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A (olden Rule
of Agriculture:
Be good to yourland and yourcrop §
wufbo goog. Plenty of 1
Potash|
In thefertilizer spellaquality [ A
and quantity in the har- | Q:}/"’
vest. Write us and KR
we will send you, »’;‘;')<./» o
Jree, by next mail, ..,1}.,-,, 6 S
our money winning "N fiAr
books. 1 1o TR
GERMAN KAL!I WORKS, ’*[, v
New York—93 Nassan St. i
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Atlaata, G.—22 4 Se. Broad St. S 0 DoV A
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741 BSN AR e
AL " A ;/./ ~’;‘, ) [ AVVA (7|
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SUCCESSORS TO
AVERY & McMILLAN,
81-58 SBouth Forsyth St.,, Atlanta, Ga
~ALL KINDS OF—
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BT o b PR ffi._"‘".‘
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Reliable Frick Engines, Boilers, all
Slzes. Wheat Separators.
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foasee PA R R 4 4“ AT Y
o+ s B A 1 S
P e PP R e i
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BHLY .:..u";‘*.;:2 ,- »
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH.
Large Engines and Boilers supplied
prompily, . Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws,Saw Teeti,Patent Dogs, |
Steam Governors, Full line Engines &i
Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue. |
el D s s e e
RoT R e S DR !
- Our Latest Im-§ |
® SAW M I LLS proved Circu-Ea |
R lar Saw Mills, B 3 \
with Hege's Universal Log Beams,Rectilin-§g3
ear, Simultaneonus Set Worksand the Hea-§S |
; cock-g(mg Variable Feed Works are unex-f
eelleG for ACOURACY, SIMPLICITY, DURABIL- :;‘; |
ITY AND EASE OF OPERATION. Write for fullfs |
A descgknive eireulars. Manufactured by the &
WSALEM IRON WORKS,Wingeton-Salem,N.C. &
TSR TR TR A
A Large Tria! Box and book of ine
structions absolutely Free and Post=
paid, enough to prove the value of
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
Paxtine is in powder
.':‘-% form to dissolve in
R water — non-poisouous
B Rt and farsuperior to liquid
CEES SRR antlse?tics containing
LR B\ aicohol which irritates
g ’_‘, \\‘; Il:xflamed llxurfaices, and
* L ave no cleansing prop
g @3b 1§ erties. The contents
{ A q. MBEWY of every box makes
Gl - S, more Antiseptic Solu
e 304 i tion — lasts longer—
A e)fi goes further—has more
5 @8 uses in the family and
3 PP doesmoregoodathanany
\ - antiseptic prepavation
you can buy.
The formula of a noted Boston physician,
and used with great successas a Vaginal
Wash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal
Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts,
and all soreness of mucus membrane.
Inlocal treatment of female ills Paxtine is
invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we
challonge the world to produce its equal for
thoroughness. Itisarevelationin cleansing
and healing power; it kills all germs which
cause inflammation and discharges.
All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price, 50¢.
abox ; if yoursdoesnot, send to us for it. Don’t
sake a substitute — thereis nothing like Paxtine.
Writeforthe Free Box of Paxtine to-day.
B.PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass.,
Give the name of this paper when
writing to advertisers—(Atl4-04)
2 4 | fi'
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- 4“,‘” ) - 8
of [ 7 s R R A N
[\ /‘ .‘, ‘\ ‘\“_ "‘i‘ ’!‘;
X e’ e e Y ‘t('?’.
Miss Whittaker, a prominent
club woman of Savannah, Ga.,
teils how she was entirely cured
of ovarian troubles by the use
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
DeAR M=rs. Izmuuu:—-l heartily
recommend é,z fa E. Pinkham’s
Vegetabge mpound as a Uterine
Tonie an Regulato:‘. I suffered for
four years with irregularities and
Uterine troubles. No one but those
who have experienced this dreadful
agony can form any idea of the physi
cal and mental misery those endure
who are thus afflicted. Your Vege
table Compound cured me within
three months. I was fully restored to
health and strenqth, and now my
e‘?riods are regular and painless.
bat a blessing it is to be able to
obtain such a remedy when so ma}xay
doctors fail to help {;)u. Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
is better than any doctor or medicine
I ever had. Very truly yours, Miss
Easy WHITTAKER, 604 30th St., W.
Savanpah, Ga.” — ’aooo forfeit f{orlplnal 7’;
aboue letter proving genuinensss cannot be produced.
