The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, December 09, 1908, Image 3

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An Example of We In this country talk occasi long face and tell our neighbors ho thing or that. Our horses are fed the barn has gone unpainted, the o another year, and so on through a Last summer the writer was t Fish and Game Commission, about that impressed him the most. He s had seen real far-sighted economy, noticed the strange-looking sheds inquiry found that the peasants sa in little moulds shaped like flower ] building. At one end all the twi were cut for lumber, were stacked, piled the lumber itself; not a thing economy is that those people make * only fit/or goats to browse on. Of tlce such rigid economy, but that we and our children by husbanding < erything up in thorough repair th Country Gentleman. The Latest in Chairs. The newest ease producer is a chaii wf"h?r*V* Hlfc honlrwarrl nr fnrwnrrl Jis much or little as desired without getting up to adjust the parts. There is no rod, but instead a series of stops controlled by a push button. You simply touch the button and th weight or the body carries the back tc any angle wanted. Sit up straighl and touch the button again, and th? chair straightens up at the same instant.?Washington Star. Fast Telegraphing. The Democratic convention at Denver saw other records broken besides that for a politcal demonstration, One record that was smashed was foi long-distance telegraphing. The man who broke this record was George W. Conkling, the Sun's chief operator. Working over a wire .that stretched more than half way across the continent, about 2500 miles, Mr. Conkling attained the high speed of 3136.2C words an hour, or 52.27 words to the minute, a record which has never before been equaled anywhere. Furthermore, Mr. Conkling, in just twen iy-eigni worjung nours, seui over mis wire to the Sun, by the Morse system, and using the Phillips code, a total ol 73,000 words, an average of 2607.^4 an hour, or 43.45 words a minute. Much of this matter was sent from a seat in front of the speaker's stand ic the convention hall, while pandemonium was being raised.?New Yorli Sun. The Broad Smile. "Pardon me," the photographei said, "but I think your smile is un necessarily broad. It will show al your teeth." "Those teeth cost me $100,' growled the sitter. "I want 'em t( show."?Richmond Times. DESERT BOTAlCALL ; THE ONLY INSTITUTION* O] New Chinese Shadows. The following is a very simpl method of producing on the wall , series of new Chinese shadows, th operator, as well as the little foil; dt lineated, remaining behind the iook ers-on, which is sometimes an advac tage. Place a candle on a table, and o the wall opposite affix a sheet of fools cap for a screen. Between the car die and the sereen interjx ~e som opaque body, such as a cardboar calendar or a large voiuine. Now how are you going to project you shadows on the screen when it is a ready dark? Very simply, by mean of a mirror fixed at the edee of a m Swiss Economy. onally about economizing. We draw q w careful we are, doing without this on cornfodder with a few ears of corn, Id fence has had to be propped up for long list of short-sighted economies, alking to Colonel Fox, of tho Forest, his trip to Europe, and of the sighU iaid that for the first time in his life h4 While traveling in Switzerland he had shown in the photograph,and on furthef ved all the manure for fuel, drying it! pots, on shelves under the eaves of the gs and stripping from 'the trees that while in the centre of the building was was wasted. The result of such thrifty a living from land we should consider ! course there is no need for us to prac; could save a vast deal for ourselves Dur natural resources and keeping e^ ere can be no doubt.?A Farmer, in The The Decline of Immigration. There is probably no good reason 5 for regretting the marked decline in immigration which is reported for the ? last fiscal year. We are told that in > 1907-1908 not half as many immil grants arrived at this port as in 1906 i 1907, while more went abroad tnan came hither. It is not to be supposed that such conditions will long continue, and that emigration will permanently exceed immigration. There is