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r * Truth and Quality ippcal to the "Well-Informed in every ; vfalk of life and are essential to permanent ! luocess and creditable standing. Accor kigly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of ' known value, but one of many reasons i - why it is the best of personal and family j laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, ; l wee tens anil relieves the internal organs j on which it acts without any debilitating ; liter effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and ; truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by 1 physicians, as it is free from all objection- ! able substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine? | manufactured by the California Fig Syrup | Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug- , gists. I lOO LOTS IF*"FLEE. J Opening sale of our (vean Heights. N. J.. I % water front lots, right across [pern AtlantlcCItv; will positively be one of the leading summer resorts Inside of two years; v.-e only require $5, which pays for acknowledging the deed; upon l receipt of $5 cash or money order we will immediately send you a full warranted deed; positively no more than one lot to each person. KLINE REALTY fi IMPROVEMENT CO., \ ' 132 Nassau Street, 9 New York City. An orange tree ha* been known to pro* j duee 15,000 fruit at one crop. BABY CRIED AND SCRATCHED All the Tim??Was Covered with Torturing Eczema?Doctor Said Sores Would Last for Years?Perfect Cure by Cuticura. "My baby niece was suffering from that terrible torture, eczema. ]t was all over her body, but the worst was on her face I . and hands. She cried and scratched all the j time and could not 6leep night or day from ! the scratching. J had lier nnaer me aoc- i tor's care for a year and a half and he | seemed to do her no pood. I took her to j the best doctor in the city and he said that | she would have t!.e sores until she was six j \ years old. Bxit if I had depended on the , doctor my baby would have lost her mind ( and died from the want of aid. But 1 used j Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and j she was cured in three months. Alice L. j Do well, 47t>9 Easton Ave., St. Louis, Mov j May 2 and 20. 1907." Lamps cause 500 firfs in a year in Lon- i don; gas, 219; chimneys, 179. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'a : Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists, j Japan exports large quantities of mush- i rooms. Why not the Natural laxative, Garfield j Tea? It's Pure, Mild and Poten*. Made j of Herbs. Write for samples. Garlield ! Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. The United States Government and j that of Canada are resurveying the boundary lines between the latter country and ours as far east as Vermnnt Many of the marks had dis- I appeared. Only One "Rromo Quinine" That is Laxative Bromo (Quinine. Look for the signature of E. \V. Grove. Used the k VVorld over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. Graceful Walkers. Parisians pay more attention to walking than we do. The gait of our women always distressed the French i visitor to our capital, and we must fain acknowledge that the average J English woman does not walk with ' grace.?Lady's Pictorial. POLICE JUDGE WILLS Will Gladly Answer the Questions of Any Inquirer. It is a generous offer that Police { Judge J. H. Wills, of Cloverport, Ky., t makes to sufferers from backache, kidney and bladder ills. Judge Wills knows the value of Doan's Kidney Pills and will answer the questions j of any sufferer who I writes to him. The j Judge says:' "I take j pleasure in recommending Doan's ' Kidney Pills to persons suffering from j kidney disorders, backache, etc. It is ' the best remedy I have ever known j and I will gladly answer any questions about it." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. 