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tybm&n Is it possible there is a woman in this country who con tinues to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham’sVege table Compound a trial after all the evidence that is con tinually being published, which proves beyond contradic tion that this grand old medicine has relieved more suffer ing atnong women than any other one medicine in the world? We have published in the newspapersof the United States more genuine testimonial letters than have ever been pub lished in the interest of any other medicine for women — and every year we publish many new testimonials, all gen uine and true. Here are three never before published: From Mrs. 5. T. Richmond, Providence, R. 1. Providence, R. I. —“ For the benefit of women who suffer as I have done I wish to state what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ban done for me. I did some heavy lifting and the doctor said it caused a displacement. I have always been weak and I overworked af'er my baby was born and inflammation set in, then nervous pros tration, from which I did not recover until I had taken Lydia E. Pink- Lam's Vegetable Compound. The Compound is my best friend and when I hear of a woman with troubles like mine 1 try to induce her to taKe your medicine.” —Mrs. S. T. Richmond, 19U Waldo Street, Providence, R. I. A Minister’s Wife Writes: Cloquet, Minn. —“I have suffered very much with irregularities, pain and inflammation, but your wonderful medicine, Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, has made me well and I can recommend the same to all that are troubled with these complaints.”—Mrs. Jen nie Akerman, c/o Rev. K, Akerman, Cloquet, Minnesota. From Mrs. J. D. Murdoch, Quincy, Mass. South Quincy, Mass, — 4 - The doctor said that I had organic trouble and he doctored ine for a long time and I did not get any relief. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ad vertised and I Pied it and found relief before I had finished the first bottle. I continued taking it all (p/gft ~ v through middle life and am now a strong, healthy b/ yu woman and earn my own living.”—Mrs. Jane L). j yy W| j Murdoch, 25 t Jordon St., South Quincy, Mass. 1 1 # I to iama f. pia itham medicine co. u\ in) k * (F >XFIr.STIAI.• i.YKN,MASS.,foradvlce. \\ \Ar- Vc,:. loliar vvii: ..c oi.ciuai, read and answered OUS by a woman and. held in strict confidence, lydiaT Films Biwefssad 10 Cents Per Roll Prints 3c and 4c Each Prompt attention and work the best. COVELL COMPANY Department K Ala* 8 Games For 10c Fox and Geese, Nine Men Morris, Ant hors. Introduction Game, Span ish Prison, ! kuninoes, a whole year s aumr.ement and the whole tliir,: for only 10c. Send tic today and get tie S games. Clark Rase/Co., 8214 Dorchester Ate., Chieage ir r jjtp Pair scissors, buttonhook, cigar cutter, &UC It I O bottle opener. kev ring. Sample 12c. I’artic- CiarS free. Lul.!ea tip. rial Manufaetarj, Hope Valley, U. L T A. *ST% ¥IT ■SR Send for onr catalog of Art i—s Xx* A Ml* O Needlework and Novelties. Voa Mfg. Cos., 1015 Slue Hill Ave., Dorchester, Mass. iprur? Get my money making proposition. Costs BUCItIO you 75c. sells for sl.6*l'; sells everywhere; particulars FKKU. ftobert T. Staten, Houlka, Miss. C l 40 and SO acre tracts cheap, Mrawberry r arms on terms, proms sso t<>sioo per RcT6. la* O. DICKINSON, Juilsoniu, Ark. enre CI3/4DFQ raining stock in gilt edge iKLC £3 75s*A15€Lv5 company. Write this office for particulars. 2 A54 \V. 22 and St., Chicago r J| A_ for 12 beautifully written visiting cards, i>eno lUC nil how to become an expert writer for (2.50. Bald, Nebraska Apartments, Washington, D. G. LIGHT UPON TI3E MYSTERIES of your life. Send birth datoand 10c to pay clerical expense. Florrnre UiiL!bx, Koi Ueduodo Bpici, CaL FT.ESHY PEOPLE send one dollar for guaran teed receipt for removi rig surplus flesh. No drugs, ex ercise, wrinkles or further expense. Safe. sure, per manent. TSumpHOB, lluiubold! Cos.. Scotia, Californlß In/ HR B start you earning $5 daily during W I B L. spare time. Send 10c for sample m tor sure repeater and permanent income. ELUS - SJIiTU CO., Kill colt Square, Buffalo, a. I, OtinTHDI IYC sell - or 525 up. Constant demand; rnUIUrLfllO fascinating and profitable employ ment during spare moments. We show you how to succeed, capital PCULiaiu.vu Cos., a-2, WaahißgUm, 1). c. avt nrsrvEss RaTTKK requiring personal attention, Boston or neighboring cities, promptly, intelligently handled. Corr. tulir.lrii. U, Fuu-i’Ca, 5 Broufielil. Uostoa. Bui. ' Hawaiian rmeapple Tropical Hawaii, the heme of the finest Pineapple, is too ||| t distant to supply you with the fresh fruit that has