University of South Carolina Libraries
V I VoiVyv\\vo\ CowsXvpaXvo^ flay be^ema\\3\Cay cvcxcomo by \ito\>ct vcxsoxvaV c$ox\s xvtvVtae assxsfoHveeej We. oaeVcuVy bcut$\c\a\ Xa^aVvvt temeAv.S^xup c]Tv^s&tV\xvr $ Scwva.Y(^\c\x crvabtes OT.e\c$r.xwxe$i\cx ?a\)\\s doixVy so\\iuX a?\L\aH\ce\o xvabitc, way be ?xa&\ici\\y Wspcv.jcd wxVtx. uX" ^ivo Voxv^ct Tiwled. as Wi bes\ cj r saxes Wlxeu xcavixxeii axe \? ass\s\ V- V \ . .* ntUUTO.(MVUTCA \0 SW^)VCA\\ \l\C WOtorcA ^utvcUowsdc^a^. w\\v? uva\i.\y u^ow. \iTopcr vvcwnsW.swY, prefer cftotls.atv) Vwtfc ^?d% To $dih buvc$\c\<d cJJ-' < ' i?w\sWy Vhe ^t\uuw?r calTforn'i a FlC fYRUP Co. SO'.O RV/M.L LEADING DRUGGISTS OR*-sue rrr' ? rtH ('PILE SO? PER BOTTLE When You're Hoarse Use PluR^ S m UST mvm YW (p\iwsa?$u>s li Gives immediate relief. The first H jlj dose relieves your aching throat and I H! allays the irritation. Guaranteed to 1 jl| contain no opiates. Very palatable. K ft All Druggists. 25c. I "Neck's Broken, Doc; Can't You Dress It?" Claiming to be the only living man in the world with a broken neck, Teddy Williams Peters, forty years old, walked into the Memorial Hospital at Richmond Oct. 3rd, and made oft-hand request that physicians set, dress it and start him on his way again to New York. I)r. Cunningham looked him over, without making any critical examination, Peters meanwhile explaining that his neck was broken when the Quebec Bridge over the St. I^awreuce River fell on August 1, 1907, killing '250 people. He was removed to New York for treatment in St. Luke's Hospital, and has been traveling from place to place in the hope of regaining his health and strength. Wrapped fast around the man's neck is a thick silver hand, which is kept in place bv a leather collar t three inches wide. From the top of his head three hands of steel reach down below his shoulders and connect with a steel belt around his waist. The only hope of saving his life, he explained, was in keeping the 6tcel harness intact, for if it is once removed he will choke to death. According to the statement he made to Dr. Cunningham, Peters lias been spending some months in Hot Springs, Ark., and finds it necessary to break the journey at various places in order to have his neck dressed. He stopped at Farmville on Saturday, when he saw Dr. Anderson. The first thought that hopped into the mind of the hospital doctors and reporters was that Peters was connected with some show at the Fair Grounds, though he rather resented that suggestion, declaring that he had refused $.'5,000 a year offered by Barnum and Bailey because of the possi Die effect lie said it might liave on his suit for $100,000 damages against the Pheonix Bridge Company While Dr. Cunningham administered slight treatment, he did not undertake to any whether Peters had a broken neck or dislocated vertebrae. Wit and Wisdom. The world is perfectly beautiful, for it is a work of God. We bang little thieves and take our hats off to big ones.?German. The study of vain tilings is laborious idleness.?German. So. 43-'09. A BANK KIPS NKItVK Broken by Coffee and Restored by Post u ni. A banker needs perfect control of the nerves and a clear, quick, accurate brain. A prominent banker of Chattanooga tells how he keeps himself In condition: "Up to 17 years of age I was not allowed to drink coffee, but as soon as I got out into the world 1 began to use It and grew very fond of it. For some years 1 noticed no bad effects from its use, but in time it began to allect me unfavorably. My hands trembled, the muscles of my fare twitched. my mental processes seemed slow, and in other ways my system got out of order. These conditions grew so bad at last that I had to give up coffee altogether. "My attention having been drawn Postum, I began Its use on leaving off the coffee, and it gives me pleasure to testify to Its value. I find it a dellclous beverage: like It just as well as I did coffee, and during the years that I have used Postum I have been free from the distressing symptoms that accompanied the use of coffee. The nervousness has entirely disappeared, and I am as steady of hand as as a boy of 26, though I am more than tf years old. I owe all this to Postum." "There's a Reason." