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DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cured by LydiaE-Pinkhaia's! Vegetable Compound ^ Galena, Kans.? "A year ago last March I fell, and a few day's after there was soreness in my right side. In a short time a bunch came and it bothered me so much at night I could not steep. It kept growing larger and by fall it was as Hr ^ar?e as a ben's egg. &;jW * could not go to ifH^) Ww\ ^ed without a hot 'III* / water bottle applied il| ppi to that side. I had gg& m one of the best docjllfi tors in Kansas and mtnc Jfi|i be told my husband 'WNMLSf r I ^"ould have to W/i/Tl I ^e ?Perated on as ^ ( /1! / o / 11J I was something liko a tumor caused by a rupture. I wrote to you for advice and you told me not to get discouraged but to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compousd. I did take it and soon the lump in my Bide broke and passed away." ?Mrs. R. R. Huey, 713 Mineral Ave., Galena, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from roots and herbs, | fias proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result Las been worth millions to many suffering women. If yon want special advice write forit toMrs.Pinkhara, Lynn,Mass. It is free and always helpful. ATCHISON'S ORDER OF SPINS Unmarried, and Contented Withal, They Have Mapped Out for Themselves a Pious City. There was called a meeting of the Ancient Order of Spins last evening, and papers were read on every subs Ject, from removing grease from carpets to the sad memories that attach to a bunch of old letters. The Spins were having a hilarious time whea a I viszung spin got up to mane a iew iemarks. She said that, while they are happy now, there was a sad time com| lng. "Think of the day," she said, "when, having no ,husbands or children, you will be all alone." There was a sniff and then a snort as Spin after Spin recalled wives and mothers who are alone from daylight till dark, except when some member of the family wants waiting on. The sniffling and snorting increased in volume as Spin after Spin told of her freedom from worry, her independence in financial matters and the Joy of doing as she pleased. "But we must not take offense at what our sister ias said," one Spin remarked. "Let us show our good intentions by calling on every lonesome wife and mother | we know." This was six weeks ago, and though the Spins have devo ~d every afternoon and evening since to this missionary work, they haven't madevhalf the rounds yet.?Atchison Globe. Good Advice, but A traveler entered a railway carIriage at a wayside station. The sole occupants of the compartment consisted of an old lady and her son, auuu i, mcuc ? cai o uiu. vi note occurred until the train steamed into the station at which tickets were collected. The woman, not having a ticket for the boy, requested him to "corrie doon." The traveler intervened and suggested putting him under the sf-at. "Man," said the excited woman, "it's as shair as death; but there's twa under the sait a'ready!" No Help Needed. A little miss of five years who had been allowed to stay up for an evening party, was told about 8:30 to go to bed. Very, very slowly she moved toward the stair. An aunt, seeing her reluctance, asked: ! "Helen, can I do anything to help you?" "No," replied Helen, "I will get there altogether too soon as it Is." Recipe for Happiness. Happiness would seem to consist of not longing for the things that would make us happy.?Life. If a woman doesn't hate a man all of the time she is in great danger of i lnvine him Dart of the time. i ' 1 "The Smack" of the "Snack" A. rOSi I Toasties if and Cream H A wholesome, ready|j| cooked food which 6| , youngsters, and older B' folks thoroughly enjoy. ^ Let them have all they ; w want. It is rich in nour- ; SB ishment and has a win- i r|| ning flavour? |j| "The Memory Lingers" agp postt'm rnni'al co., ltd., Buttle Creek, Mich. I OlffW * I .illjQi [The Treasure | and the Pearl fl ! B7 REV. E. SINCLAIR SMITH [ ! PMtor of Westminster Pre*byteri?n ffil JS Church, Houston, Texas JH THE TREASURE AND THE PEARL.... Text: What is the summum bonum? the chief good.?Matt. 13:44-6. Again the kingdom of Heaven Is like unto a treasure hid in a field, the which when a man hath found he | hi?eth and for joy thereof gceth and I selleth all that be hath and buyeth | that field. Again the kingdom of Heaven Is I like a merchant man seeking goodly pearls, who when he hath found one j pearl of great price went and sold all that he had and bought it. Prof. A. B. Bruco characterizes these two parables as the "Treasure and the Pearl" (or the kingdom of God as the summum