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Eeat For the Bowels. Nomatter what ails yo. beadacbe to a can cer, you will never get well until your b,wels are put right. CASCAEETS help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. CAScaETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. The infant named for a great statesman or hero often carries the name to oblivion. Earliest Russian Millet. Will you be short of hay? If so, plant a plenty of this prodigally prolific millet. 5 to 8 tons of rich hay per acre. Price, 50 lbs., $1.90; 100 lbs., $3; low freights. John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. A It has been observed that, as a rule, sin gle women live longer than single men. P-r.xA FADZLZSS Drzs do not stain the hands or spot the kettle. Sold by all drug The duration of an ordinary wink is four tenths of a second. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great I r'erveRestorer.e2 trial bottle and treatisefree ]Dr. R. H. KLIsz, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Most spiders have eight' eyes, although some species have only six. I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consump-7 tion has an equal for coughs and colds-JHN F. Bovxa, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb.15, 1900. The medical profession furnishes the greatest number of suicides. Hopes may be blasted without the use of dynamite. AT SHAKESPEARE'S HOME. " Stratford-on-Avon." "I am finishing a tour of Europe; the best thing I've had overhere is a box of Tetterine I brought from home."-C. H. McConnell, Mgr. Economical Drug Co., of Chicago. Ill. Tetterine cures itching skin troubles. 50c. a box by mail from J. T. Shuptrine. Savannah, Ga., if your druggist don't keep it. The original mince pie was made of mut ton, and baked in the shape of a manger. Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy Cures Irregu lar Heart Action. At Druggists, 50 cents. You can't make the father of twins be lieve that a man cannot serve two masters. 5100 Reward. 6100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's CatarrhCure istaken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The use of "E Pluribus Unum" on coin was never authorized by law. Its :rst known use was on a New Jersey cent struck off in 1776. Cabinet Ministers in Mexico receive $15.000 a year. ~ Sheep-stealing Is not soul-saving. Irs, J. H. ilaskins, of Chicag, 1U1., Pr-esident Chicago Arcade1 Clnb, Addresses Comforting Words to Women Begarding Childbirth. "DEARc IRs. PIXKAMix- Mothers need not dread childbearing after they know the value of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. While I ]oved children I dreaded the ordeal, for it left mue weak and sich MRtS. J.H. HASKINS. for months after, and at the time I' thought death was a welcome relief ; but before my last child was born aI goneighbor advised LydiaE.Pink hamsVeg,etable Compound, and 1 used that, togethcr svith your Pills and Sanative Wash for four months before the child's birth ;- it brought me wonderful relief. I hardly had an ache or pain, and when the child was < ten days old I left my bed strong inf health. Every spring and fall I nowtake f ,abottle of Lydia E.Pinkham'sVeg etable Compoand and find it keeps me in continual excellent health.'" MlRs. J. H. IIASKINS, 32-IS Indiana Ave., -Chicago, Ill. -5000 forfeit If aboce testimo alal1 is not ger.uin-. Care and careful counsel is what the expectant and would-be mother needs, and this counseli she can secure without cost by writing to NM. Pinikham at L.ynn.Mas. S 5>jSHES Est.b. t'st SCAE ore erdceesptl as5 - 4.,Wri'e for~- pre. JESSE M APR D SYNEW DISCCVER.Y; a a a E qa:ck reief arad cures wr-t r-. Book of te.timon a S and 10 dInyn' treatm',t I 1 wea. Dr B. E. GEIN'S SOt-s. reo B. At ants. Ga So. 11. Gold Miedal at Sintralo Exp'osilion. C MfcILHENNY'S TABASCO UESWE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cugh s rup.TatesGood. Usec f e. ys,"useThompson's Eye Water kRT OF FuRGETTING. )R. -TALMAGE'S SUND IY SERIMN. Fhe Eminent Divine Argues That We Should Teach Ourselves to Forget and Help Others. WASHINGTON, D. C.