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Z--------\ \.' . . . . . ..::;':~~::~:: * ".. \~·:·j~:, ~.\\.:. MI~-sS GENEVIVE MAY CAARO F IOA6 OWI[O:~ BYP[BU Miss Genevive May, 1317 S. Meridian 't., Indianapolis, Ind., Member Second High School Alumni Ass'n, writes: '"Perena is tb'e ftnest regu.lator of a disordered stomnach I hare ever feasd. It *ertainty deserves hligh praise, for 't is skilltfully prepared. "I was in a terrible condition from a aeglecte,'i case of catarrh of the stomach. Myfo',d had long ceased to be of any good and only distressed me after eating. I WAS nauseated, had heartburn and head riches, and felt run down completely. But in two weeks after I took l'eruna I was a changed person. A few bottles of the medicine made a great change, and in three months my stomach was cleared of ,catarrh, and my entire system in a better condition."--Genevive May. Write 1)r. Hartman President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for free medical" advice. All correspondencl feld strictly confidential. . New Tooth In an Old Saw. "Then he doesn't find that 'all the World loves a lover'?" 'Not exactly. His experience is that all the world guys a lover." . FIT'porminently cured. No fits ornervou. p e.ss after oirst day's use of Dr. Klineo's Great : ervelhstoror,$2triai bottlcand treatise free SDr. D. H. KLIE, Ltd.,981 Arch St., Phila., Pa. TIhere are 75000 automobiles now in use ia the United States. Use Allen's Foot-Ease. It is the only cure for Swollen, Smartln" ired,Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Cornsand 1unlons. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, apowder lobe shaken into the shoes. Cures while you a1lb. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. R)on't accept any substituto. Sample seat Addres, AUn S. Olmsted, LeBRoy, N. Y. rime record for rapid-typewriting is 20,000 ii in seven hours. 1 s.Winslow's Soothing Syrfp for Children hing, soften the gums,roduces inflamma allays paln,oureswlnd colic, 25c.a bottle. ;Count Cassini, the Russian Ambassador. ieta a single eyeglass. 'sos Curo for Consumption Is an Infallible for coughs and colds.-N. W. L, Ocean Grove, N. J., Fob. 17, 1900. average salary of a professor in rd College is a little less than $4000. hcred in 30 minut by Woolford's ry Lotion. Never Fails. Sold by all i, $1. Mail orders promptly iled , Detchon, C2rawfordsville, Ind. y is about 250 miles wide in the The Oldest Nurse in Georgia. S. E. Kennedy, one of the oldest and kno*n nurses in Georgia, states thai her experience with bowel troubles ohildren teething, Dr. Biggers' Iuckle Cordial is the best remedy. by all Druggists, 25 and 50c. bottle. Sis said that the biggest sheT made was turned out by the PP people at Essen, Germany. Y OF ORE. HANDS and reeleds-Water and RfseS used Intense Pfta-COl ed Do No erousweorkVery otaterul to autieza6r a¶a hands cracked and peeled, and were e it was impossible for me to do my work. If I put them in water I was sgony for hours, and if.I tried to cook eat caused intense pain. I .onsulted doctors, but their prescriptions were ly useless.' Now after using one cake utiep. Soap and one box of Cuticurs t my hbads are. entirely well I very grateful. (Signed) Mrs. Minnie 8 'Dani a St.,. txbury, Mass." t for Photographs. ft:` ) Iiadl 'o Prague, says that p. s can be taken by the light bY raw potatoes and hard iggs, on wiebh the phosphores g erms'llh a been artl~ially culti var Twt4 RNSWU iS a rwl-ko*Wi~ fact that "ee the hcwrekeS lj r; iastmake really Icoffee without have:n proper ma will ZV3 jnvahe Itc with coffee of has, th kinds of theUn h a-ai IFfit is wa y: 1 cmat .aw never wnt to WOWIVO %"a 6000P OD~ COolrfl nroa. cue...