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No Ugetotlry,
I No use to fr<# and worry and Itch and scrtftKh.
^iat of akin won’t cftso&Bo, cure you. Totter, IVdterino Eosenut, will. Halt Any Rlwum, wort
fiiSngworm or moro abrasion of the sltfu. At
daug stores, or by mf&l for 50c. in stamps 1 f rom J.
'J® »Shu,T>triue, Savasxiah, Ga.
■firs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
tew lifti, thing, softens'fho gums, reduce? Inllamma-
allays paln,*oure 8 wind colic. «&o. u bottle.
WJ?v try a 10 c.. box of Unseams, the finest
II vr and bowel regulator ever made.
Rise's Cure^i a wonderful Cough medicine.—
Mps. W. PiCKKUT, Van Hiclcn and Blake Avea.,
Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 20, ’U4.
son’s JPlf afflicted! Eye-wator. with Druggists soro eyes sell use Dr. at 26c. Isaac Thomp¬ bottle.
per
|| Whowels. Cascakkts Never stimulate sicken, weaken liver, or kidneys- gripe: Wo. and
HALL’S
Vegetable Sicilian
HAIR RENEWER
Beautifies and restores Gray
Hair to its original color and
'.vitality; prevents baldness;;
Cures itching and dandruff.
A fine hair dressing.
1C P. Hall & Co., Props., Nastraa, N. 71.
Sold by all Druggists.
FRICK COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
i mm •c.: mW mm
M spa
Bolters, Presses, Saw Mills, Cotton Separators. i.ins, Cotton
Grain
Chisel Tooth and Solid S-aws, Saw Teeth, fn-
ppirators, Injectors, Kmgino Repairs and
a full line of Brae3 Goods.
£m~S end for Catalogue mill iPricea.
Avery * SOUTHERN Mciillan MANAGERS.
Noe. 51 & 53 S. Forsyt/aftt,,. ATLANTA*GA.
otash
is a necessary and important
ingredient of complete fer¬
tilizers. Crops of all kinds
require a properly balanced
manure. The best
Fertilizers
contain a high percentage
of Potash.
AII .bout Potash—the rertl.rofi.»»« by «cual «-
penmem on tho best farm, in tho Uni.o.l S.atos-i.
told in a little book -hich wo publish and will gladly
mail free to any farmer in America who will write for it.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
\ 93 Nassau St.. New York.
'
ERDVES
%
■>-
; c %dre*j>! ¥
i\ vi §»i % v ip Wmm, . SHfiLiUMBS
1
& MfepiSftiSiSr
TASTELESS
CHILL
5S JUSTASCOOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRBCE5Qcts.
Paris Medicine Galatia, St. Mo. Ills., Mov. 10, 1803.
Co., Louis, 600
Gentlemen:—Wo sold last year, bottles of
GROVE’S TASTBLES3 CHILL TONIC and tmvo
bought three gross already this yoar. In nil owr ex¬
perience of ■ 14 years, in the drug business, have
never sold;an urticlo that gave such ^u universal satis*
faction as your Tonic. Yours tru ay,
AliN l.Y, Carr &CO.
-Tt tjrttej,
Sics’sSloQse Grease Liniment
&a always solid under a guaranteeito cuto all
:iaches jflpralns, and braises pains, and burns. rheumatism., Itis-a/Uio-warrunt- neuralgia,
.8(1 to cure o®lds, croup, coughs and la grippe
quicker than Sold t»ny iby ail known druggists remedy. No cure
tvo pay. and general
stores. Made only by GOOSE GREASE
MNIMENT O0„.GrREEN8IIOKO, X.<C.
oyfludincsM ^rvOSBORME'S (? /7 o-ueae
■
AliliMH'ii, fin. Ajt.ii.I ha.inna. No text
books- j$hort time. tStowup board• bend for catalogue.
“S’:FARIVS TEXASft handle nothing
your om terms, write 2. county in but bar¬
gains, tm<! can locate you jn,vny the&tate.
