The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1901-1982, October 31, 1906, Image 7

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Portraits of Napoleon. The last census -of engravings, mezzotints. woodcuts and other pub lished portraits of the first Napoleon fixes the number at above 80,000; while of caricatures. Fre-nch and tor eign, about ^,,200 arc known to be lin existence. No celebrity cr any age has be-en pictured to anything lihe the same extent. It would seem that almost every artist whose period of a.ctivity was coatemporaneous with hat of the conqucror of Europe gave eXpr-sion at one tn11 Or another to his real or- fancied Impression oi the features of the man who above a!! others filled th' public eye. One French specialist on Napoleonic icen og-raphy has compiled a volume. 'Na poleon Raconto par I'Image," in whici the story of his llfe is told in pictures. Every event of import ance. )olucaI, military and dcnesitic has had its delineato, and the 'o-it containing these illustraions is of goodly size. Of all the characters of history, Washingten in the only one who even upproachcd this record. Appleton's Magazine. The Gulf Lake WatErway. What 'would the prosperity of St. Louis Ie with a sIp channel from the gulf to the lakes? Well, it is coming as suLrely as the future growth of the .Ote::rv and, demands of commerce. - St. Louis Globe Democrat. HAlD TO USE A CA-\E. Weakened Kidneys Made an Ehvocd, Ind., Man's Rack Give Out. R. A. Pugh. tran;sfer busin s, 2020 North B Street. ElIwood. Ind., says: "Kidney trouble laid me u-: for a lorn utin% and v1e a abeto be up il ai ( ___ 'o use' a e'ave. had' terrib hae -tachevo anfod 1 -1:1 in I thho .houlders. Tha id - rey secreoMms wvore dkcloPdl. After ing t givoa eeac'it in. Vahe Iuc -oe f- r e ben oi Doan'n 1idne Pill. Thrpe boxes cured -re n and I am glad to recommetinyd t thbm.'' Sold ',y all dealers. 50 cents a bo. Fost er-yinir rCo., Euffari, N. Y. Ihe Briglt Side. "Anythinr gin on hlere to niht ."'inqurd the bakin nowder drumner who wasz mnarooned in Pru-i t vtov-n for -. numboer of hours. "Eh-yah!', rplied the lardlord of the tavern. "The villae band f -o -ngt tMe anc.ncet h in te apery husie or the bneit of old Can Feebies,. wvho is,.bled u-o with the eI, tat is erainy too bad!" "Yes, 'tis; but, after all, it ain't S d.s old.Cap'n.lives clear out at the F eof te ndsofar away that hea wuon write ant f fhe folovnlterso ublisadn in orderbtdetother, and thied imtsme woa, may bore She Is;d Well byoLdiaELik efnds hw~ Miss Cr Goode .Cig AvTensube-Chicago. .hevesriter. duty to writekhe olownlttr-o pubiction, ina rderet oterewoment bfuicd pnm sthe, whime wa berm ablehsnt oth n a wrdtohl Lawn .Tenis aCrlubdct of Chicao.aSe. wries; "hIatinged dit eren somediesn to buireatm system, whic ha beco rkunt ion fo lss ofporretandamnh a ureson-o abedanhouors, bu&hn smd inthelp wo. l!oher agedce ofs Lydia ecPink 's Vegeablo Vogetound o fmaou ,Whamg whus obed itweftom pan-s gureucear pSods begnt akeit, blaing less latualnceh Islae oenou forand, intfdorsain hrulerton, aNo bterstoedcn has perfcthalthor ofd trength byal tusaskha Lydia E.?inkhams Vegetable Compound. tom wri ho adve. Shube hit gied thusands tirrelth. pers ebackiche, blotin g (rea fatulene) gisplaeenft of ioallh stfanr-ain ored uceraion, conbe. restedao her-int halthf Lyi .Pinkhameale forpount-fv Mers. Pham cinvisnll sick womnen to Thre her nor adifce.Sh hsuie thunds tmohea. Her' exprinc is very gr~~eat an /h ie h eei ofstorlwostnm nnedfws cousRe Sne teduhtr-a of fre vchrywe. ress, Ig - as S :. '06. 'Th E TPULTJPI . A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY REV. 1. W. HENDERSON. Subject: The Eighth Cornmandment. Brooklyn, N. Y-.-Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church on the theme, "The Eighth Com mandment," the Rev. 1. W. Hlender son, pastor. took as his text Ex. 20: 1->: "Thou shalt not steal." He said in the course of his sermon: This is a call for simple honesty. a-ad the need for clear and fearless thought and utterance is both im nerativc and apparent as we apply this eIghth commandment to the so cial life and comninnal conditions of tc-day. Thev common interpretation of what it means to steal is quite cle z'entary. In the puolic estimation. stealing, very largely, is a form of open and specific disobedience to law which will likely land the evil doer it behind the bars. It is not my pur pose to say or to imply that the aver age individual conscience does not r( cognize he obligations and the va illity of that moral law which over laps our penal code. But to a large e:te'nt the robber, in the public-mind, is the man who forces locks; who spends his evenings at his neighbor's safes with dynamite and jimmy; who mzapplies to his own :uses ou'r sil ve:, our clothes, or our money. Ask a mai, Who is a thief? and the like li'aood is that often, though not al ways, he will run the list of those who bear the insignia and the dis honor of that self-seeking fraternity whose members live by their wits. Bat are the men and women who de clare open war upon society and who adhere to the principle that the world owes them a living the only ones who steal? Is it the man who picks your pocket or the man who steals your savings, by heedlers mismanagement of that fortune you gave into his trust, who robs you of most? Who is the most dangerous criminal, the sec ond story burglar or the man w vo, under the guise of a conservative financier, wrecks your home and takes your all? Who best merits prison clothes, the man who steals to save his family from starvation's g:immest death, or the millionaire of Wall street who ini!ates :alnes that he knows can never last? Who most deserves the scorn of honest men, the man who cracks a safe or the phii anthropic plutocrat who made h's wealth at the price of human blood? The consensus among those whom the lesson hardest hits is that rob bery is all right so long as you steal enough. - Only the smAl: burglar is to wear stripes. The sin of stealing is in being caught, and its worst dis grace is not to be (left enough to bag everything in sight. Stealing is wrong and it should be punished no matter by whom or how it may be committed. The Member of Congress who violates the law and robs his country for his private gain deserves the limit of the penalty. The moneyed man who wrecks a cor poration to satisfy personal spite or secret grudge, should wear the irons together with that other of his com pany who represents as a real in vestment proposition a property that is chiefly air, paper .and water. The~ business man who underpays his labor and hugs the lion's share of the profits to himself, with no con cern or care for the toilers who made possible his material success, is a thief. The rich man who raises prices and lowers wages, without right or need, to such an extent that poor men have no decant chance to live, steals more than money. "Thoui shalt not steal," savs the commandment, and to my mind's eye thre comes the vision of that cotton mill in the sunny southland. 