a pretty general agreement that last year's conditions were due to the financial disturbances and business depression which prevailed here for a time, and -perhaps to the fear that they would grow worse until the country was struggling with a genuine and protracted period of "hard times," and there is a reason! able expectation that with the restoration of the full tide of business prosperity here the tide of immigration will again risd toward the flood.? New York World. Of One Purpose. The stranger advanced toward the TLT*r? A'Tnolo i r? tha I I UUUi. iTIIO. V AWWiVi twwu AAA buv | doorway, with a rough stick in her left hand and a frown on her brow. \ "Good morning," said the stranger ' politely. "I'm looking for Mr. ! O'Toole." "So'm I," said Mrs. O'Toole, shifting her club over to the other hand. ?Everybody's. Polite Attention. ! : "Please, mum, there's a gentleman down stairs." "Very well, Jane. Show him up to the drawing room." [" "But he's come to sweep the ehim bly, mum." 1 "Very well, then, show him up the chimney." ) The average life of a ship is about twenty-six years. Moratory in arizona. ^ F ITS KIND IN THE WORLD. , ble. The reflection of the mirror wil e be thrown on the wall either in i a parallelogram or in an oval, and i: e your screen is in the suitable posi tion, and you work your pasteboarc _ uuuo tUi i CLL1J UCLWWU 1111'ill, LX1U 111 11 ror and the wall, your audience wil see the figures dance without findinj n but the way It is done.?Magical Ex periments. A Barnyard Hero. A big blue chicken hawk called a Scott Hill Sunday morning, and i; it had not been for the timely warn ing and distress signal by tha White Leghorn rooster, given us b; r>uu utility, we wuuia nave iosi a lest one frying chicken; but when th< alarm sounded, hens and little chick ' ens disappeared so promptly the bij hawk just sat on a limb and won dered how the trick was turned si j quickly. ? Congers (Ga.) Weekl; , Free Press. r I- Argentina's area under cultivatioi is is now 3G,000.000 acres, comyarini u with 12.000.000 in 1905 THE PULPIT, j AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY | HE REV. MERLE A. BREED. Theme: Realizing the Pattern. __ Lincoln, Neb.?The Rev. Merle A. Breed, who recently entered upon the . fifth year of his pastorate of the Con- 1 gregational Church at Monticello, ( Iowa, occupied the pulpit of the First ] Congregational Church of this city j Suiday morning. He spoke from He- \ brews 8:5: "See, saith he, that thou ] : make all things according to the pat- , tern that was shewed thee in the . mount," taking the subject, "The , Pattern in the Mount, the Building j on the Plain." Mr. Breed said in the 3 course of his sermon: Our text, which is a quotation from . j Exodus 25:40, sets before us a pic- \ I ture as interesting as it is suggestive. , me nosis 01 israei nave Deen waning long before Mount Sinai. Their leader, Moses, is hidden in the cloudtapped, fire-riven summit in communion with Jehovah. While the people are waiting in the plain, he r has gone forth to the mountain's' towering peak to be with God, to hear His will for them and for himself, and to bring down a divine pattern of a tabernacle for God's worship and the uplifting of men's hearts and lives to I heavenly things. The people in gen- . j eral had but earthly ambitions. While j Moses was hidden in the clouds and I darkness of the mount, they were occupied with dancing and feasting, with eating and drinking, and making golden calves to worship, Moses is beholding the pattern of that tabernacle about which the' religious life of the nation was to arise, and which was to stamp its impress upon the world. Moses is filling*his soul with the vision which he is to endeavor to realize among the rude, ignorant, superstitious, half-wild Israelites in the plain beneath him. To one man came the vision of heavenly things. The rest were to receive it through him. His life work was to be that of bringing this within their reach and making it real to them. The vision splendid came to him on the heights. The details, measure Lunula, feacauimg ui niaicnaia, lauui )f construction, wereall to be wrought Dut on the levels of common life upon the plain. We may easily Imagine that the children of Israel and