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ow s?ozM or COUPONS. Section of "Wild Animals" it With ii Rush-Section Two |w Ready. rleston.S.C..Xews and fJourlcr.of Oct.29) paon 1 of "The Wild Animals of America, the distribution of began at the offices of The and Courier, Charleston, Tuesr lorning, went with a'rush. The ?cicnt pictures of the wild nn of North America secured The itaneous approval of the read this -newspaper, as is evidenced |e fact that the ample supply on was soon exhausted. . Another has been ordered and its arri be announced later. . Jtion 2 is now ready for distri This section consists of i;he fribe, with splendid pictures of "squimaux dog, hare Indian dog, -fox. gray wolf, red fox, coyote, fox; silver fox and others with lescriptive text. reader should miss a single see as each one is a part to com the whole field of the wild ani of North America. The educa advantage of owning this great should not be overlooked. All ?n will be especially pleased |th? V pictures. Knobel's work is endorsed by >al W. K. Tate, of the Mem Normal School, in the follow er: fiave examined with some care prions of Knobel's 'Wild Ani North America,' which were ted to me, and take pleasur? fmmending them for a place in mme where there are children ire-lovers. They will prove a [of pleasure and profit to voung F' lecure the work it is necessary to clip one coupon from The md Courier. Charleston, S. C., :b part and bring or send it News and Courier, aecompan 10 cents, or 12 cents if order postpaid. >K \TH TO KINO WORM. (TTwhere I go I speak for TETTEBISB, Jt cured me of ringworm In Its >rm. My whole chest from neck to > raw as beef; but TETTBBIHB cured . also oured a bad case of piles." So M. F. Jones of 28 TannebiU St., r, Pa. TETTEBISE, the great skin i sold by druggists or sent by mail Write J. T. SnuPTBiNE, Dept. A, Ga. ?reason why some of us starve h is because others waste their ce. i1 Capudim? Cures Women's Pains, Bitckache, Nervousness, Jdnche. It's Liquid. Effects inline Prescribed by physicians with nest ? 10c.. 25c.. and 50c.. at drug storea The Family Toothbrush. |trv people, as a rule, always lake the teacher feel that she of the family" and all that [>ssess is for her use and pleas ?e Monday morning, upon re to her boarding place after home over Sunday, she dis I, to her annoyance, that she ft her toothbrush at home, and >ressed her annoyance at the the lady of the house replied: ?, now, that's too bad; we 'a* lent ye ourn, but Sary's dsitin' for a week and tuk it 1er."-From The Bohemian ine for November. Proverbs and Phrases. ?night an atheist believes in a Young, ad tree does not yield good -Danish. is never good until worse Ins.-Dutch. ies were Latin there would be learned men.-Danish, lay's pleasure and a year's -Modern Greek. ?deas'ant thing never comes too -Danish. [mit a sin twice and you will lt allowable.-Hebrew. Pert Paragraphs. a mighty fine thing to be it, but it generally costs a lot ?iney. aving disposition is a good thing re around the house, good will of some people costs more than it is worth. Veiled insult is just as shameless ?arefaced lie and a lot more bdly. So. 45-'03, PUZZLE SOLVED fee at Bottom of Trouble. [takes some people a long timu to >tit that coffee is hurting them. when once the fact is clear, people try to keep away from Jthing which ls followed by ever (easing detriment to the heart, lach and nerves. [Until,two years ago I was a heavy fee drinker," writes an 111. strick land had been all'my life. I .now 56 years old. -About three years ago I began to [ye nervous spells and could not ip nights, wa3 bothered by indi stion, bloating and gas on stomach I?cted my heart. "? spent lots of money doctoring jrdoctpr told me I had chronic ca ril of the stomach; another that I heart disease and was liable to at any time. They all dieted me itil I was nearly starved, but I Mned to get worse instead of better 5"Having hoard of the good Postum done for nervous people I dis ?ded coffee altogether and began to Postum regularly. I soon got litter and now, after nearly two y^tra, I can truthfully say I am id and well. sleep wejl at night, do not have nervous spells and am not both ered with indigestion or palpitation weigh 32 pounds more than when I