1 hear the whirr of wheels, the rattle of te loom, the roar of leather belts. the shodting of the mill boss: and there, in among that., bustle and clat ter and ceaseless racket, I see mere children watching -wheels, instead of birds: tending cotton when they should be at- their books; growing old end blunted in body, mind and spirit, when they should be learning lessons in Cod's wonderful out-of doors. Mere children driven into savery by the laziness of lying par ents or the greed of nortbhera capital. And what you may see in the cotton mills of Dixie, you may see in the glas works of New Jersey. the mines of- Pennsylvania. or in the sweat shops of New York. Is such stealing wise? The amount of wholesale and un strained robbery that takes placo in our public life is enormous. It would seem that the sense of honesty is on the diecline did we not know better. The caliber of the con sciences of a host of men .who admi'l ister the affairs of the r'lin neonie is not very large. Di'chonesty i~, strangely, even yet. with many lead ers in our jpolitical lim-. a senonyrm for as"oroi success. "'Tou ei'~t not steal" is left out of their moral cono. To be honest, to be snuare, is. wit'i thm, to be marked for defeat. When we read in our r'ilv panors ot the sh'~nmless frn cetao uon theC Governmo-t bv corpora tions, hv and wit'i t"o eonent of those who make and those who a'1 mistor our laws: when we 1'orn from time to time that hosts of mve' andl womoi are ruinod hv got-ic' quhk syndioates; who, we findj daiy Instances of veholocale do1'e"'tio-s he'men or trust and reouta an' fo" e seeming nrobity:-when we see fM ,exnresed will of th' s'.- e' - zensip o self-governir g co'rno'l : made tMe football of ,'o; '"i h; gands, and whole States ha'-'h i power of political bucm 'rs: si any wonder that we feel at times a.. the sense of the unrichteousn"e of stealing has been abandoed by m-mty in control of affairs in puliic lip-r: WVe need an enlightened public con science. Men must be ma'ie to feel und to know that cornorate and ruh lie thievery, as privato.- are c'ontqry to the law of God. Statesmen who wink at and foster robbery of the treasuries ought to be returned to p)riate life, if nothing more. Pol' ticans who are out for graft must be relegated to the rear. Clcan men must cut the way to the regeneration of our social life. The crowd of un wholesome and immoral civIc par'a sits~ who despoil and bemirch comi mual life should be removed from power anc influence. "Thou shalt not steal'' said Moses. So says Christ to us. All that Moses asked of Israel, Christ demands of Amica. No man can steal and be plumb to the law of love. With the entrance of Jesus the heart will seok to give rather than to get; and with the soul that walks with Moses' God, the right will ever reign supreme. Bat despite all the unwholesome ness around us, the signs of the times presage a glorious transfor mnaton that is near at hand. What ever may have been the cvil sowim; of yesterday, and whatever' may be need not fear for the harvest of tor morrow. The Lord is coming into I his own. Society is coming to its senses and better men are moving C the front. The dormant will of a mighty people is awaking and wo betide the wicked chailatan who fails to seC the writinrg or. the wall, or seeing, fails to he.i it. And the awaken~ng will come most largcry. as in the nature of the case it ought, anin'g the cornmon people of the land: those at who-n the unphiio sonhical slander is so oftrn hurled that they are not. worthv to be trunc I ecause theY are sO fickle, so foolisi: and so weak%. T':t a social recnrm ion anrl Tr--al revlval is takir.g pie-ce in so - t- no mnw' nay. w:th reuso! c')o'Ot. It is in the air. Men are rn' plying mora' stndards tiat for "oars we have nt ct:-. or se'o', Ward empli-cd in the judging of in Oi-'idual and public nctions. Tb r~ws'anrC to-dayV blf7e' the tr::1 p'ii of ten mT a"''' mr any a-i itorial handlis the crhial cud .tore forcefully and p Vecrively tha reany a sernvm. Mi. within ant without the church. are asIng foi rnore decisive'crme. f;.arlcss ethi er'l nrevolin fron the