University of South Carolina Libraries
Australia's Juvenile Soldiers. It is the intention of the commonwealth government to make an appreciable increase in the number of Its cadets. The Minister of Defense has PTitrusted the work to Colonel Wallack, D. A. G., who has taken a very keen and active interest in the working and development of the Aus- | tralian cadet system. At present the force numbers about 23,000 cadets, the annual cost being ?26,602. Under the new scheme there will be 36,000 cadets, and the parliamentary grant will be ?37,22S.?Pall Mall Gazette. SCIENCE ECLIPSED. A New York Man's Invention Surpasses Expectations. New York.?On July 3, 1906, letters patent were granted A. O. Leonard on an in risible antiseptic ear-drum, on tne megaphone principle, for relief of deafness, head . aoises, &c., which is proving far more successful than th,e inventor ever anticipated. Mr. Leonard was deaf for thirty-five years ind invented this drum for his own bensfit. Ear specialists, family pljvsicians and Scientists are amazed at the results, and a very prominent ear specialist says it will make more deaf people hear than all other , devices for aiding hearing combined. Mr. Leonard is sending as promptly as possible full information by mail to those n-bo write him at bis office, 1161 Broadfray, Suite 230, to try the drums. According to a bulletin issued by the Bureau of Statistics the leather industry contributed $150,000,000 lo the foreign commerce of the Unitfid States in 1906, against $55,000,000 in 1S96. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for anv case of Catarrh that cannot be sored by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo^O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions ard financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West <fc Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Walpisq, Kinnan <fc Marvin, Whole- 1 sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- | mgdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussurfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, i George Schweinfurth, the noted African explorer, celebrated his seventieth birthday a few days ago. His first visit to Africa was in 1863. TEN YEARS OF PAIN. Unable to Do Even Housework Because of Kidney Troubles. Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clinton St., Napoleon, O., says: "For fifteen years I was a great sufferer - from kidney troubles. My back pained me terribly. Every turn or move caused j ^ sharp, shooting pains. My eyesight was poor, dark spots appeared before me, jtfjWJ*1 an(* * dizzy " ' spells. For ten years I could not do housework, and for two years did not get out of the house. The kidnty secretions were irregular, and doctors were not helping me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick relief, and finally cured me. They saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. What Balzac Said of Women. The man who can govern a woman can govern a nation. A man who can love deeply is never utterly contemptible. A woman full of faith in the one she loves is but a novelist's fancy. In the elevated order of ideas, the life of man is glory, the life of woman is love. Marriage has its unknown great men, as war has its Napoleons and philosophy its Descartes. A man must be a fool who does not succeed in making a woman believe that which flatters her. v Marriage should combat without respite or mercy that monster which devours everything?habit. The mistakes of a woman result almost always from her faith in the good and her confidence in the truth. No man has yet discovered the means of successfully giving friendly advice to women?not even to his own. The Indian axiom, "Do not strike even with a flower a. -woman guilty of a hundred crimes," is my rule of conduct. When a woman pronounces the name of a man but twice a day, there may be some doubt as to the nature of her sentiment?but three times! There is one thing admirable in women?they never reason about their blameworthy actions; even in their dissimulation there is an element of sincerity.?Houston Post. nurvnc wpt/p St. Paul Park Incident. ""After drinking coffee for breakfast I always felt lanquid and dull, having no ambition to get to my morning duties. Then in about an hour or so a weak, nervous derangement of the heart and stomach would come over me with such force I would frequently have to lie down. "At other times I had severe headaches; stomach finally became affected and digestion so impaired that I had serious chronic dyspepsia and constipation. A lady, for many years State President of the W. C. T. XJ., told me she had been greatly benefited by