jegan' Postum, and am better every "ay than I ever was while drinking ipffee. I can't say too much in praise . }f Vostum, as I am sure it saved my 'There's a Reason." une given by Postum Co., Battle 9k, Mich. Read "The Road to llville," in pkgs. ?ver read the above letter? A one appears from time to time. j .axe genuine, true, and foll of interest. Modern Fanh IV As Applic Piotcs of toter? Fruit Grower ? \ '_ Improving a Mountain,Farm. J. J. D., Stackhouse, N. C., writes: "l.have purchased a small farm in the mountains of Western North Car olina, which has .been neglected and needs improvement. The sojl is sandy, l will appreciate any sugges tions.** j Answer: One of the chief needs of a sandy soifthat has been abused is undoubtedly vegetable matter. The soil is also likely to be deficient in available supplies of phosphoric acid and potash. You can add the needed vegetable matter to the soil cheaply and to advantage through the'use of leguminous crops. Among the crops that are grown to advantage in your locality v iii be any of the clovers, the cowpea, '.he vetch, soy bean and vel vet bean. The velvet, bean will hard ly mature seed, but it grows well on thin land and makes an immense mass of green material which can first be pastured off, thus making the land produce something of value and ll e refuse plowed under to add veget able matter to the'soil. Animals pas ture on the velvet bean to advantage when they become accustomed to it, though, of course, oae should look Dut for bloat, which is liable to hap pen when animals are pasturing on any green crop that is wet with dew Dr soaked by heavy rains. Under your conditions it is impor tant that you adopt a rotation as nearly as possible. One of the best you could use would be to sow the land in cowpeas this spring, using 200 pounds of sixteen per cent, acid phosphate and seventy-five pounds of muriate of potash per acre. If the land has not grown peas for several rears get two or three wagon loads Df earth from an old pea field and scatter thinly over the surface and work in with a harrow before seed ing. Use either the Whipporwill, Kew Era or Black pea. Cut the first Drop for hay and let the second crop grow as long as possible before turn ing it under. Turn under and seed lo wheat, using a complete fertilizer it the rate of 100 pounds of cotton seed meal, 100 pounds of sixteen per :ent. acid phosphate and twenty-five1 pounds of muriate of potash. Apply Lhe fertilizer well away from the seed, as cottonseed meal sometimes has an injurious effect on germina tion. In the spring seed the wheat 3own to clover and timothy, or if you prefer, a pasture seeded to clover and Hobard grass. Allow to stand two Tears in grass, cutting for hay one rear and grazing the second year. Then turn in the spring and put iu lorn, seeding to crimson clover in thc fall to plow under, and then back to cowpeas and wheat and grass. You will need to use plentiful sup plies of phosphates and potash and If your land is acid, give a good coat ing of lime, using one ton per acre. This may be purchased in the un stacked form and" distributed in heaps and scattered over the soil when properly slacked, or it may be slacked in quantity, and distributed with a machine especially made for the ap plication of lime. Keep all the stock you can on the farm, feed as much of the roughness produced as possi ble, and utilize carefully all avail able supplies of farm yard manure, | and you should certainly be able to Improve your land considerably in a very short time.-Knoxville Tribune. Destroying Field Mice and Moles. J. P. T., Jonesboro. Tenn., writes: I would like to know how to poison or otherwise kill field mice and moles. They are very destructive in my corn fields and potato patches. Answer: Moles and mice may sometimes be killed to advantage by the use of carbon bisulphide. Take small wads of lint cotton and thor oughly saturate with the carbon bi sulphide and put in the holes and runways if underground. The fresh runways of the mole are easily dis covered and if the bisulphide is put in the ground and the place where it ls inserted covered with earth and pressed down slightly the fumes will penetrate thc channels and often cause the destruction of moles and mice. There is a