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Thousands of Women ARE MADE WELL AND STRONG Success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Rests Upon the Fact that It Really Does Make Sick Women Well Thousands upon thousands of Ameri can women have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Their letters are on file in Mrs. Pinkham's office, and prove this statement to be a fact and n'ot a mere boast. Overshadowing indeed is the success of this great medicine, and compared with it all other medicines and treat ment for women are experiments. Why has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound accomplished its wide spread results for good? Why has it lived and thrived and done its glorious work for a quarter of a century ? Simply and surely because of its ster ling worth. The reason no other med icine has even approached its success is plainly and positively because there is no other medicine in the world so good for women's ills. The wonderful power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound over the diseases of womankind is not be cause it is a stimulant-not because it is a palliative, but simply because it is the most wonderful tonic and recon structor ever discovered to at directly upon the uterine system, positively CUNG disease and displacements and restoring health and vigor. Marvelous cures are reported from all parts of the country by women who have been cured. trained nurses who have witnessed cures. and physicians who have recognized the virtue in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, and are fair enough to give credit where it is due. If physicians dared to be frank and open, hundreds of them would acknowledge that they constantly prescribe Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound in severe cases of female ills, as they know by experience that it will effect a cure. Women who are troubled with painful or irregular menstruation, backache, bloating (or flatulence), leucorrhoea. falling, inflammation or ulceration of the uterus. < arian troubles, that " bearing-down " feeling. dizziness, faintness. indigestion, nervous pros tration, or the blues, should take im mediate action to ward off the serious consequences and be restored to health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Anyway, write to Mrs. Pinkham. Lynn. Mass., for advice. It's free and always helpful. a til tzBarnai To better advertise the South's Leading Business College, four scholarships are of fered young persons of this county at 1ss than cost. WRITE TODAY. GA-ALA. USIII,_ES COLLECTE, Maom, Ga. Tof (1 persons o ==pa.t Inhdianl blood who are ANTEDnot livinse with any- tr;b, () of n.en who were draf ted in Kentucky, (3)of i.oTher of oildiers who have been denied pension ::-recount of their r 'aurriaire. (4) of in.-n who served ;n theFed %-al army, or (0 1h- nearest ki of such soldiers or afi ors. now (leceaLsed. NATilAN BICKFORD, Attorney, Washngto1, D. I. Va!ue of a H.earty Laugh. An Erglish physician in search for remedies for human ills finds that laughter stands very high in the list of prophylactics. The effect of merE cheerfulness as a healtha promoter is well krnown, but an occasional out burst of downright laughter is the he roic remedy. It is a mat:er of every day experience, says our English au thority, that one feels the better for Sgood laugh, an explosion of laughter being in truth a "nerve storm, cem parable in its effect to a thunderstom in nature, doing good by dissipating those expressive clouds of care whicl. sometimes darken the mental toriz on." This augiority assures us that the memorable adage. "Laugh anc~ grow fat." rests on a sound piiilosoph ical basis. Portly people are not given to laughter because they are fat, they are far because they laugh.--I Misinformed. Amember of a temperance society teard of a man in the southern part of the city dose wife, in popular par lance. "had driven him to drink." The advocate decided to call on the inebri ate and his wife and to plead with him to give up drink. The evening she called she did not find the toper at home. but the temperance worker and his wife talk-ed on other topics. At last she asked the woman if it was true that her husband was driven to drink. "'Driven to drink!" was the answer to the surprised white ribboner's ques tion. "why, no. my man is willing to walk, na matter how far jhe has to go to get it."'