1 Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Sphinx and the Infinite. * ??? - ? ?v>ArtfArm 1 rvAfl I I UclU lillclgiue 111C 111U91 uct^j UUUV.U r atheist looking at the Sphinc and, in v a flash, not merely believing, but feeling that he had before him proof of the life of the soul beyond the grave, of the life of the soul of Khufu beyond the tomb of his pyramid. Always as you return to the Sphinx you wonder at it more, you adore more strangely its repose, you steep yourself more intimately in the aloof peace that seems to emanate from it as light emanates from the sun. And as you look on it at last v perhaps you understand the infinite; you understand where is the bourne to which the finite flows with all its greatness, as the great Nile flows be3*ond the Victoria Nyanza to the sea. ?From Robert Hichens* "The Spell of Egypt," in the Century. Costs More Than One. * It is infinitely more exponsivc to be a bachelor than a married man nowadays. Bachelors eat in restaurants, dress well and spend a great deal in flowers and bonbons. But the worst penalty of bachelordom is that, while a married man can vent his spleen on wife and children, the unfortunate liver in "single blessed* ness" is ecpected to be always gay, smiling and witty.?Munich Nach- { richten. Dog Owner's Luck. Thursday morning the local passinger train ran over Harry BarthloV?n 11 r?r? or onH L-illorl if" Lucky for Harry that it was his dog instead of himself.?Echo Register. If One, Then the Other. "Is that young woman an authoress?" ^ "No," answered the man who disr likes affected forms of speech; "she is a newspaper reporteress.?Wasningtoo Star. Rare Archaec ENTRANCE TO THE TOMB OF QUEI COFFIN AND RICH TREASURES T A NEW AUTOMOBILE BOAT. T>v TAPOrKQ ROVER. A French Inventor, J. Ravailller, has devised a self-propelling vehicle which can navigate the water like an ordinary motor boat and al30 travel overland like an automobile. The official tests of the boat, recently made in the presence of M. Barthou, the Minister of Public Works, and other distinguished persons, were crowned with complete success. To tourists who make use of this amphibious vehicle canals, rivers and lakes will present no serious difficulties, as they can be crossed with ease and comfort wherever moderately gentle and smooth slopes, natural or THE AUTOMOBILE BOAT artificial, can be found for entering and leaving the water. The hull of the boat, which is made of steel plates riveted to steel ribs of T-shaped section, is mounted 11 by means of springs on axles and j i wheels of pressed steel. The axles :; pass through water-tight tubes which | i traverse the hull. This part of the j < construction, which is very cleverly j i designed, is the invention of M. Gus- j 1 tave Pitre, the naval architect of the j i Maisons Laffitte. j i The motor (constructed by Gon-j i tallier, of Vincennes) is placed near 11 the bow. It drives, by means of a ' < U LL 1^0 A T I clutch of the disk type, two distinct i systems of mechanism: 1. A variablo speed shaft transmits the power j < f/*? thck rrtQ r r*r rlrivincr hv ! 1 means of chains and pinions, the ar- !i bors of which pass through stuffing j boxes. Three forward speeds ami '! one backward speed are provided. Ji Coupling, retarding and speed- j < changing levers, a differential brake ] I worked by a pedal, and a brake lever ' < acting on the rear wheels complete j 1 the mechanism of propulsion on land. ! < Steering is effected, as in an ordinary i automobile, by a wheel conuected j with the front axle, the shaft of the wheel passing through a stuffing box. ! 2. The variable speed driving shaft, 1 prolonged backward beyond the rear 1 axle, may be connected, by means of < diagram showing mechanise Self Oiler For Saws. A device designed to save much time to the carpenter and cabinetmaker is the automatic self oiler for saws shown in the illustration below. i1 f!i'' M i ijfl i i a ^'' i >!ogical Find. j CN Til, OF EGYPT, IN WHICH HER VERE RECENTLY DISCOVERED. ?Graphic. a clutch, with a screw propeller at the stern of the boat, the connection being made by moving a lever placed at the left hand of the driver of the vehicle. Tho rudder and the front axle are turned by the same steering wheel. Tho capstan, which is seen al the bow of the boat, is turned by a tangent screw which is driven by the motor, by means of a wheel and belt and connected and disconnected by a loose wheel, or idler. The driving wheels, the propeller, and tho capstan can be operated separately or simultaneously. The speed of the vehiclo, as determined by numerous trials, is thirtyfive kilometers (twenty-one and three-quarter miles) per hour on TRAVELING ON LAND. land, and nine kilometers (5.6 miles) per hour in the water. The boat enters and leaves the water without any preparation or j change, except in mechanical connec- ! Lions. When afloat its stability is ! perfect, as is shown by one of the ] illustrations. It leaves the water and J climbs the bank under the impulsion : of its driving wheels if the ground I is reasonably firm and the grade less i lhan fifteen per cent. If the bank \ is steeper or softer, a rope is fastened j Lo a stake driven into the ground, I md the boat is hauled up by the j capstan. NAVIGATING THE SEINE. The