The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1901-1982, September 26, 1906, Image 7

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PERUNA PRAISED. MRS. ESTHER M. MILNER. Boxe 3:21 DeGraff, Ohio. Dr. 1. "t artimlai. Columbus. Ohio. a terrible suferen from pe!iric treakness and had headtache continuous!y. I was not able to do my o)usewoVrk for myself and husband. I wro-e y ou arnd described iny condition aQ ti r s I pss:ble. You recommended Per I::.:. I !ook fjO:r bottles of it and was (onr i: ured. I think Peruna a -ode~jr;-umeclivine and have recom it to my- friends, with the very best of multi s. Esther M. Milner. V-r -.v of the areat multitude of wom en r*io .iave be-en relieved of some peivic disease kreak:es< by Peruna ever con ;entaave a testiinonial to be read by There are. however. a few courageous. .sacriicing women who will for the sake of tht-ir srferin: sisters allow. their c;:res to be 1ublished .\I:-.. .lilner is one of thee. In her %rr-s :,.k for her restoration -o health she is willing that the A GRATEFUL women of the whole LETTER TO world should know DR.HARTMAN it. A chronic inva lid broucht back to health is no small matter. Words are in adequate to express complete gratitude. Peruna is sold by your local druggisi. Buy a bottle to-day. So. 39-'06. Teaching a Girl to Run an Auto. Se-eure a good, easy-goingt machine with an active and up-to-date sparker, and having placed the girl firmly by your side, where you can secure a strong hold in cases of emergency, proceed. to a lonely. unfrequented road where you will be uninterrupted. If the girl displays any sias of nervousness, do vour best to .oothc her. There are a -iumber of ways to do this. Take her hand in yours and pat it gently. Speak to her in low, soft tones. If absolutely necessary place her head upon your shoulder and count one hundred. If not ef feetive. repeat inl one minute. Nowv she mar take the wheel, ad yance the sparker and throw in thc clutch. It will then be y-our t'urn to gr-ow nervous. While the girl is elu'-ing the machine you clutch the girl. It will then be time to rest. This should not take any longer than the rest of the afternoon. By the time you have got so you c-au kiss the girl without getting ner vous, she ought to be able to run the matchine.-Tom Masson in the Octoberi Delineator. A Unique Figure. A unique and petueesque figure has passed wth the death of Russell Sage, tiue last of the group conspicuous in Wall str-eet during the civil war and the succeeding exciting era of rail way build~ng, railways wrec-king, rail way merging and astoundinlg legal and financial battles for railway ocn trol, remarks 1,he New York Herald. The frugal habits acquired when he worked for four dollars a month were retained after he had acquired miu lions, and made him the subject of mtany gzod natured pleasanltcies. Mr. S:ge never- denied himself anything he wanted. but his wants were few, and, possessed of enormous wealth, v-ie his cultivated and estimable wife he led a life which was an example of domesticated and placid simplicity itnd contr-ibuited -to prolong his years tar beycud the traditional three score and tea A comfort about being cross-eyed is a manl can look at a pretty girl without her wanting to yell for the police. TI E WAY OUT Change of Focd Brought Success and iHamuIness. An ambios but delicate girl, after failing to go through school on account of nar-o-.sness and hysteria, found in GraIpc-Nuts the only thing that seemed to build her up and fur nh her the peace of health. " From infancy," she says. "I have not been str-ong. Being ambitious to learn at any cost I nnally got to the High School. but soon had to aban don :ny studies on account of nervous prostration and hysteria. -My food did not agree with me, I grew thin and despondent. I could not enjoy the simplest social affair for I suffered constantly from nerr ousness in spite of all sorts of rredi einer. -.This wr' he:1 condition contin uied until I was twenity-five, when I became interested in the letters of those who had cases like mine and who were being cured by eating Grape-Nuts. "'I had little faith but procured a box and after the first dish I ex perienced a -peculiar satisfied feeling -that I had never -;ained from any ordinary food. I slept and rested better that night and in a few days began to grow stronger. "I had a new feeling of peace and restfulness. In a few weeks, to my great joy, the headaches and nerv ousness left me and life became bright and hopeful. I resumed my studies and later taught ten months with ease-of course using Grape Nuts every day- It is now four years since I began to use Grape-Nuts, I am the mistress of a happy home and the old weakness has never re turned." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek. Mich. "There's a reason." Read the lit tle book, "The Rhoad to Wellville," in pkgs. (2HE TULnI. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON E\ THE REV. DR. F. W. GUNSAULUS. Subject: The Shut lUoor. New York City.-The Rev. Frnt W. Gunsaulus. D. D.. Ll..D.. of Chi cago. is filling Dr. Donald Sa-E Ma kav's pilit in ihe Coliegi Church of St. Nicholas, and Sundiay nio -ni , to a very large congre:.a tion, he preached on "The Shii Door." is mt was Matthew vi:4. "Shut the Door." Dr. Gunsaulus saH: ; wish I could by some contrasi impossible for me and possible only in the e::perience of your own hearts emphasize thedifference between this command. as it comes to us loaded with infinite love, and the commands that comc out of recolleczions of our childhood, that might give us some idea of the diferent ie::ture of 1U', the life from which the heart is a! ways moving into the infinite ranges of God's life, into which we are in vited day by day. iShut the Door." 1 think 'the instant1 demnand0.es cially- upon .imeri.can life, with itsi sy'oilen v:'ins anriarteries. its various cortfu sioT!s and;arry look and stum bling ffe,. is to get out of the whirl and hear a voice sneaking with deep. fine authcrity. saying to us as we go through life, wiith its cares, duties. amuser.Jets and contradict:ons. "Shut the doo:." This is the voice cf Jesus. Ie is tellin- us the secret o pre a, iunhe eloset-secret pray in whaic the himman soul cornes alon~e ino the preseince of God; pray er ii which man iinds his true alti zu-e and attitude: prayer in vhin alone a man is able to look into mo tives, perceiving the 'aluts of life. in w, hich heains his si:iritual hereiiy and in which he assumes his sonZip u.t> God through C od's grace. The one thing that -Jesus seems re..st in.ent about, that you and I should en -oy the privilege of prayer a nd. rece ie its benetits. is all ex plained and emphasized in these wcrds, "Shut the door." We are liv i:* at a time when prayer is a fact an a force. The world of the mate rialist has passed: the world of the idealist is here. The scientists of to day are telling us. "Let us pray." It is not strange that we should begin to realize the unifying and exalted influence of prayer upon riTan's men tal life. What, after all. is there to day in life, when life's issues are so profound and even tragic, that will unfy all one's powers-the powers cf the mind and of the affections-as will prayer? When I pray in secret I am unified as a man. If man is to be re-made, if he is to be made whole so that his various parts shall be no longer fragments. each afar from the other, he must be divinely unified. But, my brother. if that is to be your experience, "Let us pray." Here is the Master coming quietly from the fields of Galilee into your heart and mine, urging upon us, as the old, deep harmonies of the religions of all ages sweep into His soul, urging us, not only that we should pray, but pray alone. We see Him at Gethse mane, at the very crisis of His life. leaving Peter and James and' John behind, and going alone to pray. I think the most signifiednt announce ment with regard to Saul, who was to become Paul, and his experience on the road to Damascus was made unconsciously by the one who said: "Behold, he prayeth." What an en tire transformation: What a pro phecy of his future: Do you think that Christ is calling you to an easy task when He says: "'Shut the door?" Do you even know the pathway back to the old closet of early days? The road is now all overgrown. But since that day there have grown up brambles over the p;athway. First of all, we must find this path, if we are to find our man hcod and womanhood. Is it not an astounding fact how little secret prayer there has been in our lives? How this passion for publicity has liniked itself to our willingness to re mein away from the secret place. Tr le, a while ago, when we were in trcuble, we found our way back. How sweet it was! But that was not sec ret prayer, for we did not "shut the door." .It was prayer with the door wide open, through which we were looking back at the things from which we were trying to escape. You say, "I can get back to that place." Are you quite sure that you can. If so, "shut the door." How we like to sek out and see what the majority ara thinking - how our neighbors feel about things. How we want the door' just a little way