-From the letter to the Hebrews Dr. Talmage takes a text and ' strates how all offenders may be ema ted; text, Hebrews viii, 12, "Th sins and their iniquities will I re mem no more." The national flower of the Egyptians is the heliotrope, of the Assyrians is the water lily, of the Hindoos is the marigold, of the Chinese is the -hrysanthemum. We have no national flower, but there is hardly any flower more suggestive to many of us than the forgetmenot. We all like to be remembered, and one of our mis fortunes is that there are %o many things we cannot remember. Mnemonics, or the art of assisting memory, is an important art. It was first suggested by Simonides, of Ceos, 500 years before Chrizt. Persons who had but little power to recall events or put facts and names and dates in proper processions have through this art had their memory re-enforced to an almost incredi ble extent. A good memory is an invalua ble possession. By all means cultivate it. I had an aged friend who, detained all night at a miserable depot in waiting for a rail train fast in the snowbanks, enter tained a r -oup of some ten or fifteen cler g. -n. ,, likewise detained on their way home from a meeting of presbytery, by first with a piece of chalk drawing out on the black and sooty walls of the depot the characters of Walter Scott's "Marmion" and then reciting from memory the whole of that vcem of some eighty pages in fine print. My old friend, through great age, lost his memory, and when I.asked him if this story of the railroad depot was true he said, "I do not remember now, but it was just like me. Let me see," said he to me. "Have I ever seen you before?" "Yes," I said; "you were my guest last night, and I was with you an hour ago." What an awful contrast in that man be tween the greatest memory I ever knew and no memory at all! But right along with this art of recol lection, which I cannot too highly eulogize, is one quite as important, and -yet I never heard it applauded. I mean the art of for getting. There is a splendid faculty in that direction that we all need to culti vate. We might through that process be ten times happier and more useful than we now are. We have been told that for getfulness is a weakness and ought to be avoided by all possible means. So far from a weakness, my text ascribes it to God. It is the very top of omnipotence that God is able to obliterate a part of His own memory. If we repent of sin and rightly seek the divine forgiveness, the record of the misbehavior is not only crossed off the books, but God actually lets it pass out of memory. "Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more." To remember no more is to forget, and you cannot make anything else out of it. God's power of forgetting is so great that if two men appeal to Him and the oie man, after a life all right, gets the sins of his heart pardoned and the other man, after a life of abomination, gets par doned God remembers no more against one than the other. The entire past of both the moralist, with his imperfections, and the profigte, with his.debaucheries, is as much obliterated in the one case as in the other. Forgotten forever and for ever. "Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more." This sublime attribute of - forgetfulness on the part of God you and I need, in our finite way, to imitate. You will do well to cast ouit of your recollection all wrongs done you. During the course of one's life he is sure to be misrepresented, to Mre---ietd about, to be injured. Tlhere are those who keep these things-fresh by frequent rehear sal. If things have appeared in print, they keep them in their scrapbook, for they cut these- precious paragraphs out of news papers or books and at leisure times look them 'over, or they have them tied up in bundles or thrust in pigeonholes, and they frequently regale themselves and their friends by an inspection of -these. flings, these sarcasms, these falsehoods, t'hese cru elties. I have known gentlemen who -car ied them in their pocketbooks, so that they could easily get at these irritations, and they put their right hand in the inside of their coat pocket over their heart- and say: "Look here! Let he show you some thing." Scientists catch wasps and ,hor ets and poisonous insects and transfix the in curiosity bureaus for study, and that is well, but these of whom I speak eatch the wasps and the hornets and pois onous insects and play with them and put them on themselves and on their friends a.nd see how far the nonious things can lump and show how deep they can sting. Have no such scrapbook. Keep nothing in yoiu possession that -is disagreeable. rear up the falsehoods and the slanders td the hypercriticisms. Imitate the Lord in my text and forget, euaily forget, sublimely forget. There is no happiness for you in any other plan or procedure. You, see all around you in Le. church and- out of the church disposi ;ons acerb, malign, cynical, pesimistic. Do you know how these men and women ;;ot that disposition? It was by -the em .aalment of things pantherine and viper us. They have spent much of their time n calling the roil of all the rats that have -ibbed at their -reputation. Their soul is Scage of vultures. Everything in them is our or imbittered. The milk of human tindness has been curdled. They do not elieve in anybody or anything. -If they ce two people whispering they think it is bout themselves. If they see two people aughing, they think it is about them elves. Where .there is one sweet pippin n their orchard there are fifty crabapples. 