~. ~a.b to get best em t athe best coffee. EE s ,rather fine. 4~~~ gym, t~o cp sad one ther *dx Iat witth-a ek ,nae a thick water .an set aide.i; iair coldp~jr fit. tread aada r i l he ~ b, boil: m·roz How the Small Boys Succeeded Advantages in Giving Children a Personal Interest in Something on the Farm. By John B. Lisk. VERY often the parents and children on the farm could combine and work together for the welfare of all. The burden of the heavy laden farmer could be to quite an extent relieved by the children taking an active interest in the affairs of the farm. This can be brought about in no better way than by giving them something of their own to raise and care for, to make a success or failure ac cording to their own interest and effort, to count and use the profits as they see fit--a calf, colt, litter of pigs, flock of hens, plot of ground, or whatever would be most suitable. The children would not only be more apt to become very much interested in this particular thing, but would take an in terest in all the affairs of the farm. It also seems to me that life on the farm is more satisfactory when each one has some responsibility. Man is the greatest of created beings, and was placed above all animals and plants to have charge over them, and in no place can man come so near living the life that was intended for him as in the country, where he is, or should be, master of all. In our family the boys' spending money, besides plenty of necessities and a growing bank account, came from a flock of hens. When we were little fellows our parents saved for us all the money that was given to us or that we earned when we became old enough. In fact, all Children will come into possession of a few dollars one way or another, and if it is saved by their parents it will amount to quite a purchasing power in a few years. We started in the poultry business with $26. Not a very extensive beginning-still a successful business grew from this small amount. All the feed our hens consumed until we were of age was purchased by the proceeds from the sale of eggs and market poultry. When we are asked if our hens pay us we simply tell what they have done. Fifty or sixty fowls built well, owing, no doubt, in part, to the active, vigorous lives these fowls lead. In fact, during my fifteen years' experience in the poultry business I have never had a poor hatch. The chicks are hardy, rapid growing little fellows, feather ing quickly, reaching maturity and beginning to lay before the larger, slower growing fowls are out of chickenhood. The objection is sometimes made that they are a small fowl; that when a larger one is prepared for the table they "have something;" in reality there is more value to a pound of the small fowl than of the larger one. The small one alike looks smaller than it would if it were feathered like the big one; the feathers lie close instead of being fluffy. It is an indisputable fact that the Leghorn produces eggs and meat at a less cost than any other breed. When a farmer or manufacturer buys a tool or machine he does not get one as heavy and cumbersome as possible just be cause he can get more for the old iron when the tool is worn out; in other words a hen's first business is to lay eggs and plenty of them. I hope I will be pardoned if the last few remarks seem a bit prejudiced in favor of the breed I prefer. I have not found the poultry business a get-rich quick scheme. I have worked hard for what success I have had, but the best part of it all is that hard intelligent work brings success to the man who is persevering and willing to work problems out for himself.-New York Tribuneo, Street Cars, Women an? Gentlemen By the Rev. Thomas B. Gregory. _-- TLL a gentleman allow a woman to stand in a street car when he has a seat that he may offer her? W aI am more than half inclined to answer the question in the nega tive. I am seriously of the opinion that a real gentleman would feel very uncomfortable clinging to his seat with a woman standing up before him. The real gentleman, in such situation, could not help thinking of his wife, or his mother, or sister; and the thought of the woman whose womanhood he respected and revered would move him quickly to offer his seat to the woman hanging onto the strap in the street car. In stantly he would say to himself: "She is somebody's wife, mother or sister, she is a woman"-and quicker than lightning he would touch his hat and beg her to be seated. What constitutes a gentleman, anyway? Not fine clothes, or riches, or a long and honorable pedigree, or a splendid intellect. A man may have all of these things and still lack a great deal of being a gentleman. - -Fine ithes sometmemes cover -oarse natureas It is often the case that For tune flings riches in the way of brutes.