University of South Carolina Libraries
. - - >WJ 't5T " * ' A~ MAPPY P i. c*=iW&jvru. >/^ANEV YEAKS (JL^ <* V^RITTErN J3Y RE 2HAPl_/MN CIT/ h ^ ** ' . * j ,v ? SA' before the blazing i heath; the genial *|l o wtjnth of an open fire t 11 o fcbaaedme into a beau ? tlfu dreamland. MemX X oryj drew upon her ? ? $ vabi|mal resources as I t 4 sat lere, coaxed into an aSfig absfection of exquisite t Pleaire- Voices! I \ hea\ voices, strange ????+?#t ~vol??. They speak to me:,The first said, "A year ago you praised, if your life was spared to yv that you would consecrate I It to Jod.*' The second asked, "Has GodA> whom you made the promise, dec with you as you , have dealt, with.Jim?" 'The third ^ said, "Remove iff But the fourth asked "that It rallit be spared for a while longer." cried in agony, "Spare me, good l>rd." Two Girls, Stilin Their 'Teens, passed through ti room in which I sat. Full ot aninl life and youthful ^ gaiety they and joked and laughed; they wre In a whirl of > pleasure. Sudddy one of them cried, "O! O, m:" "Agnes," said her companion, "nat troubles you?" but Ellen could oy repeat, "O, my!" At length she sal, "I promised' to A spend one hour w:h God; I must go to my room instatly. Good night, Agnes. I'll see yc to-morrow." The explanation of Em's conduct was, her motheivi&d a speaking to her about the beauty a life of holiness, and she had proAed her mother to spend an hour inrayer and reading the ninety-first before she retired. The chatti; bad almost driven It out of her m"i. Then appearedupon the scene a youth of .twenty fcnmers, of noble mien; his-eye gliifened with nobleness; his demeano'w&s pleasing; he was a picture of iroiness; his carriage was that of a?' Webster or Gy or Lincoln. As he stood i&he midst of the room he addressedn invisible being: j "What shall J t with my life?" Standing on its Teshold, viewing the wrecks of wa*d lives as they floated by out intake ocean of eternity, he repeated !e question with great solemnity: That shall I do with my life?" Three Faces Inst Appeared. ? First that of an L then that of a lion, last an eagle, pe ox made answer: "Eat, <^rink a ibe merry," but the young man. i ,'ddered at the thought of making. i *pd of his appetite. Live an animilife?' Nay! I was created for jfaptething nobler than a glutton; I ht> a soul to save. The lion proposed I make a god of genius. She ofTers nddegtal of eternal fame; your nail shall* be associated with scientts, philosophers and philanthropists. ^ In Her'Native Digiy Sat the Eagle. She looked at thman, then at the heaven above. Turing to the man she said, "The eah is thy lodging place; the heavf-.overhead is thy home; the earth chiilc^st treasure cannot fill thee*'Thou art more than animal, more tin intellect, thou art Qualified for .?ompaflionship with deity. Prepay" In a moment of ., time there pasjd before me A an omnia, upon which as dbplayed all the scenes of mylife from my earliest recollection. Curious and strange tracings wenthere.? Every struggle with conscie>e, eve'y striving to be V Aftereffects o' the Grip. Dr. Cloutm, of Edinburgh, said it 1 seemed astf no disease of whose effects the* was any correct record had such j-reaching evil effects as this one, ad among its sequelae he enumerati a depressing influence on the wnc4' nervous energy, melancholia, Jurasthenic conditions, pre, mature eiftiity, various forms of paralysi neuralgic affections and a crcxTtAral ^ ^ "* jj ior worn.?uunaee Advertl*. ^ ^ ? Populous China. The jpulation of the Chinese empire isargely a m&tter of estimate. There as never been such census of the eiiire as that which is taken every <cade in this country. But the estime of the Almanach de Gotha for 1)0 njiay be taken as fairly reliabl According to that estimate, the .ppulation of the empire is, in 4 rour numbers, about 400,000,000. - It tsjrobably safe to say that if the . / hurra beings on earth were stood up, ,*E ae every fourth one woulti be a nSmifi n 1 i . ' * :i i' j V ; / L Uj MEW YEAR. | ' - rever _C-^TSsQ mode ^ J /A ?L 4 J 'W > i _, c /w w/sstk ?