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I want any person who suffers with biliousness, constipation, Indigestion or any liver or blood ailment, to try my Paw-Paw Llrer Pills. I guarantee they will purify the blood and put the llrer and stomach Into a healthful condition and will positively cure biliousness and constipation, or I will refund your mouey. ? Munyon'j Homeopathic Home Mmedy Co.. 63rd and Jelferson Sts.. Phlla., Pa. it' WE BUY^S 1WOOL/) \H ID ES andF^I Rs/ Jlii BtiflgDttltn. l7jf ^tettttfxyiw than ejects or eommissica madjMls!^ B Keterecce: any banit n Loimvn.e. ne mnmi a B Wo?| Bags Free to oor shippers. Write lor pric* list. |J | H. SABEL & SONS 'ffiy LoooTille, Kj. | ft Dropsy i Y Removes all swelling in 8 to so Aw T days; effect a permanent cure in /J^Sv 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment WWgiven free. Nothing can bo fairer, ti>v Write Dr. H. H. Green's Son* Specialists. Box B, Atlanta, Ga. A "HOMESTEAD Do you waa'. a Land Homestead? Information sent free. How to Get a Farm of Land. Address THE COLONT HOMESTEAD COMPANY B??rd n' Trade Bui'dinn indiRn.inn'i? Indiana MKTINCONeRESSATROME International Gathering of Foes of Tuberculosis to Be Held Late in September. Offlnlal annnmi cement of the Seventh International Congress on Tuberculosis, which will include representatives from every civilized country in the world, has been made by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. The congress will be held in Rome from September 24 to ?0, 1911, and will be similar in many respects to that held in Washington in the fall of 190S. The congress, which meets every three years, will be under the direct patronage of the king and queen of Italy. An American committee of 100 will be appointed as the official representatives of the United States. Meanwhile the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis is acting in that capacity and its office in New York will be the headquarters for the United' States delegation. The secretary general of the congress is Prof. Vittorio Ascoli of Rome. As a direct result of the stimulus of the last International congress held in this country, the American committee will be able to report that the number of tuberculosis agencies In this country have been tripled In the three years. More than twice as much money Is being spent in the fight against tuberculosis by private socleties and institutions, and the appropriations of federal, state, municipal and county have increased nearly fourfold. It is estimated that nearly $15,000,000 will be spent In antituberculosis wofrk in 1910. Someone Might Get Hurt. Pietro had drifted to Florida and was working with a gang at railroad construction. He had been told to beware of rattlesnakes, but assured that they would always give the warning rattle before striking. One hot day he was eating his noon luncheon on a pine log when he saw a big rattler coiled a few feet in front U I TT. * U ~ kA ui uim. no mtj acipcui txuu ucgan to shift his legs over the log. He had barely got them out of the way when the snake's fangs hit the bark beneath him. "Son of a guna!" yelled Pletro. "Why you no ringa da bell?"?Everybody's Magazine. Uncle Allen. "If you're getting old and don't know it," philosophized Uncle Allen Sparks, "you'll find it out when you go back to the town where you grew up and look around for the boys you used to play with when you were a kid." PUZZLED Hard Work, Sometimes, to Raise Children. Children's taste is ofttimes more ac curate, In selecting the right kind of food to fit the body, than that of adults. Nature works more accurately through the children. A Brooklyn lady says: "Our little boy bad long been troubled with weak digestion. We could never persuade him to take more than one taste of any kind of cereal food. He was a weak little chap and we were puzzled to know what to feed him on. "One lucky day we tried GrapeNuts. Well, you never saw a child eat with such a relish, and it did me good to see him. From that day on It seemed as though we could almost see him grow. He would eat GrapeNuts for breakfast and supper, and I think he would have liked the food for dinner. "The difference in hia appearance is something wonderful. "My husband had never fancied cereal foods of any kind, but he became very fond of Grape-Nuts and has been much improved in health since using it. "We are now a healthy family, and naturally believe In Grape-Nuts. "A friend has two children who were formerly afflicted with rickets. I was satisfied that the disease was caused by lack of proper nourishment They showed it. So I urged tfer to use Grape-Nuts as an experiment and the result was almost magical. "They continued the food and today both children are well and strong as any children In this city, and, of course, my friend is a firm believer In Grape-Nuts for she has the evidence "before her eyes every day." Read "The Road to Wellvllle," fourn In pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A ntf one appear* from time to tlm?. The? lire genuine, true, and full of human Interest, L ^ (LIFT UP YOUR I EYES AND LOOK | B/ BISHOP WILLIAM A. QUAYLE gj Montreal, Canada MB Text: In everything Rive thanks; foi this is the will of God in Jesus Christ concerning you.?Thess. 