pulnits of on jandr. Ecclesiastien1l autholirities ar-( hesitant about receiving the mones of our taihto"d Wi--'s, not h enuse they are conviincd thiat mon-, i:self can. parto':e of the moral quai ties of the indivilI:Nil who possesse: it, no matt,'r hov I n'I a man he iue he or however flagitiovly his norna m'12y have been acquired; but becauk ci'ey rio not want to )*om suspe.Ct c'l of being receivers of stolen -ood, or lay 4 .emsclves open to th- charg" -ist or unjust. of com')ounling wick d s.R-iormi movmms re rife and the bottom plank of the refolrni rtion. inlatform is. atmos:t withont, (-, ecst~ion. in suhrtan, the Eight! Word of the M;saiC iaw. Nov and again we hear it maid thal t'1os3 woo proi'se us raform will, it their' turn, v:hen t'?v si'ail have en tfrea into power. exlioit th- paonl< for their own advantage, as has beer rre of yore. I do -ot blieve thil this is so, as I read and interpral to-day's events: but of this 1 anr sure, that they who betray the con f!erre of the peonle undeOr the prom .e o a clean reform. will go down ,-t a latcr day, to a polit-eal dicaste, b~.de wilch the downfall of an Ar nold will be counted tanie. -and in hand with the mora rfemmation, a religious revival whicl F"all purify men's souls will sweeT the land. Siritual blassedness-an( "oy and neace in a holy spirit" wil b'ocmne the chief des3ire of m.an: hearts. Having tried the confor That the world give- and found i faulty, men will seek the peace of GoC which nasseth all human comprehee stn, which the world cannot give ant .which the world cannot take away Let us place our trust in the God o, Israal and of America. Let us fac the future with a cheer. Plowing Around a Rock. "I had plowed around a rock it one of my fields for about five years, said a farmer, "and I had broken , mowing-machine knife against it, he sider losing the use of the ground ir which it lay, because I supposed tha it was such a large rock that it wonU take too much time and labor to re move it. But, to-day, when I begai to plow for ('orn, I thought that b: and by I might break my cultivatoi against that rock: so I took a crow bar, intending to poke around it, and find out the size once for all. And 1 was one of the surprises of my lif 1o find that it was little more that two feet long. It was stauding on It' ege, and was so light that I coult lift it into the wagon without help.'' "'The first time you really facet Your trouble you conquered it," I re plied aloud, but continued to enlarg upon the subject all to myself, for. do believe that before we pray, o3 better, while we pray, we should lool our troubles sqluarely in the face. We'-shiver and shake and shrinl% and sometimes we do not dare t< pray about a trouble because it make it soem so real, not even knowin; what we wish the Lord to do aboul it, when if we would face the tronbli nd call it by its name one-half o: its terror would be gone. The trouble that lies down with ii at night, and confronts us on firs waking in th'e morning, is not th trouble that we have faced,. but th trouble whose proportions we do no know. Let us not allow our unmappe' trouble to make barren the years a our lives, but face it, and with God' hlp work out our salvation throug] it! -Advocate. The 'Great Weaver. . Life is a great shuttle. But th pattrn grows, the web is wrous-Y It takes both dark threadsand golde to work out God's design. You can not judge the purpose of the Weave: by the thrust of the shuttle or to e ave of one thread. wvhether it i dark or bright. "All things work to gether for good to thenm that lov God." We are yet on the loom. To shuttles are not yet empty. Give Go' time to put this -and that, war. ~hreads and bright, together, a:1' coiplete the purpose