> tr: > EVt I2E:VEIilE>\? phscJ \/ v/ H- v/E:ErK5 -~ . ?L/ HOSPITAL, NEW VottK; " j? 0>e good, every lofty ideal were drawn with perfect accuracy. Failures and ^0I successes, defeats and victories passed in rapid review. Never were there * such noble- ambitions, such possibili- T1.e ties and .?uch fatal aifnlessness The -w crowded into so small a compass. The Wo? sight alarmed me and I cried, "Is it < , . too late?" | And Suddenly the Scene Changed. ^To'e The judgment was set amid a blaze of majesty and power and glory, beyond my most fertile imagination. Every human being stood before it, c<ie^] waiting to render an account of the Slppc life now closed. Notably, ^ The Poor Led the Way./ lerrai A boy from one of the great mer- wlo i cantile houses preceded several oth- "The: ers whom he had influenced for good, he m Then came a man with a score of his in y< fellow workmen, whom he had res- woiae cued, by his holy living, from lives of ungodliness. He was followed by a I woman, distressingly poor while on ' earth, but filled with the Holy Spirit. She with her children, whom she had Andr brought up in the feaf of the Lord, tXu^ together ascended the massive step? ^ c which led them through the portals of glory into?who can describe "the fjr things which eye hath not seen nor t ear heard?" .T?Cv For a Thousand Years the endless procession continued to advance until the last man and wornan had rendered an accounting of the J life entrusted to them. I was greatly a distressed at the sight of one whom |rcffh I had known; he brought his work, a v marvel of human goodness, but it was' The Rejected, Because It Was Christless. The scene closed. Alarmed, I awoke from my reverie. Instantly I How'i fell on my knees, consecrated my life 1 to^ Him who bought me with His i0vJ blood, allowed Him to fill me with His .j, < Holy Spirit. Now, after several cn years, I write to say, this is what I i tf did with my life. 11- e n AWftTHFR YPAR IQ ANA nuuiiiLii l Lrtii iu miu .... ' " .... , 't V . : > - V. >> / Psychology in Clothes. Th Dr. Thomas Claye Shaw, of Lon- Perso don, speaking on the subject of the c^y> special psychology of women, says a ye< that there is a psychology in clothes, ? It is useless to say that they dress as have they do to please other women or please men. They dress simply be- ^h cause they have to in their own way Panand to their own satisfaction. The j custo psychology of dress is that it appears, Put * I n nH t to maice you oe wnat you profess to "* " 1 be. ! til af Halting the Autos. All With a view to preventing the driv- merc' ing o* automobiles at high speed c?est across the tracks at grade crossings, the s the Long Island Railroad Company tweni have arranged with the Long Island Plete' Automobile Club to have hummocks tinuo formed in the road on each side of certain grade crossings where reck- Or< less driving has been most common. ai*e e There are altogether 42 9 grade cross- tural ings on the Long Island system, and Jack the number of fatalities has grown to ar? K an alarming extent.?Scientific Amer- their lean. other A New Year's Homily, w Year's Day Is in some way i ed by every people having a ] calendar, yet the .hours of day of the old year generi with little variation from y routine. Nevertheless, it ompleted book whose story es the reader for good or t he cover or the frontispiece ew one. Nearly all the wordi mguage applying to a course utely marked out describe that is left behind and not t 1 is before. There is no coun to the ship's "wake" for e which the prow is about nor of the "track of the ," nor of the spoor of the ti{ f "the trail" of numberless i It may be noted incident; laws or ordinances require ai es to carry a number, in la >s, hanging from the back, who sees an automobile com wnat its numDer is. uniy wj ppens to leave some record in its track is the knowledge mber important. It is doubtl se the future is swarming v, jillties, whereas the past con