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an englis Editor?"My dear sir, we can't p verse at all?it's an escape of gas." Poet?"Ah, I see?something wro New President of Panama. Senor Don Jose Domingo de Obaldia, who has been elected President i of the Republic of Panama to sue- < ceed President Amador, was until : lately Minister from Panama to the ! United States, having been appointed i <S?WC.? 'XWiZ/SO '08MM x at the creation or the repuDiic in 1903. He Is a native of Panama, sixty-three years old, and was in Bogota and in the United States until his twenty-fourth year, when he returned to Panama and became connected with the large business inter2sts of his father. Senor Obaldia is one of the largest stock raisers in Central America and exports horses, cattle and mules. He was Governor ; of Panama when it belonged to Col- I ombia and is a conservative In poli- < tics. ] Senor Obaldia defeated President ] Amador's candidate for President, ( Secretary Arias. Obaldia was Ama- ' dor's choice until, when acting as ] President in the absence of Amador, 1 he instituted policies which estranged his chief. s ! ON THF Agent?"Say, old man, I'd like t< plete, up-to-date encyclopedia I have 1 Uncle Josh?"Wa-al, I reckon 'tw< of a hand at buyin' newfangled contrai the durned thing if I had it."?Judge. Huge Mexican Lemons. J It is not considered a joke to be "handed a lemon" in some parts of 1 Mexico, where this fruit grows to ' enormous size. To carry one of these monster lemons is no small task. ! They frequently grow to a size much < I ' - I "HANDING HIM A LEMON." J*bey have a variety in Mexico that grows larger than a man'3 bead. * H COMIC. 11 '0^ I A \ ?i *i; -<*<> - .? '. ' ' . r :.|. ' IT ublish stuff like this. Why, it's not pi re ng with the metre."?The Sketch. is tl An Eveless Eden. G One of the odd sights of the city ^ may be seen each school morning q Dver on East Fifteenth street. There ]e pou may find a building with about G L600 occupants and not a single wo- ft nan among them. It is Stuyvesant 0i High School. From clerk to princi- tr lal every position is filled by men, ind when they are all assembled je vith their 1500 boys in the auditor- ai um the absence of shirt waists and tl lair ribbons is as impressive as it is qi :onspicuous.?New York Times. j ot Telephone Supporter. An* exceedingly useful and practi;al telephone supporter for business cj lse has been designed by a Massachu- n< letts man. Instead of placing the ap- fit )aratus at the side of the desk, as is b< isually done, it is supported on a 8] jracket on the top of the desk. Jjj Whether sitting or standing, the user pi t~, r-n P< f 1 ?XTJhi SpL s irs^i :an always swing the 'phone to the a: position most desired. He does not in have to change his position. If he bi 3esires to talk while standing the ^ phone can be reached as convenient- ^ ly as wnen sitting at tne aesK. witn Be the ordinary bracket the 'phone is al- jy ways on the same level.?Washington j p< Star. ?mm U1 jj 11! ) have you take a look at this com- m here." p< Duldn't do ye 110 good. I ain't much ai )tions, and I don't s'pose I could ride ^ di larger thaii a man's head. "The large cl lemons do not bear shipment as -well J1 as those of the smaller variety, but are in much demand in the location m where they are grown. They are full Bi Df juice, and one has been known to w ifford enough acid for a whole barrel te 3f lemonade.?New York Tribune. T hi Reclaim 12,000,000 Acres. ^ ri Since 1902, when the Federal rec- tt amation act was passed, the Govern- di nent has added 5,000,000 acres to w he country's habitable land, and cs :hese, added to the 7,200,000 reilaimed from the desert before that rear, make an increase of 12,000,000 sr icres in the country's habitable area, ii( in average of 2,000,000 acres per si rear.?Popular Mechanics. th ar at At a display of porcelain in China ar in exhibitor said that Chinese litera- i ure ascribes the invention of porce- v/; ain to a period some twenty-five cen- rn :uries before Christ. Foreign ex- ^ )erts are by no means certain that a'r he art existed before the seveoih re :entury of this era. ga THE PULPIT. I BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY , THE REV. JOHN WESLEY HILL. J rhcme: The Kingship of Patience. ] New York City.?The following \ npressive discourse was delivered in j le Metropolitan Temple (M. E.) by , le pastor, the Rev. John Wesley , ill, who is by far at present the j tost progressive of New York's j reachers. The subject of the ser- , ion was "The Kingship of Patience," ad the text, Revelation 