KOBJEllfc’ CL CAR-MAN* - Austin , Texas.
LSUU EpTftlf! 8 ni EFFECT cSlirih
ffl \B Inhaler LURKS and r.e-
whs store® tfiy sense of TASTL? toMEIX -and
IISm i- c:o».up, N. Y., vL 1>s *
^ &6&NT8. £ 7 “*^. ln &S S
article ou«artlx. VVe pav &11 expense. AxL&rcsH
CfcvZA cu;[;:tr, co., WiuUidjIoo, d. c.
£352'C’f325 ._ ——.il
m UR C FOR :
CURES WHERE Syrup, ALL ELSE fAlLo. Good. ^
Cough Sold Tastes druirgistfl.
ia time. far
N S;U iyt l>,T iO ts
cp.
o
DU TA IMAGE.
NOTED DIVINE’S SUNDAY DI8-
COUHSK.
Subject; *’Pray for Those ii\ Author- !
u v «»
Text,- *‘I exhort, therefore, that, flret id
all. supplications, prayers, intercessions anti
giving of thanks be made for all men. for
kings and for all that arc in authority.’’’—I
Timsthy, 11., 1.
That which London is to Englnnd, Paris to
France, Berlin to Germany, Borne to Italy,
■Vienna to Austria, St. Petersburg to Biissln,
Washington is to the United States republic.
The people who live hero see more of the
men of the Nation than any who live
anywhere else between Atlantic and Paddc
oceans. If a Senator or Member of the
House of Representatives Secretary or Supreme Court
Justice or of the Cabinet or repre¬
sentative of Foreign Nation enters a public
assembly in any other city, his coming aud
going are remarked upon, and unusual de¬
ference is paid to him. In this capital there
are so many streets, political chieftains halls, that in their our
churches, our our
coming and going make no excitement.
The Swiss seldom look up to the Matter¬
horn or Jungfrau or Mont Blanc, because
those people are used to the Alps. So we at
this capital are so aeeuslomed to walk among
mountains of official and political eminence
that they are not to us » great novelty.
Morning, noon and night we meet the giants.
But there is no place Pauline on earth where the
importance of the injunction to
pray for those in ominent place ought to
be better public appreciated. before At this time, when
our men have them tho rescue
of our National Treasury from appalling de¬
ficits, and tho Cuban question, and the arbi¬
tration question, and in many departments
men are taking important positions which
are to them new and untried, whole I would of like to
quote my text with a tonnage em¬
phasis-words .written by the scarred mis¬
sionary to the young theologian Timothy.
‘‘I exhort, therefore, that, first of all. sup¬
plications, prayers, intercessions and giving
of thanks be made for all men, for kings and
for all that are in authority."
If I have the time and do not forget some
of them before I get through, I will give you
four or five reasons why the people of the
United States ought to make earnest and
continuous prayorforthosein eminent place.
First, because that will put us iu proper
attitude toward the successful men of the
Nation. After you have prayed for a man
you will do him jnstice. There is a bad
streak in human nature that demands us to
assail those that are more successful than
ourselves. It shows itself in boyhoocl, when
the lads, all running to get their ride on the
back of a carriage, and one gets on, those
behind!” failing to get Unsuccessful on shout on the driver, seldom “Cut
men like
those who in anv department are successful.
The cry is, “Ho is a political accident," or,
“He bought his way up,” or, “It just hap¬
pened so,” and there is an impatient rapidly waiting
for him to come down more than he
went up.
Tho best cure for such cynicism is prayer.
After o'e have risen from our knees we will
be wishing the official good instead of evil.
