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WnVitttnt ! % >4/5* 'I w W V^ Constipation May 1)0 pcvmanonlly overcome by projxx j personal ejfovts \%itMKc assistance ifih e one truly bencjicial laxative I remedy, S> rup ojand Hl'uir of Sennoj ! whicH enables one to jorm vegu)ar ! hakit^ daily So iha^ assistance to na- i turo may be gradually dispensed : when no longer necked astkekesto^ remedies, when Yeauired, arc to assist i ixature and not to supplant the natur. ; cl junctions, vfticli must depend uiti? j matcly upon proper noutishmeht, j propercffovtSjand. rigKt living genera!//. To pet ite beneficial ejjecTs, always bay the genuine SyrupfRgs?^?l ixirfSenwi ^ manu^acturr j by the California Fig Syrup Co. only SOLD BY all LEADING DRUGGISTS ?tiesize only, reguUr price JjOCfer Bottle The British Consul at Tamsui reports that the total exports of camphor from Formosa, in 1907, amount ? X _ ' ? r% * 9 _ ea 10 ^,iii,ooo [juuuus, ui ?uibu 452,933 pounds was sent to Havre, London and Hamburg; 1,635,300 pounds to America, and 33,333 pounds to Madras. THE TIME TEST. That is What Proves True Merit. Doan's Kidney Pills bring th* quickest of relief from backache and t kidney troubles. 19 that relief lasting? Let Mrs. James M. gusta St., Staunton, January 31st, 1903, Mrs. Long wrote: "Doan's Kidney Pills have cured me" (of pain in the back, urinary troubles, bearing down sensations, etc.) On June 20th, 1907, four and one-half years later, she said: "1 haven't had kidney trouble Since, i repeat my les-uuiuujr. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-MIlburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Way to Escape Guests. The "balloon party" is said to have arrived, and there are hostesses who boast the possession of a tame balloon. Beyond these two facts very little transpires, except an occasional exhibition of skill by the non-professional "espert," which is extremely trying to witness, and altogether an overrated excuse for leaving ninetenths of the guests to spend the afternoon quarreling over croquet . hoops, or attempting to revive their ardor for lawn tennis.?Lady's Pictorial. Our Uproarious Supreme Court. During the consideration recently by the Supreme Court of the United States of a certain case of copyright, counsel introduced a number of perforated rolls used in mechanical pianos and organs, and passed them up to the court as exhibits. Chief Justice Fuller handled on* of the rolls curiously, and then observed in solemn and profound tones: "I observe that this roll iu my hand bears the inscription, 'Am I Yo'h j Kentucky Babe?' I should like to ] inquire whether this personal appeal ; will render it improper for my distinguished associate, Mr. Justice Harlan, to sit in this case?" Before the Kentucky justice could make himself heard above the decorous smiles of the attorneys, the court had waived the tentative objection, and the case went on.?Success. To Be Pitied. True philanthropy, of course, embraces every sort and condition of sufferer, but we cannot help feeling that the class to be pitied and relieved the most is that of women of good family, women of birth and breeding, who through adverse cir- . cumstances are forced to face the world quite unprepared to earn or; get a living.?The Queen. One of Life's Sweetest Things. That kindly soul, N. P. Willis, wrote that "the sweetest thing in life 'Via TirolPATTlD nf n wifA '' j iO ViaV uuviuuuvu *? Wivumv v* V. ?I I?v. SELF DELUSION Many People Deceived by Coffee. We like to defend our indulgencies and habits even though wo may be convinced of their actual harmfulness. A man can convince himself that whisky is good for him on a cold morning, of beer on a hot summer day?when he wants the whisky or beer. It's the same with coffee. Thousands of people suffer headache and nervousness year after year but try to persuade themselves the cause is uot coffee?because they like coffee. "While yet a child I commenced using coffee and continued it," writes a Wis. man. "until 1 was a regular coffee fiend. I drank it every morning and in consequence nad a blinding headache nearly every afternoon. "My folks thought it was coffee that ailed me. but I liked it and would not admit it was the cause of my trouble, so 1 stuck to coffee aud the headaches stuck to me. "Finally, the folks stopped buying coffee and brought home some Postum. They made it right (directions on pkg.) and told me to see what iUfforanAA if nmuM mol/Q tV'ith m V bead, and during that first week on Postum my old affliction did not bother me once. From that day to this we have used nothing but Postum In place of coffee?headaches are a thing of the past and the whole family is in fine health." "Postum looks good, smells good, tastes good, is good, and does good to the whole body." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Weliville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They ! are genuine, true, and full of human Interest. m* New York City.?The blouse that Is simply tucked is one of the prettiest that young girls can wear and this season it is greatly in vogue made with collar and cuffs of lace as Illustrated. In this case it matches the skirt and the material is dotted Swiss muslin, but the model suits the fpint f^fl odd waist vjuite as well as it does the entire frock and is adapted to every seasonable waisting. The blouse is made with front and backs and with moderately full sleeves. The lower edges of these last are gathered into narrow cuffs for elbow length, into deep cuffs, that fit the forearms snugly after the latest fashion, for long sleeves. The quantity of material required (jfp for the slxteeD year size is three and one-eighth yards twenty-four, two and three-eighth yards thirty-two or one and three-quarter yards fortytwo inches wide with three and seven-eighth yards of insertion, one yard of ruffling to trim as illustrated, seven and one-eighth yards of insertion for the deep cuffs if these are used. Facing Often Matches Feathers. Black picture hats, trimmed with long ostrich feathers chosen in pale pastel shades of blue and pink, leafgreen and lilac, are enjoying a great vogue at the moment. Sometimes fuotlio i*c? in ttun or throo r\ f t Vioeo pastel colors are seen grouped together on one and the same hat, but a more surely successful result is obtained when the feathers are selected in one shade, or in several tones of the same shade. For Stormy Days. It is a great relief to know that when hot weather comes, and it is necessary to wear a raincoat, we will not have to wear those heavy silk affairs. either in white or any other color that have been worn for so long. The new raincoats are of rubberized pongee, just as waterproof as tne strongest rut>uer. but lignt ami cool, and fairly becoming in their soft lines. Fichu Without Frills. A fichu of satin, without frills, worn over a diaphanous frock, is a change from the usual order of thingj, and should be accompanied by a transparent hat trimmed with big bows or choux of the same saliu, and a transparent parasol tr"'ed likewise. The Reign of the Tassol. Tassels, tassels everywhere, be it dangling from the latest neckwear or hanging from the big drapery seen on so many of the new costumes. tv Cotton Voiles. The figured cotton voiles make | ideal negligees. i Sashes in Style. | Wide flashes of black satin, with ; long, fringed ends, are seen on exclusive models in cashmere visiting gowns. These are draped in high corselet fashion and fit snugly to the figure. Direotoirc Coats. Embroidered velvet and rich brocaded silks are equally stylish for the vests of the Directoire coats, and the single costly jeweled button that often fastens them gives the final perfect touch. Millinery of Different Types. It is from the French Revolution that designs for so many picturesque caps have been culled, made of crepe de chine, a fabric that is going to be very modish during the coming season, plumed with big feathers and otherwise decorated. Contrasts. Bright flower-trimmed hate are worn with dark gowns and black hats with bright or light-toned gowns. And with such toilets a great many separate coats are seen, linen, cotton or fine wool ones with silk gowns and silk or satin coats with lingerie or fine wool costumes. Four Gored Skirt. The skirt that is perfectly smooth over the hips while it is gracefully full at the lower portion is the one that is most in demand for walking and general wear. This one include* that essential feature and ie novel ai the same time, being made with wedge shaped panels that are laid under the gores and which allow of treatment of various sorts. In this case the skirt is made of mohair and is trimmed with silk braid and little buttons, but if a combination of materials was wanted the panels could be of striped, plaid or checked material, while the gores were of plain, or vice versa; or one material can be used for the skirt with another for the panels. Again, the trimming can be banding of any sort, either braid or the same in contrasting material cut into bands, or anything of a similar sort. The skirt is made in four gores, these gores being made with extensions to the depth of the panels. The extensions are turned under to form pleats and the latter are arranged over the panels, the edges being joined beneath the pleats. The quantity of material required for the medium size is seven and five-eighth yards twenty-seven, liva yards forty-four or three and fiveeighth y?.rds fifty-two inches wide, eighteen a.