open in order that we may hear the sounds of the clairms of good causes, in which we are interested! Surely, there is noth ing wrong about that. "Shut the door." Let us take the words of Jesus into our hearts to-day as sim ply as we can and since:'ely accept them. "Shut the door." "Why. surely," you say, "that is something I can do with one hand, while I grasp) other' things with the other hand." No, both hands must be in sic.e. There must be no effort to grasp things without. "Well," you say, "what shall I shut the door against, there are so many things with which I must keep in touch?" I don't know; He says, "Shut the door." "But," you rebly, "there is my church. my family, my relatives, my det.r friends." 0, poor soul! it seems such ordinary talk, does it no:, in the presence of the great, sweet Being, Who11 is saying, "Shut the door" I must be alone with God; I miusLt fel again my perronal rela tio nship to my Father'; I must realize again that if there were only one being in the world, and I were that ben.while the moral universe sub sisted, still there must be a cross, C'2 ' Chrs:, still :C ethermane, st!l iso or~r~gof the ascenision, stili ;uoensacher. The only way to be ri:1 of' our enemies is to "shlut the door." The real truth is that. .:hn the real crises of iife come. my only enemy .s myself. This is the one 1. need to conquer. Here are paessiors, prejudices. hates, lusts. Oh, my frier d, whatever your gain or loss, realize this, that never un:til you shut the door will you go into the presence of God: ne'.er until in secret prayer' ycu are alone with you:' enemies. What can any man do to harm me, unliess I harmi myself? If ever you tre tossed about upon seas of dart ness, it will be because you neglectei to put the anchor on board and your ship is at the 'nercy of the waves, "Shut the door." After all the limitations of life that are serious are the limitations that come to vs through loved ones. If there is one thing that a man needs, it is in some holy and grand way to be separated from these friends, I k-now off no other right, gentle and lotin~g way but the way of prayer, and as I shut the door. Intide of tht~t door I will never lose my power of friendship, my soul's friendship is real, lighting her altar fires for her and the door open my friendship wil be tenderer and d-elper and I shai say, "My own. dear friend. i con jack to you with a friendsiip that i ,1l divine. Thou art my friend. iave been inside where the door wa shut." I wonder where this door is to b found. I wonder. sometimes. when try to have a secret moment in m awn life. if there might not har 3een a second meaning in the wor< when He said: "I am the door." Fo surely there is nothing in this uni verse responsive enough. grea - ough to shut everything else ou .nd to shut the soul in-great enougl in tenderness--so that the slightes ouch of an infant soul will "shut thi ioor." 1ere is the authority of Jesu 3hrist. No one knew the world out side as lie knew it; no one know ' world inside as He knows it; ni -> else will take my thoughts, m: feelings, my soul; no one else cai shut the world out and the soul in Here is a man who has been trying ti pray and shut the door as Jesus tol him to do. It takes more intellec :o shut that door than to write Hin lustanee or Shakespeare: more char acter than to marshall an army ani lead it to batile. No muscular powe will do it; no inteilecti:al refinemen Dr process of philon:cal investign :icn, no wealth. Ah, you will have ti eave *our wealth outside. -Shu the door. 1 is :'y ti: man in th :randeur _f 'is zol'iude. in the pre cnee of God, wi en ?e means more t Cod ihau eve b e it is only the that 'inally h t the door shut jist becaus .Jclss is our entranc' ne is the dooo;. I realize, day b :yhow Tnite Te is when I toucl Him: how infinite Me is when 11 touches me. How about that past? There it Nothin rankles n:ore than man past, t will '- its head up an say: "Ah. hiere I am. Look at im I know you. I >av;e heard you pr before. Thore hands. I know wher hey have been. That hcart. I knoi how dark it is." -Iave you ever trie to shut the door against a past li; that? Have y-ou ever known what is to have the past hiss and sting Somtimes you think you have th door shut, but oh, how that pas that seem a giant, fully armed. to big to get into the door, suddenl transforms, flattens itself out, lic like a serpent. and by and by yo hear it wiggling at the door, hissin; Oh. I must have a door accuratel fitting, that whether the past slithei like a serpent o. comes like a gian I can sh'ut tha-: L.or. Oh. how