1:9: "I, 1 3hn, your brother and companion in i ibulation, and in the kingdom and < atience of Jesus Christ." Mr. Hill j lid: I Patience does not appeal to us as 3 regal quality. Why should a king < ait? Having power to accomplish , t once, why should he bear with the \ ulness and obdurateness of his sub- ] jets? Commanding swift agencies, , hv should he delay their execution? j nd right here we encounter a seem- \ ig contradiction: our text Introduces j divine interpretation. It teaches \ tat kingship is not divorced from pa- ] ence, but bound up with it; that j le divine kingdom is inherited , irough patience; and that spiritual ] jvereignty is acquired not by a sin- , le bound, but through the long, ( ?iirri.{wQtro "na+iPTipp j lUUUlUg pXJgi iUia^v TT uivi* lone can make. This is a truth hich permeates the entire spiritual ;onomy, finding its supreme exemliflcation in the being and nature of od. Christianity is solitary in its revlation of patience as a quality of od. No pagan god was ever crowned ith this virtue. The coarse mind of lan never evolved a gentle deity, he gods of human genius are great i impatience, force and resentment, his conception of impatience as the rerogative of deity is not only at the >ot of the grotesque forms of paganm, but it is responsible for many of le false and monstrous views of od that have found their way into le so-called "Christian theology." fhen theologians paint pictures of od that stamp Him with remorsess absolutism; when they say that od must be just and may be merci.1, and set themselves to parceling it the divine nature into sections, acing the boundary lines with athematical precision, and then ittirg watches upon the frontiers st love snouia encroacu upon irutn j id mercy supplant justice; then j ley forget that all the great moral ( lalities are duly proportioned in the j vine nature; that they include each ? ;her in a way that defies triangula- t on; and that patience is the lardian of them all. j When the sculptor's vision dis- ? oses the angel in the block, he is j at discouraged by hardness in the ^ one nor defect in the grain. Hft is j ;nt on actualizing his ideal. The 2 eater the difficulties, the more his j itience is called into play. And r ire we think of God as conceiving a i lrpose less sharply or bringing it to jrfection with less patience? 1 We fall intc bitter, suspicious, mis- r ithropic frames of mind over the t igh-handed insolence of demagogu- s m, over social laxity and licentious- ( ;ss, over fraud and graft and god- ? ss luxury; and because things are i ooked, we would hew them to the i ne of our thinking, lay the scor- r on scourge on the back of con- r srvatism, condemn all who are not j illing to march to our music; yea, j a a po fomntod tr? flni.ht t Vl o Hi-cino - V ".I W ^Uit/VVU w U )odness, because God does not arise ? i His might, destroy'sin, and usher i the millennium. But meanwhile, od waits. He stands in .the midst ! the passing centuries with outretched hands of entreaty. No ;her attitude would be consonant ith His character. Self-existent and ernal, without beginning or ending, e cannot take account of time, [me is an element that does not iter into His being. Perfection is le mould in which the divine ideals e cast; the amount of time is nothg. It is not a question of calendar at of character. The problem reices itself to perfection. That is :e infinite goal toward which all lings in the universe, seen and un:en, are silently, ^lowly, and patientmoving?the goal of a redeemed, ;rfected and glorified humanity. From this viewpoint, we begin to Qderstand that there is a divine ? lilosophy in the expression, the s lingdom and patience of Jesus t brist." In it is hidden the mystery ^ ! redemption; above it is lifted the f ood-stained cross; upon the cross i mgs an innocent Victim, an inaite Sacrifice, vicarious and saving, od's great love argument to the orld. Time, Providence and Caliry are the forces that conquer the ?ul, and therefore God waits to give a iem a chance, waits for us to weary ! our rebellion, waits for the fever ! sin to cool, waits for the black i rvf noocinn t r\ m t-* aiiI titiU d 1 ith infinite patience for us to re- i irn, demanding no more than ohedi- i ice, and asking only the homage/of I ir hearts; and then He embraces us < i the rapture of long delayed recon- I liation. i Standing thus before Calvary, and c izing into the tranquil face of Jesus i nrist, we begin to realize what is ( leant by the patience of Jesus i hrist. His patience meant infinitely 1 iore than the popular conception