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0: ww: Wonderful Kava-Kava Shrub. Discovery. Of Ve. T-rHt to Sufferers from 1 a of the Kidneys or Blad feumatlsm, eto.-A Blessing- vM ftraaft VAlllA. in Ynii. rflQ bill ui miw. . j... ni be clad to know that orreau"-' ia.ov.rv. Alkavis. Xrful Kava-Kava ahrub ,nved an assured cure foralldia proved an ease caused by Uric acid in the blood, or by disordered action of the Kidneys or urinary organs. The Kava Kava Shrub, or as botanists call it. Piper Methys ticum, grows on the banks of the Gan ires river. East India, .1 V. t....KVAPHRUl anu pruuouijr w ifa jwiifjiif"-) used lor centuries Itbe natives Deiorc Arties became known to civilization krespect it resembles the discovery quinine from the Peruvian bark, JL known by the Indians to the early U missionaries in South America, 7. nn.1erful discovery, with a rec ti of i joo hospital cures fn 30 days. It f, directly upon the blood and kid. Its anu is uut"i'""'Mji' L?Jimonv of many ministers of the f..i well known doctors and business P'r"' j w ill.rlt wVien nil ntrir Lea cureu vj - hS Yk HVr of Sept 10th PB.l"'.' - of E. W. B. Moore. V. D.. 01 t.hiacton.'I). C. was given, describing his t of suffering- from Kidney diftes.e end Ptumatiim. and his rapid cure by Alkais. F ni nrlv onr hundred Lwl ilones after two weeks' use of Alkais. IViohn H Wsuon.ofSunset.TeiBs.amlnister Itht oiel of thirty yearB' senrice. was struck t h out oT dut I fluiv DT KlunrT disease. "hi. and U hia doctora having failed, he ! .1 rr KiMn life and death tor two jlthindtrenKin,ua ""T""""" F -r .h.unnl. Mr. R.C. Wood, a Brora- Lt .tiornev of Lowell, Indiana, was cured of il lo rie ten lime un"i t .... r wonderful. Mrs. lames IoM'.of Keni. wnio. wine. ..... a doctors in vain, that she was about to give unicu ..... .. .,., .1.. u.J ;.,! r?s"p" LlV VVi; AV.;;.; .nrt restored lviy .nv nher tnrilei a I to testifv to trie tnderftil curative pow""a of Alkavis' in the ihcaiairacrs pecuwar iy wu........ So far the Church Kidney Cure Com anr, Ko. 412 Fourth. Avenue, New ork, are the only importers of this tw remedy, and they are so anxious to irove its value that for the sake of intro luction they will send a free treatment if Alkavis prepaid by mail to every taderof this paper who is a Sufferer rom any form of Kidney or Bladder lisorJer, Bright's Disease, Rfceuma isra, Dropsy, Gravel, Tain in Back, Female Complaints, or other affliction Joe to Improper action of the Kidneys srCrinarv Orpans. We advise all Suf treritosend their names and address to the company, and receive the Alkavis Tree. It is sent to you entirely free, to Prove its wonderful curative powers. TOLD FOR WOMEN. Tin- hieyele redding which recently leetriilcil London, as the bride wore the jr;ilation white satin and veil, ha hud rival in the marriage of the young arisian who went to the church in a arrive projx-lleu hy an electric motor. IThe woman who want.s to make herself famous now M-fiius to have little else left ler than a Ixilloon in which to tuck her lappy lover, the minister and a couple of witnt'SM's. Mme. Adam,, the -prominent Parisian journalit. was driven into the work by the uuhappiness of her first exerience a wife. Her parents married her when she was a girl of 15 to a notary in ft provincial town. She left her hus band, and with the aid of tioorge Sand frote herself into fame in I'ari. H'r womi husband was a senntor and left Im fort une at his death. Thisenablod ler to found La Nouvelle Itevue and to establish the salon to which all the wiebrities of the French capital crowd when she receives. In trying to make a point against veg etarianism a member of the Ethno prapliioiil MH-iety in Paris reiul a paper wfore that lody a short time ago in huh he in.isted that cannibals are ex fedin'ly strong and vigorous, far ex cecdinjr in Ktrenirth those triles not ad Oictdl to such food. He said that the savapes. w ho abstained from human food rey nie meat of nnv kind and were n puny lot. The most curious part of his argument was that the flesh of women was much more digestible and far more nutrition than that of men; many tniK's recognize the fact and eat only Tnien, until the supply gives out. ABOUT PROMINENT PEOPLE. The kiiic of Siarn is to visit Queen 'ictoria next summer in his 2,500-ton un yacht Malm