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ANOTHER WOMAN CURED , By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Black Duck, Minn.?"About a yea ago I wrote you that^I was^sick an< liiijfiBSilSSL -1 sickness was callec Retroflexion. Wher Iht ^HmIP 1 ^"ould sit down ] lffir ^ as if I could noi ||M| ^ <* WW ?et U,P- I tool BmpM |p:i.!<1 Lydia E. Pinkham'i lim JtC< Vegetable Com ?V pound and did jus' as you told me anc JL\K nowJ am^perfeccl.i Mrs. Anna Anderson, Box 19, Blacl Duck, Minn. Consider This Advice. No woman should submit to a surgi cal operation, which may mean death until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound, made exclusive ly from roots and herbs, a fair trial. This famous medicina for womer has for thirty years proved to be th< most valuable tonic and invigoratoroi the female organism. Women resid i ing in almost every city and town ir the United States bear willing testi mony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound It^cures female ills, and creates radilint: VmnTont. health. Tf VOll are'ill, for your own sake as well' as those you love, give it a trial. Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., Invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice is f recj and always heipfuL FOR SALE Twenty horse power Return Tubulai Boiler and 18 horse pawer Liddell-Tomp fans Engine, together with a Moffitt Heater ill in good condition and can be had at i bargain. Above in operation now on oui Eremises Corner Fifth and College Streets harlotte, N. C., and can be inspected before purchasing. Address SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER UNiON r Charlotte North Caroline ^fHTlioiiipsoii'sEyfcWates WHAT HE CONSIDERED FAIF ivir. uibcn i> v/ucr iviuai n?*w wm.%? ?<Surprise Even to Persuasive Claim Agent Up In Minnesota Mr. Olsen had a cow killed by a railroad train. In due season the claim agent for the railroad called: "We understand, of course, that th? j deceased was a very docile and valuable animal," said the claim agent in his most persuasive claim-agentleman ly manner, "and we sympathize with you and your family in your loss. But, Mr. Olsen, you must remember this: Your cow had no business being upon our tracks. Those tracks are our pri vate property and when she invaded them she became a trespasser. Tech ically 'Specking, you, as her owner, became a trespasser also. But w? have no desire to carry the issue intc court, and possibly give you trouble Now, then, what would you regard as a fair settlement between you and the railroad company?" "Vail," said Mr. Olsen slowly, "Ay baen poor Swede farmer, but Ay shall give you two dollars."?Everybody's. A Logical Landlord. Many a tenant will sympathize witl the man in this story, from the Phila delphia Record. He was renting ? small house which the landlord hai refused to repair. One day the ownei came to see him. "Jones," he said, "I shall have t( \ raise your rent." "What for?" asked Jones, anxiously "Have taxes gone up?" "No." the landlord answered, "but ] see you've painted the house and pu In a new range and bathtub. That, o course, makes it worth more rent." The Difference. 'T don't see any difference betweei jou and a trained nurse except th( uniform," said her sick husband. "And the salary," she added thoughtfully.?Harper's Bazar. We often hear the expression, "a: poor as a church mouse." But even ? church mouse doesn't have to live or the collections. When a man dresses like a sloucl It's a^#retty good sign that he eith'ei Dught to get married or get divorced | When It's "What for Breakfast?" Try Post Toasties Serve with cream or ; milk and every member of the family will say "ripping" good. And don't be surprised if they want a second helping. "The Memory Lingers" Fostum Cereal Company, Ltd., 3 Battl? Creek, Mich. k. \ . Iffip Blessings of j Imperfection | By HENRY F. COPE i Text.?We are saved by hope.?Romans S:24. To every man life is either an iu^ fliction or an inspiration. It all de> pends on how you take it, as a dose or as a spur. It is easy to become so conscious of calamities possible, troubles impending, and difficulties present as to be oppressed with a sense of the universe as warring against you, or you can see it all as a glorious struggle in which it is a joy * ~ U i. l iu uave a. paru [ Life is Dot all a joyous way of k pleasure. No person of .sensibilities j can ignore altogether its pain and need, or ever be free from the sense I; of personal incompleteness, and of un1 realized adjustment to the universe. 