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REACH THE SPOT,
To cure an aching back,
The pains of rheumatism,
The tired-out feeclings,
You must reach the spot—get at the
sOoßuke, -
In most cases 'tis the kidneys.
Doan's Kidney Pills are for the kid
ineys.
Charles Bierbach, stone contractor,
‘living at 2625 Chestnut St., Erie, Pa.,
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- heavy sediment. Doctors treated me
for rheumatism, but failed to help me.
1 lost all confidence in medicine, and
began to feel as if life were not worth
Alving. Doan’s Kidney Pills, however,
‘relieved me so quickly and so thorough.
‘ ly that I gladly made a statement to
1 that effect for publication. This was
}{l 1898, and during the six years which
hage elapsed 1 have never known
Doaw’s Kidney Pills to fail. They
curedymy wife of a severe case of back
.ache i the same thorough manner.”
A f;'@}g~t§ia! of this great kidney med
{cine which cured Mr. Bierbach will be
mailed on application to any part of
the United States. Address Foster-
Milburn Co., Buffalo, N, Y. For sale
by all druggists; price 50 cents per box.
POOR DEVIL.
“Another treatise on the devil!”
“Yes. Does look like they’d be de
<cent enough to wait for him to come
after us, and not thrust him on us!”--
LACKADAY, LADIES!
Cobwigger—Did the women’s clubs
thave a harmonious convention?
Merritt—No. The only time they
got together was when they were hav
ing their picture taken.—Judge.
Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we everused
for all affections of throat and lungs.—Wm.
©O. ExpsLey, Vanburen, Ind., Feb, 10, 1900.
Death is one thing that never fails to
come to the man who waits.
Fruit acids will not stain goods dyed
with PurNaM FapELEss DyYEs.
One way to dodge the divorce courts is
to stay single.
Write us a postal card for a frece sample of
STUART'SGIN AND BUCHU.
We cheerfully send it to all sufferers of Kid
ney, Liver, Heart, Bladder and Blodd diseases
on reguest. It will do all that we claim for it.
Full directions with sample sent. Mention
this gsal{er. Address STUART DRUG M'F'G.
CO., Vall Street, ATLANTA, GA.
WANTED —ln each state salesman to sell
large line tobacco; permanent position;
Central Tobacco Works Co., Penicks, Va.
THERE IS NO somes,
g ey %
SLICKER LIRE 4sn o
Forty 53 ago any ofier many years
of use on the eastern coast, Tower's
Woaterproof Oiled Coats were introdiced
in the West and were called Slickers By
the pieneers and cowboys. This graphic
name has come into such general use that
it is frequently though wrongfully applied
to many substitutes. You want the genune.
7.&y Look for the Sign of the Fish,and
the nune Tower on the buttons.
MADE IN BLACK AND YELLOW AWD ™
SOLD BY REPRESENTATIVE TRADE
~~ "THE WORLD OVER. _ i
AJ. TOWER €O BOSTON, MASS. U.S.A.
. TOWER CAMADIAN CO. Limited TORONTO. CAN.
3 s
Give the name of this paper when
writing to advertisers—(Atls-04)
e i gt
itafiicted with
woak oyes, m“omm,s E" Water
says: “For two
years I had kidney
trouble, and there
was such a severe
pain through my
loins and limbs
that I could not
stoop or straighten
up without great
pain, had difficulty
in getting about
and was unable to
rest at night, aris
ing in the morning
tired and worn out.
The kidney secre
tions were irregu
ular and deposited
Won’t Eat 'Possum,
A human being is a queer animal
after all. We eat ’possum and pay
fancy prices for them, yet a vulture
will not touch one. During a long
season of snow some years ago a far
mer said the buzzards in his locality
were almost starved and to test the
matter he killed a pessum and put it
out where he could be easily be found.
The wultures would not touch it,
though they “examined” the carcass.
Not satisfied, the farmer cooked an
other ’possum up brown and spread
it out, but the buzzards declined the
feast—Greensboro (Tenn.) Record. (
For more than an hour two French j
duelists had fought desperately with
their rapiers. &
Suddenly one of them was seen to
wince slightly.
“Hold!” exclaimed the referee—or
whatever he is in French—stepping in
between the combatants. “What s
the matter, sir?”
