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DON'T MISS TH!S. Cure For Stomach Trouble-A New Methol. by Absorption-No Drugs. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you arficted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour Eructations, Heart Pains, Indiges ion Dys pepsia, Burning Pains and Lead \ei in Pit of Stomach. Acid Stomach, tended Abdomen, Dizziness. Colic? Bad Breath or Any Ohtr Stomach Tor ture? Let us send you a box of Mull's Anti Belch Wafers free to convince you that it cures. Nothing else like it known. It's sure and ve-ry pleasant. Cures by absorption. _Harmless. No .-ugs. Stomach Trouble can't be cured - herwise-so says Medical Science. Drugs won't do-they eat up the Stomach and make vou worse. We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers cure and we want you to know it. hence this offer. This offer may not appear again. 1276 GOOD FOR 2-c. 144 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist's name and 10c. in stamps or silver. and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull's Anti-Belch I Wafers, and will also send you a cer- i tificate good for 25c. toward the pur- 3 chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou ble; cures by absorption. Address MrLL's GRAPE ToNic Co., 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, Ill. Give Full Address and lWrite Plainly. All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. American Exuberance. A prominent English statesman who visited this country during the past summer was talking with friends about the national characteristics of Ameri cans. and gave it as his opinion that the Westerner is the most truly hu morous of the citizens of the United States. "Why," said the Briton. in explana tion. "a relative of mine who frequent ly visits the States for purposes of sport tells me that he was entranced by the reply made to him by the pro prietor of a hotel in Nebraska when he asked if there were any quail in the vicinity. "'Quail' exclaimed the proprietor, 'I should say so! Why, they've got to I be a regular nuisance 'round here. My cook comulains that she can't throw a piece of toast out of the window with out four -or five fat quail fighting to see which shall get on it-' '-Woman's Home Companion. ALL SICK WOMEN SHOULD READ MRS. FOX'S LETTER In All Parts of the United States Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has Effected Similar Cures. Many wonderful cures of female ills are continually coming to light which have been brought about by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and through the advice of M trs Pinkham of ynn Mas.,which is given to sick women absolutely free of cl- arge. twenty-fiv ya ae a study of the Ills of her sex ; she has consulted with < and advised thousands of suffering Swomen, who to-day owe not only their health but even life to her helpful ,advice. r.Fannie D. Fox. of 7 Chestnut Street~Dradford, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham " I suffered for a long times with female touble, and Enally was told by my phystelan that I had a tumor. 1 did not want to submit to an operation, so wrote you for advice. I received your letter and did as 1 you told me. and to-day I am completely cured. My doctor says the tumor has disap- 1 peared , and I am once more a well woman. Ieev Lydia E. Pinkhamn's Vegetable Com-e pound is the best medicine in the world." The testimonials which we are con stantlypublishingfrom grateful women establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Corn-t pound to conquer female diseases. Women suffering from any form of 1 female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs.c Pinkham, at Lynn. Mass. She asks nothing in return for her advice. It ist absolutely free, and to thousands of women has proved to be more precioust than gold. 'Y2elds Per Acre One Of The Results of liber-ally using our fertili zers. Is to pay o a mortgage g on the ol d farm. Read the fol lowing from Messrs. Wherry & Son.owners of the Magniohla Fruit F'arm, Durant. iss.: a "We made $90 from one acre strawberries, on which your *fertilizers were used. Eight I years ago we bought this place ti at 520 per acre. It was then considered to have been worn out twenty years before, but c by liberally using Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers nder peas and velvet beans. we can now grow almnost any thing, and hiave been offereda $250 per acre for the place. We experimonted with a grea. many brands of fertilfzers, but find the highest per-cent.e chea er." Now don't you thinkv Vlrgnia-Carolina Jertilizers woud enable you to pay off a mortgage If you had one? I Well, don't use any other. VirginIa-CarollnaChemicalGC Richmond. Va. - Norfolk. Va. Durham. N. C. Charleston, S. C. Baltimore. Md. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Memphis. Tenn. Shreveport. La. So. 4-'06. it lhnp ..~ Eye Wate ?POut ON "GJRAFT"' )UR REGULAR SUNDAY SERMON k Scholarly Discourse by Rev. Dr. R. F. Alston on a Live Topic-Curious Use of the Word Graft. Brooklyn. N. Y.-Dr. Reese F. Alsop, -ector of St. Ann's P. E. Church. ireached Sunday morning on "Graft, kncient and Modern." His text was 'rom Luke xix:S: "Behold, Lord. the ialf of my goods I give to the poor. md if I have taken anything from iny man by false accusation. I restore iim fourfold." Dr. Alsop said: We have in these days a curious use >f the word graft. Probably the gar lener would find it a little hard to un erstand how it came to have the mean ng that it has, yet It ought not to be litcult to explain. He sets into some >la.:t a bud or a twig, and by and by t grows into the plant. Then It lives 0 a certain extent its own life. bears ts own fruit, drawing the while sap, iourishment, vitality, from the plant nto which it has been grafted. It be omes. therefore, the figure of a thing :hat draws that something else with -vhich it is connected, that which it vses for its own purpose. So the habit )f drawing off for private uses some hing that really belongs to some one se,whether it be a government, a lepartment. or an individual, has come :o be called graft. The use of the ord is peculiar to our own times. 'he thing which the word indicates is, tlac! as old as history. Something like t we find in the story of him who :laims our attention this morning. Two or three things come out in our tudy of Zacchapus. First-He was in a dangerous em loyment. It surrounded him with :emptations. Its usual standard of tetion was low. Its prevailing habit vas one of wrong doing. It was a ourse of life in which every day one -ould see opportunities or getting gain md take them. Both insiders and out iders took for granted a certain meas ire of pilfering. Mr. Jerome has lately been holding ip to the ridicule of the public the !laim tha.t there is such a thing as ionest graft. by which is meant op )ortunities which come to insiders to ake advantage of their knowledge -od )f others' ignorance to make great )rofits. The employment of Zacchacus Mve such opportunities. and men like 1im were expected to gather in con tantly what was called perquisites of heir position. Just as a customs in :p2c(tor is suppe ..i1 to look for and to v:ut for a fee, or as a policeman who s a district like the Tenderloin. is ;4P. posed to be waiting and ready or bribes. We have men who have ;hown a good deal of this spirit. We mave had those who call themselves tatesnen in New lork who were in olitics by their own confession not or their health, but for their pocket ill the time. Zacchaeus, we are told. vas chief of the publicans. and he eems to have illustrated the spirit vhich is apt to prevail in a hated and roscribed business. namely, that of Lvenging itself upon the public by naking the public pay. Secondly-It would appear that he 1ad used :ie opportunities which his >ositlon gave him. 5 ax collecting >roper does not bring a man a large ortune. The income is usually grad Kd to give him merely a inoderate liv ng. But Zacchaeus had not been ~ontent with that. Tfhere are thou ands or peopile all through our land ho have the rare faculty of growing. ich in a fe'w years on a very small| alary. Mcen like Beavers, senators rho have been indicted and convicted >f laud frauds, judges- -ho have used ippoinments for personal .'easons. 