5:1S. Have we cot eet the song of the Christian life to much to the tune of difficulty, danger and sorrow? "Id everything give thanks," I am pretty certain, will, in the multitude of in stances, be translated as meaning that whatever difficulty or distress enters your life, be of grateful mood Do not murmur. Be glad through whatever roughness the water wear as we voyage across their uncertain billows. I am certain of two things In this matter. First, that this is how this Scripture is pretty generally viewed, and second, this is not what it does actually mean. It does mean that, but it means indefinitely more. A farm is on a landscape; and he who confounds farm and landscape is n<?t seeing things as they are. Difficulties are to be encountered and sorrows are to be met and they are to be met with the mood of manly and womanly resignation to the wide-working will of God. But that we are to be grateful for the clouds rather than the sunrise and the noon and the blessed open sky is to me absurd and a listless interpretation of the good God our Heavenly Father. To be glad on a holiday is as devout as to be sad on a funeral day. We shall not need to reset our estimates of Gcd and his will concerning us before we are in harmony with his mood. He is the glad God of out-of-doors and the happy singing things whether they be birds or children or women or strong men. This anaemic nouon 01 rwugiuu 10 unwholesome because it is untrue. God gives no assent. A good man and great said this: "In everything give thanks." Nobody but a good and great man could have said it. The sentiment is like Mount Lycabettus from whose top all of historied Greece lies under the eyes without straining an eyeball. All life lies at the base of a mount of vision and of praise like this: "In everything give thanks." The fact which is meant to be lifted Into light at this moment is that there is a devotional element in all things whatsoever. We say grace before meals, except we be heathen. We often say grace before labors and battles without or within and reading of books and taking of journeys and husking corn or going to picnics or a ctroll through suntrurnt fields for the sheer love of the crisp grass under foot and the hot sky overhead. We do narrow beyond the permission of God this thought of devotion or we must be at church or prayer meeting or at family prayer to be devotional. Those places and occupations are greatly good, but they do not monopolize the moods of demotion. The devotional frame is the deep considoratlon. Are we opeu to devotion for all things as Paul was? It is meet to give thanks for the bird voices, and a good way to give such thanks is by listening to tha voices. That is worth weighing. To love things enough to. give things heed is a mood of gratitude, whereas not to care enough for things to notice them is a first-class specimen of ingratitude toward God and his doings. The cricket's chirp is a species of poetry which may well set the heart singing after Its fashion, too. Such a little warmth makes the cricket set his heart to song. Were we as good at the voicing of our gratitude as the .cricket of the hearth, what a shout of chorusing would the great God hear from men. The religious nature is wiser and wider than many religious folk are given to supposing. Christianity is generosity. "Thank God!" How often have I found my own given to that gust of gratitude?"thank God!" And I am not slow to believe God hears such prayer and smiles with gladness to hear it. Why should we not give thanks for the finding of a wild flower or the striking gracefulness of a child at play, or the toss of apple branches lit with bloom, or the blue jay's note with its musical unmncfpoHtv No, secularities are just theme for praise and prayer. We have no call to ask for things for which we have not call to answer to God in spon taneous words of thanks. "I thank you" is a phrase which the debonair use frequently. Courtesy is a good habit for a body's own