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About The Ashburn advance. (Ashburn, Ga.) 18??-19?? | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1897)
Wanted Directions. I>r. Ernie—There nothing serious the matter with Fatty, Mrs. Mulcahey. ) think u little soap anil water will do him as mueli good us anything. ’an Mrs. Muh'uhey— Yis, doetbor, will Oi give it t’ him hefoor oor aftlier his mains? Judge. Horrid Torture. This I* often felt In every Joint qnd muiv lc of the ls.dy i>y turns, t.y people who. eiperletieliig nevlect tlie earliest twinges of rheumatism, to arrest me malady, as they may easily do. with Hostetler's sioimn li Bitters, a prolesslonslly mithentieoted teinady tor the agonizing unchecked com plaint It ceo] I eel mat rheumatism of toll lusts a Iff*-•lime, or abruptly UTinlmiU-M It wlion the iiifil/i'lv fttup*k» tho heart. 'i h" hit i.-fH alao n iihmIIoh chills uikJ fever, dyspepsia uud liver complaint. It makes th" f.M boss sheep smile when he •ecu ininb chop* on a rentauiitiil bill of tare. No-To-liar for Fifty Ont«. Over 40(1.(01 rued. Why not let NoTo-Ilar regulate (.I irnnno y.air drain, b.r tnharro? haves money, innkea health and maiihiMxl Cure guaranteed 50 < <■ 11 fa and #1.00. at all druggists. .tuat watt till about August when tho sun asks If It is but enough lor you. 1,1 fo Ifin’t Worth Living to oho who mifhort tho mmhlonliiK agony of IW-orna, Toll or and Hindi irritating, Itching Hkln I'.vory roughm-HH of tho Hkin from a hI in pi o fdmp to 'J’ottor and Ringworm ©van of long Mtundlng In com plou-ijr, (pih kly and Huroly eurad by 'i etterfm' 1 m I’o/nfort worth to ci-ntH to you? That m tin- print of 'lottorluj nl drug HtorrH or by mall for In •teinptt from J. I mp i HA,. uwiiiiift i, ,<l llow ’a Till.'.’ We offer One Hundred Dollar. Reward for any raso of t atanh that eaunot. ho toured by Hall's < atarrh < uro. K .1 riiRNKV A C O , Props . Tojedo, O. Wo, the iindoiHlgnofl, have known F. */. C’ho- noy for tho last. l > yoarH, and bnllovo him i>«r- ffM-tly honorahlo In all IiuhItiohs tranna* tl<>n« nnd financially ahlo u» < arry out any obligation made by tliolr Drin WMT A r i itCAX, Wholf Balo DmgglHtH. Toledo, Waldino, Kinnan A Makvjn, Whoicaslo Drug gintw. Toiodo, Ohio Ifall'H Catarrh ('uro in taken Internally, aet lug dlreetly up«»n the blood and mueoviH suv- tiu . a..f the ayatem i'ri< <■. |...r bottle. Huhi Hall's Family Fills are the best. cakcakkth fUlmnmto Jlvor, kidney* nnd bowolH. N«*v«r hlrki'i). w**nk«n or gripes 10<\ CANC'KlfiM,TUMOKH, IHIOPNY AND MTS f'hrotiir HUfiihck ully Treatdil or Monoy Itel tinifol. i'ftiirerH pormam'iitly romoviul, “rootH and nil,” in lo diijH, for flliooo. All othor rhronlo dlMF/iMrM tnoitod for $5.oo |n*r month Nofiiuu’kH, NoliumbugH. FI ft ron yours 1 oxpoiioiu’n In tills <lty. Almolutr gimrnntrr Send money with full drBrii j it loll of mm* to 1>K. <> llKNLKY Snidkk. Oflb’o and Dlspoimary, 0 to ^ North Uouirvjud. Atlanta, Ua Wii kn bilious or cofltivo. rat ft Casoaret, randy rathartlc; euro guarantood; 10<\, &V. Wifi. Window's Soothing Syrup for children teething, HotinvH tho gums, reduren InUamma lion, allayfi pain, ouron wind collr. n bottle. Fit ,h ponna.ncMd.ly mi od. No fltft or neryouH neett alter !lr»t day’ft uho of hr. Kllne’ft <iroat Nerve ItcHtorer. trial bottle and treatise free, hu. U. II. Klim:, l.fd . Ml Aivh St., i'hlln., i’a. I rannot npaak !<m> highly I’Imo'h Cure for C'oiiHumption Mr«. Frank .Momls, ii!5 W. ~d Si., Nrw York, Ort.L'H, 1H«»1 .Iust try a l(U*. box of Caftrftrotft, th® finest liver und bowel regulator over in ado. True Purifier Blood Such a medicine you need at once to remove the impurities which have accumulated In your blood during winter. Such a medicine is Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Therefore take Hood's Sarsaparilla now. It Will do you wonderful good. It will purify your blood, give you an appetite, and cure all humors. Hood’s Sarsaparilla la aold by all druggists. Fries SI, six for $6. Hood’s Pills are prompt, I'llVienl and easy iu effect. 