We will be hoping for him benediction rather
than malediction. If he makes a mistake,
we will call it a mistake instead of malfea¬
sance in office. And. oh, how much hap¬
pier wo will be, for wishing one evil is dia¬
bolic, but wishing one good is saint¬
ly, is angelic, is godlike! When tho
Lord drops a man into depths beyond which
there is no lower depth, he allows him to be
put on an investigating committee with the
one hope of finding something wrong. In
general assemblies of the Presbyterian
church, in conferences of the Methodist
church, in conventions of the Episcopal
church, in House of Representatives and
Senate of the United States, there are men
alwaj’S glad to be whileL appointed there on the commit¬
tee of malodors, ni '' ,u are those who
are glad to le ’on the committee of
eulogiums. After you have prayed, in the
words of my text, for ail that are in author-
“>'- 7 0u wUl sa >’’ “Brethren, gentlemen, Mr.
Chairman, excuse me from serving on the
committee of malodors, for last night, just
before I prayed for those in eminent bOSi-
tions. I read that ehapter in Corinthians
about charity which ‘hopoth all things’ and
‘thinlceth no evil.’ ” The committee of mal-
odors is an important committee, but I here
now declare that those are important for its
•work, who have, not in spirit of convention-
alty, but in spirit of earnest importunity,
prayed for those in hiirii position. I cannot
hejp it, but I do like a Sc. Bernard better
than a bloodhound, and I would rather be a
humming 1 bird among honeysuckles than a
crow swooping upon field carcasses.
Another reason why we should pray for
those in eminent place is because they have
such multiplied perplexities. This city at
this time holds hundreds of men who are
expectant of preferment, and United States
mail bags as never before are full of ap¬
plications. Let me say I have no sympathy
with either the uttered or printed sneer at
what are called “office seekers.” If I had
not already received appointment as minis¬
ter plenipotentiary from the high court of
heaven—as every minister of the gospel has
—and I had at my back a family for whom I
wished to achieve a livelihood, I there is no
employer whose service would sooner seek
than city, State or United States Govern¬
ment. Ttiose Governments are the promptest
in their payments, paying just as well in
hard times as in good times and during sum¬
mer vacation as during winter work. Be¬
sides that, many of us have been paying
taxes And to city and State and Nation for years,
while we are indebted for the protection
of
to us for the honest support we have
rendered it. So 1 wish success to all earnest
and compelent men who appeal to city or
State or hation for a place to work.
But how many men iu high place in
•city and State and Nation are at their
wit3‘ end to know what to do, when for
'Some places there are ten applicants and for
•others a hundred. Perplexities arise from
the fact that citizens sign petitions without
reference to the qualifications of .the appli¬
cant Jor the places applied for. You sign
the application because the applicant is your
friend. People sometimes want that ior
which they have no qualification, as wo bear-
people sing “I want to be an angel” when
they offer the poorest material possible for
angelhood. Boors waiting to be sent to
foreign palaces as embassadors, mud men
without any busine ss qualification wanting
to :be consuls to foreign ports, and illiterates,
capable .orthography in or e letter of wrecking all the laws
of and syutax, desiring to. be
put into positions where most of the work is
done by .correspondence. If divine help is
need>ed places in auv place in 'the yrorld, it is in
tho@e where patronage is ■distributed
In years gone by awful mistakes have been
made. Only God, who made the world out
of chaos* could out of the crowded pigeon¬
holes -of public men develop symmetries! re ¬
sults. For thus reason pray Almighty God
lor all those in authority.
Again., prayer to God for those in authority
is oul* only way of being of any practical
service to them. Our personal advice would
be to them, tioir the most part, an impertin¬
ence. They have all the facts as we cannot
have then^. andithey see the subject ia ail its
bearings, and we can be of no help to them
-except through the supplication that our
text advises. In {that way wo may bo infinite
re-enforcement. The mightest thing you
emu do for a man is (t.o pray ior him. If thti
old Bible be true—And if it is not true it has
been the only imposition that ever blessed
the world. Turning barbarism into civiliza-
tion sjad tyrannies into republics—I say, if
the old Bible be true, God answers prayer.