-.d one-half yards of braid* I THE PULPIT. AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON B\ THE REV. J. E. AU?MS. i I Knhi/wf* M.ik's P.irt ill find's IM.'lil i | j Brooklyn, N. Y.?In the Ross ! Street Presbyterian Church, cornel j of Wilson street, the pastor, tin J Rev. John Erskine Adams, preachec j Sunday morning on "Man's Part ir ! God's Plan." The te?t was from Ro! mans 8:28: "And we know that tc j them that love God all things worli j together for good." Mr. Adams ! said: The Apostle Paul has Deen called ,! a fatalist. Perhaps, in late years | he has been the object of more disI cussion and criticism than any othei | New Testament writer. Preachei j and pew alike have striven to under j mine his system of theology. Thej have sought to avoid many of the 1 fundamentals of his faith. The) j have told us that it is high time we I should come into a larger conception of the ethics of Christ's life and a lessening sense of the importance of His death. They saj that much of His writings was foi the Jewandcouched in such figurativf 1 r> ? o a Tonf qIatio /*/Ml 1 /"* |jau?ua&c; uiai uit. ucn a.jis.uw vuu?u understand and appreciate, and ac i cordingly, He dweltatlength upon the I typical and sacrificial rather than I upon the practical and ethical. And in the chapter from which our texl i is taken we seem to have presented the horrible doctrine of predestination, a doctrine which by many is accepted as synonymous with a fatalisi' tic creed which eliminates man'f ; I free agency and subjects all things ! to an Incontrovertible and change! less law of necessity. I wish to show i you, if possible, to-day, how different was Paul's conception of our relation to God and God's relation to us, | Let us not doubt that Paul had j absolute convictions that in all j things God's will would be accomplished. But let us not doubt, also, ! that he had absolute convictions thai men must become co-workers with God in the out-workings of the divine plan. There was one occasion when he fully illustrates these truths. It is when, as a prisoner I he is being brought to Rome to stand before Caesar. This is the message of revelation to him. In this he sees the will of God. With this purpose he has nothing to do. He maj not modify it nor change it. He resigns himself to it. Nothins ! can prevent its accomplishment. II is God's will that he should come tc Rome. But shipwreck threatens, The ship on which he is captive is overtaken with disaster. Fog, storm [ darkness, danger, all seem to indii cate the defeat of the divine plan, j It seems as if all on board must be I destroyed. And again, the divine ' will is manifest. Paul is assured ol safety for himself and all on board that ship. But what does he do? Does he, in view of this assurance, make no effort to avoid the dangers and overcome the difficulties? Does he meekly resign himself and his shipmates to the inevitable? By nc means. He becomes a co-operatoi j wikh God in the fulfillment of His j purpose. He heartens all on board j that sliip. He feeds them. He asI sures them of safety; but of safety j only as they use every precaution, I as they overcome treachery; as they 1 strive with all courage and persis! tence to save themselves and their j ship. He says to the Centurion and | the soldiers who had him in convey, I when the fear-stricken seamen : would have sought escape in a small : boat: "Except these abide in the I ship, ye cannot be saved." In cthei ! words, lie couples Human endeavor j courage and skill with divine prom: ise and protection. And so, deliveri ance is wrought. All things were , to work together for good; but in j that result one of the essential farj tors must be human courage and fidelity. The sun shines to-day for j me, for all the world. That is cerj (ain. Nought we can do may prei vent its shining. But it only shines ! for me as I open my eyes to receive its light. It is in my power to keep : my eyes shut, if I will. Paul declares In this chapter thai | nothing can separate us from the i love of Christ; neither tribulation j distress, persecution, famine, naked| ness, peri], sword, principalities j powers, things present, things tc ! come; none of these things shall inj terfere with the keeping, saving J power of God's love, in Christ. And I yet, we hear him on another occasion j fearing, lest, having preached tc i others as a minister of God's grace j he himself might be a castaway. H( I lives again, he says; yet not he, but j Christ in him; and still he is usino all the powers of determination and will to keep his body under, to restrain it; to make it perfectly responsive to the control and ordering nt find To Paul, this life is a con ! stant struggle; a warfare againsl