the roving tribes about them greatly admired the completed tabernacle, with its curtains of blue, purple and scarlet, with its ark and altar, its candleitick and cherubim, its pillars and table, its canopies and courts, its holy place and holy of holies, its laver, nercy-seat and mysterious separating fail. But there was one who had' jeen something better, who knew that, beautiful and costly as it was, ihe tent of meeting but dimly foreJhadowed forth the glory of that pattern shown him in the mount. The people saw only the tabernacle in the slain, but the eyes of Moses looked beyond and through that and saw che pattern he had beheld in the cnount with God. And that is our thought' together this morning, the pattern In the mount, the building in the plain, for life-still has its Sinais, vhere we behold Ideals, and it has Its plain, where these ?ire to be realized. Surely he is a sorry builder who has seen no pattern in the aount. For- the success of our building. nuch will depend upon our choice of i pattern. The. costliest building is manhood and womanhood, that something we ;all self, a life, character. Yet there ,'s much haphazard building. With he greatest variety of plans there is little, attention to standards, and an infinite variety of results, because the pattern is not selected with the care in architect draws his designs upon Ms trestle board. What shall we build our lives? novel, or palace, or temple? It is an exhilarating reflection that every act ! ar thought Is building them into something. What an infinite variety i pf patterns. We can not build after j ;hem all?which shall, we choose? J There must be unity in the design. i The eclectic method, pure and simple, j will hardly avail for this. What one : i^e approved fails to win the approixition of the next. There must be psrmanence and real worth in the J pattern, if it is to satisfy ourselves or others as the years pass. As we read history and the great names of past ?ras move before us, we often feel bow transient they were. How like a j hovel is Midas, the Phrygian king of c legend and story. Jl'ow like a mold- < ering trireme upon the shores of time ] Is Pompey the Great. How like a ? j dust covered ruin in the Romau j forum is Caesar. ' i Now we may all be tabernacle i 1 builders, like Moses, if we will. i For this method Moses followed is ' not to be thought of by us as excep- < tional. It is a type for us each in our i I building. We, too, are building, ( j "building every day, building for t | eternity," and our Scripture lesson j I told us that our building must stand s God's test. We have like opportuni- < ties with the great Jewish lawgiver. 1 If he had eyes to see God, and ears j to hear God, so have we. Will' we y choose the tabernacle pattern for our j lives? "Every human soul," wrote ; Hartford's greatest divine, "has a! comnlete and Derfect nlan. cherished I | for it in the heart of God?a divine : biography marked out, which it enI ters into life to live. This life, right- 1 j ly unfolded, will be a complete and 1 beautiful whole, an experience led ' on by God, and unfolded by His se- ] cret nurture, great in its conception. ' great in the divine skill by which it ' is shaped; above all, great in the mo- 1 mentous and glorious issues it pre- i paves." Life m'ay be used for other purposes, no doubt, jbut do they satisfy? Is not life insipid, unsatisfying, '< tost, till it is ap wrought out a temple, . a dwelling place for God most high? ' Here some will say, "But my life is 1 1 cast on other levels. It ueals with f common things, with the doing of 1 momentous acts and routine service. 