of c itience; more than .the power of s tiysical endurance, more than drift- i ig and dreaming in silence. The atience of Jesus Christ is a con- t ructive force; it inspires a des- i srate, persistent struggle for spirita.1 manhood. It is a power which lakes a kingly man and not a stoical strifaction, insensible to "the slings ad arrows of outrageous fortune." ' Now, there can be no kingship in 1 le absence of patience. Protracted ? iscipline is the condition of exalted t laracter. It is thus that man wins I imself from the wrecking forces of ? fom thllQ fViaf loorno + + * id feels the power of Christ's im- < lortal maxim, "In your patience ye ^ lall possess (win) your souls." It c as thus that John, the author of our t >xt, won self-mastery. Think of it. 1 he man who in the early stage of ( i3 Christian life desired that he and 1 [s brother James might sit on the 1 ght hand and on the left hand in t te kingdom of Christ; the man of i ignity and of ambition; the man ho in his unbridled rage wanted to ill fire down from heaven upjjn the ihospitable Samaritans; the man of ide and resentment; that man,; 0 lastened, subdued and exalted, de- ? lised by the world, persecuted, ex- ii sd and everything but martyred, h ts down in the lonely solitude of i iat volcanic cinder called Patmos, t id writes familiarly and lovingly 0 iout the "tribulation and kingdom I id patience of Jesus Christ." What u ought about the change? Patience as the stern and rugged schoolaster that led him from pride and rogance and self-assertion to the :ights of a spiritual manhood sweet s id tender and fraternal; a state of p pose and vision enriched by the o lin of loss, and filled with the joy J 3f tribulation; a kingdom in whlcb tie became a partaker of suffering | with every other sufferer, and could j 3ign himself with kingly courtesy/"I, John, your brother in the kingdom 1 and patience of Jesus Christ." Not only does patience thus ennoble and exalt character, but it imparts to life its only true and abiding perspective. An art student once said ; :o Titian, "I saw it in a moment." ! 'Oh, you did!" replied the great mas- I ter; "it took me twenty years to see it." You cannot stand before a work ot art, every square inch, every color, svery shade of which has been transfigured by toil and tears, and gather Its wealth of meaning in a few seconds. You must stand there, sit there, surrender yourself ' to the theme, until you feel like the pilgrim before Reubens' "Descent From the 3ross," who forgot time and comfort ind place, and after standing from morning until evening and being reminded that the time to depart had arrived, exclaimed, "Wait a moment, until they get Him down!" Such i* :he patience which brings to light the hidden things of God, discloses the iivine intent in the workings of time and enables us to hear what the centuries say against the hours, and thus Ind deliverance from the "tyranny of :he instant." It is this spirit of what ias been called "immediateness" that jecomes our greatest peril. We become impatient in awaiting results, [t is the child who to-morrow digs in the seed tie nlanted yesterday, to see whether it is growing or not; and n this respect, many of us are chiliren of a larger growth. The effect Df this impatience is disastrous in nany ways. It produces a distortion of vision, substitutes a segment of life's circle tor .the whole, measures providence jy a few years of happiness, and weighs the interests of time against iternity. "How can these things be?" we often ask. What things? The woes of broken health, the agonies by which human bodies are tortured for nany years, the wrongs of orphanage, jestilence. Are, flood, famine and >ar.thquake. How can a merciful God permit such severities? Patience :omes to the rescue, and becomes the merpreier ul rroviucutc, oma ;hat they are parts of the "all things" .hat "work together for good," 'omentations to soften the calloused leart, hammer blows to break the lardened will, lightning flashes to Durify the atmosphere, millstones jrinding the hard grain, furnaces reining the gross ore, grim schoolmas.ers teaching us in God's great night school the lessons of love. O my riends, let us give these teachers the ight of way. Better for us to ask >urselves, What new lessons do we leed? than all this meaningless talk ibout accidents, and how they are jrought about. Finally, patience means expectancy, md .there is rest in that. It is the ;ense of uncertainty that begets un est. Wi} all. feel the power of a man *rho can keep still in the storm. His josition is