7 But this incompleteness, restlessness, 4 and dissatisfaction, may be the cause " of our profoundest joy and largest : hopes. A man is greater than an angel, though he may not be better, and may " be worse. In an important sense imperfection is better and greater than perfection. That which is perfect has found its limits, has reached its fullness. Man sees no limit about him and goes on forever without the sense of completeness. That is the mark of living, that the more you live the larger life stretches before you. But for our imperfections there would be no growth; the future would lie like a blank without the hope of larger things. This it is that makes the new days welcome, no matter what freight of woe they may bring , to us?that they stretch before, they > promise onward steps, new vistas, the 1 chance to be more, feel more, know more. Perfection might mean peace, j" but it would be the peace of death. If ever we are inclined to complain I of the shocks of fortune, the buffets r and smarts of living, we ought to turn . and look on them all with gratitude. , They shake us out of dull content; i they testily to our incompleteness and r call on us to learn life's lessons, to : gain new strength to withstand theic oncoming attacks. The fact that we are vulnerable makes us ultimately victorious. \ Now, it matters not how religious a 5 man may profess to be, how freely he may, handle pious phraseology, if . he spends his breath in complaining | aboift the sorrows of this existence ' and in sighing about another world where he will be free from the pres! ent penalties and pains and will enter into the lite of perfection, the life that has attained and knows no further desire, his religion is a menace 1 to this world and to him as a dweller J here. Our present business is with the ( life that is fuu of prophecy of larger being, that reminds us by our present failures and friction of the greatness of our shortcomings; our business is to take this life of pain and need and use all its provocations, its troubles, difficulties, problems as the curriculum of larger life. We ought to be grateful, as they who take life wisei Iv certainly will be. for all that moves . us on though it may seem to lay us low at the time of the blow. True religion is that which places , the :ight of aspiration before a man's eyes and sets in his heart the vision i of a life which knows no limit. Reli, gion interprets the universe in terms of a reasonable plan of life, with a r hope in life which does not mock us. [ Religion is the spirit that enables one to trust '-he ultimate wisdom of the plan of our present imperfection. The present struggle is the finest i thing that we have. Not that we need - to add to its intensity or increase its i complications. But we ought not to i try to dodge its demands nor ought we to be blind to its splendid promise. For Imperfection is ever the prophecy of ) development, and he who bravely, hopefully struggles on, bears, endures, . aspires, not only finds the way through the clouds to the stars, but in the I struggle finds the high and divine in t himself. f Here faith plays her part, aiding us to cling to our visions of the larger life and greater universe, giving us confidence even in darkest nights that 1 we do not walk in a maze, to come out } where we went in, hearing the mocking laughter of idiot gods. We believe ? better things of our world, and that means taking our world in a nobler way and trusting that love rules 3 through it all. That means finding 1 our way out through imperfections and 1 needs to a wholeness and perfection which we call God, the desire of every soul. ) r The Power of the Kinkdom. ' For the kingdom of God is not in word, but in power," 1 Cor. 4:20. We are always giving a fictitious value to knowledge. In oui ignorance we sometimes imagine that th^ Christian religion owes its power to a certain set of ideas. Wo speak of the golden rule, and the Beatitudes, and the Lord's prayer, and the fatherhood of God, as though these were mighty forces which would account for Christian growth and progress. But when we study history we discover that ideas are comparatively impotent in the great work of changing the character of the human heart. This is the work of the Spirit, which is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth.?Rev. Chas. E. Jefferson, D. D. The Christian's Privilege. The great master hand sends the thoughts of sorrow, of joy, of strength, into our life in varying forms as mighty means under the Spirit's power, to mold and bring us into the Divine image, for "to stand by the side of Jesus Christ and look upon life and its possibilities is to behold a vision of marvellous beauty." It is this ever-deepenir.g vision of life that is the Christian's privilege as he walks by the side of his Master and touches the hand which is molding his life into the highest beauty. Though earth is dark, in Hi3 presence it is always day. ; 1 RH?ias T] :| SUPPER I I Sunday School Lesson for Not. 6, 1810 B ft Specially Arranged for This Paper 9 Lesson Text?Matthew 26:17-30. Memory verses 26-28. Golden Text?"This Is my body which is given for you: this do in remembrance of me."