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fHealth Gone Suffered with Throat Trouble Mr. B. W. D. B a rnee, ex - Sherift of Warren -Ooun ty, T e nnessee, na letter 7tr.omM i- MinaMle. M un nville, Ten nessee, writes: "Il ha C h r o a trouble and had three doe tore treating m e. All failed to do me any good, and Pronounced m y health gone. I con- Mr. B. W. D. Barnes. clided to Peruna, and after using four bot can Uay I was. entirely cured." Unable to Work. Mr. Gustav Himmelreich, lochhelm, exas, writes: "For a number of years I suffered whenever I took cold, with severe at tacks of asthma, which usually yielded to the common home remedies. "Last year, however, I buffered for eight months without interruption so that I could not do any work at all. The various medicines that were pro. scribed brought me no relief. ' "After taking six bottles of Peruna, two of Lacupia and two of Manalin, I am free of my trouble so that I can do all my farm work again. I can heart fly recommend this medicine to any one who suffers with this annoying complaint and believe that they will obtain good results." the name to rememb r n you need a remea for COUCHS and COLD Bereavement. A good home is the best exposition of heaven. No harmful d ugs in Garfield Tea, Na ture's laxativ t is composed wholly of clean, swcet. h lth-giving Herbal He who c not do kindness without a brass b id is not so scrupulous about his ther dealings. For E ACIE-Hicks9 4APUDINE Whet .r from Colds, Heat Stomach or P~rVo, I a. CapdIa" Will relieve you. a y it. l0o., 25o., and 50 cents at drug store Scott's Rebecca In "Ivanhoe." The character of Rebecca, in Scott's "Lyanhoe," was taken from a beautiful Jlewess, Miss Rebecca Gratz of Phila, delphia. Her steadfastness to Juda 'sn, when related by Washington Ir ving to Scott, won his admiration and caused the creation of one of his fin. est characters. Crutches or Blers. Richard Croker, at a dinner in New York, expressed a distrust for aero planes. "There's nothing underneath them," he said. "If the least thing goes wrong, down they drop. "I said to a Londoner the other day: "'How is your son getting on since he bought a flying machine?' "'On crtitches, like the rest of them,' the Londoner replied." A Fairly Wet World. The Pacific ocean covers 68,000,000 miles, the Atlantic 30,000,000 and thle Indian, Arctic and Antarctic 42,000,000. To stow away the contents of the Pa cific it would be necessary to fill a tank one mile long, one mile wide and one mile deep every day for 440 years. Put in figures, the Pacific holds in weilght 940,000,00,00,00,000,000 tons. 'The Atlantic averages a depth of noat quite three miles. Its water weighs 325,000.000,000,000,000000 tons, and a tank to contain it would have each of its sides 480 miles long. The figures of the other oceans are in the same startling proportions. It would take all the sea water in the world 2,000,000 yerars to flow over Niagara. * omen Appreciate Step-savers and Time-savers. Post Toasties FOOD irec fycoked, ready to serve dietfrom the package with cream or milk, and is a deliciously go ato n meal. go ato n Atrial package usually establishes It as a favorite breakfast cereal, "The Memory Lingers" POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd.,, Battle Creek, blcsh. Man When a Fellow Is Mariled He Loses Rn Many Friends By ALICE MONTGOMERY H, the modern trend of the young men who lie back compla O cently in theap1-mbracing comfort of a deep armchair .i some cozy drawing room and prate of marriage to their women frionds! It is the one topic. They rehearse it from every point of view. They wallow in its intricacies and glory in its mysteries. "It is our last resort," they say resignedly. "It is bound to happen some day, and as woman is the pursuer and man the pursued, why, the responsibility of the initiative is lifted from our shoulders. We are mere puppets," they say ex citedly, straightening themselves for a moment from their lounging posi. tions in the flush of their new discovery. "Mere puppets, dangling to a string controlled by a woman. When the appointed day is conie, she beckons and we follow. It may be the voice of nature, or it may be tho stirring of the life force, or it may be-oh, call it what'you will-but one thing is certain-we obey. And, hang it all, think of what we have to give up in the doing of it. When a fellow is married lie loses his best friends. At first they drop in casually and try to pretend things are just as they were, and admire the new fixings, and make pretty speeches to your wife, but somehow it is not 'the same, and