Y ou may got a letter ajid through forgetful¬
ness or lack o( time not answer it, but God
■never gets f genuine letter that he does not
make reply. Every genuine prayer is a
child’s letter ho his Heavenly Father, and he
wii i nuswer fr, and though you may get nutny
letters from yoar child before you respond
some « ay you eav: “There! 1 have received
ten letters from in? daughter, and 1 will an¬
swer them all now and af oncp, Uiougb
not in just tho way that hope? for I will
doit intfco best way, and though sb« asked
mo for % sheet of music I will not give it to
her. for I do like the music spoken of. but I
willt^nd her a deed to a house and lot, to
be hers forever.” So God does not in all
ca*es answer in the way those who sent the
prayer hoped for, but Ho in all cases gives
whttfis asked for or something better. So
prayers went up from the North and the
South at the time of our Civil War, ami they
were all answered at Gettysburg. You can¬
not make me believe that God answered
only the Northern prayers, for there were
just as devout prayers answered south ot
Mason and Dixon’s line as north of it. and
God gave what was asked for. or something
as much more valuable as a bouse and lot
are worth more than a sheet of hiusie. There
is not a good an intelligent man between the
Gulf of Mexico and the St. Lawrence River
who does not believe that God did the besc
thing possible when He snood this Nation
down in 1865 a glorious unity, never to be
rent until the waters of the Ohio and the Sa¬
vannah, the Hudson and the Alabama, are
licked lap by the long, red tongues of a world
on fire. Yea, God sometimes answers pray¬
ers on a large scale.
In worse Dredicaraent nation never was
than the Israelitish nation on the banks of
th-e Red Sea, the rattling shields and the
clattering hoofs of an overwhelming host
close after them. An army could just as
easily wade through the Atlantic Ocean from
New York to Liverpool as the Israelites
could have waded through the Red Sea. You
need to sail on its water to realize how big
it is. How was the crossing effected? By
prayer. Exodus xiv.. 15: “And the Lord
said unto Mose«: Wherefore eriest thou
unto Me? Speak unto the children of Israel,
that they go forward”—that is. *‘Stop pray¬
ing and take the answer.” And then the
water began to be agitated and swung this
way and that way, biilow and the ripple became billows, a
billow, and the climbed other
and now they rise into walls of sapphire, and
invisible trowels mason them into flrmnesS ;
and the walls become like mountains, topped
and turreted and domed with crags of crys¬
tal, aqd God throws an invisible cha n
around the feet of those mountains, so that
they are oblige lto stand still, and there,
right before the Lraelitish army, is a turn¬
pike road, with all the emerald gates swung
wide open. The passing host did not evept
get the r feet wet. They passed dryshoi,
the bottom of the sea as hard as the pave¬
ment of Pennsylvania avenue to New York’s
Broadway or Loudon’3 Strand. Oh, what a
God they had! Or I think I will change that
and say, “What a God we have!”
What power puts it hands upon astron¬
omy in Joshua’s time and made the sun and
moon standstill? Joshua x., 12. “Then spoke
Joshua unto the Lord.” Prayer? As a giant
will take two or four great globes, an i in as¬
tounding way swing them this way or that,
or hold two of them at arm’s length, so the
Omnipotent does as He will with the great
orbs of worlds, with wheeling constellations
and circling galaxies, swinging easily star
around star, star tossed after star, or sun
and moon held out at arm’s length and per¬
fectly still, as in answer to Joshua's prayer.
To God the largest world is should n pebble. obey the
Another reason why we fbr
Pauline injunction of the text and pray
all that are in authority is that so very
much of our own prosperity and selfish hanpi ness
are involved in their doings. A rea-
son, you say. Yes, but a righteous selfish¬
ness, like that which leads you to take care
of your own health and preserve your
own life. Prosperous government government means a
prosperous people. Damaged
means a damaged people. We all go up
together, or we all go down together.