sake. To be genteel is a soul-instinct of fineness, and if a man or a woman lived alone and broke bread with himself, (although such a way of living is not necessary or to be desired. If one is alone and has no relatives, then should such a one borrow some child, or, better, some homeless body, somebody human, not feline nor canine, tc keep alive the humaneness in one's own soul), ho would do well to say: "I thank you" when he passes food to i himself, for so would the method of I good manners be kept alive and the social impulse would be hearkened tc "Father, I thank thee," says the Christ: and "in everything gic? thanks," says his brainiest follower And for one I will take this advice and will find provision for devotion in everything, books, folks, church, labor, song, tears and cares. And for the least and largest to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ will make my adoration for the Christ, my Saviour and my King. Will of Right. God has given every man the will tc do right, the will to succeed and tc persevere. That will is ours as long as we keep it under control and dc not allow It to become subservient tc our passions and our weaknesses.? Rev. T. H. McDonald, Roman Catho lie, Utica. To be beaten but not broken; tc strive and contend for the prize, anc to win it honestly, or lose it cheer fully?in all this there is testing anc training of character which is wortt all that it costs us.?Bishop Potter. . . * ! | THE WISE AND I FOOLISH VIRGINS H Sunday School Lesson for Oct. 2, 1910 Specially Arranged for This Paper I LESSON TEXT.?Matthew 25: 1-13. . Memory verses 10, 12. GOLDEN TEXT.?"Ee ye therefore ready also; for the Son of man cometh at an hour when ye think not."?Luke 12:40. TIME.?Tuesday afternoon, April 4. A. D. 30. PLACE.?On the Mount of Olives, overlooking Jerusalem, on his way te Bethany. Suggestion and Practical Thought. This is one of the most beautiful and touching of the parables. Poetry, painting and the drama have combined to give it an exceptional bold on the Christian imagination. The weird pathos of the story is unspeakable. The occasion is so happy, the agents so interesting, the issue bo tragic. The story is a picture of an oriental wedding. Among those friends of the bride who waited to join the procession were ten virgins. While they were waiting, the time of the procession being ever unknown, they became drowsy and slept in peace, knowing that the shouts and cries of the coming crowd would awaken them in time. They had no anxiety; the wise, because they had faith and were prepared; the foolish, by false security and by ignoring the future. The ten virgins had to wait till about midnight, when through the still air came shrili and clear "those peculiar shrill, quavering cries of joy, called Zugaret, which are heard throughout the east on occasions of special rejoicing. (See Rev. 19:6-9.)" And they i heard the cry: Behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him. The wise virgins trimmed and replenished their lamps with the oil which they had the forethought to bring with them. The foolish found their lamps burned out, but they had been too careless to bring extra oil with them. They begged oil of the wise, but they had none left; and advised the foolish to go to the source of supply where they should have gone earlier. While they were gone, the procession reached its destination; those who were ready went in to the marriage festival. And the door was shut. Like Esau the foolish virgins came too late for the blessing. They had thrown away their opportunity. The Lord was soon to depart by the wsy 01 tne cross, tiut ne promised to 1 return. He came back in the resurrection. He came in the coming ol the Spirit of the day of Pentecost. He came at the destruction of Jerusalem. He is coming in glory at the last day, when his kingdom shall come and his will be done on earth as it is in heav^en. The same principles apply to all whatever may be our understanding of the promise. Every crisis of our lives, every opening of opportunity, every crisis of the world or the church may be called Id Its degree a cominj of the Lord whose providence Is over all. (1) The coming Is something of the greatest value and blessing. It is like the wedding festival, full of the best of life. Even In the subordinate comings and crises of our lives, there is always a door, an , invitation, to something better than wo have had. Even death is a gate to heaven. (2) The time of the coming 1b always unknown, for ye know neith| er the day nor the hour wherein the Son of man cometh. T _ TTTU _ i, ttr-.. A TTT. X ? TTT- 1 ^1. 