?"Luke 22:19. Time?Thursday evening, April 6, A. D. 30. Place?An upper room In Jerusalem. This lesson is full of dramatic incidents. A harmony is necessary to understand the scenes in full. The first great day of the Passover, which lasted a week began at sunset on the evening anter ttu 14th of April, which by the Jewish reckoning was thp hpe-innine- nf thp 1 nth W the regular Passover supper was eaten. The disciples came to Jesus, some time on Thursday, saying . . . Where wilt thou that we prepare for thee to eat the passover? "A room was needed, with tables surrounded by couches, for the Passover must be eaten reclining, since it was a canon that even the poorest must partake of that supper in a reclining attitude, to indicate rest, safety and liberty." Then there must be obtained unleavened bread, bitter herbs, wine, and a paschal* lamb, which must be slain in the temple between three and five o'clock, ?.nd cooked in a private home. Jesus and his disciples probably left Bethany late Thursday afternoon, walked two or three miles, and reached the upper room soon after sunset. The strife probably began when the disciples were assembling in the upper room, and were about to take their places at the table. Even in this most solemn hour, more solemn than they realized, there arose a contention among the disciples as to who should be the greatest, probably with reference to the places of honor and nearness tn Tesns Trith nntlnok to ward the highest places in the new kingdom which was soon to begin. Also because no oni? was willing to take upon himself the servile duty of washing the travel-stained feet of the company. There was doubtless a mingling of good and evil motives in the disciples. -isitlAt length all were reclining at the tables and the Passover supper was begun. Jesus wisely waited till time had been given for the excitement to be quieted, and the disciples to come to a better frame of mind. Then by a symbolic action he taught them a lesson which has been needed all down the ages. He who had all #ower, who came forth from God, and was going to God, arose from the supper, poured water Into a basin, and washed his disciples' feet, including the feet of Judas, into whose heart the devil had put the plan to betray him. And as they were eating the Passover meal Jesus used the same bread and wine that was upon the Passover table and taught the Passover truths. The rites of the new kingdom of heaven expressed for the spiritual life the deliverance from the slavery of sin, the redemption through blood, the promise of allegiance to the Lord, the hope of the promised land, which was enacted in actual life by the saving nf leroiilifoe frnm fVtft Vinnrliicro nf Egypt. "The Passover brought together the largest number of individuals to claim and consciously recognize their part in God's redeeming grace and power, and because of its sense of all-embracing victory, millennial gladness, universal salvation, was better fitted to become the distinctive and enduring symbol of redemption, and express the mighty hopes of Jesus as he stood on the threshold of his passion, than any of the sacrifices of the altar." Jesus took bread, the thin cake of unleavened bread, and blessed it, "Invoked blessings," "consecrated with solemn prayers." Take, eat, make it a part of yourselves. This is my body, symbolizes my body, does for your bodies just what my spiritual life does for your souls. This is my blood. A type of emblem of his blood, his life, which he laid down as the atonement for sin. Of the new testament, which God was now confirming to men. The new covenant was that God would renew and save all who believed in Jesus. It is I fViQ no-nr nvnmfco nion tho rtn\i- P.nc. pel dispensation, in which God has used his perfect wisdom in seking to save the world from sin. Which is shed for many. Multitudes, not merely a few, are to be saved by Christ. For the remission of sins, including the forgiveness of sin, and the deliverance from the power of sin. Sin is to be put away entirely, so that the heart and life are clean and pure. The Supper is a kind of All Sain*s day. Wo become one, not on!!y with those around us, but with those who have gone before, to join the heavenly host. It is a feast of victory. It was the sun triumphing