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Thousands of American women ‘
in our hemes are daily sacrificing
their lives to duty. |
In order to keep the home neat l
and pretty, the children well dressed |
and tidy, women overdo. A femala '
weakness or displacement is often
brought on and they suffer in silence, i
drifting along from bad to worse,
knowing well that they ought to
have help to overcome the pains and
aches which daily make life a burden.
It is to these faithful women that l
\
LYDIA E. PIN;(JIAM';S ;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
comes as a boon and a blessing,
as it did to Mrs. K. Ellsworth, of
Mayville, N. Y., and to Mrs. W, P.
Boyd,of Beaver Falls, ~ who say :
“I was not able to do my own worl,
owing to the female trouble from which
I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound helped me wonderfully,
and I am so well that I can do as big a
day's worlk as I ever did. I wish every
sick woman would try it.
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
SBhe has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
GEESHETY e CARNRERERR R e e
(Georgialigpmme
: AN .
Pacornpsbarittoviviziaakdp
@%amaf(fiz)% e
Write ab.once and learn why we secure best
positions, nnd best salarien for our graduates,
L KUGENE ANDERSON, Pres, =
Bl‘ i TRADE MS
¢\; B
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4 ,"5, » = «i":l‘!‘b
9L Ry BN
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Bosßoby Mo
o !ledicin®
Cures Constipation, Diarr} . Convulsic
Gollc, Bour Btomach, etc. It Destrovs Wormy'
E“ltplfi\:lg.nh'l‘“:“ and (‘Ruld.s. It Aids Diges
s ERTHING ', Pro N
ess and Produces N utur:l..“-‘.lert:;.mm“ -
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Oh! Papa don't forget to buy a
bottle of CHENEY'S EXPECTO
RANT for your little girl.
You can buy it at any Drug
Store and you know it never fails
te cure my Croup and Cough.
::B??‘.l‘lgAdr;‘ r;a‘h".i are pun:llvvlv |onwd by
« Forhypodermioo orn
:;o. Hample sent to nny‘d‘n\; t'x‘:hr(l\n.o Fl‘ee
mall, i plain wrapper. Regular price $2.00.
DELTA OHEMICAL COMPANY
1144 Molland Bullding £t Louls, Mo,
full of pimples
apolls life for many & one. Get rid of
thow by alding digestion with
’ .
Parsons’ Pills
They assist digestion, belp the liver to do
s work, and cure constipation.
Put up b gless vials,
Price 23 conts. For male by all dealars.
L & JONESOR & 00, Bosten, Mass,
I
',lf) [E' m ‘
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1 "], ‘ % )% “‘0 a ,'I
L orth e pivin
O (D 76 powing
Monkeys are remarkably keen of
sight, but deficient in sense of smell,
Half rates for women prevail in
gome old Swedish hotels because they
eat legss than men.
The Mississippi, with the Missouri,
is the longest river on the globe, The
longest single river i 3 undoubtedly
the Amazon. i
The moonstone is a mineral, so ‘
ecalled on account of the play of the
light which- it exhibits, Moonstones
are found in greater or less quanti
ties, in all mountainous regions,
Such a year for possums was never
before been known in Tennecssee.
There have been more brought to
market this season than during any
three or four previous years. They
sell at from twenty to fifty cents
each,
A basket of roses, made completely
of butter, basket and all, is being
exhibited through England by the
governpment oi Victoria, one of the
States in Australia, to remind the
mother country of her groac agricul
tural wealth,
Nobody knows who discovered
Mars, He has been known as a plan
et for thousands of years. The same
may be said of Venus. The diurnal
relation of Venus was discovered by
Casgini in 1667. Neptune was dis
covered in 1846,
-~ Denmark claims some intercsting
specimens of mearine architecture in
the five oldest vessels in the world.
The Albertine was bui't in 1794, the
Constance in 1793, the DeWende
Brodoe in 1786, the Himile Hauser in
1786, and the Marvie in 1776. All are
ystill in regular service, some even
trading to Iceland.