'hey have never been able to forget. They l not want to forget. 'They never will orget. Their wretchedness is supreme, or no one can be happy if he carries per etually in mind the mean things that ave been done him. On the other hand, -ou can find here and there a' man or voman (for there are not many 'of them) vhe disposition is genial and. summery. ,hy? .Have they always been treated ell Oh, no. Hard things have been said :ainst them. T1hcy have been charged ith ofliciousness, and their generosities w. been set do-vn to a desire for display, ud they have many a time been the sub et of tittle tattle, and they have had nough small assaults like gnats and enorgh, great attacks like lions to have nade tnem perpetually miserable. If they could have consented to miserable. liut they have had enough divine philo ophby to cast olI the annoyances, and they ~ae h:ept themselves in the sunlight of ~ods favor and have realized that thes e ppositions and hindrances are a part of a :hty discipline by which they are to 1:e ,reared for usefulness and heaven. Ti:e ecret of it all is they have, by the he:p the Eternal God, learned how; to forget. Another practical thought: When ou:r iuls are recpentcd of let the:n go out of nind. If Gr>d forgives them, we have a ight to forget them. -Having once re ented of our infelicitir and misdemean irs. there is no need of our repenting of hem again. Suppose I owe you a large un of money, and you are persuaded I .m incapacitated to pay and you give me couittal from that obligation. You say: Icancel that debt. All is right nowv. tart again.'' And the next day 1 come in ,nd say: "You know about that big debt 1 we you. I have come in to get you to !et ne ff. I feel so bad about it I cannot est Do let ma o. You reply with a 1,tt4e -mntienc : "I did 't bother yourse'. and bother more of that di=c ession." day I come in and say: -My that debt-I can never get that I owe you that money. thing that weighs on my min stone. Do forgive me that time you clear lose your patie "You are a nuirnce. What by this reiteration of -that a almost sorry I forgave you you doubt my veracity or do derstand the plain language told you that debt was cancel my friends, there are. many guilty of worse, folly -that. is right that they repe f ne of recent sins, what is he use ing yourself and insulting God Him to forgive sins that long forgiven? God has forgiven th do you not forget them? No; the load on ;,:h you, and 365 tim if you pray every day, you ask call occurrences which He has not give-, but forgotten. Quit this folly. I do not ask yo realize the turpitude of sin, but I to a higher faith in the promise and the full deliverance of His me does not give a receipt for part or so much received on account, ceipt :n full, God having for Chris decreed ."your sins and your will I remember no more." I know you will quote the -Bib: ence to the horrible pit; from' whi were digged. Yes, be thankful f0 rescue, hut do not make displays mud of that horrible pit- or splash i other peoj!e. Sometimes I have - Christian meetings disconifited anad for Christian service because I had. none of those things which seemed in the estimation of many; necess Christian usefulness, for L never sw word or ever got drunk or went to promising places. or was guilty'of and battery or ever uttered. a. sland word or ever did any one a. hurt, :alth I knew my heart was 'sirifiil enough said to myself, "There is tio use 6f my. ing to do any good, for I never through those depraved experiences'. afterward I saw consolation in the t that no one gained any o;dinatio;by. laying on of the hands of dissoluteness. infamy. And though an ordinary. moral life, e ing in a Christian life, may not be as . matic a story to tell about, let 'us be grt ful to God rather than worry about 'it. we have never plunged into outward abo inations. A sin forgetting God! .That is cl' yond and far above a sin pardoning How often we hear it said "I can but I cannot forget."I That 'is 'u saying, "I verbally .admit it;is all" r t but I will keep the old grudge . goo There is something