of His ?rovi dence. The Law of Gr'owth. There comes a time .wien thi chestut burr opens up intuiti'el: and the nut rolls out-there Is time when'an apple gets so lusciotu and ripe it can hang'uo longer-on t tree and falls-there comes a t7: when the chicken gots too ".ig for shell an d picks its v.:Ly out and r"' ifests his larger form of life. ,T coes a time w >". ver.iy .iu soul that ke?; in ny wit ' will walk it t's - *iace ojf Iiu A man has . "1f -.It is a ere it> con e etl ie as lasting a-.... \scmt Lr'ermee mnoreest riin.Lham.' Lt '' i ler d th:at e'very m:i c mntI. there w i. hi.h n-wbu j.is aad nop Cl'e:i na hi 'and il i' e th-w .:.e is the ; pr ghe outside a~sorca .: nr. toWe arei'~ d ni me n't go.ain bm!oaed ser~.~'As ("ingen EPWOiITH LLU [[Soeina SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4. Church Extension.-Luke 4.16; John 18.20; Acts 9.20. Daily Readings. Go:d honored in the bufiding of the G-od honored in th. buiMlitg of the tempe.-l Kin:gs S. 11-1i. ;od honored in th" building o-f the synagoG;ue.-Luke 7. 1-1u. Lib'aaiity is a miark of love-ExO-'1. The church a holy ace.--ExO:1 ,0. 26-29. The church a place to be longed fcr.-- -Psa. SI. The Boird of Church Extension of our church 13, so To saY. a big com m.ttee of the church chrged by Gen e al Conferenee with the duty of a:d ing in tiae crection of church edifi'es !n places where. locaily, the people are not able to build alone. The necd of an a-ency of this kind fa fel. a hal. centudry -go and more, but no organiz;ation was effected until I q4 It -rri 01T as a Society." but be ing adopted by the General Confer ence it became a "Borni. FLeiV in deed were its bagirznnd mid its first secretary, Dr. Monoo, w a tragic death. But under the Na-,ol0 onic leadersliip of the late Dr. . J Kvnett. the movv:innt at amed strength and mornentum until it ,aS - come to rank as secnnd only iu ir , portance to the Missionary Society it -self. . It is well for as to reread th gas cinating account of how God slow 1 his feeling toward the people at the comulut.on of the laiorn;,cio, and ag in iecn Solorno:1 fuished and dedicated. his temp!e. Te "glory of I e lord" filled bo0th !ont and temuple. The centurion who had buil for the Jews a synagogue wa:-. a m'ode and s If depreciating mar, but douut1ics his gncro;;ity and d--%t wr'4 counted "i -..... us mrveli. and said, "I have not fu s.i gret faih, - no. not in Israel." !.0ir!.: in - iMing a holse- of God be'ks tah. adit is never unbevdof heaven. *The people bring much more than ei ough. those i, ch'nro Cried at the profulsion of ofen' L o 0r tne buiing o0 the tabernacle. 0. if it Cou 11 so now there would be no homeiess. con gregtons: nor builair whici' jO not repres'nt tb. a.iLy of e p. - pi.; nor crusmfhing deli' -: nor In I heavily of the whelr of1 the riLss.ionL L arv enterprises, by what:. rer ni'0301cd1. Perhaps this comu-ttu ,ji v n able us' the better to emreerir .he magnitude of the wo 1 (f e1 a of ChurchxtEeioj;i1 the cha.rehes aided froi the beginning were praced three and one hall' fe )9at 'hey would make a line nearly twieC around the globe-if ;hat V*ere pos sible. Or. if phLal side by side ard each church given fifty feet .ront. ty would make a street of solid church wNalls mnore than forty;-seveni nul- in length. : CHISTIN DAVHNOTES NOVEMBER FOUBTN The Blessedness of Communion with Chrlst.-Jchn 14:15-26. If we are in lack of comfort. we do not know tho Comfortcr. The test of rel gion is joy. I.s folly to dream of knowing C'rist till we are readly to be known c' Him. Hei will give Himself to us n h.n We give ourselves to H.ml. Chrst does not say, "Obey me, love - " but. "if you love mc, you will 06ymc.' If' we havec do"bts, It is because we h've not the Spirit; the two cannot he together. Suggestiono. Com"munion w t.i Civ st mens un en with his work, ILs peo1e, a..d Ei nerson. T ' re can be no acquaintance with C'ri.t, any more than with a humnan riend, without the spending of time The miore regu'ar we are in out c-mun on with C::rist, the more we s..ll commune with iHim also at Ir regulr times.