they feel it, and you feel it., and try to right it, but it won't go. There is a feminine constraint, an invisible barrier that can't be ignored, and so gradually your best chums have other engagements and gather new interests, and you are not included, of course. And you feel an outcast. And then in sheer self-defense you have to throw in your lot with the other married people and watch some poor chap struggling in the marriage toils, and often it isn't a pretty sight. Say, marriage isn't all beer and skittles-it has its drawbacks." "And then, too," these same young men continue, warming to their subject, "how we fellows have to toil and spin to make the wheels go. round. There is no limit to the yards of bills that iave to he met at the first of the month, and as for appreciat ion-there is no such thing nowadays. The women just take aill they can get as a matter of course, in a sort of deign the queen kind of way that makes you feel pretty Imican for not giving them more. But all this time the women, who have a deeper insight into things marital and a keener intuition, smile whimsically into the embers. They know the men are having the time of their lives, and, inciden tally, one of their own missions, that of alfording q / entertainment, is being fulfilled. If the men were not really enjoying themselves, why on earth were they there at all, and why that particular topic, if it wasn't of paramount interest? I have beeni slcepjing outdoors on my back porch somec six years and do not comec Much Much in for zer'o temperatures or snow or rain. .1 Benefit by use a sanitary folding couch and havec waterp~roof canvas cover wvhich keeps the. Sieegiad mattress dry in the day time and servei Out of as an excellent top cover tucked in ove Doorsanetamtrsovrtetionwic By A. MORGAN Frcvr s orhayalwo Milauk ia.blaket porc soe comfrear and ovot come in forzro rainaro snow wd.ot rain mintesbefreetiingI use in sanitryre qoldin water agd hen wateshuldeseamig at her putnof th can ags.ve Thec kees ofheo w t all clothing and mattress at night. I us I us awoltockng a pledtrav mtte o f the thnose cwhich ing andaprotectinghtheoeyes poundstsanddonm ctfrongrasn overoal Sseeplik a hil aid gthui the motrroog cover act raes ape. tinfrmrininw nein.Aou e mnthin befor reiingIcp inc twepioor trea rtwaerban.Th watershoud be teamng h the coue in ths countrysno. 0ho1 watysrtheetariefebutileeapaysaim aanynothtr H usoawoo thein ays whlere own t the ndormy oe it. r. Takeaforinsoancetthegbthng ofes. pontadimsrnga adewh. eafato fa ei oic Isesk acidndgTupthe mrni ng oswife in tavnos eappo. Nothingpricesndscoftentoorcedptondoorsnagmall Much M oneysaaal-oe egsat3 cetpr By PROF. W. C. L.ANGDON ms edr1 et.I i ah a ange cnsme of thi cuntrynool pasThe samerlue apays to may gooder manyartiles ellng a a wfgur where he is oee dwson f t. c ticesohrea ratin fbocntcoesin Whil it ay sem a Triia loss, ican lhousthtwie agggte tato is hustaen ro thernigloftshe poos and mddlet casndl aurchst, toyaahavastensegsannuallnty.e rj~he cndiion oulbzeaslnmde bu the coiing nof half-pennies. ______________musttender_18Lastts.mme the spah comays Uninverntaledy onumeraflffdingnta Birds [fshetepen d3cns for bidhnJc nand asdozng or S aages.isedo1%cns man aricls ellng t fiurewhrin the inere dison now a hrac tinbDbuigin aekp el tce wt od Whilitmayseearivalconsstin Ica eeds yof vharious aggrega, th M oustknfrth earnin s th poresl anumdde clas birds aoupn ing he wntesherstha usallyflylout By J. HOWARD MOORE frtecl ots Chicago heie h leas hc aebe hi~er regulalye ' numer wite aeedin sthe roions, forirds apea Jakon and oahngevern wintrheraresevralKenuyrdinathe wite monthrd nohese (snowbirds, shrkes, crsonyn oodsees, nutvario chens, wild -W As a reul aubro irsaesed duck anda flck o b irng c ed wawiner hee hat usuaed cfly out th, erris o thefruifan wild ol months.m Besies te buejaa, wichhavebee WED IN AN AIRSHIP AND SAIL FAR AWAY AVIATOR TAKES DARING YOUNG COUPLE AND PREACHER UP IN BALLOON. t CEREMONY IS A MILE IN SKY E Enveloped in Mist, High Above the ti Earth, the Marriage Service Is Sol- d emnly Performed-Alight Over e Thirty-Five Miles Away. b Sanl Antonio, Tex.