1 in wuau way Are vve iu waicu; i The company of watchers was divided - into two classes, the wise and the : foolish. The equality of numbers has . no bearing on the proportion of per, sons in real life who are wise or foolish. i The lamps signify the outward pro' fession, and the possibilities. All had some light, they had religious feelings, they were moved by the influences of the Holy Spirit. The oil is the spiritual life, the heart, whinh is the source of the flame, the visible manifestations of the Christian spirit. "But this significance was shown only by the burning lamp. Those who took vessels of oil, a permanent supply, were those who had the living reality of that which they professed, who put into practise, into character, that which shone forth from their lamps. Those who took no supply of oil had a surface feeling, like the s?;ed sown on rocky soil, which sprang up quickly and endured till persecution or trouble arose (Matt. 15:5, 6, 20, 21). They had no deep religious feelings, nothing wrought Into thitfr character, no abiding principles which led them to live up to their professions and hopes. Watchfulness consists in being prepared for every emergency, and every duty, as the wise virgins watched by having their lamps continually burning, and a full supply of oil to keep | them burning. "Header Harris, leader of the Pen! tecostal league, and an eminent lawi yer, got his first lift in life significantly. Employed in a drawing office of the Great Western Railway company's , engineering shops, he found young > A^noeinnollv cent / ! +Vi n lAlvu tycii; uwaoiuuuuj ogxit uu v* i_i llivj f line on responsible commissions. Ret ceiving instructions in the morning, i they spent the day preparing to start. Shocked at the waste of time, he filled a bag with traveling conveniences, and . took It to the office, to be ready to start at short notice. His companions ridiculed the idea. But one day the chief engineer came in and asked about the bag. The owner said: 'I determined, if I had a chance to go, to be ready. "You did? You see that train?' 'Yes.' 'Jump in; I'll telegraph instructions.' From that time Mr. Harris made rapid progress. They who , wait for Christ in readiness shall not , wait in vain." A ?J 4Ua CKnf T ' LIU uitr jlvuux yy as ouut. i uc , tunity came, and the gift in its hand i was gained or lost. There came a . time when it was too late to change. . This Is a fact of nature, as well as a truth of the Word. There is a tendency to fix the character, so that one will "ot change. In the missuse of ' the body there comes a time when it is ' impossible to ward off disease. We shut tue door against ourselves. No one I but ourselves is to blame for our not en1 tering. We shut the door by negligence to be prepared to enter. J SULTAN'S PIT GAME IS NOVEL Prisoners Placed In Labyrinth and Offered Freedom Under Unique Conditions. A certain Sultan who was fond of all manner of Intricate puzzles used to amuse himself by testing the ingenuity and resource of his prisoners of war. Among other buildings about his palace he had a peculiar maze, which consisted of 12 pits, open to the sky above and connected by a series of underground passages, which were quite dark. Upon one occasion he caused six prisoners to be placed in these pits, three of them dressed in red In the pits numbered 12 3, and three more dressed in yellow In the pits numbered 10, 11, 12. The Sultan commanded his vizier to provide each of these prisoners, who were complete strangers to one another, with a rifle and five cartridges, and to Inform them separately that any of them who could escape alive under the following conditions should be set lree and returned to his own country: The three dressed In red were to exchange places with the three dressI l/~?Trr V*itf Anlv nno man tuna to CU in ;cuun, uu?, \JUAJ vuw u*wM ??*%? %.w move at a time, upon a given signal, a belt for the red and a whistle for the yellow. Each man could move (TV (T) Jl>) >Xof 17 ^ & \ i 9 i 70K (i?