- . The noble phrase, "Practise the preece of God." impi-es the truth tt i'Lperfect communion comes only after much communion. - tlustrat.Onls. God is here, and it is our fault if we do not peceive Him, just as the Rontgcn rays have always been in existence, though men did not see them. The problem of wireless telegraphy was soived when that marvellously dZlicate3 receiver was invented: but God's heart is instantly responsive to the least impluse from earth. Men spoil a conversation when they Insist on monologues. There Is no comniion w-th God unless we will listen as well. as spea'<. Conversation between two friends Is based on sympathy and in its turn Increases sympsllhv. It is so with communion with God. Questions. Do I spend eflough time in prayer? Do I allow worldly thoughts to vi tiate my prayers? Is Christ's presence real to mie when I pray? iNaps aM~" the Health. Prolonged "'forty winks" during the ay are severely condemned by many d octors on the ground that they af feet one's . regular slep. Scientists have found that in the or:dinarv cource in the human being there is the greate st vi tadly between 10 a. mn. and 2 p. mi.. and the least between 2 c'clock nd G in the morning. Long sl'ens duv'ng the day interfere with th's crde- of nature and sometimes affect arious organs. causing headache. The :n of forty wiks but only forty, roes refreshing to many because it is r t'short to hav-e an -injuious con seuecellfs.-Tndonl Tel'egraph. If it takes nine tailors to make a man demands the Baltimore Ame-i cai, hotdmany does it take to make him ridiculous is a query that is ikely to be put by the one who is pone to let ca:som have her ancient sway as hoeconsiders the announce meat from the E--:'isb metropolis tat blue evening dress will be the iOe hundred and six ve:rs, ih stretch of time lying bctween 180 and 1906. is a ct.iparatively shor peiod mas-:red by tle ages of l, 0ld %(world nations, but it ineladE withi, its limits almost the birth an pr:eticlly all th developmen;t -.hie the iUnited States have undergon The Department of Cormerce an Labcr throws i-lht upon the eour '11and the extent t- this growth in ram 1S pamlet t eet id.; issu.I10 the( area~ of thu Unie Stte wr ;27.S44 square auiles, the poplatio. -a 3 0.483. the publiic debt iS2 9716.21. he money in ciulatiii 1000,000. In 1906 the area of iL Uiiwtd S aue-:. (xclisivc of Ahh is st3.2: Sane miles; the popt la'tion, 84.545.0O0; the ublic deh : ,61'135.(iG; the money in eireuI tion. 8637:O.:27.609 of ;xoId an d $I1,)S 471,.-95 Of sihVer. The total ione in -irculation in 1SOO iv as 26.500 000, or $5 per citizen., whle in 10 ilhe mory p ei'rulatmin i- $2.744. 4S:)8.):N, or .M:32.42 per Citize:. I 1;61 !th mber of prniners v. S,:% eceis ing$1,034.00 in .N OS I SKIN 1-.RUJOliS 35 YEARS. Scffered Serverely With Eezesa All Ove Body-AThonmand Tha iksO Cut 'cura Rcmiedies. "For -ver ti rty-dive years~ t w~as a vere suiterer from eczema. The eruptio was net curfine:! to any one paice vwZ's all o':e : :. ....lm.b, and even ; mxy head. I a- ixty :.-.ri uld and a eI d aid have been examined t and th-y Fud there was no cure for m:1. vc.' : n l : i:: of nedicine an lid :'per., 1arge suso-,o:e for oer ithorn:avai ciA s:ort rgodd to try the(.....-ra Remedies, and aft: usir t - (4 Cati.ura Soap, tw om~s ,'- ie:r:-Oiru::ntand 'r;,- be, tiC! *t- :vent , two troatmem - ' A thenad th nk to Czieura. c..nnjj,; t a o high,:: of .h uiu Ras C .. 