equipment of the boat is com* J pleted by a pump for bailing, an an- I ;hor, a buoy and a pair of oars and ; movable rowlocks for use in case of iccident to ihe motor while afloat. I The Ravaillier automobile boat ' seems destined to render valuable j services to tourists. The best proof j jf the practical value of this inven- I lion is the fact that it has been pur- I ihased, together with all its patents, , jv an American.?Scientific Ameri- 1 :an. The National Druggist scoffs at j Dr. Wiley's proposed investigation of f soda fountain drinks. It does not believe as he does that any of the beverages contain chloral hydrate, i opium or cocaine. J sfji j 1 OF THE AUTOMOBILE BOAT. - ^ The inventor claims it can be so j done by the- use of the self oiler, which consists of an oil cup clamping j m the blade. This cap has a bifur- j ;ated discharge nozzle, the oil dis- I charging through the bifurcations , anto the saw. The carpenter is thus j ible to continue sawing without be- j iTJir /'rtni nol 1.1/1 tn ctmi ovi>rv fr>\v Riin- i utes to remove the saw from the ivood and apply the oil. Naturally, I ivhen the saw is not in use, it is j placed in an inverted position against I he wall or other object, it being then 1 mpossible for the oil to discharge. ?Washington Sar. Obeying Instructions. A Denver woman, going from home or the day, locked everything up | veil, and for the grocer's benefit, | vrote on a card: "All out. Don't j cave anything." This she stuck on . he front door. Ou her return home ! ;he found the house ransacked and J 11 1 u,.i .? ??^ Tr? I ill Ilfl" L'UUli;CSL jfUadtT?dIUUd gl/uc. ^ vy ho card on the door wa3 added: Thanks; we haven't left much."? Causas City Star. THE PVLP17. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. N. M'GEE WATERS. Subject: Joy in Work. Brooklyn, N. Y.?In nis series of sermons on "The Choica of a Profession," the Rev. Dr. N. McGee Waters, pastor of the Tompkins Avenue Congregational Church, Sunday preached on "How a Young Man Mav Find .Tnv in His Work." He said in the course of his sermon: The story of labor is a checkered one. It is only in our highest civilization that work is coming to its own. In his savage state man is the lazy animal. Indeed, it is not natural for any animal to work, save as it is driven to it by the whip of necessity. This is the view of work we find exibodied in the old Genesis Btory, where labor is set down as a punishment for Adam's sin, where he is told, as he is driven from the Garden, "Thou shalt eat thy bread by the sweat of thy brow." This is not only a very uninspired part of the Bible; but this sentiment certifies that it is a very old part. y How labor was despised received its most signal illustration from the life of Christ. You remember how over the multitudes who heard Him, He cast a spell. All the people said that no man spake as He spake. The loftiest spirits pressed about Him and asked Him if He were the Messiah. Yet they scarcely could believe for joy. And what was the basis of their doubt? Their skepticism was all in that question of theirs, "Is not this the carpenter's son?" How could a workman be the real Saviour? They marveled at His wisdom. They confessed that He spoke with authority. They followed Him as sheep follow a shepherd. But He was a carpenter, and so the high and mighty set Him down for a fraud Tt. war he> cause their eyes were holden that they mistook the dignity of toil for a disgrace. In some parts of the world that is still true. But increasingly the world Is coming to honor the toiler, whether he works in a profession or a trade, and is correspondingly coming to despise the idler, whether he be rich or poor. How much the United States has done with its democracy to bring this about, and with its great men, almost all of them coming from the cabin and the plow, we may never know. Certain it is that New England was the first country since the land of the ancient Jews in which it was counted respectable to earn one's living. Little do we think, or have taken time to find out, how much our work contributes to our happiness. Work is a great character builder. I suppose most of us work in order to eat. I suppose if we were generally asked, we would say that the first requirement we made of our labor was that it should clothe us, and feed us, and house us. That is the first requirement and the lowest. The second and greatest requirement a man makes of hi3 work, whethpr he knows it or not, is that It shall make a man of him. Your work must bring you bread, but no less it must bring you culture. Somehow