principalities and powers, witt ! wickedness enthroned: it is a race in which, if he would win, he musl strain every nerve and stretch everj i muscle and lay aside every weight j and the sin which so easily besets; he must run with patience, with perI sistence, looking to Jesus. Thai ! gives us the idea exactly. Use al ; your own power, looking to Jesus i as your example, inspiration, stimu. lus and strength. If he wrote the letter to the Hebrews, and whethei i he did or another of the saints is immaterial, the principle is the same; he made out a list there ol men and of women who were ir God's keeping, and yet wrought achieved, suffered, triumphed through the exercise of dauntless ?A tA foau A nr j cuillttge aiiu ui ajxcuuiu lauu. .n.uv so we are led to say that Paul'i i conception of life was that of al liance with God. He was destined of divinity for high achievement This is not pride, it is not egotism save of the right sort. All great mer have lived and achieved under this conception and in this thought. The men who have done things have done them because they have knowr themselves called of God for achieve ment. They are in the divine plan; they are also agents in its carrying on and out. Under this Impulse David went forth from the sheep fold to the sceptre. With the an ointing oil of the prophet upon him I he waged his battles against th< Philistines and conquered. Under this impulse, Savonarola rchieved Under this impulse John Kno? wrought, defying throngs and devlis. Lincoln and Washington were the men they were, and did th( things they did because they were allied with God, and through theii personality expressed the divine purpose and power. It was because oi their certainty that God was above them and in them, and that righl would triumph, that they went steadily forward to accomplish the Mgfc mission of their lives. We are told by Plutarch that Julius Caesar, on s night of storm, crossing a channel ; In a light, open boat, quieted the j alarm of the oarsmen who were with Um by telling them: "Pluck up youf | courage; you carry Caesar." Thla j g-eat Roman believed in his des- j tiny. A secret presentiment bade , ! mm Deneve mat no was uum iu? o notable career. He had power, h6 j had resource, but above all, a pro- | found belief in his star. The man ', who has not such a faith is to bo j pitied. We all need such a vision. With- j out it we perish. Aspiration is in- | 5 spiration. Let us not be deterred i from building our castles, though j i they are in the air. Perchance God \ I will help us lay the foundations t I l under them and make them real and ' - strong and permanent. The man I ) who says: I must and, God helping i : me, I can, is the man who has con- i 5 fldencc in himself to do something that no one else can do. and that i [ otherwise will remain undone. How wonderfully God holds ter! rific energies in leash and under con trol subject to the gradual outwork- 1 ing of His perfect idea for the clill- i . dren of men. In the realm of nature r all things work together for good. ; The sun, which has in it heat suffir cient to consume our little world in ! a fragment of time, nurses to a ful. ler life by Its gentle raress the ten, der lily and the modest violet. It . touches them and evokes their deli cate aroma; it puts the roses Into the cheek of the child and the song > into the throat of the nightingale as I it soars and sings to the clouds. It is true that so well do we understand the constructive force3 of nature, that it furnishes but a trite subject for our consideration. But underneath all physical manifestations and phenomena, let us believe there is moral purpose. Nature i3 God's great temple in which His voice Is heard. It was through nature's sublimity i.hat David realized man's dignity. Above all nature, next to God, stands man. And for him all phjrsical forces are in harmony and work together for his good. And as with nature, so in history. As in the roaring of the seas and the clash of the elements the atmosI phere we breathe is cleansed and we . enter into more vigorous life. So , the wars, which seemingly spell * -i1? ?noHnnc I ; ruin; me truiuuiuig ui u<*ww*iu, i which spells corruption: through all . storm and revolution, through shock i and tempest. God is leading the sons > of men out into larger life, and , bringing on the brighter and better I day. > And, finally, human experience ! testifies to the same truth. We are told that on one occasion Napoleon ' was shut up in an Island of the s Danube, hemmed in by the Arch; duke Charles. He was able to main: tain himself there, but he sent word i to Italy and Spain and France, and , he ordered his marshal with such i minuteness that every day's march , was perfect. All