0110. I::. . i15. Ther 5 :0 rei : vEliy e hu not'ZS. love r s th1ml.e'. 0se.:iahlly i theyv happe A Good Record. Out ' ril t he 8exernal remedic: rn t11 -mark.te d' . . i thee is ow, thai t the r.ccrd of ti. vrord-renwmnd r.rni ,da~ -icock's. It hanov been mt Q fos sidv ear, :ndstill conTI.e to0 a-, popular i ever i doing its ;;reat wos or reirmg u pams and .:ch%,. It a :1 1cr0dy ve all r.ecd when rin~ fro: :any ormn of ache or p:.in rslting fro: takiiz coald or over-stram. Ailcoci:'s Plasters ar' sold by druggis in .vr-; part of the civilized world. The greatest lencth of tim e -hie any T o-t-te has been lnown to remai a'ioat -s twenty:-one years. A ho1 lie containing a mesage. which we thrown overboard by an~ A meriea son captain off Newfonndliandi 1S78, wnas picked un off the wet coas. of Ireland early in 1899. narnaas~ C',nnot Ta C'ne-nI l iz'akpieations 'o thy. oannot reqoi th ,ij'r,4edn~rianotth0oelr. Thereisonlvon Wov to oure d.aff'ess. and thit is be costi flamed vou have 'i rumb1linr savnd or imn'e feet hio'ri'ler, andi <m *-.i -tir il-iq' Ileafness Is the reunit,. and 'un1*e th$ in tai wation~ can bo tae'n ov - a,a thit tube n' storu'd to its nornl eo'd tioVi MaVin-' Wi are uaani brv pati.rrh.w'ii-h it nothiu-bnt inflmed condition of the~ 'uonn enrfaiet eace of Decafuess(can~sed by oatarrh' that .'t n)ot be enrad by TWall's'atrr Cure. *prn rl?< cironmife.' F:~Trivs & Co., Toledo,( Foid by Drur istsa. 7!4. Take Nall's Family Rlia 'or sonatin~atio1 Postal facilities in China are r< ported to he imnnrnving throng~h 1) service on farit tralins betyween Pek1 and Hlankow. The.se are exnected i make the run in thirty-six hours. You CANNOT CUR E all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal coi ditions of the mucous membrane such a nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh cause by feminine ills, sore-throat, sor mouth or inflamed eyes by simpi dosirn? the stomach. But v'ou surely can cure these stubbor affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antisepti which destroys the disease gez ms~checli discharges, stops pain, and heals th~ inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successfu local treatment for feminine ills eve produced. Thousands of women testif to this fact. So cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box 'giE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston, NMa 1Y // Q A ' Made Uner U.S Govermentinspctio 4'iiM &&& anh taini Comm -a.ne earmer w e Is very careful about her churn. She scalds it thor)ughly after using. and gives it a sun bati to sweeten it. She knows that if her churn is sour It will taint the butter that is made in it. The stomach is -1 churn. In the stomach and digestive and nutritive tracts are periormcd pro cesses which are almost exactly like the churning of butter. Is It not apparent then that if this s tonach-churn Is foul it maies foul -!! which is put into it? The evil of a foul stomach is not alone the 'ad taste in the mouth and the foul breath caused by it, but the corruption of the pure current cf blood and the dissem ination opf diseae throughout the body. Dr. P Golden Mcdeal Discovery makes the sour and foul stomach sweet. IL dces for the stuiach what the washing bad am *ath do for the ci urn-absolutely . moves every tainting or corrupting (l( n ent. InI this way it. cures blotches. pimples, eruptions, serfulous se-llings. sores. or open eating uleers and all humors orfd iseaseur igroim bad bicod. i0 yo have bitter, -n"oul taste In - your mouth, coated tongtie, foul breath, are weak and easily ired, feel deopresed and despondent, have frequent headaches, dizzy attacks, gnawing or disire-A instem ach. constipated or irregular bowels. sour or bitter risings after enting and poor appetite, these syniptons, oranyco.sider able numberof them, indicate that you are suffering from bilionsness. torpid or lazy iiv-:r with the usual accompanying .;ndi gcstion, or dyspepsia and th%:Ir attendant dlerangements. The ---.