supported by the facts, ind therefore his argument is final, ind he can afford to wait. Power is lever boisterous. It has no measure n noise, but rather in silence. That Toaiia Phrlof ntnndine' RT>i?PCh ess before Pilate while His accusers ave In the fury of their passion, ia he one supreme picture of power in ill human history. Calm in the wild excitement of the infuriated mob, lerene in the fierce overflow of maignity, with the repose of eternity in lis face, His very silence was the nost searching speech that ever fell ipom a human soul. It crashed down nto the conscience of the heathen udge, rang the alarm bell in the amp of his fears, filed his vision with i thousand menacing terrors, and ransformed him into a cringing :oward. He saw what all the ages ince have seen, that this quiet Man vho took up no defense, who measired all the wrath of His enemies ind understood their worst weapon, lad a foundation in truth that could lot be shaken. He stood like one in he midst of eternal realities, surounded by immortal and invisible servants, One who knew that all jower was given unto Him, that He leeded only to speak and that all the orces of the universe would rush to iis defense. This asurance made lim calm and crowned Him as the ine solitary King of Patience for all he ages. Ob, let us gaze anew upon that lilent, serene, expectant face; catch ince more the inspiration of His patent life, and go forth serene in the assurance of faith'' and confident md strong in the expectancy of Jesus Christ, the dawn of whose second, jlorious coming, already throws its ;leam of promise across the world's lorizon. The Sweetest Incense. "How I wish I had built an altar vhen we started our married life!" i father said to his pastor recently. Dr. Norman McLeod tells of one ?bo said tne same tning. i snan lever forget the impression made lpon me during the first year of my ninistry by a mechanic whom I had risited, and on whom I urged the >aramount duty of family prayers. )ne day he entered my study, and >urst into tears as he said, 'You renember my girl, sir? She was my >nly child. She died suddenly this norning. She has gone, I hope, to 3od; but if so she can tell Him what low breaks my heart?that she never leard a prayer in her father's house >r from her father's lips. Oh, that ;he were with me but for one day nore!' " There is no fragrance that sweet>ns a whole house like the incense of jrayer. A Prayer. Our Heavenly Father and truest friend, who hast so loved and saved is, the thought of Whom is sweet and ilways growing sweeter, come and lwell in our hearts; then Thou wilt - ' - 11 ceep watcn on our iips, uui uccuo, ind we shall not need to be anxious iitber for our souls or our boriies. iive us charity, sweetest of all gifts, vhich knows no enemy. Give us in >ur hearts pure love, born of Thy love o us, that we may love others as rhou lovest. Loving Father of Jesus Christ, from Whom floweth all love, et our hearts, frozen in sin, cold to rhee and cold to others, be warmed >y this divine fire. So help and bles9 is through Christ, Thy Son. I Splendor of tlie Infinite. Life has no zest when it has no relization of the unattained. The man vho knows all, who has all, and who s entirely self-sufficient, has never | lad the satisfaction of coming into ! deal possession of the splendor of he Infinite: he has never reached iut and taken hold of the beyond, ^et us praise God for the unmeas:red and unattained.?Churchman. Refined by Fellowship. If we want to be builders of the j piritual kingdom our spirits must be urified and refined by the fellowship f the Holy Ghost.?Rev. J. H. 1 owett. M. A. ? | ECZEMA BURNED AND ITCHED. Spread Over Hand, Arms, Legs and Face?It Was Something Terrible ?Complete Cure by Cuticrura. "About fifteen or eighteen years ago eczema developed on top of my hand. It burned and itched so much that I was compelled to show it to a doctor. He pronounced it ringworm. After trying his different remedies the disease increased and went up my arms and to my legs and finally on my face. The burning was something terrible. I went to another doctor who had the reputation of being the best in town. He told me it was eczema. His medicine checked the advance of the disease but no further. I finally concluded to try the Cuticura Remedies and found relief in the first trial. I continued until I was completely free from the disease and I have not been troubled since. C. Burkhart, 230 W. Market St., Chambersburg, Pa., Sept. 19, 1908." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. A race horse galloping at full speed clears twenty feet to twenty-four feet every bound. No Wonder She's Cross. The woman who has a thousand petty carea and annoyances while she suffers with headache or sideache must not be blamed if she cannot always be amiable. What she needs is thou^htfulness irom ner family and such a simple and natural remedy as Lane's Family Medicine, the herb tea that makes weak women strong and well. Sold by druggists and dealers, 25c. Almost three-quarters of a million dollars will be the cross receipts from the Texas onion crop this year. Rhematism Cured in a Day. Dr.Detchon's Relief for Rheumatism radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action is remarkable. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. First dose greatly benefits. 75c. ana $1. At druggists. The Drawback. " 'Some acquire fame,' " quoted the Philosopher of Folly, u 'some achieve It, and some have It thrust upon them.' But those who have It thrust upon them seldom know what to do with It." There is more Catarrh in thiB section ot the country than all other diseases put together, ana until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by conitantiy failing to cure with local treatment. pronounced it incurable. Science has p.oven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only conititutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous rarfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F.J. Cheney Sc, Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pilla for constipation. The Dijon Poplar. A private letter from a traveler in France speaks of a poplar tree that the writer saw in the city of Dijon, which is the oldest tree of its kind in France. It is 122 feet in height, and is forty-five feet in circumference at the base. The city council has an authentic record of the history of the tree, since the year 722. The people of Dijon are proud of it, so much so that they not long ago voted to levy a tax to put a railing around it, so that it might be protected from possible injury. It is good to Bee sentiment of this kind. Aik Toar Dealer For Allen's Foot-Case. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns,' Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen s Foot-Eane nukes new or tight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute. Sample mailed Free. *3J *11 U /II i w v nuur?Hf ancu k>. k/ilaioai* ?. The Transvaal produces 400,000 ounces of gold every month. Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 60c. China uses a great deal of lead, principally for lining tea chests. DR. KENNEDY'S Favorite Remedy For KIDNEYS, BLOOD and LIVER _?*r iW _ Backed by over 33 years of re\i refo markable success In th# euro of / JHb Kidney, Liver and Blood trouMM bles; Constipation and the dlsfey ,3C?? eases peculiar to women. Not a m&! patent medicine. The formula .VJR4 is In keeping with strict scientific Ami jpW principles. Many physicians of ^V'iA the highest standing have prescribed Dr. David Kennedy's Fa'SALflHHk vorite Remedy. This statement can he Prove(l absolutely. It has f I. cured many cases practically abandoned. Have you dangerous symptoms of Kidney, Liver and Dr.lmvid Kennedy Blood troubles, pain In back, cloudy urine with sediment, pain In passing water, consUpatlon, skin eruptions, etc. ? If so, don't delay, but use Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy at once. Large bottler, $1.00; all druggists. Write Dr. David Kennedy Co., Rondout, N. Y., for free sample. Australia has had an abundant wheat crop this season. Owing to the high prices in the world's markets, shipments of the grain are being hurried forward in steamships instead of, as usual, by sailing vessels. N.Y.?14 FarmFopSalc JL * ingFarmsinl4States.Strout's New Monthly Bulletin of Real Bargains, profusely illustrated, mailed free; we pay your R. R. fare. E. A. STROUT CO.. Book C1. World'* iiridi Fun Dulcrt, 47 West 34th St, New York. PUTNAM Color :aoro stxx!:; brighter and faster colors than any < can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write Yom Kippur. When everything else is surren 1: ~e aerea mat is aisuucuve ui jcd^u ceremonialism the atonement retains its grip on the vast majority of Israelites. Kippur is the last link binding them to their conrtnunity, their faith and its peculiar observance. Miss Alma Sturtevant was recently appointed clerk of the County Court in Boulder, Col. She is a native of Maine and moved to Boulder County from that State three years ago. I Education Mas Proved Value. In a letter to the Boston Transcript favoring humane education in the