at la the soul takes hold of ore ithing an severs all from the past, and thiat on thing is Jesus Christ. I am interested in men's problem Do you know anything that is inte esting enough in this world to kee the past out, except Jesus Christ? ] there anything that so appeals t your interest that you actually tur your back upon the past and say: ' have a present. Thank God. I hav a present. I am looking to Him wh says, 'Follow Me.' He has nevE yet told us we have followed Him tO far. Since He says that, and as on as my heart pulses and as long , my will keeps in harmony with Hin I have a future." Your past is out < doors; your present and your futui here, simply because you have "sht the door." I tell you, brethren. th manliest, the grandest, the greate! thing you can do this morning is sin ply to accept Jesus Christ as the doC into'the communion. The door movi upon such hinges of love that yc need .but to say: ''I am a sinner: want to be alone with God," to stal it moving-to get in, with the pa: outside. My friends I will look ft them by- and by. And my enemies I want to conquer only one of ther I want to be alone. I will "shut tI door." . May God's holy Spirit, wl is here this morning, quicken eve1 heart. Get back this very day-nos and "shut the door." You need n< be afraid that the world will lo0 anything. You will be a better ma when you go out, with a whiter fac cleaner hands, a more loving and braver Xeart. ''Shut the door." . Dependence on God. Our heavenly Father keeps us co: stantly in the condition of uttermo dependence on Him. Were it othe wise with us how wanton would a become. Therefore, He writes tI sentence of death upon ourselves, at also upon our choicest temporal me cies-not that He always means1 remove them, but to hold them as special gift from Him; and, despai ing of all succor but His own, that v should place -our trust not on sel not on valued fellow-creatures, bl on God, who can raise up to help even the very dead (2 Cor. i:S-10 He is considering our weakness, at our need, and our work; and in pe fect wisdom and love has already a ranged for the very best. The Only Hindrance. What hinders that you should 1 a child of God? Is .not .salvatic free? Is no': the invitation to hung out to you on every page the New Testament? Is not Chri offered to you in all HI-s offices. ar are you not welcome to all Is ben fits if you want them? is not ti Holy Spirit :::omized t i themn th; ask Him? Nothing can hinder yc from being a Christian. but your om' worldly. selfish, proud, obstiiate, u worthy and self-righteous heart. Ichabod Spencer. Take God With Us, To enjoy God and heaven it co not require that we wait till the la touch of death reveals all things the light of eternity.. We may tal God and heaven along with us evr day. and carry their peace and glo: into all the dull and p)rosatic seen of car'tiy.-Thomas Lathrop. The last fiscal year was for Cai ada the greatest in the history of hi comerce. American interest in th trade development is fairly illn trated by the fact that the Unite States sold to Canada 61.4 per en of all her purchases. Her impor last year. notes the New York Pres from the United States alone we: tnL' a little less in value than hi total imports from all countries 200)0. England is the heaviest buy( in oar markets, with Germany the i econd place and Canada in tU third. The U'nited States suppli 61.4 per cent. of Canada's foreign r quirements; England supplied 23 per cent.; France, 2.6 per cent.; Ge many. 2.3 per cent.; and her pu chases from all other lands are i luded in the remaining 10.2 per en On a little more than $94,000,0( rorth of our merchandise a duty w~ charged; but $S6,529,291 worth we admitted free of duty. It is probabl that Canada takes from us a largi range of merchandise than any othi of our cstomers. STHE SUNDAY SCHOOT INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM.1 MENTS FOR SEPTEMBER 30'. Tenperance Lesson, GTl- V-, - Gal. vi., 7, S - (owl Text, Prov. xx.. 1-iemory erses, 1 .* 8--Topi: ifite Coltrai . - T. The Spirit and ,bch ,eh at en t mnity (vs. 3 - ). 1-0 "Ir o .ite t and devour." In cont tto :uve i of verses 1C. 14. T t drawn from the habils of wild ieas a in the order or CiJa::- _3 i s nates the momendary omburh, ue - vo:;r, the steady "ir!)oseo injury; S consume, the final reu-;it probable to y both paries. -1ake '-' ezl - As r wild beasts contend sonedLunies until 1 hoth are slain. The idea Is that in their contentions they would destroy ) the spirituality and ppiness of each I other; their charatr' s would be t ;uined; the church woud bo over - thrown. - G. "This I saiy then." Havine, I pointed out the cfczs o- v;a ias r the law of love. the opos- le now pro t ceeds to show how ibis law may be - oi yed. "Walk." This wvorid i-s of 3 tea equivalen to "ie-. in the t Spirit." 