- Frequently great intellect is accom panied by great rudeness. A man may come of a splendid ancestry and still be a rough, inconsiderate, unfeeling boor. Primarily, the gentleman is the man whose nature, like a delicately strung and perfectly tuned harp, responds instantly to every breath of the finer senti ment, to the faintest call of the tender, the refined, the honorable, the merciful, the chivalrous. "God's first gentleman," said some old scribe of Jesus of Nazareth. No handsomer compliment could possibly have been paid Him! Jesus was a gentleman-of exquisitely fine feelings, tenderly considerate, abounding in courtesy, more chivalrous than any knight, ever prepared instantly to respond to the faintest call to any kind of noble-action. And to give a seat to a woman, who might otherwise be forced wearily to stand for a long distance, is a noble action.-New York American. Little Romances Qf Savings Banks By William S. Power. SRAGGED little newsboy entered a Pittsburg bank one day and boldly invaded the private office of the president. "Say/ mister," he said, "can I Lut some money in this bank?" "Certainly you can," the president answered; "how much do you want to deposit?" "A quarter!" exclaimed the youngster, pulling a handful of pen nies and nickels out of his pocket. The banker took him over to the receiving teller and introduced him with all the deference that he would have shown to a millionaire. The boy left the city soon after opening the account, bUt he kept adding to his deposit from time to time, and, as he was naturally bright and shrewd, everything he undertook prospered. He is back in Pittsburg now, the head of a successful manufacturing concern and one of the bank's most valued customers. A year ago a pround young father out in Michigan sent $25 to open an ac count for his first-born son, then less than a week old. "The boyl need it some of theoe days," he wrote, "and we may as well begin to save for him right onff." Six moiths later a tear-dimmed letter came, asking to withdraw the money, to pay the little fellow's funeral expenses. A working woman in a little town in New York sent a dollar bill in the name of her daughter, 6 years of age. "She'll be marrying by and by," she said, "and ought to have something to start life on." That was nearly two years ago, and almost every week since a dollar bill has been added to the account. There'll be a snug little marriage portion for the young lady some day, if nothing happens. Not long ago a woman living in Illinois sent $5, with explicit instructions not to let her "old man" know about it, as "he'd be after spending every cent of it for drink."-Success. FRENCH GRACE DARLING. How Rose Here, the Heroine of Brit tany, Saved Fourteen Live. All Brittany is talking of the heroic exploit of Rose Here, the courageous Breton woman who (as brieflyc rated- in ylreterday's Daily ail) saved the lives of the boatswain, lEtienne Coursol, aisd thirteen men of the rteamer Yesper, which waso wrecked on the dangerod5 coast of Ubhan. Rose Here is a flsherwoman and cltivator of the soil. On Monday, about 8 o'clock, she was gathering bhelltfsh on the rocks near the Pyra mide dii Runiou, when out of the fog, which. was beginning tllift, she heard despairing cmes; and looking seaward perceived a-boat containing fourteen men vihich was drifting -wildly at the mercy of the strong current among a mass of dangerous reefs. Every now and again it was luffeted by the surf, which threatenedT to dash the frail craft to pieces. The occupants of the boat, half naked and afraild to throw themselves inito the sea ont account of the swift tide, plied their oars with the courage of despair, and shouted at the top of their voices for assistance. .iR*e at once signaled to them with her arzm that she was coming to .. i aid, and the shipwreckedu men on -ireevi~-t her aoeanifg polled wuth lTthere he'meisthrent for the shore. Rode doer tethe frjoot of the cliffa, and t : g moment plunged into $ baiig saw;itcreasaeda as she was, a t b