1 What opportunity can there be for . me to achieve such large or worthy ; j results? If conditions wore different, i or my calling other than it is, all this ' might be of interest to me. I lone to ' put just this into my living, but it is all too remote from life as 1 have to live it." Here lies the value of the scene before us. Through Moses the numoiest or tue peopie uecame jiunt ners with him in building the tabert nacle. Moses did not rear it upon the - cloud-encircled mount, but in the t plain, that you and I might be encourf aged to realize the purpose of God t for us in the field of common daily relations and amid what will otherwise * be the drudgery of daily living. He " leaves us the same task. Merchant I and teacher, sailor and soldier, farm er and workman, author and editor. j housewife and clerk, mistress and y maid, lawyer and preacher, however 1 humble and obscure our lives seem, 1 we are to be fellow workmen with God in bringing things divine into i theso seemingly common and uny meaning activities and relations. ! After the clouds and glory had with- : ? L f drawn from Sinai, the humblest I raelite could point to the tabernac an'd say: "The glory of God still fo lows u:; all through our wildernei wanderings in that tabernacle yonde and without me it Would never hai been complete." Your life, where is, is needed for the rearing of sorn thing greater and better than tl tabernacle in the world of to-day, ar without it the kingdom of God wi never come in its fullness. Befoi this all other needs of our time sin Into insignificance; for the true tabernacle for the showing forth i God to the world is not a patter hidden in the majesty of uaapproad able heights, nor is it temple < cathedral, helpful as these may b but a life simple outwardly, tbOug svith luxuriant and divine furnishing within; a life spent on the leve where our fellow men live their filled not with such consecrated fu rtisnings as adorned the tabernac: VIoses fashioned, but with the grac< md kindly deeds men need to see an feel near at hand. This is our worl is divinely appointed to us as it we :o Moses. It is the greater buildinj n which all our common tasks an lumblest efforts may have an honore place as truly as dii* the altar an aver in the ancient tabernacle. But for this successful building < mr lives into God's purpose we, to< nust seek our nattern in the mount. God Himself builds according 1 jlan. Even a casual glance tit H wonderful world this morning wi lisclose that. Purpose and plan aj jvery where. Not one grain of sac s a law unto itself. Not one flowe ilooms, or withers, unhidden. N( >ne leaf drops before its time. Not >ird note is unrelated; its music jorn from present conditions an vakes its own echo. All things fa nto their place and carry out the d rine purpose. This is the method of the divin juilding, whether in nature or in hi nan lives. And it may be so in yoi; ife and mine. We may know God jurpose for us and follow it as trul is the grain of sand, the flower, tli >ird of the air. "If any man willet o do His will," said the Master, "h shall know." God does not withhol iis plan from any man. The mour s ever ready for the revealing of tb )a,ttern, but men must take the tim o learn, to withdraw to its retrea Phe pattern came not to Moses till h lad twice spent forty days and fort lights in the 'mount alone with Go< ^.fter many years' tuitioD in tt vilderness came John the Baptis lerald of Christ. The wilderness wi lis mount of vision. Handel had spiritual ear, and gave the world tt >ratorio of the Messiah, and when lear it we must not forget the Ion jeriod of preparation. Michael Ai rolr? had tho onlrHnnl pva and hail ***%?. V?v "f* - " ? ind painted the frescoes of the Pau ne Chapel with the representatior >f the martyrdom of St. Peter an he conversion of St. Paul, and carve he statues of "David" and "Moses, f Paul spent three years ia Arabi o meditate upon the vision he ha lad of the Christ, who had met hi] >n his way to Damascus; if Chrii limself retired, to Solitary places fc luiet and prayer, you and I need tim orsuch a disclosure of God's will fc is as He is waiting to give. Befoi ve can rightly rear the tabernacl >f our lives in the plain of daily se: rice we must seek the pattern in tt nount, not Sinai, but the heavei eaching life of Christ. The diviu jattern has come near men in Jesv Christ. We have nbt to seek it ami he perils, darkness and difficult^ >f Sinai; it is here with us, built i ill its divine perfection on the leve if our daily needs; supplying us wit ill desirable inspirations, helps an latisfying fellowship, opening tt rery vail by which we enter into tt nost holy place itself. It is not j44a+9n+ onH romnroH hilt >resence near at hand, familiar wit >ur needs, to which we may witl iraw In moments of discouragemex ?r temptation, full of divine comfoi ind solace for