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CURE YOUR KIDNEYS. When the Back Aches and Bladder Troubles Set In. Get at the Cause. Don't make the mistake of believing backache and bhidder ills to bo local ailments. Get at the cause and cure the kidneys. Ise Doan's Kidney Pills whitch have cur-ed ilhousands. Captain S. 1). Hunter. of En pgine No. 14. Pitts burg, Pa., Fire Department, and residing at 27-J Wylie avenue. "It was three years ago that I used Doan's Kidney Pills for an attack of kidney trouble that was mostly back ache, and they fixed me up fine. There is no mistake about that. and if I should ever be troubled a.ain I would get them first thing. as I know what they are." For sale by all dealers. Price .~ cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N.Y. Po;nted Paragraphs. Nothing beats a good wife-except a bad husband. So. 17. If you are willing God should be your guide He will be your guard. FITS perm anertly en red. Nofitsornervous ness afterdirst day's use o! Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer.M2triailbottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. KLISE.Ltd..31 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. In some of the London schools the boys take lezson in canng Ask Your Dealer For Allen's Foot-Eaqe. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions. Swollen. Sre,Rot. Callous,Achin Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot.-Ease natkes new ortight shoes easy. A: 4ll Druggists and Shoc stores, 25 cents. Ac eept no substitu:e. Sample mailed FazE, Address, Allen S. O1-sted, LeRoy. N. Y. The crown forests of Russia comprise 30,000,000 acres be'onging to the Czar. Popular Cars. The Popc-Hard ord and Pope-Tribune gasoline car. and runabouts meet the spe cific demands of a large class of automobile users. They are simple in construction. free fron complication and efficient. Prices from Q500 to .91609. For finely illustrated catalogues and descriitive matter, ad dress Dept. A. Po'e Manufacturing Co., Hartford. Conn. Glass hcuses may soon be made stone proof. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we everused for all affections ol throat and lungs.-WM. 0. ENDSLEY. Vanl:uren. Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. A former army officer plays a hand 'organ on the streets of Sieffield.' England. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething,soften the gums, reduces inflamma tion.allays rpain.cures wind colic,25c.abottle. Fruits -rown in cina are usuailv in ferior in Favor. Itch cured in .30 ninutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never .rails. Sold by all drug ists, $1. Mail orders promptly filled by Dr. E. Detchon. Craworsville, nd. The Peruvian railways have all been con solidated. Coldness of Spring Water. "It is a fact," remarked the head of a certain fascinating soda water department, "that spring water keeps colder very much longer than ordi nary river water, such as is served through Philadelphia water pipes. You can make the test, even in - im mer, by going to Fairmount park, drawing a jug of spring water, bring ing it hoae and putting it in your cellar. Not only will it not get wvarm during the trip to your house, but it will remain much colder than will hydrant water drawn and kept be side it for a number of hours. This is said to be due to the lack of warm animal matter in the spring water, which is filtered through the earth. At any rate, it's a great pity we couldn't have just such water here in Philadelphia."'-Philadelphia Record Suggestions How to Suff~ issielie Hlolmes While no woman is entirely free frozt periodical suffering, it does not seem t< be the plan of nature that womer should suffer so severely. Menstrua tion is a severe strain on a woman' vitality, if it is painful or irregula: something is wrong which should bE set right or it will lead to a serious de rangement of the whole female organ More than fifty thousand womei have testified in grateful letters to Mrs Pinkham that Lydia E. Pinkhami Vegetable Compound overcomes pain ful and irregular menstruation. It provides a safe and sure way of es cape from distreasing and dangerou weaknesses and diseases. The two following letters tell so con vincingly what Lydia E. Pinkhami' Vegetable Compound will do fo women, they cannot fail to bring hop to thousands of sufferers. Miss Nellie Holmes of 540 N. Davi sion Street, DUnfalo, N. Y., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkhara: -Your medicine is indeed an ideal medicin for women. I suffered misery for years witi pin ful periods', headaches, and bearing-dow: pains. I consulted two different physician but failed to get any relief. A frnend fron the East advised mue to try Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. 