a record which cannot ;ed, that most of our festlvil s about the anticipation of rear rather than in a retrosj flection for the old. In the ? ys of the world prophecy hel of prominence among all p but of history in the scient there was none. This has b sed by the severely practl rn world. Histoid is at a j i, prophecy at a discount. Imost disregarded last day of er stands for the completed i as New Year's does for the j ' of what is to come. New Year's Resolutions. rybody on this earth le resolutions New Year's Day ;ept them fast, a share of mirth n life would straight be swept aj ool would cease 'the pranks wl make wise man jeer with cynic chaff, ise man with some sad mistake lid never move the fool to laugh. us strive as best we may , if perfection be not won, let tne failure go its way iwell the scoffer's store of fun. When Talleyrand Scored. ien Mme. de Stael published -ated novel, "Delphine," she 1 sed to have painted herself arson of the heroine, and M. 1 ad in that of an elderly la s one of the principal characti r tell me," said he, the first ti et her, "that we are both of jur novel, in the disguise sn." 'ASSING OFTHE OLD YEAR. SnrOcll, old yearl jiurneyed on roomer many day ioO bcKcaa the barttn{>, oj our \3a lou^ht^ oj- rt^n^lcxPfctadncjj and he OindI^Jhat I mujf freac ?e av?al?5 rhe realnT^'of jhadov^j ^enf Land oj ycarj that lie ^CC,jvAth folded bandj. TStfeUdl,. old year! waiT_ , ' ? To ho\>c and fear, rOcIl vnlto, a Unfipr n& cta;[> ft na >u jhilt lie yltnirf l?c i^adow-lar All ^llenny; )hde I hatfc a btad ncv) year to tr Jhfle Ij^irr^ orryith memories yj( r,oU jj^d-ana oravc and true a friend < Kr ah, Mce dear c6 one jccinj -sJhcn com05 mc dart\c fo^rl and libs all Ircmulouj mujtu A lajr bpod-hyc; J , loioh fhy frienHly face no more Ij jgnonej jvcgf my ncarr i\ept TfiER CHANCE. F ; Qfl? ' ** land \op - 1ACH,efEmR 1_jlX 'N ere are about 6000 New Y< ns who have not been in on the avenge, two months ir in the las; decade. Euro souin, seasnore ana mouma them for the other ten month ere are no undertakers .in When a penon 'dies it Is m for his neirest relatives lim into a coffn and bury h he mourning does not bogin i ter burial. most any steamer afloat in 1 tiant service can now go to Ms er, England, the deepening hip canal to a uniform depth ty-eight feet hating been co 3 after over three years' c< us work. leriy ana well bgiaved convi iow being employed as agrio laborers in Austrit, owing to 1 of far*n hands. The prlsom inch pleased with Uie work, a employment is an incentive s to behave well in prison. THE TEMPERANCE PROPAGANI , CONCERTED ATTACK ON DRI1 illy WINNING ALL ALONG LINE. #r Is jm. United States Senator Clay Gi iadf Best Method to Use in Acqnai of ing the Younger Generat: 3 of With the Dangers of the Salo not In speaking ol the best methods the employ to make the younger gen hat ation fully acquainted with the di ter- gers of the saloon. Senator Clay, the Georgia, recently said: t0 "The schools and the churches hj a great responsibility in this matl I regret that the Church is so oj to criticism on this question. 1 tul" saloon influence is so destructive, u illy versal and Insistent, it undoes ito- much of what the Church tries to rge that It is little short of marvelc No. to me that she is not more outspoi jng against the saloon. The schools i , doing far more than in the past, 1 not so much as they might. Then be" pils should be drilled incessantly ! the knowledge of the effects of ess cohol on the human system. rith "Another important and sadly : stl- glected work of the churches and c be schools is the teaching of the po? l, of a clean ballot. The people and. 1 L.. youth should be taught that the bjtf e is put into the hands of the elm )ec" for the making of clean, honest/Sta }ld- city and national government; fl d a bad government, corruption in pc ieo- tics, is an impossibility, if the cle iflC citizens of this country will use th een ballots as they should. , | "Viewed in the light of this J gleet, the corruption of our body g ?e" Itic to-day lies a$ the door, of gxj Yet church-going citizens,^because, be! De-' in the majority, by the* proper use rec- the ballot, they could rem??