f'tt~iib~o 46jwe speaks little French, and then, taking her place at the rudder, steered the boat with marvelous adroitness past a thousand dangerous reefs to Pen-ar Roch, distant about two hours by rowing from the Pyramide du Runiou. When the rgscued men had landed, Rose Here guided them to the village, where they met Capt. Viel and the rest of the crew, who had come to the conclusion that the fourteen men in the boat had been lost. Capt. Viel warmly thanked the heroic woman whom he was unfortunately unable to recompense substantially, all his money having gone down in the Ves per. lie has, however, sent an account of her brave conduct to the owner of his ship, and requested them to send her a money reward. Further, he has sent a report to the municipality of the island of Ushant, who, after inves tigation, will communicate it to the Minister of Marine. Her task finished, Rose Here re turned to her usual occupations. She states tat she has saved many other shipwre·ed men under similar cir cumstances. The Brittsh counsel at Brest has sent a sum of money to M. Malgorn, the 'Mayor of Ushant, for the brave g esharwoman, who is in very poor cir cumatanaees - Brest Correspondence More than 10,000 pilgrims. male ant, female, ascend Mount Fuilyama, in Japan, every year. Daring the year 1904 the number of vessels entering the port of Genoa wai:-· 4 ZL ·: ADDS TO SPLENDOR MEN OF BUSINESS RECOGNIZE ADVANTAGES OF ACETYLENE. Famous Summer Ho te, the Grand Ulnon of Sarste.ra, HII Installed This Best of All Artlflolal Lixhta-M-eaa In creased Comfort and Health. Saratoga, June 27.--The very name, "Saratoga," brings to every mind health-giving springs, nnsturpassed ho tels and beautiful drives. It has been for ma;y years the Mecca for all who admire natuaie, enjoy good livlng, and are searching for health, or are simply taking a vacation. The Grand Union, the largest sum mer hotel in the United States, set smong green trees with its long wlung. enclosing a court with fountains and flowers, grass auind trees, music and light, is throughout the season thronged with guests. With the progressive spirit always shown by Its manage ment, the Grand Union has again add ed to its attractiveness by Introduc ing acetylene gas to make still more Irilliant the evening hours. The genlal proprietors believe In furni ':hAg their guests with the best of everything. and now, after Investigating and find ing that Artificial Sunlight can be had. they have installed a complete acety lene gas plant to produce it, and have connected upwards of six thousan!l Acety!ene burners in and about the plant. Like many discoveries of recent yerars, which are comning into popular favor, acetylene. once of the most re cent, is very simply produced. It is adapted for nuseo wherever artificial light is needced and the necessary ap paratus can be understood and oper ated by any one. The generator in which Acetylene is produced by the automatic contact of-carbide and water might be termed a gas plant, as it performs all of the functions of a city gas plant. Thr acetylene generator (an bl. purchased for a few dollars and in any size. from one adapted to furnish acetylene i; ten or a dozen burners for a cottage. up to the large but still simple mn chin. such as is now furnishing Acet y-lene for six thousand burners In the Grand Union. Outside of large cities the use of Acetylene is quite common. The own or of the country hom,' now demand: runningll water, gas and other conveni ences which a few years ago were coin sidered as luxuries, and acetylehne ga; hasn met his requirements, and gives himi a better and chlaper light than is ordinarily furnished In cities. It is well known that rooms lighted with Acetylene are more comfortable. because cooler, and more healthful be cause the air Is not vitiated. MODERN METHODS OF SPELLING Exchange Tells of Hardships They Caused One Unfortunate. "Imagine the case of a person who at different periods of his life was obliged to learn to spell all over again," said the professor. "I knew of such a man, not originally a poor speller, who was compelled thrice to take up the study of orthography. It happened in this way: "This friend