable all
winter, and there is no coughing and 1 ,
no shivering. I am aware that but :
few, even ■>” the more Intelligent farm¬
ers, believe in this system, but I am'
satisfied that If the stable is well ven¬
tilated no harm can come of it.—C. L.
Watts, in The Cultivator.
Teaching the Calf to Drlnlc.
To begin with, I want to say that I
have not lind a groat deal of experience
with calves. Nevertheless, the little I
have had has proved very satisfactory.
I regret that circumstances permit
me to sny that young calves are often
the recipients of vile abuse at the
hands of Impatient and ill-tempered
hired help, and also by the farmers
themselves, while in the attempt to
tench them to drink.
In nine cases out of ten the cause of
the supposed stupidity of the calf is
tlie lack of sagacity on the part of the
operators. It Is not my desire to dwell
wholly on what Is, but rather, what
ought to be. I have not taught one
dozen calves in all my life to drink,
but the few I dkl teach learned with
dispatch nnd ease. It may he per¬
ceived by this that it is not a matter
of long experience to be nble to teach
calves to drink quickly and easily, but
rather of Ingenious handling. I have
had a calf drink at the second offering
—drink a full moss without the finger.
method is this:
First of all, use patience and unaf¬
fected kindness. This they are entitled
to in the name of humanity and na¬
ture’s common law. Give them your
fingers gently; don’t thrust them into
their mouths. Don’t push their beads
down into the pall; it Is not natural for
them to look for their food toward the
ground. Lift the pail to their heads.
If a calf should hold its head too high,
coax it down toward the pail by low¬
ering the fingers, which it sucks. Af¬
ter a little patience exercised in this
manner the calf will begin to suck
with some avidity. While the calf is
sucking remove the fingers very sud¬
denly. The calf will continue the mo¬
tion of sucking and thereby draw in a
mouthful or two of milk and swallow
it. After this performance has been
gone through a few times, the fingers
may be drawn out more carefully, and
the tips held against the nose; the calf.
In a natural attempt to got bold of
them, will be surprised into drinking.
In closing, I will again admonish' gen¬
tleness.—John D. Larkin, in the New
York Tribune Farmer.
Longfellow tlie Universal Foot.
Among the many interesting stories
which Mr. Higgiuson has collected itij
liis “Life of Longfellow” there is one.
that puts the wide spread of the poet’s'
fame in a very dramatic way. A party
of passengers on a steamer from Con¬
stantinople to Marseilles fall to talking
about Victor Hugo. A Russian lady
exclaims that it is not Hugo but Long¬
fellow who is the universal poet, and
she recites, “I stood on the bridge at
midnight;” an English soldier recites
“Toll me not In mournful numbers;”
a Scotchman follows with “There is
no flock, however watched and tend¬
ed;” an American recites “My Lost
Youth;” a young Greek sings “Stars
of the Summer Night,” and the cap¬
tain winds up with “Excelsior.” This
is curiously like the poet’s own “Tales
ofa Wayside Inn.”—London Spectator.
The beds of peas in Colorado some¬
Include as many as 2000 aci’es,
there Is one bed exceeding in size
acres. ..... .
A SERIOUS WEED PEST.
Wild carrot Is considered one of the
serious weed pests of New England,
likewise of New York and some of the
other middle states. It Is a blefinial
and does not make its appearance to
any extent until after the hay Is cut,
when It grows to a height of about
two feet and bears a rather large
white blossom that is very conspicu¬
ous. Old meadows are frequently
thickly covered with It during August
and September. The root Is from one.
quarter to three-quarters of an Inch
In diameter and quite long. Where
It 1 r thick, the roots of course, appro¬
priate the plant food than would other¬
wise go to the grass, and In this way
decrease the yield of grass or hay.
The weed Is never present to any ex¬
tent In the first cutting of the grass
and does not injure the hay. Where
a crop of rowen Is taken, there In
sometimes more or less of it, but I
have never heard any complaint of its
being injurious to stock nor impart¬
ing any undesirable odors to milk or
butter.
No effective methods are commonly
used to combat It. It forms seed ihe
second year and then dies. Owing to
the habit of growth, it is difficult to
prevent seeding by mowing, for some
of the blossom stems are sent out so
close *o the ground that they escape
the mower. Then too, the period of
blossoming extends over nearly two
months. Theoretically clean cutting
for two years will eradicate It. As a
matter of practice, it does not, for
some of the seed seems to lie dormant
and springs up year after year. How¬
ever, I have seen it almost entirely
eradicated from a farm by running the
mowing machine over the meadows
two or three times late in the summer
and following in a few days with a
scythe to cut whatever blossoms have
escaped. This is much quicker and
fully as effective as hand pulling.—
E. C. P., in New England Homestead.
Telegraph Facts.
Every day that a telegraph operator
works at three minutes before 11 there
is only one man in the whole country
from San Francisco to New York that
is privileged to use his key. That
man Is the operator at Washington.
In those three minutes every key is
open and all operators wait for three
minutes’ ticking which tells them the
correct lime. From that ticking every
telegraph company’s clock is set.
There are at least 20,009 operators at
work. Taking three minutes from
every one of them equals 60,000
minutes idled away every day. It
would take one man 125 years to do
the listening of all these men for
those few minutes. At the rate of $50
a month, and working for the required
number of years, this man would re¬
ceive $75,000. This is what the com¬
panies pay to their men a year for
Just listening—Boston Journal.
LONESOME.
Gerald—Good people are scarce.
Geraldine—That needn’t make you
feel lonesome.—New York Herald.
Syrup.of Why FjjJs
tke-b&st family laxative
It is pure.
It is gentle.
It is pleasant.
It is efficacious.
It is not expensive.