Chakrl, which was omit for him in Scotland. John Tweed, of Chelsea, and once of viasgow, has been commissioned to ex cute the statue of Cecil Rhodes, which to be erected at llulu wa vo. Ex-Post mailt pr-nnprnl Wilson la to t inaugurated president of Washing ton and Lee university, Lexington, Vn., "i lllesilnv. SentPfthir 14. The oldest actor in the world is Hen f7 Doel. He wtll be 03 on his next Birthday, and was an actor for 65 years, & child he was rowed out to Plymouth sound and saw Naioleon walking the ounrtr deok of the Beller phon. Letters from Farmers) In K..,U j xt iu ivt.. minting. weir own personal experience in those fttg, have been published in pamphlet 'Ror!J by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, and as these letters arc extremely J:. , UnB. nd the pamphlet is finely inu 'fated. on r.nnw ,;n i.- .nt in nv address, fn of two-cent postsRe stamp. Apply l. kco. H. HeafTord. General Passenger Apt, 410 Old Colony Hudding, Chicago, A wise man can lesrn something worth .lowing from a fnol hut a fnnl is made all ilornre fol going to college. Ham's iQ .knack of easy travel is in knowing now to keep readr ail the time. Km s "TO, - AGRICULTURAL HINTS THE ROAD QUESTION. Mew rroareanlvo Knrnier Should View Tula Important I'roblem. It is only during seasons of abnormal rainfall that the average farmer feela disposed to manifest a more than luke warm interest in the subject of rond im provement. In most sections the set tling of the roads late In the spring set tles; for the time being, the general agi tation of this question. That it will bob vp again with renewed emphasis is just as certain as that the roads will "break up" in the fall, for neglect of highways at any time only intensifies their bud conditions. Eternal vigilance and eternal agitation seems to be the price of good rouds in this country. It would seem that the most conservative man would need only to open his eyes to the miserable condition of country roads in many of the states during a great part of the year, and consider carefully the annual cost of maintaining them in such condition, to realize that rond mnking methods, and the system under which they are applied, are seriously at fault. We believe a majority of the farmers in the states referred to know WHAT A HO AD SHOULD BE. the present system to be wrong; other wise they would show their faith by heir works; they would no longer feel ustifled in performing $:i worth of abor on the farm one day, nnd $1.I0 worth on the road the next. We have lo;ig stood with those who thinl the roud tax should be collected n nionev. and have paid cash for Severn ears, but tuuUir the present system of oad management it cunnot always be applied to the best advantage. In some sections even where great claims were made for the "naturally good" condition of the roads, the boun tiful crops sometimes lie unmoved through n period of high prices, simply ecnuse the naturnllv bad condition o the roiuls at certain sensous of the year. forbids the hauling of loads. Farmers tudv and plan, and work, to increase production; they study the law of sup ply and demand; they watch the mar kets that they may be enabled to sell their produce when prices are best; in short, they, many of them, do their part as well, as fur as their own private business is concerned. On the other hand, the railroads and elevators are ever ready to do their part, as far us their privute business of handling the farmers' produce Is concerned. Lnoer these conditions what is to hinder the intelligent farmer from always pushing his produce into market at such time as his best judgment dictates? Simply the weakness of the connecting link the highway the one thing over which the people have full control. There are times when the farm Is practically much farther from the nearest village than the village is from the great mart to which it is tributary, and until the vvfak link is made strong, farming will not be ns generally profitable as it otherwise would be. The Kpitomist. DAIRY SUGGESTIONS. Milk of different tcmperntu res should never be mixed. With cows long in milk the butter will come slowly. , The only way to keep cows is to keep them perfectly clean. The oleo law has been sustained in Yest Virginia by the supreme court of that state. The law requires that oleo