$ t >ro- guilty, grafting politicians. v "Any minister or teacher who fa to teach this continually is lame ably derelict in his duty. "It is a deplorable fact .that the stitutions of higher education in t! country, the universities particular are criminally, wilfully negligent pointing out the dangers of dri aid) an<l the power of a clean ballot, much so is this, that it is nothing 1 the strictest truth when I assert tl our great universities are to-day no ing but institutions for the manufi ture of drunkards and sports. ? so much by the evil they teach, 1 by the good they do not teach." The Senator then related a st< \ of how a young man of his acquai: ance, gifted, especially brilliant/ h bei been sent to a great university, w glorious prospects, came back, in 1 tie more than a year, physically, m< *D tally and morally ruined throu ral- drink. .dy. "Let the Church," exclaimed S< ers ator Clay, pacing the floor with ti [me Senatorial strides, ""let the Qhui ug and our educational institutions t / teach the curse of drink, but poi out the power of a clean ballot, a the future of this country would glorious. "And mind you can't teach o without the other. The saloon inf ence is so interwoven in our politii )>> fabric that'anything that means dea to political corruption means the cr of pling of the saloon so that Its recc . ery is imnossible. The saloon Is t 1 mother of all our morpj ulcers, fs t ' father of practically all existing pol leal corruption, the hermaphrodite sin. Without the miasma from t saloon swamp, the disease germs politics would die. On it they exlsi "Do you know that the liquor lob * in every State is responsible for t meagre amount of reform legislati . we usually get. lowerB the wh( moral tone of the State's legislato in a word, makes political corruptic w?r, ists? "You'll have to excuse me furl er," the Senator said, good-natun ly. "If some of my folks down in r .. State read what I've given you, I < pect it will throw up some dust." ncd They Just Had To. The Associated Press recently s? iec' broadcast the item that the brewf 0^' of St. Louis, Mo., have magna: mously announced, that hencefoi they "would obey the law" and r ' sell to any saloons or bars ^hlch a known to be lawbreakers. This ? -i. a. l-Vi 1 a voluntary act migui up tuusmei praiseworthy, but the facts are th stated by Excise Commissioner Mu hill, of St. Louis: "This agreeme was reached after I'had Issued a c for a meeting of the accredited re resentatives of every brewery dol business in St. Louis. I gave the men two alternatives?either to < ; operate in upholding the law by i ? fusing to supply illegal clubs, or < > pect to see fewer saloons in I j Louis." j ' The Reason. t ."Because the saloon is a crimii Institution,, evil and only evil, t producer 6f ill health, Immoral! Impurity, insanity, poverty, crin degredation and woe, increasi taxes, breaking up homes, corru] ing government, filling jails, aln p houses/ workhouses, penitentiar: 5 and insane asylums, and directly a I indirectly carrying 200,000 of o ? people annually to premature deal 3 It is the business of government S destroy the saloon!" Such was t i declaration of the committee temperance appointed by the India * Baptists to report to their recc convention, on the progress of pi ; bibition and local option, and t ' attitude of religious bodies and t ?__ Worst of Bargains. To sell rum for a livelihood Is b enough, but for a whole commun to share the responsibility and gu of such a traffic seems a worse bi * gain than that of Eve or Judas. H Horace Greeley. ~~~ Temperance Notes. )rk The temperance move Is a move I tne better humanity, and for better bu In ness. pe* In North Carolina more than ni' *n3 ty-five per cent, of the territory * s. | barred liquor. 