-Philad~elphia Ledger. A girl's idea of a romanae is a man -who wears a woman's ring on his fin rer and looks sadly at it. So. 31. EVER TREAT YOU SO? Coffee Acts thie Jonah and Will Come Up A clergyman who pursues ils noble calling in a country parish in Iowa tells of his coffee experience: "My wife and I used coffee regularly for breakfast. frequently for dinnier and occasionally for supper-aiways the ver~y best' quality-package coffee never could tinal a place on our table. "In the spring of 189Gt my wife was taken with violent vomiting, which we had great didiculty in stopping. ".It semad to come from coffee drink ing, but we could not decide. "In the following July, however, she was attacked a second timec by the vomiting. I was away from home till in~g an appointment at the time. and on myv return I found her very low; one hatd literally vomited herself almost to death. nd it took some days to quflet the troiuble and restore her stomach. "Ihad also exp~eriencedI the samne trouble. bunt not so violently, and had relieved it eanch tinme by a resort to mredicine. "-But my wife's second attack satis fled me that the 2.se of coffee was at the bottom of our troubles. and so we sto1pped it forthwith and too': (n Pos tutm Food Coffee- The oldsymtoms of diseas~e disappeared. :ued duing' theo '. years that we have been1 iPo tum: instead of cofzfee we Iavi..e lhad a recurrenice of the vomills W'e (eer waryi o( PCo~mun, to wib we kn:ow we'. owe our goodl hilti.Tisi a1 simpl'e strie~nerCft of fa. EN givn b Posts: CompanyBtl Creeck. Mic.. Rtead the littie bok.TeRodt were indifferent, we cannot afford to he so: for our highest interest is to be found in seeking the coinpletenss of our own being in aind the harmony or 'r'gness of our relations with all other beiings and with the jaws and forces of the universe in whici we find our place. Everything worth having or worth desiring is involved in charae ter. in being simply and soundly right. Tc wvorld come's right when the min coies right. What it 's to each one of us depends on what we are and how we take it. We make our own hells, we can make our own heavens. "When the soul to sin hath died, True and beautiful and sound Then all carth is sanctifled. Upsprings paradise around." A rough-east man rose in a country meeting-house to tell his ?xperience: "I t was in the north country. when the snow lay deep on die ground. that the Lord God found out Jonathan linckley and converted his soul. And the leafless trees gave praise to God." Is there one among us who might not renort to himself somethin.' like this happy convert's story? Who has not at some time felt sure of his place in the great order. and seen all the world irradiated with a light which really shone from within the mind?. If a man has lost his faith in God and still holds fast his own integrity. well for the man. But, in this very -oncern to be true to the highest law he knows. he is uneonsciously a wor Chiper. Blessed is the man who hmi .ers and thirsts for righteousness. for already he holds in his soul the richest of all treasures. We who believe in God need not be seriously troubled about the fate or state of honest non believers, for we may count their very honesty as a sign of the real presence and the finest inspiration. Once accept the principle of duty. and all life becomes an honorable dis cipline and a steady advance. There is no higher rank on earth or in heaven than the rank of personal goodness: and he who loves it, seeks it. and practices it for its own sake is surely moving, howN ever slowly, toward the pirfect life. Here also is the cure, and the only cure. for our resTiesstless and self diss: tisfaction. "No man can serve two masters." But bo whon falls heartily in love with virtue is no longer distracted by a divided allegi nnce. He has nothinr else to (o but to occupy himself with learning and doing what is right and reasonable. Havinli settled the central principle and leading purpose of his life. eveory step onward and upward makes the next easier: and the law of habit Con tinually operates to confirm this deep heartEd choice. He is'no longer driven by the lash of conscience; he is no nore a servant, but a son, am the Father's house is his happy lionie. Here too is the sec-et of victory over our trials and depressions. When shall we half realize the grandeur and glory of simple rectitude Let me again repeat a tale of real life. Years I ago. and far away, I knew a woman of most fine and excellent qualities whose deeply shadowed life was like a lon- crucifixion