At a recent auction of old coins
some of the lEnglish coirs back s far
as Bdward the Confessor brought
only $1 each, and one of them only
‘tc—*n cents, A rare Dlizabeth crown,
“with a profile of the Queen, brought
- sl6; a half ¢rown of the same reign,
sl2, and a half crown bearing the
stamp of Cromwell, sll.
COILOLS SEEN IN DREAMS.
Only Two, Says Scientist, and They
. Are Red and Yeliow.
Ned and yellow are the dream col
ors if Dr. Havelock Ellis is right.
No other hues come to the dreamer
of dreams. Simroth has declared
that red is the most primitive of col
ors, and long ago protoplasm from
which human beings derived their or
igin on the new earth probably re
sponded to or was affected by red
color waves.
In the depth of the sea the algae
or seaweed are red. With the sav
age red is the favorite color, and for
a bright piece of red calico African
savages gladly would give valuable
elephant tusks.
Red strikes the nole of intense
emotions, It is the color of joy, ex
ultation, jubilation. Savages paint
themselves red and rejoice at seeing
each other in burning hues. German
women of the early ages daubed
their bodies with brilliant red and
yellow, and cousidered themselves
most beauteously adorned.
On sacred festivals in Rome and
Greece Pliny recordsred was smeared
over the statues of Jupiter and was
the color of religious rejoicing.
The human eyes, it is said, can
distinguish 100,000 different hues or
colors and can appreciate and differ
entiate twenty shades of each hue.
In other words, the eye is capable of
2,000,000 color impressions. — Chie«
cago Tribune,
He Knew,
The pretiy teacher was trying to
explain the difference between good
conduct and bad. “Good actions,”
she explained, “are the lovely flow
ers. Bad ones are the weeds. Now,
can any lit'iv boy or girl tell me the
difference Dbetween flowers and
weeds? What are flowers? What
are weeds?"”
“Weeds,” said Walter, who had
been struggling with the sorrel in
his mother's garden, “are the plants
that want to grow, and flowers are
the ones that don't.”-—Youth's Come«
panion,
A Sure Cure.
It was during an oral examination
at a medical college. As the exami
nation proceeded the student who
was being questioned got warmer and
warmer, and the sweat broke over
his forehend. “What would you do
to throw a patient into a profuse
perspiration,” at length asked the
examiner, “if you had tried the ordi
nary drugs without effect?” Send
him here to be examined,” replied
the student without a moment's hesi
tation. *lf that didn't do it there's
nothing that would."—Kennebee
Journal,
The Cost,
Germany's war in Southwest Afrl
ca has cost $50,000,000, which has
been spent overcoming the registance
of one or two native tribes. The
losses in action were heavy, Bightye
slx commissioned officers were killed
and the non-commissioned officers of
ficers numbered 229; rank and file,
116 Y; tota), 1482, Among the colo
rial troops sixteen officers ay * 195
wnen perished.—Detroit Nows, ;
Paper making in Japan has been
'very active for the last year or so.
| New companles have been formed,
! and old ones enlarged. Most Jap
anese milis use gteam for motive pow
' er, and nearly all the machinery used
is of American make.
The most qxtravaga.nt of monarchs
in the matter of sea palaceg is not,
a4s one might suppose, the German
Emperor, but the Czar of Russia, who
owns no fewer than five steam yachts.
- ;
yrup of fios
Sl Senna
acts pen’t}y je’[ PromPT
>
l{ onthe bowels, cleanses
t e sys’(em PH ectual\ly.
assists one in overcoming
habitual consfi‘)a)(ion
%ermanenfl)/. To actits
eneficiol eflec’ts l)\y
the denuine,
P’lonu{ac‘tured _b«fl\e
e Syrup Co.
SOLD BY LEADING DRUCGISTS - 50¢ pe-BOTTLE
NA n‘m‘s >wifr.z would r;ovc:;—k:rcw—;c;
had a bad temper if he didn’t lose it.
LICE IN POULTRY.
Borax BSpray a Safe Preventive —— {
Simple, Cheap, Harmless
to Fowls, 1
“20 Mule Team” Borax was a good i
thing to rid poultry of lice. [ had
used so much inflammable Lice killers 1
that my Poultry Houses were regular |
fire traps. I gave my 8. C. W. Leg
horn house a good sprayiag just two
months ago. Since I have caught
geveral hens and I found no lice. I
am ria of lice and shall continue to
use “20 Mule Team” Bc-¢x as a
gpray, also as a wash.