the hours of sorrow ull of divine strength and vitality i >ur days of weakness when all othe lelp seems far away, full of gracioi varning when we are careless an vayward. We need ever to be witl Irawing into this mount,1 Jesi Christ, if we are to realize the patter n the plain of our earthly living. Bi ;ause it is so accessible, so complet n its" ministry. "See, therefore, ths hou make all things according to tt jattern that was shewed thee in tt nount." Why? Is there not something minute] lathetic in the continual going bac >f one generation after another to tt >1{, sad mystery of pain? There i ! suppose, says the Rev. George Jacl >on, nothing new to be said aboi t; there is no fresh light to be cai jpuu it; yet sun me a wait auu watt -vith hope, still the poor brain busii tself and the torn heart cries alow 'My God, my God, why??" Oth< luestions we answer, or they answ< :hemselves, or we are content th; ;hey should remain unanswered; bi :his question is always with us. An ndeed, how should it be otherwis since on every man, soon or late, ti lark mystery thrusts itself? "Ma :ha.t is born of woman is of few da: lilcl full of trouble." The words ai rery old, they are never obsolete. Tl generations come and go, but sorro incl pain and death abide. Turning to Jesus. How naturally we turn to Jesi tor comfort and help when trouble < misfortune befalls us. Like Jesus v should never be forgetful of the kirn ness we have received in the home < aur friends. In making others hapi we are often paving the way to 01 3wn greatest happiness. How pre ious are tears of sympathy to tl heart that is crushed with sorrow rhe. tender, loving heart of Jesus always touched by the grief of thoi who love Him. The grave canm hold our loved ones when the co queror of death and the grave cot mands them to come forth. The j( of the Bethany home when Lazan was returned was but a shadow i Hiq 'inv that will fill tha honvon home when on the resurrection mor; ing we gather to part no more. Taking "Worry Rightly. There must be a way of talcir worry rightly, so that it shall do i good aitd not harm. Worry, right taken, should train to quietness, h mility, patience, gentleness, cyr pathy. It ought not to eventua (though it natural!', does) in makir others suffer because we are uncor fortable. in making us a source < painful worry to others because v are worried ourselves.?A. II. J Boyd. The Reason. The saint loves truth because it Lrue, and loves right because it right, and loves God because He God.?Rev. J. Ossian Davies. The True Conqueror. The greatest conqueror is he thi has mastered the Wv>rld that lies : his own breast.?Scottish Reformer. "vV-' "l "- -, - '<* ; ; ; g. i \ Truthful Answer. lc j He was a beggar, with old, vri l1- i clothes, unwashed face, unkemjjt h and unbrushed shoes. He waded rg to the counter of a bank In Lombs it street, and told, between his so e- tears, groans and sighs, how his sto ie ach yearned for a bite of bread, 'd sympathetic clerk drew fort'i a n ^ I and shining threepenny bit, which I laid kindly and gently into the b I gar's quivering and blackened han 3f "Now, my poor friend, what, n you propose to do with that monej 1- ! seriously inquired the generous cle >r The beggar looked down at soiled and tattered garments. ? scanned his benefactor curiously ]g i a moment, and then, in a tremul( B(i j tone, said: r- | "Young man, you see me as I s !e wearing the habiliments of an o cast. Yet I am honest, and I \ l<* give you a truthful answer. I sh * 1 - - - ? J J!_. i nrst go ana- Duy me a guuu umu ^.8 then I will take a bath and hav( (j shave and hair cut, and mayhap af d that adorn this handsome form wit d new suit of clothes. If there is i of it left after that I shall, upon 't word, come back and deposit in 5' bank. I am etceedingly obllg 0 Good day."