and martyrdom. In one of her letters she said. "My youth is rone. my hope is dead, and my heart is heavy; but I neglect no duty." Inj reply I sand: "If you could ask God for just one blessin.g. and- could be sure of that one and never of another. would you dare pray that your youth might come back, or that your earthly hlopes mighlt be renewed? Would you not ask for a living principle within yourself that would make you neglect nio duty? And can you not see tha~t, in giving you the love of righlteousness, lHe has really given you the best thing in all the universe?" In her next let ter shle wrote that thlis view of thle matter was new to her own mind. but that she accepted it as true, and found in it strength to take up her burden a burden carried, as I believe, with patience, courage, and constancy to the end, which was not far away. There is one thing more to be said. H le who really loves righteousness ennl not love it for himself alone: he bun gers for its triumph over all the earth: le longs for tile banishment of every wvrong. Hence his zeal for justice is swveetened with good will to mlen. so that righteousness becomeus one form of benevolence. The rirht is always the good. Hence the ethical passion kindled from thle heart of Jesus has flamed out. in abhorrence of wronmz and evil, and has lent support and vigor to every movement for reform atid welfare. "It is a spulrious virtue that can contentedly see vice thrivitng b~y its side." The gospel is no gosp~el if it does not turn tile hearts of mn toward each other as well as towara God. It is no gospel if it do0es not unite all believers in wise. well-considered. andii earinest movemients for theC cleans ing of the worid and th-' better order ing of aill human life. Righteousness is rightness. To liunger and thli'st tor' righteousniess ther-efore is all one with th.e prayer that God's kingdom may comei. andl( that HI-s will may be done onl earth as it is ill h ave "Never Refused God Anything." Florence Nightingale said: "If I couid give you information of my life. it would be to show hlow~ a woniat of very ordinary:. a bility has been led by God itn stra-nge and unaccustomed pa;ths to do in HI-s ser; ice what He has d~(one in her'. Ard if I ('ould tel: you all. you would see how God has done' all. and I nothing. I have worked haird. ver" hlard. that is all: amnd I have never refused God anything." D)o Not Veliny, To-1 a (1 is; a good timle to mendt your i'e wher e it has need of it. Take the stp'nto your F-athier's service. Do} it in .renu~ine~ honesty and faith. D~on't qib~lble with your douts. Don't nmis Itust y'oursielf. Don't forget that Jesus is ookinlg' on. Don't w~a it any longer. The door is op~en. You cani enter. You (can do( it no0w. T1o-miorrtow may be tot, late.-lIev. I. 2j'ench Chambers. RAM'S HORN BLASTS "E" te'st of the vae IF ~ ai i' whether i Our' (hild-en are h t'\ king-r~ for 0"" ~ ~ __ Ce's A n-4 rena Tlw:e s a thea sea;with ba longing :o a chur:chl and thinking that th chur.+ belongs to you. 'T HE T ULUPI AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. CHARLES C. AMES. Subject: The Glory or Simple itectitude Boston. Mass.-The followinZ helpful sermon was delivered Sunday by the Rev. Charles G. Ames. It is entitled "Tie Glory of Simple Rectitude." and was preached from tle text. "Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for the'y shall be tilled." -Matt. v. G. "Blessed are they that hunig'r and thirst after rightousness., for they shall be tilled." The man who says that has a claim on the reverent and grateful attention of all niankind. le g'ves voice to the universal reason and conscience: he inspires the highest and holiest hope. Heaven and earth may pass awy. but the words tlit give life are themselves immortal. Like the utterances of the sibyl they are "simple. untadorned. onperfumed, and reacling through the ages, beCuse of God." Here is one sIgn of truth. It affects us like a p:irt of th.e' permanent order of things: it is al! of one stuff with the word and with our own proper nature. It has the ring of reality. Like sunlight it carries its own evi dence: and"to the sane muind it ree omiends itself as sunlight does to the healthy eye: but it is concealed from our grossness by its own siuplicity and transparency. Who realizes this splendid miraele of the common day?! In the same way we have become too familiar with some of the most ob vious aind iipt)ort:nt aspects of spirit ual truth. These Beatitudes of