4 I Gustav Trenssen says: "Even J&- thimbleful of spirits weakens all ] the best faculties." ts Give up drink, or give up hope im, holding your place in the industr an- 1 is the warning of John Bui to the laboring men oi' England. Drink is the dynamite of mode the civilization.?Hon. John D. Long. Ninety per ceut. of the territory f Mississippi is prohibition, and it : expected that the coming Legislatn ?" will enact absolute prohibition i m* the whole St&te. ? wrvjciiiUiija waa a ici mc v-aiiipai, ground for the League's crusade Ey its recently adopted constituti cts the sale of liquor is prohibited. u'1_ Congress will have to face the < :he rect question of whether Washingt ers is to remain "wet" or whether t nd statesmen will have to forego the hi t0 The League is preparing for a vigc ous assault. 1 ' . to TORTURED FOR SIX MONTHS By Terrible Itching Eczema?Baby's1 S'K Suffering was Terrible ? Soon Entirely Cured by Cutlcura. "Eczema appeared on my son's face. We went to a doctor who .treated him for three res months. Then he was so bad that his face and head were nothing but one sore and " his ears looked as if they were going to fall ion off, so we tried another doctor for four on. months, the baby never getting any better. . His hand and legs had big sores on them and the poor little fellow suffered so ter* a " ribly that he could not sleep. After he I had suffered six months we tried a set of the Cuticura Remedies and the first treat mttit let him sleep and rest well; in one ^er we ^ the sores were' gone and in two )en* months he had a clear face. Now be ia "he ^wo years and has never had eczema again. _i Mrs. Louis Beck, R. 1'. D. 3, San Antonio, bo Tex., Apr. 15, 1007.^ _ - / )U? Decofatioaa Wot, Women. ;en There are tfoisqratoons for womire en in Europe, the most fbctent order t eoming-trom the Austrian It al" rank. Another fR the^^^^ ^undjne* jgT^elf" BTAT* ? ?j?' that cannot en red by^We. "2- CataHrh Wm. Frank JVCiteney. -y-" CTjom to before me a|Sd subscribed in my ?V .presence, this 6lh day of December, A. D., T886. ??.. / A. W. Olea^OJI. % (beal.1i ""'?' i \/ Notary Pubnc. \ Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and Qt- hcts directly on the blood and mucous sur, faces of the system. Send for testimonials, ,n free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold bv all Druggists. 75c. ?18 Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. iy? t - L. in ' Stamps For the Religions. nk noicrinm h?B a Snndav nostaee )ut B^amP? issued'for those who do not iat wish to have their mail delivered oa th- Sunday: All mail bearing the Sunday Etc? stamp is held over by the carriers for Tot delivery Monday. >ut ? i? Useless Worry. irJ It frequently happens that a woma J an worries a great deal over the quesIth tlon of calling on another woman who [it- doesn't care in the least whether she ?n- calls or not. gh Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children -Q~ teething,softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Ch ? )Ut In the seventeenth century absence from in^ church r/as a punishable offense in Engnd i _ be Itch cured in 10 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. ?0 " ' V r_ England loses <50,000 persons every year I by emigration. it PUTNAM he Color :noro (roods brighter and faster colors than any < he can dyo any (pxment without ripping apart. Writo lit- : of Fellows in Misrortnne. h? The Washington man who was in treed by a dead bear understands jjy. the feelingn of the man who took ofT via his shoes to slip up the stairs quietly on and then discovered that his wife )le ,wasn't home from her suffrage club. rs, v >u- Hiccough. .h_ A newspaper quotation claims that ;d" relief from hiccough can be obtained ny by holding the arms straight above ?x- the head, and keeping up inspiration as long as possible so as to retain the air in the lungs for a long time. ,nt Traffic on the Sault Canal. >rs ' Sault Ste. Marie canal traffic for ni- the season of 1907 reached a grand total of 52,217,214 tons, which shows l0* a net