'hese things which we know of in our lay should give some insight Into the nethods in JIericho of old. - was a ase of "high finance," of a constant 'rake oiW' in the year of our Lord 29. t was graft nearly twenty centuries, >efore the word ca-ie to have its pres nt connotation. And so Zecchaeus be. *ame rich;-nmotoriously rich. He was )robably like some os our high finan iers of to-day. He had a fine house tnd garden andl establishment, so that ts men pass -d it they pointed to It td said. "There lives the richest man n the city." Third-Still, in spite ot his prosper ty. he was In bad odor. The community vill stand a good deal, but there comes time ',hen even the glamour of realth cannot hide a man's true char teter-when his suc'cess can no longer lind men's eyes, when his splendor >ecomes an offense that cries to high eaven. There are houses and estab ishments in our day that make men ~nash their teeth, that stand in the ommunity as an exhibition of what raud and trickery and legal stealingt nd breach of .trust can do. With ealth honestly earned and nobly used, he legitimate reward of real servIce o the community, there Is and should( e no quarrel; but with ill gotten ains, gains got at the expense of the ommunity. gains which areinot the pay f honest work, of brain, of body, but he oot of eunning, of fraud, the booty lched by the strong or the ('lever, ort he high placed from the weak, ori oolish, or lowly; with such wealth here is and ought to be a quarrel eter al. And so it was with Zacchaeus. ts the people of Jericho passed his ates it was with a sneer, perhaps a urse. Hie is rich: yes, but lie is a inner: his glory is his shame, Hist plendor is the measure of his turpi ude. he has made his pile, but it ist he result of extortion and false aceu ations. He is not only a renegade, ine hat he is a publican. and the chief of 1 hem, but lie is a standing, living 1 .onument of what conscienceless reed can make of a max. Fourth-Now, with this judgment of t is fellow citizens. .tesus seems to gree, for when the people protest ganst His being this man's guest esus says: "The Son of man is conic m seek and to save that which was I st." That word "lost" seems- to I onede the justice of the people's udgment. Zacchaeus is a son of Lbraham. indeed; th.. is, one of the hosen people. But he is none the ss a lost man needing to be sought nd saved. Now, if that was his true character: fthe .Jerichoan estimate of him was a orrect. how are we to understand the rords: -Behold, Lord. the half of my :oods I give to the poor; and if I have aken anything from any man by false ecusation. I restore him fourfold"' h [ow can a man who sliews such gen- n rosity to the poor: who rertores four >d to adl whom he has injured, be so ad Have the people, and has Jesus istaken his character? Is he a mis idged and uniappreciated man? Not so do I read the story. The a ords which we aire thinkinig of are tot meant to describe hi: past, but his uture. 'They do not set forth what Las beta his habit, his manner of liv ng: they are the announicemenat of a r uddenly form'ed pur'pose. And that urpose. as we shall see presently. is b he natural reaction from what have ti een up to t' 'is time the motive and te Though he has done all these bad hings, justly won tie odium that he -njoys. none the less .j-sus sees in him )ossi'ioies of nmendment and nobil ty and <alls hini down from the tree )m1 which he has perched himself t) iecome his guest. This eondescention nvolves an interview and an intlux of he personality of Jesus upon his soul. this brings about a teiendous reul kion. The rEvulsion r..y perhnps be :he end of a long. slow process. Has ite not found that his :-iehes after all lid not p- him for the loss of his own leace o min . :and f - - the hate of the !ommunity in which I e iives, for the zcorn of a whole city? Has he not 'ound that after all his wealth did not satisfy or make him happy', That t.L 4in or its acquisition was like a canker it its heart? More than :his, when the light comes t brings out. the dark lines. Like a iash of lightning. the presen.e of hrit illuminates his past: and just as Peter, when he realized the divinity >A his Lord, cried: "Depart from me, for I am sinful man, 0 Lord." so Eamchaeus feels all at once the enor mity of his sin. It stands up in strong ,elief against what has been his mas :er passion. his greed. In an instant ie sees tie turpitude. the ugliness of vhat he has been doing. What he has een before dimly is now emphasized, tands before his mind in clear, strong ines. He is in the light and all at nce a mighty resolve seizes him. He will break with his past. will give up is besetting sin: yea, will vwith all his might tattle with it. Just as in Ephe mus, Pamu.ong the converts of Paul, those ho had been dabbling- with magic brought their books to burn; just as a runkard knows that if he is to follow Christ he must dash the cup forever rom his lips, so Zacchaeus forms and nnounces his purpose to brecAl with is greed. This resolve includes two things. First-Generosity. "Behold, Lord, the half of my goods, of my income, [ give to tue poor.' Notice the proportion. Moses asked it least one-tenth. Add to that de mands for publie requirements and a tfth was reached. This man says ,half." Compare that with the gifts f some of our notoriously rich men to-day. Very few attain to the mark )f this converted publican. A muan who died the other day ieft an estate f some $7.500.OO0, of which $100,000 was bequeathed to charity. and the newspaper spoke of a large amount being bequeathed for charitable be luests. One hundred thousand dollars >ut of $7.500,000 is a very small pro portion. Let us hope that during his life time the man did better than that. There was something extraor linary in the bigness of zus purpose >f Zacchaeus. Our multi-mlilionaires. uost of inen. even those who at times startle us by their gifts. have still ;mnrething to learn from Jericho's pub lican. Secondly-Restitution. "If I ha .-e taken an. thing from any man by false accusation, I restore him four fold." What a vista thcse words open back nto his life. They snow how a part it least of his wealth had been won. rhey show also how the methods of the past look now to his awakening con science. He proposes to deal with his habit by a heroic treatment. "I will restore fourfold." As h carries out that purpose, imagine, if you -can, the effect upon those, who in the past. dad had bitter and exasperating exper ences with him. Should the like be ione to-day, what a stirring up there would be. What a change of places etween the rich and the poor. What rast swellings of the conscience fund f the government! What thousands. erhaps millions of acres of public and would b~e returned t-> goverlne::t mtrol. What a disi,>rging there vould be of exhorbitant freights. How nany policy holders would be made ~lad. How many crushed out firms vould be resuscitated. Imagine, if rou can, the restitution of all wrongly otten w. alth. Why it would be like ~treams of water flowing through dry laces. It would be like a transforma ion scene in a pantomime. It is almost inconceivable, and yet bat is what Christianity meant to ~acchaeus. It was a salvation not -om death eternal, it was primarily a ~alvation from his greed, from his sel ishness. :rom his isolation, from his 'ellows. And notice that Jesus accepts 2s purpose 'as a perfectly proper :hr-g. He has the true spirit of a con erted aufe-large-hearted liberality, -estitution of all wrongly taken prop rty. Given these two things every rhere and religion becomes real and ital. Deny them and there is only a ame to live. It is ice to talk about )eing Christi'ns, unless our religion neans open-heartedn'-ss and righteous Christ Anchors the Soul. 'ev. Theodore L. Cuyler, speaking if Christ as an anchor to the soul, says lignificantly. "You are certain to be Lmailed with troubles. No hurricane 'an strike a full rigged ship more sud lenly than s orms of adversity may mrst upon you. But if Jesus Christ s in your soul you cannot suffer vreek. The anchor sure and steady -il hold you. Ileople do not see what uods a vessel when the gale is sending he billows over her bow. The anchor s invisible, as It lies full many a athom deep on the solid ground be meath the waves. So. when we see a ood man beaten upon with heavy ad -ersities and yet preserving a cheerful irit, we do not discover the secret or s serenity. 'But th~e eye of God sees hat there Is an interior life hid with hrist in that soul which no storm can ouch.' There is nany a bereavement, nony a trouble thiat may str'ip a man >f canvals or (cordage, but never touch le solid strengthi of his godly charac The nea-er you are to the Savioar he farther' are yor: from sin. Spot's Long Jaunt. It took Spot, a West Side bulldog, ust six days to come on foot from Iolland, Mich., to Chicago. 