quitting coffee and using Postum Food Coffee; she was troubled for years with asthma. She said 11 was no cross iu yun. tuucc when she found she could have as delicious an article as Postum. "Another lady, who had been troubled with chronic dyspepsia for years, found immediate relief on ceasing coffee and beginning Postum twice a day. She was wholly cured. Still another friend told me that Postum Food Coffee was a Godsend to her, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking on Postum. "So many such cases came to my notice that I concluded coffee was the cause of my trouble and I quit and took up Postum. I am more than pleased to say that my days of trouble have disappeared. I am well J 1 11 /-> "D.rv^r.-rv.r* V ana nappy. nitric? a x\casuii. i R6ad, "The F.oad to WellvilJe," in j jjkgs. Smart Style! New York City.?Every variation of the jumper blause, or the one that gives the gulmpe effect is in vogue just now and each new one is sure to meet with a welcome. Here is ar ex ceedingly attractive model that can be made plainer or more elaborate as may be liked and which gives more or less of the gulmpe idea as the sleeves are made to match the chemisette or the waist. In the illustration it is made of Shantung pongee trimmed with velvet and convbined with lace, the square bertha being embroidered and edged with velvet. But if the embroidery in volves too great tr. expenditure of time or labor applique can be substituted, Indeed, any trimming that may be liked. The fancy lace sleeves are exceedingly dainty and dressy, but plain ones, either long or short, can be substituted. All seasonable materials are appropriate, the waists being equally well suited to silk, wool and the many pretty cotton stuffs. There Is a fitted lining which is closed at the back. The back portions of this lining are faced to form the back of the chemisette, but the front of the chemisette is separate. There are also the fronts and the backs of j the waist and the front is joined to the chemisette and the -vhole is arranged over the' lining. The bertha outlines the yoke and finishes its lower edge, while the closiog is made invisibly at ^he back. The fancy sleeves are moderately full with frills arranged over them and the plain ones can be joined to cuffs or to bands. The quantity of material required for the medium size is two and a half yards twenty-one, two yards twentyseven or one and three-quarter yards forty-four inches wide, with the frills and five and a half yards of binding to make as illustrated; three and a half yards twenty-one, two and a half yards twenty-seven or one and seveneighth yards forty-four inches wide with one and one-eighth yards of allover lace to make with plain sleeves. Carriage Boots. Carriage boots of satin or velvet in light shades are taking the place of the black velvet ones that for so long a time have been fashionable. They are made in the same style to come nhnvo thp nnlrlp an.i arp pdppri nnri lined with white fur or white fleece. They are iutended to draw on over the slippers, and it is rather a fad to have them match me opera cloak in color and material. The soles are heavier than those of the slippers, to prevent any dampness from the pavement. Dainty Lawn Waists. Some of the prettiest waists shown are of dainty colored lawns or dimities, made with quantities of fine tucks and elbow sleeves with turnback ruffled cuffs. White Dresses Load. White is the favorite for all sorts and conditions of dressy gowns. It is always satisfactory and becoming, two very important facts. When in dou^t wear white. 5 for Spring. Dainty. Fine Lawns. No woman Leeds to go ether than neatly dressed when dainty, fine lawns can be had. Darned Net Waist. tv.q /-inrnorf not wnist offers ample I opportunity for the most ambitious to exercise her skilli A bodice of this kind is sometimes used as a substitute for the Irish lace guimpe to be worn with the popular skeleton waist of late design. i Green Jewels Fashionable. Olivines, and, in fact, any stone of limpid greenish tint are all the rage in Paris, and followers of the vogue will tell you that it is a fashion adopted from the English, in compliment to Queen Alexandra, who recently visited Paris incognito. Lace For the Yoke. The lace of the yoke may continue in a band to the waist line, or the yoke disappears beneath surplice fronts. In the latter case the embroidery is applied to the edges of the fronts passing to the shoulder in diagonal lines. Blouse or Shirtwaist. The shirtwaist that is tucked on becoming lines always is the one in most demand, and here is a model that gives the tapering effect to the figure at the back while it can be made to