25 cents. at Laugh^ the Sun} Drink r r bwrJCool-Drink / nvvo Pont s|p tt/RES Rootbeer s-m \Roatbccn/ HIRES IQucncim is yHIRES ygurthjrst mmRootbeer.J Opium amt Whisky Habit cured at borne Never falls. Home C ure t o., Nkw Albany, lM>. . The The The Best. Rest. Test • Thoro are two kinds of sarsaparilla: The best — and the rest. Tho troublo is they look alike. And when the rest dress like tho best who's to tell them apart? Well, “the tree Is known by Us fruit.” That's an old test and a 6afo one. And tho taller tlie tree the deeper tho root. That’s another test. What’s tho root,—the record of these sarsaparillas ? Tho one with tho deepest root is Ayer's. Tho ono with tho richest fruit; that, too, is Ayer’s. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has a record of half a century of cures ; a record of many medals and awards — culminating in tho medal of tho Chicago World’s Fair, which, admitting Ayer's Sarsaparilla as tho best—shut its doors against tho rest That was greater honor than tho medal, to be the only Sarsaparilla admitted as an exhibit at tho World’s Fair. If you want to get tho best sarsaparilla of your druggist, here’s an Infallible rule : Ask for tho best and you ’ll get Ayer’s. Ask for Ayer's and you’ll get tho best REMARKABLE RECOVER! Of a Young f.adr of G i.,»ort, Nor Yor'i, Iriun Ann.in in. From the Courier, llujfalo, N. V. Miss Lulu Hlovous, dnughter of door Slovens, tho wall-known blacksmith, of Qaa- |)ort. Niagara, County, Now York, tun sur¬ prised hor neighbors considerably, by not dying five months ago, when the physicians sabl she could not live. This was quite n remarkable case. The young worn iu, who Is very well known, on account of her musical ability, ha I be.-n a very healthy begun girl, until fall, about one year ago, when she to nud gr.ov so pule and apparently bloodless und so weak that after it few mouths she was given up to die. Last winter a physician w.io wosu visitor at (lasport met Miss Htevi-ns, and seeing her emaciated condition, and hearing from the local doctors that the disease was anaemia, prevailed fir. Williams'Pink on the girl's Pills. mother Directly to make her try she commenced the treatment she began to mend, and now since February, when she decided lo take them, she hits become well an I strong and the picture of good hea th. The mother of the girl, Mrs. Stevens, Bays: *‘Kv»ry one In Gosport knows that I* nk Pills cured Lulu, and I feel very thankful that we heard of them In time to save my child's life.” Hr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, In a con¬ densed form, nil the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are also a npeciflo for ‘roubles peculiar irregular!tins to foirmb and n, gU( .j, hh HuppmisloDfl, all forms of woaknosa. They ,f build up the blood, am , rmton tbe R j ow ( Health to pale ami callow cheeks. In men they affect a radical cure In nil cases arising from mental worry, «V"rWorlt or exwww of whatever nature. Pink Fills are sold lu boxes (never In loose bulk) at 60 cents a box or six boxes for |2 60, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mull from Ur, Will »m»’ Medicine Con-' nuy, Sohenamady, N. Y. THE CREAT FEUD AND ITS END. It is seldom in this workaday age that one encounters a genuine family feud, , inherited , . from Klie . t,0 son thtougn „ nil . . , )0 j eHH than six centuries. Such a feud actually existed in the dominions of Queen Victoria until a short time ago, and its final settlement was brought about by tbe ingenuousness of a boy of nine. The two leading Anglo-Irish families In Ireland have long been the Fitz¬ Geralds and the Butlers. From being comrades in arms of the invading strongbow, they became by degrees ri¬ val barons, and fierce contestants for the vice-sovereignty of their adopted country. In the wars of the roses the Butlers sided with the white rose of Lancaster, the Fitz-Geralds with tho red rose of York. Factions gathered around in two great houses; and the bitter feud brought forth death and bloodshed from as early as 1250 down to the Willlamite wars. Butlers, whose chief had obtained the dignity of earl of Ormonde, succeeded in crushing the power of the elder branch of the Fitz¬ Geralds, earls of Desmond. It is told of a warlike Desmond that while being borne prisoner on the locked shields of his feudal foe’s clansmen, the But¬ lers taunted him with the bitter words: "Where is now the proud Fitz-Ger- ald?” To