'Thi is Oirr'tit ly ( C plaied: 1. By. or :[-';dini to the rule of the Silrit. 2. By the guid ance of the Spirit. 3By the help a of the Spirit. Notc - The an - tagonism between the F--or Spirit in -Il that tie is and produces. and the flesh with its amppite- ;nd wozis 2. The ceriainty o victory oor the e esh to all those wo walk in or by the Spirit. " tSha.l no, u The strongest negative o si~be. Y e s in no wise fulfil. Ith 0:'i C d d dwell in and rule your hea. ce whole carnal maind will be destro'd:' y and then. not only carnal ordina.nes will be abandoned.but also the works and pr opensities of the flesh. "Lust." Desires. "l's." That e is, the evil impul vhih have their .i seat in the body. 17. "Flesh lust - eth against the Spirit." The wo are e antagonistic: each seeks to ct:trol the man and be suPreme. One or 0 the other.rules in every soul. SS. -ibut." This inteirnal s trife s may be ended. "*Bn led." By sub u mitting to the Sipirit and by follow ing Hlis drawings. "Not under the law." Not under the restraints of - the Mosaic law or disensation, but under the control of the Spirit. d I. The works of the n'esil. (vs. e19-1). 19. "Works of the flesh." 'he works which are done when the man exalts the flesh and its desires to a controlling inituence. 0. "Idolatry." The worship of false deities. "Witchcraft." Or sor 0 cery. The use of charms. incanta n tions. etc.. to produce preTernatural effects. "Variance." Strife: a dis e position to dissent. "'Em'ulations." 0 Jealousies, rivalry. endeavoring to r excel at the expense of another. o "Strife." "Factions." R. V. "Her g esies." Parties. Nothing is more In S line with the selfish, independent, 1 fleshly nature than strife. conten )f tion, factions and parties in the -e church. 21. "'Murders." Omitted it in the Revised Version. But if not e rightly in the text it is certainly one ; of the works or the flesh. "Drunk 1 enness, revelings." These are the >r sins that follow the indulgence of s appetite. Revelings include drink u ing. feasting, dancing, ribald songs I and debauchery in general. The t seeds or possibilities of all these sins at are in every unregenerate heart. >r Many of thema may lie dormant for a ? time; many may never come into act 1. ual life; but under favor'ing circum e stances, away from restrains, they to will appear in the life and character. -y Every one of these evils Is promoted ,. and encouraged by the use of intoxi t cating liquors. Intemperance e-xcites e every evil passion, arouses wrath and .n hatred, leads to murders, is the e, friend of revelings. Intemperance Is a a work of the fiesh. It exalts the flesh above the Spirit. III. The fruit of the Spirit (vs. 22-26). 22. "F-uit of the Spirit." The fruit of th? Spirit is one. yet 1 manifold. He who has the Spirit of t Christ has in him the root of all r Christian gracesc. e 3 "Temper'ane" Self control e in the gratification of appetites. d W hilme this inclndes the abstinence from strong di'ink it must not be o imite~d to this. "No law." There ais no law to condemn those whose lies are adorned by'. these virtues. 24 "Have cruciled." The apos it tle uses tihe strong tigure of cruel s fixion to show how cornpletely Chris .tians - those "thr-t are Christ's" d have forsaken and renounced the old r. life. They are dead1 to sin. r- 25. "Live in the Spirit." The Revised Version uas "by the Spirit" in both clauses. That is, if we have entered into a spiritual life, let us continue in that life. 26. "Let us >e not," etc. The apostle again points .n which were destroying'tner spiritual it gi 'IV. Sowing an reatping (vs. 7, a warning against ' self-deception, ewhich, strange a:s it may seem, is commn-. "Not mocked." God is not deevdor dehded. "Soweth n rean. This is a univerc:sa! law of Calrs government which He will not 8. "To his flesh." He~ that grai feshi carnal desires and lives a ife of ease and~ slf-indulmgence. a. wil reap r'.~an' er..irtua death. st course of self-indu lgen'c rrupits in the moral nature an~d ends in de iest 'cton. "To tlhe Spirt. lie who y ollos n obrys the Spirit. "Life y evaiastng."In this promise is in s e'ided all that God has provided for ;B's peopile in the vwcrld to coe. .. 