'I did so, an no longer suffer as I did before. My period are natural; every ache and pain is gone, an my general health is much improved. edrise all women who suffer to take Lydi E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D. writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkrham: " I might hrave have been spared man months of suffering and pain had I oni known of the effcacy of Lydia & PinkhJam Ask Its Plnkhain Advic.-A Ws BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA Face Liae Raw Beet-Thontht She- Would Lose Her Ear-Healed Without a Mlernish-Mother Thanks Caticura. "My little giri had eezema v-erv b-ad when sh e was ten month,; o'd. I s.e would lose ier r;git ear It had turned black. ard her face wa :i1kC a p(e of ra: ceat, and very sore. I wou:d eed 'hen 1 washel h-r. and 1 bUi to keep b :ilhs on 't day and -igh:. T1 re w as3 no a etar spot on her iace when I be gan uing Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and nox it ;s comlletelv hea:ed. wit hont scar or biernish, hib is more than I had honed for. (Signed; Mrsi. Roie Ether, 2a Eckford St, Brook'y!, N. Y."' Ivory Congratulations. A v ry famous Anerican dentist met th~ Eng.ih hun-und of an American friend of mine with the geniai eingra tuatzio:i: *.My dear sir, I wish you Joy! You have married a fir.st-rate set Of teeh."FotnighLy Review. Deatnet Cannot ISe Cursi byloe'al applications :ts they cannlo: re::ehthe diseased portion of the ear. There is on ly ,>ne way to cure deatuess, and tbat i.s by :onsti tutionalremedios. Deafness is eausecd D aa innlamed condition of the mucous liinn of ithe Eustachian Tube. Whentais tube is in flamed you have a rumblingsouad or imper fet hearing, and! when it is entirely closed Deafness is therresul:, and unless the intlam ration can be take out aud this tube re stored :o its norm::i 'adition, hcarin-. will be destroyed foreve.. Nine ca,es out of tea arecaused by eatarra,waich is nothing but au infamed condition of the mucous sur.'aces. We will give One Hundred Dollars fr any case ot Deafness (caused by catarrh)tb at -an notbecuredby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for I circularsfree. F.J. CH~r Co.. To1do, 0. >old by Drugzists, 75e. Take nall's Family Pills for constipeation. English Shopkeepers. The upper class in Eng-and is sink ing; the middle is rising rapidly, and those who belong to the former keep shops in assumed namez, while those whio bejong to tha tatter endeavor to con.eni that they themiseives are eon necteal with trade. The conversation of both. however, betrays that they are shopkeepers.-London Truth. Cannot Reduce a Rate. It is stated in Washir:gtozn that un der the Townsend rate bill if a rate is fixed by the commission it cannot be lowered by a railroad. Should an emergency arise calling for a decreased rate the railroads or shippers would have to appeal again to the commis sion, there being no latitude allowed. whatever the circumstances. Hitherto a maximum rate has been the rule, but no such concession is made under the proposed legislation. Courting Bad Luck. There is an old superstition that It Is bad luck to burn a piece of bread. The origin of this is obvious, though probably few indeed of those who re ligiously adhere to the superstition have paused to think that it dates from those times when famines were part of the regular order of life. Famine no longer troubles the imagination of men; but the broad truth under the- foolish superstition remains. Bur-ning bread isn't any more likely to bring bad luck than wasting it in another way. But wast ing anything in any way is extreme provocation to what we call "bad luck." If the grown people who habi tually waste do not suffer for it their children surely will-for they will follow the example set them, and rare indeed is it that -famt.y can survive the faults of two successive wasteful generations. Waste is not generosity; thrift is not stinginess. There are millions of Americans, especially among the poor and the not-too-woll-off, who seem to think so. A thorough inves tigation would place at the head of the list of causes of poverty: "Waste fulness inherited from wastelul par ents."