in the- dmeanor 'thi seems to say: "I would' not do you harm: Indeed, I wish you well, but that nnfortn- a nate affair can never pass out of my iiiird." b There may be no hard words pass Between them, but until death breaks in the same coolness remains. But God lets our- par doned offenses go into oblivion.; He never: throws them up to us again. He..feels as j) kindly toward us as though we 'had been " spotless and positively angelic all along. " Many years ago a family' cosisting of the husband and. wife and little girl of two 'c years lived far 01it in a cabin on a western prairie. The husband took a' few, cattle -to market. Before he started his little chlild. asked him to buy her' a doll. and lie' proni- '11 ised. He could after .the-sae of the-cattle. 9 purchase household .necessities. and cer- .s tainly would not foiget the'd-oiU .he^ had' pronised. In the villAge to which he ,*eut, :he sold the cattle and obtained. the rocet- o0 ies for his household and the doll for his a little darling. He started home alog "te dismal road' at nightfalL As..besw'nti along on horseback a thunderstorm broke," and in the most lonely part of thd:ruad f andI in the heaviest part of the ant he heard a chl' c.Rbmh knovrta1-som id~fork 'alon' that road, and it was known that 'thii'is' t man'had money with him,' the pl'e&of the cattle sold. The herdsman fir,st .tljougt it as a. stratagem to have him.halt-and be despoiled of 'his treasin-ee, 'but' the'dhild's ~ cry became more keen and rendingtend so he dism>)unted and felt around'.iq~ ,the; ~ darkness and all in vain' until 'he'thouighi of a hollow tree that 'he. rememberedier& . the road where the child might be,,rnd! '. for that he started, .and, sure 'enoughi p found a little one fagged out-and dric~ed of the storm and almost dead. He wra d . it up as well as he could and mounted his . horse and resumed'- his journey~ li6ide. "I Coming in sight of 'his cabin he saw it;all ' lighted up, and supposed his wife .hadt kindled 'all these lights-'so'as to guido he' husband through the darkness.. 'Batt 'no;. The house was full of excitement, and -the c neighbors were gathered atnd stood aroiud a the wife of the house, who was insensible't from some great, cala'nity. .On :inguiry thet returned husbaird found that the little child 'of that cabin -wais gone. 'Sh'e .had v wandered out to roeet her father an4i.e ..t the present he had promised, and el~ child was lost. Thehi the father ud~e~ " from the blanket the child he hadefoundar C the fields, and, lo, it was his own child and the loss one of' the prairie home, and the cabin cquak:ed with the shout over the ost one found:'''. ~ How suggesr.ive of the fact that once we i were lost.in the open fields, or among the I b rnoutai crgs,God's wandering''children,I ind e fundus, dying in th'e- tem"pet nd wrapped us in the mantle of His loyei t nd fetched us home, gladness. and cop- I ratulation bidding us welcome. The fact s that the world does not know God; or hey would all flock to Him.. So I set open the 'wide gate of niy texti o nviting you all to come into the .meo b ad pardon of God-yea, still further, into 'b he ruins of the place where once was ent the knowledge of your iniquities. :..' The place has been torn down ad the .b ecords destroyed, and yet you wd1 find a he ruins more dilapidated and' broken ad prostrate than the-ruins si 'Malrose -or. Kenilworth, for from these .last tuins' you 'C an pick up some fragment of a sculptured t s,one or you can see the curve of se roken arch, .but after your. repeintane ad your forgiveness you cannot fnd'in a~l~ he memory of God a fragment of your p ardoned sins so large as a needle's point. 14 'Their sins and their iniquities will I re ember no more." Six diff'erent kinds of sound were beard - on that night which was interjected into f the daylight of Christ's assassination. The eighing of the war horses-for some of the soldiers were in the saddle-was one ound. the bang of -the hamiers was a. econd sound, the jeer of malignants was is third sound, the weening of friends and p ollowers was a fourth sound, the' plash i of blood on the rocks was a ifth sound,1! i.nd the groan of the expiring Lord was a P: ist.h sound! And they all commingled a: into one sadncss. b Over a place in Russia where wolves ere pur.suing a load of travelers and to'B ae them a servant srrang from the sle'd II into the mouths of the wild beasts and 'f vas dev~our'ed. and thereby the other lives were sated are inscribed the words, "Great r >oce bath no man than tnis. that a man an\ cown his life for his friend. Many.a' :< vrcon in our own time ia.; in izh's~ ony with his own lips drawn fro"m the:' indpipe of a diphtheritic patient that vih cured the patient and slew the sur :en, and all have honored the sel sacri c. But all other scenes of sacrifice pale f ore thi< most illustrious martyr of all time and all eternity. After that agonizing g pctacle in behalf of our fallen race noth-' e ing about the sin forgetting God i.s too stupendous for my' faith, and I accept the. romise, and will you not all accept it? 