When we pray for our rulers, wo pray for
ourselves, for our homes, for the easier gain¬
ing of a livelihood, for better prospects tor
our children, for the hurling of these hard
times so far down the embankment they can
never climb up again. Do not look at any¬
thing that pertains to public interest as hav¬
ing no relation to yourself. We are touched
by all the events in our national history, by
the signing of the compact in the cabin of
the Mayflower, by the small ship, the Half
Moon, sailing up the Hudson; by the treaty
'of William Penn, by the hand that made the
“Liberty bell” sound its first stroke, by Old
Ironsides plowing the high seas, and, if
touched by all the events of past America,cer¬
tainly by all the events of the present day.
Every prayer you make for our rulers, iT the
prayer be of the right stamp and worth any¬
thing, has a rebound of benediction for your
own mind and soul.
Another reason for obedience to my text
is that the prosperity of this country is com¬
ing, and we want a hand in helping on its
coming. At any rate I do. It is a matter of
honest satisfaction to a soldier, after some
great battle has been fought and some great
victory won, to be able to say: **Yes, I was
there. I was in the brigade that stormed
those heights. I was in that bavonot charge
that put the enemy to flight.” Well.the day
will come when all the financial,’political driven
and moral foes of this republic will be
back and driven down by the prosperities
that are now on their way, but which come
with siow tread and in “fatigue dress” when
we want them to take “the double quick.”
By our prayers we may stand on the moun¬
tain top and beckon them on and show them
a shorter cut. Yea. in answer to our pray¬
ers the Lord God of Hosts may from the high
heavens command them forward, swifter
than mounted troops ever took the field at
Eytau or Austerlitz.
That was beautiful ana appropriate at the
laying of the cornerstone of the extension of
the Capitol fifty-eight years after the corner¬
stone of the old Capitol had been laid. Yet
the cornerstone of our Republic was first
laid in 1776 and at the re-establishment of
our National Government was laid again in
1S65. But are we not ready for the laying
of the cornerstone of a broader and higher
National life?. We have as a Nation received
so much from God. Do we not owe new
consecration? Are we uot rea iy to become
a better Sabbath-keeping, peace-loving Nation? vir¬
tue-honoring, God-worshiping Are
we not ready for such a cornerstone iayin :?
Why not now let It take place? With long
precession of prayers, moving from the north
and the south, the ea-t and the west, let the
scene be made august beyond comparison.
The God of nations, who hath dealt with
usa3 with no other people,will president the level the
solemnization. By the square ami
and the plumb of the everlasting right let
the corner stone be adjusted. Let that cor.
nerstone be the masoning together of the
two granite tables on which the Jaw was
written when Sinai shook with the earth¬
quake, and inside that cornerstone put the
sermon on the mount and a scroll containing
the names of all the men and women who
have fought and prayed the an I first toiled for the of
good of this nation, froai martyr last
the American Revolution down to tne
woman who bound up a soldier’s wounds m
the field hospital. An i let some one worthy
to do so strike the stone three times with the
gospel hammer in the namo of God the
Father, God the Son and God the Holy
G lost. Theu let the building rise, one wall
laved by the Pacific ocean and the other
washed of the Atlantic, until its capstone
sharl be laid amid the shouting of
nil nations, by that divinely time os constructed, tree us our own and
divinely founded, last throne
divinely prqtecte 1 republic, fallen flat the into the dust
of oppression having
and the last shackle of tyranny been hung up
in museum as a relic of barbaric ages.
The prayer that the grantexpoun ter wrote
to bo pat ia the cornerstone at the extension
ot the Capitol I ejaculate as our own suppli-
ration, "God save the United States of
America,” only ntidinf? the words his with which
Bobert South was apt to close sermons,
whether delivered before the Court at
Christ-Ohurch chapel or in Westminster
Abbey, at anniversary of restoration of Oil-
ver Cromwell amid the worst tempest that
ever swept over England: “To God be ren¬
and ascribed, as is most dtie, all praise,
might, majesty and dominion, both cow and
forever. Amen.”
Hold Initio Crusader.