?Tid-Bits. j? ONE KIDNEI GONE, e d But Cured After Doctors Said TI) * Was No Hope. a Sylvanus O. Verrill, Mllford, M Is Bays: "Five years ago a bad inji d paralyzed me ? i* afTected my k t burt me terrlt l- and the urine ^ ir badly disorder 's Doctors said y rIgtxt kldney T 0 Practically de h They Said I co ie never walk ag? lt I read of Down's Kidney Pills and ie gan using them. One box made te stronger and freer from pain. I k t. on using them, and in three mon ie was able to get out on crutches, ? T the kidneys were acting better. I! proved rapidly, discarded the crutc ^ and to the wonder of my friends "< tg soon completely curea." a Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a b ie Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, A. Y. Q g Government Caught an Octopus i- Tlie big Government dredge Ci d bprland while at work with her gi " suction pump in the Savannah Ri (drew up into the vessel a real live ;(j 'topus. The animal was not quite " large as other octopi are plctur ia and seemed badly frightened at be d caught by a Government vessel. 1 31 eight tentacled fish died soon al being caught, and in one instance, 'g least, the United States has put ,r octopus out of commission.?Sav e nah Correspondence Atlanta Const! Ie tion. r ie Breaks a Cold Promptly. The following formula Is a ne ls falling remedy for colds: a One ounce of Compound Syrup >s Sarsaparlila, one ounce Torls Cc n pound and one-half pint of gc la whiskey, mix and shake thoroug k each time and use in doses of a tat d spoonful every four hours. , This if followed up will cure a acute cold in 24 hours. The ing a dients can be gotten'at any drug stc ,h j. It Made a Difference, it A Chinamam of noble birth 1 rt been invited to dine at Williai v? home. His mother was very anxii that the guest should not be mi |g uncomfortable by the little cha d, curiosity, so she took him aside { i? explained all about the yellow sli is long braid of hair and almond e n of the Mongolians, and even shov e' him pictures of Chinese. She i "? pressed upon him more than anyth *a else the fact that the visitor was ie father's friend and was to be trea with respect. Upon the Celestii arrival, William tried hard not stare or to look too curious, and s ly ceeded in being very quiet for so time, when, much to the surprise ie his mother and the amusement of, s,' Chinese, he called out: "Mami t- If he wasn't our friend, wouldn't be funny?"?Bellman. st a? ill 23 IC-A88IF1ED AOVERTISEMEN1 , UVW^WWS/VS^wvvwn^VN^V a, 7 ?r BKAfKEHB AX;) CATARRH CUB ,r TNHALENT CATARRHAL JELLY Ci "f A Deafness and Catarrh. Trial treatmen1 11 mail free. REA CO.. Minneapolis. Minn sPUTHAW tn Color :-.ioro {rood; brighter and faster colors thai ^ oaa dye ?ily garment without ripping apart. 1,0 Early Rising Problem. 10 Tommy was a very sound slee and wouldn't get out of bed ear than 10 o'clock, no matter what mother said to him. So one morn she tried coaxing, and said to hir J* 44 You have heard of the little who got up at 6 o'clock in the mc ing and when he went out he foi af a purse of gold?" >y "Oh, yes," said Tommy; "but w 1 ? ? lUfln Kaw nrV?r\ trnf nr\ " I ctUUU L LUC 11 LUG uuj Tt uu t?v>v u)/ c" fore him and went out and lost i ?New York Globe. ' "Chance." When you taik of chance you n_ only confessing ignorance. The v a- spin of the coin is governed by >y nerve, muscle (or manipulation) is the thumb and brain that spin it. ' only chance about it is your igr ance of the forces that lift, twist i Qcatch the coin. If you could cal late th?> physical and mental for between the half-penny's leap and lg turn you might buy the world. ;ls you can't. And it's just that bit ly blindness that we have to call chai u- ?London unromcie. P. ?e S| Coughing Spells fe i. REE are promptly relieved by a sinKB gle dose of Piso's Cure. The By& regular use of this famous reES medy will relieve the worst r$jl WJ form of coughs, colds, hoarse. _JSf ness, bronchitis, asthma and dis{to cases of the throat and lungs. WjJ iS, tin Absolutely free from harmful MMK j<3' KJ drugs ana opiates. For half a Ktial jgsB century the Household remedy jfHB in millions of homes. At all druscuts', 25 ct?. ? TOfll ~V-i ' T1 ' ; r4-:Vc : SEVERE BLEEDING HEMORRHOIDS, )rn ^, ajr Sores, and Itching Eczema?Doctor Thought an Operation Necessary ^ ?Cuticura's Efllcacy Proven. / . "1 am now eighty years old, and three ' years ago 1 was taken with an attack of 'm~ piles (hemorrhoids), bleeding and protrudA ing. The doctor said the only help for me ew was to go to a hospital and be operated on. he I tried several remedies for months but did eg- not get much help. During this time sores jj appeared which changed to a