bonum or chief good). These two parables constitute but one text and teach the same general lesson, the incomparable worth of the kingdom of uod. They show how the kingdom of God ought to be esteemed In whatever esteem it may in fact be held. Something that it Is worth while giving up everything else ir order to attain It. What is this supreme good of human life? We are all looking for hidden treasure. We are all seeking goodly pearls. The only question Is what treasure is, worth the most? What pearl has the greatest value? What Is best worth living for? What Is the summum bonum? What, according to Jesus Christ, is the phief good? The treasure it is worth while to barter everything else for? The priceless pearl whose value is greater than all else? Is- It not the kingdom of God set up in a man's heart? To have God's kingdom set up in a man's own heart, to be in touch and sympathy with the great Interests of Christ's eternal kingdom; this is worth while, worth living for, worth dying for. This is the only interest deep enough, high enough, comprehensive * ? enough to aDSoro a man a nucvuuu, arouse his energies, develop the best and broadest life. There is only one thing worth living for?the kingdom of God. Christ teaches and experience proves the truth of his teaching that only the kingdom of God set up in a man's heart can satisfy him. He may have everything else under the sun, but unless he has entered into living, loving fellowship with God his soul will thirst for the living God and will never be satisfied until satisfied in God. Man's chief good Is God. The living, loving God as recalled in Christ enthroned in the heart, the source of life eternal! this is man's chief good. "This is life eternal that they might know this the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent." Another term, our Savior uses in describing the chief good is "eternal life." If men only knew the significance of those two words?eternal life?they would give up everything they had on earth rather than not possess it. - - * J iV ~ Like toe man who iuuua UlltS UlUUCli treasure, they would sell all that they had to possess that field. Like the merchantman seeking goodly pearls, when they found this pearl of great price they would give up everything they had rather than to give up this priceless pearl. Let us study these parables a little more closely. They represent two different classes of men. The parable of the man who found the treasure hid in the field represents a man going about his daily business, living a surface life, unaware that just below the surface, if he would dig a little deeper, he would find a rich treasure, not knowing that there is a richer, better life In store for him, until accidentally. as it were, he stumbles upon "the Christian secret of a happy life" and goes on through life rejoicing in his newfound happiness. The parable of the merchantman seeking goodly pearls represents a different type of a man, one of high Ideals and expectations, always reaching cut after something better than he possessed, unt. at last, in bis seeking, he comes across the pearl of great price revealed in the peerless one, and he gladly parts with all that he has gained that he may possess It. Such a choice soul was Paul, who said: "What things were gain to me these have I counted loss for Christ. Yea, verily, and I count all things to be loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I suffered the loss of all things and do count them but refuse that I may gain him." Another choice soul was Justin, martyr, one of the early Christians, who tells us in his writings how he had traveled through the whole circle of Greek philosophy, seeking everywhere for that which would satisfy the deepest needs of his heart's soul, and ever seeking in vain, till he found it at length in the gospel of Christ. This parable represents an earnest, seeking soul finding at the end of its weary quest Christ, God's answer to the heart's need. We show our appreciation of the value of this treasure, this pearl, by the earnestness with which we seek to possess It. The man that fnund this hidden treasure sold all that he had i that he might possess this treasure. If the kingdom of God set up in the j heart is the chief good then our only | rational course is to give up evervI thing that hinders our possessing it. ' It is irrational to go through life with! out possessing ourselves of it. Requirements of Religion. "D 1 { rri/-?r-? n ilClifelUJl 1CV1UHCO 111 D I a XJCl'SUIl WOO | is right and righteous in his soul, and ! then an outward life of goodness and ! servile in harmony with that right | state