The testiponials which we
are constantly publishing from
grateful women prove beyond a
doubt the xower of Lydia E,
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
to conquer female diseases.
NORTH-SOUTH-EAST-WEST
- YOU Wikk PIND
AWER's
: 35
g 7 WATLRPROCF
£\ OILED cuotiNG
i\ EY SRE.
e ) Thtebe;t matarials, skitled whngnw
, aixty-seven eri mede
s TOWERS Sicers, Conts ond Fats
kY, 7% famous the world over They are madein
Py black or yellow for all kinds of wet work,
TOHERS | endevery gorment bearingthe SIGN OF
THE FISH s fi.u:.rontcedto ive 3t
‘m isfoction. All reliable dealers xi?thcrn.
A.J.TOWER CO.BOSTON HASS. U.5.A.
| ALL OTHERS | vowts chnuns 0. oted ToRORTO, G 2
- R PR R i o s SRI | .- -‘_k
" Millions of U. M. C. Shot Shells §
are sold each year. They are §
made in the largest cartridge }
factory in the world. :
The UNION METALLIC CARTRIDGE 0. §
BRIDGEPORT, CONN.
Your dealer i
sells them. ,4, Catalog ”o‘::‘. o
i upon requ
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This is What You Want !
Have You Any Malarial Troubles ?
R 3o B Al iy 3 Lol
REGAL MEDIGINE C00.,0f Stamford, Conn.,
for medicipe and directions. quick ag a
gy uasabiont o OTI of eslcta” S 8 sud
- Fame.
“Your case,” the doctor told him, “is
absolutely unique. In the whole range
of medical annals there is no record
of anything like it. It is an entirely
new disease. We congratulate you.”
“You congratulate me!” feebly re
plied the patient. “Am I going to get
well?”
“We can’t tell yet.”
“Then what are you congratulating
me for?”
“We are going to name the disease
after you.”—Chlicago Tribune.
"Putting on Airs.
“Old Bill got real tony last summer
after he visited his city relations,
didn’t he?”
“Yes; the old fool 'ud wait till after
dark an’ then go out an’ take his bath
in the waterin’ trough.”—Baltimore
Sun. :
FlTSpermanently cured. No fits ornervouse
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer, §2trial hottleand treatisefree
Dr.R. H. ErINE, Ltd., 931 Arch Bt., Phila., Pa
It’s the love of the other fellow for your
money that is the root of ail evil.
Ladles Can Wear Shoss
One size smnaller after using Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes
easy, Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching
feet, Ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At
all druggists and shoe stores, 252, Don’t ac
cept any substitute, Trial package Frer by
mail. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Leßoy, N.Y,
One trouble with people who have ex
cuses is that they can’t always think of
them.
Teosinte and Billion Dollar Grass.
The two greatest fodder plants on earth,
one good for 14 tons of hay and the other
8C tons green fodder per aere. Grows
everywhere, so does Victoria Rape, yield
ing 60,000 iis. sheep and swine food per
acre. [A.C.L.]
JUST SEND 10C. IN STAMPS TO THE
John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.
and receive in return their big catalog and
lots of farm seed samples.
As the wise man knows he is a fool he is
misgerable; the fool imagines he is wise and
is happy.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forchildren
teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma
tion allays pain,cureswind colic. 25¢c. abottle
Only after repeated failures to catch on
does a girl announce her decision never to
marry.
All creameries use butter color. Why
not do as they do = use JUNE TiNT BUuT
TER COLOR.
More men would have indigestion if
forced to eat their words.
Piso’s Curefor Consumption isan infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.—N, W,
SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900,
Some women wiil believe any kind of
story if there is ascandalconnected with it.
For $1.65 Money 01’(1—::‘.
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wis., mail postpaid 15 trees, consisting of
Apricots, Aplgles, Crabs, Cherries, Plums,
Peaches and Pears, just the thing for a city
or country garden, including the great Bis
mark Apple, all hardy Wisconsin stock,
are sent you free upon receipt of $1.65.
AND FOR 16C. AND THIS NOTICE
you get sufficient seed of Celery, Carrot
Cabbage, Onion, Lettuce, Radish and
Flower Seeds to furnish bushels of choice
flowers and lots of vegetables for a big
family, together with our great plant an
seed catalo~. [A.C.L.]