'Their sins and their iniquities will I re ember no more." rEnnyrIrht. 19t"t L. Klopsch.1 OD ATYPE or. 0 Farmeri and the Itoad Question. AVING' been- appointed a del egate to this congress by the Department of Agriculture of the Province of . Ontario, -s with . some. degree of timid that I.attempt. to address so large -distinguished an assemblage of lie spirited represertatives gath from so many distant States and pean countries, on - so important ubject and of such wide national rest as that of good roads. aving followed with deep interest progress of the good roads move t of recent years in both the United es and Canada, I desire briefly to upon a few points of the good question from the farmer's point It is' sound public policy and the function of government to do in terest of the community as a all those things which the indi cannot well do by himself, does appear clear that the State pay the whole cost for improv main thoroughfares? These are he leading arteries connecting mess centres, and continuing ty to county across the en ' and separate from the many ocal roads to be cared for by the authorities. principle of State built highways to be as old as civilization being 'adopted by the first ex e builders df good roads-the nians and Romans. Not since g by the latter of the Ap and the 53,000 miles of solid $s: that ancient .empire, and remain as monuments of their .to this day,. has any country the priceless boon of good without some measure of State I. Let the State first build its main ighways' and they, will be ever pres at object lessons to the local authori es for constructing the other roads. T3e Jength and numner of streets in e city are short and small compared ith the compact concentration of realth, Jhus making the burden of ost comparatively light for street im-' rovement.' In the country 'districts e length and number of only the tding. highways to be improved are d far out.of proportion to the sparsely %led 'and scattered wealth of the rging communities that it is entirely u. of the question .for the farmers' o 'tothink of paying the much' i;ger comarative cost for such first Idss stieroads as are -nuired. The rers have=always bo"i. che:r share, Setimore thani their fair share, Sneedfi taxation, ar,d will not o.Sit i aying/'thein jit pai-t for State built oo6roads.' Partial:Ineasures of iState aid are epa n'the right direction, so far af e j go. .1 would not say anything in sparagentent of the good work and Svery-commenldable degree of prog e. that -has .been made under the ~itTi systems of Str.te aid for good ~adEhin those leading States of New: esey, 'Connecticut and New York. 1u in- the foremost State, Massachu tisa, which has adopted more neariy ~e F-uropean and Roman systems. we: d .the nearest to the Mleal plan, a thin~ous system of good roads built rss the entire State, under compe ni Siite'authority.. The work .is pro. ced and the roads properly located' berethey will' be of the greatest good. .he 'greatest number. The -State, nllds-:the roads and pays the whole st, and afterwarde charges one-' ~ur;h of it to the county through' thei road is buiit. This far less ated .system overcomes an im-' ,ch aonto difficulties, draw isng local authoritIes of county ot ~weh!ja. et the general governments of the; anted. States and Canada build ideal ntnental highways from ocean to eaa. Let the States and provinces ild simIlar highways from border to' rder. Let the European nations ex-: nd some of 'their war millions in' diding ideal highways from Europe coss Asia, thereby placing Western rilaton .Ip closer touch with the: 11Dese and.other Orlentals. Let the alited States and England build good ads .in..the Philippines and Sonth Tfri'and -they will miore effectually cfy the Filipinos and Boers at far 5s cost than by use of the cannon. P. Bean, Vice-President Ontario pd Roads Association, at the Buf-' ilo Good:.Roads Congress. ''Ea That Bi-ing Comfort. Before all things the United States an agricultural country. It. is the' ssibility of large returns for labor this direction which keeps up the ~lee- of labor in our manufactories d -in ,all our, industries, and thus' -ings comfort and ease within thc ~ach of alL. G'ood roads, by lessen-" g the cost of agricultural products, em the most effectual means of intaining the condition of comfort d even luxury of which America is proud.