-Saturday Evening Post. .. Find Relief from Such ~ring. Alnst//e Hart Vegetable Compound sooner: for I have tried so many remedies without help. " I droaded the approach ot my menstrual period every month, as it meant so much pasin and suffering for me. but after I had used the Compound two months I became regular and natural and am now perfectly well and free Ifrom pain at my monthly periods. I aan very grateful for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege -table Compound has done for me." Such testimony should be accepted by all women as convincing evidence tat Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound stands without a peer as a -retmedy for all the distressIng ills of1 women. -The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound rests upon the well-earned gratitude of American wonen. When women are troubled wtith irreg ular, suppressed or painful menstrua tion, leucorrhoea, displacement or, ul ceation of the womb. that bearing down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache. bloating, (or fiatu lency), general debility, indigestion and nervous prostration, or are beset with such svmutoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, e xcitability, irritability. ner vousness, sleeplessness, mnelcincholy. they should remember there is one tried -and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. "Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. SDon't hesitate to wirite to Mrs. Pinkhami if there is anything about your sickness you do not understand. Sihe will treat yon with kindness and her advice is lree. No woman ever regretted jwriting her and she he~s helped thousands. Address Lynn, M'ss. .a. Bf~ niertandS a Waman's E1s. THE P ULP1. AN ELCQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY DEAN F. K. SANDERS. OF YALE UNIVERSITY. Subject: The Most Beautiful Book. Brooklyn, N. Y.-In the absence of Dr. A. J. Lyman, the pastor, the pulpit :>f South Congregational Church was occupied Sunday by Dean F. K. San Liers. D. D.. the head of the Divinity School of Yale University. He took Cor his subject "The Most Beautiful Book in the World," and said: My theme rests on the authority of one renowned for his literary knowl dge, Renan, who is deservedly famous .s a student of literature nnd of the Bible. He declared that the gospel of Luke was the most beautiful book in the world. No ene can, of course. test this statement who is not familiar with the gospel. To the superlici..l reader it is only one of the stories of tie life of Jesus. The skill, the power, the pathos and the sympathy of the writer become clearer with every re reading of the book. An early tradi tion spoke of Luke the painter, and said he bad painted a portrait of the Virgin. That tradition, whether true or not, was not very far from right. It may be said that he gave us, in a fashion, the most beautiful picture of Mary of Nazareth: it stands out before us with lively distinctness. Everything goes to show that Luke was a Greek. familiar with the best literature of his day, a keen observer and careful inves tigator. He seems to have had unu sual opportunity for observing and de scribing the life and personality of the Lord. Among other things he gives evidence of.possessing the true histori spirit. You will notice how he is inter ested in tracing the Lord's active min istry from place to place. The story is told in an orderly fashion that helps us to arrange the facts far better than the other gospels could. You will no tice also that Luke is fond of following up the physical and moral growth of our Lord. He is also careful to con nect his story with the history of the time. -with Roman and Syrian history. He is careful to place the life of Jesus in its larger environment and to show - -hat Jesus was inrelation -o the world about him, and we shall see why it was that that point of view laid such hold upon him. This was natural to a cul tured Greek, and it was necessary if his purpose was to influence his cul tured countrymen. What is it, we may ask, that consti tutes a beautiful book. and does this third gospel possess those attributes in a supreme degree? It would seem to me that a beautiful book ought to have in the first place a noble conception. which in some way awakens and dom inates the soul, and it ought to have a skillful, but simple plan of develop ment rightly grasped and enjoyed. There must he good taste and right judgment in the choice of the material which enables us to grasp details and to see the gradual unfolding which the writer would set forth. And there should be felicitous expression of everything which the writer seeks to set forth. These nre the fundamentals of a beautiful book. First, in its beautiful conception. The theme is the active life of Jesus. and it is far more than that: it is the broad lif'e which He lived with others. Luke loses no