164 mIles. Spot arrived in Chicago last night. otsore and thin, but pleased. He ralked in at the residence of his mas r, A. F. Rehberg, Forty-eighth aye ue and Indiana street. still able to rag his tail and put his muddy feet 1 over the astonished memners of be household. Mr. Rehberg went to Holland two 'eeks ago for duck shooting, He took ue dog along: hut when he returned e left Spot behind. Country life did ot suit Spot. It made him sad. One ight, while tiedl to a tree, he slipped is collar and dlisapplearedl. Spot kept no recordl of his trip, and erefore Mr. Rehherg can only sur misc. The conclusion is that he walb I all the way from HollandI. To d~o ais he must hare made nearly thirty miles a ay. Furthermore, he had no >ad map,. Perhaps the most dlelightedl mem er of the Rehherg family is Hazel, e 5-year-old daughter. Since yes trday she has given Spot two pounds andy--Chicago Post. TWENTY YEARS OF IT. Emaciated by Diabetes- Tortured With Gravel and Kidney Paias. Henry Soule, cobble-, of Hammonds port. N. Y., says: "'Since Doan's Kid ney Pills cured me eight years ago. 1've reached 70 and hope to live many years longer. But twenty years ago I had) kidney trouble se bad I could noi work. Backache was persistent an( it was agony to lifi - anything. Gravel whirling head aches. dizzines. and terrible urin ary disorders ran me down from 1G to 100 pounds. Doctors told me I had diabetes and couki not live. I was wretched and hopeless wher. I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. but they cured me eight years ago, and I've been well ever since." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ONLY ONE. "I've received ten proposals this fall." "The persistent fellow' What's his name?"-Cleveland Leader. FITS permanentlycured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer,t2trial bottle andt reatisefrec Dr.RB.H.KLN.z, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Ragout of bear has become a popular dish. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine. Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails %:o cure. E. W . Grove'ssignature on each box. 25c. Mahomet's tomb is covered with jeweh worth $12.500.000. Robbed in Church. Just think what an outrage it is to b robbed of all the benefits or the servicei by continuous coughing throughout the congregation, when Anti-Gripine is guaran teed to cure. Sold everywhere. 25 cts V. W. Diemer, 1M. D., manufacturer Springfiejd. Mo. A company has been formed in Greect for buying up unsold currants. A Guaranteed Cure For P1 les. Itching, Blind, Bleeding-, Protruding Pilus. Druggists are authorized to refund money It PazoOintment fails to cure in G to 14 days.50c. Salt has had much influence in shapint civilization. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coaghs and cold..-N. W, SAxUEL, Oceani rove, N. J., Foo. 17, 190j. 'he Iindoos are boycotting foreigr su-:ar. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion: never fails. Sold b. Druggists. Mail orders promptly fillet by Dr. Detchon, Crawfordsville, and. .c1. The new Italian postage stamrs will noi bear the monarch's head. S100 Rteward. 5100. The readers of this paper will be pleased t eLrn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to .,ure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh C'ure is the only positive cure now known tc the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's CatarrhCure is taken inter nally,aeting directly upon the blool and mu cons surfaces of the system,thereb:y destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patIent strength by building up the con sitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith ir its curative p)owers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any ease that it falls to cure, Send for list of tes::imonials. Address F'. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Japanese Diplomat in Lo;'don, The Jap is by nature a dIplomat writes a correspondent of M. A. P Here in our midst the Viscount Hay ashi was long a respected figure. but the man who has familiarized us with Japan, and done most to advance her cause among us, is undoubtedly the Baron Suyematsu. As one of the crowd of "Young Japan." who, as the outcome of the revolution sought a new life in Europe, young Suyematsu (with more than one of the generals who have met Russia at the front) made Cambridge his alma mater, and then returned to Japan. As the son in-law of Marquis Ito, here on a diplo matic mission, the baron reappeared among us two seasons ago, and rapid ly became a familiar figure in Lon don drawing rooems. "Cy" Sillway Would Dig 'Em Up. "Cy" Silloway, the tall New Hamp shire congressman, was visiting a friend who was making extensive im provements on his estate In Ilover, when the following incident occurred: There was a scarcity of sand and loam, which was needed to fi1l in an excavation, and his host asked the congressman: "What shall I use to fill that hiole?" "Oh, if you haven't the dirt, fill in with some of these 'diggers, and cover them deep," answered "Cy." "Yes," spoke up one of the diggers. "an', begorra. ni:ct election tine ye'fl be 'round diggin' us up." THE LITTLE WIDOW A Mighty Good Sort ofra Ne~ighbor to Have "A little widow, a neighbor of mine, persuaded me to try Grape-Nuts wher my stomach was so weak that- it would not retain food of any other kind., writes a grateful woman, from Sar Bernardino Co., Cal. "I had been ill and confined to my bed with fever and nervous prostration for three long months after the birth of my second boy. We were in despair until the little widow's advice brought relief. "I liked Grape-Nuts food from thei beginning, aned in an incredibl~y short time it gave me Such strength that I was able to leave my bed and er joy my three good meals a day. In two months my weight increased from ninety-five to 113 pounds, my nerves had steadleed down and I felt ready for anything. My neighbors were amazed to see me gain so rapidly and still more so when they heard that Grape-Nuss alone had brought the change. "Mtly four-year-old boy had eczema, very bad, last spring and lost his ap petite entire'y, which made gim cross and peevish. x put him on a diet of Grape-Nuts, which be relished at once. He improved from the beginning, the eczema disappeared and now hie is fat and rosy, with a delightfully s/t, clear skin. The Grape-Nuts die't did it. I *1i) willingly anawer all in'tuiries.' Name given by Postumn Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. rbead the little bok'1b a Qftd to et an~e_" ak nare A MAMMOTH SAWDUST P!LE. It Forms a Hill That Covers About Twelve Acres. Probably the largest sawdust pIe in the world is the rne at Chebo)gan, Mich. This Is the product of one mill operated by the W. & A. McArthur Company. The mill being run by water power had no say of disposing of its sawdust. The company was not permitted to dump it into the river and for a few years an attempt was made to burn it. There was so muen smoke that the village passed an ordinance prohibiting that form of de struction. As a consequence it was simply hauled out Into a vacant field and during the thirty years of its, growth has acquired monstrous pro portions. It is a hill 1080 feet long. 875 feet wide, and ranges from 20 to 50 feet in height. The hill covers some twelve acres. kt is almost entirely white and Nor way pine sawdust, because this mill did not cut hemlock except for the last two or three years before it was closed down. The pile is undoubtedly rotting a little at the bottom, but it is well preserved and bright when it is dug into, the top and sides having crusted over forr. a protection for the sawdust underneath. In its present state It contains rather too much moisture to admit of being used for fuel without treatment by some pro cess of drying. A number of chemists have exam ined It with a view to extracting the themicals which it cont'ains, but as yet nothing has been done in this direction. There is no question but that It has a considerable chemical value and prdWbly the time will come when some one will find a way of working It up profitably. FOUR YEARS OF AGONY. iWiol- Foot Nothing kut Proud Ftesh 1Ead-to Use crutches - "Cuticura Riemedies Best on Earth." "In the year 18915 the side of my right foot was cut off from the little toe down to the heel, and the physician who had charge of me was trying to sew up the side of my foot. but with no success. At last my whole foot and way up above my calf was nothing but pi-oud fiesh. I suf fered untold agonies for four years. and tried different plsicia-.s and all kinds of ointments. I could walk only with crutcheq. In two weeks afterwards I saw a change in my limb. Then 1 began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment often during the day, and kept it u. for seven months, when iy limb was healed up just the Same as' if I never had trouble. It is eight months now since I stopped using Cuticura hemedies. the best on God's earth. I am working at the present day, after five years of suffering. The cost of Cuticura Ointment and Soap was only $6, but the doctors' bills were more like $600. John M. Lloyd. 