Jesus may seem to be worn smooth. We have heard them from our intimacy: their force and beauty appeal to unrespond ing hearts. If we could have stood. one day long ago. among the Syrian peas.ntts. on the slope of a hill in Galilee. and listened to these sayings as they fell fresh and clear cut as newly minte'd gold from the living lips of the new prophet. perhaps we. too. should have been "astonished at the do(trine.' we should have "wondered at the gracious words that proceeded out of His mouth." Did it not seem as if Nature herself had -at last found a voice,. and as if that voice were speaking straight to her children. saying clearly and cheer ily. yet soberly and solemn ily, what all men vaguely think or feel, bult ean rarely put into words? Yet these Beatitudes are remarkable for what tley (10 no say. The sen tences of Jesus seldom ruii in the grooves of old commonplace. He does not sit there, like tile scribe of the syn:mgoge. ('omplncent'ly reeiting. in tones that make men sleepy, tie vir tues .id piety of a dead ancestry. as if it weire enloughi to have Abraham for :t father and Moses for a law giver. H Pronounces no blessing On iousrespectability. decorous Con formuity. doctrinal soundness. ioyalty to the standard. fidel: y to the tradtionS. or even diligence to the routine of oh servanee and dei,,tion. Any priest in the audience must have felt that a slight was put upon his great office. ns if the snraker had forgotten to do it hon-or. The temple. the altar. and the sacred hooks are a!! mlentioned( with :espect. yet they somnehow fall into the baceksround. IHumanity is brought directly fronting Divintity. na if the pure heart ig~ht- see God and the im pure might know the caus of their bl iess. Ma: ;y a man in i:ist co-rany t must have hungt his head its the rebuke came hiome to huim. Complaeent world lings. meni proud of their estates or their learningt doubtless stood there. expecting that He would confirm the wor'ld's vunlgar .igmenut which sayvs. "Blessed are the lprosperous. the popu1 her. the cultiva:ed and the comfort aide." But no. The uins that oDened in blessing made them shrink as if Hle had tuttered a curse. Ever.,' world fell like a blow o:1 their idols. The vir tues which hatd strutted so proudly b~efore God and man beganl to unmask as ugiy vices as I-I wvent on to say: "Blessed are the men of humble mind. the men of good will, the merciful, the pure in heart. Tea. blessed are they who hunger and thirst for rirnteous ness. so that for the sake of being right they dare and hear al1 losses and paIns. andt willingly let their mames he e':st outt as (evi!. No comfort here for the :alf-right eons. the self-satisfied, the sellf-willed. the' self-seeking. But sc-attered throigh the company were men nd women who felt their emnptiness and poverty, who took no credit for their nneestry. thi.Cr a(compljtishmnents or their social sinnding. wh~o hardly dared so much as to lift up their eyes to heavena. Yet, as tht-v listened, all the world above. around, within. seemed to change. The awful JIehovah, whom they inad thought of ns throned afar in threat cining majiesty, seemed a smiling Father who wvished This children to he near Himu and to be as perfect as5 Ham self. Tihev drewv in deeper draughts of' the country a ir: their very emptiness srcnmed to make so m'tch mtore roomn for GodI and goodaess. Th~eir cr of i:vrd need elhanged into childlike trunst. Here was indeed a messenger oif good tiings. Here was a doctino( nawrh of man as it was worthy of God. And does not all the best thought of our own time still travel this wvay? Has the weairy search of manukind t hroughi the aIges fotund aniy thing better than a righteousness which is rooted in sonship to the hi.:hest, and which blossoms into ser vice to the lowest'' Has not our clear' est conception of the divine ever been an expansion and idenliz::tion of the best un!ities of the hunman? The one fact which we most certainly know is our owni existence: and that fact. if we book deep) enough and honestly enough, we shia!! tind thlit r'e liion and wiiness of Goed. For. wh~ena:n' has rightly rver.:-cd tihe: tecrees of conlsc'iee. lhe lhs hear d the Voice: when he hr.s reall y :made acquaintance with his own natuere, lhe has seen the' Face. There are t imes when I feel cut ireiv satislied with this inward proof C: renlities. There are high mnomnt~s when ther'e is ne-'d of no other evi dence of God than the fact :hat I :im alive. And there ate times wh'len