/ (li) vH) Plan of Pit. ojly from the pit In which he stood to e.nother pit that he could see In a direct line with his own, the passage from one pit to another being always a direct line through the dark. As each pit commanded a view of two others, each man was told that if he saw another man dressed In a different color fro& himself standing In any pit he should fire upon him at once and kill him or the man whom he saw would In turn shoot at him. If any survived and got to the other side of the maze they would be set free. This plan having been explained to the prisoners before the day set for the experiment and each of them having been provided with a plan of the ma^e it appears that one of them had studied out a plan by which they might all escape with their lives, and when they were placed in the pits, the tops of which were open to the elrff Vin fn fKft AfV?nro in hlo Attrn on.j t at ww uxiv* viuwo in unu language and was delighted to find thai: they all understood him, whereupon he explained his plan and gave the word of command to each man as to the direction he should take. In 22 moves they had safely changed places, no red man having ever seen a yellow man and no two men having ever been In the same pit at the same time. How was this accomplished? MOTOR-CYCLE SIREN WHISTLE Powerful Alarm Device, to Be Placed on Front Fork of Machine, Is on Market. A powerful siren whistle, designed for attachment to the front fork of a motorcycle, just above the rim of the wheel, has been placed on the market, says Popular Mechanics. Attached in Powerful Siren Whistle. this way the bell of the whistle points j in the exact direction that the front | wheel of the machine is taking. Dense. One day the teaoher asked her class to write an es say on London, about which they had just been reading. When examining their papers later, she was surprised to read the following: "The people of London are noted for their stupidity." "Where did you get that from?" she asked of the little girl who had written the paper. "Please, teacher," the little miss replied, "It's all in the book. It says the population of London is very dense." A Good Idea. Said Janey: "I look volumes And why, I'll tell to you. I don't know how to read; so that's The best that I can do." Rose Guess. Any one can play this simple game. Take a full-blown rose, hold it up where all can see, then let them write on slips of paper how many petals they think axe in the rose. The petals are then counted and the nearest right recelveB a prize. OFFENSIVE MANNER3. A A i-A-i I .vM, ? ^ 0 How nicely little Cecil sits And eats his Cake In careful Bits? A Warning, John, to you. Whose Mouth Is filled with Beef and Egg, The Remnants of a Turkey's Leg, And half a dumpling, too. It really makes me feel quite hurt To see the Way that you Insert Your Fingers In the Dish; Such Mouthfuls, too. have ceased to bo Since Prophet Jonah Marv'lously Was swallowed by the Fish. Pray from the Joint remove your Fist, And do not stubbornly persist Good manners to offend. Romp Hnv vn'nll phnl/o unnn A SllcA. . Or suffocate from too much rice, And that will be your End. UNIQUE GAME WITH LETTERS Each Player Is Given a Vowel and Five Minutes to Write Sentence? Longest Wins. "Now," said Charlie, when everybody was gathered around the table, "let's play tbe vowel game father told us he used to play when he was a boy." "How do you play It?" asked everyone at once. "It's very easy," replied Charlie, distributing pencils and paper Impartially among the family group. "You take the five regular vowels, a, e, 1, o, u, and, beginning with the first letter, each player writes as long a sentence as he can, using no vowel except 'a' in any word, but repeating that letter as often as he wishes." , "I don't quite understand," said Cousin Lucy. "Please give us an example." "You'll have to give me a few minutes' grace, then," laughed Charlie, taking his pencil and paper. "Suppose I take 'a.' He wrote industriously a few minutes and then read the result aloud: "Ah, madam, Frank Farns, a tall, testy, black man at Panama, has a cat that can catch all bad ants and bats at Nathan's pantry and barn." "Bravo!" cried uncles and aunts and cousins, as Charlie finished reading the queer sentence. "You see," continued Charlie, "you may give the players five minutes, or any time you agree on beforehand, to make un the sentence. When the time la up, the sentences are read and the one having the longest sentence of good, plain, commonplace English has gained the first point. You go on this way for each of the five vowels, and when all the sentences are read and compared, the person who has gained the most points wins the game." A TRIP BEGUN IS HALF DONE. Willie, Jennie, Mary, Joe, Decided they would take a row From Boston down to Tokyo. Until up spoke the River Man: "I really do not think you can, For Tokyo Is in Japan." "But, why,' they asked In great dismay, "Could we not go a little way, And start ?agaln some other day?" What happened then, I do not know, But that was yesterday, and so They must have gone to Tokyo. LIFTING CATS AND RABBITS Mistake to Lift Animal by Nape of Neck Without Supporting Lower Part of Body. It is a mistaken idea that the proper way to lift a full-grown