over the north of ? J 1 ? O/MlfVl -.France, ana irum me caucuic owm . of Spain and Portugal, the corps s were, all of them, advancing, and ; day by day coming nearer and near! er. Not one of them, on the march, I had any idea "what was the final pur' pose, and why they were being or, dered to the central point. But on ; the day the master appointed the i head of the columns appeared in i every direction. Then it was that i he was able to break forth from his bondage and roll back the tide of ; war. How like our life, as it moves 1 on, to the command of the Master. Its forces seem confused to us, with' and cohesion, ofttimes antagonistic. , Joy and sorrow, health and sickness, ' prosperity and adversity?all march in their appointed paths and to their appointed ends. But at last we shall [ see behind them all the one will and - - J -1.-11 V.? ohlo I , tne one power, aim we uuan uc nUiv to say on the day of final emancipaI tion and victory, as said Joseph of old, God meant it unto good, to bring it to pass. So, let us go forth, renewing our courage as we renew our confidence that to them that love God all things i work together for good. 1 , I Advanced Thought. He cannot justly be charged with . illiherality who "adheres to that . which is good" until a better is proi vided. A starving man who casts . away a loaf of bread because he Jmi agines a ten-course dinner ahead even an agnostic would account a . fool. Why give up our Christian ; faith, which has proved so good, so ' long as only the vague and ghostly ' chimera of "advanced thought" is | proposed to take its place? some i of us know that faith in Christ is a j very real and precious and joyous I possession, a comfort in sorrow, a j help in trouble, a spur to higher 1 living, a source of assured hope for the life beyond; what has science, or human philosophy, or any of the : j thousand and one vagaries of "free j t thought" to offer in its stead? A ; joyless life, a rayless future, a quenched soul?Nirvana!?The Examiner. v ; Never Without "Blood. Tou will find in Heb. 9:22 that : "without the shedding of blood there i is no remission." I should like to ' ask people who believe in the Bible and yet try to ignore the doctrine of ' blood, what are you going to do.with that Scrinture? From the time that Adam fell in Eden, to the present time, there has t never been a soul saved but by the ' shedding of blood; there has never . been a soul prepared for coming to God except by the shedding of blood. i The Holy Ghost coraes and dwells with that soul that is washed by the 3 blood of redemption And it be comes a temple for the Holy Ghost f to dwell in, but never until it has 1 been cleansed by the shedding of the blood. It is the blood alone that purges from iniquity.?D. L. Moody. Flow Character !s Made. 3 One of the chief dangers of life is trusting occasions. We think that conspicuous events, striking experi ' ences, exalted moments nave most ' to do with our character and capacity. We are wrong. Common days, mo, notonou^ hours, wearisome paths, ; plain old tools and everyday clothes ' tell the real story. Good habits are not made on birthdays, nor Chi%tian " character at the new year. The vis, ion may dawn, the dream may waken, ' the heart may leap with a new in| spiration on some mountain top, but the test, the triumph, is at the foot of the mountain, on the level plain, i ?Maltbie D. Babcock. Accept Your Cross. i We need not go hunting crosses; . but we must not evade them ) if they .come. Christ did not come > to the earth for the sake of dying. " ----- 1 > HIS aim was iue reucuigjuuu ui uiau kind, and because the cross was in . the way of the accomplishing of that f redemption, He did not shirk it, but i set His face steadfastly toward it as h Hp iourneved in the way of duty. - The secret of His strength was in the i knowledge that in lowliness of heart I He was saying to the Father: "Thy t will be done." His conscience was [ clear and His purpose unflinching, s and He saw His joy through it all. tj?H. A. Johnston, D. D. BITTER WAR ON INTEMPERANCE | I SOLDIERS FIGHTING THIS CURSE GREATLY CHEERED. f rui pel T'l. ~ nMmvAvc1 T~H tr-1 ncii rr>o . Jl(j Which Prove the Talk About res "Pure Liquors" is a Sham and , po a Delusion. j st: It is interesting to no^e the adroit j ^i( tactics to which the men who, to a s a" large extent, control the liquor in- Th terests in certain States, are com- th< pelled to resort in the futile hope ex af checking the great temperance ti- EC] dal wave. Seeing how deadly to the tj, drink traffic the publication of economlc statistics has proved, the brewers. borrowing a leaf from the tem- i perance advocates' book, are now ni publishing statistics of their own. ?