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs. Grocers sell. Bvtr reed the above letter? A new I one appears from time to time. They sure genuine, trie, and fall of bamaa BhWv- # THE PULPIT. 1 A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SEP\"ON CV REV. J. H .IOW P TT M A ' r Theme: The Christian s nccourcc-. * S New York City.?The Ter. .T. TT. Jowett, M. A., the most famous minister of Carr's Lane Congregational Church, Eirmingham. England. who is on a visit for the first tir.in to this country, preached Sundav in the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church. The sermon was on "The Christian's Re- d sources." Mr. Jowett's tent was Luke t? 14:31, "Or what king going to make F war against another king, sitteth not si down first, and consulteth whether T he is able with ten thousand to nmet C him that cometh against him with n twenty thousand?" He said: j< Our Lord was always seeking to n get men to sit down to think. He i< seeks to win their Judgment, to touch p their reason, that they may see the 1< reasonableness of His doings and the p reasonableness of His evangel. H? o is continually calling upon men and r women to think. "What think ye?" w "What, king." He says, "about to en- I 2 PJICP In o romnolirn oUt Atk ~ ' * - ... .. ^Ul^ulhll OilVUHl rl'Jt UU .VII 11 first to estimate the strength of the P foe and the strength of his own re- b sources, and then ascertain whether s there is legitimate hope of his forces s< being ahle to meet and conquer those a who oppose him?" G My simple purpose to-day is to a<=k a you to do this little thinking, to medi- if tate on what kind of enemy we have c to meet, and 1 pray you not to let s your thoughts wander away to a far- o off world, but let us consider what a enemies we have to meet in this tl world where we have to labor and die, j( and whether we can with our own ,i< strength overcome them. And if not. P let us turn to those resources which ti are offered to us in Jesus Christ, our a Lord. I a Now what are these enemies that a we have to meet? What are the er.e- ^ mics in front of us? I repeat our v Master's own estimate of the foe < which every one of us will have to F meet to-day and to-morrow. Jesus is Christ calls one "the world." Now a what is the world? We sometimes a say a man is a worldly man. What g is the signficance of the term? Too t frequently when we use this term we tl refer to something a man does or a leaves undone. Men may be habitues w cf the theatre, or fond of cards, and b wo say they are worldly; and people f who abstain from these things are ^ labeled unworldly. I do not think o that covers it in the slightest degree, o Worldllness is not implied in what we 7 do or do not do. Worldliness is not in u doing this, or not doing this. World- s liness is in the spirit. It Is the at- h mosphere of the soul. Worldliness is 3 the spirit of the horizontal. Werldli- d ness looks on and out. but It never ii looks up and prays. It Is ambition, 4 not aspiration. Its motto is "for- v ward," never "upward." Its goal Is t sucress, never nonness. Worldliness t is life without the vertical, without h the upward calling in Christ .Tesus, v our Lord. And whenever you find a c man cr woman, no matter what they v do or den t do, who always looks out o to the horizontal end. men aud worn- 1 en who have no ideal, no aspiration, 4 no heavenly vision, no prayer, those 8 are men and women who would he 2 described by the Master as "of the s world, worldly." Every' >dy here c knows what an exceedingly strong t gravitation there is toward the hori- r zontal life. In the church and out of " it you feel this tremendous mesmer- e ism, this worldly fascination, leading b us to turn our eyes from the heights, o from what Paul calls "the heavenly things In Christ Jesus." We have F got that force of gravity to meet? S the world. F Then there Is the "flesh." Every- c one knows the power of the flesh; h not