cat is by the nape of its neck without supporting the lower part of its body with the other hand, says Watchword. It is true that the mother cat carries young kittens by grasping in her mouth the loose skin at the back of her offspring's neck, but a tiny kitten is a very different matter from a large cat, and, indeefl, the only way to lift a kitten without squeezing or hurting its soft little body is to lift it by its neck; but after it has grown larger its own weight is too great to be supported by such a bit of skin and fur as is so grasped by the hand, and many a cat suffers perfect tortures by being held in this manner, and is quite helpless to run or struggle, as in such a position certain of its muscles cannot be controlled, and it is absolutely at **? aP Uo nnnnnonlnna fnrmfin. ine mcit; ui 'w iui uitUtor. The same rule should be observed in lifting rabbits by their ears. They should always be partially supported by the free hand and not allowed to dangle with their whole weight straining from their large but necessarily delicate ears. Even or Odd. This game is the most ancient, perhaps, that we know. The children who played in the streets of Athens pnd in the Roman Forum In early ages, knew and loved It, and little children find amusement in it still. Jt is played in this manner: One child hides in her hand a few beans, nuts, or just bits of paper, and asks her comnanion to guess if they are or even. If the playfellow guesses odd and on opening her hand the other displays an odd number, she forfeits the articles to the guesser, who hides them in her turn. But if the guess is cdd and the number even, the guesser pays a forfeit and the first hidei retains the feeans, etc. The guess must be right^o win. <A Conditional Situation. If littK. girls were not so stupid Ancf little boys were not such fools, And /no one needed any teaching. Tlfire'd be no public grammar schools. ACT PROMPTLY. Kidney troubles are too dangerous ' to neglect Little disorders grow se- po rlous and the sufferer Is soon in the au grasp of diabetes, dropsy or fatal , Bright's disease. ' ffini I D0^'8 Kidney Pills rig cure a11 distressing | V kidney ills. They fui JJNc Ja make sick kidneys ' ' nil st well, weak kidneys 7 Y strong. H. A. Townsend, 19 wl \ ? Knox St, Dansville, ssJ W N. Y., says: "I am Hi :??? satisfied I would not ? be alive were it not for Doan's Kid- " ney Pills. I endured agony that ao tongue can describe. Doctors did H their best but could not help me. fij Doan's Kidney Pills restored. me to health and strength." Remember the name?Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. SLOW. de ir~~~ pr M "What, hasn't George proposed g1 ret?" . w "No, what can you expect of a man who won't speed his' automobile over CJ fifteen miles an hour." 6j ir True Independence. p You will always find those who think they know what Is your duty better than you know It It is easy Jn the world to live after the world's opinion; It is easy in solitude to live " after "our own; but the great man is 0 he who, In the midst of the crowd, | keeps, with perfect sweetness, the In- * dependence of solitude.?Emerson. I For COLDS and GRIP Hicks1 CxruprsE is the beat remedy?re- ) lievta the aching and fererlshness?cores the f. Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid?effects lmmediatly. 10c., 25c., and 50c. " t drug stores. l*] Some men need tq be called down = about twice a day.N ? , " wvv/rn If you had positive proof female ills had made many re not feel like trying it ? If during the last thirty yeai convincing every faij-minded \ ham's Vegetable Compound ha sands of women of the ills pe long for an opportunity to do s Meanwhile read the following to be genuine and truthful. Hudson* Ohio.?" I suffered for Inflammation, dreadful pains ea< had been doctoring and receiving friend advised me to take Lydia ] pound. I did so. and wrote to you followed your directions and now of the Vegetable Compound, I hav a well woman. I give you full peri ?Mrs. Lena Carmocino, Hudson, St. Regis Falls, so bad that I had i and 14 would lasi I! wrote to you for a igHT ^tP<! ham's Vegetable < 'm/B oHji happy to say that ~ K!w!l tn<xri I s>Iti a rvnH en flatter for-*the go Breyere, St. Reg! There is abs< I \ ill a^ty of this gr LLLL II I Ithe roots and h female diseases. We possess \ enough to convince the most s For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkharr Compound lias been the standar( female ills. No sick woman do* herself who will not try this famo Made exclusively from roots an< has thousands of cures to its credi SSBflflflf* Mrs. Pinkham invites all gf&mr to write her for advic< guided thousands to health frei Address Mrs. Pinkham, For niQTFT . JL/1U J. Jm/1 / ( L J| t\\ \ 8ure cure acd posltlTepraren n l? I r^ffl fcl 111 II or"exposed." Liquid,glYen on t I? IS l^w Xy *) "J poisonous germsfrom fne body. \lP\ V /'s/ *>oultry - Lanrest selling 11 vesta \ /*S7 and Is a fine Kidney remedy. 