provide more or less fulness at the front as may be desired. As white linen Ill UOli atCU; AC 10 muuv with round neck and attached collar and the tucks at the front are stitched for their entire length, but there are several variations of the model that can be made with ease and with success. The tucks at the front can be stitched to any desired depth while the neck can be made high and worn with a separate collar, either of the high rollover sort or with any pretty stock that may be liked. Again, sleeves can be in elbow or in full length so that a great many possibilities are covered by the single design. All waisting materials are appropriate and this season they are [ exceptionally lovely and exceptionally varied. A novelty, and a pretty one, is the use of unbleached linen in a canvas weave with white collar and cuffs, and sometimes the waist also is worn vrith the additional box pleat and frjlls that can be bought separate and attached to any waist The waist is made with -ronts and hack and is finished with a regulation box pleat at the front edge. When made with round neck the collar is joined to the waigt, but when the neck is cut high it is finished with a neck-band, and the high rollover collar is made separately and attached to it by means of buttonholes and studs. The sleeves are of moderate fulness and can be finished with roil-over cuffs below the elbows or with deep ones that extend to .^0 wrists as preferred. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and fiveeighth yards tv/enty-seven, three and a quarter yards thirty-six or two yards forty-four inches wide. I ! \ The ^Pui/o/i- f ?'A'SERMON' Mpl 6/ TAE REV^-c [KVy/fcNDERJoiJ^S^F" ~UrfT% ? Subject: Murder. if ; Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church , on the above theme, the pastor, Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, took as his text: Exodus 20:13, "Thou shalt not kill." He said: The extent and force of the admonition to recognize the inalienable right of all men to life is not widely recognized in our day, in view of the professed love of our forefathers and us for God and the Christ. With no circumlocution and no wavering of the voice, Moses speaks out for God a principle that the modern world, as the nations of all ages have done, disregards. To be sure the civilization of to-day is. better in general than the manner of life thousands of years ago. We do not kill our neighbors out in the open to gain our food. The settlement of private wrongs by "wild justice" 1s, in this country at least, limited largely to the mountain whites. No man of ; enlighteament grants the right of a , ruler anywhere to stamp out a human life arbitrarily as of old. Phys- ; leal dlsaDinty in a Daoe io-aay merus , more our sympathy than slaughter. Gradually we are coming to recognize the rights and privileges of the children who are yet unborn. Vendettas are unpopular, and the mere . threat to kill is, very properly, Buffi- 1 cient to put a man under bonds to keep the peace. Nowhere is the ' murderer safe from the clutches of outraged law. Does he slay his vie- tim here, then whither shall he flee? ! The minions who upholds the law j in Mohammedan Turkey will hound : him to the earth to return him to the | scene of his fortal sin in the borders of Christian America. Here and there * a few far-seeing souls declare that ] even the State has no business to ex- ' act an eye for an eye, a life for a ' life, and they say that society has no more right to cut short a human career than has that unit of society the individual. Yes, the recognition by the world of the wisdom of this commandment is greater to-day than ever before, but it is not yet what it should be. To kill a man is to deprive him of ( life. But the process may be varied and the length of time consumed ! in stifling the light of life may be. ; greater or less, according to the means employed. "Thou shalt not ' kill," says the commandment, and instinctively we picture the quarrel, the hot fight, the hand quick to slay. "Thou shalt not kill," and we see ' the gun, the aie, the poison, the bludgeon. "Thou shalt not kill," and the vision of a sharp, keen conflict, man to man, or of the silent, sudden blow flashes into the mind's view. Yes, each photograph is true to some scene in life. To these the law refers! But is this all? Is it always the axe or'the poison or the gun that fells a soul into eternity? Must the murderer be (he man with the instrument of immediate death? Are the murders which are the result of overt crime the only killings that take place? I think not. Slow work is not so fast, but it is just as sure. The breaking of a human heart by