or other we are always pitying the boy who is born poor, or the young man who fails at college. It is a hardship and sometimes a pity. There is one man, however, more unfortunate than that young man, and that is the young fellow who is born In a silken nest and goes through college in an automobile. There is nothing wroDg about a silken nest, and there is nothing bad about an automobile, except its trail. But you cannot raise an eagle in eiderdown, and it requires far more of a man to amount to anything in college who goes through it in an automobile Instead of walking. We are so made that we must have struggle. The reason why rich men's sons rarely amount to anything, is because they never develop their muscles. There is no teacher like work. It must bring him bread, but .no less it must bring him culture. "The Man With the Hoe"?he needs not so much pity. Moses was a herdsman; David was a shepherd; Jesus was a carpenter; Benjamin Franklin knew no college ?he was a printer's devil; Robert Burns knew no leisure?he was a plowman; Abraham Lincoln wore no Boft raiment; but these are our stars of the first magnitude. Even colleges can give culture only through work, and there are some things colleges cannot teach. Literature and history and the liberal arts are at last the ornaments of life; even read Ing and writing and the rule of three are all named the "conveniencea of life." But these an fundamentals?industry, thrift, courage, honesty, truth, faith, hope. love. These arc the threads which, woven together, make the eternal life of man. If you have forgotten these, "though you have gained the whole world, you have lost your own soul," and these may be had for the receiving in every work and calling open to men. When you stand before a task, look for a teacher. If it offor thee not wisdom, despise its wage. If thy calling yield thee not culture for mind and heart, it is but a coffin for thy better nature. Demand of your life work that it shall make a man out of you. "Work is a great influence giver. And here we come upon another blunder. It is not the kind of work you do that give3 you influence so much. That is what the world thinks. It is the way you do it. Quality counts for more than kind. It is true, of course, that there are some vocations that in themselves damn the worker. All labor that makes merchandise out of men's vices is of that sort. It is true also that certain kinds of work give more consideration than others. The minister, because he is a minister, occupies a larger place in the community than the day laborer. That is, he does if he ministers. His great calling will not serve in itself. Mary a laborer in many a village has been more the voice of God to that village than the parson has been. For, after all, the thing that counts in influence is not money or possessions. It is a quality, a thing, an atmosphere. It is personality. So the fineness of a man's work, or the coarseness of it. is the thing by which he is at last judged in the community. mu i*l^ 1UUIC IS .1 IIU1C lUllll UUL in 1T..Uncsota called Rochester. A few years ago when I was there it only had a few hundred people in it. It was a nice little, commonplace, prairie town. It is not the capital of the State; it ic not the seat of the university; the penitentiary is not even there; nor have they a church with relic working miraclcs. It is not the home of a United States Senator, nor any politician. And yet it is the Mecca of a pilgrim host. From every State in the Union, from across the cea, from every capital and country of civilization men are journeying to Rochester, Minnesota. . And those-who are going are the scholars, the authorities, the masters in surgery. What take3 them there? Simply this: An old doctor by the name of Mayo has been practising in that little town for a generation. His two j sons, now in early maturity, practise j with their father. The fact is that J they have been doing such marvelous things with the knife, and such fine work as surgeons, that the great mastorn from Paris, Berlin and Vienna, as well as this country, are singing their praise, and go out to that little town to sit at the feet of these men, and pay homage to the superiority of their work. It is always so. If you are remembered at all it is by the things you have done well?whether you have raised a field of corn, sewed a patch on an old garment, made a pumpkin pie, or written a poem. Work is the great happiness bringer. You all know what a game of nine pins Is. You set up so many pins, and you roll two balls, and you make a "strike" or a "spare," or el'# you don't. The game is to knock over as many pJns as possible. Men become very skillful in it and gain a great deal of pleasure by doing it. That is the philosophy of all play. It is the erection of artificial difficulties or barriers and learning to overcome them with ease and skill. That makes the exhilaration of tennis, and baseball, and bowling and golf. I am told, and I do not know any thing about it myself, that therein lies the mania for mating money. That is a great game. Now, in reality, work is just exactly the same thing. The difficulties to be overcome are not artificial, to be sure, but very real. But they are there, and work is the game of bridging them over with skill and ease and joy. In its final analysis, for a healthy man there is no game in the world so exciting and so exhilarating as his work. I suppose you longsuffering folk who sit in the pews and are more or less at times tempted to somnolence, have never realized that there was anything exciting about the preaching business. And yet I want to say to you that I know of no keener joy than when well and ready I taks a theme and look ft through and analyze it, and illustrate it,, and mark out the points to be made in its illumination, and then sit down to write a sermon. Your fingers will not fly fast enough. If it turns out well there is a great exhilaration and state of happiness and joy. Making a sermon is a great game. Now the reason that there is so much happiness in work is because of this fact. All true work is a man expressing himself. We have generally thought that work is drudgery. We want to think about work as expressing a man's message. Stephenson's engine is Stephenson's thought dressed up in steel; Tennyson's poem is Tennyson's thought set down in letters; Watts' "Hope" is Watts' heart hunger put on canvas; St. Paul's is Sir Christopher Wren's praise to God put into stone. Why, then, shall not the house builder make his house declare his thoughts? Why shall not the blacksmith make his hammer and anvil express his hope? Why shall not the farmer pub-? lish his secret? Almost any man can learn the technical part of any work from carpentry to poetry?but no man hath mastered a trade till it becomes a language through which he can express himself to all men. O, the drudgery of life lies in the fact that we bend above our work like dumb driven cattle with never a secret of our heart told in our work. And this shall be the joy of our life, that we make our vocation proclaim to all the world the truth that God hath put into our hearts! Blessed Are the Pure in Heart. A beautiful lady went to a photographer to sit for her picture. After the sitting, the man retired to examine the plate. He was greatly puzzled, upon developing the picture in the chemical bath, by the appearance of a number of dark spots on the face, although not the least trace of blemish could be detected on the face of the lady. The next day the explanation came. The spots then became distinctly visible. The lady had contracted small pox, and soon died. The faint yellow spots, before they could be detected by the naked eye, were faithfully portrayed by the searching aid pure rays of the sun. So the first harborings of impure thoughts will mar the loveliest soul, and, if not resolutely warred upon with all spiritual weapons these unholy imaginings will drag their victim down to ruin. No other treasure In this world is so rich as the consciousness of purity, and in order to retain it one must avoid not only the acts, but also the impure thoughts which would destroy it. It is not enough to have a fair exterior; the heart must be pure. It is in the heart that God would live. Tho heart, too, is the centre of the life. God helps us to keep our hearts pure that our lives may be pure!?G. B. F. Hallock, D. D. The Narrow Way. Matt. 7:13, 14. Narrowness is Christ's idea of the way of life, a straitened way, the way of truth. For a moment pause and ask: Could it be otherwise? It is 11 o'clock, the orthodox regulator at the watchmaker's points with exactness to that hour. "Very narrow," exclaim all the cheap timepieces of the neighborhood, and they persistently point tn all hours from 9.30 to midday, but the*** boasted liberality is only inexactn&ss, which is another word for untrath. So orthodoxy in the harbor channel marks with exactness each rock of sunken hulk, and puts its danger signals out. A liberal pilot might be careless of these signals, but the passenger would prefer that the pilot should be overcautious rather than too