chance to show how out siders sought opportunities to conte in contact with JTesus and always evoked a response. We see His parents. disci ples, friends and casual acquainitanlcs with entire directness. and yet it was not Jesus the man that Luke tells about, but the Lord JTesus. Luke never forgets that those to whom he refers are now the risen Lord and the apes' tes of the church. A famous critic said: "Luke ever spares the twelve. es peially Peter." He omits many little details even regarding our Lord, such as the agony in the garden, and many about the apostles. especially Peter. which are given in Matthew and Mark. Why? Apparently bec'ause he did not think it was worth while. He wats studying the work of the Lord in rev erent fashion. It was not his purpose to simply puVt down facts, but to showv those facts which would bring out the explanation of the fact that Jesus was the risen Lord of humanity. and that the twelve were the "glorious company of the apostles." It was not even just that, but to show Jesus in all His pow er, and greatness, and holiness, and grace, the friend of all who were in any kind of need, the Saviour of hu mall kind, the one power to whom the whole world ought to bow. That seems something like the thought that was in the mind of Luke. But to go to the plan of development. It is extremely simple. Mark's gospeli consists of a series of scenes which~ bring out the life of Jesus with start lng realism. Luke and Matthew are not like that. Luke seeks to give tiue historical association, a plain and sim pe view of tile development of the life. and it-is uniqud in its simplicity. He has two chapters devo'ed to the inl fancy and boyhood of JTesus, and in the last two verses he shows the thirty yars of growth of Jesus. Tfhen two chanters serve to bring us to the point when, ini full maturity, and with abso lute commanld over Himself and His purjoses. HeI was ready for the work which opened bofore Him. So three or four chapters give us the 'irepalration for tiis publlic ministry, tell us of John the Baptist. how JTesus came to him. the details of the baptism amnd tempta tion; then follows the genealogy, and we are prepared for the actual story of the active work of JTesus. Then cones the story of His ministry, from Galilee to Jerusalem, and then thle lamst week iln Jerusalem. the Passion. and lastly the resurrectiou. and ascension. easy to follow and comprehensive. Luke adds six out of twenty miracles and eighteen out of twenty-thrmee par'a bes and a great deal of choice nma' iial.eqise Ini the third place is the eu i taste and sympathy. Luke's gospel is a universal gospel. HeI emphasizes the fact that the ministry of Christ was for all. Dante called Luke the writer of the story of tile gentleness of Christ. He alone tells the stories of the good Samaritan. the prodigai son, the great supper, the Pharisee and the publican, the dinner in the house of Simon, and, lastly, the story of the repentant rob ber. All is a part of his great theme. Nor was it accidental that Luke shows us so many types of women and gives heml 1hono0r' a stlrange thinmg ill his day. His remarkable delineation of Ma ry, te mother of Jesus. with her strong. deep womanliness, gentle, trustful and nure, resolute and self-controlled; how is it done? Just ai 'word here and there. Tr'ulv we call his the gospel of woanhood. but it is only a part of that broader vision of the true pur poses of JTesus~ and His work. Perhaps the( miost direct proof of the quality of Lu tke's gospel is in its charm f expression. W here can you fin~d anthinm~ nmore e'-uisite than thme story ~f the birth at Bethl~ehem., or of the scene in the synagogue at Nazareth. or than the pathetic story of the widow's son, or of the woman "that was a sin ner?" We should need to take a whole boont-o+ make such prnfnund impres ions. The stories of Mar'y and. Mar ha and of Zacheus of that walk to -'mmaus-how ilimpossile) to read it vithout havin. our hearts burn within is also: Luke was truly a portrait )ainter. An alie'nt leend said Luke vas the founder of Chrstian art. Now the last and tnost tes t of per 'eetion is unity. Passaes in the hook >f Luk.' are like "ems in a royal crown. ['he book is a tribute of a reverent dis iple to the Lord Christ. showing His 'elationslip 'to nia and striving to 'onvey the impre5ssion of His personal ty. As if Luke should say: -Cannot 'ou see that le embodied the univer al ideal of a perfectly God-like life; hat le over-passed nuanio possibility iud gave in His life the evidence of be ii divine'' To be appreciited the ook must be constantly and reverent y read