of mine was reared in the country, attended the school, and acquired therein the necessary proficiency under the rules of the old time teacher. As a matter of fact he learned to spell while standing. It was a curious fact that for many years that man could not spell some of the simplest words unless he stood up. On his feet, he was the best speller in the class, and acquired many a prize in the shelling 'bees.' There was not a pupil in those days who could 'turn him down,' when it came to an exercise in upright ortho graphy. "Then, years afterward, he had to learn to spell with a pencil. All his spelling talent went into his pencil. His tongue had lost its cunning, and whether standing or sitting he would miss the easiest words, unless he used his pencil. "Finally, with the advent of the typewriter, he was obliged again to learn how to spell, this time with the "machine. Queer thing, isn't it? Un less the word is a simple one, my friend's tongue refuses its aid, his pencil declines to afford its old-time help, and he is compelled to refer to the writing machine. And yet he's a good speller.-The Sunday Magazine. Butcher's Hair Was Like Wagner's. Wagner, a German folk tale relates, became afflicted with headache and determined to have his hair cut. He accordingly arranged with a barber to perform the operation on a certain day. That worthy resolved to make a good thing of it, -and accordingly informed all his customers of Wag ter's impending sacrifice. Most of them paid him a certain 'sum down. To the barber's horror, Mme. Wagner superintended the cut ting, and when it was over appro priated the whole of the coveted locks. The barber, in despair, confessed that he had sold them many times over, whereupon madam suggested that the butcher had hair much like Wagner's. And the story goes that that night half Dresden slept with the butcher's hair under its pillow. But Etiquette Hardly Applied. A. H., Hummel, the well known law yer of New York, was talking, be tween the acts of a drama, about the leading woman. "Though her salary is large," said Mr. Hummel, "she is always hard up, always in debt, they say. "The other day I heard a story about her. A female bill collector called on her to try to get her to set tle a bill for a sable coat. "'I am sorry,' she said to the col lector, 'but I can't settle this bill at present.' " 'Very well, madame. When shall I call again?' the collector asked. "'Well,' said the actress, 'it would hardly be etiquette for you to call again until I have returned the pres ent call.'" To oure, or money refundl4d by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 500. CONVICTS SIT AND GAMDLE. In Western Prison They Are Allowed to Play for Stakes on Sundays. "A few weeks ago, while sojourning in Carson City, the capital of Nevada, I witnessed a scene that struck me as exceedingly curious, and which prob ably was never duplicated anywhere in this country," said T. B. Gardiner of Chicago at the Shoreham. "A friend of mine who was on good terms with the warden of the state penitentiary took me to that institu tion on a Sunday afternoon, and there I saw all the convicts, numbering sev eral hundred, assembled in the long dining room of the structure, playing poker, seven-up, monte, faro and near ly all the gambling games known to western sports. Don't think for a mo ment that these men were merely playing for fun; they were betting, chips which stood for sure-enough money and the play was just as se rious and as much on the level as though it were taking place in a reg ular gambling establishment. "This gambling, my friend told m:, was never allowed on any other day but Sunday, the idea being that as the state laws licensed it there was no valid objection to the inmates of the prison engaging therein. Every con vict was issued checks showing how much cash there was to his credit, and if he chose to lose these checks representing his money at cards it was his own affair. While the men played, which they did with all the fervor of free gamesters, a couple of guards sat watching them with loaded Winchesters in their laps, ready to put down the slightest outbreak or least indication of disorder with a form of argument that scarcely ever fails to persuade."