over darkness. The Lord's Supper is a prophecy of Christ's second coming, of the perfect triumph of his kingdom; for we are to celebrate it till he comes. It contains a hope and a promise. Our last view of Christ in the Gospels is not of death, but of an everliving Saviour, who once was dead, now lives for evermore. It shows that we do not worship a dead Christ, but a living Christ, sitting on the right hand of God, leading the hosts of Christendom. It is the morning star that heralds the new day. It is an invitation to all to come and be saved. It is the church holding up the banner of redemption that all the world may see. We ought to make the Lord's Supper the most helpful and important service of the church. Christ Within You. If you wish your neighbors to see what Jesus Christ is like, let them see what he can make you like. If you wish them to know God's love is ready to save them from their sins, let them see his love save you from your sins. If you wish them to see God's tender care in every blessing and sorrow they have, why let thena see you thanking God for every sorrow and every blessing you have. Er.unple is everything.?Kingsley. ... - ; : NEED MONEY FOR GOOD WORK Fians of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. What "A Million for Tuberculosis ! from Red Cross Souls" will do )n providing some of the 275,000 beds needed at once in the United States for consumptives, is explained in a recent bulletin of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. There is just about one bed for every ten indigent consumptives, and if all tuberculosis persons" tn the country are counted, both rich and poor, hardly one for every 25 or 30. If sufficient hospital accommodations are provided only for those <vho are too poor to pay the full price for their treatment fully 275,000 more beds in special institutions for tuberculosis will be needed at once. The immense outlay necessary to provide and maintain so many beds in Dospitals, makes it imperative, the National Association for the. Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis declares, that such institutions be erected from public money, either municipal, county or state. In order to get appropriations for public hospitals for tuberculosis, agitation is necessary, and in order to create a campaign of agitation, organization iB demanded. But in order that an organisation may carry on an effective cam paign, funds are needed. . These funds It is proposed to secure in as many communities as possible from the sal^ of Red Cross seals. REST AND PEACE Fall Upon Distracted Households When Cuticura Enters. Sleep for skin tortured babies and rest for tired, fretted mothers is found In a hot bath with Cuticura Soap and a gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointment. This treatment, in the majority of cases, affords immediate relief In the most distressing forms of itching, burning, scaly, and crusted humors, eczema, rashes, inflammations, irritations, and chaflngs, of infancy and childhood, permits rest and sleep to both parent and child, and points to a speedy cure, when other remedies fail.' Worn-out and worried parents will find this pure, sweet and economical treatment realizes their highest expectations, and may be applied to the youngest infants as well as children of all ages. The Cuticura Remedies are sold by druggists everywhere. (Send to Pott.er Drug & Chera. Corp., sole proprietors, Boston, Mass., for their free 32-page Cuticura Book on the care and treatment of skin and scalp of infants, children and adults. The Most Noticeable Change. "<?*> vrrn hnvr> 11 vert in KllWine for 25 years? That's a long time for a man to be away from his own country." "Yes, it is. and I'm mighty glad to be home again." "I suppose you notice a great many changes?" "Yes, many." "What, if I may ask, is the greatest change that has come to your notice?" "The greatest change, it seems to me. is to be found in the fact that the vice-president of the United States succeeds In getting his name in the paper nearly as often as he might il he were a baseball player or a prom ising lightweight prizefighter." At the First Try. .. "What do you think of my dough' nuts, George?" "Dear, you are a wonder!" "Do you think so, really, darling?" "I certainly do. Scientists have been trying for .rears to produce artificial rubber, and here you do It the first rattle out of the box." Old Oaken Bucket. Doctor (to typhoid patient)?Do you remember where you drank water? Patient (an actor)?Oh, yes! It was mm 4-tkA rl s\r% r* nM form -tTITOn t T7 uaun. uu tiic uiu *.<** *** years ago.'?Puck. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart?Soothes Eye Pain. Drflggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Adylce Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. So They Say. Stranger?I say, my lad, what is considered a good score on these links? Caddie?Well, sir, most of the gents here tries to do it in as few strokes a3 they can, but it generally takes a few more.?Scottish American. "SF'OHN'S." , This is the name of the greatest of a?l remedies for Distemper, Pink Eye, Heaves, md the like among all ages of horses. Sold by Druggists, Harness Makers, or send to the manufacturers. $.50 and $1.00 a bottle, /.gents wanted. Send for free book. Spolin Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, ]nd. ino nurry. "What are you in such a rush about?" "Promised to meet my wife at three o'clock down at the corner." "Well, there's no hurry. It isn't four o'clock yet." TO DRIVE OUT MAIAKIa AND BUILD UP THE SYSTEM Tako the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC. You know what you are taking. The formula Is plainly printed on every bottlo, showing it Is simply Quinine and Iron In a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out the malaria and tne Iron builds ur> tbo system. Sold by oU uealers lor 30 years. Price 60 cents. Queen's High. "Does Bliggins ever bluff when he plays cards?" "Never until he gets home and ex plains where he has been." For COLDS and ft HIP Hicks' Capudink Is tlie best remedy?relieves the uching and feverishneRB?cures tha Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid?effects immediatiy. 10c., 25c., and 50c. At dru<; stores. There are some rich men who have made their fortunes honestly. Also you may have heard of the needle in the haystack. Constipation causes and aggravate? many serious <li>eases. It. is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. The favorite family laxative. A business tirrn advertises a shirt witfccut buttons. That's no novelty. Many a bachelor has worn them foi re&re, 'Z^EifeHENl &I H AVE u heart that never hardJflL-ftL ens, a temper that nevei then a touch that never hurts. ?Charles Dickens. Nothing lovelier can be found In woman, than to study household good; And good works In her husband to promote. ?Milton. Ways of Serving Vegetables. Potatoes?Boiled, mashed, baked stuffed, stewed, hashed in creaaa, hash brown, franconia (baked with the roast), and as croquettes. Peas?Boiled and seasoned with butter and salt, in cream sauce, -4n niiroo cnnn In ca 1 a rl gnrl In Pfft quettes. String Bean3?Stewed, boiled and served with cream sauce or as soui beans with vinegar and bacon, German fashion. i Squash?Boiled and seasoned with butter, salt and pepper, escalloped. Hubbard Squash?Baked and boiled. Eeets?Boiled and sliced, seasoned with butter, pepper and salt, or served in vinegar, chopped and served in a cream sauce and In salad. Carrots?In stews, and soups, Jn white and brown sauce and in boiled dinner and in hash. * Cabbage?Stewed with vinegar and butter added, cold slaw, sliced and vinegar, sweet cream and sugar, sour cream, cooked in a white sauce and stuffed as a salad. Cucumbers?Sliced with onion and served with a french dressing, in salads, served with sour cream, boiled and served in white sauce, friend and stuffed. Tomatoes?Sliced, in salads, stewed, in soup, stuffed and baked and scalloped. Sweet Peppers?In salads, stuffed with jneats and baked, in croquettes, muffins, roasted and scalloped. During July and August the mushrooms in the fields are apt to be the narrow hemmer and run the napkins through without using any thread. This makes an even and narrow hem that can be turned by hand. Before making over a garment, wash in soapsuds and a little ammonia water and press well on the wrong side, then make up and it will often be hard to tell from new goods. Discoveries at Venice. Some very interesting discoveries have been made in the course of excavation work around the island of Lido, at Venice, where a number of ancient pieces of artillery have been found beneath six feet of mud. The cannon are all in a state of excellent preservation, though it is clear, from their construction, that they must date back to the period almost immediately after the discovery of gunpowder, and it is believed that they c\-ill prove of very great artistic and historic vkIuq. wormy. as me tuuier uiguua luuic they begin again to be safe to eat and are good until the frost kills them. Nothing can be more delicious than a dish of fresh mushrooms served on toast. Peel the caps and saute in a little butter for five minutes, remove the mushrooms and add a tablespoqnful of flour and a cupful o? good cream. Serve hot with the mushrooms added to the