merely the carnal power of the n body, but of carnal power expressing c itself in vanity and pride. The flesh 1 that bows down the soul and rides it, n instead of the soul's determining the p movements of the flesh. We have the v "flesh" ta meet, whether in appetite fi or carnal desire. "The world, the > flesh and the devil." I do not know fi how I can define the devil, but Paul's t phrase always seems to describe my u relationship with the devil better than v any other: "The prince of the power p cf the air." Fie does not leap upon / you like a Hon. The devil usually p appears as "the prince of the power of / th? air-" on/1 So ?v xuiuca lino every i life and lets down thp temperature; | i lie changes the moral atmosphere. ? Yen v/fcie just praying fervently, and r suddenly you experienced a chill, it i Is "the prince of the power of the air." ? Ycu start with great zeal to lead a t clean life, and before you know i: the i< temperature is perceptibly obiiled. b "The prince of the power cf tie air" u quietly, silently makes that t.-.'rann- t dous change in your moral life by in- v fiuencitg and changing the aer.es- n phere. We have got the devil to b meet. c Have you anything else to meet? t Yes, the fourth enemy is the binding ? power of guilt. In my country there G are prominent men who say that men t and women have no longer the sense b of guilt. I cannot regard that as t healthful. There are many who can- if not hear the voice of God who are r i hbyci v.wjess pursuea by their guilt. Y I You do cot neeu to hear the thuuder a and see the lightniug to have proof it of the storm. The souring of the ti milk In the dairy proves the storm's 1 presence, and there Is often the proof t' of the Lord's presence and of guilt t in the souring of the disposition, the t manufacturing of cynics. The man li who was once sweet tempered be- r comes a cynic, the optimist becomes a A pessimist. These things have regis- ti tered themselves as "the binding p. es- t'. r. < "O Af ' 1 4 w V1JPV U1 ftUllt. It is the bondage of to-day that comes from yesterday's sin. We have got that to meet. There are men and women who have that paralyzing power of their own yesterday from ei which they cannot escape. b Still one more enemy we have to el meet; the tremendous impetus of the a the quiet habit. Everybody has cerI tain habits which are determining the '' I trend and tendency of their lives. There Is nothing In human life which ir is trifling. The most apparent trifle b has its quota cf energy and It em- h phaslses that energy in the n.atn river y or our lift gad determines its course. 5Trc. I c? unfcaij - Softool/ I XTEKNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOK OCTOUETl 24. ubject: Paul a IVisonor?Hefor? Fcstux and Agrippn, Arts 2.">:<L 12?Golden Text: 2 Tim. 1:12? Commit Verses 20. 27-20 TIME.?A. D. 60 or 61. PLACE.?Caesarea. EXPOSITION. ? I. Not Disobeient Vnto the Heavenly Vision, 10tt. Verse 19 contains the key to 'aul's life and successes. Christ noke. Paul hearkened and obeyed, he heavenly vision, the call of hrist, comes sooner or later to every >an. To hearken means blessing and iy and victory; to refuse to hearken leans wretchedness and ruin tcf. sa. 50:5). How Paul obeyed apears in Gal. 1:15, 16. Heavenly visins are not to bo trifled with, hut romptly, unquestionlngly, exactly be.ved. Paul began his testimony igni wnere ne was. ine apostles rere to begin in Jerusalem (Luke . 4:47), where they were. Paul was i Damascus, so he began right there, 'nul was to be a foreign missionary, 1 ut he proved himself first on the J not where he was converted. The " ubstance of Paul's message to Jew \ nd Gentile: "Repent and turn to i !od and do works worthy of repentnee" (comn. ch. 20:21). To repent ; to radically change one's mind: to ' hange one's mind about God, about in, and especially about Christ: to \ hange from a mind that loves sin to e mind that hates sin; from a mind n hat snurns God to a mind that yields jyfully to God; from a mind that re- j pets Christ, to a mind that accepts iim as Saviour and as Lord. To turn ? God is to turn onr 'ices which are way from God in fear and dislike I nd disobedience, uiuo Con in trust nd love and obedience. The "works rorthy of repentance" are th<* works flitch He commands in His word see, e. g.. Luke 3:8. 