the sight of a good man. or somethiing seen in the fatce of a child, or some stir in Natlure that :tffects me liIke a focttstep) carries with it conviction and assur ance. Along wvi: h this feeling comes alwauys the per(cptin that goodness 1s whlat I amt miade for. Not even'a voie cut of tbe sk c ould tell nre more the renroof nes the enceurgen:m', must imvo -:iv. n 'Cs Ir~ue ih Si.111he riin war' :mdl strnuih~l :i The Best of Life. Kot till lfe's heat is cooled. The headlong rush slowea to a quiet pace. ind ev-ry purblind passion that has rul(ed Our roisier years. at last Spurs us in vain, and. weary of the race. *v,- eart- no more who los-s or wlo wins Ah. not till all the best of life seems past The best of life begins. ro tell for only fame. Ilandicappings. and the fickle gusts of praose. or place or power or gold to gild a name Above the grave whereto All paths will bring us, were to lose our days: Ye, on whose ears youth's passing bell has tolled In blowing bubbles. even as ehildren do. Forgetting we grow old. 3ut the world widens when Such hope of trivial gain that ruled us lies 3roken among our childhood's toys, for then We win to self-control: And mail ourselves in manhood. and there rise non us from the vast and windless height Those cleaner thoughts that are unto the sm:1 What stars are to the niaht. --The Spectator. Would Live in a Cemetery. Israel M. Barnes, of North Scituate, 'lass., is to give up his well-furnished ight room house in Scituate road to mild and occupy a three-room shanty .n the old family graveyard of his an estors, if the law will permit him to lo so. Already relatives have taken ction to prevent him carrying out the plan. Barnes plans to build the shanty eside the tomb where his great grand parents and his parents are buried. He as an opportunity .to rent his house t a good price. With his son, 19 years old, and his daughter, 14, he In sists that he will live in the graveyard. The graveyard is a private burial ground, a part of the old Vinal estate. There are many descendants who pro tested against Barnes' plan, and when it became known one of them consult ed an attorney to prevent any shanty being built. Barnes declares that he has been unable to buy a lot of land anywhere in the vicinity upon which he cares to build, and for this reason he will build in the cemetery. Food of the Cod. About 1874 William Drysdale won a medal at a poultry show in Dudley. Staffordshire, England. The cen-er part of the medal consisted of a gold disc, on which the winner's name was engraved. Mr. Drysdale's son seems to have worn the disc and lost it whilst on a visit to Ashington, in Northumberland, in 1894. Naturally he concluded he had seen the last of it, but nearly ten years afterward a ,od fish was caught off the mouth o! the Wansbeck, in the stomach of vhich was found the long missing isc. A Blyth gentleman who had nov7 becomp the owner of it published an ccou. of his find in a newspaper. L"his caught ihe eye of Mr. Drysdale's son, who then applied for it as his roperty. His notion was that the disc nust havg been carried to sea with -efuse andI swallowed by the cod. Chinese in New York. There were 4,080 Chinese inhabi ants of New York, according to the ast census, but the popular estimate s that the actual number of China nen is twice as large. Though there s a rigid federal exclusion law and 1ew births occur in the Chinese quar ers, the Chinese population seems to ,ncrease. Thibet Poor in Minerals. The geologist who accompanied the British mis.ion to Thibet reports that :he country is strikingly poor in valu able minerals. The largest yield of gold was .28 grain a ton of gravel, and there was no trace of coal or in igenous gems. Cork Tre~e in Arizona. . E. Sowers, the mining man, has ust come in from Pinal county and 2a-3 broiught with him a sample of :ork bark taken from a tree on the [rions 'ranch. It is perhaps thne only :ork tree in Arizona and one of the rery few cork trees in the United states, but the thrifty condition of it rceres that cork can be produced This tree was planted by Mr. rions about nine years ago, is about :wenty-five or thirty feet tall and is about nine inches in diameter. That s as tall as the average tree ever gets. but at a great age trees some imes reach a diameter of five feet. [t is understood that the -;lant was rought from somewhere in South America.