It is good for children.
It is excellent for ladies.
It is convenient for business men.
It is perfectly safe under all circumstances.
It is used by millions of families the world over.
It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians.
If you use it you have the best laxative the world
produces.
RUNNING FOR COVER.
/,/^SJ/ THE ORIGINAL
*‘S
TRADE 5 7 £
/ A tyfl BR#
/ WE'OMi / CLOTHING
J y /. WILL ( MAPE IN BLACN AND YELLOW)
AND COVER YOU
KfCP YOU DRY IN
/ THE WEITfST WEATHER
ON SALE EVESYWHKS.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES.
AJ.TOWfR CO .BOSTON,MASS..U J.A.
102 T0WBR CARAT IAN C0-.Lnn.te4. TORONTO, CAN.
i Colds Cured
LaGrippe ami Neuralgia Banished
BY THE USE OF
l CAPU DINE
X 10, 25 and 6Jc. at Diug Stores.
P V CATHABTlC^^r
,0 Os * b EST.F0R THE BOWELS All
SSe. 30e. ----------Dcagytsts
Genuine stamped C C'S- Never sold In balk.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
“something just es good.”
It aflicted with Thompson’s Eye Water
eye*, us*
V
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i •.4 4
( it %
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'rSS .
::
V-W A M. KOTA i ft'V: k l: iP
ill A
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V# V A*Si t.
n f,W>. :
:vaoa [Omni
.-It #3 is
v* V© * r +. • 3 7,1 .1
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as \ / k
: mm
3ft M
ml
i.\ % Kite V
*'• j OAR
■\ul
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% w m JR
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gste* mm
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USE TAYLOR’S Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein nature’s Kemedy Great for
Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe 60c ~ Tho roughly and 8I.OO. tested
m ’A
fl IN VIIC YI PH IS, TKNN., will
g be g’ad to know yon. Send lOets and
10 names of your Flower-loving
ju U friends nnd receive by return mail
a beautiful
ASPARAGUS
SPBENGERt! FERN
I shall be pleased to hear from you.
MISS CALLIE WATSON,
T he Southern Woman Florist,
MEMPHIS, - TENNESSEE.
I BUY BRAINS !
Agents Dollar-A-Year wanted for “The New York Evening News,**
the Daily. Easy to get subscriptions.
I got 4iJ myself in 15minutes. Keep posted! Xatest
Howard, markets, Jr., fashions, tho stories, politics, etc. Joseph
most famous Newspaper man in
America, writes exclusively for us in New York,
“Howard’s Column” alone is worth more than the
entire price of tho paper. Only one dollar per vear
for a__Metropolitan Daily Newspaper. Address
ALTER , SCOTT, Editor and Proprietor, New York
Evening News, 187 Broadway, New York.
DROPSY
10 CAYS’ TREATMENT FREE.
a Have mado Dropsy and its com¬
plications with a the specialty most for wonderful tvsnty
years scccess. Havocnrod thous¬
and cases. many
F/.JH fl I8.H.H. SBEEH’3 SOUS,
Box B 'Atlanta, Ga.
25 'CTS,‘
Peruna is recommended by fifty members of
Congress, by Governors, Consuls, Generals,
Majors, Captains, Admirals , Eminent Physicians,
Clergymen, many Hospitals and public institu¬
tions, and thousands upon thousands of those in
the humbler walks of life .
Best Cough Syr ILL ELSE FAILS.
in time. rup. Bold Tastes Good. Use
by druggists.
(2’5 CTS.‘
Because
Its component parts are all wholesome.
It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects.
It is wholly free from objectionable substances.
It contains the laxative principles of plants.
It contains the carminative principles of plants.
It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are
agreeable and refreshing to the taste.
All are pure.
All are delicately blended.
All are skillfully and scientifically compounded.
Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to
the orginality and simplicity of the combination.
To get its beneficial effects — buy the genuine.
Manufactured by
pO^VRlJP ^
Ky. San Francisco, Cal.
Louisville, New York, N. Y.
FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
Malsby & Co.
41 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
AV2 * ifp
••. >i< '-iff 1 ?.*
Portable andi Stationary
Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills
AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY
Complete line carried in stock for
IUMEDIA TE shipment.
Best Machinery, Lowest Prices and Best Terms
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.
BROMO
SELTZER
CURES ALL
Headaches
10 CENTS-EVERYWHERE
A "White Star" Buggy
HI
sHK
f?. Willi 1 ?.Ju]v I. STAR" 4th wo Top will give, Free, one of our
composing the Buggies to the jperson
words from letters greatest number of English
contained in the sentence:
"WATCH THE WHITE STAR BUGGY.”
this Anyone who will devote an hotiT each day to
pleasant study can win tlie buggy.
No conditions to comply with except make
up the Use of words.
If this offer is not understood, any buggy
dealer in your town who has the agenev for
the “WHITE STAR" Buggy will gTye you a
copy 'py of . the . rules.
when you have made out your list of words
give them.to our agent In your town, who will
send them to us.
Oa July 4th we will notify every contestant
who the Winner is and number of words that
won the WHITE STAR ” Buggy.,..
IEF*if you write us. enclose postage lor reply,
ATLAtfl A BUGGY CO., Atlanta. Georgia,
rr'Give the name of this prper when
writing to advertisers- (At. 9,
The work of » rn.nrhlnels done on the latent A
hlghpradewlu d fl* ■ I fj a
standard guaranteed
visible Typewriter, ♦•‘luai to any work,with 111
free course on stenography tor each 1
chine, can be operated by anyone In n few davs, adapted for
the u*«f doctors, tejchers and business men .
For Circular* address
Koom 912, ACME TYPEWRITER CO.,
loe Fulton 8t., New York.