within.?Rev. John W. Kowlett, j Unitarian, Atlanta. Sympathize Now. Don't wait until a man is gone to exi press your sympathy and eulogies. The flowers and kind words will not 1 do him any gcod then. The world now has too much epitaphy, and too little ! taffy.?Rev. Thomas Uzzel, Independ| ent, Denver. ? ?? "the last! i : judgments | Sunday School Lesson for Oct. 16, 1910 jj Specially Arranged for This Paper ' LESSON TEXT.?Matthew 25: 31-46. Memory versus 34-3C. GOLDEN TEXT.?"Inasmuch ns ye have done It into one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done It unto me." Matt. 25:40. TIME.?Tuesday, April 4, A. D. 30. The same day as our last two lessons. PLACE.?On the Mount of Olives. Suggestion and Practical Thought. That there is a day of judgment Is a fact, but It Is difficult, and not so important, to decide the exact nature or time of the coming of the Lord to judgment. It is said in Matt. 24:29-34' that "this generation shall not pass away till all these things be accomplished," and it is repeated in Mark 13:30, Luke 21:32, and again in Matt. 10:28, "there are some of them that stand here, which shall in no wise taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom," when "the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels, and then shall he render unto every man according to his deeds." This must refer to the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of the old dispensation or age. and the coming of the gospel dispensation. But' it does not exclude the great and final coming and judgment day at the end of that age. There Is really a judgment day at every great crisis of the nation or of our lives, at death, at the coming of rewards or punishments for our actions, at every time of decision. For instance, we have seen within the last few years many persons who have been for years growing rich by graft and dishonesty and have suddenly met their judgment day. while others have been reaping the rewards of faithful service. So young men who have been going on in course of drinking and rioting for a long time, suddenly find themselves drunkards, in ill health, incapacitated for their best work. They have been brought up at a judgment day; while those who have resisted temptation and been faithful and true are also reaping their rewards. v Then shall the king say unto them on his right hand. The sheep, the righteous. Come. Draw near to your Elder Brother, to your Father, to your home, for here is the plaQs for you. Ye blessed of my Father means exactly "my Father's blessed ones," denoting not simply that they have been blessed by him, but that they are his. Blessings innumerable had come " to them through their being willing to Vila arwl APP.PTlt th'5 kind of blessings he had to bestow, such as his loving care, the bestowal of the Holy Spirit, the experiences of the gospel, the renewal of the heart, sanctification by the Spirit, the power to become children and heirs of God. the gifts and fruits of the Spirit, eternal life, the favor of God, the rest in the everlasting arms, the pavilion under the shadow of his wings. Receive not by purchase, or by la^ bors, but by becoming children of God, like God, and therefore heirsheirs of God, and joint heirs with Jesus Christ. Every one must be the heir of him whose child he is. He that is a child of sin is an heir of sin; a child of the devil inherits from the devil; a^ child of goodness and of Gpd inherits from God. The kingdom of heaven, the kingdom which cor.sists in righteousness, peace, joy in the Holy Ghost (Rom. 14:17), in which saints reign over infinite forces and powers to make them minister to happiness and good: "All things are yours," because "ye are Christ's." ' Ye have done it unto me, the poor and needy and sick, and all the classes whom Jesus helped in Palestine are his reprasentatives now oa earth. The only visible expression of our love to him is through them. wnai a privilege imo is iu suun uui love to our Master. How it enriches our life if we keep in mind that we are not only helping the needy, but expressing our love to our Master. The unconsciousness of the righteous shows that their virtues were sincere and true. Whosoever does good deeds for the sak? of the reward deserves no reward, and will obtain none, fcr the soul of goodness is leit out of such deeds. Unconscious goodness is the highest form of goodness. The beginner i~i music counts his measures, and studies on what note he shall place each finger; but the perfcct musician strikes the right notes and expresses the right emotions almost as naturally as he breathes or as the birds warble their morning songs." The