1- WASHING LINOLEUM. There seems a prevailing false im-a s pression that linoleum should not be washed. This may have its rise in the mistaken idJea of its being -an oil t.cloth. Oilcloth wore off when washed, s just as paint does. Linoleu-m does not demand the care of a ha-rd-Wood floor, ebut it has to be washed to keep 1:t nr clean. One of its sanitary claims is rthat it can be washed. In fact, one m ranufactui'er issues a litle card to e send out to his customers which says: d 'Srub whenever soiled with a brush, . water and castile soap. Rub -dry with 5 a woolen clzth." If the possessor of r- a linoleuml-cov~ered floor will remnem' r- ber that linseed oil, oxidized by ex a posure to air, as is done in the malk t. ing of linoleum, is used as n paint for 0ship bottomas, he cr she will realize s v~hnt a folish thin~g it is to think that s it canraot be washed, and scrubbed e cean. The -main (-ifficulty is to ga rr the scrubber to go down on her han-ds rr and knees and scrub it.-Good House A DANGEOUS PRACTICE. Ilurning OK Pait Makes Insurance Void. t 'e"r:. that considerable danger to property eists in the practice of bu"rning cY o'd -aint before rc-paint ing. Th' question has log been a of delate in the technical .unms, and no-. house-holders and the nevsDpapers have bcgun to discuss it. Those of us vwho. with t-embling, have watehed the painters blow a fi-ry b:rs: fr6m their lamps against our honE. and have looked sadly at the size o our painting bill because of the tirue was.d on1 this prelimin ary work, are interested in the in vestigtia by the Greenfield (Mass.) Gazette and Courier, which gives ccnsiderable space to the reasons for the practice, questions Its necessity and suggests ways to prevent the risk of burnling down one's house in order to get the old paint off. It says: "There is a good deal of discussion among house-holders as to the desir abili!y in painting houses. of burning oiY the old paint, a practice that has grown very common of late in G'eenfield and elsewhere. Insurance n:en are strongly op)osed to this mIethod. Ir maks void insurance poliiis for fires :aused in this man ner. Several houses in Greenfield have gotten afire as the result of this ma:hed, and in some places houses have burned as a result. "It is undoubtedly true that when a ho.:se has been painted over and over agin thire comes to be an ac c'umulation of paint in bunches. If nw paint is put on top of these ac er m:uatilons it is almost sure to blis ter. To burn it off is the quickest aind cheapest and perhaps the surest method of getting rid of this old paint." The Gazette and Courier quotes rertain old patrons to the effect that accumulations of raint are unneces -ary. These old-timers lay the blame partly on the painter who fails to brush his paint in well, partly on the custom of painting in damp weather or not allowing sufficient time for drying between coats. and partly to the use of adulterated paints instead of old-?ashioned linseed oil and pure white lead. The paper says: "Many of the older house-holders say that if care is taken at all these points. it is absolutely unnecessary ro have paint burned off. They ad vise that people who have houses uainted should buy their own materi als, and to have them put on by the day, so as to be sure to get good lead and oil. Of course the burning off of paiint gr'.atly increases the cost of the job." The trouble house-holders every where have with paint is pretty well summed up by our contemporary, and the causes are about the same every where. By far the most frequent cause of the necessity for the danger ous practice of burning old paint is the use of poor material. The oil should be -'are linseed and the white lead should ~'e real white lead. The latter is mo.e often tampered with than the oil. Ea'thy substances, and pulverized rock and quartz, are fre quently used as cheapeners, to the great detriment of the paint. Painters rarely adulterate white lead themselves and they very seldom use ready prepared paints-the most frequent causes of paint trouble. But they do ofteh buy adulterated white lead because the property owner in sists on a low price and the painter has to economize somewhere. The suggestion is therefore a good one that the property owner investigate the subject a little, find out the name of some reliable brand of white lead, and see that the keg is marked with tha' brand. TIhe linseed oil is more difficult to be sure of. as It is usually sold in bulk when the quantity is .small; but reliable mkers of linseed oil can be learned on inquiry and, if your dealer is reliable, youi will get what you wan t. Pure white lead and linseed oil are so necessary to good paint that the little trouble necessary to get them well repues the house owner in dol lars and cents saved. Wec carryv our1 neighibor''s failings in sjh:we ''row our1 own over our =olde-F im the Fr ench. S OVER !7,000 VICTIMS Of Tlil TREATMENT endorsed by S lotte. Raleigh, Greenstoro, Reil S We cure the LIQUOR HAB] S positive guarantee of a perm sr These are no "Home Cure" I has all conveniences, For Th[ McKANN) P UTNAM .cler mnorecrocdab'hterand falter( ecatanai yeauy iarm.t wthout1 rIr pnLiar.