11-14: 19:8. 9: i !ph. 4:17-32). The turning to God 5 the inevitable outcome of repent- I nee, and "works worthy of repentnce" are the fruit and proof of the I ennlneness of the repentance and timing to God. "For these causes < he Jews caught me in the temple, t nd went about to kill me." That ras a strange eause to kill a man for. ut the heart of the Jew was "deceit- i nl above all things and desperately I icked" (Jer. 17:9). And the heart f the Gentile to-day. of every one ! ut of Christ, is just like it (Rom. 8: ' ). The man who preaches the plain, i nvarnished truth of God is hound to 1 utter in this God, hating and truth- 1 atlng world (Jno. 15:19. 20; 2 Tim. 1 :12). But we can stand it if Paul id. and Jesus did; yes. and rejoice 1 a it, too (Matt. 5:11. 12; Acts 5: i 1). There is a great utterance in | j erse 22: "Having obtained the help i ' hat is from God 1 stand." Angry. 1 ilood-seeking Jews against him. a j ' oving, sustaining God for him. That j . as Paul's position. So he stood. So ' * an we. All we need is "the help ; rhich is from God." and that is at J ur disposal (see also v. 16; ch. 14: | 9, 20; 16:25, 26; 18:9, 10; Ps. IS: i 7; 27:1-3; Ps. 124:1-3, 8; 2 Cor. 1: -10; 2 Tim. 4:17, IS; Jno. 10:28,: 9; Heb. 4:16). Paul was now j tandlng before a governor, a prin-; ess and a king, but he never forgot' he little ones of earth. His testi-1 nony was to "small" as well as . great." Many of us think the wash-! r woman, the servant girl, the boot-' 'lack and the coal heaver beneath | ur notice. Not so Pan!. II. Almost PernatMled, 21-29. . 'est us was getting excited. The' Ipirit of God was gripping his heart. ; "estus was unwilling to yield, so hei piled the preacher a crank. The devil j ins cheated many a man ont of eterial life in that way. He has also heated many a Christian out of a arger life in the same way. We unst expect to be called crazy, if we I ;et our message from God. That is ' rbat (hey called Jesns (Jno. 8:48, ' 2). Note Paul's unfailing courtesy, lany a man is loyal to the truth and s called "mad" for it, and then goes o scoring his traducers. But in Paul i' I 111'II ill U II lrli' v W rui ii.uiw III iiaint rirh unfailing eourtesv. Let us learn ' 'ouson. Paul now turns directly to ff'vuna with a tremendous, startling v. ' soul-awakening question: "King ( icr'poH, hell-vest thou the pro -cy Tr wn* a master stroke. It s w gcnd qu*"uinn to put to the un.-? i - I Tew to-d.'iy. It is a good '" 'on to nut also to unconverted ijipc, jinri then show them how o-derfuliv the prophecies have been ' ul?Ml*'. Theargument from prophecy unanswerable. Many are trying to renk Its force, hut they have failed i tterly. They have succeeded in urning the eyes of some foolish peo- ? from the contents of the proneeles to questions of authorship, ut if any one will stndv the propheies themselves. Instead of wasting ime In the endless jangle of words Wdt them, he will soon find that !od is t4,e real author, that the posilor. of the destructive critics cannot e true, and mat "Jesus Is (he Christ, he Ron of God." Agrippa's answer ? full of suggestion: "Almost thou ersnadest me to he a Christian." Vhile the Authorised Version is not literal translation of the original. l comes far nearer to being a literal ranslation than the Revised Version 'he literal translation Is: "In a little hou persuadest me to make a Chrls!an." It is said that Agrlppa snid his In sarcasm. Perhaps so: hut, ike many another, the attempted jest eveais me reai siaie 01 tne neart. .grippa was deeply moved. He 6aw lie oo3t of further consideration ol he claims of Christ. , A BRIDIE'S TO WEDS. A br.lde-to-be has ordered her erryday towels cr fine bird's-eye. emroidered in fancy scallops at the nds, with two rows of large eyelets bove, the lower row coming in tho allops, fcrm and the top row abovo ie scallops. The