terrible itch* ing eczema. Then I began to use Cuticura 9,, Soap, Ointment, and Pills, injecting a '" quantity of Cuticura Ointment with a Cuticura Suppository Syringe. Jt took a month his of this treatment to get me in a fairly He healthy state and then I treated myself for once a day for' three months and, after )US that, once or twice a week. The treatments I tried took a lot of money, and it is fortunate that I used Cuticura. J. H. Henderson, Hopkinton, N. X., Apr. 26, '07." pill Streets running north "and eouth have lall best health records. er> Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'B ? a Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Of the English in India, there are six Q a men to one woman. my Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children y teething,softens thegums,reduces inflamma the tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle e<*' Islands For Sale. , It may perhaps be, of interest to some, of your readers to hear that In the South Seas'.there Is a number of ere small islands at present on the market. Among these may be mentioned Ie-? Sophia Island and Nassau Island, both 117 about seven days by steamer from LDd Samoa, and both planted with cocoanuts. N lck Last year I visited the New He>ly' brides group, where .there are also ?as several islands for sale, but these e<*- are not so healthy as others, fever my being somewhat prevalent. Also in va* the North Marshall group several a~ small islands might be purchased.? E. King, in a Letter in the London l,n- Daily Mall. s be- m Well Understood. . OP t ? \ ths Barber (looking for business)? in(j "Excuse me, sir, but your hair'Js go[m. ing to come out soon by the handful." hes .feggs (who was out all night and vas is Just going home to face his wife)? rYou (hie) shpose I don' know (fcic) )0X. that?"?The Bohemian. Catarrh Cannot Be Cored With looal applications,as they cannot __ reach the seat of the disease.1 Catarrh is a ~ blood or constitutional disease, and in order ant to cure it you must take internal remedies, ver Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and oc_ acts directly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a auack 33 medicine. It was prescribed by one of the ed, best physicians in this country for years, |Dg and is a regular prescription, it is composed of the best tonics known,combined with the l ne best blood purifiers, acting directly on the 'ter mucous surfaces, The perfect combination at -of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send tor testimonials, free. an- F. J. Che .vet 4 Co., Props., Toledo, O. tu- Bold by droggista, price, 75c. ! Take Hall's Family Kills for constipation. He Had Reformed. ".Uncle, Mose," said the drummer, ver addressing an aged colored man who was holding down a dry goods box in ?' front of the village store, "they tell ,m" me that you remember seeing een>od eraj Washington. Is it,true?" "No, sah," replied the old man. ,le~ "Ah uster 'membah seein' him, but Ah don't no moh since Ah done j'iri'd aD church, sah."?Judge. N.Y.?47 ;re- 1? 6 Sale making Farms in 14 States. Strout'o mam? ? a ?,il wis CsTROVfcO.' " 3 us World'* Laixe*t ram Dcalcn, 150 Numb St, Ntvr York. md ^LOOKING in. ahead? yes If so, take advantage ;ed m^IHNeh of today's oppor,_ MuMnA-^tunitiaa for the Lm~ y|yi^W(li?T^merchant, farmer, ing " frnlt grower and ftjesmii J business man along nis *the Pacific Coast ted 1 extension of the Chl,]'q cago, Milwaukee & St. Pau I R aJ I way. Descriptive Books Free. to Wlj s. HOWELL, G. K. A., New York. uc" me ?! Farquhar | he ;; Engines, Corn Shelters, :: Boilers, Cotton Planters, \[ :: Saw Mills, Stocks, ^ AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS GENERALLY. !! 