until it is fixed in the nemory. [hen it will do irs constructive work in ur souls. It will encourage us. that ospel of Luke. to let the whole Bible have its right (if way in our lives. and it will suggest the way in which the Bible can become. in our heiarts. the souree of genuine and constant up building, The rul)iIvitalized. Pulpit power. which for a time seemed to be on the wane, is return ing, and it is largely bec'ause the peaching is less of a literary chaniac ter, less of tinished essays and topical discussions, semi-secular. It is now more vittrlized and energized with the Spirit's power. Those who heard some of our most fanmorspreachers ten years ago would scarcely believe they were the same me speaking if heard to-day. Dr. Gunsaulus, who used to deliver those polished sermons in Plymouth Church, Chicago, ten years ago, could not hold the great audience in the down-town auditorium which he ad dresses now if he used those old-time sermons, or better ones of the same or der. Sonithing seemed to cone into this fine man's life a few years ago which admonished him that nothing but the power of Coil could nake a ermon great, and he has been preach ing great sermons since that day. Dr. Hillis used tocharm a literary audience in Central Music Hall with an essay which glittered like a newly cut stone from the hands of a lapidary. but if re ports are true, that is not the kind of sermons that Dr. Hillis is preaching now. Indeed, he himself is quoted re cently as saying that oratorical pulpit tiights are the bane of preaching, and that clergy and laity shared an equal responsibility in the saving of souls. *The preacher." said Dr. Hillis, "must not treat on topical subjects Sunday after Sunday. but must preach the gos pel of Jesus Christ. The church is not the preacher's field: it is his force. and it is the nan who has not crossed the church's threshold for years upon whom you have a claim." It is that possibility which makes a preacher's work inspiring. but also tremendously responsible. What Sabbath may be ot have among his hearers a soul that is hungering and thirsting for the bread and the water of life? What an infinite crime to give him a stone. or quite as bad, a. handful of artificial flowers." Be Good For Something. The highest virtue consists of more than merely being good. It is being good for something; and good for some thing not to one's self alone, but to others and to God. That legative, self-complacent virtue which is only a strict abstention fronm evil, is of a quality far inferior to the virtue which suppresses evil or helps another to re sist it. Virtue, in the old Latin sense. is synonymous with valor. It implies not only an espousal, but a champion ship, and, if necessary, a fight. Virtue is not only being good. but-doing good, and the better we are the more wve ought to- do. We believe in these words of R. R. Bowker: "It is bad for the ignorant and the vicious to do ill. It is worse for the educated and honest to do nothing." Disloyalty. When a Christian is at peace with any sini ill his own life, when he is reconciled to any evil habit, or be comes indifferent to anything in his own character wvhichi renders him uin like Christ. he is disloyal to his Mas ter. In like mannter, when a citizenl of the Kingdom of God is at peace with any sin of society. becomes rec onciled to any evil habits of tile com munity or indifferent to anything that is inconsistent with the full coming of God's Kingdom on earth, he is dis loyal to the kingdom.-Josiah Strong, D. D., Open the D~oors. You close your doors and brood over your owvn miseries and the wrongs people have done you: whereas. if you would but open those doors. you might c;>me out into the lhght of God's trnth, and see that His heart is as clear as sunlight towvard you. If you would but let Him teach you, you wouldl find your perplexities melt away like the snow in the spring till ycu could hard ly believe you ever felt them.-Geor'ge adonald. Chri.st Walks on Onr Feet. Christ would still seek the lost, but Ie must do it nowv on our feet: lHe would sti'l minister. but He mtust do it with our hands; lHe would stil~l warm and co~,afort and Encourage anui instruct, hut He must (:0 it with our lips. If we refuse to perfor'm these oices for H-im. what right have we to call oursel-'es members of 1His body in vital union wvith Him?-Josiahi Strong. A Wondertul Light. If you are willing to choose the seem ing darkness of faith instead of the umunation of rea son, wonderful light will break upon you from the Word e' God.