* That these are manufactured "to l-? order" need hardly be explained, but of what is not bo easy to understand is in how any one could accept them ser- as lously. i It is not a difficult matter to mangle even official statistics so as to make them prove almost anything, ^ no matter how preposterous. Con- c" cerning this mangling process, we t0 may have something to say later, th Meanwhile, our esteemed contempo- It rary, the New York Sun, gives both st< Bides to the controversy a more immediate subject for consideration. A correspondent of that exceedingly live journal "lifts the lid" on some of the secrets of the brewing houses, and the disclosures are of a character 6C tSat may well make even the steady ! drinker ask himself whether the ve brewers' and distillers' claim of ia "pure liquor" is not a hollow sham and a pitiful delusion. He quotes ^ from a leading publication of the brewing trade: In the advertising pages I find as follows: An entire page devoted to the merits of "Patent Brewing Ma- gj terials," which by their virtue are supposed to keep beer without the j use of ice. Another page headed, | cr "Better Beer With Less Malt," and ?? advocating the use of sugar rather than malt or rice. On another page be the advertisement of an individual who offers for sale "Pure Beer Ex- 0j tract Coloring" and "Porterine." On d still another page is the advertisement of a system of fermentation, ni by which it is claimed that "perfect wi draft beer can be produced In from co fourteen to twenty-eight days," and Vi "perfect export and bottle beer in from twenty-one to thirty-five days from day of brewing." I also find the advertisement of "beer color, salicylic acid, preserving cakes, pure of malt color, aromatic dextrin malt"? pr all these things being made by one T1 firm. Also "the best preservative wj - - ? i * >> A Ima IVA . ror aie ana lager ueei. ^.jdu mo jn advertisement of "maltoid, flake malt, grits and brewer's meal." Also "isinglass, guaranteed free from 18 starch." ar This analysis of embalmed or pre- bt Berved beer and chemicalized liquors st cannot be a very agreeable subject to of contemplation for those misguided _ mortals who indulge the hallucination that these beverages are pure. Yet we see the brewers and distillers widely advertising their "purity and healthfulness;" whereas, as their A own trade journals show, they are for the most part as vile and injurious as could well be imagined.? Christian Herald. Dark Secret of a Brewery. Not a great while ago I made a j trip through a large brewery in another State. It was one of the largin fhic ccpHnn of the country and covered many acres of ground. I We were led through almost lnnum- I erable departments, so that nearlng I the end of our journey we supposed I that we were fairly familiar with the R manufacture of American lager beer. g But at the final stage of the journey, ? when one of the party asked per- Ejj mission to pass through a certain I door into the room beyond, our con- I ductor said: "That is one place that H I cannot take you. Visitors are not i H allowed in there." U What we all wanted to know was, B What was done in there? The *v*st fi of the huge establishment was or ap- I peared to be freely open to us, ex- H cept' this Bluebeard room. One of a our party asked the monitor if this I was where the "preservative" was fl injected. A bleak silence followed. B ?Humulus Lupulus, in the New j n York Sun. H Moderate Drinking. ? If moderate drinking led to more I moderation, and that to total absti- | nence, it would not be dangerous. I The trouble is that it leads to more I drinking and intemperance. Fifty I years ago, in France, the people I drank freely of light wines, using I little strong drink. But the French people have learned a sad lesson. The wines created a thirst for intoxicants, and now strong drink has a firm hold on that people. Light wines are no longer satisfactory; distilled liquor and drunkenness are the common thing. The average consumption of alcohol is thirty-three pints a year to each inhabitant, twice as much as in any other country in Europe except Switzerland; eight times as much as in Canada. It is a sad coramenmoderate drinking, but a ? very suggestive one.?Herald and Presbyter. Saving One Generation of Boys. It should not be forgotten that the one great object, the goal, of temperance agitation Is to grow one generation of young men free from the drink curse. We cannot save the j[ men already addicted to drink, but ? we can, at least, generation after generation, save an increasingly large number of boys. And this is our u hope.?Progressive Farmer. ? e< Cure For Vodka Drinkers. ? The Russian Duma Commission i ? which has had under consideration I the drink question has reported in