“One of my corns is hurting me,”
replied the duelist who had winced.
“Sheathe your weapons, gentlemen,”
said the referee. “Honor is satisfied.
—Chicago Tribune, 1
e |
“Today,” said the minister, “I think
you'd better take up the collection
before I preach my sermon.” ;
“Why so?” asked the vestryman.
“I’'m going to preach on “Economy.”
—Philadelphia Press.
FlTSpermanently cured. No fits ornerveus
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. §2trial bottleand treatiseiree
Dr.R.H.KrIxE, Litd., 981 Arch Bt., Phila., Pa
: Statue of Pope Leo,
Bondi, the Italian sculptor, has com
menced to work on the great marble
statue of the late pontiff, which will
crown a hil that overlooks Carpineto,
Italy, Pope Leo’s birthplace.
STATE oF OHIIO, CI7IY OF TOLEDO, } . :
Lucas CouNTy. .
Frank J. CEENEY make oath that he s
senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY &
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
LARS for each and every case of CATARRH
that cannot be cured by the use of HArLy’s
CATARRH CURE. Frank J. CHEXEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
~A— , presence, this 6th day of Decem
{sear. | ber,A.D., 1886. A.W. GLrasox,
—— Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
free. F.J. Caeney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists, 75¢. |
Take Hall’s Family Pills for cons.tipation. 7
Agriculture in Castile. \
Land in Castile is in greater part
devoted to the production of wheat,
and during planting and harvesting
times laborers, especially reapers, are
taken there from Galicia, |
Tor 3€Cc. and This Notice |
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wis., will send free |
1 pkg. May Ist Carrob...ouieeresensnnidoe
1 pkg. Earliest Green Eating 0ni0n.....10c¢.
1 pkg. Peep Of Day T0mat0............20e.
1 pkg. Salzer’s Flash Light Radish...... e,
1 pkg. Long Ouick, Quick Radi5h.......10c.
1 pke. Salzer’s Queen of All Radish..loc.
Above six rare novelties, the choicest and |
finest of their kind. have a retail value of
70c.., but they are mailed to you free, 10-
gether with Salzer’s big catalog, well
worth $lOO.OO to every wide-awake gar
dener, all upon receipt of hut 30¢. in post- |
age and this notice. TACT.] }
After a young man has called on a girl
at least three times she imagines there is
an odor of orange blossoms in the air.
Mre. Winslow’s Soothing Svrup forchildren
teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma
tion allays pain,cureswind colie. 25¢, abottle
No man objects to being assured that he
is not in it when jail is the subject of con
versation.
WORLD'S FAIR ST. LOUIS.
Louisville and Nashville R. B s Short
est Line, Best Time and Service,
Round trip season, sixty-day and fifteen
day tickets will be sold daily from all points
beginning April 25th. Very low rate Coach
Excursion tickets sold May 16th and 81st.
Special rates made for military on applica
tion. Don’t missthe Greatest Fa r the world
has ever known. Ask for tickets via the 1..
& N. R. R,
For World’s Fair literature, with list and
rates of hotels and boarding houses, sched- (
ules, cost of tickets, slecping car space and
fuli information, apply to '
J. G. HOLLENBECK, |
Dist. Pasgs, Agent, Atlanta, Ga., '
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THE BUSY CHILD.
I have so many things to do,
I don’t know when I shall be through.
To-day I had to watch the rain
Come sliding down the window pane;
And I was humming all the time,
Around my head, a kind of rhyme;
And blowing softly on the glass
To see the dimness come and pass.
I made a picture with my breath
Rubbed out to show the underneath.
Y built a city on the floor;
And then I went and was a War.
And I escaped from square to square
That’s greenest on the carpet there,
Until at last I came to Us;
But it was very dangerous:
Because if I had stepped outside,
I made believe I should have died!
And now I have the boat to mend,
And all our supper to pretend.
I am so busy, every day,
[ haven’t any time to play.
—Josephine Preston Peabody.
GRANDMA’S COMPANY.
“Dear, dear!” said little Nora, flat
tening her face against the window
pane. “Where do all the snowflakes
come from, I want to know?”