difficulty in this remedy, however, for the runways are often so near the surface of the ground that part of the carbon bi sulphide escapes and becomes mixed with the air and is not effective. Another good way to rid yourself of these pests is to prepare a mash of bran in which you might mix a lit-* tie cheese, corn meal or any other food that is likely to prove attractive to mice, and saturate the mixture thoroughly with paris green or some other dpadly poison. Put small spoon fuls here and there about the places the mice frequent. In this way you might be able to kill a great many of them. The principal objection to us ing paris green in the mash as indi cated is tha danger that something Persistent. "She tries so hard to.be young." ' "Yes, and seems to me that she is bound to succeed.'" "Does it? Why?" "She has been at it so long." Her Steady. "I hear you have a show with the new young man." .'Show! I should think so. It's a continuous vaudeville." As Usual. "I've plenty, of theories" "Yes and when you want to work one out" "Work one out?" .'Yes." "Oh, when I want to go to work I forget them." Danger Zone. A man may smile and smile and be A villain up to par, Particularly if he smiles Too much around the bar. ?ethods ?d iii the South. ?st to Planter, md Stockman else may eat it. If the field is some what remote from the house aad the poultry not allowed to run on it. there is nbt much danger except in the case of dogs. No other means of ridding fields of mice and moles are known to the writer, though they may exist, but I trust you will find these remedies satisfactory.-Prof. Soule. Raising Calves Without Milk. E. T., Quicksburg, Va., writes: I would like to know if I can raise a calf only two weeks old without milk. If so, what is the best food, also for older calves? Answer: Calves have been raised with fair success with the use of very little skim milk. It would.be a diffi cult undertaking to attempt to raise a calf only two weeks old without the use of milk. At the end of thirty days a fair substitute may be made for milk from hay tea. Th?s is best pre pared by taking hay that has been cut quite young, covering it well with water, and covering it so as to ex tract the soluble food elements. The tea should be boiled until it is in quite a concentrated form, and then some flaxseed and wheat middlings should be added to the tea to increase the fattening and muscle forming ele ments in which hay tea rs deficient. Flaxseed jelly may be used to advan tage for this purpose. It is made by adding boiling water to oil meal. For a calf thirty days old not more tban one-quarter pound should be fed per day with an equal amount of wheat middlings thoroughly stirred into the tea. This hay tea is often used by dairymen who sell milk. It is quite a simple matter to raise a calf on skim milk when taken away from the dam two or three days after it is dropped by adding a small amouut of flaxseed jelly to the skim milk. Not more than one tablespoon ful should be used at first, and the amount increased daily as the needs of the calf seem to require. A calf when first taken away from the dam should not receive more than ten pounds of skim milk to be increased gradually up to fifteen pounds, but under no circumstances should it go over eighteen pounds before the calf is' five or sis weeks old. After that time as much as twenty-four pounds may be fed. Should you attempt to raise a calf on skim milk or hay tea remember that a small amount fed three times a day is likely to give you much better results than a large amount fed twice a dav. Where skim milk is used it is important that it be fed at blood temperature and in a sweet condition.-A. M. Soule. Set Out Asparagus in October. Asparagus may be grown from seed, or set from roocs, which may be had at from $5- to ?6 per 1000, and will require about C000 plants to the acre. The soil should be moist, rich, sandy loam. The lighter the soil the better the result. Sets should be put out in October, in deep furrows, eigh teen inches apart and covered with an inch or two of soil. Well-rotted stable manure in the furrow is the best fertilizer. The ground must be kept soft and free from weeds and grass. In the early spring mulch with a coat of fine straw or pine ne "".es. It.will produce from 200 to 300 pounds of shoots to the acre per season and will sell from five to twen ty-five cents per pound, although the first shoots may bring as high as fifty cents per pound. But aside from the sale of the vegetable, every farm er.should have a bed of it for his own use. What is more delicious than the first dainty dish of asparagus in the early springtime?