(Signed) MRS. B. R. BUFFHAM,
Roswell, New Mexico.
A prophet is not without honor in
his own community as long as he pays
his bills. »
Stop That Cough |
before it becomes chronie. Get .
Brown's Bronchial Troches, the best
preparation known for coughs,
There is little fun in doing the
things we are compelled to do.
WORN OUT WOMEN :
Will Find Encouragement in Mrs,
Merritt’'s Advice.
Mrs. W. L. Merritt, 207 S. First
Ave., Anoka, Minn., says: ‘“Last win-
AT ter 1 began to suffer
o with my kidneys. I
PR PRRRAY had pains in my back
R ve £ R and hips and felt all
< R worn out. Dizzy
& ¥ spells bothered me
(‘%fl and the Kkidney se
{ cretions were irregu
. ¥ y lar. Th?{ first box of
v Doan's Kidney Pills
l’//, N brought decided re-
AR lief. lam sure they
would do the same for any other
woman suffering as I did.” '
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N, Y.
It is easy for a man to have the
courage of his convictions if his bank
balance l, large enough, *
CUTICURA CURED FOUR.
Southern Woman Suftered With Itche
ing, Burning Rash-—Three Little
Babies Had Skin Troubles—Calls
Cuticura Her Old Stand-by,
“My baby had a running sore on his
neck and nothing that I did for it took
effect until I used Cuticura. My face was
nearly full of tetter or some similar skin
disease. It would itch and burn so that I
could hardly stand it. Two cakes of Cuti
cura Soap and a box of Cuticura Qintment
cured me, Two years after it broke out on
my hands and wrist, Sometimes I would
go nearly crazy for it itched so badly, I
went back to my old stand-by, that had
never failed me-one set of Cuticura Rem
edies did the work., One set also cured
ny uncle’s baby, whoee hrad was a cake of
sores, and another baby who was in'the
same fix. Mrs, Lillie Wilcher, 770 Elev
enth St., Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb, 16, '07,”
CONFIRMING THE DISAPPEAR
ANCE,
COlty BEditor—ln this story you say
the automohile “disappeared In a
cloud of dust”—and it has been raln
ing so rtwo days!
Cudb Reporter—One on me, ‘old
man, How'll “an eruption of mud"
do~Puck,
" Piles Cured in 6to 14 Days,
tment is ranteed to
nh: dol?rhhfi, Blinr!‘\lc«lms or P:;:ld.l:’.
Piles in 6to 14 daysormoney refunded. 50c
HEART INTEREST.
“That play,” remarked the critieal
person, “lacks heart Interest”
“It does, eh,” answered the star;
“vou just ought to see the way the
manager is taking the box office re
~celpts to heart"—Washington Star,
' THE TYPEWRITER GIRL, ' .
, See the busy typist girl ;
As she pounds the keys,
Printing other people’s thoughts
With apparent ease,
’ Sometimes printing other things
Because of lack of care,
And thus producing in her boss
A strong impulse to swear
See her with her guileless face,
Making her excuse:
“I had it in my notes, you see,”
The boss—‘Oh, what’s the use?”
—C. A. Boyd, in Harper's Weekly.
Mr. Bryan’s Dessert.
VUpon William J, Bryan's return to |
Cotter Bride’'s home from the White
House he found a note and a box ‘
which had been sent to him by an
old lady whom he knew while a mem
ber of congress years ago. .He slip.
ped the box into his pocket and join
ed his daughter and several friends
at luncheon at the Raleigh Hotel.
When dessert time arrived he ord
ered the waiter to search his pocket
and bring forih the package.
“These,” he said, “are doughnuts
sent to me by an old friend, and we
are to eat every one of them.”
All gladly congented, and the Peer
less One consumed five, while the
waiters looked on in horror.—Wash
ington Special to New York World.
UNCLE SAM'S WAY.
Englishman (on Atlantic liner):
“Well, old chap, we'll soon be en
gaged with those blarsted Yankee
custom inspectors.”