be colored pink, and for a violation of it by selling It in the guise of butter n line of $20 and costSjWns imposed. An ap peal affirmed the decision. At ten cents a bushel, jotatoesdo not pav the grower, but they will jmy the dairyman who purchases them nt that nrlee to feed his milch cows. Farmers w ho are hauling potatoes out to the field to be used as fertilizers will find it will jny better to first put them through live stock. Water cools the milk much more rapidly, says a writer, than air will do. and on this account the wurer Betting must be used in the winter as well a the summer. It would be a simple mat ter to set the water to be used out of doors to get cold before putting it in the tank. MUD IS EXPENSIVE. It Entails an Annual Loss Estimated at SKSO.tHMI.OOU. It is ah Inside figure to put tin amount this country annually contrib utes to the inud fiend at $250,000,000, of which amount Iowa pays at least $8, coo 000. A total loss. Mud does not o-iva back anything to anybody. There i. nnthlnir reciprocal about it. It is a loss complete, absolute and irrecover nW even in part. A man loses $1,000 bT hia house being destroyed by fire, hut somebody Is benefited by that loss Tn rebuilding, the sawmill, the sash and door manufacturer, the carpenter, the painter and the plumber nna a mar fnr material and labor. If a bank HUrounts a note which proves worth ia tha money, while a loss to the bank. troes about on Its mission and is not a less without somebody's gain. Mud knows neither friend nor foe. In the natnrnl oTflranlzation of matter mud may have a place, but that place la not In the road.r-Judge Thayer, Clinton,!, FARMERS AND BIRDS. Why tt Feathered Visitors Should II Carefully Protected. The farmer who pretends to "keep up with the times" provides himself with all the modern appliunces which are ndapted to his business. If part of the land is marsh, he will underlay it with the most approved system of drainuge; if it has not been properly cultivate, he buys the best Mibsoil plows in order that thu riches which lie just below the surface may be brought to light. The fertil izers which he thinks best adapted to the crop which he wishes to cultivate are procured and applied with a lavish hand; knowing as he does that this ex penditure will repay him, perhaps, n hundred fold. The enterprising farm er calls to his aid not only all the im proved tools nnd Improvements for cul tivation, irrigation and protection, but nvokes also all the forces of nature, which can in any way assist him. lie ifts the subsoil nnd invites the air to help him pulverize it ;he erects a wind mill and risks the wind to aid in rais ing the water, with which to irrigate; ht, digs ditches, and calls upon the wa ter, which the wind power has lifted, to do its part in nourishing the parched earlh. Thus his vegetables, his gram nnd his grasses, through an intelligent use of nature's forces, spring up nnd flourish for n time; but only to meet new dangers. Jsow the Insects aj- pear upon the scene and the aspect changes. Can it be that the farmer has put him self to all this great expenditure of la bor, tools, material, aud time, only to be thwarted at last? It certainly looks so. But nature, which was responsible for the danger.now provides the remedy nnd thnt remedv is the birds, which come in regular order each spring, al most as regular as the seasons. In the "Bigelow Pnpers"tl'.is reference ismade to the blackbirds in "A New Lnglanti Spring:" "Fust come the blackbirds clatterln in tall trees. 'An' si-ttlin' things In windy congresses Oueer politicians, though, tor I'll be skinnoil. , Kf all on 'tm don't head against the wind." Then the blackbirds are soon .fol lowed by others, and when the proper time comes each family does its full duty, and the insects ure obliged to succumb.. It is stated by comietent au thority that the red-winged blackbirds destroyed in a single locality more than 1C,000,OOI1,00 insects during one reason. The blackbird does not rival I'ntti as a singer, but it does attend strictly to business; and its business (like that of an entomologist) is bugs. But long before this, other birds have been w orking for the farmer, searching all the hidden places, under the bark of trees, alniut old stumps, amidst the moss und dead leaves, and in other places