-Sincere, in Pro gressive Farmer. Shrub the Pastures. V ' Briars, bushes and trees are the greatest drawbacks to pastures in this section. These are very anxious to grow and they hold back the grass from growing. No farmer can grow them and do much growing grass at the same time. There is enough bottom land for pastures on almost every farm if the briars, trees and bushes were out of the way of the grass. It helps very much to remove the briars and bushes if the trees are allowed to re main. Pastures should be shrubbed at least every two years, and once a year is better. Now is the best time to do I this work. Bush aies?, grass knives I and briar knives are the tools mainly used. Remember that it takes a little work in the pasture as well as in the field. Without pastures you can not do much with livestock, and without livestock it is impossible to get tue biggest crops from the fiel r's.-J. AI. Beaty, in Smithfield Herald. ; Dye Wouldn't Stick. "No use trying to convinee him?" "None at all. He is a dyed in the wool party man." "Oh, well, if it is no worse than that, we will go after him. I noticed as we passed that he was almost bald." warm work that probably no one of the candidates will trouble much about their cold feet. The News of the Day. On the occasion of the late jubilee of the tcwn of Wilhelmbnrg in Ger many, the burgermeister received a telegram, signed by all the unmarried girls of the place, advising him to uet married, and saying that none of 1he undersigned had any objection to be coming his wife. Mrs. Grover Cleveland appears be fore New York Errand jury which is probing the lefter, all pored 'o have been written by her husband d sold ta the New' York Times. |l,,t/\K!.K AM. (^ATAKKH t'V UK. 1.\nAl.KNi' CATAJCKH A L JKLLY tn rp* Dearness ann" Catarrh. Trial treatment by n'n'l fifo. UKA rn . Mlnn-arvlis. Minn. Dye Wou?dn't Stick. "No use trying to convince him?" "None at all. He is a dyed in the wool party man." "Oh, well, if it is no worse than that, wc wjll go after him. I noticed as wc passed that he was almost bald." Fert Paragraphs. - The man who banks' on Iiis' dig nity should be careful not to draw 'oo large a draft. There may be some way of falling in love and escaping dire results, but if so, the average man has never found it out_: FIFTEEN YEARS OF S.UFFEIUHG. Burn Painful hores <iiu Legs-Tor tar jd liny and Night-Trie?. Many .Remedies to ISo Avail-Used Cuticura; Is Well Agata. "After an attack of rheumatism, running sores broke out on my husbaid's legs, from below the knees tu the^nnkles. There are no words to tell all the discomfort and great suffering he had to endure night aud day. He used every kind' of remedy and three physicians treated himj; one after the other, without any good results wiiatsrer. One day 1 ordered eumc Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura llesol vent. He began To use them aud- in three weeks all the sores were dried up. The burning lire slopped, and thc pains oceanic bearable. After three months he was quite weil. 1 can prove this testimonial at auy time. -Mrs. v\ V. Albert, Upper French ville, ile., July lil, 19J7." Danger Zone. A man may smile and smile and be 'A villain up to par, . Particularly if he smiles Too much around thc bar. KEPT GETTING WORSE. Five Years of Awful Kidney Disease. Nat Anderson, Greenwood, S. C., says: "Kidney trouble began about five years ago with dull ibackacke, which got so severe in time that I could not get around. The kidney secretions became badly disordered and at times there was almost . a complete stop of the flow. I was examined again and again and treated to no avail and kept getting worse. I have to praise Doan's Kidney Pills for my final re lief and cure. Since using them I have gained in strength and flesh and have no sign of kidney trouble." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co , Buffalo,'N.' T. As Usual. "I've plenty of theories" "Yes and when you want to worl one out" "Work one out?" - "Yes." "Oh, when I want to go to wbrl I forget them." Deafness Cannot Be Cnred iylocal applications ns theycannot reach th? ttiseased portion of the ??or.* There is only ont way to cure deafness, und that it? by conn ti tntional remedies. Draftiest* iscauscvl by ai m damed condition of the mucous lining o Jue Eustachian Taba Whenttr?tubeisin tl ume-d you hu ve a rumbling sonador imper feet "learing. and when it is entirely closer .Deafness is the result, and unless the in nam mation cia be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hcaribgwil be destroyed forever. Hine cases out of tel areoausod b> catarrh, which isnothingbut ai influmod condition of the mucous surfaces We will give Ono Eundrpd Dollars for an-1 caso of ?ftafness (caused bycntarrh)thatran riot oe enredbyflail's Chfarrh Cure. Send foi Circulars fro?. F.J.Cmwiy &Co.,Toledo,0 Sold bv Druggists, 75c. Talco Hull's Fumily Pills for consti?atioa Eo Your Own Tree Doctor. Every man should be his own Ire? doctor. If properly trained- he has been busy all summer removing suck ers from the trees, fighting f?n??i and discouraging insect1" When the leaves are off he goes all over his plantation, diagnosing each tree shrub and bush. He will find some borers1 not yet killed, and these should be thoroughly eradicated fron: his quinces and apples before wintei sets in. Use a flexible wire and J sharp knife; and when the larvae an killed, pile coal ashes freely around ' the tree. He will probably find ir his currant and berry fields more oi less bushes that cultivation has loosened in the soil. These are liabU to heave out during the winter. H? should slip a narrow shovel undei the plant, draw out the dirt, and lei the bush settle-until it is well plant ed. Tread heartily, and then, if you have them to spare, place a- scuttle of coal ashes about each one.-Prom The Outing Magazine fo*--Noveniber, Cures Tlragfetbe Blood < The Old Standard GROVE'S system. You know what you a is simply Quinine and Iron in a pf? Cleanses tile System Ejfect ually; Dispels Colds aiilHead actas clue to Constipation; ?cts naturally, acts truly as a Laxative. Best jorMen\vi)men ana trula* ren-^oungand Old. lo get its b?n?ficiai Ejjects Always buy the Genuine whiclt has ike juli name oj trie Com pany ??G- SYRUP CO. . byvvnoni it is manufactured, printed1 on the h-onl of every package SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.. one size only, regular price 5CKper bottle Nothing New or Mysterious. "AS Ei YOUR . GRAND= MOTHER." For man v generations Gooss urfasc im, bon recognize I as a wonderful remedial inndium in treating and curing Pneumonia. Grippe, Rheumatism and Neuralgia. RICE'S GOOisB GREASE LiyiMEST ls made from pure coos? grease, with other valuable curative Ingra* dieqts added Try it. 25o-At nil Drug?l-tn and Dealers-C5e. ME GREASE COMM, ??ffg>^ CURED Oivoa Qa lok Relier. Removes nil swelUnj in 8 to 30 days ; effects a permanent cur? in .io to todays. Trial treatment given free. I*btbinfrcaa befairer i Write Or. H. H. Green's Son?. SoscIaUsts. Box Q Atlanta. Of bUli?>|-t!oJy;t;unrantee?:lvcn:prica low. Write(iiilck. Tue WlllUUTMliD. C"J., l'eru.lnd.. The man who can tell a funny story and doesn't is either a mean man or has a new story. KEEP YOUR SKIN HEALTHY. TETTEBINE has done wondars for suffer ers from eeseina. tenter, ground itch, ery ..ipclu-. inf un: sors head, chaps, chafe? and other forms of a'?ia diseases. In aggravat ed cases of eozsma Its cures have been mar velous and thousands of people siug tts 5raises. 50c. at druggists or by mail from . T. ?IIUPTKIJ?'1?, Dept. A, Snvannnh, Ga. Some people are short on intellect who are long on brains. The brains usually draw about a hundred dollars p?r. To Drive Out Malaria anti 15 ai kl Up the System Take tho Old Standard GROVE'S TASTR LKSS CHILL TOXIC Voa know what you are taking. Tho formula is plainly printed ou every oottUs snowing it is simply Qui nine unit lrou in a tuateless form, awi the most effuctual form, r'or* grown people and children, 50c. In the world who knows not hov; to swim goes to the bottom. Hicks'. Capudine Cures Headache, ?Whether from colds, heat, stomach or nervous troubles. No Accetanilid or dan gerous drags. It's liquid and acts imme diately. Trial bottlo Ilk-. Regular stzee U5c. and T'k:., at all drugg?tta. If no fight, no victory; no victory, no crown.