Six-year-old Editli Miller, who was over¬
come by grief at seeing a neighbor wantonly
kill a cat by stamping it under bis foot, ap¬
peared iu the Long Island (Jity Po ice Court
as a witness against the offander aud caused
conviction. '
CUUIOUS FACTS,
In Kansas whoJe sections of land
have suddenly disappeared, leaving
only fathomless lakelets to mark their
loostion.
There nro 3G0 mountains in tiro
United States which have a height ex¬
ceeding 10,000 feet. The greatest
number ir in Colorado and Utah.
The buhvt which killed General
“Stonewall” Jackson at Obancellors-
ville, is said to bo in tho possession of
Mr. Isaao B. Wheeler, of Highland
Falls, N. Y.
Tho Forth bridge, in Scotland, is
constantly being repainted. So vast
is tho structure that it takes fifty tons
of paint to givo it one coat, and the
area dealt with is something like 120
acres.
Food is served in one of the London
restaurants on electricity heated
plates, so that the guests can eat leis¬
urely and still have the viands con¬
tinue warm until the close of the
meal.
The frog barometer, used in Ger¬
many and Switzerland, consists of a
jar of water, a frog, and a little
wooden stepladder. If the frog come 3
out and sits on the steps, rain is ex¬
pected.
A mosaic map of Palestine, thirty
feet long by fifteen broad, has been
discovered at a village between Salt and
Kerak, east of the Jordan. The pave¬
ment is believe ! to belong to the fifth
century after Christ.
When lions and tigers are born in
captivity, the greatest care has to be
exercised to keep them for several
days in the dark and undisturbed, as
otherwise the mothers will almost in¬
variably destroy them.
When a suspicious-looking person
approaches one of the tellers in the
Bunk of France a private signal is
given to a concealed photographer, and
in a few seconds the suspected individ¬
ual is secretly photographed.
A French statistician has calculated
that the human eye travels over two
thousand yards in reading an ordinary-
sized novel. The average human be¬
ing is supposed to get through 2520
miles of reading in a lifetime.
The smallest piece of real estate
ever oflered for sale by auction in New
York was put up to-day in a partition
sale. It is a triangular lot with a
frontage of eight feet on St. Nicholas
avenue, a depth of three feet on one
side and a length of eight feet nine
inches on the third line.
The method of lighting up the in¬
terior of the human body, or some
parts of it, was shown recently at Bal¬
timore at the College of Physicians
and Surgeons. Prof. Friedonwald, by
means of a flexible rubber tube,
passed a small electric lamp into the
stomach of a patient, and the room
being darkened, over two hundred per¬
sons were able to watch the working
of the patient’s internal organs
through the “transparency” created
by the light in the abdominal wall.
Did the Bird Hau? Itself J
A strange event happened at the Edi¬
son laboratory in Orauge, N. J., re¬
cently, which puzzled the great inven¬
tor and leit tho question as much in
doubt as ever. It is thought by some
Orangeites that an English sparrow
committed suicide on the walls of the
laboratory; by others that merely an
accident occurred. The facts are as
follows: In the end of the loft in one
of the laboratory buildings is a dia¬
mond shaped arrangement of holes.
These holes were left there for ventila¬
tion purposes and were made by leav¬
ing out certain bricks in the end wall
of the house. They proved capital
nesting places for tho sparrows, and
several of the birds were not slow to
make use of them. One day the work¬
men around the building noticed a
sparrow which was making a great to
do over the repairing oE a nest. Tho
little fellow flew in aud out of the hole,
collecting alt kinds of shreds and
patches and interweaving them with
the old work of the nest. Finally the
bird secured a long piece of grocer’s
cord, such as is used lo tie up smalt
packages, and flow with it to the nest.
Tho workmen saw the bird enter the
hole with the string trailing after it.
Then as the part of the cord still hang¬
ing out of the hole was submitted to
several continued jerks they conclud' d
that the bird was interweaving tho
cord with the fabric of the nest. They
dismissed tho matter tor the timo be¬
ing and went about their work.
