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HAD CATARRH THIRTY YEARS. ' 11 ..—. ■ 4 flgressman Meekison Gives Praise to Pe=ru*na For His Recovery. CONGRESSMAN MEEKISON PRAISES PE-RU-NA. Hon. David Meekison, Napoleon, Ohio, ex-member of Congress, Fifty-fifth Dis trtctj writes i thereby front nty catarrh or the head. I feel encouraged to believe \ that if I use it a ehort tints loager I will be fully able .o eradicate the > dl*ea*e of thirty year *> s and lag. »—David MeetcUon. j ^TASMiiwriiNSiTi^iirciffRfnssri^irDr^irGri^ri^ County, Mo., writes: I have been in bad health for thirty-seven years, and after takibi twelve bottles of your Peruna I am cured.”—Jacob L. Davis Iler If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable adivce gratis. 111 De _ Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. 0. 1000 gallon Cistern - 18..V 1550 gallon Cistern - - 21.50 2100 gallon Cistern - 25.45 Cypress sash and doors very cheap Wire screens and doors cneap. ■U V. LEWIS Sc GO., Iilmited 816)4 Baron lie St.. NEW OLE A NS, LA. •and for Catalogue. Write for Priow /FT** • •UARAJt TEED BY A nor I bank deposit 500 FREE COURSES HHHBHHBHH ^otes taken. Limited educa tion no hindrance. Board at Cost. Write today. CA.- ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE. Hum Gt jHE “Yellow Leaf Blight” and “Red Leaf Blight,” so disastrous to cotton, are both attributed, by the highest author ities, to impoverished soil — lack of Potash and nitrogen. In fact, these authorities advise liberal fertilizing with mixtures con taining Kainit as the prime preventive. “ Cotton Culture,” an authoritative book of 90 pages-—shows, from actual photographs, healthy cotton plants fertilized with Kainit,' alongside diseased plants not fertilized with Kainit—yours for the asking, absolutely free. Address, OEEMAN »*t.r WORKS, Vvw York—OS Vaisau Street. or Atlanta. Ga.—04*4 So. Broad Street. Haakon and the Hawkinses. You pronounce the double “aa” in Haakon like “aw” in “awful” and tjhe “laf” in Olaf as “laugh.” The two ttames fall on the ear as "Hawkin” and “O-laugh.” The numerous Haw kinses aTe descended from marauding crews of Northmen who flew on their flat>bottomed boats not the raven but Che hawk flag.—London Truth. MOZLEY’S LEMON ELIXIR. Is not a new and untried remedy. More than K of a Century attests its wonderful curative and health giving properties, and serves to Show that it has no e*ptal ss a cure for Constipation, Biliousness, Indi gestion, ftck-Headacbe, and all other ilia arising from a TORPID LIVER. Being strictly a vega table com pound, It has no harmful or even unpleasant effects. Its action is gentle but none the lees thorough— cleansing the stomach and bowels of all impurities, and Ionia* up the entire system to a healthy con dition—leaving the person feeling Sood, because every organ is made > perform its part perfectly. MO. AM fl.M A BOTTLL Alt MM B7BBLS. “One Dose Coavinces." DIEBOLD SAFE AND LOCK CO., W. T. COATS, Agent. Largoit Ctock in South. NEW AND SECOND-HAND Write Yyr Catalogue. 633 Gravier Street. NEW ORLEANS. LOUISIANA SHORTHAND BY HAIL CSinrtter Shorthand can bo mastored at homo In 10 to i!) days'. There after, dictation for speed is all that is nec essary. Full bookkeeping and shorthand aoursos. Catalogue froo. •poneor Business College . Now Orleans. Louisiana To Make Florida an laiand. “A canal of great Importance which requires construction,” writes Aus tin Bierbower in his article, “Canals We Must Dig,” in the Technical World Magazine, “is across the northern part of the peninsula of Florida. Such a canal would save 700 miles between New Orleans and New York, and about the same dis tance between our other Gulf and Atlantic cities. Most vessels between these ports must now go two days out of their way, and, when time Is so* Important and the cost of sea transportation so great, this cannot be forever endured. Florida is level, ind so can be cut without much diffi culty or expense; a*d there are 3ome streams which could be utilized for part of the route.” It's a pretty hard proposition to dig a canal with a fountain pen. . i. .. .... it HIS ONE WEAK SPOT. Prominent Minnesota Merchant Cured to buy Cured by Doan's Kidney Pills. O. G. Hayden, of O. C. Hayden & Co., dry goods merchants, of Albert Lea, Minn., says: “I was so lame that 1 could Hardly walk. There was an unac* countable weakness of the back, and constant pain and aching. 1 could find no rest and was very uncomforta ble at night. As my (health was good in. every other way I could not understand tills trouble. It was just as If all the i strength had gone from my back. After suffering for some time 1 began using Doan's Kidney Pills.- The rem edy acted at once upon the kidneys, and when normal action was restored, the trouble with my back disappeared. 