--While soaring o Inore than a mile above San Antonio 11 in a dirigible balloon enveloped in mist and clouds, Miss S. Marie Shel ton and W. Walter Stowe were mar ried as the result of a wager. Follow ing their romantic marriage they- had an aerial honeymoon, the first in the history of the world, going more than thirty-lIve miles and landing in an other county. The balloon cane down in a forest rnoro than five pilles from the nearest ::ountry road hnd the popular youlig ::ouple had to walk that distance through the mud to r ach an automo bile iII waiting to c'Ay them to the city. Rev. J. Ii. Adams, pastor of the Cumberland Presbyterian church of this cit y, performed the ceremony. Capt. It. E. lioneywell of St. *Louis, who piloted the balloon on the honey moon trip, and T. 0. Bateman, a car toonist and photographer, were the witnesses. Captain Honeywell had invited a couple to be married in his balloon. Considerable bantering followed and many Wagers were lid that no couple S would make the attempt. As the re 4uit of a wager 'Miss Shelton and Mr. Stowe declared they would be mar ried in just that manner. No one took 0 them seriously, but Sunday afternoon o 'hey appeared at the aviation park with the minister in tow. It was misiing and low clouds al- 1 most enveloped tihe house tops. This did not deter the couple. They on .ered the balloon with the pastor and 51 -. f Pai Wde inBlon th inessan h rops1erecu tooe.Th aicaf atocesotu /or tha a l. hn t a :cce/ hseeaio n a aln ' Paistr eored the cereony i :he wionesoema aner.o er u Thoere wair crafsderable dhticut inr thadn a pla'e. t ligh t ad weashe nti elvtioh baon was sailin thaever citndsc coul thnted Stes beausemy ato eouSrins that, th Tewas dedmafo t com down This was 35 miles northwest of San Antonio. M'.rs. Stow~e, who did not manifest the least nervousness (luring the en tire trip, although it was the first ascension she had ever' made, said she liked the sensation of high flying and was veiry glad she hadl accepted the oppoirtunity to be married in the clouds. As a result of the tr-ip many busi ness men of San Antonio have sent wedding presents to the young couple, and they will have sufficient furini ture to start housekeeping without any individual outlay. FINDS HIS MOTHER ALIVE Detroit Mani Quarreled With is Father, Then Located Other Long Lost Parent Through Uncle. Detroit, Mich-Twenty-flve yearsn of searching for the grave of his mother, whom his father had said was (dead, has resulted in WVilltam R. leaird of Detroit finding his mother alive. She is Mrs. C. W. Spencer, wife of' a prosperous meat market owner in Urbana, 0. She was divorced froem tier first husband 25 years ago, the father taking the boy. Upon being toldl his mother was dead, young Beard became< so insistent uipon seeing the grqve that about eight years ago he and his fath sr quarreled over it arid Separated. lie knew his mother had a hrother named C. P. Lewis, a horse-breeer. Reading of at Mr. Lewis at an Indiana horse show, he looked him up, learned that hie was his uncle, and lioiate hi I EAR GIVEN A WOMAN BY BORNEO SAVAGES FIFE OF A NEW YORK ZOO MAN GETS PRESENT FROM CAN. NIBALS. Now York.-All the way from the Ildest parts of the Island of Borneo is journeyed a little black,.ball of eth, clawe, fur and bad temper, to ok out of steel bars of a zoological ige. Its name. Is Heldretos Malay. 'us, but Keepers Landsberg and ane in the small mammal house of to Bronx" Zoo called it "Sunny" to .y, because it is the cutest, round red, sun bear cub that has ever been l'ought to the big animal inclosure. While in that portion of the Island r Borneo known as Sarawak, C. Wil ama Beebe, the curator of birds of / un Bear Cub Given Curator's Wife. 1e Bronx Zoo, who is now on a i two ear tril) into tile uikown Portions f the earthi collectilig are slmens f bird life for exhibition here, was ecompiJ)tllled by lrs. Ileebe, ats en ilusiastic a naturalist as her hus. and. When the curator's party reached lie region peopled by the Dyllks, the boriginal race of that island. feared s the "wild men of H1ornleo" and nown to be head hunters and canni. als, Mrs. Heebe's presence In the ids created great curiosity, for the ead hunters beheld a white woman ar the first time. While on the slopes of Mount Kim. alu, near the source of the River [inabatangan, the naturalist's camp vas stddenly surrounded by flerco ooking Dynk chiefs, some robed in antastic garments made of birds' kiis, some without clothes, sotme vreathed around the waist and temn. )les with leaves. and feathers. As Mr. Beebe noticel the head chiel -ush in the direction of Mrs. Beebe, lhe curator drew his auttomiatic pistol Lfnd threw hiitnself in a poestutre of de. enise. But the precauttion was un ecessary, for the "wild man'" meirely aid1 a furry aninmatedi little butndle in le white woman's lap. It was a tiny, reck-old sun bear' held in great r'ev rence by the Dyaks. Mrs. Beebe arried1 tihe bear the rest of the jour lcy and fed it from a bottle until the arty reached Brunel, a seaport, from vhlch tihe little cub was dispatched o the Bronx Zoo. 10LD STORAGE FOR DEBTOR hutcher Put a Man on Iee When He Wouldn't Pay His Bill. Scranton, Pa.