ripened ||| on the plant. If you want the delicious m Hawaiian Fnseapple in all its perfection if i after fully ripening in the field, buy Libby's. 0 Yellow and mellow when harvested and /g V placed light into the tin the day it is £§ \ y picked. Yon can buy it sliced or crushed. At Your Grocers Libby, M9Neill & Libby “New Rival” Loaded Shotsbells I a I Good shooters and sure shooters are Winchester “ Nublack ** and ** New i 1 Rival ” black powder loaded shells. They are strongly made and loaded I with only standard brands of powder, shot and wadding. Their even paU I , ||| tern and deep penetration make them sure game getters. You will find I ij| nothing better. Sold everywhere. , Look for the Red VNT on the box. I ■ I They Are Udiform , Highly Satisfactory ToaC** \ Not in Weeds. “She is a grass widow, isn’t she?” “Well, she seems to be in clover.” — Boston Evening Transcript. HEAL YOUR ECZEMA QUICKLY WITH RESINOL No matter how long you have been tortured and disfigured by eczema or other itching, burning, raw or scaly skin humor, just put a little of that wonderful resinol ointment on the sores and th© suffering stops right there! Healing begins that very min ute, and your skin gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of the money you threw away on tedious, useless treat ments. Used by doctors for 19 years. Resinol ointment and resinol soap also clear away pimples, blackheads, and dandruff speedily and at little cost. Sold bv all druggists. —Adv, 0 One kind of a hero is a man who tells his wife the truth, first, last and always. Lee Slack of Ripley, 0., writes: “I have sold several kinds of horse lini ment and Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh will do more than any other liniment I have ever sold or knew of.” Adv. Many a True Word, Etc. “Pa, what do they put water In stocks for?” “To soak the investors with.” If you can extract 50 per cent of real joy from the enjoyment you plan you are lucky. . ROADS AS CROP PRODUCERS Government Studies Show How the Agricultural Output of Country Depends Upon its Highways. That an Improved road will increase vastly the productiveness of the area through which it runs has now been satisfactorily demonstrated by stud ies conducted by the United States department of agricultural in Vir ginia. Conditions in Spotsylvania county were investigated with par ticular care and the results have proved suprising. In 1909, the coun ty voted SIOO,OOO to improve 40 miles of road. Two years after the com pletion of this work the railroad took away in 12 mouths from Fredericks burg, the county seat, 71,000 tons of agricultural and forest products hauled over the highways of that town. Before the improvement of the roads this total was only 49,000 tons annually; in other words, the quantity of the county’s produce had risen more than 45 per cent. Still more in teresting, however, la the increase shown in the quantity of the dairy products. In 1909 these amounted to 114.815 pounds, in 1911 to 273,028 pounds, an increase of practically 140 per cent in two years. In the same time shipments of wheat had increased 59 per cent, tobacco 31 per cent, and lumber and other forest products 48 per cent. In addition to this increase in quan tity the cost of hauling each ton of produce was materially reduced. In other words, the farmers not only pro duced more, but produces more cheap ly, for the cost of transportation to market is of course an important fac tor in the cost of production. From this point of view, it is estimated that the SIOO,OOO spent in improving the road in Spotsylvania county saved the farmers of that county $41,000 a year. In the past two years the traffic studies of the federal experts show that approximately an average of 65,- 000 ions of outgoing products w r ere hauled over the improved roads in the county an average distance of eight miles, or a total of 520,000 “ton miles.” Before the roads were im proved it w as estimated that the aver age cost of hauling was 20 cents a “ton-mile;” after the improvement this fell to 12 cents a “ton-mile,” or a sav ing of eight cents. A saving of eight cents per mile on 520,000 “ton-miles” is $41,000 a year. Because this saving, in cases of this character, does not take the form of cash put directly into the farmer’s pocket, there is a widespread tendency to believe chat it is fictitious profit, while as a matter of fact it is just as real a source of profit as an in crease in the price of wheat. In Dinwiddle county, Virginia, for example, where peanuts are one of the staple crops, the average load for tw T o mules on a main road was about a thousand pounds before the road w'as Improved. After its improvement the