which the farmer never dreams of, for the concealed " larvae" where the embryo insects are thus destroyed by the million. One of the most industri ous of these early workers is the "Brown Creeper," which searches every tree, as if it had a special contract to ..ftiii n. re rtain nunilwr of specimens ft'f "larvae" every week. Thus does thU bird (like may others) "take time by the forelock" nnd destroy millions of in sects before they have n chance to emerge from this first stage of their ex istence. But we must not forget our old friend the robin, of which it is said: rtv anmo name or other. All men who know him, call him brother." The robin is more than a brother to the farmer, for, by his activity in de vouring insects, he sometimes benefits the farmer more than could a real brother. Have the farmers any udequate idea of the value of the services rendered them bvthe birds? The best author ity states that t he birds effect saving to the country each year of not less than $100,000,000. 1 he farmer shouiu be tne Iiird's best friend and stanch defend er, for it is the birds alone which stand between the farmer una tne loss or his crops. "But," argues some pica yune tiller of the soil, "the birds eat my cherries, nnd the crows pun up my corn, and I'm bound to kill 'cm." The Smithsonian Institution long airo Bent out i warning to the farmers of the country regarding the impending extinction of the birds, and the dire r .il results which are sure to follow When the Inst bird yields Its life to the not hunter, or is offered up to sal itfy the demands of that tyrant. Dame i.Vwhion. then, and only then, will some farmers see where they have erred -hut it will be too late. The ruin w ill have been wrought, the damage dom The farmer should Bee to it that the boys ana girls of his neighborhood ate taiurht that the killing of birds, cr robbery of their nests, is a crime; not onlv an inlnry to their neignoors, out an "actual harm to themselves for be yond all question the destruction of the birds will cause the boys and girls of the present day to weep bitter tears of repentance later in life, when they real ize the harm which has been done, and will renn the penalty. Cndei'the old Enarlish low (and ours as well) man's house Is his castle," nnd the man has a riffht to defend hia home even to the extent of killing the man who tries to enter without permission. Will anyone attempt to say that n bird who builds a nest, in which it lays its eggs and rears it young, has no right to pro tection ? It has the right A ownership. enven bv a power higher than the au thoritv which granted the titles to the land on which we live; a title from iU Creator, and yours. "Why should I deprive my neighbor Of his goods against his will? Hands were made for honest labor. Not to plunder nor to steal." He who robs a bird's nest not only wronirs the bird, but he deprives hia neighbor of the protection which na ture has provided, lie wno uoes some thing, bo it ever to little, to protect the hlrds. does something not only for him self and for his ne'gnbor, but for pos terity as well. H. H. WATEfUJ. Opium and Whisky Habits. Tti litrr nuntMl ludow. written March 23, 1896, by the editor and manager of the blietneia, Ala., otunaura, leaves no ruyiu to doubt that a successful treatment for the cure of the liquor habit exists: ri. It M. Wnollfiv. Atlanta. Oa.: Your antidote for the liquor habit will do all you claim lor it. Alter uriiising wiubrv iu more than twenty years 1 lind myself en tirely relieved of the accursed appetite through the use of three bottles of your medicine, it ih bii-.iuici, a ri.i m. iui liquor habit, and leavs no bad effects. 1 "i:. M. It AC LAND." Shinnston. W. Va.. Dr. B. M. Wool- W Atlanta, (in. 1 have been cured, or quit taking the antidote nineteen months, and never hud any call for opium after taking the first dose of your Antidote. You wanted to know if you might use my let ter, les, and my name, also. Any one may write to me if they wish to know of my cure or ask any questions as to the efficacy of the Antidote, and if they en- r-lnan Ht.inin I will answer. ru-n l TfTllT PT KT? The fact that there is so much stuff that shines like cold makes the story of disaster one of the saddest chapters ever written. Kam s Horn. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put to gether, and until the last few years was supposed to he incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by con stantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. 1 lull's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 dropB to a teaspoonful. it acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to euro. Send for circulars and testi monials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., To ledo, O. Sold hy Druggists, (5c. Hall's Family'Pills are the best We have often wondered why one can nev er nnd a thing until lie quits hunting tor it Washington Democrat. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. Uures painlui, swollen, smarting leeianuin stantlv takes the Btina out of corns and bun ions. Greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen s ioot-hase makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Is a certain cure for sweat ing, callous, hot, tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druppints and shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FHKK. Address Allen S. Olmstead, Le Boy, N. Y. Defect in our behavior, coming short of the utmost gracefulness, often escapes our observation. Liocke. McVicker's Theater, Chtengo. The Liliimtians, in their new gorgeous spectacle, "Merry Tramps. ednesday and Saturday matinees and Sunday night till further notice. A woman likes winter, because she can wear a long coat and hide her old dress. Washington Democrat. Fits stopped free and permanently cured. No fits after tirst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Bestorer. Free $"2 trial bottle & treatise. Dr. Kline, 933 Arch st., l'hila.. Pa. Peoolp alwavs want to do things, until thev lind out that they can just as well as not. Washington Democrat. I cannot speak too highly of Tiso's Cure for Consumption. Mrs. frank .Mobim, 10 V . 22d St., New lork, Oct. JM, laa. No person who worried a great deal, ever lived to an extreme old uge. Atchison Globe. Just trv a 10c box of Cascarets candy ca- thartic.finest liver and bowel regulator made. Great people alwayi have small enemies. Barn's Horn. Are you bruised? Use St. Jacobs Oil and you won't be long. Shortest way. The secret of a secret is to know how and when to tell it. Barn's Horn. A sprain may cnpple, but St. Jacobs Oil will cure it before it can. It cures. Some women make up their husbands' minds. Washington Democrat. Use St. Jacob's Oil promptly and freely and say good-by to neuralgia. Hail as large as eggs fell this afternoon; fish eggs. Atchison Globe. When bilious or costive eat a Cascaret, candy cathartic, cure guaranteed. JOc, 25c. A prosperous iniquity is the most unpros- perous thing in tne woria. jcremy xujior. At once use St. Jacobs Oil for sprains. At once it will cure. Athletes know this. Grief is an outcast, and no man grasps his and cordially. Barn's Horn. Use St. Jacobs Oil and say to rheumatism: "Will see you later." Some people who say they are tired arc really shiftless. Atchison Globe. Sudden cold brings soreness and uess. fct. Jacobs Oil brings a cure. stiff- THE MARKETS. New York. April 12. LIVK8TOCK Native Steers $4 25 'it G t Sheep M 'it i jr. Hors 2u M 4 Si I FLOl'i: Minnesota Patents 8 Wi U 4 1ft Minnesota Hakers a W a WIIKAT No. 2 Ited May COHN No. 2 May OATS No. 2 LA K D I'OKK Mess , nUTTKIt Creamery Factory EGGS Western , CHICAGO. CATTLTC Steers , Blockers and Feeders... Cows 71' t'tt 2M2"r 2M.-ff? lit 2V. 4 37V? 17v 9 1 10 11 3 5H 1.1 'it 2i' 8 lit 1.1 ft 15 ffi 4 20 3 6.1 M 4 2 1X M 3 75 Texas Steers. 3 K1 '(ii 4 25 HOGS Lljrht 3 ft 4 ' KotiRh 1'acklng. if 3 Hrt SI1KKP BUTTKU Creamery Dairy EGGS Fresh POTATOES (per lu.) PORK Mess. May.., 4 40 lie 5 W 14 W 1" !l fit 11 K,iO 9 14 fi 24 8 22'4(( 8 ?.1 t.AHD Mav 4 15 'it 4 z-p W 4 ?5 FLOUR 8irlnjr 1 M Wlntr 1 75 lit 4 -I" nn a in Wheat. May ttt WW- Com. May Sav ?3V- r. Mnv ' lfi'Uf IfiWj Rve. No. 2 S2bf 32'4 Barley, Good to Choice... 27 tt 32 MII.WAUKKE. nn aim YVhpnt.No. 2 SnrlriK f fif.ifl) M Corn. No. 8 23 23Vi Oata, No. 2 White lM4i ? Rye, No. 1 83 ffD ?V Harley. No. 2 .81 . 32 POKK Mess 8 IS fff 8 10 Laud oo & 4 10 nrvrrtOTT. QRAIN Wheat, No. 2 Red., f 4 f 9iK Corn, No. 2 Zu W 2.-'4 n.