last. Large mushrooms are a choice dish when broiled, serve with butter and sfllt. Though thorns may pierce into your feet; For other's sake to walk each day. As If Joy helped you all the wayWhile In your heart may be a grave That makes It hard to be so braveHerein is love. What to Do With Honey. Honey is such a wholesome sweet that It may be used freely with the little people. Here is one to delight the palate of a child: Honey Popcorn Balls.?Heat slowly one cupful of strained honey and boil until it will crack when dropped in water. Pour it at once over a quart of freshly popped corn and shape into balls, greasing the hands a little with butter to prevent sticking. Honey Nougat.?Put three-quarters of a poupd each of granulated sugar and strained honey in a saucepan and boil until a little dropped in cold water becomes brittle. Add the wellbeaten whites of two eggs and threequarters of a pound of blanched almonds cut In strips. Turn into a buttered pan, press down as smooth as possible, cover with a waxed paper and a weight. When cold and firm, cut In squares. Helpful Hints. / Don't fail to have a soap shaker in which to use all small scraps of laundry soap. A few grains of rice put into the salt snaaer win jtccp iu? buil uuui hardening. Clean white paint with a dish of hot water, a cloth and a dish of bran, the bran remove's dirt Fresh fish may be kept for several days by covering with salt and putting in a cold place. A good silence cloth may be made from a discarded bed spread of the old-fashioned weave. When washing lace, rinse it in milk, which gives it the creamy tone and stiffens it at the same time. Wipe hard wood floors with a cloth moistened in kerosene, which will keep them clean with little work. When it is unavoidable (the setting of a dish or sauce pan directly over the fire, grease the dish well on the bottom and any smut that forms can be easily wiped off. An easy way to clean a cereal cooker is to turn it upside down in a dish of boiling water and let it steam until the sticky mass is soft and loosened from the side of the pan. To turn the hem in napkins, put on 1 Was Getting Monotonous. A handsome woman who had been bo unfortunate as to find occasion to divorce not one but several husbands was returning from Nevada. In Chicago she happens to meet her first husband, for whom, by the way, she always has entertained a real affection. "Upon my soul, if it isn't Charlie!." exclaimed the ex-wife, cordially shaking hands with the gentleman whose name she formerly had borne. "I'm awfully glad to see you, Charlie!" Then, after a wistful expression had come to and been banished from her countenance, she added: "Old chap, I've often wondered where you were and what you were doing. It was too bad we didn't get on better together. I hope your experience hasn't been as unpleasant as mine. I'm just sick and tired of marrying strangers!" Fable of Pan of Biscuits. A Vassar girl married a Kansas iarmer. Two weeks later a cyclone made the happy pair a friendly call. It carorted around the premises, ripping up the fences, scattering the haystacks and playing horse with the barn, but when it looked through the open window It drew back in alarm. There lay the bride's first pan of biscuits. "I ain't feelin' very strong this morning," murmured the cyclone. And with another glance at the terrible pan it blew itself away. ' The Family Growler. "Why are you weeping, little boy?" 'T broke de pitcher." "Well, there's no use crying over spilt milk." "G'wan! Dis wuz beer."?Louisville Courier-Journal. For HEADACHE?Hick*' CAPTTDINE Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach . of Vawnna TVtiihtofi. f!n.r?Lidine will relieve votil It's liquid?pleasant to take?acta Immediately. Try it. 10c., 25c., and 50 cents at drug stores. ' I Don't you notice how the man toho always wants to bet, and who says he has a roll In his hand, Invariably rolls away? Mrs. Winalow'a Soothing Syrap for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. We surely owe to men the same duty as we owe to pictures?to try and see them in the best light.?Emerson. TJT idj iiO) I When a woman s j? \ 7 silent secret 8 | - { J trusts yon. Milli il"3 id stowed this mai It'.ii'illSIX ) jr. dence on Or. R, | * ! J? of Bufifalo, N. "! i I ^hero there arc fl bear witness to !152?3r|J*SyjJ jjfc working, coring-p ArtfeiSdlol^' ' ? Pierce's Favorite ' " I fJn ?which saves the ,ChwJ?65)) |%' "nd S*1^^c?ESi I ? apples w>th woi Nfj nesses and stubbor - MS I S'SS |jlj No woman's i ffl* fidence misplac </? the World's E " ?