Initials are done i eyelet and solid embroidery com- 1 Iced, ai^d a most attractive lot of J wisehold linen la the result.?New 4 orlc Tribune. < si r - . *.. . In a Premium. If yon do not care for the Prei Far example: ? For $10.OO you caa have $10 $10.00 Premium in our Catalog. Without the of Product*. Either way, you get double retail We have been in business thirty-four years. Ov< A Copy of Oar New Enlarged Catalog Frt It illuilnitM and dticribti all of the IMt Larkln Pri mlums ; shows how to furnish your home and cloth youraclf out of prsstnl coat of livins. Send us tour name and address today and u uriU mail you a ropy, postpaid. Larkitz buiTyu Fri?od? Weit of the Miuiitippi, utc time by tddrm Tin' pure in heart are slow to eretl: ealumiiies.?.lane Porter. Rough ou Rata fools the rats and mice, nit never fools the buyer. The secret is, rou (not the maker) do the mixing. Take \ hint, do your own mixing; pay for |>oisou inly, then you get results. It's tne unleatable exterminator. Don't die in the louse. 16c., 25c., 75c. Prayer moves the lluiul that moves he universe.?German. So. 43-'09. Jn case of pain on the lungs 1 linn!ins Yixard Oil acts like a mustard plaster, xcept that it is more effective and is so lucli nicer and cleaner to use. My three things we learn men? ove, play ami wine.?German. baby's Eatery eczema. Itched and Scratched Until Blood Ran ?$60 Spent on Useless Treatments ?Disease Seemed Incurable (' nul I... ' S. . "j * in iv u i u mr 9 I .ill). "When my little hoy was two and n half months old lie broke out on both cheeks with eczema. It was the itchy, watery kind and we had to keep his little hands wrapped up all the time, and if he would happen to pet them uncovered he would L-law his face till the blood streamed down an his clothing. We called in a physician it once, but he gave an ointment which was so severe that my babe would scream when it was put on. We changed doctors und medicines until we had spent fifty dollars or more and baby was petting worse. [ was so worn out watching and caring for him night and day that 1 almost felt sure the disease was incurable. But tinully reading of the good results of the Cuticura Remedies, I determined to try them. 1 can truthfully say I was more than surprised, for I bought only a dollar and a half's worth of the Cuticura Remedies (Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills), and they did more good than all my doctors' medicines I had tried, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is perfectly clear of the least spot or scar of anything. Mrs. W. M. Comerer, Burnt Cabins, l'a., f?ei>t. 15, 1908." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Propa, )f Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. It is the duty of men to love ever those who injure them. Rorieh on Ruts, uuitott-aole exterminator. Hough on Hen Lice, Nest Powder. '25c. Hough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd, 25c. Hough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c. Rouuh on Roaches, Pow'd. 15c., Liq'd, 25c. Hough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c. Rough on Bkoeters, agreeable in two, 25c. i?. S. WolU, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. One "Wis! TJngratified. Wife: "You promised that if 1 would marry von inv every wis! would he gratified." Husband 'Well, isn't it?" Wife: "No. 1 wish I hadn't married you."?lllus Ira ted Hits. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure consti nation. Constipation is the cause of man) diseases. Cure the cause and you cure th? disease. Kn?jy to take. Proverbs and PhrasesThe rude jester is brother to tin fool.?Irish. The strongest evidence of love ii sacrifice.?French. Tranquillity is the first duty of t citizen.?Governor of Herliu. ? tir:?i . .? i"i?. inmnw ? rooming Myrup for Children teething. softcnKthe gums. reduce* inflamina turn, allays p.\m.< ur-v wind rolir.l!5c.aboltla On a loiijr jour.icy even a straw i.heavy.?Italian. For r?Hd)S an<1 OKIP. Hick'* CapnDiirs Is the best remedyrelieves the atlilng and feverUlineas ? curei Kir Cold and restores normal conditions. It'i quid?effects Immediately. 