-Arizona Republican. Gave His Life for Bride. A young man named Vansevern was married a short time ago on his death bed at Courtrai, Belgium. He had asked his father's consent to marry, and when it was withheld there was a violent quarrel, during which the father seized a gun and fired it at his son, mortally wounaling him. When Vansevern was informed that his con dition was hopeless, he again asked his father's consent to his marriage, and the ceremony took place in his bedroom- When it concluded the bride fainted, and a few minutes later the bridegrom died. Admiral Rojiestvensky has under one an operation for the removal of a piece of bone from a wound which he received in the recent battle of the Sea THEpan PLAYWRICHT-STAR. tOdtte Tyler', Yamous Actres"s Vn':eS Doan's Kidney Pills. MIss Odette Tyler is uot only one of the best kn~owu dramatiC stars in America, but has written and produced n sulcce'ssful play of hiar own. Miss ~~ ~'yler hias writtenI t b following grateful note, eX T rssing her ap peciation of SPills:s idy xperince with your valuable remned:; has bn equally gralifying to hoth myvsoit and fiendcs. ned, ODETTE TYLER. Iester-ilburn Co., Buffal~o. N. Y. For satle by nll dealers. P'rice, 50 .VA MISS ELLA OFF, Indianapolis, Ind. e-ru-na, the Remedy That Curet Miss Ella Off. 1127 Linden St., Indian. aolis, Ind., writes: ''I suffered with a run down con itut~tion for seve, atl months. and -ared that I woudd hare to give up y i work. 'On secking the advice of a phyisi a n, he prescribed a tonic. I found, hwever, that it did me no g.ood. Ora eking' the advice of our drusggist, hasked me to try Peruna. In ai fw weeks I began to feeL and act likE different persom. M y appetite mn. eased. I did not have that weorn. ut feeling, and Icould sleep splen wZ~dy. In a couple of months 1woai .tirey recovered. . . thank you fo hatr your medicine has done foi Write Dr. Hartman. President of Thi artman Sanitarium. Columbus. Ohio, foi fee medical advice. All corresponidenc< iseld strictly confidential. cofehe Secret4 Even the best housekeep c eewithout good material. blended coffee such as unseri cunters won't do. But take t LI(ON COFFEE, tme the coffee that for over a welcomed in millions of hoznes for alking in this way: HOW TO MAK Use LION COFFEE, because to get be: Grind your LION COFFEE rather lne era for the pot." First ix It with a little add white of an egg (if egg is to be used as 1st. WITH BOILZNG WATER. THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a1 minutes to 3ettle. Serve prmptl 2d. WITH COLD WATE.A bring it to a boil. Then~set aside mainutes it's readly to serve. 3 (Don't boll It too long. <Don't let it stand rnore DONTS ~Don't use water that TWO WAYS T4 tet. With Fujs. Use part of the whi COF FEE before boiling. Ed. With Cold Water instead of eggs. aside for eight or ten minutes, then serve thi Insist on getting a pael prepare it according to tis LION COFFEE in fure. (Lion-head o: (Save the:-e Lion-hea< SOLD BY GROCE Fire destroyed the State Penitentiar2 tHuntsville. Texas, -ntailing a los agregating $50,000. The convicts wer rmoved when thefire was discovered There was no fatalities. FTSpermanety cured. No fits ornervous~ nss after nrst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great erveRestorer82trial bottleand treatise free . R. H. KE, Ltd.,31 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Cabbages were introduced into Englant inthe sixteenth century. dIrs.Winlo W's Soothing Syrup for Childrer tething, soften the gumsredudces infinama tin,alays pain,cureswviad colic, 25c.a bottle Cromwell is said to have originated thi board of trade idea. pisos Care for Consumption is an infallibl' edicne for coughs and colds.-N. \V ....., Oe.ean Grove. . .. Feb. 17. 190 A baby was born the other day on Gotham trolicy car. Cores Blood Poicon, Cancer. Ulcers. f you have offensive pimples or erup ins, ulers on any part of the ',ody, aeh g ugbones or joints, falling hair. mucou .t thes. swolen glands, skin itehes and burns, sore lips or gumns, eating. resterini reC5 sharp. gnawing tains. then you suif r cfrom serious blood poison or the begin igs of deadiv ener. You may be per inently eured by taking Botanie Bloo< alm (B. B. D. male especially to cure th worst blood and skint diseases. Heals ever: soe or ulcer. '*ven deadly carer. stol s a] -hs and pains and redai'ees all swelinugs Botanic Buood Dahn cures all malignan blod troubles. such as eT-zema. seabs an< ses1. pimples, running sores. earbuneles :rofula. Druggists. I1 per large bottle. >ttles $2.50. , l bottles *65. exp~re-ss prepall To rve it eur's. sample of Blood Blai set fee and prepai by vriting Blood Ball . ,Atlanta. G. De.s-ribe trouble and fre medical adviue sent in .sealed letter. Ioie ha: seiaures represeting eight) eveu orders. 