which the indomitable earl ans¬ wered: “Fitz-Gerald is where he ought to be—on tho necks of the Butlers.” This proud reply will give an idea of the intensity of the strife. Now it happened that her majesty's Irish viceroy gave a garden party in the viceregal lodge at Dublin, and thither were bidden by accident the marquis of Ormonde, head of the But¬ ler family (familiar to the Americans through his yachting interests) and the little duke of Leinster, boyish chieftain of the house of Fitz-Gerald. With the duke, who was not quite nine years of ago, came bis widowed mother, one. of tho beautiful Duncombs sisters. The duchess of Leinster lost sight of her son for a space, and In going to look for the lad, found him engaged in earnest conversation with a tall, elder¬ ly gentleman, in whom she was sur¬ prised to recognize the marquis of Ormonde. What was her horror when, on approaching nearer, she distinctly heard the youthful Geraldine remark In somewhat slangy phrase: “Well, 1 suppose 1 ought to punch your head ou account of the feud, but 1 say, you know, you're too jolly decent a chap for that. Can't we shake hands and call It square?” With the utmost gravity Lord Or¬ monde grasped the small hand of his hereditary foe, and when the amused mother cante to congratulate them on the happy settlement of 500 years of bitterness, she found young hopeful perched, like his famous ancestor, on the neck of the Butler. Thus ended a feud, undoubtedly one of the oldest, and possibly the bloodi¬ est in tho world.—Atlanta Constitu- ,. tion. LEVEE IN MADISON PARISH FI¬ NALLY GIVES WAY. DANGER WARNING IS SENT OUT Heroic Meanureii Were Taken to Prevent CrevaHHe Hut to No Avail. Supreme Test Is On. The Queen & Crescent train dis¬ patchers at Vicksburg, Miss., reported at 12 o’clock Friday night that Biggs levee, in Madison parish, broke at 10 o’clock and that the break was one hundred feet wide in twenty minutes. The break is four and a half miles south of the delta, Louisiana, and one and a half miles above the upper end of Reed’s levee. The news was sent to tlie delta at once, the operator being roused out of bed and the message of warning sent along the line of the railroad west¬ ward. The levee is a very large out and has been engaging the special atten¬ tion of the levee authorities for weeks, or ever since the Mississippi crevasse. About six hundred convicts were employed on it in addition to other la¬ borers, and so gredtly strengthened had it been made that until up to the time of the break it was believed to be safe. Advices from Natchez and other points below Vicksburg indicate that the supreme test in the flood situation is at hand. The swift current which is rising steadily is heating against the levees with such force as to cause the gravest apprehension at many places. At Natchez the river is near the top of the levee and everything possible is being done to tight back the rising waters. All kinds of rumors have been current regarding wholesale loss of life on Davis island, but diligent telegraphic inquiry fails to confirm the stories. It is known that three negroes were drowned on the island, but outside of these fatalities no further loss of life is known to have occurred. At Vicksburg the river is rising at the rate of four-tenths of a foot daily. The swift volume of water pouring out of tho Yazoo into the Mississippi, at a point twelve miles north of Vicksburg will continue for several days. The levees between Bedford, four miles south of the delta, Louisiana, and Duckport, six above,are in a preca¬ rious condition and every man and boy available was put to work strength- ning the embankment. At some points iu this stretch of levee the water is washing over and the greatest alarm is felt. CARLOAD OF LIQUOR SEIZED. Constabulary of South Carolina Takes Charge of a Big Shipment of Wine. A special from Charleston, S. C., says: The state constabulary met a tartar in the little schooner Saucy Lass, but it redeemed itself Friday by the capture of a carload of the finest liquors consigned to wealthy citizens for personal use. The carload consisted of ninety-two packages of the best wines from a San Francisco, Cal., wine house. The packages are in barrels, half barrels, kegs and cases