~ 13 rit01o Strive to make the world better TYNER'S DYSPEPSIA REMED)Y. Many Hlave D~yspepsia and Don't Know It. Do you belch up wind? Taste your food after eating? See specks before your eyes? Are you pale and haggard? -. Does your heart flutter? Are you / ~ dizzy? Do you have ~IS pains in side or -back? Risings or pimples on the skin? Are you low' spirited ? Is there a sour taste? Breath bad? Headache? Weak kidneys? Bilious? Consti' pated? Are you nervous? If so, you have Dyspepsia, and- it is a dangerous condition. To cure, take Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy. It is made for just such troubles and symptoms Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy remove! acids from the stomach, strengthen! weak stomachs and cures the worsi Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Druggisti or by express 50 cents abottle. Monel refunded if it fails to cure. Medical advice and circular free by writing tC 'rvner Remedy Co., Augusta. Ga. Tized, Netv Makhe Unhappy Homes-T Both Husb-and and Ch of Mothers Have Beei Prostration and Made .Af..... .*/......rr A nervous, irritable mother, often on the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care I for children.; it ruins a child's disposi- t tion and reacts unon herself. The N trouble between children and their I mothers too often is due to the fact that the mother has some female weak ness, and she is entirely unfit to bear the strain upon her nerves that govern ing children involves; it is impossible for her to do anything calmly. The ills of women act like a firebrand upon the nerves, consequently nine tenths of the nervous prostration. ner vous despondency, " the blues." sie-ep lessness. and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement, of the female organism. Do you experience fits of depression, with restlessness, alternating with 6 extreme irritability? Are your spirits f easily affected. so that one minute you t laugh, and the next minute you feel like crying ? Do you feel something like a ball ris ing in your throat and threatening to , choke You; all the senses perverted, i morbidly sensitive to light and sound; pain in the abdominal region. and 1 between the shoulders; oearing-down 1 pains: nervous dyspepsia and almost:1 continually cross and snappy ? I C so. your nerves are in a shattered conditio'n. and you are threatened with nervous prostration. Pr oof is monumental that nothing in the world is better for nervous prostra tion than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Comnound; thousands and thou sands of women cant testify to this fact. Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advice-A Woma If a girl has a good figure, she I knows it just as well as you do. but YoU won't hurt yourself with her to tell her so. SORES FROM HEAD TO FOOT, Covered With Crusted Scaly Keseima When One Month Old--Cured by ICnticura pt Expense of 84.50. "When 1 was one month old I was taken with eczema. After being under the treatment of two doctors for one month, and no improsement, my moth er wasn advised by a druggist to try Cuti cura Soap and Ointment. I was one crut of sores from bead to foot. My mother could brush the scales off my body, Iand my linger and toe nails fell. After using six cakes of Cuticura Soap and about as much Cuticura Ointment 1 was completely cured. I am now seventeen years old. and my skin has not a scar. I am still finding wonders in Cutjicura; after wash'ing a fever Uister two days i was completely gone. Your Cuticura Ifriend, Miss Eela Classcock, Marksville, La.. Oct. 27. 1905." It's impossible to convince a woman that a man's reason is better than her intuition. manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerv e Restorer. $3 trial bottle and treatise free. . Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld..981 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Being ini love is five parts pet names andl five p~arts iggles. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething softens thegums,reduicesmnlamma ton, alays pain,culres wind colie. 