-A. J. Gordon. Lost Faith in America. Joe Grim, the Italian fighter with the iron jaw, was recentiy drawn for jury duty over in Philadelphia. HE had made arrangements to fight Hugc Kelly of Chicago, and there was mone) in the bout. Joe went to court anc said to the judge: "Excusa me! Means lotto da mon judge!" "Are you naturalized?" asked the court. Sure! Good American me!" re plied the pugilist "Nothing doing. then!"' remarlkef the judge. "If you go West to figh1 you'll go to jail for life when yoU come back!" "21ean shame!" cried Joe. "I necdr da mon. Wife, she ncedat da men Me, greatest prie ighter' ia Littic Italy lousa da nman. I go to my man ag Mike da Co.;te.l. Hie ist a politish He say sure I'll fix it right. Now he do nothing. Say he go to jail, too I go myself to all the politish. They givea me da smile. If I go fighta dt Kell I go to pris. If I don't fighta da Kell I loosa da mon. America fine country!" And Joe left the cour rm in tearst CUBAN MINI Recommen Senor Quesada, Cuban Mini Senor Quesada. Cuban Mfinister to the article in The Outlook for July 1899. by Ge at the Esteban Theatre. Matanzas, Cuba. he the spell oi eloquent speech and in the gri have rarely witnessed such a scene as at dead patriot. Marti.'' In a letter to The Pe Washington. D. C., Senor Quesada says: "Peritnca I can recon mecdicine. It is an ea tonic. anrd it is also ani abinost uiversal comflj Gonzcdo DeQitesada. ICongressman .1. H. Bankhead, of Ala btma, one of the most influential mem bers of the House of Representatives, in a letter written from WVashington, D. C. gives his endorsement to the great cab tarrh remedy, Peruna, in the following words: "Your Peruna is one of the best med icines I ever tried, and no tamn iy shoulhi be without your' remark blde remedy. As a tonic and catarrh cure I know of nothing better. J. H. Banakhead. To better advertise the south's Leading Busness College, four scholarships are of fered young persona of this county at less than cost. WRITE TODAY. EMA-kA BUINES80CJLEE, fcon1,6a. Facts Are Ste Uniform excellent quality century has steadily increased Thie leader of all Lion Coffee is now used in millions of homes. popular success speaks for itself. positive proof that LION COFFEE ha Confidence of the peo The uniform quality of LIO COFFEE survives all oppositi LION COFFEE keeps its old friend Wnakes new ones every day. HION COFFEE a.s en. than its Strength, Flavor and t ity to commend it. On arrival the plantationiAg is carefully r ed at our factories and sec1 packed In 1 lb. sealed packa and not opened again until ne 'for use in the home. This preel the possibilLty of adulteratio i dust, Insects or unclean han LION COFFEE is therefore ga Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Save these Lion-head SOLD BY GROCE! Jets and Flashes. It takes mo:e than glucose hcney to hod people o the church. i Adjust your conscilnce to Christ an your ourse will be right. A Frame House 100 Years Od. A frame house can be kept in good order for a hundred ears. if painted psith the Lonman ti Martinez. L. & 3L Paint. It wont need to ent more than ont e in ten to s ten years because the L.,& . Zinc harUens hIeL. & L Wlhite Lea. and -ives it enormous life. 'Four gallons Longmnan & MIartinez L. & 3. Paint mixed with three gallons linseed oil will paint a house. W. B. Barr. Charleston. W. Va., writes: Pinted Frankenburg Flock. with L. & M1. stands out as though varnished." W~ears and covers like gold. Sold ev erywhere and by Longman . latinez. New York. Pamnt Makers Ior Compu'soryV education Will becomre gen cral i Cape Coloay soon rhe Effect of Warm Days and Cool N ights. A leading physician writes that he has no t'eed warm days and cool nights always af 1feet the bowels, and suggests some pre ventative remedy. Dr. Biggers' Huckle berry Cordial is the only one that can be absolutely relied upon. It never tails to Sold by all Druggists, 25 and 50c bottle. No one can look more solemn than / THE '1 THE HMGHEST AWA~ifAT' THE ST.LOm~S WORLUYSF'AiR 'gWE WATERZPROOP> OILED CLOTHINg I. .'Towen co..ESTABLISHED 1836 | TomRa CANADIAN CO. anied. TOROTo.CANJ STERT1U. S. ds Pe-ru-na ......... - ------ ster to the United States. United States, is an orator born. In an orge Kennan. who heard Quesada speak said: "I have seen many audiences under ) oi strong emotional excitement; but I the close of Quesada's eulogy upon the runa Medicine Company, written from uend as a very good :ellen~t strengtbenlin %cacious cure for the >laint of catarrh." There is but 'a single medicine which is a radical specific for catarrh. It is Peruna, which has stood a half century test and cured thousands of cases. If you do not derive prompt and satis facto'ry results from the use of Peruna. write at once to Dr. Hartman. giving a full statement af your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman. President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. 