liberal.?H. E. Partridge, Pomona, Tenn. A Prayer. Grant, we beseech Thee, 0 Lord, the Giver and Guide of all reason, that we may always be mindful of the , nature, of the dignity, and of the privileges Thou hast honored us with, i Grant us Thy favorable assistanca in ? the forming and directing our judgment, and enlighten us with Thy truth, that we may discern those things which are really good, and, i Having discovered tnein, may iuve and cleave steadfastly to the same. ' And, finally, disperse, we pray Thee, those mists which darken the eyes of our mind, so that we may have a per-< feet understanding, and know both God and man, and what to each is due. ? Simplicius (translated by George Stanhope, Dean of Canterbury, 1704). Commit Yourself to God. I VjI'IUJL 1U1 tilings jmoi mac canuut be remedied and care for things to come that cannot be prevented may easily hurt, but can never benefit me. I will, therefore, commit myself to God in both and enjoy the present.? Joseph Hall. PERUNA EDITOI Dr. Hartman is now offering Peruna to th Ileal product. It is just as ethical as any ci profession. No straining of medical ethics < PRINCIPAL ACTIVE INGREDIENTS are label on the bottle, that the people may know have a true justification. The only departure we shall make from Peruna affairs in the future, is the fact that y sell our product TO THE PEOPLE. If we would agree to sell to doctors on] then the medical fraternity would be oblige entirely within their approval. btjt we shall not do this. We shall continue to offer Peruna to tt eonvey to the people our claims for Peruna a* continue to supply the people with free litei our medicine, teaching them how to avoid die of benefit to the home. We shall continue profession like it or not. We are proposing from this time on to ta Notwithstanding that some imitators and si put np something which they consider just aa draw aside the veil of secrecy and allow any OF WHAT PEBUNA IS COMPOSED. This ought to disarm all honest criticism icism will continue. On some pretext or otl SUCCC People Who Object to gf^ Liquid Medicines Can peb Now Secure Peruna J*. Tablets. } year in foreign lands until the people of all the w able household remedy. WE CLAIM PERUNA TO BE A CATAB try it. If it helps you, be honest and acknov If you want us to we will publish yourst to us. We will add no words, take away no i publish your portrait in connection with it written request, without your entire consent. Peruna has cured thousands of people of and locations. At least, that is what the peo testimonials. Peruna will cure many thou glanders to the contrary. WE GUARANTEE EVERY BOTTLE 0 INGREDIENTS PRINTED ON THE LABEj We guarantee that every testimonial w exact language of the testifier. We guarantee that every photograph pr person whose name it bears, that every word ized by the hand that signed it We are determined to beat our opponei by dealing squarer than they dare to. We a with truth, aupnciry witn canaor, insincerity , We know that the users of Peruna will a that the dealers in Peruna will applaud our ponents will be obliged to acknowledge fin honest and useful remedy, but one of the 0] CDTES ON THE CONTINENT, NO MORE MUSTARD PLAS THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTEFU CCapsicum-Vasdii EXTRACT OF THE CA\ i PEPPER PLANT TA) | DIRECTLY IN VASELU LLa DON'T WAIT TIH COMES-KEEP A T1 A QUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READ> ?IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURE ' ^ DEALfiRS, OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF A substitute for and superior to mustard or blister the jnost delicate skin. The pain-allay -w/inH?rfnl It will StOD the tOOthj ache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the irritant known also as an external remedy fo and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty com we claim for it, and it will be found to be'inv; children. Once used no family will be with the best of all your preparations." Accept m the same carries our label, as otherwise it is r Send your address and we will mall our our preparations which wl nstatest. CHESEBROUGH I cCriS the" FAM MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREf W. L Douglaa makes and aella mort W? men'a $2.SO, $3.00and$3.BOahoet than any other manufacturer In tht Bg? world, because they hold theh ahape. tit better, wear longer, am rcrco are of greater value than any othei ahoea fn the world to-day, W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Eqi aa- CAUTIOIV. W. L. DoofjLas name and price 18 utai Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere. Shoes mailed f: A-.