and are valued at a considerable amount of money. Chief Constable Bahr has telegraph¬ ed Attorney General Townsend of the seizure. The goods were consigned to a prominent banker of Charleston. There is a question as to Bahr’s right to seize the goods and the case will doubtless go to the courts. The schooner Saucy Lass with 800 gal¬ lons, is reported to have landed her cargo up the Cooper river. YOUTHFUL SUICIDES. Two Boys. Aged Nine and Fifteen, Swallow Poison In a Fit of Anger. Two young sons of Mr. Herson, liv¬ ing at Greenland, Ark., aged nine and fifteen years, committed suicide while their parents were at Fayetteville, nine miles distant. The boys were angry because they were left at home. Both dressed in their best clothes, wrote notes to their parents, pinned them on the door, took strychnine and went to bed. They died before the parents returned home. The notes bade their parents goodby and expressed the hope that they would meet in heaven. RESEMBLED MYERS, But the Idaho Man Was Not the Youth¬ ful Murderer. Once more a rumored capture of Will Myers, the condemned murderer who escaped from the Atlanta jail last vear . has been dissipated. The man reported under arrest in Boise City, Idaho, is not the murderer of Forrest Crowley, but a young man well known iu the far western state. Tobacco Dealer Robbed. John Ogden, a prominent * tobacco dealer of Kentucky, en route home from Mayfield, was waylaid and robbed, He was badly beaten and cut. WOULD INTERRUPT SERVICES. Good Friday Proved a Lucky Day to Frank Meyers. Good Friday gave Frank Myers, sentenced to hang in Georgetown, S. C., ou that day for arson, another week of life. The jail is next the Episcopal held church, where services were dur- ing the hours fixed for the execution, On the petition of the church authori- Governor Eller be granted ^ a re- suite. RECEIVER TAKES CHARGE AGAIN. Southern Building and Loan Aiiociatlon Ordered to Be Wound Lp. Again the big Southern Building and Loan Association, at Knoxville, Term., is in the hands of receivers, and this time it* affairs will he wound up in the courts. Lindsay . For four days Chancellor listened to argument in this case, there being ten prominent lawyers employed. At the conclusion of the speeches tri- day afternoon the judge named Major Daniel A. Carpenter and John W. Conner as receivers, and instructed them to wind up the affairs of the a«- sociation without cost to the stock- holders. the old Major Carpenter is one of directors, and at present Mr. is pension Connor agent at Knoxville, while is the clerk and m ister of the chancoiy court in which the case was tried. All claims against the association must be filed by July 15th. In rendering his opinion Judge Lindsay eaid that if the association was not insolvent it was right at the danger line. It is claimed that an effort will now be made to put the as¬ sociation in the United States comt again. This action will be taken by the stockholders in Tennessee and other states where the association did business. SPAIN WITHDRAWING TROOPS. Part <>f Her Army In Cuba Is Called Home. According to information received at Washington from trustworthy sources the withdrawal of at least a part of the great army that Spain has maintained for several years in the is¬ land of Cuba, will begin when the rainy season sets in within a few days. The initial movement will be the de¬ parture of 10,000 Spanish troops from Havana for Spain and within a short time after that 30,000 troops, it is un¬ derstood, will follow. Whether this movement is to be construed in favor or against Spain it is impossible now to say. Spain says positively that little or nothing now remains of the insurrection ;that Gomez has only about fifty or a hundred fol¬ lowers and that to watch these under the conditions in which the campaign has been necessarily conducted, a few thousand men are quite as effective as the army of 80,000 men which has been maintained in Cuba. The Cuban contingent, on the other hand, insist that the Spanish financial resources are exhausted and that the troops are to be withdrawn because of lack of money to keep them in the service. ARBITRATOR SELECTED To Negotiate Terms of Peace Between Brazil and French Guiana. Information has been