It was a wonder, to be sure. When
she looked out toward the meadow,
they were so thick that she could not
catch a glimpse of the big hickory
tree, and when she looked straight up,
she spied them as far as she could
see, flying down and round like a
swarm of bees. And it was too bad,
Nora thought, for she had a new pair
of skates, and had just learned to
stand without slipping down when
the snow came, and covered the Ice
all over. And now she could hardly
tell the pond f'om the pasture.
“Did you ever see such a storm?”
said Nora, nestling her head in grand
ma’s soft, smooth lap
“Yes, I remember a heavier fall of
snow than this,” said grandma, click
ing her needles cheerfully.
“Oh, won’t you tell me about it? Or
have you got to count your stitches?”
asked little Nora.
“No,” said grandma. “I can knit and
talk both at once.
“It was when I was a littls girl, and
we lived at Beechwoods. I% was rath
er a lonesome place,“and #e were all
glad when the time came for the
Friends’ quarterly meetings, Then
our house was always full of company,
for father and mother were Quakers.
We children loved the nice old ladies,
with their motherly ways, and their
dove-colored bohnets and dresses. Be
sides, we thought it was splendid fun
to sleep in the garret, and so make
room for all our visitors.
“But this time the meeting was not
near us, but way over at Bear's Cor
ners. Father and mother and wrome
of the children went to it in the long
bob-sleigh, but the rest were left at
home—my sister Rachel, my little
brother Amos and myself. .
“After the others were gone it be
gan to snow and blow furiously, and
before dark we could not see a fence.
Rachel and I helped little Amos shovel
a path to the barn, and how our fing
~ers ached before we reached the barn
door! We fed the cows and sheep as
fast as we could, and hurried back to
the big fireplace.
“Whew! Didn’'t the wind roar in
the chimney! I was afraid, and locked
the door, but Amos and Rachel
laughed at me. ‘Who could come in
all this storm?’ they asked.
“Just as they said that there was
a thump on the door that made us
start. 'Who couid be out such a night
as this? Amos peeped out of the win
dow and said, softly, ‘lt’s three In
dians! Big fellows!’
“Oh! O-00-oh!’ I began to ery.
“’'Sh! Girls make such a noise!’
he whispered. ‘Keep still, and they
won’t know we are here!’ ’
““Why, Amos, I am surprised at
thee!’ said Rachel, in her quiet way.
‘The poor Indians will freeze if we
keep them out in this storm.’
“So she opened the door herself,
and let them come in to the fire.”
“0 grandma, did they kill you?*
asked Nora, with round eyes. :
~ “No, indeed.” said grandma, laugh
ing. “Poor fellows! How cecld and
hungry they were! They had come a
} long way on their snow-shoes. Rachel
gave them a good supper and let them
sleep in the kitchen. So they stretch
ed themselves out on the floor, with
their moccasins to the fire.
“But in the night we were wakened
by a terrible noise. I never heard
anything like it! We opened the stair
door just a crack, and peeped down
into the kitchen. What a funny sight
we saw! . !
“Our Indian friends were so com
fortable that they felt quite jolly, and
they were dancing before the fireplace
and singing just the queerest tane,
The words were queer, too. We «hil
dren fancied they were
: “‘Chippaquack,
Catch a snake,’
and this they sang over and over. We
listened to them a long while, aad
laughed till we cried.
“Well, when we woke the next
morning ‘our company was gone, and
on the Kkitchen table lay a beautiful
minkskin, which they had left for a
present. Rachel sewed it into a tip
pet.
“That’s all my story; now run out
and enjoy the snow. If your skates
won'’t go, your sled will. So good-by!”
—Elizabeth H. Thomas, in Youth’s
Companion.
A Chicago doctor says that golf is
a sure cure for Bright's disease. It is
nrobahly about 23 sure as any other
zind of an attraction that will draw
a man away from his office desk and
cause him to exercise in the open alr
frequentty for an hour or two at a
time, giving his lungs som<thing to
worx upon and calling into play the
various organs and muscles of his
body, comments the Haverhill Gar
zette, These are the eurative prop
erties of golf, and they are quite as
likely to be found in a sennis racqued,
a fishing rod, a hasebali bat or a pafr
of oars or a dogzen other things that
might tempt a man to get out and
exercise. Take the medi#.ne you like
the best.