-Cold storage as a neans of collecting a dlebt was utsed y Michael Youhas, a butcher of cranton, to a point whetre the poli1ce amie to the rescue of a shig~erinlg ebtor. John Mauleski was passing 7ouhas' store, accordling to tile police, va 7'le /no h store y /n Butger crdLor. etrnIeBx Yha ti hrusit im e onto ad reg ratori ad fa~t lened1 th door from. thet' utgide heincdetoase'.cm notlin ini tihe neighbiorhiood. A squad vas sent from police headquarters nid found Male~-' still ini the icebox ni thn verrre of callnns-n N." ,: QUITE 80 Philip-These motorists seem to think the ordinary pedestrians are be, neath them. Harry-Well, they often are. SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT OF PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS ' A speedy and economical treatment for disfiguring pimples is the follow ing: Gently smear the face with Cuti. cura Ointment, but do not rub. Wash off the ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and 'hot water and batho freely for some minutes. Re peat morning and evening. At other times use hot water and Cuticura Soap for bathing the face as often as agreeable. Cuticura noap and oint ment are equally successful for itch ing, burning, scaly and 'rustcd hu mors of the shin anI scalp, with loss of hair, from infancy to age, usually affording instant relief, when all else fails. Scnd to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Boston, Mass., for the latest Cuticura book 0h the care and treat. ment of the sIlA and scalp. No Purhase Recorded. There was a dealer who tried to sell a horse to the late Senator Daniel of Virginia. le exhibited tfhe merits of the horse, and said, "This horse is a reproduction of the horse that General Washington rodo at the batltie of Trenton. It. has the pe(ligree that will show he descended froma that horse and looks like him in every particu lar." "Yes, so llIch so," said Senator Daniel, "that I ant inclined to believe it is the same horse." Alabama Man Says Tetterine Cures Eczema. Morvin, Ala., August 1, 1908. r received 'your Tetlterino all 0. K. . have used it for Eczena and Totter, Ring worms. Old Sores and R1sin1gs aid can gladly recommend it as a siro (ure. J. It. Deolride. Tetterine cires Erzemn, Tetter, polls, Rling Worm. l):inruff. Ca nkered Scalp. Bunions, Itching 'lies, Chilblains and ev ery form of Realp aind Skin Disenso. Tet terino 60c: Tetterino Soap 2-'. At druig gists or by mall dlirect from The Shium trinn Co.. Ravnnnah. a. With every malt order for Telterine we vive a box of Shuptrline's 10o lAver 1lls freo. It is 'unquestionably true that wealth produces wants, but it is a still more important truth that wants produce wealth.-Malthysn. Taylor's Cherokee Rle 'dy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Natu; ' great rteedy Cures Coughs, Colds.j 'roup and WVhoopmng Cough and all throat uad lung troubles. At druggists, 25e, 50e and $1.00 per bottle. No man has come Ito true greatness who has not felt in somne degree that his life belongs to 'his racc.--Phillips Brooks. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, sanl, su~gar-coatedl easy to take as canady, regutlate and invig orate stomach, liver and( bowels and cure constipation. Some women worry about the wor 'ries they have missed. .OTTUMWA WOMAN CURED By Lydia E3. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Ottumwa, Iowa.-"For years I was almost a constant sufferer irnm female . e .e.troubale in all its (dre ad ful fornms - shooting pains all over my body, slcic heatdache, spinal weakness, dizziness. S depression and S everythn th was horrid. I tried many -doctors in different Sparts of the United. " \States, but LydiaE. ~ V Pinkham's Vegeta-. le Compound has done more for me than all the doctors. Ifeel it my dluty to tell you these facts. My heart is full of gratitudb to you for my cure."-Mrs. I IARRIET E. WArn1-:n 624 8. Ransom Street, Ottumwa,T Iowa. Consider This Advice. No woman should submit to a surgf. cal operation, which may mean deatha until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous medicine, made only from roots and herbs, has for thirty years prved to be the most valuable r~ncand Invigorator of the female organism. Women residing in almost every city and town in thne United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E~. Pink,. barn's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice is free, connfldontint. and ~alwa hme.