-mdete ence o Above sy m toms -) co I ions. as tte . . itm o - aer - nr' - Cr-o a.. these er seho'Is - - ave o03 n- -sk I Ir np bzo- innly in in r. - r ' o at this is absolutely true will be readily proven to your satisfaction if you will bi mail a p;-stal card reest t Dr. R..V. Piorce. Buffal-. N. Y.. ier a j p' fh luoklet of errcts from *!' i.opta.ir medical authoriti':s. nivin~ r thesandard t the names of al! tei inaredientz enti-ring into his wcrld-fam'd medicines and show ina what thc most eminent medi:'al mnca I of the age say of them. S Th ,ieg rages ot then Stone. no Ot V ow'sW Saothig Syrnp Wo Cilr'" th. ir;.. itenseum c s~rduesiitammIa alias pin~crnid cabottle eTe;rt th a omant does.:t, 10.......a I o . 'ee l t o Witoe'. to a ian s to l Dort Is all night long fr neuraloi. or r Sloa L1RIV kills the pain - nerves and in<( At all dkalers. Pac' Dr. EarjlIS.Sloj, Bo AeWOman dpendls so much u~ that the least upset< whole system. It Ethat count, in woma The little pains, and womanly disorder, s' Sthings,-serious pail It is for just these Swomanly troubles, gentle, strengthening I Woman': has been found so successi in relieving and curing. female complaints for 1t Bettie Arp, of Ballplay, Te1 under doctors' care for foi little good. I took one t Sand one dollar's worth SDraught, and now I am]1 Ssaved my life. We are always keep it in the hous worst pains and regulates At All Druggists WRITE UE and frankly, in strictest confidence,. age. We will send you FREE velope, and a valuable 64-page MENT FOR WOMEN." Addre Chattanog Medicine Co.. Chatta S-.A. -ny man who is dead in love imself should be buried in oblidna HIGKS* CURES ALL ACHES And ;NrvoesnWe3 Tiaiboelc lih sa W. L. DOUCLAS '3.50&*3.OOShoes =M.ST :N THE VICP.T.-5 .L~oug' d 4 PIt Edge in,-te -. annotheequadedatany prcer t i ..m n To-j She b'alo W. L. 1, DoIl Job comhll t IHOES FoR. EVERYBOBY AT ALL PEMZ Men's soes, $1 to 5. Bos, ow. * Chf?'bisrWs S40's.$~ *2 $-2 0 0 =< fry W. X. Douglas Womed-!4 Mlusses Mv C la &Children's; fo. style, fit and~ir they excel other makes. If I couid take you into my Iaqg - . actoriesLt Brockton, Ma.ss.,ands*1Me. ou how careluily W.L. Dougkssoe re made, ypu would t!!en urderstar why they hold their shape, I bettr wear longer, and are of gree.tervamZrt -an any other make. Wscrever you live, you cz obtain W. - )oglas shoes. ir rame ao p:ce is sUaPen i the bottom, Which prouecas you a20ot2. :rices and interior tshoscb. Take 4r zm.' &tze. Ask your deo!cr for W. 1.Dou s at.f ,.d insir.2t .pon having them. Fet~ CoorE ieie s us' : h.~tw.!t not wer d * Write for 'ituws -ra.- Cataog 'l Fail Stywe.. . OLULA. Ure L.s e. , c . So. 4.- C ff voMce eyes, nec oMS SE Wal om toothache heumatism quiets the luces sleep 25c50ec*1.00 srMa ss.U.S.A. .al pon her functions >f them affe her is the little things n's life and health. other symptomnsf of oon lead upto big is, serious diseas . ordinary, common that the use of a , female tonic, like ; Relief ii, in thousands of cases~ 'I had been troubled with months," writes MrD~ an., "and aitnough I was ur months, tney did but ottle of Wine of Cardui of . Thedford's Black etter. I believe Cardui poor people, but I shale e." It relieves woman's fitful functions. Try tL In $1.00 Bottles iFREELY elling all your troubles. and stn~t r ADVICE, in plain sealed er- - Book on "HlOME TREAT ss Ladles' Advi:ory Dept.. Tme ic~oga, Tenn. . GE