-Savonarola. lira.Winslow's Snotting Syrup for Children teething.softens tbeguma, reduces inflninni ?? tiuu. allays pom, cures wind colic. 25c a boult Mildness governs better than an i?er. H. H. GKEKS'H SOJJS. of Atlanta, Ga., a? the only successful Dropsy Specialists tn th? world. See their liheroi offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. Most women hold that the tongu< was made to talk with. A few mei hold it was made to keep* still with FOR MEI The bottom of your foo', if t' of its proper lines, will c troubles. bKREEMER shoe foundation: the bottoms i bottomsof yonr feet. That'? are comfortable. .Look fort! Bkreemors easilv, write ni fi them, FRED. F. FIEL s, B?cmng (Humors* Poison, Eczema, Botanic Blood Balm) is thc only Bior nd then purines it-sending a flood of les, Joints, and wherever the disease oles, Eruptions are healedand cured nzs subside. B. B. B. completely ch ving thc skin the rich, red hue of p .ts. Try lt. Cl 00 per large bo? for home cu... S A .ur LE FREE by writing BI B.B 8? Uk - .coat cone worst f TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, driv xe taking. The formula is plainly pr tasteless, and the most effectual form "Cardui" writes Mrs. Susan I taking Cardui, I have been in beti had my baby, if it had not been Ladies whe ache, backache, ness, irregular f has benefited c Composed < and reliable rei PUTNAM Color more poods brighter and faster colors than an; c*a dye any garment without ripping apart. Wrl Ii You Arc Lost in -the Woods. Let the man "who is lost in the woods be very careful not to over exert himself. His chief dangers lie in panie and over-exertion, r.nd though he may be in a great hairy to find shelter, I must warn him to go slowly. Two miles an hour, on an average,, through the snow in the woods, is all that a man in his con dition will be able to stand without over-fatigue and its attendant dan gers, over-heating and perspiration. By exercising caution, a man may live through a week cf what he is undergoing. To make this article brief, however, wc shall suppose that he regains the road by the afternoon of the first day. He doesn't yet know, of course, just where he is. He should examine the tracks of the person who last passed that way. It being afternoon, he must follow in the direction taken by the last pass ing vehicle or team, as shelter will be nearest in that direction. Had it been morning he would have taken tlie opposite direction, as whoever made thc tracks must have come from the place where he obtained shelter the previous night.-From "Lost in, the Woods," by A. B. Carleton, in The Outing Magazine for November. Tho Frenchman Looked Innocent. Some time since, in a Tremont Street store in Boston, a nervous lit tle Frenchman brushed against' a pretty trifle of vaseware valued at about fourteen dollars aud succeeded in getting several score more pieces out of it than had gone into its mak ing. Thc floorwalker led the abashed Parisian aside and politely explained that the broken vase must be paid lor. Monsieur fetched a handful of small silver and copper, mostly foreign, from his pocket when lie was told the value of the trifle. "Mon Dieu," cried the Parisian, "seventy francs!" At this he tcok out his billbcofc- nnd I discovered a fifty- ollar draft, which the flccrvrnlker instantly seized upon, to the unspeakable horror of 'its owner. After deducting tin? value of the vase thc former handed the man his change and dismissed him with a floorwalker's blessing. The express draft reached the bank in due time, with four others? as fraudulent, but the volatile little Frenchman had de parted southward ivith the swallows. -From "The Latest Methods of Graft." by Don Mark Lemon, in The Bohemian Magazine for November. ' Seme men need a change of heart i almost as badly as they need a j change of clothes and some loose j change in the pockets thereof. IE J. Itt --WI Sl?kea 70 jvffcr-nt Extracts all Kim Canvassers 40 Year? BEST PROPOS] Much of the chronic lamene See that your horse is not aile Liniment on hand and apply It's wonderfully penetrating-t the soreness - limbers up the elastic and pliant. will kill a spavin, curb or splin' len joints, and is a sure and spe founder and thrush. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Sloan's book on horses, cattle wisted ont :ause foot s fit nt the natch the i why they ie label. If yon do not tina sr directions how to secure ,D CU., Brockton, Mass* Bone Pains. id remedy tb&t kills the poison in pure, rich blood direct to thc skin ls located. In this way all Sores, . pains and aches of Rheumatism anpes the body Into clean, healthy erfeet hoalth. B. B. B. cures thc? :le at Lrng Stores with directions LOOD BALM CO., Atlante, Ga. es out Malaria and builds up the inted on every bottle, showing it . For adults and children. 50c. D L Hall, of Hayne, N. C., "has been a 1 ter health than in the past five years. for Cardui. I cannot 6ay too much in > suffer from the pains and ailments < dragging sensations, pain in side, nu unctions, dizziness, etc., should try th )ver a million women, during the pa? sf purely vegetable, harmless ingrediei nedy. Try it So. 45-'08. FABELE y othor dye. Ono lita, package colora all fibers. Tin te Tor free booklet-How to Dye, Uleach and Xix Ca How many American women in lonely homes to-day long" < for this blessing to come into their lives, and to be abb to utter these words, bot because of some organic d?range ment this happiness is denied them. Every woman interested in this yubject should know that prepara tion for healthy maternity is accomplished by the use of LYDIAE.PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COHPQUMI 3 [rs. Maggie Gilmcr, of West Union, S. GjWiites to Mrs. Pinkham: " I wes greatly run-down in health, from a weakness peculiar to my sex, when Lydia E. Pinfcham' s Vegetable Compound vras recommended to me. It not onlj' rostered ire to perfect health? but to my delight I am a mother." Mrs. Josephine Kail, of BardstowiL, Ky., writes : ,kI was a very great sufferer fron? female troubles, and my physician failed to help me. Lydia'E. Pinkham's Vcge ta/blc Compound, not only restored mo to perfect health, but I am now a proud mother." F?CTS FOi? S8CBC WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female illa, and has positively cured thousands or women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that hear ! ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you'try it? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write lier for advice* She i ins guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. mm MEDICAL co. [NONA, MINNESOTA. * Article*: Household Remedien, Flarorlat la, Toilet Pr?parations, Flue Soap*. Ste. Wanted in ExJery County*-. Experleuce, 93,000,000 Outpnt. ITION EY*2 0L^??? AGENTS ss in horses is due to neglect:, wed to go lame. Keep Sloan's, at the iirst signs of stiffness:, ^oes right to the spot-relieves. ; joints and makes the muscles; 1 t, reduce wind puffs and swot edy remedy for fistula, sweeney*, Price, 50c. and gi.oo* - - Boston, Mass. i, sheep and poultry sent free. W. L. Douglas makes and sells more^V men's ?S3.00 and S3.GO shoes than any other m&nufactnrer in thc world. ne cause they hold their shape, flt better, and -rear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of tho Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children W.L.Doublai $4.03 as? $6.00 GlltEd?o Shoeacanaat tn eqnall wi ct any price. W. h. Dangin 88.00 nd $2.00 theta ara tho bait In the world Fart Color Eyelet* V*cd XxetuMvetm. ST-'l'uUe Sn Nutx.iU.it.-. W. L. DoHlM name and prloe is stamped on bottom. SoM evcry'Tliere. Shoes mnllud from factory lo any part ot tne world. Camionne freo. W. L. DOUGLAS. 157 Spark St., Brockton. Ms**. UPI P Inrlct on Having F ca Dr.MAn?a'SPreparallai? uir\ tm re i\i "Thc Standard Kemedr. W v J? tv! I Si ? y AT DB?0OISTS. Send for book, "ILrJlff for Women." 30 W. FR2NCH DRUG CO., 32d St, k. T. CBjr ieaven-sent blessing to me. ?inoo It cured me. I could not have i praise of it" Hue to womanly ills, such as head mbness, inability to walk, nervous .is famous female remedy, which 5t 50 years. its, C ARDU I is a perfectly safe SS DYES ey" *lyo In cold T? .-?ter bettor than any other <Sjc Tee lora. AXON HOE Of ;L ti CO., <?ainc?, Illino-*?.