ill-treatment, either in word or act, is murder, though the papers never hear of it. Constant abuse may end a life, though the body show never a scar. The man who houndB his family to an early grave with physical abuse is a murderer. The smooth and careless youth who breaks his mother's heart is no less guilty than the man who brains me with a maul. The scurrilous and unscrupulous writers who hold honest men up to obliquy and shatter sensitive souls till the hand of death draws them out into the other life, are guilty of a mortal crime. The man who grinds the men who labor till they welcome death with joy is soiled with blood. The company of respectable and moneyed men who use their reputable names to float financial schemes and then ruin those who, trusting them, nave put their all into their keeping, are guilty of robbery least of all. The record of the starved, the broken-hearted, the insane, the suicides, Is but the corollary of their greed. The man who sells his neighbor poison, be that poison arsenic or whisky, is accessory before the fact to a suicide. The employment of children in factory and mining work Deiore tneir time is aimusi muiuer in the first degree. My friends, anything that tends to destroy or prematurely to curtail human life is a means to murder, and the men who set into motion the forces of unrighteousness that deal and hasten death are criminals In the sight of God, though the law may never touch them. Far be it from me to say that many of the men who commit these indirect murders have any real intention to cause misery or to commit crime. But the truth is that they are none the less culpable. The one thing that Is needed is a clear-cut vision of the meaning of the commandment which frames our text. The need is for sharp and unmistakeable definition of what it Is to kill. The eyes of men must be opened to their personal responsibility for the outcome of their acts. A new realization of the fullness of the command of Christ must infill every jiuman heart. Moral laziness must give the way to moral clarity of vision. . Spiritual indifference iilust yield the road to spiritual insight. The Christ must come into all men's hearts, not in small measure, but with a fullness that shall leave no room for unrighteousness. We must train our minds to thoughtfulness for others, and not to satisfaction of self. The money in our purses ought to burn our very souls if we see upon it any tinge of blood. The health and happiness of the man who toils, and bends a weary back that we may live in luxury, must be our care. The amelioration and betterment pf the life of all the world should be our constant aim. As Christian individuals we should guard the life of every human soul. As the right of the individual to slay his brother is denied by tne commandment, so also implicitly the right of society to take human life is questioned. The murderer is an enemy to society, and for the best welfare of the many it is wisest to keep him under guard. But the principle of the lex talionis, the life exacted for the life destroyed, is unchristian, and in the light of the teachings of Jesus is unwarranted. The State lowers itself and commits real sin when it wreaks the penalty of death upon the modern Cain. Vengeance is the business of the Lord, if indeed there be any such thing. The State has nothing to gain by the sending of any soul to his last rest. .The criminal has the right to a dsatb ] , - . ; t 4 I aot of the State's making. The prln:iple of capital punishment is as vicious at bottom as is private murder by the individual, and 1b unwholesome in that it disregards the very law of inalienable right to life that t essays to protect. "Thou shalt not till,8' says, the State, "for if you do, md we can prove the case against rou, we will slay you." The inconsistency of the situation should appeal to everyone, but queerly enough the very disciples of that Christ who said, "Father, forgive," are among the loudest clamorers for the life of ^>ia murHorop But the greatest example of the violation of this commandment is to be found in the actions of the Christian nations of to-day. Theoretically Christian, we are, as segregated peoples, largely pagan. Praising God is individuals and despising, most of as, in our private lives un-Christian conduct and un-Christlike acts, we stand ready as members of a great social body to sustain and to serve measures that are wholly corrupt and corrupting. Professing a love for peacefulness and for the Prince of Peace, we pay without a grumble our military tithes. Indeed, we may often see the spectacle of two mighty peoples, each paying homage to the same God, clutching each