718 S. Arch Ave., Al liance, Ohio, June 27. 1905." There are no pre-determined death bed repentances. Cui es Blood, Skin Troubles. Cancer, Blood Poisaon. Greatest Blood Purifier Free. If your blood is impure, thin, diseased. 'hot or full of humors, if you have blood poison. caneer. carbuncles, eating sores, scrofula, eczema, itching, risings and lumps. scabby, pimply skin, bone pains, estarrh, rheumatism, or any blood or skin disease, take Botanic Blood Bairn (B. B. B.) accord ~ing to directions. Soon all sores heal. aches and pains stop, the blood Is made pure and rich. htaving the skin free from every eruption, and giving the rich glow of perfect health to the skin. At the sanme time B. B. B. improves the digestion, cures dyspepsia, strengthens weak kidneys. Just the uredic-ine for old people. as it gives them new, vigorous blood. Druggists. .81 per large bottle, with directions for home cure. sample free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble and special free medical advice also sent in sealed letter. B. B. B. is es pecially advised for chronie, deep-st ated eases of impure blood andt skin die ease and cures afte r all else fails. Many people think that the church is a ''Don't WVork'' club, Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mlullen is Nature's greatremedy-Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At drug gists, 25c., 50e. and $1.00 per bottle. Getting into debt is an easy way of going to the devil. HIGHi ( The better class of druggis who devote their lives to the purest medicinal agents of I scientific formula. Druggis always under original or offi They are the men to deal wi all standard remedies and c best of toilet articles and pri The earning of a fair living, conferred upon thei'r patroni reward for long years of stu( Figs is an excellent laxative are selling many millions of remedies, and they always t name of the Company-Cali They know that in cases of< of weakness or torpidity of t over-eating, that there is no Syrup of Figs, and they are Owing to the excellence of immense demand for it, imi individual druggists to be fo of the profession and whose to recommend and try to sell sometimes have the named or fictitious fig syrup comps the Company-California Fi should be rejected because ' they find it necessary to reso off on a customer a preparat does not bear the full name he is attempting to deceive a establishment, whether it be and deception in one case he physicians' prescriptions, an Knowing that the great mai for our excellent remedy ent where, in origi- al packages < exist it is necessary to infori any imitation which may be California Fig Syrup Co.-p article and to demand the re druggists ho wll seli you wla .Admiral Hichhorn Pfais Pe-ruan IRN -.4 A~ REA-iA0RAL H Admiral's Words Carry Weight. Rear-Admiral Hichborn is one of the! best known officers of our navy. His statements concerning Peruna will have much weight a, they go out in the world.: What he says is echoed by many other officers of high standing. What the Admiral Says. Philip Hichborn. Rear-Admiral oi the U. S. Navy, Washington. D. C., writes: ''After the use of Perunif'or a short period, I can now cheerjplly recomi. mtend your valuable venedy io any one who is in need of an invigorat ing tonic. --PhiLip Hichborn. For Your Family The Best A Rho Sp an Pric Dr 615 Afb PRICE, 25Cs SOURE THE GRP IN ONE DAY A 11PIIS ( GRIP, BAD I won'tsn Am 1N0O R . can for your F. W. MDe= COTTON AGENTS WANTED -e de"r correpndent in aul the manerton lio and uption baine. wil receive a liberal salary FrederickLK Fish, Jrs & Co., John White & Co. LOUISVILLE, KY. Eutablished 183M Highest market price patid f'>r raw FURS and Hides. AUEOTAWLADY. advertiser in every town. ~ItIUNo canvassintg. Good pay. SAn stamnp for reply. Widows oreferred. CU:LVE R & KIDD, Dept. D.. Milledgeville, Ga. CE31 WHEkE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cugh Srup. astes Jood. Use Sin time. Sold by druggists. p aLss DRI (ND -OTHE ts, everywhere, are men of scientific at welfare of their fellow men in suppi) nown value, in accordance with p as of the better class manufacture m: inal names and they never sell false b th when in need of anything in their rresponding adjuncts of a first-class sparations and many useful accessori, with the satisfaction which arises iro and assistance to the medical profes y and many hours of daily toil. Tb remedy and that it gives universal se bottles annually to the well informed he pleasure in handing out the ger fornia Fig Syrup Do.