American: “You bet! And re.
member, old man, that the TUnited
States expects every man to pay his
duty!"—Puck.
FITS,St. Vitus'Dance: Nervoas Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve |
Restorer, $2 trial bottle and treatise frea, |
Dr.H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa, i
ACCOUNTING FOR IT. '
“l understand that old Titewad }
gave you a cigar yesterday?”
Yo'
“I wonder how he came to do that?”
“I guess he must have known what
kind of cigar it was.”—Houston Post,. |
There is more Catarrh in this section of l,
the country than all other diseases put to
gether, an?until the last few years was sup
posed to be incurable. IFor a great many
years doctors pronounced it a local disease
and prescn'hmf {oeal remedies, and by con
stantly failing te cure with local treatment,
pronounced it incurable. Science has proven
Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and
therefore requires constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured 3{ F.J.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only con
stitutional cureonthemarket. It4s takenin
ternally in doses from 10 dro‘)s toa teaspoon
ful. Itacts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. They offer one hun
dred dollars forany caseitfails to cure. Send
for circularsand testimonials. Address F.J.
Cueney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 75¢c.
Take fv(all’u igz‘tmily Pills tor constipation.
THE DEAD AWAKENED.
And the Colored Porters Vanished ‘
’ Immediately. |
Something happened at the Balti
more & Ohio depot a few nights ago
which caused a number of the col
ored employees to wish they had been
elsewhere.
“Anyhow,” remarked one cf them
afterward, “I'm glad it didn’t happen
at the new station, because then I
would be uneasy the balance of my
life. I'll only have a few days more
here, and if I think ghosts are after
me I can get out of the way.”
A box intended for shipment to a
place in Montgomery county was re
ceived at the station. It was the
'kind of a box that is used by under
itakers as the outer casing for cas
kets, but it happened to be empty
when it was received. i
“Let's have some fun with the col
ored porters,” suggested one of the
rallroad employees, calling another
employee and having him stretch him
self upon the bottom of the box.
The lild was placed upon the box
and the colored men were called upon
to remove it to a train that was in
waiting. The colored men were pro
<coeding slowly along the platform
with the box when the occupant of it
slowly raised the lid. It took the
colored porters considerably less than
one second to drop the box and seek
quarters inside the building.—Wash:
Ington Star.
CUBS' FOOD
They Thrive On Grape-Nuts.
Healthy babies don't cry, and the
well-nourished baby that is fed on
Grape-Nuts is never a crying baby.
Many babies who cannot take any
other food relish the perfect food,
Grape-Nuts, and get well,
“My little baby was given up by
three doctors, who said that the con
densed milk on which I had fed her
had ruined the child’s stomach. One
of the doctors told me that the only
‘thing to do would be to try Grape-
Nuts, so I got some and prepared it
as follows: I soaked 1% tablespoon
fuls in one pint of cold water for half
an hour, then I strained off the liquid
and mixed 12 teaspoonfuls of this
strained Grape-Nuts julce with six
teaspoonfuls of rich milk, put in a
pinch of salt and a little sugar,
warmed it and gave it to baby every
two hours,
“In this simple, easy way I saved
baby's life and have built her up to a
strong, healthy child, rosy and laugh
ing. The food must certainly be per
fect to have such a wonderful effect
as this, I can truthfully say I think
it is the best food in the world to
raise delicate babies on, and is also a
delicious, healthful food for grown
ups, as we have discovered in our
Yaoaily.”
Grape-Nuts is equally valuable to
tha strong, healthy man or woman,
It stands for the true theory of
health. “There's a Reason.” Read
“The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs.
A Keal Experience With Life In
surance That Makes Interesting
But Not Very Reassuring Read
ing For Policy Holders
From 'the Country Gentleman.
Readers who are’ considering the
advisebility of insuring their lives,
and particalarly those who are weigh
ing the relative advantages of differ
ent forims of insurance, may be inter
ested in the experience, covering
twenty-six years, of the owner of
Policy * # # * in the * v ¢ = # » of
New York, taken out in November,
1881, SIO,OOO, fifteen-year tontine.
In the case of Policy * * * % gag
with all tortine polecies, the insurer
agreed that no profit should be paid
to him (or to the beneficiary in case
of+his death) until the expiration of
the tontine period in November, 1896.