at the other's throat, the meanwhile each is asking uoa to give tne enemy aeieai. aji too often we may see the armies and the navies of a wealthy Christian nation full of power, menacing a weaker sister to collect a money debt. The nations of this day descend to the decision by fisticuffs which all worthy men deny to be manly, or to be of value to decide an issue.. The situation would "e ludicrous were it not so lamentable. Christian men and Christian nations have no communion with disloyalty to the Father. The Individual, the church, the peoples have no iall to kill. God gave us brains with vfrbich to settle our difficulties In sober thoughtfulness. He gave us Dur hands to help oureelves, not to harm each other. The more money >^u may possess, the more mast you care for the men below and about you. Financiering that makes its chief profits through the exploitation of the man with small means, or through the financial wrecking of the moneyed man, has no place in a Christian economy, for its fruit is all too often death. Many are the victims of unscrupulous Napoleons of finance. The easier you make the task of the toiler in your shop, or mine, or mill, or field, the more do you serve your God. The oftener we Bettle disputes between, individuals or among nations, by the courts of arbitration, -the more do we glorify our Lord and manifest our manhood. Immense armaments merely prove national weakness _o? will and lack of mental poise, wars oiten urmg victory to those who a#e In the right, and they should. But no war has ever proven the validity of the case of any victor no matter how well founded the argument of that winning party may have been. The crushing of little children at men's tasks is a short-sighted policy to score it very little. The system which wrecks and destroys the youth of a land, prepares a heritage of wrecked humanity for the worriment of future generations. Gain at any price is a poor business proposition, and is morally unjustifiable. My friends, the need of the hour in this matter is for an honest recognition, by Individuals and nations, of the force which the words of Jesus Christ add to the command "thou shalt not kill." We need a quickened conscience that shall always counsel for the right. We need a holy manhood that shall insist that no form of murder, be it brutal or refined,'shall soil the private or the public record. The call is for Christ men who dare to do good and to be upright, no matter how much the dividends may suffer, no matter how much humanity may remain unap?nt IHn'rinoes rharltv and pj CtiaiiTC V?4 ?W4-? , ? love. The call Is for men of high and men of low estate who shall ever recognize that war is hell, and that God is honored, not by the smoke and din of tattle, but by the exerfcise of human self-control. Let us, then, be men, and be sure to keep our hands from blood-guiltiness. Let not the death of our brothers be upon us. Let us live and let live. Let us serve and save. Let us not destroy. Influence. A mother once said to a popular teacher who had been admired by her pupils for a scpre of years, "What a wide and beneficent influence you have exerted, while I have been cooped up at home, managing servants, dosing the mumps and the measles, and patching and darning! How narrow my life looks beside yours." "Narrow!" cried her friend. "Think how you have sent iortn mic the world every morning your husband and your flock of boys and girls, full of health and cheer! What a model home yo;i have created for all your friends to see! It is I who have lived a narrow life rather than you. What is the slight touch whieh ] may have given to a thousand or more lives compared with the deep, determining influence which you have wielded over the half dozen in your home!" "Is it possible that you think so!" exclaimed the tired mother, incredulously. "I know so. I have watched your children in school. They radiate everywhere an atmosphere of love and light, and it was you who gave it to them."