--Washington Post. Great Bank Squeezes Pennies. The World's Work, in a recent is sue, shows how carcfully the Fir4t National bank of Chicago looks to its postage account. "Stamped postal cards are not used, and not one of the thousands of routine letters that are written every day is stamped and sealed until the whole routine mail of the day is assembled in the after noon. Then all the cards and letters to one correspondent are put in a sin gle envelope, and-except for letters from the officers and the like-the bank comes as near as possible to get ting its entire mail carried at 2 cents an ounce, or 1 cent for every postal card, instead of often paying 2 cents for a quarter of an ounce, as it would have to do if every communication were sealed and stamped separately. This little matter of getting full value out of a 2 cent stamp makes a saving of $25 to $30 a day." Returned Bloodstained Testament. The Governor has received a blood stained Testament of Confederate print from J. E. Reid of Newton Cen ter, Mass., with a letter stating that the book was found, at Fort Fisher, N. C., after the capture of that famous fortification on the second attack, Jan. 15, 1865. Upon the fly leaf is the name of H. A. Sledge and a line chowing it to be the gift of Chaplain McKinnon of his regiment. The Governor is requested by Mr. Reid to present the book to the son of Sledge, H. M. Sledge, whose home is Tarboro, N. C.-Raleigh cor respondence Atlanta Constitution. Lydia E. Plakhasn's Vegetable Oonrpound is a positive cure -for all those painful ailments of women. It will entirely cure the worpt forms of Female Com plaints, all Ovarian troubles, Infam mation and Ulceration. Falling and Displacements of the Womb and con sequent spinal Weakness, and is pec iarly adapted to the Change of Life. Every time it will cure Baokaohe. It has cured more cases of Leucor rhcea than any other remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development. That Bearing-dewn Feeling, causing pain, weight and headache, is ilstantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circtrm stances it acts in harmony with the female system. It corrects irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous l'rostra tion, Headacho, General Debility. Also Dizziness, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude, "don't-care" and " want-to-be-left-alone " feeling, excit ability, irritability, nervousness, sleep lessness, flatulency, melancholy or the "blues," and backache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the Uterus. For Kidney GAmpla#ints and Backache of either sex the Vegeta ble Compound is unequaled. You can write Mrs. Pinkham about yourself in strictest confidence. LYDIA E. PIWKII~U RED. CO., Lynn. Mass. In Her Dreams. Miss Ascum-Just back from Palm Beach, eh? Miss Bragg-Yes, and oh, you'd nov. er dream all the proposals I had there. Miss Ascum-No; but I suppose that's the way they came to you. Philadelphia IPress. FREI wITEVY PAIL FROM SIZE ELEVEN, UP. Pade Especially for the Busy Young Ones. It has STRENGTH, STYLE AND COMFORT DOWN TO A CERTAINTY. IT IS FOOT EDUCATION Asý ýý0ý1 Dealero FOR THE BOYS AND OIRLS. It's a CLOVER BRAND SHOE, "ALWAYS JUST CORRKGT." S rtxr ill r t"r-. uarIta o ! 0Q . I.ARUEST PINI SHOG EXCLUSIVISTS ST, LOUIS., V. . A. Truths that Stirke Home Your grocer is honest anl--if he ca:ron to do so-canl tell you that he knows very little alouil the bulk cofttf he sells you. IIo'w canl he lowL where it (oriinally (cae:u froil, how it was, bletded-or with what -or when roasted? If you bluy your co(ffeo leoe ,v the pound, how co, you expect purity and uniform quality'? LION ICOFiFEE, the LEADER OF 4 ALL PACitA GE COFFEES, is of necessity uniform in quality, strength aind flavor. For OVER A S QUARTER OF A CENTURY, LION COFFEE has been the standard cotiee in millions of homes. LION COFFEE Is carefully packed o FoY ao o at cur factories, and until opened in your hohome, his no chance of being adul terated, or of coming in contact with dust. dirt, germs, or unclean hands. In each package of LION COFFEE you get one full pound of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting the genuine. (Lion head on every package.) (Save the Lion-heals for vahlal 'l premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. FREE SAMPLE DR. TAYLOR'S FAlFMILY PELLETS. I'KI(t. : '(·. Culre ('ollstilrLatin:, lntld~t ..tion, etl.. Azenllts mkl;e$ k I O ,. ly. 