5 YEARS OF TORTURI tching anl rair.rnt Sores Covered1 Hen nd Bd.-tmcca ini Week by Cutilenia. ..For fifte:n yar.s my sa p andi forc had v*:s one n'-s of seabs, and my bod as ceed with sores. Words canno exress how I suffered from the itehin an pain. I had given up hope when rind told mne to get Cuticura. Afte bathing '!ithi Cuticura Soap and applyin Cicura ()intment for three days my her was as cear ac'evr. and to my sulrp)ri a d jy. cne caike o: soap and onebo ni r.en ;21( a complete cure in cn r ek. S ima Ui!. B . Franklin, 717 Wa*i intra old by drnets4. ....... 0 When you are at a los? to knowv what when you crave meehi.oth appetizing L eil 1 9(Natural I H Dby S iavor) Ornce tried, you wi I alwa Ox Tongues Chi Veal Loaf Ham Loa .Your Groce Libby. McNeill & BEST FOR GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel trouble blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, f pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin at regularly you are sick. Constipation kills mot starts chronic ailments and long years of suffei CASCARETS today, for you will never get wo right Take onr advice, start with Cascarets * mo ne d The genuine tablet stampe book e Adres Sterling Remedy Comp, Dropsy "FE Removes all swelling in 8 to 20 days; effects a permanent cure in 30 tO 6o days. Trial treatment given free. Nothingean be faires I Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons. Saeclalists. Box B Atlanta.9ea SGod Coffee rs cannot make a good cup of Dirty, adulterated and queerly ulous dtalers sio-vel over their he pure, clean, natural flavored leader of all package coffees Larter of a century has been daily and you will make a drink fit EGOOD COFFEE. Us atabesponfu to cael cr, and one old water, enouth to make a thick paste, and ettler), then follow one of the followmng rules: dd boiling water, and let it bol Lie cold water and set aside five I your cold water to the paste and ,add a little cold water, and in live h aten minutes before serving. s been bolled before. SETFLE COFFEE. teof an egg, mixing it with the ground LION fter ooilir'g add a dash of cold water, and set 'ogh a strainer ge of genuine LION COFFEE, recipe and you will only use (Sold only in 1 lb. sealed packages.) avery package.), Infor valuable premiums.) S EVERYWHERE DOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. WOMEN will find in1 MOzLEY 'S LEMON ELIXIR, the ideal laeativ e,a pleasant and thoroughly re liable remedy, without the least danger or possible harm to them in any condition peculiar to themselves. Pleasant in taste, mild in action and thorough in results. Tested for 35 years. Soc. and $I.oo per bottle at all Drug Stores. XOZLEY'S LEMON ELIXIR "One Dose Conines. Orchard Water ThADC MARK, Is a Certain Cure for O DYSPEPSIA, 3SICK HEADACHE,6 Stimulates the Liver, cures Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Irreularities of the Bowels. A natural product, prepar Sed by concentration ; a gen une natural water. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., Louisille, Ky. OUR SPECIALTY --4 -5 Three two dollar shirts for five doiiars. MADE TO YOUR MrASURE. UMODEL SHiRT CO. to serve for luncheon, dinner or supper nd satisfyin- try ood Products s have a supply on hand Ii Con Carne Brisket Beef Soups r ha. fhem Libby, Chicago TlHE BOWELS CANDY appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad >ul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, d dizziness. When your bowels don't move e people than all other diseases together. It 'lg. No mattelr what ails you, starttaking today under absolute guarantee to cure or 11l ad stay wel untl yu ge y~WbwelsI SC C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and ny. Chicago or New York. 50 fU flORS Rl I N0 cun t 4 ISodtarngty rlvdotru and hei! CufrTe by ath whh ur. ~ndre roa tose eans e istare sn, opsndis alcaion ofC i srecures 1icnret to soth candrr . -a Pills fato cl tnghe blomda A o sile St, coggstg bucets aOne Dola otony ures Ml thoghu :c h'rd Poer yd hn Ask. B ar n y 2o e xperience Weu~ with l d eclik to so tifex ncustda o me s m vesy s - Wrsfl i eorou l cl al~e :.-il dased m tstdi monig hal bolemtio.n oa Cotiein wenomto eslvdin poe Che, n i aroe icN.C., Alna.>eGa.cdu B coo ical i n ghudaniet o Ain. OI ..:.. -r.- WOMEN'S S -rIL SE