received at Washington that the presi lent of the Swiss republic has been selected as arbitrator of the boundary dis ute be¬ tween Brazil and French Guiana. The territory involved exceeds that at issue between Great Britain and Venezuela and includes rich gold mining dis¬ tricts. It is thought that President McKin¬ ley would have been designated as ar¬ bitrator, but as France was one of the parties to the treaty, a European arbi¬ trator was preferred. The dispute reached an t>ccu*,e stage a few mouths ago when a French war¬ ship was dispatched to the territory iu question. In one of the border con¬ flicts several French officers were killed. It is understood that the arbi¬ tration will settle the boundary and also adjust the claims growing out of the border conflicts. FUNDS FOR NAVAL MILITIA. Tlio Sum of $50,000 Is Allotted for tlie Naval Reserves. The secretary of the navy has made the annual allotment of the fund of $50,000 appropriated by congress for the naval militia of the states. Deducting §2,000 reserved for the purchase of textbooks, the remainder of the appropriation is allotted among the states having naval militia organi¬ zations in proportion to the number of uniformed petty officers and men they had ou their rolls on the 1st of .Tanuarj' last. The result in the south¬ ern states is as follows: South Carolina, 165 officers and men, allotment 31,814; North Carolina, 140 officers and men, allotment$1,138; Georgia, 188 officers and men, allot- nieut $2,436; Louisiana, 209 officers ami men, $2,436. FOR MINISTRIES OF WAR. Th© Grecian Bottle Ask» For Govern¬ ment .Aid in War Preparations. On the reassembling of the Grecian bottle Wednesday M. Delyannis, the premier, introduced iu the presence of a crowded chamber a bill granting the government a credit of 23,000,000 drachmas for the ministries of war and marine. The premier asked the house to expedite the passage of the budget, - Ridiculed By London Papers. The Gobe. St. James Gazette and Pall Mall Gazette (London netvspa- pers) all ridicule the idea of the Uni- ted States bimetallic mission having any practical result. ERRING TREASURER FREE. A South Dakota Ex-Official Leaves the State Penitentiary. South Dakota’s erring state treasurer, William W. Taylor, was released from the penitentiary at Sioux City Thurs- day, after an imprisonment of one year and a half. Good behavior re- duced his two years’ sentence six months. He left at once for his old home at Redfield, where he will stay a few days, and then gj to Indiana! - visit friends. Motherhood. mother who is in good physical comUttmJ^ nsmits A & > mother's milk after for healthy Is not that an incentive to prepare a J, 4 maternity? # of what . . / Do you know the meaning y is popularly called those “long- i\ irigs,'’ or cravings, which beset so "f pregnancy? M „ many women during ,EJM / There is something lacking in tho mother's blood, Nature cries out and will be satisfied at all hazards. / One woman wants sour things, y A another wants sweets, another ’Vt, *0 I wants salt things, and so on. CL 0 IS The real need all the time is to enrich the blood so as to supply l * nourishment for another life, and to build up the entire generative j l A system, so that the birth may be *< k *> * possible and successful. If expectant with mothers Lydia would E. Pink- fort¬ W rt * * 7 Z) ify themselves i* ham's Vegetable Compound, which for twenty years has sustained condition, there would be fewer , disappointment ,. . thousands of women in this at birth and they would not experience those annoying “longings.” In the of following the Compound letter in to such Mrs. cases. Pinkham, She says. Mrs. Whitney demonstrates tt| power sixteen old till I twenty-three, I “ From the time I was years was was, troubled with weakness of the kidneys mind and terrible Lydia pains E. Pinkham's when my Vegetal*: monthljH periods came on. I made up my to try , Compound and was soon relieved. After I was married, the doctor said I „ would never be able to go my full time and have a living child, as I was constitutionally weak. I had lost a baby at seven months and a half. Th, - next time 1 commenced at once and continued to take your Compound through ^ the period be of three pregnancy, months and old, I I said should then, send if I went letter mj to r full you. time My and baby the is baby^ lived to a non seven months old and is as healthy and hearty as one could wish. “ I am so thankful that I used your medicine, for it gave me the robust health expected to transmit such a to blessing. my child. Praise I cannot God for express Lydia my E. Pinkham’s gratitude Vegetable^; to you; [|| never Compound, and may others who arc suffering do as I did and find relief, ani may many homes be brightened as mine has been.”