At that time he was to have choice of
four options, viz.:
1, To sell the policy to the com
pany for a sum of money then to be
fixed; or-~ "
2. 'To receive an increase in the
amount insured; or—
3. To let the policy stand paid-up
for the original amount and take an
annuity for his share of the profits;
or-—
4. To draw the profits in cash,
and let the policy stana, receiving an
nual dividends thereafter.
As an inducement to take this nol
icy the insurer was furnished with a
document on the society’s printed
blank, called an “Illustration,” set
ting forth the probable results at the
end of the tontine period, “calcula
tions based” (so the “Illustration’
says) ‘“‘on the actual experience of
the society for a number of years.”
The following table shows the ex
pected results as stated in this “11-
lustration,” compared with the actua!l
results as given the insurer by the
company at the end of the fifteen
years:
Expected. Actnal
1. Cash.value of p01icy........... 88,640 $6,445
%. Increase in amount insured.. 10,600 “ 4,140
3. Anpuity in liea of profits..... 360 144
¢ Proftein éashi v i vviili e 4,083 1,887
The insurer decided on the fourth
opiion, taking SIBB7 cash and let
ting the policy stand as it was, enti
tling him thereafter to annual divi
dends. The “Illustration” estimated
that these dividends would begin at
S6S. lln the year 1901 the insurer
was informed, in answer to inquiry
addressed by him to the secretary of
the company, that $4lB had been
added from the profits to the amount
of his policy. This last summer he
inquired again as to the amount, and
was told that it is now $258. On his
asking how it could be possible that
the profits earned by his policy were
less in 1907 than six years before he
was informed that there was an error
about crediting him $4lB in 1901,
and that the proper amount at that
date was sllß.
. By this time the insurer decided
tht he had better take any cash that
he could get from the * * * * * com
pany, and asked for remittance. Then
he was told that if he wanted cash he
could have only $l2B. The only im
aginable cxplanation of this second
shrinkage seems to be that the com
pany will not pay as much in cash as
if taken in insurance. No hint to
that effect, however, is given in the
“Illustration,” the words of which
are: “The policy would draw annual
~dividends thereafter, payable in cash,
or applied to increase the amount in
sured, as the policy holder may
glect,’. & % R (9
e et
A Game Professor.
Boston and Cambridge people of an
eariier day remember well Professor
Child, of Harvard, a scholar who was
likewise a live man. President Eliot
tells with great gusto a story about
his faithful attention to city politics.
Professor Child always attended to
his duties as a citizen of Cambridge.
One night he went to a ward meeting
at which a boss began to put forth
some of his warped ideas. The col
lege professor was speedily on his
feet and scathingly denounced the
boss and his methods.
After the meeting was over the
good natured boss, just to show that
he bore no il will, met the scholar
on the stairs and genially handing
over a cigar, said: “Have a smoke,
profess?”
His antagonist straightened up,
took the cigar, and said with great
dignity: ‘“Yes; I'll match you in any
of your lesser vices!'—Boston Her«
-ald.
’ Plenty of Time.
The pretty nurse had taken the
best of care of the steel millionaire.
“I want you to marry me,” said he
simply.
' “But, Mr. Giltedge, this is rather
sudden.”
“I know, child, I know. But you
have plenty of time to get used to
the jdea. I'll have a fierce job get
ting rid of my wife.”—Pittsburg
Post,
e—— ee et
Prince Dulow,
Many good judges regard the
Prince von Bulow as the ablest dip
lomat alive. He is a man of fascin
ating address and exquisite courtesy.
Long residence in Paris and Rome
has developed in him the art of light
and witty causerie, the cheerful tem
perament and gracious manner,
which has beeen noticably lacking in
many of the makers of modern Ger
many.—Munsey's Magazine,
An OQOutpost of Empire,
Crete is one of the worst stations
for British troops. There is little to
see, nothing to gain, unhealthy ecli
mate and poor rations; in fact, it is
an ideal place for “brigands and rob
bers,” or, to be more polite, “Turks
and Greeks."—Regiment.
Prodigal Son. .