'T'aylor Remedy Co.-Dept. 1. Louisvillo, Ky. To better advertise the South's Leadingm Business College, four scholarships are of- t fered young persons of this county at less tha c cost. WRITE TODAY. GA-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon, G. N ForR ALL SEWING MA NEEDLES, CHINES. Standard Goods SHUTTLES, Onl. Free Cetes"o'ue t SDealers. BLELOCK REPAIRS. St.AT. Ld~UI. MO. BEAUMONT COLLEGE a" HARRODSBURG, KENTUCKY. There is absleiuttely no other i.ch..lt for Tonen and Olrls in the .o.nth. ir anywl:ere ..O.'ert rii exteltl e ..iurrl ull tanl: ihl.the ge'rnt ,,ll.fIltI fr the mahilest outlay. Most approveed in-erlu Im provenients-EheliC Lihts, iea1 heatlnu, Com- 1 plete, ntfltl otf Path-r omn.,etc..etc. (rounitlof forty acrea.hy universal consenlis.the moet illllqnele beat tlfll ~chool Grounds In Ameri 'a "lif.r. r t.) the I ..hblttioul the.ru;h preparation for the great enlver esltles.Col.Th.a.nmth., .M.,Pre.[A twr ,Uti.ofl'a] 1 a For Preserving, Purifying and Beautifying the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands. Cutieura Soap combines delicate medicinal and emol ]lent prpteti:s L. rived *tom Cntliuure, th peat Skin Cure, with the puree of cleantsitg nhirednui and ta e 1tnoltrefreatita offuwlr odors. Two S a. o i t oe st ono orce e--ameiy a Mediit.al and Toillet Roap for Ct. t ster l)g k&fltm. Corp., So!e Props., Bortou. DB Maledieen, r' "'Ail About the Skin, Scalp, lind. ltar FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, killa disease germs stops diseharges, heals Inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrboa and nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder corm to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, gernucitdal and economical than liquid antiseptics lor all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. THE R. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON. IMASS. Sour Stomach "I used Casearets and feel like anew mnn. I have been a suffretr from dyspeopsra tnt sour stonmeb for the last two years. I have beer. taking m'sdl eine and other drugs, bet could find no reliet o ny for a abshort time. I wll recommend Casearetsl to my friends as the only thing for indilestion and Aour stomach and to keep the bowels in good con dition. They are very nice eat." C nk iarry Sauckley, iaUsle Chunk. Pb Best for CANDY CAA*lT*RC Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste (eood Do (lood, fever Sicken. Weaken or (irlpe. the, 25te '. .ToveC sold In bolk. Tbh genuine tablet 8tamped CO. Guaranteed to cure or your money batck. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 5M IANNUAL SALE. TEN MILUON BOXES " I) lCENTS BUYS A PACKAGE ECONOMY BLUE Makes Full Quart Best Wash Bluing 15 years on the market. Ask dealer. or twe will send by mail package upon receipt of lwc. in stt nillps and dia-or's name. !Inlnoes-MCI)OWELL CO., Louisville, Ky. " __ , __ - _ _ ... ..- 4, Spencer's Business College, NEW ORLEANS, LA. lir...teft Butsiss'Traitlint 4l~'r, o i In tl8. ittit't. Btlttkkteilnli 3 Inuntita. tIlIartirtrl ,lU. tric Shortlhand, In t Wolt'rfil dist. airy ot Ilie a.e. Your mlnneY back If you iaill,'t| wt it. 125 words per ininulte after i to 12 a eeks ....ly, .ond read your notes like rrilnt. 1,00 tOallon Cistern, 518 S. 1,550 Gallon Cistern, 21.40 2,100 Gallon Cistern, 26.8 Cypress, Sash and Doors very cheap. Wire Screens and Doors cheap. -. J'. LnWI N 4 Co., ZaLimzat*d Send for Catalogue. Wilte for mioos THE DAISY FLY I LER2**" '-1'1 titler a ftlutpr A t, "t "altl. f (lt:' ll, na u .it r al w lit 0nw"1 rte .6ll\m .n, I Ir aL .,,1 ",r thora. Ilot t!i.: 1"7 foriar . IIt OLD.8OERl, 149 DelaItb Ave., Iroklet, 5. 1 VIX 26--1905. raph~oegeLouisville Ky. ttOlii Wi' 5 sear. Students oan enter~el tlus. Catsaclo free. Iitr URES WHIE All. ELSEFAIL. intIme. boldb drugit Ue VIX 26-1905.