33. . " ,, Send for free catalogue. > ?h2 I A. B. Farquhar Co., Ltd., York, Pa. < I FADELE i any othor dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers. The tVtoto for free booklet?How to fiye. Bleaoti and Mix Col CHICKENS EARN I his Whether you raise Chickens for fun o: ing get the best results. Th? way to do this' We offer a boob telling all t ' ject?a book written by a boy 25 years in raising Poultry. [ >rn- had to experiment and spend j|4 jnd wav to conduct the business-4CtiNTS in postage stamps, .J and Cure Disease, how to hat Market, which Fowls to Save he- indeed about everything vou must know ei tr POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENT] Book Publishing House, L are ery ^ It is no use a( you have the G< and ? ? t rs _ ieeu; navmg tne ut But advertise. of . ice. i jy HOCX^MAJS. A SURGICAL OPEBATIOW ^ dF^ i (LliJI If there is any one thing that a > woman dreads more than another it is a surgical operation. We can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hundreds, yes, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hospitals whieh are entirely unnecessary and many have been avoided by / LYDIA E.PINKH AIM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following letters. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman, , Kansas, writes'to Mrs. Pinkham: " For eight years I suffered from the most severe form of female troubles and was told that an operation was my only hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it has 'saved my life and made me a well woman.* Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes: "I feel it ismy duty to let people know what'Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound has done, for me. I suffered from female troubles^ and la&t March my physician decided that ac operation was necessary. My husband objected, and urged me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's "Vegetable 'Compound, ^ and to-day I am well and strong." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the. standard ^ remedy for female ills. .vi and has positively cured thousands 01 women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, and backache. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write'her for advice* She has guided thousands to health* Address, Lynn, Mass. iru riiT?f?S9Vl tiiiiw miiiCi ffivi *" W. L. Ponglag mabeH end telle more ^ nwn'i 83.00 and 83-50 sboea than any other manufacturer in the world, be-' cause they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. { Show?tAt!Prlett.farjvervMimbtrof the Family. Men. Boys/Womin, MIssu & Children W.I.DooiUi$?.OOi*d $5.00 Mlt Eds* nkowcmwt b# aqtulltd at any pric*. W. 1. D<re*l*i $8.80 sad f 2.00 (boas an ttu beat in tli* world TaH Color Eyelsts CM Xaoclurtvtiy. ' ' dTXake Mb Substitute. W. L. DoqrIm name and prico is (tamped on bottom. Mid everywhere. Shoe* mailed from factory to any ; :z part of the world. Caialoeunfrse. - A' . W. L. DOjJGLAS, 157 Spark St.. Brocktos, Maw. uei p Insist on Having MP1r Br. MAKTEL'S Preparation MfAueM The Standard Remedy. WUMtn >T DUUOOIBTB. (tend lor book. "Rellel lor Women.'" FRENCH DRUG CO., 30 W. 32dSt^ N. T. City. PATENTS >25?2 We pay all expenses except Government fees?56 extras. Our book dhows saving to you?T7rite for it now. THE INDUSTRIAL LAW LEAGUE, ) Inc., 170 Broadway, Kew York. m HE FINANCIAL "REMEDY" prescribed. A simple '* * X Business Tonic" within easy reach of eveir Bank Depositor. 2a stara^or booklet free. MAR? J?. DA V13, IIAH aroauwaj, uasmuu, vai. nPOPRY NEW DISCO VEE7; l#r%VIT I give*autckrelief?odeuro* worst ca*e*. Book of tertlmoniol* * 20 dart' treatmi at Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS,Box B.Atlanta.G*> ?: DHCIIliJITKI1 now curable; thousand*cured; renoClimAIian b ul te s peedy: kuaran tee gl van; price low. Write quick. The WRIGHT jled. CO., Per\ lad. SS DYES y dyo In cold water better than any other dye. Yoo ion. MONROE lJKCtt CO., Qnincy Illinois JAurvi ^ You Know How to llUnC I ! Handle Them Properly r profit, you want to do it intelligently 'and is to profit by the experience of others. you need to know on the subQman who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Detect Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and > '' 1 the subject to make a success. SENT CS IN STAMPS. 34 Leonard St.> N? Y? City. ' . -Vi' i * *?- < v Ivertising unless ' oods, and no use iods unless you bottom of your foot, it pnshes tho I bones out of place, strains the cords, M and cause* foot-ache and lameness. I SKREEMER 6hoes are made like n hunftn feet, and so really do fit. a Look for the label. If you do not n find these shoes readily, write us for directions how to secure them. & FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. I