1 have not had any return of It” For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a bos. Foster-Milburn Co..Buffalo.N.T •LECTRIC ROADS AND STEAM LINES Keen Blralry Now Biliti. Between the Two System* of Trevel. Among the interesting developments In the railway business during the past fear has been the action of great (team compares with respect to trolley roads and trolley competition. The New York, .New Haven and Hartford Company, which owns about 450 miles »f the 700 miles of trolley in Connecti cut alone, was the first to acquire large municipal trolley systems at various points on its main lines, and it began to do this before the year 1905, but it was in the past year that several other prominent companies adopted the set tled policy of not only buying such ex isting trolley systems, but also of con structing new electric lines parallel to their own steam tracks, their purpose being both to forestall the threatened competition of other builders and to re lieve their main lines of local passen ger traffic which interfered with the free passage of through trains. The New York Central’s recent pur chase of the Rochester trolley and lighting system by paying $125 per share for common stock having a par value of $6,500,000, is a long step to ward the projected chain of electric service roads from Albany to Buffalo which is to be operated by that great corporation. The Central owns several other trolley lines along this course, and is now electrifying a considerable part of the parallel West Shore steam road. This part of its business is con trolled directly by a new corporation, the Mohawk Valley Company, capital ized at $10,000,000. The Erie is to construct an electric road parallel to Its steam line from Binghamton to Cor ning, seventy-six miles, to forestall competition and relieve its steam line of local traffic. This appears to be the aim of the New Haven company in un dertaking the construction of an elec tric line paralleling its main tracks from Norwich to Worcester. On its road from Philadelphia (or Camden) to Atlantic City, sixty-four miles, the Pennsylvania has decided to substitute electric power for steam, but it will be affected by new competition there, for Chicago capitalists have undertaken to spend $6,000,000 on a third-rail electric line between the same points. In addition to tlie projected use of electric power for the suburban parts of great steam lines near their New York terminals, it should be noted that provision has recently been made for fast electric service on separate lines from Newark through tunnels to New York, and that the trolley line from Camden (virtually from Philadelphia) to New York is to be straightened and otherwise improved. In some parts of the West steam lines are meeting the competition, actual or threatened, of electric parallels by the use of gasolene motor cars on their steam tracks. A successful trial of such cars on its main track between Chicago and St. Louis was made last week by the Al ton company, which will at once sub stitute them for steam trains on sev eral of its interurban lines in Central Illinois.—New York Independent. — The Archaic Cat. Japhet looked out of the window and rawned. “Water, water, everywhere,” tie remarked, according to Lipplncott's. “I say, Ham, do you suppose cats can swim?” “Don’t know, I’m sure. Let’s wake Shem and then we’ll find out” “We’d better tie a string round her fleck,” suggested Shem; “then if she i can’t swim, we can pull her in.” So they caught the cat, tied on a string, and dropped her from the wln iow. “She can! she can!” they shout ed; but just then the dinner bell rang. “Plum duff!” they cried as with one voice, and tumbled down the stairs. At first the cat rather enjoyed her adventure and swam along merrily enough; the sun had begun to shine by this time, the air was delightfully fresh after the stuffy ark, and the ;onnecting string helped her more than »he realized. But a sudden gust of wind made the ark lurch violently, [he string snapped, and the poor cat found herself being left slowly astern. She called for help as loudly as she could, for it took all her strength to iwim, and the giraffe, who was of a benevolent nature, finally noticed her cries. “Me thinks,” said he, “I hear a fel tow-being in distress.” “Oh, don’t you care,” said the rat, with a wicked grin. “It’s only that old cat. She’s always sitting on the roof to sing.” But the kind-hearted giraffe looked out of the window. Spying poor Mrs. Gat, he stretched his long neck to its utmost and finally succeeded in pulling her in. She lapped her wet fur disconsolate ly. “More than enough is too much,” ibe said, and her descendants hate water to this very day. ---- British Sailor's Collar Goes. The reformed uniform for the blue jackets, which is to make the handy man of our navy a different looking sailor lad, came into force at Christ mas. The familiar caps and blue col lars will disappear, and Jack wiU be given a peaked cap and a jacket. Sailors have several objections to the old-time picturesque costume. The baggy trousers were liable to catch in machinery, the open jumper was nick named the “pneumonia catcher," an< the white straw hats for hot weatbet were difficult to stow away. A jacket loosely fitting, comfortable around the neck, with a turned-down collar and five buttons; a peaked cap, light, ventilated, with broad, flat top, and, for use in hot weather, a cover to protect the back of the neck; trousers moderately loose; this was the recon struction favored by the lower deck of the Home Fleet.