public schools, a correspondent says: "In one public school in London, England, where, in the course of twenty years, 7000 children were giveu a thorough humane education (during this period, which would make many of these boys men of twenty-five and thirty-five), not one of them was ever arrested for a criminal offense, demonstrating the value of humane education to prevent crime, as well as cruelty." ESI gS3 "MEMOIRS OF DAN RICE," THE CLOWN OF OUR DADDIES. At Last, There Is on Sale a Rook 1 Brimful of American Humor. Any bookseller will tell you that the constant quest of his customers is for "a book which will make me laugh." The bookman is compelled to reply that the race of American humorists has run out and comic literature is scarcer than funny plays. A wide sale is therefore predicted for the "Memoirs of Dan Rice," the Clown of Our Daddies, written by ^ Maria Ward Brown, a book guer- anteed to make you roar with laugh- D ter. The author presents to the public a volume of the great jester's I most pungent jokes, comic harangues, ti caustic hits upon men and manners, tj lectures, anecdotes, sketches of ad- ^ venture, original songs and poetical effusions; wise and witty, serious, satirical, and sentimental sayings of the sawdust arena of other days. These "Memoirs" also contain a series of adventures and incidents alternating from grave to gay; descriptive scenes and thrilling events; the record of half a century of a remarkable life, in the course of which the subject was brought into contact with f most of the national celebrities of the ? day. The book abounds In anecdotes, ti humorous and otherwise; and it af- C fords a clearer view of^ the inside mysteries of show life than any ac- J count heretofore published. Old Dan 2 Rice, as the proprietor of the fapious "One Horse Show," was more of a ^ national character than Artemus a Ward, and this volume conta'ins the " humor which made the nation laugh n even while the great Civil War raged. r( This fascinating book of 500 pages, b beautifully illustrated, will be'sent g postpaid to you for $1.50. Address t Book Publishing House, 134 Leonard street, New York City. \ 8 Japan is now competing actively ? with the United States and Great Bri- ? tain for China's trade in pianos, ? piano players and organs. D For DISTI !/^/ P \jA 8ure enre and positive Jmmyf I \ | Infected or "exposed." LI 1*JIS F9*tf M t]i||1 Glands, expel* the polsono I"~ I < I JH * IUJJ and Sheep and Cholera In ] linVV -i/frl La Grippe among human b \ Jvv /v/ bottle; and $10 a dozen. who will get It for you Special agents wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., London uses 50,000 tons of sugar annually for jam making alone. f Hale's Honey , of Horetaonnd and Tar Gears i n The Voice I Sold by Druggists ^ Pike's Toothache Drop* w Care In One Minute ^ The Season I Hake and Sell More Men's $.'.00 So $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer li beeaose I give the wearer the benefit -of the moat complete organization of trained expert* and skilled shoemaker* In the conn try. The (election of the lea then (or etch part of the ihoe, and erety detail of the mating in trttry department, la looked after bv the beat shoemaker* In the shoe industry. If X could inov yon how carefully W. L. Donrlaa ahoe* are made, yon wonld then understand why they hold their *hape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. My Method of Tanning the Soles makes them More i Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others. A Shoe* fer Every Member of the Family, f Men, Boyi, Women,Mlaeea and Children. For sale by shoe dealers everywhere. PAHTIflM I ^one genuine without W. L. Dong)a* Unll I lull name and price stamped on bottom. Past Color Eyslett Used Exclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. L DOUGLAS, 1*7 Sosrk St, Brockton, Mm. ONION SEED r Per Saber's catalog, page 129. HHH ' Largest growers of odIoii and vegetable seeds In the world. Big catalog free; or, 1 send 16c In stamps and recelvo catalog and ' 1000 kernels each of onions, carrots, celery, radishes, 1500 each lettuce, rutabaga, tur- 1 nips, 100 parsley, 100 tomatoes, 100 melons, I 1200 charming flower seeds, in all 10,000 ker- I nels, easily worth 91 of any man's money. Or, send 20c. and we will odd one package of Eariicst Peep O'Day Sweet Corn. f SALZER SEED CO., pox A. C., La Crosw, Wis. J RICH LANDS IN THE SUNNY SOUTH. Along the Seaboard Air Line. Mild and healthy climate the year round. Fruit and vegetable crops i net $1000 per acre. Write for full information. M