average load was found to be 2,000 pounds, and the time consumed in hauling the larger load to market was much reduced. IDEAS ON ROAD IMPROVEMENT Speedways, Joy-Ride Trails or High ways for Pleasure Traffic Not Wanted by Farmer. Sanity has overtaken the advo cates of better rural highways. In the old days the good road advocate dreamed of nothing less than macad am, and his visionings ran often to brick-payed paths and concrete coun try lanes. All the rural world rolled smoothly by over traffic ways that would cost anywhere from $5,000 to $15,000 per mile. That was before the farmer had really entered into the movement and before the small town merchant, the rural banker, and the county seat cities had begun to think about good roads in terms of dollars and cents. Twenty years of agitation has brought us face to face with the fact that the taxpayer does not want speedways, joy-rider trails or roads for pleasure traffic, says St. Louis Re public. The man on the farm wants a good firm, well drained highway that he can use at any and all seasons of the year, and he does not want to be bankrupted or driven to the poor house in getting it. Laying Pullets. Pallets very often are slqw at start ing to lay owing to becoming tco fat. In growing pullets there should be more nitrogenous and less carbo naceous food given them. Importance of Movement Of the 2,000,000 miles of public roads in the United States only about tw r o hundred thousand miles have been given a hard surface. This show’s the importance of the good roads movement. ' Poor Highways. Poor highways lessen the profit of labor, increase the cost of living, bur den the enterprise of the people, dull the morality of our citizenship and hold down the educational advance ment of ?he country. Prevent Colds. When hens are molting they feel these changes very much, and great care should be taken that they do not take cold. Fowls for Breeders. Breed every year from the strong est, best developed fowls and espec ially from those of good laying qual ities. * North Carolina prodaces approxi mately 600,000 bales of cotton eacfc year. THE SEA COAST ECHO, BAT ST. LOUIS, MISSISSIPPI CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK! LISTEN! GLEAN LIVER MILS MY WAY just Once! Try “Dodson’s Liver Tone” When Bilious, Consti pated, Headachy—Don’t Lose a Day’s Work. Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel fine and cheerful; make your work a pleasure; be vigorous and full of am bition. But take no nasty, danger ous calomel, because it makes you sick and you may lose a day’s work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver, which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel crashes into sour bile like dynamite, breaking it up. That’s when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. Listen to me! If you want to enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone. Your druggist or dealer sells you a 50 cent bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone under my personal money COMPLIMENT THAT WAS REAL Tribute Paid By Old Nurse of John Sharp Williams Should Have Pleased Bride. Senator Kern of Indiana and John Sharp Williams of Mississippi are not only fellow Democrats, but very good friends and frequently pelt each other good naturedly. Upon one occasion, when Mrs. Kern was on a visit to the capitol, Senator Williams was introduced to her. After the usual exchange of greetings the gentleman from Mississippi looked gravely at Mrs. Kern and, with the ex pression of a judge who had a sym pathetic comprehension of all things pertaining to prisoners' at bar, in quired in a judicial voice to match, “Madam, did you marry this man of your own free will?” Upon proper assurance that this was the case, he remarked, gallantly: “I think John has done what an old darky on the home place said I done when I brought my wife back home a bride. “The old nurse met us at the gate, and when I told her, ‘This is your Miss Betty, nova —my wife,’ the old darky looked ‘Miss Betty’ over very admiring ly. Then she turned her shining black face to me and exclaimed: ‘Massa John Sha’p, I’se been heah fo’ three genera tions o’ brides, but yob, sub, yoh has jest outmarried yo’self.’ ”—Washing ton Star. SKIN ITCHED AND BURNED R. F. D. No. 1, Box 164, Bridgewater, N. q —“j v.as suffering with a skin trouble which began after a spell of sickness six years ago. It w*as mostly on my body and I could not rest for the itching and burning. It began like a nettle rash, then it would break out In pimples all overdue. I would sting and burn and itch all over and I scratched until I was almost raw. At times I could hardly bear anything to rub against the parts that were af fected. “I do not know how many remedies, soaps, etc., I tried but none did me any good. Then I tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment and they seemed to be the very thing that I needed. I only used them four w’eeks and they com pletely healed me.” (Signed) Mrs. H. L. Patton, Jan. 31, 1914. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.” —Adv, Partiality. Five-year-old Katherine was kneel ing on her father's lap, stroking the very scant thatch on the top of his head. “Daddy,” she suddenly piped up, “do you know- that I think you’ve got awfully nice hair.” A moment’s si lence. Then: “But if you were not my daddy I wouldn’t think you have nice hair.” ELIXIR BABER A GOOD TOXIC And Drives Malaria Oat of the System. “Your ‘llabeli’ acts like magic; I have given It to numerous ueople in my parish who were suffering with chills, malaria and fever. I rec commend it to those who are sufferers and in need of a good tonic”—Rev. S. Szymanowski, St. Stephen’s Church, Perth Amboy, N. J. Elixir Sfabek, 50 cents, all druggists or by Parcels Post, prepaid, from Kloczewski <fe Cos., Washingtou, D. C. Qualifying for the Race. “Who is the man who comes around every day and spends two dollars on the machine that tests your grip?” asked the boardwalk operator. “That’s James Joshua Joshum, the well-known politician,’’ replied the as sistant, “He's getting into shape for his handshaking campaign.”—Wash ington Star. * E. B. Hall of Wellsvllle, N. Y., has sold Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh for forty-five years. Several other drug gists have handled it from thirty to fifty years. Adv. Patients and Doctor Far Apart. “My doctor is evidently determined to get a rest.” “What has he done?” “Sent all his patients to the moun tains and he’s going to the seashore.” —Kansas City Journal. Heard and Obeyed. “They say money talks.” “Yes. Mine says; ’Save me!’” —Bos- ton Evening Transcript. Probably once in about four thou sand years a man who is licked in a fair fight has no excuse to offer. Belgium has forbidden the exporta tion of adulterated or impure rubber from the Belgian Congo. The common blue-bottle fly pos sesses between four thousand and five thousand little eyes. —————————— ——■ ■■ l ' ' ' J | back guarantee that each spoonful will clean your sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that it won’t make you sick. Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You’ll know it next morn ing, because you will wake up feel ing fine, your liver will be working, your headache and dizziness gone, youj* stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. Dodson’s Liver Tone is entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and cannot salivate. Give it to your chil dren. Millions of people are using Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dan gerous calomel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of calomel Is almost stopped entirely here. CARRIER PIGEONS IN WAR First Used in Franco-Prussian Con flict, and Their Value Has Since Been Recognized. The first war in which pigeons were used as messengers was the Franco- Prussian, and the birds carried news into and out of besieged Paris. A post was established at Tours, and right through the siege regular mails were carried between Paris and Tours by pigeons. It is not generally known that all the armies and navies of the world can fall back on official pigeons. If necessary, and that the birds belong ing to the British navy have their official standing and numbers just as the handymen have. During the Boer war the British army had its carrier-pigeon system. The birds brought messages from all the towns beleaguered by the Boer in vaders, and when Sir George White’s force was cooped up in Ladysmith winged messengers carried several dis patches from that gallant officer to the men who were slowly fighting their way to his relief. Anti-Hops, Reports of the hop harvest suffer ing through the war would have pleased Hie anti-hop crusaders of for mer times. In the middle of the sev enteenth century the city of London petitioned parliament to put down “two anusancies, Newcastle coals in regard of their stench, etc., and hops in regard they would spoil the taste of drink and endanger the people.” A few r decades later John Evelyn ap pealed to the king and all loyal land owners to banish the “drogue hopps,” which, he declared, spoiled good ale and led to fomenting diseases, by planting cider fruit and so creating a taste for more wholesome liquor. A century ago Cobbett also wrote angrily of hops and hop growers, chiefly be cause of the destruction of young trees for hop poles.