—M rs. L. Z. Whitney, Sjg George St., E. Somerville, Mass. _ ____________________ ANDY CATHARTIC -QfeCQhdik CURE CONSTIPATION lot * I, ALL 25 i50* DRUGGISTS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED ^ pie and booklet free. Ad. STEKMNG RF^KnY (: 0 ..€hlcngo. Montreal, Cnn^, oHVow York. 21 ?.# 7 •A i ALABASTlNE.S IT WON’T RUB OFF. TEMPOKa£Ty,’ uOTS,°BCBN OFF AAlf ISLEs! ALABASTINE is a pure, permanent and artistic wall-coating, by mixing in cold ready water. for the brusli I For Sale by Paint Dealers Everywhere. Tire Doctor—' “One layer of GZ LOJ r A Tint Card showing 12 desirable tints, also Alabastine paper la bad enough, you have L Sourenir Rock sentfree to any one montioning this paper. three here. thrive.” Baby may recover ALABAHTIKE CO., Grand Itapids, Mich. but cannot W-i ^ tdL\r iMl {a; rVsu ■ii ii the STANDARD PAINT FOR STRUCTURAL PURPOSES. Pamphlet, "Suggestions for Exterior Decoration,” Sample Card and Descriptive Price List free by mall. Asbestos Hoofing, molding Felt, Steam i'acUing, Hotter Coverings. Fire-Proof Faints, Etc. Asbestos Non-Conducting and Electrical Insulating Materials, H. W. JOHNS MA- UFACTUEING- CO., 87 Maiden Lane. New York. CHICAGO: 240 fc 242 Randolph St. PHILADELPHIA: 170 & 172 North 4th Rt. BOSTON: 77 & 79 Pearl St. Corn is a vigorous feeder and re¬ sponds well to liberal fertiliza¬ tion. On corn lands the yield increases and the soil improves if properly treated with fer¬ tilizers containing not under 7% actual Potash. A trial of this p^n costs but little and is sure to lead to profitable culture. All about Potash—the results of its n«e by actual ex- penment on the best farms in the United States—ii told m a little book which we publish and will gladly BiAii lrce to any farmer in America who will write for it GERMAN kali WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. SAW MILLS. LIGHT and HEAVY, and SUPPLIES. ^CHEAPEST AND BEST> Cast every day; work ISO hands. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. For Men Only. diabetes, Bright’s Disease and all chronic af¬ fections of the genito-urtnary system are cured by HAGGARD'S SPECIFIC TABLETS. They not only cure but invigorate and re' store. 1 box .$1.00, 3 boxes *2.50, by mall Ad- ressHAGGARD SPECIFIC COMPANY, ! :'^' A,lH, " a <”>' LAMAR A i RAN tNK,vn KIN DRUG ' CO., Wholesale Agents. M OSBORNE’S boot;. Short <;n- Ac,lial basines*. No text time. Cheap board. Send for catalocu^ If you FARM TEXAS want a in che * 1 ’' 41 lbs. Best Granulated Sugpr Shipped to an vbody. Send no money, but enclose stamp to l'.»»IUU.«! IkM S. Ce.StiS. Clloton 9 t..D*,t. SSCiitagi, j h G ? NTS. C lr , 1 } I L t c 5 e aeen: lr > this Cour.'y FRICK COMPANY ECLIPSE ENGINES US T ■ ; I i aiifegfejg ili-BSt ipj Boilers, San Mills, Cotton (tins, Cotton Presses, Grain Separators. Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth, In* spirators, full Injectors, Engine Repairs and a line of Brass Goods, fy Send for Catalogue and Prices. Avery * SOUTHERN & McMillan MANAGERS. N os. 51 & 53 S. Forsyth St., ATLANTA, GA, DOUGLAS SHOE BEST IN THE WORLD. For H years tilt# has shoe, by distanced merit alone, competitors. Indorsed by over 1,000.009 wearers style, AC as tlie best in nnd durability oE ni>y shoe ever m WkM cd at $3.00. UJ It Is mad* SHAPES in I the latest oE i ami styles and j every variety oi / | leather. One dealer in a m town ei ven e: xcIub- ive 8rtle ana nd a tdver* tised in local paper Uiji/ on able receipt of reason- Write order. for catalogue to w. i» imicoi.as. Urockten, Mbm. 0 m 0 0 0 CONSTANT WEARERS. in writing to adver¬ tisers. ANC9T-16 ‘RB -FOR’" rc Best „ CURtS Cough HHtHP AIL ELSE FAILS- _In Syrup. Sold Tastes Good. Use n tiraa by druggists.__ 2 iW-