?Herald and Presbyter. The Gates of Pearl. In his sermon, "On the Twelve Gates," Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman says, "I am sure that there is some meaning in the fact that the gates are of pearl. Do you know the histnrv of nearls? Humanly speaking, it is the history of suffering. WheD discovered it is at the risk of the pearl fisher's life. It is said that pearls are formed by the intrusion of some foreign substance between the mantle of the mollusk and its shell. This is a source of irritation, suffering and pain, and a substance is thrown around about that which is intruded ' to prevent suffering, and thus pearls are formed." The Preacher Needs Help. As long as the winning of souls is considered to be the work of one man, he and the believers to whom he ministers must suffer loss. They are kept from the spiritual exercise and activity which is essential to a healthy life. He is robbed of the support which their witness ana tneir prayers could give.?Andrew Murray. Paying For Sin. Every sin must be paid for; every sensual indulgence is a harvest, the price of which is so much ruin for the soul.?Robertson. The apoplectic church U. apt to have an apologetic preacher. " 2' v ' ' ' - ' Australia's State Railroads. The State railroads of Victoria, Australia, report for the last fiscal wl frear the largest gross earnings on at Record. These roads have a mileage pr fcf 3394 and a capitalization of $201,-' ar 463,543. Their gross income the last ed frear amounted to $18,432,448 ana oi Working expenses to $9,728,246. The fixed charges or interest on the debt Were $7,737,438, leaving nearly $1,b00,000 as surplus to be turned into gi the public treasury. This is a new tb fexperience for that Australian State. R< ?Springfield Republican. w I JVIIS5 AOELAICENICHOLS ca that period of its terrors. Women wl regular functions should take immed consequences and be restored to heed' Lydia E. Pinkham's V< Miss Adelaide Nichols of 324 W< writes:?Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-"H won upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ( quickly alleviated. I feel greatly in which has been brought to me by you Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cox such as Falling and Displacements, General Debility, Indigestion, and system. For the derangements of t' E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Women suffering from any form o: write Mrs.Pinkham, at Lynn,Mass.Fro may be located and the quickest and si yiMBMB 34 YEARS SEU NJVnlXI 9U' TehJ,cl? hiY^bffotc ruanntce uA dellTCT^. Youun r^jflfllCT We are the largest Maanl VrvvHv^ y/ra\v sclllo^ to the consumer exclos!' (,N*-?vjLi>' Vehlcla, ?rtyle? ofhiroeu. Se teJftn^op^t^! Elkhart Carriage * Suae Price complete. 878.60. <v EUdiart. Indiana i Man Libellonsly Caricatured. No man cares to be libellously caricatured, and a masculine woman, declares Marie Corelli, writing on "Man's War Against Woman," is nothing more than a Jibellous caricature of an effeminate man. Emperor's Mexican Coffee. The German Emperor will drink no other coffee than that grown in I Mexico. There are sixteen telephone calls in New York City each second of the day. N.Y?19. i FITS, St. Vitus'Dance, Nervous Diseases per! manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve I Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., is wondering 1 why men do not go to church. Instead of experimenting with druss and , strong cathartics?which are clearly narmful?take Nature's Mild laxative, Garfield Tea! It is made wholly of Hefbs. For constination. liver and kidney derangements, 1 sick-headache, biliousness and indigestion. I A movement is on to have eggs sold by . , weight instead of by the dozen. SKIN CURED IN A WEEK After Suffering Six Months With Disfiguring Red Spots and Pimples? Cleared Away by Cuticura. ) "Cuticura Soap and Ointment are the greatest remedies for skin diseases on , earth. I have suffered 6ix months from a disease which I cannot describe, but 1 will | tell you the symptoms. My skin was full of red spots and my face was full of red pimples. It made lilfe miserable for me and I was ^discouraged with everything. I went to several doctors, but it was useless. I resolved to try the Cuticura Remedies, and after using them for about one week I became a new man. The pimples and the red spots have disappeared and they made my skin as soft as velvet. ? Albert Cnshman, Bedford Station, N. Y., I ' Nov. 29, 1905." | An Italian claims to have invented a | process whereby he can photograph a soul. ^pd1 Products ; I Libby's Vienna i Sausage >! I unequalled for their delicious ^ I taste. They are put up in most I i I convenient form tor ready serv- U , I ing, requiring only a few min- j . I I utes Dreoaration. They have a i fine flavor and freshness which will please everypne. e' An Appetizing: Dish.?Drop a tin of w Libby'a Vienna Sausage in boiling water ai until heated (about 15 minutes; and iv i serve as taJcen from the tin on a small tl plate garnished with lettuce leaves. 0] I A?k your. grocer for Ubbr'* and _ ln*Ut up?D getting Llbby'*. D< i Llbby, McNeill A Llbby, Chicago ~ ^Help the Horse ^ \ No article Is more useful Vr , about the stable than Mica \ JWpaB n ' Axle Grease. Put a little on 7 w the spindles before you "hook tip"?it will help the horse, and V| ? * cc bring the load home quicker. MICA AXLE m I i CDCItEi BP? ? 