25ca bottle Hardly ~ anan withr a vwife enn' atord auy~ more extravaganc-e. ATMEN WHIC I IUOR AND MORPfHINE IIABITS hlAVE ~overnors, supreme Court Judges and th< tville, and of Western Cities where kno in Three days, and administer the MA nent cure within a - asonable time. treatments, but are administered in our dorsements and testimonials address, THIl Rtt-DAY LIQ REIDSVILLE, N. C. FADELE The sole reliance of the C::ar, his. nobility and the bureaucracy is upon. Ithe army. If that fails them they are: ne and Nicholas will be lucky to escape with his life,' declares the New York American. -That the army. will fa~ll the ruling class is highly prob able. The soldiers, like the sailors, are for the most part peasants-and drafted peasants at thait. They have the thoughts, the feeings, the preju dices, the interests of their class, and in spite of every precaution revolu tionary doctrines have be-en sedulous ly spread among them. A woman would rather have false teeth than big feet.. CAPUDINE SCU RS acsmmditer INDICESTION and tu rmong th a.. 10 est.. EDTAW.=t l wth ay tribe, (2 or men WANT . *e i Federa' ry o h . nat BuiM*E"D.Is" m" us Moth ezs heir Condition Irritates fidren-How Thousands i Saved From Nervous Strong and Wel .r . . as ...... R r w X, , Mrs. Chester Curry. Leade. 5f the ,adies' Symphony Orchestra. 42 Srara ga Street, East Boston, Mass., rites: )ear Mrs. Pinkham: "For eight years I was troubled with ex eme nervousness and hysteria, brought on y irregularities. I coul~ neither enjoy life or sleep nights: I vv as very irritable, nervous nad despondert "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetaibe Compound as recommended and proved to be the only enedy that helped me. I have duii-y in rovec in health until I am now strorg and ell. and all nervousness has disappear-d." Mrs. Charles F. Brown. Vice-Presi ent of the Mothers' Club. 21 Cedar 'errace, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: eazeMrs. Pinhbam: " I dragged through nine years of mis'r ,b1 :istence. worn out with p and ner 'ousnes. until it seemed as tough I should [. I then noticea a statement of a woman Obhied as I was. and the wonderful results e derived from Lydia E. Pinklianm's Vege able Compound. Idecidodtotryvit. I did so, nd at the end of three months I was a differ at woman. My nervousns wa* all gone. I vas no longer irritable, and mI husband fen a love with me all over again. Women should remember that Lydia ,. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is he medicine that holds the record for be greatest number of actual cures of emale ills, and take no substitute.- - Free Advice to Women. Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of .,ydia E.Pinkham. Lynn. Mass. invites ill sick women to write to her for vice. Mrs. Pinkham's vastexperienee rith female troubles enables her to ad ise you wisely, and she will charge ou nothing for her advice. Best UnderstandS a Wman's Irs. N. L. DOUCLAS 3.50&'3.OO Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD .LDougjas $4 Gilt Edge flne mnoteequlldatanjprios usgHoe IS the mose HOES POR XVEEYB3ODY AT ALLI o$L.' Woments Bhea $4.005*. ...e., &chfarensSe. ... ~to $1.00. ry W. L. Douglas Women's. Misses an Children's shoes: for style, fit and wear they excel other miakes. - if I could" take you Into my large actorls at Brockton, Mass.,and show ,ou hawcarefully W.L. Douglas shoes re made, you would then understand hy they hold their shape, fit better, year longer, and are of greater value han any other make. wherever you live, you can obtain W. L logs shoes. H is name and price is stampied n the bcttom2, which protec's you against high rices and inferior shoes. Take no subatr. ate. Askc your dealer for WV. L Douglas shoes id insist upnhaving them. Fast Color Eelet. used: ther wil! not wear brassy. Write for Ilustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. W. L DOUGLAS, Dept. 15, Brockton, Mass. BIBLE ! REE Wri'e":.' t*. Ietter Bibleu.and every otherkiad. A KEE E IcA SUPPLY COMP'T, Etchmen.Vs AKES GOOD I BEEN PERMANENTL.Y CURED officials of Columbia, Char 'n for seventeen years. ORPHINE treatment under handsome Sanitarintm which ORCUECO. I SS DYES There is no satisfaction keener than being dry nd comforal when ot in the. .1 ha.rdest storm YOU ARE SURE OF THIS IF YOU WEAR WATERPRO~ OILED BLACK OR YE!L.OW u CURED BIves Buick . .SyRelief.. Rmesaswelling in 8 to 2o. days.- efects a permanent enre i21300 o deys. Trialtreatmpt en free. Nothingcanlbefaurer .Write Dr.iI H. .Grees' Se S,' Ists. Box a Alaa.6 So. 39-'06. C ASH For Your Home, Farna. Tlnsber Lands or Buslness. If you wanqcr a, vor Ihv esirable nlonu.id n mbraz