cause of the doom was the refusal to do the deeds that belong to ihe heavenly kingdom and to be ruled by its motive/. They refused to bi fit for heaven They decided to li_ selfish lives. The plan of their lives was such th't all the evils of society?graft, ct'M labor, poverty, degradation, crime, oppression, drunkerness, disease, could go on without any effort on their part to put an end to them. The punishment is like the sin: it omits heaven and joy and God and the companionship of the good from our lives, and adds the everlasting fire. This is a warning of love. It Is a statement of the fact that by the very nature of things sin leads to ruin, and righteousness to heaven. No evil can enter heaven, for if it did heaven would not be heaven any longer. President Eliot of Harvard, In an address to nicdical men, said thai however people might refuse to believe in a future hell, it was the doctor's business to show young men that if they persisted in certain vices they would find a hell in this life. It is for each of us to make the choice, and start on the way which leads where we wish to go and live forever. The law of the harvest Is "to reap more xuan you suw, Curbing the Appetites. If the biceps require the dumb-bells, if the intellect require mathematics, logic and classic, so the appetites and desires require careful disciplining if the fullest life is to be obtained.?Rev. A. A. Brown, Episcopalian. Akron. IMIMM??? !|Z||piT^KEN I iSS^ABINET I Eg O INSURE good digestion, exer else daily In the open air, eat an abundance of fruit and drink pure water freely between meals. Plain, simple foods, as direct as possible from fields, orchards and woods, should always bo our aim. Planning for a Small Family. When catering for a small family, care, judgment and economy must be used or one kind of food must be served several times in order to avoid waste. wnen purchasing utensils ana aisnes for cooking, choose the size most suitable to the size of the family, as such an investment has a great advantage even in serving leftovers. In buying a roast, too small a one dries out In cooking and is not an economical purchase. -The beef left over may be served In slices heated in a Mexican sauce curry, tomato, or horseradish sauce. The little bits too small to serve may be chopped and seasoned, then used as sandwich filling, or one c^n always have hash. Bits of leftover vegetable like carrot, beans or corn, may be added to a salad greatly to its advantage. Eggs contain no waste and add tc the nutriment of a dish. When ma king an omelet if a few peas are at band folc'l them in at the last 01 serve in a sauce poured 'around an omelet. Very tempting desserts may be made from stale cake cut in rounds 01 fancy shapes, a preserved pear 01 peach, with a little of the syrup and whipped cream served on each piece. For a small family one can make so many attractive little dishes thai would be entirely out of the question with a hirger family. When using gas a small portable oven to be used over a burner is a great saving. A delicious dessert which is both pleasing to the eye and the palate ii prepared by beating together a hall cup of any favorite jelly and the white of one egg. It will take a little time to beat until it stands alone, but the resuty will repay the effort. Serve in sherbet cups with sweetened whipped cream on top. A change i'rom the usual French toast may be made by cutting the bread in rounds or in some fancy shape, dip in egg and milk and fry in butter as usual. Often a dish refused many times will be welcomed if the appearance is changed. It is necessary in all successful cooking to appeal first to the eye. might while I do live. Resolved. never to lose one moment of time, but Improve it in the most profitable way I possibly can. Resolved, never to do any thing Which I uhould deSI>'.se or think meanly of in another. ReBolved, never to do any thin? out of revenge. Resolved, never to do any thing which I should be afraid to do if It were the last hour of my life. ?Jonathan Edwards. J-eaks That Sink the Household Ship. Meat is the most costly and extravagant of all articles of food. Consequently every bit should be saved and worked over. The cheaper cuts of meat make the best soups and stews. Where a sauce Is used to hide the appearance there Is no occasion to spend money on choice cuts. Soup meat, tasteless as It is, may be nicely seasoned and made Into pressed meat, hash or other dishes quite as good. Meat left from beef tea should be saved for highly seasoned dishes. The water has drawn out the flavoring and the stimulating principles of the beef, but the fiber, which