increase of twelve per cent., or 6,466,134 tons, as compared with e(1 that of the season of 1906. us ill- Bound to Come. ^ It won't be long before we'll be 4a 1 reading tbe obituary of ^the fool who ^ rocked the airship. ? Detroit Free !Se Pressjo 1 re- Ungenerous Mirth. iX~ The funniest sight the editor of this paper ever saw was at Judd Fish's hotel in Pendleton during the fair. fe It,was a fellow with only one tooth t m i. * _ Hollno ' trying 10 eat vuiu uu mc wu.?l>uhM ia1 Optimist. he. ty. No Sure Sign. le> The will of a wealthy New York man was found when read to contain !js~ only thirty words. That is no sure [eg sign, however, that some of his disnd gruntled kin will not try to make it ur look like thirty cents. to Troubles of To-day. on In these days of scientific marvels na when a man sees a mysterious mon>nt ste? in the air he has to guess whethro er it is a flying machine or a woman's hat.?New York Press, he : PI I ' Fun pie treatment G B P" Red Crops Pile and | Hi Boh +S0 Fistula Cure and aa Beok rent by mail ity VBHrar FREE. Ut REA CO.. DEPT. B. A MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. (Excellent f I Remedy Cough* j Hale's | I T7 I Horehound I ny I All Druggists jj nf I When it I Aches again ns I Try Pike's Toothache Drop* >rn or ^SfKeep It on Hand! ^ j pEsH Cough* and cold* may *eize any Mje ? IH member of the family any time. PR 3 gn BZl Many a bad cold ha* beta-averted wJ ^ E9 and much nclcnet* and tuffering t#j| v TCI bai been iaved bythe prompt ute { Oil ISH of Pi*o'a Cure. There i* nothing BjB { |[>I like it tobreak up cough* and cold*. KM (j There i* no bronchial or lung NJM vj Ji- Uy trouble that it will not relieve. Mfl V] nv HB ^rrc from opiate* or harmful in- d i DH sredient*. Fine for children. V BATS AS PETS. ? A College Professor Has Had Several and LlkfeB Them. A bat In a woman's bedroom can' cause more excitement than can one lone burglar or even a dozen mice. All of which is sheer foolishness, acocrding to a writer?a male writer, it is unnecessary"to say?in the Technical World. If she would but give the bat a chance he could prove to her entire satisfactioi#that he is an Intelligent and amiable creature and not unworthy 6f a permanent place in the household. Yes, the detested bat makes'a most agreeable household pet. He is a most affectionate creature and ^111 attach himself to a person as does a kindly and intelligent dog. A college professor Says: ? "When I was a student at the university I had two/bats, which came and went freely of their own accord. In the evening they were wont to rush, -through the window^into-the neig? lforing garden, hunt insects, .and.tjhen their hunger was appeased they fould return to my room. "They slept on a bookshelf, where they suspended themselves from a dictionary. At 'the present time I possess a bat that shows a touching iijitdkchment to my person and follows "me about through the rooms of my house if I call it" < This advocate of bats as pets further states that when he talks pleasantly to it his present favorite raises arid lowers its ears, much after the manner of a horse', blinks its eyes in a contented fashion, licks its nozzle with its tongue, and. in general disports Itself in a manner that indicates it is pleased and contented. When harshly spoken to it layB back its ears, shrinks away and tries to escape by climbing up the curtain. "When I sit by lamplight in the < morning working at my desk I can hardly get rid of it," he, writes. "It comes and goes, "rambling about the> : desk or climbing up ,my legB or else : it sits on the curtain and endeavors by violent shakings of the head and shrill twitterings to excite my attention and to obtain worms?its usual food?thereby. Its appetite is Indeed something uncanny. Thirty fat worms are readily taken at one meal." Woman's Limitations. \ . Any woman thinks she's capable of refo'*"!ing a man, but when it comes to^jjggSkming herself she employs a drebiiiiaker.?St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ?' A