J. W. WHITE, Genl. Indl. AgU, I Seaboard Air Line, K Dept. F. Q. PORTSMOUTH, YA. 1 sirHThompsoD's Eye Water F A D ELE S sther dye. One 10c. package colors alt fibers. They dy for free booklet?How to Dye, Blcach and Mix Colors. HHinKFNS FARN Ml m rnHBB V 1MB ma w m w m Whether you raise Chickens for fun ? pi get the best results. The way to do this is We offer a book telling all ject?a book written bv a 25 years in raising Poultry, [ M had* to experiment and spend ||4 ^ wav to conduct the business? Jfl CUNTS in postage stamps. JHl and Cure Disease, how to Market, which Fowls to Save indeed about everything vou must know on tl POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS ] Book Publishing House, 134 It is no use adv 1 - ** I you have the (ioc having the Goo< advertisa ?????i?? urat DOCTORS FAILED ,ydiaE.Pinkham'sVegetaile Compound Cured Her. Willimantic, Conn.?"For five years ; :'X--| suffered untold agony from female 'sSB roubles, causing backache, irregular!. ies, dizziness and nervous prostraon. It was impossibb for me> to aking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable lompound to see what It would do, nd I am restored to my natural ealth."?Mrs. Etta Donovan, Box 99, Willimantic, Conn. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's regetable Compound, made from roots V nd herbs, is unparalleled. It may be sed with perfect confidence by women rho suffer from displacements, inflam- . f jP lation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, iregularities, periodic pains, fcickache, ; ^ earing-down feeling, flatulency, indiestion, dizziness, or nervous prostraLon. For thirtyyears Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cfompound has been the tandard remedy for female ills, and , offering women owe it to themselves o at least give this medicine a trial. ' I 'roof is abundant that it has cured housands of others, and why should it .ot cure you? ' vr^ lMPER~v?vr,lc Catarrhal Fever. preventive, no matter now nones u any wc aro quid, given on the tongue; acta on the Blooa and us germs from the body. Cores Distemper In Dogs "?3J Poultry. Largest selling Uve stock remedy. Cure? , elngs and Is a fine Kidney remedy. 90c. and $1 a :;5 Cut this out. Keep It. Show to your druggist. ' ' . Free Booklet, "Distemper, Causes and Cures.* .. ?,.? Bacteriolo^sta. BOSHES, WD, U.S.A ffizaUne toilet mtiseptio if NOTHING LIKE IT FOR mr 'I'L L 11| Putioc excels anjr dentifrice I nt I bL I n in cleansing, whitening amoving tartar from the teeth, besides destroyinj U germs of decay and disease which ordinary K>th preparations cannot do. rur Mm ITU P?*4 * ?a mouthI Tib IVIUU I fl wash disinfects the mouti id throat, purifies die breath, and kills the germr hich collect in the mouth, causing sore mroat, \ "J * ?L-J miu>k ?olrn*M | ESU uau Ui?UU| auu UiUWH n. n. I I nip PYCC w^m inflamed, tired, ach? I ilt 11 kw sod bum, may be instantlj ilieved and itrengthesed by Paxtine. kATADDU Paxtine will destroy the germ* ?A I flnnn that cause catanh, neal the in. munition and stop the discharge. It is a sun medy for uterine catarrh. Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful rrmicide,disinfe<aant and deodorizer. l*ed in bathing it destroys odors and aves the body antiseptically clean. OR SALE AT DRUGSTORES,80c. I A M l OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. I |.I g>j I'W: ARGE SAMPLE FREE! I??JP HE PAXTON TOILET CO.. BQ8T0W. MA88. . k SAVING IH SHAVING I , [t'a nothing more or less than extraTajancetopaya big price for a safety-razor. H ^ The only part that counts for anything flu! Is the blade. Bat good blades-even the ES best of blades--don't warrant the _)rlce B usually demanded for the razor. ? The biggest part of wnai you pay ior the regular eafetv-razor is for th^ratne H and the box-details that don't figure at KJ all la the razor's value. -w Prove this for yourself. h _ ,n STAMPS brlriRS you /JjO one of these marvellous ^ Razors, postpaid by malf - - > BOOK *?UB. HOUSE, 134- Leonard Street* Mew York. IS DYES e In cold water better than any other dye. Yoa .? MONROE DRUG CO., Qutncy. Illinois niiryi If Yoj Know How to Wilt I Handle Them Property -ofit, you want to do it intelligently and to profit by the experience of others. * you need to know on the sub^man who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sum of 23 i It tells you how to Detect Feed for Eggs, and also for ' for Breeding Purposes, and tie subject to make a success. SENT IN STAMPS. Leonard St., N. Y? City. '_>* rertising unless ! \rlci Qrirl nn hqp \ /Vik/J U1IU X XV \A.KJ\S is unless you