-?r / t> \r d: d Dr. Pierce'* Pleauat Pellets Induce mi That Col wint has i ((f^aHWB a rest.' whei temp temp V v, which can be kept at full or lo Four quarts of oil will giv< without smoke or smell. An indicator always show Filler-cap does not screw on; bt and is attached by a chain and c An automatic-locking wick from being turned high e remove and drop back so that i The burner body or gallery cannot ?n an instant for rewicking. Finished i made, built, (or service, and yet light an Dealers Everywhere# not at y< 2^0 W. L. DOU *3 *3= & *S4 SHO Boys*Shoes,$2.00,$2.50 &$3.00. I W. L Douglas $3.00, $8.BO and are positively tho beet made at ular shoes for the price In Amoi the most economical shoes foi Do you roallze that my shoes have been t SO years, that I make and sell more 8.1. shoos than anv other manufacturer in the LAR FOR DOLLAR, I GUARANTEE MY shape, look and lit better,and wear longer t 8:;.50 or $4.00 shoes you can buy ? Qui made my shoes THE LEADERS OF TH1 Yon will be pleased when you buy inysho< lit and appearance, ai.-l when it comes thn chase another pair, you vrill bo more than the last ones wore so well, &nd gave you sc P&IITIDN ' Xone icenmne without W. L.D v?w B IVIla name nn<1 price stamped on the I 11 your dealer ouino: supply yuit v/ith W. U Doueb W.L, BOSUjy - s4sm RHEUMATISM I vraLt cTory chronic rheumatic to throw away all medicines, all linlmentz. all i plasters, and give MuNYON'S RHEUMAj i>3 TISM REMEDY a trial. No matter what your doctor may eay, no matter what g! your friends may say, no matter now prejudiced yon may be against all aflrertlsed remeales, go at once to ypnr drngciat and get a oottle of the RHEUMATISM REMEDY. If It falls to give satlafactlon.I will refund your money.?Monyoix i Remember this remedy contains no sal- ,g lcyllc acid, no opium cocaine, morphine or -f ctner bnrmfnl drntra. It to put up under- r; x,a the guarantee of the Pure Food and Drug - ? Art. For cale by all druggists. Price, 26c. \ . /jffl ? ' n i; ^ Is the price of HUNTS CURE. Tbl? j|H price will be promptly refunded if ; it does not cure any case of SKIN DISEASE ALL DRUG 8TORE8 . A. B. Richards MeJlcfne Co.. Slierm&n, Tex. ' '.' I GET A SAW MILL I I from Lombard Iron Works, Aujni- I i. A ? ta, Ga. Make money sawing neigh C bor*s timber whan (in engine is idle after the crops, are laid by. I - *1 Vv. N. U? CHARLOTTE, NO. 44?19107 4 nored by Women | priks ol her uffering. she ons have be- Sen : < >; ffl k of confi. , v. Picrcc, . aasa mm if. Every- iglggHV ' women who the wonder- ' ower of Dr. 'SfcsiK/^LMW Prescription ^48^ suffering sex ^ HPf successfully |B nan's weakn ills. 5 WEAK WOnEN STRONQ 2S SICK % WOMEN WELL. '? ! $ ippeal was eve/ misdirected or her oon- / A'g| cd when she wrote for advice, to llSPBNSAHY MBDIGAL ASSOCIATION, Dr. '"2 resident, Buffalo, N. Y. | . M natural bowel movement once a day. Id Room he Rirfe nf the hmise where er blasts strike hardest always a lower temperature than tne of the house. There are times i it is necessary to raise the >erature quickly or to keep the ).'$ yerature up for a long period. ? : can't be done by the regular tod of heating without great >le and overheating the rest of house. The only reliable tod of heating such a room ; by other means is to use a PFECTION ZZ Smokeless ^r\ \btolately smokeless m& odorless w heat for a short or long time. . - Um.n+ 9nln. \ ; ~i II KIVWIUK UMI tvi UU1V UVUtl) I i s the amount of oil in the font. it is put in like a cork in a bottle, annot get lost. flame spreader prevents the nough to smoke, and is easy to t can be cleaned In an instant. : become wedged, and can be unacrewed n japan or nickel, atrong, durable, welld ornamental. Has a cool handle. ours, writ* for dtstriptiot circular I agency of Iht powlri) i f HEN Uncle Sam puis his 0 K on anything MH it stands (or current value and superior Egqfl worth; good as coin ol the realm. It is to BXgfi Snowdrift Hogtess Lard. Every SSB is U. S. Inspected and Passed and Is so labeled. 't buy unless you tee it on the can. SnotVft Hogless Lard is the best shortening vn (or superior results in cooking, and health* ^BS melits upon loods and digestion. Made by wRB P CAIITHFRN fATTAlV ATT. ffl. Hi GLAS^Sr icc for_men jig ' fcn W & WONIbN ffipfUw 3est in the World, Og $4.00[shoe* M&J %??*?=. Wft id moat sou' I;# O flea, ana are you to buy. )2i^ he standard for over JT OO, 83.50 and 84.00 1 U.S., and that DOL- tv-i^ i SHOES to hold their tf&wjfaM?'/ fV han any other 83.00, .JR /f *litv counts. It has 9|sV^ m/ |y ffiO| J WORLD. 3^_ J Wffla bs because of the ' & '-.'<@w XSKa e for you to piir- ic/i x? rrwL pleased l>ecause Mi^dpV~*jO/lOA Dnuclat > miiflh comfort. F V y 67m,,. Co. jotrom. TAKE MS SUBSTITUTE ^Slio?kwilts for KrJ\ U:ilei' Oattuoir 1.9, 11^ ?'?c^Ll t?}g:' t, Juruckton* Mom.