5 UllkNUh fjf'&S ^ 1 wears u/ell?better than any fiffftWk to 3 other grease. Coats the axle f'JufrjgB F mth a hard, smooth surface of laZMtU M powdered mica which reduces {HEjJfl 0rI friction^ Ask the dealer for iJpjjfiU 14-jfj ,T*sasfiD ^ Bl y$qaM Musical Staircase. A staircase has been Invented tiich plays tunes as it is walked up id down upon. A series oJ pins la essed by the feet and plays gonga, id drums, while others are connects : with collapsible chambers, which ow various instruments. Robin Hood's Wind. Robin Hood's wind is the name ven to the wind which blows over awing snow. It is so called because obin Hood said he could stand any, ind except a thawing wind. ERIODS OF PAIN |; I While no woman is entirely free ? >m periodic suffering, it does not i m to be the plan of nature that > imen should suffer so severely. Irmlo^t.laR and train are DOsitive dence that something is wrong' lich should be set right or it will : id to serious derangement of the ; ninine organism. Thousands of women, have j ind relief from all periodic suf- i ing by taking Lydia E. Pinkm's "Vegetable Compound, which made from native roots and herbs, it is the most thorough female ) julator known to medical science. { It cores the condition, which uses so much discomfort and robs ' 10 are troubled with painful or ir- j late action to ward off the serious < fch and strength by taking ;getable Compound \ est 22nd Street, New York City, j ' sen' who suffer would only rely Compound their troubles would be debted for the relief and health ' r inestimable remedy." a pound cures Female Complaints and Organic Diseases. Headache, in prorates the whole feminine he Kidnevs of either sex Lydfm is excellent. ; Invitation to Women ' t fomoid mlfflMs are invited to m the symptoms given, the trouble I arest way of recovery advised. ? [JNGDIRECT -fmm ~~ 1I8 direct from our factory to uacr xffilisfl for examination andaggnral and^_^ tactnrers In the WortI rely. We make 100 ityles of ad for large, free catalorne.\ZJliy|^/ VLDIg I ^ ? Mfg. Co. Tim. Pil?t(napuw, S78.00. The Small Buyer of Paint v who takes care that the Dutch Boy trade mark, shown below, appears on every keg of white lead he buys, is perfectly pro-, tected; as perfectly as if he were a railroad official buying hundreds of tons, and with a corps of chemists at his back to see that no adulterant is palmed off on him. Pure White Lead and Pure Linseed Oil are absolutely necessary to good painting. /\m\ CTTM-n TTOT3 I avFUl 1 "A Talk on Paint." gives valuable infor- ^*&t/AT\ y\Kr matlon on the paint subject. Sent Iroe All lead packed in , . ; i upon request. 1307 heart this mark _ NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY ?> in whichever of the follouyS ing eititt U nearest you : New York, Bocton, Buffalo, Cleveland. Cincinnati, Chicago. St. Louis, Philadelphia (John T. Lewis k Bros. Co.). Pittsburgh (National Lead & Oil Co.) JYSPEPSIA Harlne taken jonr wonderfctf "CMearets" l'or , re* months and beine entirely cnred of stomach larrh and dyspepsia. I think a word of praise ia to"Cascarets"fortfceirwonderfulcomposltlon. ifcve taken numerous other totalled remedies t without avail and I find that Cascarets relieve \'r? >re in a day than all the othera 1 hare Ulua mid In a rear." ames McQune. iC6 Mercer SI.. Jersey City It. I, ' r& The Bowels ^ ktwcajmo CAK3V CATHARTIC loftfiut. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good, Do Goo4. > Ter Sicken, Woaken or Gripe, 10c, 25c7?c. Neva ! a ir. balk. Tbe genuine tablet stamped CCO. Aranteed to care or roar money back. , * Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.7. 59s . UAL SALE, TEH MILLION BOXES IHICKENS EARN MONEY! II Too Know How to Handle Them Properly. | Whothpr vrrn rfliKP Chick- MMIWPto cs for fun or profit, you ant to do it intelligently J ad get the best results. The w ay to do this is to profit by K /I ie experience of others. We BL A ffer a book telling all you eed to know on the subject -a book written by a man ho made bis living for 25 ;ars in raising Poultry, and Of > in that time neces|C> sarily had to ex- A -Ut/a periment and spent 1 much money to Id learn rlie best way HRS t n ronduct the tamps business?for the L ft small sum of 25 I J -nts in postage stamps. H M It tells you now to Detect A >J| id Cure' Disease, bow to eed for Eggs, ana rlso for HjS Market, wlucn Fowls to Save r Breeding Purposes, and B deed about everything you m ust know on the subject > make a success. A Wu Sent postpaid on receipt of llfli cents in stamps. DOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, Jr { m*. .1 ^ J 1? ,:m - , jM .*%;V ^'jf'7$'iL f^#^