contains the greater part of the nourishment, is left undissolved. After using all the ham that will slice nicely from the bone, chip the remainder for frizzled ham and put the bone in the soup pot. An ordinary me-t grinder will save money and hours of time, as it chops all kinds of food easily. Fat from meats and soup stock should be carefully saved and clarified, and if carefully done no fat need be bought for general frying. Tea leaves should be pressed tightly after they have been used and put away to use In sweeping the carpet. They both brighten the carpet and keep the dust from flying ovtir the walls and furniture. A little water In the wooder. tubs will prevent them from falling to pieces. Twine laken from bundles, If ded together and wound in a ball will aways be ready when a string Is wanted. Fold pieces of manilFa pape:: and put in the wall pocket on the pantry door. Use them for sifting flour and save tlipfe and dishes. A piece of paper makes a good moulding board when thickly dusted with flour Old tablecloths make fine tray cloths or strips for the table to sa\e the cloth. They are nice for bread and cake cloths, to cover them af:er baking. Put the scrubbing brush, vegetable brush and hairbrush bristle side down to dry, otherwise the water soaks Into the brush and soon destroys it. - // /UZAsU*? What Women Have Done. It was a woman who invented pantaloons, the Turkish women first wearing tliem, and the trousers men wear are all evolution. In fact, it seems that women are responsible for most of the good and bad things in the world. Where Not to Fight. The man who fights in the last ditch may be brave, but the world keeps most of its admiration for the men who show their fighting qualities before the last ditch Is reached. LOOK TO YOUR KIDNEYS. H When Suffering From Backache, Head- c aches and Urinary Troubles. They are probably the true source of your misery. To keep well you must keep your kidneys well. There Is no |tj iLmj better kidney remedy u H than Doan's Kidney o: 1 ^ll3- They cure sick S ' kidneys and cure them tl "Mrtur permanently. d JETi E. C. Hampshire, h M B^\i17a*r 708 E. Brambleton ^ 1 at St, Norfolk, Va., says: "I suffered from kid- e ney colic and the S I?????J pain during some at- 8 tacks was so severe that It required a two strong men to hold me. The only relief I received was from morphine Injections. I was completely cured P by Doan's Kidney Pills and believe they saved my life." Remember the name?Doan's. ' For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. a | ' v ENGAGEMENT NOW OUT. * Ethel?Weren't you surprised when you heard about my horse running away with me? Ernest?Not very. I'd do the same thing myself if I got the chance. BABY'S SKIN TORTURE ' "When our baby was seven weeks old he broke out with what we thought was heat, but which gradually < ?rew worse. We called In a doctor. < He said it was eczema and from that time we doctored six months with three of the best doctors in Atchison but he only got worse. His face, head < and hands were a solid sore. There was no end to the suffering for him. 1 We had to tie his little hands to keep him from scratching. He never ' knew what it was to sleep well from 1 the time he took the disease until he was cured. He kept us awake all ' hours of the night and his health wasn't what you would call good. We tried everything but the right thing. "Finally I got a Bet of the Cuticura Remedies and I um pleased to say we did not use all of them un?ll he was cured. We have waited a year and a half to see if it would return but it never has and to-day his skin is clear and fair as it possibly could be. I hope Cuticura may save some one else's little ones suffering and also their pocket-books. John Leason, i 1403 Atchison St, Atchison, Kan., Oct. 19, 1909." Now They Steep Inside. Georga H. Beattle, jeweler in the old Arcade, and L. E. Ralston, auditor nt tYia Mania have inlntlv And fiftVftral ly decided that sleeping out In the open Isn't all that It has been declared to be, says the Cleveland Leader. They were both In a deep snooze out at the Beattle farm, near Chagrin Falls, the other night, when a runaway team from the county fair city turned into the lane leading up to the Beattie estate and came along at full speed. Sound asleep, but dreaming of Impending danger, Ralston rolled opt of his cot toward the north, and Beattle from his cot toward the south. The runaway horses dashed between the sleepers, oversetting everything In the way, but missing Beattie and Ralston by margins too narrow to be measured. Since that night Ralston has slept In his town house and Beattle has found shelter under the ample roof of his house on his big plantation. Why He Wouldn't Hurry. They were riding to church and j were late. Several of the party were worried and one remarked: "The audience will be waiting." "Well," observed the old pastor (who was to preach that forenoon), "don't let's fret over It If we are a little late. It reminds me of the man who was being taken to execution. His guards were greatly exercised over the fact that they could not possibly get tnere on time. 