—Loudon Chron icle. War and Football. Yale’s., bowl, the “fell cirque” or stadium in which the great football battle with Harvard will be played this fall, will be the objective of 22 trainloads from New' York alone on the day of the game. The whole structure will seat 61,000 people, and it is announced that “every seat in the bowl is a good seat” —that Is, it has an unobstructed view of the play ing field. Despite Cleveland H. Dodge’s protest against holding these “annual mimic battles” during wartime, the Yale Alumni Weekly says they should go on. If the contest in Europe has any direct reaction on American col lege football it would seem to lie in the direction of eliminating the brutal factors of the game. Women in Warfare. Endervoring to emulate their an cient Germanic and Gallic mothers w T ho fought against the Roman legions, the French women of the revolution formed themselves into militant bodies and the dames de halle and the Fauboug St. Antoine, in short petticoats, red Phrygian caps, with pikes in hand, became conspicu ous in the early days of the Terror, and the “Amazon of Liege,” grasping her lighted match, astride her can non, was dragged by a mob of de mented women to Versailles when the royal family was forced to return to Paris. Women w'ere also prominent at the barricades during the com mune, and many a murderous shot was fired by a woman’s hand from the w'indows of the capital. Electricity and Food. At the recent session of the Na tional Electric Light association in Philadelphia Mr. T. C. Martin gave an interesting report on the electrical stimulation and nlrnt growth. He an nounced that vegetables, such as rad ishes and lettuce, when subjected to electrical treatment, had shown a 75 per cent increase in growth over un treated vegetables. Evidently elec tricity is destined to play an impor tant part in the production of our food. —Scientific American. For old sores of any kind apply Han ford’s Balsam. It will reduce the in flammation and the sore will gradually disappear. Use it for the hard cases. Adv. Proper Forethought, “Good momin’, Mrs. Moriarity. It’s well ye’r lookin’. And how’s thot delicate son av yours now?” “Itte wurrking in a delicatessen store he Is.” “Aha! Must b© folne to hare spe cial stores jlst for sickly byes to wor ruk In, hey?" How a How Started in Glen Eider. They were leaning over the line fence, these' ladylike neighbors, and they seemed to be having an argu ment as the Glen Elder Sentinel's reporter passed. “How do you know It is so?” asked one. “I said it was so, didn’t I?” the other came back, coldly. “tlh, huh, you did, and I suppose It is your Idea that whatever you say goes?” “Yes, If I say It to you —it goes all over town!” And then the neighbors called the police.—Kansas City Star. Extended. The Applicant—Have you a vacancy in your tango classes? The Dancing Master —How old are you? “Forty-three.” “What is your weight?” “Hundred and fifty.” “You’ll have to get on the waiting list. I’m not accepting tango pupils under forty-three years and 180 pounds.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Limited to Her. “James, you’ve already danced with that young Miss SmUhers four times. I think you ought to drop her now. People will be talking.” "Now ma—” “I tell you It doesn’t look right.” “Don't get jealous. I’m not in love with her. She’s the only one in the ballroom who dances the hesitation the same way I do.” —Detroit Free Press. Of Equal Impact. Knicker —They are looking for a war tax that will fall equally on every one. Bocker —Then tax the rain. The Complete Butcher. “What’s veal, Benny?” “Oh, it’s the part of ihe cow we eat before she grows up.”—Sacred Heart Review. For galls use Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh and keep on working the horse. Adv. Ceylon has 1,000,000 acres of cocoa nut plantations. jjji g™!| „ Forlnfen^andCMldre^ | The Kind You Have Always Bought ALCOHOL-3 per cent # m S AVegetablePreparalionforAs- - ff similaling toe Food and Regula* HOcHS 1116 ting the Stomachs and Bowels of $ fV|® jpBBMGMgBg Signature /A$ Sr Promotes DigcsHon.Cheerful- | M If r R ness and Rest. Contains neither ; QJ Opium. Morphine nor Mineral Va .A/ So Not Narcotic Feape of Old DrSAML'£I/fTC//ER 3jji,‘ Pumphm Seed- A If A ;v! AlxSenna * \ ■ S W. FocheU* Salts - ) l/l B .t 5 ® Anise Seed * I UB a I M Kl frpperminl - \ A ‘A 1 'o BiCnrhenaleSodn - / 4 IS P jw - I 11 a i 1 n.k . Clarified Sugar I ■ S A , *' Q Wtatergrern Flavor ' * A perfect Remedy for Conslipa- ZX| MS* USu NlJ] tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, I I If s>Slfi Worms .Convulsions, feverish- j 1 n ft ness and Loss of Sleep | yjl Is Ql* |J V 6r* Facsimile Signature of ! I JgSSL. 