Later in the day the bird was seen
to be hanging dead outside tho hole.
A shpnooso on the end of the string
which it had been using to build the
nest was tightly drawn around its neek
and part of the wing. A photograph
was taken on the spot and an examina¬
tion made, ft was evident that the
bird had drawn the string into the
hole until nothiDg but the slipuoose
remained outside. Theu for some pur¬
pose had flown quickly out nud iu so
doing had passed its head through
the noose. The force with which the
noose closed around its neck must
have strangled the bird instantly. It
hung limp, tho interweaving of tho
other end of the r-trin; iu the nest
it from falling to the ground.
Norway's First Ironclad.
An ironclad for the Norwegian Gov-
eminent ,. wfl was „ l launched a ntii>hpcl lately lftr e.y ironi from the tno
shipbuilding yard ot Sir _ William Arm-
strong' & Co., England. This is the
fj rs fc seagoing ° ironclad owned by the
^Norsemen, who m . the ., Viking old , , ships. days , swept , ,
the seas With their This
modern vessel was christened tho
“Harold Haarfoger,” after tho first
King of Norway, by JIme. Stuuae, who
is herself a descendant in the thirty-
third generation from King Harold.
The ironclad is heavily armed and has
a conning tower aud two torpedo tubes,
aud tho armor belt is from four to
seven inohes thick. The builders have
an order for a second ironclad lor tho
Norwegians.
FIBROID TUMOR
Expelled by Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegotablo Compound.
Interview With Mrs. II. A. Lombard-
I have reason to think that I would
not be here now if it had not been for
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound. It cured mo of a fibroid tumor
in my womb.
Doctors could do nothing forme, and
they could not euro me at the hospital.
I will tell you about it:
■I had been in my usual health, but
had worked quite hard. When my
monthly period came on, I flowed very
badly. The doctor gave me medicine,
but it did me no good. He said the
flow must be stopped if possible, and
he must find the cause of my trouble.
Upon examination, he found there
was a Fibroid Tumor in my womb, and
gave me treatment without any benefit
whatever. About that time a -lady
called on me, and recommended Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
said she owed her life to it.
said I would try it, and did. Soon
after the flow became more natural and
regular. I still continued taking the
Compound for some time. Then the
doctor made an examination again,
and found everything all right. The
tumor had passed away and that dull
ache was gone.— Mbs. B. A. Lombard,
Box 71, Westdale, Mass.
vubcofieto/ /^JANDY CATHARTIC
^Jcure corisnPATaotC^
25 * 50 * DRUGGISTS
KRPAT TITL'T V AHIDIUTPrH to cur* any enseor eoni'tipatlon. fascunts nrr the Ideal
ouijvliuiuui ViunnnnijJUL) *j TF- n .r.r srrip or irripo.bat rosso e'.synnturalrosults. Sam-
pie and booklet froo. Ad. STERI.INfl REJJKBI <U., OhJciuro. Mflntrcnl, Can., or New York. an.
KEASO.YS FOR USING
Walter Baker & Co.’s
Breakfast Cocoa.
1. Because it is absolutely pure.
2. Because it is net made by the so-called Dutch Process in
which chemicals are used.
Because beans of the finest quality are used.
Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired
the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans.
,11 I 5. Because a cup. it is the most economical, costing less than one cent
F,j Be sure that you get the genuine article made by WALTER
BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780.
© n-JMM wSfr »■
ft
■i,v.
the STANDARD PA1&T for STRUCTURAL PURPOSES.
Pamphlet, "Suggestions for Exterior Decoration,” Sample Card and Descriptive Price list free by mail.
Asbestos Roofing, Building Felt, Steam Packing, Boiler Coverings, Fire-Proof Paints, Lie*
Asbestos Non-Conducting and Electrical Insulariitg Materiais.
