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%% Our money winning books,
Swritten by meh who know, tell
‘you all about
' Potash
They are needed by every man
who owns a field and a plow, and
who desires to get the most out
of them. S
They arefree. Send postal card.
© ' GERMAN KALI WORKS
» Xow York—-98 Nassau Street,
J Adests, 6a.—82% So. Brond St.
MALsBY & Co.
4| Sonth Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
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| ) 22 pDS
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W Ty a Al (EITARE A p e T
: Portable and Stationary
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Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills
Complete line carried in stock for
: IMMEDIATE shipment.
Best Machinery, Lowest Prices and Best Terms
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., Ppefore buying.
“Uhor over nine yeirs T suffered ¢ :
.%v?s:ion and duih;g thissutigg lwli)ta’ac%l;o?ailgoco:n
injection of warm water once every 24 hours before
I ¢ovld have an action on my bowels. Happily I
tried (‘-!scarebs, and today I am a We]r man.
Dyriugihe nine years before I used Cascarets I
sufferel untold misery with internal piles. Thanks
toyou!l em free from all that this morning. You
esi use this in behalf of suffering humanity.”
A B. F, Fisher, Roanoke, 111.
& DY) Bestfor
7 W 47 Theßowels ;
i':e RS “"’* 16 .=4 4N
EATI RIS R sSI A L
B CANDY CATHARTIC
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Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, T
fifie{nS})clsgn. '}g’euken oir (r}lrtlpésrl::;).i:f;&?:? kol:o m
X nix. e nu
Guaranteed to curo%er yonn: m::m:y :):‘::'flm uve
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 633
ANRUAL SALE, TEH MILLION BOXES
W. L. DOUCLAS
$4.00, $3.50, $3.00, 82.50
NION BEST IN
%lADE SHOES THE &OII!LD.
W.L. Douglas shoes :
are worn by more g ‘,%
men than any other g% ... 4
make. The reason LSS ERd
is. thev hold their ] W VA
18, they hoid thelr g 3 Y /,9
shape,fithetter,wear pasgt ‘
lohger, and have ¢Sfa |
» atar intringie o .
gx’e ater Intrinsic il
value -than any _&\sce™ /B
1 AR O 2
otiier shoes. ;rf‘éi;‘:;ffi:x( i ’3“\ Y
“old Everywhere. §i ‘{\\' Xeicei/ i "‘/f)}z
' Look for name and price on bottom.
Douglas uses Corona Coltskin, whieh is
everywhere conceded tobethe finest Patent
Leather yet produced. Fast Co‘or Eyelets used
Sloes by mail, 25 cents extra. Write for Catalog.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass,
Ei—e Great East
and West Line A AND
Across the En
tire States of ;
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%~ TEXASE f,\N“ P : PAC!FIC
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OB RAILWAY ¢
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No trouble to answer questions. 85 miles
shartest route Shreveport to Dallas. Write
fornew book on Texas, free. E. P. TURNER,
General Passenger Agent, Dallas, Texas.
.ho 1.0 .-. : £"3 A ‘
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g 9 A prominent club woman, Mrs. Dan- §
forth, of St. Joseph, Mich., tells how she
was cured of falling of the womb and
® * ® °
Its accompanymg pams and mlse-ry by
’ s 9
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
“Drar Mrs, Pingnam:— Life looks dark indeed when a woman
feels that her strength is fading away and she has no hopes of ever
being restored. Such was my feeling a few months ago when I was
advised that my poor health was caused by prolafvsus or falling of the
womb. The words sounded like a knell to me, I felt thae my sun had
set ; but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound came to me as
an elixir of life; it restored the lost forces and built me up until my
gopd health returned to me. For four months I took the medicine
aily and each dose added health and strength. lam so thankful for
the hfifi) I obtained through its use.”— Alrs. FLORCNCE DANFORTH,
1007 Miles Ave., St. Joseph, Mich.
A medicine that has restored so many women to health and
can preduce proof of the fact must be regarded with respect. This
is the record of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which
cannot be equalled by any other medicine the world has ever pro
duced. Xere is another case:—
&0 “Dpar Mrs. Pinxrau :— For years I was
h*f»%;;{;gfig troubled with falling of the womb, irregular
}*’f“{ff&% and painful menstruationfileucorrhoea,_ bearing-
Ge PSS\ down pains, backache, eadache, dizzy and
b € " fainting spells, and stomach trouble.
o 8 Wl “«] doctored for about five years but did
\:7 ‘@) ‘@, §¥ not seem to im%‘ove. I began the use of your
* A B 9 medicine, and have taken seven bottles of
LA o) / Lydia E. Pinkhgm’s Vegetable Compound,
SO .. / three of Blood Purifler, and also used the
S~ Sanative Wash and Liver Pills, and am now
f oAy enjoying good health, and have gained in flesh.
sy, I thank you very much for what you
g 3 e g have done for me, and heartily recom
(o A 2 A mend your medicine to all sufiefln{
' 5% women.” — Miss Exua SWYDER, 318 Eas
Center St., Marion, Ohio.
SFREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN.”
Women would save time and much sickness if they would
write to Mrs. Pinkham for advice as soon as any distressing symp
toms appear. It is free, and has put thousands of women on the
right road to recovery.
Mrs. Pinkham never violates the confidence thus entrusted to
her, and although she publishes thousands of testimonials from
women who have been benefited by her advice and medicine,
never in all her experience has she published such a letter without
the full consent, and often by special request of the writer.
R FORFEIT if wo cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of
sso§ 0 above testimonials, which will prove their absclute fienuineness.
Lydia E, Pinkham Medicine C 0.,, Lynn, Mass.
GARDEMN AND POULTRY FENCE,
£\ RSN PONTIS N N
IX FX TN ad T A 2kt
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PR NN NP NN N
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TN £N7NN RN Nl
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gl iipnlr gy
A"'A'A"'A"'
B S e Nl
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PR e o
ANDERSON HARDWARE CO.,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
3Bin. High, 30 Cents per Rod Boin. High, 50 Cents per Rod
48in. High, 40 Cents per Rod. 72in. High; 60 Cents per Rod
10 Rods or 166 feet in one roll. No order taken
for less than 10 Rods, This is not a cheap net
ting, but is a strong Fence made out of No. 1%
heavy galvanized wire reinforced every 12inches,
Poultry and Rabbit raising puys better than cot
ton. Send eash with order for & Rolis, men
tion this paper, and we will prepay freighs.
~ Satisfaction of Work.
Too often the worker gets “mere
wages” out of his occupation and
nothing more. The work itself does
not appeal to him or satisfy him, and
withcut knowing what is wrong, he
become restless and ready to join in
strikes or other movements to improve
his condition, movements that, if suc
cessful, in one sense does not g{;}flie him
what he really needs. Workingmen
are themselves to some degree respon
sible for this. Their union rules give
no scope for ambition or the exercise
of the highest skill. All are held to a
monotonous dead leved of achievement
and the rewards of labor that are
above and beyond the wages ::ld by
their employer—the supreme satisfac
tion of doing their best for their own
sake and the work's sake—ls lacking
and the incntivi: thus taken out of life.
Newspaper work may have certain in
herent peculiarities that give it espe
cial charm, but any work well done
may afford its own share of satisfac
tion apart from the ‘“mere wages” in
volved. Money wages are a necessity,
and in themselves serve as a measure
of achievement, but there must needs
be more than this if the worker is to
be content. If a man will he can find
pleasure in any honest thing his hands
are set to do, but when he is fortunate
enough to have for his life’s occupation
the thing for which he is best adapted
and which he most likes to do, then he
is iadeed truly favored by fate and
may well obey the poet’s injunction to
those who have found their work—
“l,et him seek no greater blessed
ness.”—lndianapolis Journal. :
That Altered the Case.
It was in a country police court, and
the lawyer on one side had occasion to
refer to a dead man, whose evidence,
had he lived, would have been impor
tant.
“The defunct,” the lawyer sald,
“would have corroborated me in this,
your worships;” or “The defunct,
may it please the court, would, were
he here:” or, “It is notorious that the
defunct declared frequently, your wor
ships,” and so on. @
Whenever these references to the
dead man were made, indignant objec
tions came from the lawyer on the
other side. The words “the defunct,”
in fact, always caused a squabble, and
it was to be observed that in this
squabble one of the magistrates—a
self-made man—had from the begin
aing been disposed to take part. He
frowned and shook his head in repro
bation a great deal, and finally he said
impatiently,—
“What’s the use o’ talkin’ so much
about this chap you call ‘the defunct?
Can’t you bring him here and let him
speak for himself?”
“The defunct’s dead, your worship,”
the lawyer interposed hastily,
The magistrate looked mollified.
“Oh, that alters the case,” he said.
The Pope a Favorite.
One recalls those moving speeches
which, as cardinal, he delivered weep
ing in the Conclave, setting forth all
his imperfections (his sins, even), and
the disadvantages of hfs career from
barefooted boyhood up, but which real
ly secured him the throne, and the
stories of him which every one knows
in Lombardy and Venetia. For no ec
clesiastic can have been more widely
known than he. A pulpit orator of re
nown from the very outset of his
priestly career, the sought-after pane
gyrist of great occasions when bishop
and patriarch, no wonder that he was
hailed by a voice in Rome when he
took possession of his title as cardi
nal: ‘No one has spoken so well as
this cardinal!” As county assistant,
then parish priest, professor in the
seminary of Treviso, canon, chancel
lor of the diocese, great hierarch of
Mantua, the successor of St. Mark,
every one seems to know him, and no
one has any memory that is not pleas
ant,—William J. D. Croke, in Century
Magazine.
In 1900, according to the census,
there were 877 gas plants in the Untited
States and the number was growing.
Thev earned an income of $75,000,000.