-i? uMman. * w. truicu ucc w CHICKENS EARN MOI Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, get the best results. The way to do this is to j We offer a book telling ell ject?a book written by a 25 years in raising Poultry. [ Mr had to experiment and spend j|4 way toconduct the business? SB CENTS in postage stamps, and Cure Disease, how to Market, which Fowls to Save iadeed about everything you must know on the ? POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN f. Book Publishing House j 134 Li /AN IMITATION TA a~ ? " ?TMI= OF $ I i Lr\n u b X There was never an Imitation n $ tators always counterfeit th'j genuin what you ask for, because genuine artl< w Imitations are not advertised, but depe & ability of the dealer to sell you someth $ good" when you ask for tho genuine, b <K on the imitation. Why accept lmltatlor $ ulne by Insisting? I REFUSE IMITATIC The average depth of the English Chan- f nel is about 110 feet. V |? FITS, St. Vitus' Dancc, Nervous Diseases per- " nanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve juj"|jv" Restorer. $'2 trial bottie and treatise free. Dr.II.II. Kline, Ld.,031 Arch St.J'hila.J'a. gr a|11 There arc 20,000 different kinds of but- wiih * :er flies. eye* es QnSy One "Bromo Qi TSiat is L&xatSwe Bron USED THE WORLD OVER TO CURE Always remember the full name. Look for this signature on ev?7' box. 26c. . rialTNO. I. .e public as a regular pharmaceu)mpound put up for the medical ian find any fault with it. THE prominently incorporated in the ' that the claims made for Perana medical ethics in the conduct of re shall continue to advertise and ly, to advertise for doctors only, id to recognize Peruna as being ie people. We shall continue to i a household remedy. We shall attire, teaching them how to use ;ease, teaching them many things to do this, whether the medical ke the public into our confidence, lbstitutors will be attempting to i good as Peruna, we are going to one who chooses to know exactly , We expect, however, that critter those who are envious of the S8 of Peruna will continue to find ; But we are determined to give people no just complaint UNA IS A GEEAT MEDICHfE. has become a household word in ons of homes. Our faith in the sdy is stronger than ever. Every T?Ttt ortiwf t/% oofahliafi HAW nlantj FT W ?A|fvW VV vuvwwmwm MWf* ^ orld are supplied with this valuItH REMEDY. Bay a bottle and ' r ^ pledge-that it has helped you. atement exactly as yoa furnish it ivords. If you wish us to we will We will not do this without your ' chronic catarrh, in many phases pie say to us, through unsolicited sand more, in spite of fabricated V ...V F PEBTJNA TO CONTAIN THE r, LI. re use is absolutely true-in the iblished is the photograph of the of every testimonial was author^ its by being fairer than they are, re determined to meet falsehood j with sincerity. ppreciate our stand. We believe course. We expect even our opally that Peruna is not only an EtEATEST HOUSEHOLD MEDI, ? Vr"yfi TERS TO BUSTER ML COUNTE^RRITANT^ 1 | VL f~ I J 'ENNE I S KEN 'I | | SLJI Mfcjlj i ,the pain 1 jbe handy ' CURE FOR PAIN.?PRICE 15c. TIN-AT ALL DRUGGISTS ANF" 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS, any other plaster and will not ing and curative qualities of the iche at once, and relieve Headbest and safest external counterr pains in the chest and stomach plaints. A trial will prove what aluable in the household and for out it. Many people say " it is d preparation of vaseline unless iot genuine. Vaaellne Booklet describing II Intareat you. MFG. CO. New York City ' ?a jailed At Any raped on bottom. Xi?kc Jin Substitute, rom factory to any part of the world. Ilia* L. DOUGLAS, Bruektou, Hail. JPY| ^ You Know How to lLi I Handle Them Properly , you want to do it intelligently and >rofit by the experience of others, vou need to know on the sub 3 man who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Dctect Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and subject to make a success. SENT STAMPS. lonard St., N. Y. City. KES FOR ITS% !AL ARTICLE * iade of an Imitation. Iml- $ e article. The genuine Is * :les are the advertised ones, tij nd for their business on the ? ilng claimed to be "just as qi ecause he makes more profit is when you can get the gen- fli ihto get what you $ ask for! g rn THAT'S PURE?s^ all All our ?oc<l ih tested HSVm I fll and warranted to be ikV reliable. Write for ?? r Catalogue. It's FKEE. Gregory S Son. Mmslcheao, Miss. ^Thompson's Eyewater i m m m tin me'' r$? Quinine A COLD IM ONE DAY.