H. W. JOHNS MAIN UFACTUEING- CO.,
87 Maiden Lane. New York.
CHICAGO: M0 h 342 Itandolph St. PHILADELPHIA: no & 172 North 4th St. BOSTON: 77 ,t 70 Bearl St
it ^ ee Them /
When you are talking Bicycles, don’t be
content uniil you h.ive seen the new
mm Lovell Diamond Models of ’97
They are the top notch of bicycle engi«
fleering, r.nd :cience must now seek to
* velop other lie!Js. The psrf.ct point of
m PERFECTION is reached only by the Lovell
if A 11 Wheels. On this fact critics agree.
P. not look them over carefully, study their
strong points and note their beauty and
H PSw elegant finish. Their points of superiorly
are so simple a chi d can understand them.
We stake our busintss reputation of over
Eft wheel 55 years made. that there It leads was them never all. so Investig perfect te a
and you will ride no other. Please call and
examine, at our iecd agencies, or at our
stores, 147 Washington and 131 Broad St.,
Boston.
lyF 0 ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE
Mailed Upon Application.
None Without Genuiae John P. Lovell Arms Go.
Above Name-Plate. BOSTON, MASS.
A list of Bargains in Second-hand Wheels mailed ov.
application.
mm,
xmtipmiiw
-
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Every ingredient in jj i
Hires Root beer is health
pfllf|| Sal giving. The blood is 1 !
1 improved, the nerves
soothed, the stomach']
i@lj benefited by this delicious! m
beverage. m
HIRES
|j| §jl Quenches Rootbeer the tickles \i
thirst, i!
If the palate ; fall of snap, sparkle \l
and effervescence. A temper- 1
I once drink for everybody.
Hade or.lj bj The Chari., R. Hire. Co., Philiidt-iplji*.
A pnetage makes five gallon?.
W1ALSBY StCOMP^NY,
57 !1n. For.ytli Ht.. AttmitH. flu.
General Asente (or Kite City Iron Work*
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heater*. Steam Pomp* and
PenUerthy Injector*.
%
1 } ; N.‘ :V'. l-
wOei
Manufacturers and Dealers In
MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬
ery and Grain Separators.
SOIdD and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
Locks, KnlKlit.’s Patent. Dogs, Blrdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Kepairn, of Mill Governors, Supplies. Grate Prico
Ears and a lull lino
aud quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning ihis paper.
Haaari’s Specific Tails
Quiet the nerves, equalize the circulation, vital¬
ize the secretions, impart vigor and give tone
to all the functions of the system. Over-worked
and run-down men and weak and nervous
women are 7/ >eedily restored by their use. 1
box $1.00; boxes $2.50, by mail. Address,
HAGGARD SPECIFIC CO., 310 Korcro»»
Building. Atlanta. Ga. LAMAR & RANKIN
DRUG CO., Wholesale Agents.
PURCHASE
Manufacturer to wearer. Illustrated catalogue free.
Underwear department. Address
CONSUMERS’ SUPPLIES CO., Troy, N. \\
!
MENTION THIS PilPER“K v , «Ll0
tat »l iC{GI<l!(»l 191 4011*1 l«lt«l ^
O Lstab. teas.
V0 i
Cf! S3
3 m m m
1 lg :3ffir
LbJ \ mm til*®.!/ 1™“
Ud
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For 14 years this shoe, by merit alone, has
distanced Indorsed i».ll competitors.
best in style, by over 1,000,000 wearers as the
offered fit and durability of any elioe
over It Is made in at alt $3.00. BATEST
s *lYLES tbc SHAPES aud
and of every variety of leather.
One dealer iu a town given exclusive nale
and advertised in local paper on receipt of
rea sonable order, f-sr Write ior catalogue to
W. B. DOUOBAB, Brockton. Mnm.
MORPHINE .cured Opium at »ml home. Wliisky Never Habit falls.
Monarch Home Cure Co.* Xfcw ALKAkT, Ixj>,