It was probably some married man who
first discovered that troubles never come
singly. :
TL AT LB YA N, S ARSI A 5 NS SR RSP (5 BN P NPT S 5,
85 U 0 Given Awayf
Write us or ask anf
Alabastine desier for §
particulars and free umplo:ud of 3
The Banitary%m§ 5
Duuoysdheaa‘ggemaaud u*mln. eve: B
rubs or scales. Youoan ?ply t—mix with &
oo&d water. Deautiful effects in whitte and &
delicate tints, Nota diseass.breeding, out- &
of-date hot-water give parstion. Duy
Alabastine tn 61b. pumu. properly 1a- B
belled, of paint, hardware and drug dea{eu. q
ideas fres, ALISHRE G 0 G Mg, B,
pr 105 Water St A, ¥, 2
I
WANTED —ln each state salesman to sell
large line tobacco; permanent position;
Central Tobacco Works Co., Penicks, Va.
4 - PISOISHCURE FORR:
M 5 URES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS, )
Best Cough Syrup, Tastes Good. Use P&
8 in time. Bold by druggists, & st
R A 2AN RN e L s eTEE <
- RAILROADS OF CHINA.
Foreign Interests Building Many Lines
in the Empire.
According to a recent article by Ar
thur Judson Brown, on “Railways in
China,” foreign interests in Chinese
railways are and have been for several
years past rapidly increasing, and, no
doubt, it will be only a 2 matter of a
few years when the whole of that
mighty empire will be encircled by for
aign-built and capitalized railways.
Russia was one of the first countries
to obtain concessions from China for
this purpose. Russia already bad a
terminus for her Trans-Siberian rail
way at Valdivostok, but as that port
is ice-bound in winter the trains could
not connect with the steamers. So the
Russian diplomats did not rest until
they had secured the right to extend
the Trans-Siberian road southward
through Manchuria to Tachichao.
From there one branch extends south
ward to Port Arthur and Dalny and
another southwestward to Shan-hai-
Kwan, where the Great Wall of China
jouches the sea. At this point connec
tion is made with the Imperial Rail
‘way of Taku, Tien Tsin and Pekin, a
distance of 5,746 miles from MOSCOW.
A recent St. Petersburg despatch says
that a survey has just been completed
{rom Kiakhta, Siberia, to Pekin, a dis
tance of about 1000 miles. This road,
if built, will give the Russians a short
cut direct to the capital. The Ger
mans, like the Russians, have also
been very aggressive along these
lines, and have already a railroad run
ning from Tsing-tau, on Kia-chau Bay
into the heart of the populous province
of Shantung. The contractors of this
road, it is said, promise to reach the
capital of this province, Chinanfu,
within a year. At Chinanfu, this road
will meet another great trunk line,
partly English and partly German,
which is being pushed southward from
Tien Tsin to Chin-Kiang. Another
English syndicate is to control a route
from Shanghai to Nanking and Ningpo,
while the Anglo-Chinese Railway Syn
dicate of London, is said to be plan
ning a railway from Canton to Chen
tufu, the provincial capital of Szech
uan. A most valuable concession has
also been granted to the Anglo-Italian
syndicate in the provinces of Shansi
and Shemsi, which gives the right to
construct railways and to operate coal
mines in a region where some of the
most extensive anthracite deposits in
the world are located. Several of these
roads mentioned are already under
construction and will no doubt do
rmuch toward the future opening up of
the natural resources of China and
general enlightenment of the world
on Chinese manners and customs.
Young Men as Senators. '
The Rev. Edward Everett Hale, the
fiew chaplain of the senate, is 84
years old. A day or two .after he be
gan his duties he went into Senator
Hoar’s committee room. The senator
was not there, but his clerk was. Mr.
Hale walked around the room and
looked at the pictures. Then he
turned to the clerk and said:
“I thought the senators were old
men.”
“Well,” said the clerk, “most of
tliem are pretty old, are they not?”
“Old!” snorted Mr. Hale. *“I should
think not! There’s Senator Pettus, of
Alabama, who is 83 and has reached
mature years, but the rest of them are
young fellows, so far as I can see.”—
Washington Telegram to the New
York World.
10665 Miles on Snowshoes.
Nearly every camp in the Yukon ter
ritory has been visited this winter hy
the Rev. John Pringle, who made the
tréip of 1065 miles on snowshoes. Mr.
Pringle, who is the councillor for this
Canadian territory, reports on the new
diygings as most promising and that
it s his confirmed belief that the dis
trigt will rival the Klondike. This view
is aeld by many others. The mining
outlook for the territory is bright, and
mirers are much more contented than
at eny time since the discovery of gold
in 1896. Eight to ten thousand men
are expected to go into the new dig
gings this season.