j I favor of replacing th6 imperial eagle j on the labels of vodka bottles by the fl skull and crossbones and appropriate warnings against overindulgence. I Doctors Denounce Use of Whisky. At Clarksburg, W. Va., a resolu- B tion denouncing the us*. of whisky in the medical profession was adopt- " ed by the West Virginia Medical AsBociation. w e: The Ultimate. At a recent meeting of the New j York Wholesale Liquor Dealers' As- / Bociation the executive committee <* said in its report: "The critical and impending question which confronts you is not how you shall sell or brand your product, but whether you are to 1 be allowed to sell it." An Unwilling Tribute. * J A??1 fnUit A? A guuu UCU1 Ul LUC aiJim. Wi. i u appears to have cropped out iu the -r Illinois women who have enlisted to conquer the demon Rum.?New York World. .. M '23 - 'r id ?J?I I I I J I ! i Pe-ru-na Useful for Catarrh? Should a list of the ingredients cf Pe a bs submitted to any medical exrr, of whatever school or nationality, would be obliged to admit without erve that the medicinal herbs ccmsing Per una are of two kinds. First, indard and well-tried catarrh rems?3. Second, well-known and genery acknowledged tonn remedies, lat in ouo or the other cf these uses py hnve stood the test of many years' perience by physicians of different iooIs. There can be no dispute about is, whatever. Peruna is composed of me of the most efficacious and unirsally used herbal remedies for carrhal diseases, and for such conditions the human system as require a tonic, ich one of the principal ingredients Peruna has a reputation of its own llie cure of some phase of catarrh or a tonic medicine. Hie fact is, chronic catarrh is a disse which is very prevalent. Many ousand people know they have ronic catarrh. They have visited doers over and over ap;ain, and been told at their case is one of chronic catarrh. may be of the no3e, throat, lungs, Dmach or some other internal organ. lere is no doubt as to the nature of e disease. The only trouble ia the medy. This doctor has tried to cure cm. Tha? doctor has tried to preribe for them. No other household remedy so uni- , rsally advertised carries upon the bel the principal active constituents, owing that Peruna invites the full spection of the critics. : Discovered What the Noise Wat. While returning from work at airs Mills, Franklin County, Bar:y Wise, hearing a noise in the eek bvjlow Harris' tannery, paid no tentlon, thinking It was a cow. The noise turned out to be a large iar, and it came out of the bushes to the road about ten feet in front Mr. Wise. Barney is a noted pe'strian, but that evening he broke s record and was home before his Ife had supper ready. The bear ntinued on his Journey up liorse illey.?Philadelphia Record. St. Mark's Tower. The new campanile, or bell tower, 'IS St. Mark's Church, in Venice, will obably be completed by April, 1911. he bricks used are baked twice, Ith wood fire, and then submerged water for a week before being ied. The number of men employed about a hundred, and 3500 bricks toM Tho foundation has sen made strong enough to bear a ructure three times as heavy as the wer will be. Producd Peerless I 1 Dried Beef | | Unlike the ordinary dried | beef?that sold in bulk? I Likby's Peerless Dried Beef | comet in a sealed glass jar 1 in which It is packed the I moment it is sliced into those fi aeucious uun waiera. w Nona of the rich natural jjj flaror or goodness escapes a or dries out It reaches yon I (rath and with all the nutii- B mcnt retained. 1 Libby's Peerless Dried 1 B*ef is only one of a Great 8 number of high-grade, ready to serve, pure food products that are prepared in Libfey*fl great While Kitchen. Just try a package of any : of these, such as Ox Tongue, Vienna Sausage, Pickles, ? Olives, etc*, and see how i f delightfully difl|j||pf llWy.MeNegSS 1 UfcSy, Cfekege I UFfiV MAM HISM flflfilM IL.41! Ilinil IIIU Willi www ?. Sy J. HAMILTON AVERS H M? M. 0. This Is a most Valuable Boot for the Household, itching as It does the easlly-dlst.' iguisbed Symp? ims of different Diseases, the Causes and Means oj reventlng such Diseases, and tho Simplest Rem? lies which will alleviate or cure. ftON fare*, refuaely Illustrated. 60c. postpaid, bend 3stal notes or poitafe stamps. BOOK Pitt* IOU8E, 134 Leoiard St., Mew Vork, sleeping-room aud all places where flics ?r? troubles^ uie. Clean, neat, aud ?Ul not (oli or Injure anything. Try them ouc* and you will never be without them. If notkcf'l by dealer*. prepaid t?rtbr. AJtOLD SOMEKS, Hi BOalk Am., BnOlya. S. X. ff^sThoinpson'sEye Water ADVERTISING IS THE LIFE OF BUSINESS, 'he Only Way to Attract Tra cie is to Make Known What You Have to Offer. HE LIBERAL ADVERTISER 18 THE? SUCCESSFUL MERCHANT.