(. Vn t U'hlla SI Ml 21'. Rve.' No. 2 ST. T.Ol'18. CATTLE Native Steers 13 M f? !f !5 Texas 2 65 tt 440 HOOS CO ft "5 SHEEP 8 00 ff "3 OMAHA. CATTLE Steers $3 ?5 01 85 , Cows and Heifers 2 W f 4 10 Rtnckers and Feeders 8 60 T 4 o HOOS 8 W j 8 JO BH1S1SP i w a w S CURE naxout to suffering-humanity la k .v.. . . a-I'm. aim and effoo- ,i tlv nmady for the Ills to whloh fiesh Is heir. That Is why restored mllUons psy wining- homage to All experiment waa pused long-ago. It Is known to t a positive cure tor BRIGHTS DISEASE.', URINARY DISEASES, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, GENERAL DEBILITY, and MALARIA, and all dlseaaes arUIng- from disor. dered Kidneys and Liver. Eur to Uka, lea-re no nnpleuant terte, pro duce no 111 effects. Large ilzed bottles or now ftjle smaller one at your nearest store. Ml The Man who is Raising a Big Crop Itkal farmino- comorehends not onlv i most tons-to-the-acre of hayj the best farming the farming; that pays must " -4 I,. .A.tt,:Mn mn., tUtn ihiet tn ttir a 9 harwct liiriK. ana lust in proportion as a crop is saved successfully, speedily and economically, in just . I . I . . l- .J .( .t:f r,m lrr uiai proporuon may oe uicuuic.i Harvesting Machines are the profit-bringing kind; they are built for long wear, hard worlc, light draft, and in short, to satisfy. Then are other kinds that don't cost as much, but there's nothing cheaper than the best. McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, Chicago, The Light-Running McCormick Open Elevator Harvester, The LiRht-RunninR McCormick New 4 Steel Mower, The LiRht-Kunninir McCormick Vertical Corn Binder and The Light-Running McCormick Dainy Reaper for sale everywhere. REASONS FOR USING Walter Baker & Go.'s Breakfast Cocoa. ANDY 10 i 25 50 ........ n,n vrmOTnw . ABoULU 1 LLI UUAKAB 1 LLU tire, awr Is aad booklet free. id. STERLING RKNEDT nnJcure cohstipatioh "w I iT" i 1 1 1 I i 'Jftl II , L ri. T3ri1i?li4L assygiyii.? -i-v UE1IAVEN0 AGENTS but have told consumer for Iheni the m 7 W rlaceSjtnstyleaof Her ' nam. TopBuaciesaalow as VH. rbalons as low mm too. rwrina ELKHART cakbiac amb mabjiem sirtt. $1,912,000 Buds JCmAcX ixx XOOO toy Kootenai Gold .lines BRITISH OOL.TJBCBIA. If yon are a moneymaker write for maps and proa, peotua. A. W. MoUousald, Ashland Ula., Cbloaso. Vocko Scalo Works, Ili BUFFALO, M.Y. pensions.':; ,,.vir: Tee for Increase (2. Hejaeted claims reopened. All laws free. SI yrs. practice. Barren or bo fe. a. W. siimints s , tt.,!.!!, sea .-, mU PATECJTS Snrt'iin rtoemt tm WITM I ABB. PHILIP T. DODGE, WASaUTOt,s,C $60 Graceful Wavcrley Bicycles are pleas ing: to the eye Their mech anism is perfect What more could be wanted than the famous 96 Waverley greatly improved at such a price? Better than them all Is the 1897 a. WAVERLEY with absolutely true 1 1 II g bearlnes built on a new prlnciole VsjjJ which sells at the fixed price of Send for a Cataogu. Indiana Bicycle Co. Indianapolis, Ind. THlRTSn6RRSSfil realizes that the harvest time is ahead. the erowine of the tallest train the uinuauinpiumwi i NOTICE (kft same wis , ? JyyLA DEL OA Because it is absolutely pure. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in which chemicals are used. Because beans of the finest quality are used. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent a cup. Be aure that you get the genuine article made by WALTER BAKER A CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780. CATHARTIC ALL DRUGGISTS .....u.f Ma.t In at Inn. rnsearstl are IBS larai izs rrip er arlpe.bat raise sy staral rjunlts. Sam-i CO.. Chleaeo. Montreal. Csa. , orKswlork. jn.i direct to the 34 years, at dealers' pro 1 171 JLJ - Moad Wagons etc. Head Rc.tos. Srr Prinawuia, Ump.. tor laris, frM OaUkloeue. mit, mhi pM. a. im u miu hr fM. niiiin. u co w. b. ibatt, twy. blebabt. up. mm fDDOVKSW PISrOTEkTj alrrf. J 1 3 I qnlrk rel let and enre wont . cmm. Komi f or book of teatlmnnt.la ni III d " trattsaens Yr. Pr.. H. iaKS'S soxa, ilau, tie. . m asm M M and WbUkey Habit rnred 1 II 1 1 1 1 I at home wliooutj.nl n. Hook of V 1.1 partlularriitFJ ki:k. Ikf B SlWBIslW OOU.Kf.M.D., Atlanta, Us . 600 SECOND NINO BICYCLES $5 TO $5- Allmakrm. OOOUtSNKW, M at b vkMwd at. Llstsfree. U A.MMdOyclCo.,chiM. Yucatan, it lo perfection. GET RICH Q IIICKLY. Head for "00 fntratloas S4aTMto,t4tB'w7,a.I. A. N. K. A WHEX WRITING TO ADVERT! ft F.USi lease stsiso that F saw the Adeerttaa seat la this spes