-H{. W. Conn, Department; Biology. Wesleyan i'uiversity, Slid etown, Conn. A Sure Indication. ood roads and broad highways for od -citizens; alleys, slumways and wpathS for the vicious, the depraved d the lawless.-Charles N. Day, New vea, Conn. nand used half a million Christ s trees last Christmas. California nalsos uig Things. ~California raises the largest of everything except pea beans. Her pea beans are the smallest, but they are higher priced than any that grow this side of that state. CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. To Prove It-Medicine Free! Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) kills the poison in the blood which causes rheuma tism (bone pains, swollen joints, sore mus cles, aches and pains) and catarrh (bad breath, deafness, hawking, spitting, ringing in the ears), thus making a permanent cure after all else fails. Thousands cured. Many suffered from SO to 40 years, yet B. B. B. cured them. Druggists $1 per large bot tie. To prove it cares, sample of B. B. B. sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., 12 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice given. B. B. B. r nt at once prepaid. American ciocks are to be found in the most remote hamlets in Siam. Christ's call is His servant's con secration. The invitation to lean on the Lord is for the w. ary and not for the lazy. So. 11. " 12MIMMMIMS"tm lilt _ ICapudIneAL : Headaches, LaGrippe, Colds, etc. lMoneyback if itfails. 15&25e.All DrugStores Fruit. Its quality influences the selling price. Profitable fruit growing insured only when enough actual Potash is in the fertilizer. Neither quanth/y nor good quality possible without Potash. -y Write for our free books giving details. GERMAN KA.I WORKS. 93 Nas.au St.. New York 9!,. KGalls SADDLE on our Horse or Mule quiekly cured with D)r. Danielh' (Aol cura. all Dea er, or sent by mall with pr. I antelsbook,' 'Vie eaes of -se. attle. iheep and swine ard How t raat Them." ipun receipt of 25 conts. A. C. DAN IEL9 I Stanfford St.. BOS'l'ON. MAisS. STHE LANIER SOUTHERN MACON GA. Thorougvh In al. appointments. Busnea men recognize our .iplonmas a. a testtmo nial of ability and worth. All branc-hee taught. Full information cheerfully furnished. A COMMISSIONl LeGE ENOUGWT PRO se,wen.ain tinme for sde Ile.tsloos NFFDL 1W0 Nsssau strsat. r. $1I00Q for $ I. *g;n* m~i~ n 'ou wel Irefun yor rnr eudjortct Many Im No Equat Royal Worcester and BOn 'I Corse Straight front. .Ril that is Smart. HealthfuL and up to date Ask dealer to order for you. Accept no other. ReplWorosters,invCorstC. we make it ossile t WAnt 0cmileahd bihinssin weeks a aetle o dirt cheap. Foddei ur a dueis brimin1 o greaoddper acrse; Pea ot Y elinlg 6 tons of mgnI~ne lay snd an endle Bomen I.ennle-6 T gs Atga terts~ gr g ha is recetpet fbutlocents postage. ar-Catalog ale I inHN A. SAL2ER SEED 4 Asthma "One of my daughters had a terrible case of asthma. We tried almost everything, but without re lief. We then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral and three and one-half bottles cured her." - Emma Jane Entsminger, Langsville, O. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral certainlycures manycases of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak lungs, whooping - cough, croup, winter coughs, night coughs, and hard colds. Three sises: 25c., enough for an ordinary cold; 50c., just right for bronchitis. hoarse ness har= colds, etc.; S1. most economic* for cbsooe cases oa to keep on hand J. C. AE CO.eu, One day an old friend said: "Are you troubled with dys pepsia?" I said: "Yes, and I don't ever expect to be cured." He told me to go across the street and. get -a box of RipansTabules. After using Ripans Tabules for three weeks I was satisfied I had at last found the right medicine, the only one for me. The I Cnacket is enough for an erdit arg 2heson family botUe. d0 enats con tains a supply for .. , esr. goyd by0a 8 DoPgaas Stores. and the bt shoe deeas Thesd gu i bsveW.L namle and priceon c Itom ators. Pars P WOiRLQ" AGT [D -Afrsf - 190 1DDER PL aTS. sWm .. ugas aes n e..oe e 8Oat Cl oes thnsytWrwmn ufactrs ndtewrd P .Lnt ls.Oad3.Ohepae ie bd wiGth $of gan *qRIshesNo oth make, r fni..ob jsts.u amona o ear o n fn einAerica tCoay pelse ncrde ln WL ouman a.*Oe '.a EdeIpo mtsforsp.ta. irMbDYR PL%e ANTS