0. AD correspondence held strictly confidential. CURED oSy efief. Removes all swelling in 8 to 2= days; effects a permanent cure in 3o to 6o days. Trialtreatment given free. Nothingcan be faire' Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons. ~... Sseialsts, Box Atlant. Il bborn Things for over a quarter of a the sales of LION COFFEE, package coffees. Such t is a Ls the le. on. '-? s and - - - from mast- - " irrey - - iges, eded udes or contact with germs, dirt, s. The absolute purity of ranteed to the consumer. Lion-head on ev-ery package. for valuable premiums. tS EVERYWHERE )OLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. $50 POSITION PAY TUITION AFTER POSITION IS SECURED First 10 who clip this notice and send to DRAUGHON'S PRACTICAL BilSINESS COLLEGE R aleigh. Columbia, Knoxville, Atlanta Waeo Ft. Worth or Nashville, Tenn. may. without giving notes, pay EVERY CENT of tuition out of salary after good position is secured. If not sccured no pay required. COURSE BY MAIL FREE f not ready to enter you may take lessons by mail FREE ontil ready. which would save time, living expenses. etc., or complete at home and get di ploma, D. P. B. C. Co.. has $300.000.00 capital. 17 bankers on Board of Direc tors, and TWENTY Colleges in THIR TEEN states to back every claim it makes. Established SIXTEEN years. Clip and send this notice to-day. BEST FOI 4i blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin regularly you are sick. Constipation kills a starts chronic ailments and long years of sun CAsCARETS today, for you will never get right Take our advice, start with Cascarn mnoney refunded. The genuine tablet stam booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Cot CONCENTRATED Crab Orchard WATER *O'ADE MAPK -A SPECIFIC FOR | Dyspepsia 3 Sick Headache3 |Constipation... I The Three "ills" That Make Life a Burden. Nature's Great Remedy Iu Use for Almost a Century. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., LUISVILLE, KY. A Tobacco Grower's Profit is dependent upon a properly bal anced fertilizer. No -~ crop is so easily spoiled as tobacco. The fertilizer must be right, and to be right it must contain at least 10% actual Potash Test it: Sv~l n patch with fertilize with plenty oa atash. anotbee with little or no r . and note .heresults. Every tobacco Erower should hare our little book. "Tobaco ulture"-it will be sent free-write t: GERAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassan St., N. Y., or Atlanta. Ga.-=% South Broad St. UNION MADE - W. L. DOUG.AS MAZES AID SEI.L 3ORE EWrS $3.50 SOES THN ANY OTHER INI =ACTURNR 32 ME WORL. SIO,OOO R EWAR D to any one who cndispross this st-ment. t'est S lrs in the world causen of eir elent stye, eas froey .0 tostt .00. The only dif their shape better, wear longer, and $.0 s aron eark ttoay W.L btto of eahn sheook font. Take shoesubrctuol th rough hisg ownretai sres in the principa cities and by hee ou lieW L. Douglas shoes *"The Best I Ever Woe.", "I write to say, that I hare worn pour $3.50 bhoes fithe pst re raas, ad nd the th East Jefferson St., L.ouiseitle, Ky. Boys wear W.LI. DouglasS$2.50 and $2.00 shoes because they fit better, hold their shape and wear longer than other makes. W. Donglas uss Cor CotZ' nin hi Ze the jinest patent leather produced. Fast Color Eyelets will not wear brassy. business In the wod.orul the getg a t by mail. Scent era repay delver fliustrated Catalogue of ,Spring Styes. W. L.. DOUGL.AS, Brocktoa, Mas. You want only the best Cotton Gin Mac h iner y Ask any experienced Ginner about Pratt,E[agle,Smith Winship, Munger WVe would like to show you what thousands of life long customers say. Write for catalog and testimonial book let. IContinental Gin Co Charlotte, N. C., Atlanta. Ga. Birr'ingham. Ala. Mtemphis, Tenn., Dallas, Tex. A NFW CARD TRICK' FIE CARDS Tips of lFingrrs instantly disappear; Cds imediately produced again from anyp place performer desires. Full instructions by mail for $1. Address J. HI.VANDERHAVEN,TAVARES,FLA, 30. 17. THE DOWELS CANDY CATHARTIG ~s, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, ad dizziness. When your bowels don't move e people than all other diseases together. It Fing. No matter what ails you, start taking 1el and stay well until you get your bowels stoday under absolute guarantee to care or d C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and