1 Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper th ointuh oom*i*y. *■** *o oity. Sure. PERFECT HEALTH. >■ “Absence makes the heart grow Tutts Pais keep the system in perfect order* fonder,” observed the old fogy. They regulate the bowels and produce “So do presents,” added the grouch. A VIGOROUS BODi. TOUR OWX DRUGGIST WILL TELL VO I 8p33 BSI *3 19 r 3 Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery ■SB liSIMI ** jSfe, SsJB ■ tfl H Byes and Granulated Eyelids; No Smarting— B jf JS 3T £ ®ISi Bk** lust Ere Comfort. Write for Book of the Eye 9 BSi* II 2| igl by mail Free. Murine Eyo Kemedr Cos.. Chicago. H Rpg B MsP Two Negatives. a , Make overlook soiling: new practical , <TIM __ . if D u„ Bn {A A CfARTC household article; soils forgl; sample Why are yoj so happy if she said iiYClltaste, a. and. bocuau, Fairfax, oiua. ‘Nor” - . —.-r- . ...-=1 “She said it twice.” W. N. U., Birmingham, No. 42-1914. sewer if clogged up. All life consists of building up and tearing down and just in the same manner that the blood carries to the various parts of the body the food that the cells need for building up, so it is compelled to carry away the waste material that’s torn down. These waste materials are poisonous and destroy us unless the liver and kidneys are stimulated into refreshed and vigorous life, BR. PIERCE’S Golden Medical Discovery is the balancing power—a vitalizing power. It acts on the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition—on the purifying filters which clean toe blood- Thus fresh vitalized blood feeds the nerves, heart —and brain. This well known alterative relieves catarrh of the stomach and tieadacher. accompanying same, and has been successful for more than a gen eration as a tonic and body-builder. It builds op the rundown system. You need it—if you are always “catching cold”—or have catarrh of the nose and throat. The active medicinal principles of Americaa-Native-roots are extracted without alcohol and you can obtain this tonic in iiquid or tablet form at any drug store or send 50 cents in 1-cent stamps for trial box of tablets. Send 31 one-cant stamp* to pay coat of mailing and wrapping for from copy of Tha Common Sense Medical J! Jk ’i . ill Adviser, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, cloth bound. JOOO .fIA jPi tI pages. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. - ■ * -V What a Cold Can Do K&nr a. fatal caa of kidney d(assure atarta from a simple sold or eblll. iJongesuon clog* aad weakens tire kidneys. Uric poisons coUe.it, damage the kidneys and cause backache, rheu matic pain, headaches and urinary disorders. When doctoring a cold, think of the kidney*- Brink water freely to help Hush out the poison. Take Doan's Kidney PiU* to relieve conges tion of the kidneys, give up a heavy meat diet and take plenty of rest. Nature *lll assist la the cure. Doan's Kidney Bills are used with , success and are publicly recommended ail over the civilized world. An Alabama Case * __ S. M. Brown. Sr., rffn* fwT 712 S. St. Andrew flctw*lefts St., Dothan, Aim. TANARUS, JT V ,l klteo" says: “1 was so bad Xttf / with kidney disease .-Ji&V that the doctors held out no hope of recovery. I was confined to the house two montha, hardly able to move. My body swelled terribly and I was so raiser able that deal h / * : r]il would have been R Doan's Kidney Pills and Improved In a months I was a well man and I have nev- V " er had a sign of kidney trouble since. Get Doan's t Any Store. 50r a Boa DOAN’S WAV FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. 8* j WHY. NOT--IftY POPH AM’S ASTHMA MEDICINE i Gives Prompt and Positive Relief In Every i Case. Sold by Druggists. Price 51.00. 4 Trial Package by Mall 10c. I WILLIAMS MFG. CO., Props., Cleveland, 0.1 I*/ A At ~W~ fC Will pay 10c apiece for W/- Ivl i MT, O Indian arrow heads, M# ■■ * “ w ■ m-w f oraX og a ndothersicn# Implements. FrmkT. T'xggvrty, fi.'rto lUdg.. UaJTkto, M. X* Medicated Insoies sufferer. A rem edy that has never failed. Prioell. Your money baoil If nut satisfied. J.W.ACO., Dvpt. A., Bes,€h*aaMy, w. Ts. Slop Smoklnd S,K"S!RI!T72va complete fors2. Peerless Cos., A237 Broadway, Chicago For Sale By Owner SSSIMKafTSS particulars address Z. CAVKNDKH, Homestead, FIA. neon A DA7CT7C eradicates wrinkles; mate* UCnmA liUfcC IIC you look 10 years yonneurt 600 package prepaid. Ideal Cos., loot Cheater, Lillie I A Our 10c sellers will open youi%rL Lady AJfCntS c;,.t, particulars and free sample offer. IS, WAGSTAFF, 13U2 St. Charles. New Orleans ft I guarantee results from my fatten- Horse Uwners ir:g recipe, no wetter how old th* horse. Mailed forWc. CITY FKU)cO.Mii.lsi UiOS.OkU, ETCHING^LIDS