-printed on olds and headaches attended by bilic e liver and bowels, arising fronm irr other remedy so pleasant, prompt an lad to Bell it because it gives umivers Syrup of Figs, the universal satisfaci ations have been made, tried and nd, here and there, who do not maint reed gets the better of their judgmner the imitations in order -to make a lari Syrup of Figs"-or "Fig Syrup" on ny, printed on the pacikage. but they Syrup Co.Lprinted on the front of hey are injurious to the system. Ir t to misrepresentation or deception. on under the name of "Syrup cY Fit f the California Fig Syrup Co. printe d mislead the patron who has been : large or small, for if the dealer resor1 will do so with other medicmn.'l ag I should be avoided hy every one wh~o )rity of druggists are reliable, we stu irely through the druggists, of wnom ny, at .the regular price of fifty cents the public of the facts, in order thai old to them. If it does not bear the inted on the front of every package. turn of your money, and in future go atrd and the bet of everythirg i subject...to..catarrh. I. baraksan on the idP nifu euyec tae n imer-wllPreent Fo. fo sueeopn to catarrh. vn aterk anod has settled in some organ of the body Pe runa can be relied upon as an efficacious remedy to promptly overcome it. Peruna will relieve catarrh. whether acute or chro~nie. but a few doses of it taken~ in the tirst stages of the disease wifl be more effective than when the dis ease ha becomeW e stblished. and Your Horse ntiseptic Known. TRY IT FOR umatism, Strains, rains, Swellings Enlargements. e, 25c., 50c. and $l.00. ,EARL S. SLOAN, any St., Bos'ton, Mass. ,UARANTEED TO CURE COLD, HEADACHE AID NEURALGIA. t-Gripune to a dealer who won't Guarantee If. XOEY BACK IF IT DOESW'T CURE. er, M.D., Manufscturer, S cringld, om That Delightful Aid to Health jSaxttne Toilet Antiseptic Whitens the teeth-puriies ' mouth and breath -cures nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes, and by direct application cures all infamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions caused by feminine ills. Paxtine possesses extraordinary cleansing, healing and germ cidal qualities unlike anything else At all druggists. 50 cents LARGE TRIAL PAcKAG FREE The R. Phxtoz Co., Boston, Mass. Wanted. Old dlefanlied ',r unsilee~ble stocks andl bonds. Rtuaindrs of es a u loght. All unut. or un li'ted tec arino ealt in. No charnter vaaing old &ruri t. \alufaleu eook on old ecuites r -e . It. ... '- 1 .I . #Co 1. 2, oye duce Exchaanac, New i urk. So. 4-'06. [GISTS RS. ainments and high integrity, ing the best of remedies and aysicianis' prescriptions and ny excellent remedies, but ra'nds, or imitation medicines. line, which usuallv includes pharmacy and the'finest and s and remedia] appliances. m a.kniowled gc of the benefits sion. is usually their greatest ey all know that Syrup of tisaction, and therefore they . urchasers of the choicest ine article bearing the full :he ront of every 'package. usness and constination and aguar habits. indigestion, or a beneficial in itz effects as al satisfaction. ion which it gives and the condemtned, but there are an the dignity and principles .t, and who do not hesitate er profit. Such preparations of some piratical concern, never have the full name of the package. The imitations order to sell the imitations nd whenever a dcaler passes ts" or 'Fig Syrup." which on the front of the packoage, o unforti nate as to enter his s to misrepresentation and ents. and in the filling of vlues he alth an d happiness. npp the immense demand t may be prchasedl every rr bottle. ibtt as e:eemions ull ma decline or return U msine of the~ Comp any io not he.-itate to return thec to one of the better class of