10c.. 2J>c. and iOc.. at <1 rutr stores jol ?&] It is a simple and affective I 9 from a disordered liver. It I Bp Head, Throat and Chest, and i 9 benefit you, return the empty t 9 Oxidlne has a direct action e 9 orator and reconstructive. It d 9 throw off the poison in the a niuiic/i, wmcn orten become c B form their natural functions. B people suffer from It for yea e Sj always accompany malaria tr forms of Skin Disease, Pile*, E B to Malaria, and can never ben lieves by removing the cauee. afl restores the organs to a norm 11 AS A CURE FOR m NO EQUAL. ci Made in Regular and Tastt P U T N A M Mor more (ooda brighter ??<t fee?er ootora U?*? en: M djra SNJ wtlbost rtpptes Wrl 1 ion Rocker Without Cost >olid-Oak Rocker represents the expenses wholesaler, sales-agent and retailer saved ?n to you with a ? JO. 00 purchase of lair kin ld-sunplies: ColFee, Teas, Spices, ExLaunary and Toilet Soaps, etc. In all, such necessities of the finest quality. 1600 Premiums given with purchases of Products ; all standard merchandise of ie. LARKIN Tr-to-Family Dealing Save* For You All and Profits of Middlemen?Double* the ing-Power of Your Money. ou buy direct from us. the manufacturer*, you got sy's worth, full retail value, in Product* and strain nium. you can have your savings in extra Products. .00 worth of Products of your selection and any Premium, for $10.00, you can have 520.OO worth value. (r two million families save money by dealing with us. 11 MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY ie Lftrfcxa Cxx. Please mail Catalog No. 127 and explain how the Lofkin Idea saves momy. Name Street ami No. "" or K. It. P.O >- State _ (1 I'. 1M | I In Be "1 had a mishap at the fix," writes Mrs. Georgia Us 391 "I u/nc nnrnncriniic I would liave fainting spells, headache, heart palpitation a "I suffered greatly with life and had 3 doctors, but t! to try Cardui. "Since taking Cardui, 1 all my housework." |i The Won Do not allow yourself t PSR get in so bad you would fir g? Better take Cardui whi still in moderately good healt R and keep you in tip top coi In this way your troubl Ira ually grow smaller instead < 1 up-grade instead of the d( R arrive at the north pole of \ 0 Get a bottle at your dri ?DIST ( ? ^\Af\ Sure cure ami poali I n \ 1 Infected or "exposed." I^Iq JA ?| | .1 Oland?, tupi'U the poln ITJL1* 1 Jf) PjlUI an<l Sheep and Cholera \VJ* iAnC .?//>/ 1-a Orlppt-amouK butm A J^\ /J*-/ bottle; $.' and $10 a doz A>v/ who will (ret It for Special amenta wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL C Never spur n willing horse. Perry l),ivn' I'amkii.cr coaUt cii!y23p..35e. or SOe. n Ivittlc. Iml it contain* itumv d??S[ larti' worth -it" relief for ro'i!-. iu-iir.tlt;in.f. i When you eonsent, consent cor: <linlly.?Jacob Abbott. I Tjose* no Sleep tlirotch u nnririnc c.titr'i . or irritated throat. Take Allen's Lunjj Palsam. It is quirk and harmless. Give neither eounsel nor suit until . | you are asked for it.? 11nliuti. r?r HRAOACHK-Ulrhi* f'A PrDIKR 1 'Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach of Nervous Troubles, ('aitudiii" will n>lli'ri> you. ' It's liijuiiJ ? i>l?*a?aiit 10 lake act* hr.mcdl* | at?'ly. Tiy It. luc.. iae. ami ai drug % 1 kl< - I S. Bad BLOOD > "Before I began using Cascarets I had a bad complexion, pimples on my face, and my food was not digested as it should 1 have l>ern. Now I am entirely well, and the pimples have all disappeared from my face. I can truthfully say that Cascarets ; are just as advertised; I have taken ouly two boxes of them." Clarence R. Griffin, Sheridan, Ind. > Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. I I)o Good. Never Sicken.Weaken or Gripe. 