60c ^ TMr />vy Keeplt. Miow to your druprgltt.< Causes and Cures." Special Agen SPQHN MEDICAL CO., ?< INCORPORATED One of the best equipped schools In the South. 1 faoilty. MORE GRADUATES IN POSITIONS th BOOKKEEPING, SHORTHAND and ENGLISH. KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, ,Ralelgrh, Nortl JT" We also veach Bookkeeping, Shorthuul, Penmase Can You Beat It? "Sir, are you against the railroad wer?" interrupted tlie man in the dience. 'I am!" shouted the Socialist orator. 'Huh! Yoji'rg traveling on a pasa;ht now!" 'Sure I am! I hate 'em so that I re- V. 3e to pay 'em money!" ' n She Was a Big Fighter. Mrs. Benham?Do you remember len I had my coming out? Benham?No; but it'must have been :e the launching of a battleship. iocs Your Baby Suffer Frnm din Hkpaw? 11 VIII Ulllll I/ijuioi^? He would be a heartless father In*1 J ed, who did not allay baby's sufferer as did Mr. E. M. Bogan of Enter ise, Miss. He says: -.J "My baby was troubled with break-: g out, something like seven-year :h. We used all ordinary remedies, ) 4 it nothing seemed to do any good itil I tried HUNT'S CURE and in ft ' w days all symptoms disappeared id now baby is enjoying the beflt of ialth." Price 50c per box. $ m Manufactured and Guaranteed Bjr . B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO. Sherman, Texas Bad Breath For months I had great trouble with my! . omach and used all kinds of medicines.1 [y tongue has been actually as green si' | rass, my breath having a bad odor. Two A eeks ago a friend recommended Cascaretsl id after using them I can willingly and -< leerfully say that they have entirely >< i red me. I therefore let yon know that I jail recommend them to any one suffer- 3 ig from such troubles."?Chas. H. Hal- /& trn, 114 E. 7th St, New York, N. Y. 'Jj Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good, ; 'j Do Good. Newer Sicken, Wsakeaor Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold In balk. The gen- ? nine tablet stamped CCC, Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 1 929 frf;nlMMS!tnTln Restores Gfay Hair to Natural Color/ v?l RIMOVKS OAHDHUFP AMD SCURF nrigorates and pretenta the bur from falling off, . :'4 For tale by Drugglata, or Sent Direct hjr , ' i-'i-cS CANTHIME CO., Richmond, Virginia 7 , rfca (I f*? Battle Sampte BottJa jse. Scad Hf Orcalaca ': . lEFIINCE STARCH i-ffl L N. U.f CHARLOTTE, NO. 39-1S10L i i M # ''"'IS UOK that a certain remedv for markable cures, would you , ' | s we have not succeeded ia YUIUcUl Uiai Lijuia jl>. JL lUtt.s cured thousands and thouculiar to their sex, then we 0 by direct correspondence. letters which we guarantee ' % < a long time from a weakness. :h month and suppression. I . only temporary relief, when a E. Pinkham's vegetable Com? 1 for advice. I have faithfully , after taking only five bottles e every reason to believe I am nission to use my testimonial." Ohio. B. F. D. No. 7* N. Y.?"Two years ago I was to take to my bed every month. t from two to three weeks. I ,d vice and took Lydla E. PinkCompound In dry form. I am i I am cured, thanks to your od advice. You may use my od of others." ?Mrs. J. H. s Falls, N. Y. )lutely no doubt about the and old remedy, made from erbs of our fields, to cure rnlnmpc nf nrnof nf thLs facL keptical. i*s Vegetable i remedy for es justice to u/f?T ^gja \Nj\ us medicine. 7 / fa 1 r i^herbs, and j 7/ I sick women fA 2*^3 Jn) * >. She has \\]\Ar^jSSS^f// 0 of charge. Lynn, Mass. ^"tvS^A^E PiNKHA^'"^ AXLE GKEASE Keeps the spindle bright and free from grit. Try a box. Sold by dealers everywhere. I STANDARD OIL CO. A (InoorporatedJ Pink Eye, Epizootic fl r I* I* - Shipping Fever " ?AI & Catarrhal Fever tlxe. no matter how hore#?atiinTsta<j? are Infected h e tongue; acts on the Blood and Glandsi expels the Care* Distemper In Dogs and Sheep ana Cholera In ek remedy. Cures La Grippe among ha man beings and II a bottle; f5 and 110 a doseo. Cut this out who will pet It foryou. Free Booklet, "Dlstempar. ts wanted. icter'lologlat# GOSHEN, 1N0., U. S. A. ^ A SCHOOL WITH A "uaZ# REPUTATION for DOING ^ HIGH GRADE WORK CHE LARGEST, THE BEST. The strongest an all other Business Schools in the State, Write for Handsome Catalogue. Addreu' 1 Carolina, or Charlotte, North Carolina, tflp, etc., by mall, Sena for Home Stndy OrcaUfc i