—Loudon Mail. V—---* Cyclometers are hi use in the cabs o> Berlin. Leipsic and Dresden. i * H • V . ifint D8flU;4af*ii v* .t it^i vuUH* ness after first dav’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer,*2 t-ialbottleandtreatis-freH Dr. R.H. Kush, Ltd..981 Aroh 8t.,Phils., Pa Korea has a population of 6,000,000. Seoul, the capital, has 22.000. A Guaranteed Cure Fof PUm. Itching, Blind, Bleeding. Protruding Pile* D ucrcists are authorized to refund mOTJfU’i!' PazoOintmentfails to cure In 6 to 14 days.50c, . Numerous arrests of editors in the Ru3 man provinces continue. Taylor’s Chorokee Remedy of Rweet Gum and Mullen is Nature’s great remedy—Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Oozistipatlon, •pj •“ throat and lung troubles. At drug gists, 45o., 50o. and f 1.00 per bottle, 1® Switzerland males between twenty and sixty-five are obliged to vote. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. B. W. Grove’s signature on each box. 25c. There were no silver dollars coined in 1905. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be inourable. For a great many years doctors 1>ronounoed it a local disease and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in ourable. Solenoe has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It aots direct ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. Chxnxv A Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75o. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation 0 __ In twelve marriages out of every hundred one of the parties has been married be fore. PAINS AMERICAN WOMEN FIND RELIEF The Oaee of Miss Irene Crosby Is One of Thousands of Cures made by Lydia & £lnkham’s Vegetable Compound. How many women realise that It is not the plan of nature that women should suffer so severely. ^^bhhhhhhhhbhhhhhhbhhhhShhi^ Thousands of American women, how ever, have found relief from all monthly suffering by taking Lydia E. Pinkh&m’s Vegetable Compound, as it is the most thorough female regulator known to medical science. It cures the condition which causes so much discomfort and robs these periods of their terrors. Miss Irene Crosby, of 313 Charlton Street, East Savannah, Ga., writes: “ Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound is a true friend to woman. It has been of great benefit to me, curing me of Irregular and painful periods when everything else had failed, and I gladly recommend it to other suffering women." LEWIS H. WHITE S21 Bienville Street, NEW ORLEANS, ■igheet market price - poid for HIDES RAW FURS AND WOOL Gin and Mill Supplies . . . CIN a HACBINB WORE] Vlokabuvd, —ri 5I» lor »|>c worth of leadinr lKXSnoveltie* JnOticiv 0 e«t Garden Seeds. *l»e ww' * of Universal Pre* pum Coupons tree wun every order. BOlulAM>’t> bKEDbTOhA. BAH'JMOKK. depends upon the life-long study and experience of the men who di rect this business, and who mix a fertilizer which “makes three (often a dozen) bladesof grass grow, where onlv one grew before.” The name of it is Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer. . By Its very liberal use, a week or two before, or at planting, as well as second application, multitudes of fanners in the South have “in creased their yields per acre,” and with the larger profits which these increased yields brought, paid off th e mortgage on their farms. Don’t be foolea by any dealer into buying a “cheap” substitute. t Vlrginla^srolloa Chemical Co. Richmond. Va. Atlanta. Ga. Norfolk, Va. 8avannah, Ga. Durham, N. C. Montgomery, Ala. Charleston. 8. C. Memphis, Tenn. Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, La. _YIX. 9-06. PONT MISS THIS. A Care For Stomach Trouble—A New Metho J, by Absorption—No Drags. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you afflicted with Short Breath. Gas, Sour Eructations, Heart Pains, Indigestion, Dvs pepsia, Burning Pains and Lead Weight m j j Stomach, Acid Stomach, Die tended Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic? Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach Tor ture? _ Let us send yon a box of Mull's Anti Belch Wafers free to convince you that it cures. Nothing else like it known. It’s sure and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. Harmless. No drugs. Stomach Trouble can’t be cured otherwise—so says Medical Science. Drugs won't do—they eat up the Stomach and make you worse. * We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers cure and we want you to know it, hence this offer. This offer may not appear again. ■ 1 ■■ ■■■ .. — ■ I ■■ ■ I —III I .—I-—i I Women who are troubled with pain ful or irregular periods, backache, bloating (or flatulence), displacement of organs, inflammation or ulceration, that “bearing-down” feeling, dizzi ness, faintness, indigestion, nervous f>rostration or the blues, should take mmediate action to ward off the seri ous consequences, and be restored to perfect health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkhaxn’s Vegetable Com pound, and then write to Mrs Pink ham, Lynn, Mass., for further free ad vice. She is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising women free of charge. Thousands have been cured by so doing. For Ym Family and Your Horse The Best Antiseptic Known. TRY IT FOR Rheumatism, Strains, Sprains, Swellings and Enlargements. Price, 25c., 50c. and 81.00. Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, 615 Albany St., Boston, Mass. 338 GOOD FOR 25c. 144 1 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist's name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send you a cer tificate good for 25c. toward the pur chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou ble; cures by absorption. Address Mull's Grape Tonic (Jo., 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, 111. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. In the year 1904 coroners’ jurors n London passed on forty-two cases of starvation. High Class D GGisrts AND—OTHERS. The better class of druggists, everywhere, are men of scientific attainments and high integrity. Who devote their lives to the welfare of their fellow men in supplying the best of remedies and purest medicinal agents of known value, in accordance with physicians’ prescriptions and scientific formula.. Druggists of the better class manufacture many excellent remedies, but always under original or officinal names and they never sell false brands, or imitation medicines. They are the men to deal with when in need of anything in their line, which usually includes all standard remedies and corresponding adjuncts of a first-class pharmacy and the finest and best of toilet articles and preparations and many useful accessories and remedial appliances. The earning of a fair living, with the satisfaction which arises from a knowledge of the benefits conferred upon their patrons and assistance to the medical profession, is usually their greatest reward for long years of otudy and many hours of daily toil. They all know that Syrup of Fig3 is an, excellent laxative remedy and that it gives universal satisfaction, and therefore they are selling many millions of bottles annually to the well informed purchasers of the choicest remedies, and they always take pleasure in handing out the genuine article bearing the full name of the Company-—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package. They know that in cases of colds and headaches attended by biliousness and constipation and of weakness or torpidity of the liver and bowels, arising from irregular habits, indigestion, or over-eating, that there is no other remedy so pleasant, prompt and beneficial in its effects as Syrup of Figs, and they are glad to sell it because it gives universal satisfaction. Owing to the excellence of Syrup of Figs, the universal satisfaction which it gives and the Immense demand for it, imitations have been made, tried and condemned, but there are individual druggists to bo found, hore and there, who do not maintain the dignity and principles of the profession and whoso grood gets the better of their judgment, and who do not hesitate to recommond and try to soil tho imitations in order to make a larger profit. Snch preparations sometimes have the namo—“ Syrup of Figs”—or “Fig Syrup” and of some piratical concern, or fictitious fig syrup company, printed on the package, but they never have the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of the package. The imitations should be. rejected because they are injurious to the system. In order to sell the imitations they find it nececsary to resort to misrepresentation or deception,nnd whenever a dealer passes off on a customer a preparation under the name of “Syrup of Figs” or “Fig Syrup,” which does not bear, the full name of the.California Fig Syrup Co. printed on the front of the package, he is attempting to deceive and mislead the patron who has been so unfortunate as to enter his establishment, whether it be large or small, for if the dealer resorts to misrepresentation and and deception in one case he will do so with other medicinal agents, and in the filling of physicians’ prescriptions, and should be avoided by every one who values health and happiness. Knowing that the great majority of druggists are reliable, we supply the immense demand for our excellent remedy entirely through the druggists, of whom it may be purchased every where, in original packages only, at the regular price of fifty oents per bottle, but as exceptions exist.it is necessary to inform the public of the facts, in order that all may decline or return any imitation which may be sold to them. If it does not bear the full name of the Company— California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package, do not hesitate to return the article and to demand the return of your money, and in future go to one of the better class of druggists who will sell you what you wish and the best of everything in his line at reasonable prices. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Colmr more goods brighter and fas' er color than any otto" dye." On*We pss^ace mJor* all fibers. They dye in oall wa‘er better than an 7 nthar dva Ynn aau di e any g .rrueat without tipping apart. Write lor free bboklet-How tv^ya. JJlaaofc and Mix Color* i*ON IIDS Utt UQ CO.. Unio«vllie. .W^oarL ' •