1 10c. 25c. SOc. Never sold In bulk. The genuI I Ino tablet stamjwl C C C Guarantee 1 to I cure or v"?it > n-v he. k 927 C IDIf tome remedy for Chills, Fever, Malaria a effective for Constipation, Indigestion, a sold under a strict guarantee. If t! >ottle to your druggist and get your mot 30W IT RELIEVES in the Liver, Stomach, Kidneys and Bow leetroys the germ of malaria, stimulate yetem, and flushes the stomach and bow logged and inactive in cases of Malaria The symptoms of malaria are so nurr without discovering the true source of oubles, and chronic Constipation, Rf Infeebled Heart action and pains in all | tlieved without first discovering and rem It goes to the seat of the trouble, dent al condition, builds up the system and j MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVE eless Forms, all Druggists. r otter djre. Oee luc. peekece colore _Ji liber*. 11m. le tor f*>so booklet? Bow to uyo. Mutt *nU Mix Oom I rill ItPltrt;I.UNlHl!OM{UEKLI>-WrtU!l?r L I.fiItt.? >. |in>mificui ami booiiat wn> N A 11 Kt.'.l OHi'.A riUN i:uraii'<iiuuinptlra(. K? !>. MutUAX, .->11 lit* j.u. li.|>|>o<lioino lli.lt;., CluvclaadjQL ^o. 43 *09. mimaa Restores Cray Hair to Natural Colon REMOVE* O&nORUFF AMD OCtfRF In?ifor?Ui and prevents (he hair from For lale by OruR(;l?t?, or Font Plroct fef XANTHINE CO.f Richmond. Virgin!* m'-cm $$ For ftstU*. %*m*U Collk 3sc. UM Cv Clnalvv MostPertect(uT jS j jjoILER pEEDgp YET P5^0 pipe-valves fitting AND SHAFTING. PULLEYS. BELTS. LOMBARD IRON WORKS,'""jT*id Fix I age of 41, which Jeft me in bad K ;her, of Conyers, Ga. R ?r tliree days, and after that I m dizziness, nervousness, sick nh nd many strange feelings. ailments due to the change of nE iiey uiu 110 gouu, so i conciuaca gs am so much better and can do flE CJ4i I lan's Tonic I o get into a bad fix. You might H :d it hard to get out. B ile there is time, while you are ? h, just to conserve your strength H idition. B es, whatever they are, will grad- B Df larger?you will be on the ffij 3wn?and by and bye you will M perfect health. jggists' today. B| ,l7Twro'E,T>plnk EyeEMPEKi^^/^cr. tire preventive, no mailer how horse* at uu; anara LlijUld, given on the tongue; ui-ts on the blood udi MitioUH germs from the body. Cum I>lsleni|?er In Dupi In Poultry, l.nrgest selling live stock remedy. Cunar in beings niul 1* a lice Kidney remedy. !?* . and 91 m en. Cut this out. Keep II. Show to your druggist, you. Free booklet, "Distemper, Cause* and Cuna." 0., GDSHFIV. INI).. P.S.IC CHILDHOOD'S BUGBEAH BANISHED ' /it Jl.l. bar >11.111.. li> ?t..t II niMOt, I.o.la.1 I If S.lBll?l.to.lU( I'llUiT INI, Iktlwal.i.lMl mid iiMilMt raiharitr to yo?r cbl'dr?? y vlvl?ll> 1 <i< llHtoui ?-? >y ..DiMkpf.l???a mm* . JDJ tr??Mr?|iun wl mollt^r ? rtilTlriill <?i?. PALATAL, A CTEAM OF CASTTJB W. looks, smells. testes *?>o?1 makn / \ dolTekiv. Cblltlwri I Irk lbs uuoic *W* i ? i SC^??. 1 All<lr?*?l*lxr j 1 \ Money in ChicKen^s t Kl like, u* auyap* w? aaad a an If/ _ I'AOt. uoOhi giviox (IwflxpactaM^ / I ul a pra.iu-m fuullrji llataaa ant f / / 4 au ajiiau'ur but a man wortiac I J T lur uuiiim ana t-eou?uuri%S Xjt-ar?. it lawns. Im? u> LUUM 1 iiihl t uri- Iiuoimum; Kaetl far I , jn ulao lur r'HUuiini*;; whk* Hwrtw I \ ?a??- lur lirrvtliurt; rTtrTUIaf *1 1 ijutr-t.- tor |>rv>li utile I'imltn I I '.UK iHHIn l?l .IHUIMtt CO. 13k LaaiurJ iMr?.t, .New . ?rk. A I vv ? v - MRNTIttM THIS PAPBB w lien w riling .% ?l vcrlliurt, and I at till v I ug Article* adurllard In lk*M colnm ir a i h It c iiiiIy i lie la KN I! 11* K aaA DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES I #3.1Dropsy H v" Rmom all iwctllng la Stoa ^ day* ; cflccti a permanent caea d . V lo jolo do da vs. Trial trcataaaaft ^j^flfragWepfrev. Jtothlogcan bafaicae iJyfta?n Write Dr.H.H.OrtMTia?HLt aSH SaaataUata. *m m Atlaata. 6* or JB I , and all other diseases arising LaGriope and Colds in the gBg te first bottle does not greatly $? iey back. IP3| m /els, and Is a powerful invlg- flg s the liver, enabling it to ^8 elt. It also strengthens the SB Fever, and forces them to per- vSB lerous and varied that many QS ' their troubles. Chills do not 5fi| leumatism, Dyspepsia, many m parts of the body may be due SE oving the cause. Oxidine re- M roys the germs of the disease, yH lids nature. SS R REMEMBER IT HAS ? 50c Per Bottle. S S DYES In ooUl wator bsur IS? MT other Hh n. aoiuiit IlilUU OUH 1| 'III Till I