A Southern pulpit orator one Sun.
day merning was describing the ex
perience of the predigal son. In his
endeavor to impress his hearers with
the shame and remorse that this
young man felt and his desire to
cast away his wicked doings he spuke
thus:
“Dis young man got to thinkinz
about his meanness and his misery,
and he tuk off his coat and frowed
it away; and den he tuk off his vest
and frowed dat away: and den he
tuk off his shirt and frowed dat
awav, too: and den he come to his
self.”—Philadelphia Ledger.
THIS MAN'S BACK
ACHED ¥OR TWO YEARS.
Cured by Minard’s Liniment after all
else had failed—we want you
to send a postal for a
Free Bottle.
Minard’s Liniment Mfg. Co., Dear Sirg:—
I write you these few lines to iet you know
that I thank you for your sample of Min
ard’s Liniment sent me about a week and a
half ago. 1 want to tell you that I have
had the back ache nearly two years, and
could not get anything to cure it until I
looked in the paper and found your adver
tisement. 1 had gpent a good deal of
money und did not get any satisfaction
out of it. Now 1 will tell my friends and
neighbors about your great remedy for all
aches and paing, for 1 am feeling O. K.
now. You can publish my name anywhere
you like and I will recommend Minard’s -
Liniment. Yours verytruly, Joseph Perry,
33 Ingraham St., E. Providence, R. I,
Jan. 7, 1908.
The above letter is one of many telling of
wonderful cures by Minard’s Liniment, and
we again offer to send a special bottle Free
to all who send a postal to Minard’s Lini.
ment Mfg. Co., So. Framingham, Mass.
Doctorg are in business for health of
others, but not for their own.
THE COOK'S CONSIDERATION.
Mrs. Wiggs: “Cook has broken
only one dish today, dear.”
Mr. Wiggs: “That's better. How
did it happen?”
Mrs. Wiggs: “It was the last one.”
—Judge.
When troubles start they come like
a string of beads
. H. GREEN’S Sons, of Atlanta, Gsa., are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the
world. See their liberal offer in advertise
went in another column of this paper.
Heads of sensible women are never
thatched with dyes tresses.
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Swees
Gum and Mullen is Nature’s great reme
dy--cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Con
sumnption, and all throat and lung troubles,
At druggists, 35c., 50c. and SI.OO per bottle,
Styles sometimes make a handsome
woman look otherwise.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
tecthing,softens thegums, reducesinflamma
tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25¢ & bottla
Man grumbles most where he is
treated best—at home,
Only One “Bromo Quinine™ -
That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look
for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25¢.
A pencil is often hard pushed to teli
the truth.
Moravian Barley and Speltz,
two great cereals, makes growing and fat.
tening hogs and cattle possible in Dak.
Mont., Ida., Colo., .yes. everywhere, anJ
add to above Salzer’s Billion Dollar Grass,
the 12 ton Hay wonder Teosinte, which
Eroduces 80 tons of green fodder per acre
mperor William Oat prodigy, etc., and
other rare farm seeds that they offer.
JUST CUT THIS OUT AND RETURN IT
with 10c in stamps to the John A. Salzer
Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and get their
big catalog and lots of farm seced sam
ples. A. é‘ L.
A woman would rather break a s§3
bill than a 10-cent dish.
Ttch cured in 30 minutes by \Voolfqrd’i
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails, At druggistse
Genuine happiness is able to stand
a lot of hard knocks.
SUCCESSORS TO
AVERY & McMILLAN,
51.53 South Forsyth St, Atlanta, Ga
—ALL KINDS OF—
'yhm“ —"'-l—,-—c“\;— N
. $‘ A ~._ — 3
B el T AR N
i ol S GO 0
- AR y. -’" .;?‘
i ‘\\/.. \ AR/ AN 7\
B\ A/ 5 < )
WA\ Eons i AR g
i N
Rellable Frick Engines, Boilers, all
Sizes. Wheat Separators.
o e
\at? ) 4 '
L 5. ARt
| e Reag L RORRR
‘ ¥ ‘l».‘;' D
; BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH.
~ Large Engines and Boilers supplled
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Clrcular SBaws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs,
Steam Governors, Full |ine Engines &
Mill Supplies, Bend for free Catalogue