Definition. . The difference between a liar, and : a humorist is that one distorts a ' statement and the other states a dis- i tortion. j FADELE! ither dje.v Ono 10c. package colon all flbor*. They ( lor tree booklet?How to Dye, Bleacft and Xlz Colon ' i / > |"j yJ'M 'VJ It is no use ad you have the Go ~ having the Go( advertisa CHICKENS EARN M Whether you raise Chickens for fan or ] get the cest results. Tho way to do this is We offer a book telling all ' ject?a book written by a 25"years in raising Poultry. [ had t* experiment and spend ||4 . fl way to conduct the business? jk GIANTS in postage stamps. and Cure Disease, how; to Market, which Fowls to Save indeed about everything ycm must know on postpaid on Receipt of 25 cents Book Publishing House, 134 OAPPTV omt c. i i / AT LOW . SUPERIOR TO BEST S The small price Is made possible by great demand for this Razor, The si profit on each aggregating as larg sum as if we sold fewer at a greater pi The benefit is the consumer's. The Blade Is of the finest st tiffcally made and tempered by process--and the blade, of course, is tant part of any Razor. The frame is of silver plated, and "angled" correctl quick and clean shaving. The tough b finds this Razor a boon; the soft be finds it a delight. These blades can I Buy one and you will recommend I friends. That is the best test of any a in POSt ' SB Wt or casl 25 CIS. rr Writo r BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 13 r AN IMITATION T PATTERN THE I There was never an lmltatio: tators always counterfeit the gel J> what you ask for, because genuine i l> Imitations are not advertised, but c I ability of the dealer to sell you sod [> good" when you ask for the genuin \ on the imitation. Why accept imita g uine by insistine:? REFUSE IMITAT UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM SOUTH CAROLINA PRAISES PE-RU-NA. Oyspepsia is Often Caused by Catarrh of the Stomach?Pei-una Relieves Catarrh o1 th^Slomach and is Therefore a Remedy ^ Hon^ljL a Batler, U. S. Senator;; ' | a letter from Washington. D? C:. write*;; . w cne reruns Medicine co? u ioijowb: <> "I can recommend Peruna for" ;dyspepsiaandstomachtrouble. I',': have been using your medicine for \a short period and I feel very'.', much relieved. It is indeed a ! wonderful medicine, besides a good tonic," G&jfARKR of the stomach is the correct name tor most cases of drspepftia. Only an internal catarrh remedy, such tu? Peruna, is available. Peruna Tablets can now be procured. Ask your Druggist for a Free Pftruna Almanac for 1909. -i_ - : : WOMEN Headier book, <*BeUel lor Women." FRENCH DRUG COl, 30 W. 324SL, N. T. City. ^anmmpsofsEye WiHef | An advocate of the vegetarian diet v has stated that the nut trees of the tt? world are capable of supplying food all the year to the population fbf the HOHsiauKUtt CO? ''A,- ' 1 vertising unless J| ods, and no use )ds unless you IMJCVI If You Know Hoto to I UN H I . Handle Them Properly profit, you want to do it intelligently ancf to profit by the .experience of others. H you need to know on the sub- IS man ivho made his living for ' flfSMBI L and in than* time necessarily H - much money to learn the best M for the small sum of 25. . BKB i It tells you how to Detect EjgjeH Feed for Eggs,-and also for 21| ;' ^ ' for Breeding Purposes, and tj9H the subject to make a success. SENT zSa INSTiSOPS. f Leonard St., N. Y. City. RAZOR I PRICE. OLD AT ANY PRICE. r a secret "jj^j satin finish, | 10j carded man PJ arded man IVSaJ J ' ""Pf*- Brl EXTRA ,our Eg blades age stamps tfwJ (l! h brings It ffj{ 1 CdKJ I I by mail in p^?'] al box. <iiSJ tame and fuJI address very plainly, (4- Leonard Stre-'t. N. T. City, 1~z?_i. ?mm AKCS rUK ITS*% IEAL ARTICLE | made of an imitation, lml- | ? tuine article. The genuine is jj articles are the advertised ones. S lepend for their business on the. aething claimed to be "Just as <1 e, because he makes more profit < | tions when you can get tbe geD- < TA\TO GET WHAT 5fOO \ iWO" ASK FORI J