'Never mind,' said the poor fellow, philosophically. 'Don't fuss over it. ' The people can waft. There'll bo nothing doing till I get there.'"? Christian Herald. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes andGranulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart?Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eyo Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. j Latest Mine Horror. The Doctor?Of course, if the operators in the anthracite and bituminous fields form a coalition? The Professor?Then there will be nothing for the consumers to do but I coalesce. (Slow curtain.) For COLDS and GItIP Hicks' Cafudixe Is the best remedy?relieves the achinfr and feverlshness?cures the I Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid?effects lmmedlatly. 10e., 25c., and 50c. At drug stores. None so little enjoy life, and are such burdens to themselves, as those who have nothing to do. rme active only have the true relish of life. Win by Being Prepared. Those who are prepared for the worst are the ones who generally get | the best of it. PUTNAM Color more good] brighter and (aster colors than ar You can dye any garment *-'?hout ripping apart. Write (o IIS RUBBERS HAD VANISHED ronsequcntly Man From the Country Had Little Use for City Methods. The benches in the waiting rooms t the Union depot In Kansas City are sed for other purposes than to rest a by travelers, the Kansas City tar enlightens us. At every midnight le maids clean out the rooms. They o not forget to poke under the enches for stray bundles left by trustig travelers. Sometimes, after intervals, the travlers return to claim their property, ome time ago a red cap at the depot aw a man in a linen duster, a felt hat I, nd the manner of one who had spent p Is life in a secluded part of the j, izarks get down on his knees and eer carefully under several of the | enches. ' ' "Lost anything, mister?" the red cap ueried. "Wall, no, sonny, not a'zactly. I left / pair of rubbers here last January L. rhen I was on the way tew Emporey. _ lain't seen nuthin' of 'em, have you?" I The red cap explained that he B adn't, and, moreover, that the room ad been cleaned out several aozen Imes since last January. he "Well, I swan," replied the traveler, illnklng and stroking his beard, "the ^ lty methods do beat me." th< : hii FAIRLY WARNED. th< ^ of^ . ^ I I The Slugger?An' see here, you I 1 lon't wanter be goin' around braggin' I !at It was me wot soaked you, see! Woman-Like. '1 hate him! I think be is the mfean- A sst man I ever met" I "Gracious, Jeanette! What Is the trouble?" "Why, he. told me he loved me de- A, notedly and I told him it would be impossible for me to love him in return. _ The poor fellow looked so downheart- g ed I told him to try and forget me,'' Q "Well?" x P "Boo-hoo! He he?did!" } Of Course. Ji "What's the matter?" J "Cold, or something in my head." "Must be a cold, old man."?Lippin- ? cott's. < VV r" || Weak and delicate ladies r U into their pale cheeks and enerj KSV I\cau U11S icuyi uum ling, iuvi IB giving an account of her expei relief: tjjl "I was hardly ever without NJ a misery in my back and sides, nj in bed half the time, and suffei ||j ralgia of the stomach. Since t j? tonic, I have gained 10 pounds pi my own house-work, and wash I? ook like a different person." 1 The Womar ^ No harmful effects can poss from the use of Cardui, the woi 51 women have written, like Mrs. benefit they obtained from its us P Cardui is a reliable tonic. U medicinal herbs, acting mainly oi H and building up both nervous ai Pure, strictly vegetable, safe |fl ideal remedy, for delicate, ailing |1 Try it At all druggists. On Yah f?r> M uu T:iat the NORTH CAROLINA AGRICULTU turning out graduates who, as scientific farm* teochers, are In great demand? That board, lodging and tuition cost only 87 That you, young man, cannot afford to raise For catalogue or free tuition write TODi Mechanical College, Greensboro, N. C. INCOKPOIATCD One of the best equipped schools In the South. 1 faculty. MORE GRADUATES IX POSITIONS thi BOOKKEEPING, SHORTHAND and ENGLISH. KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Raleigh, North fj~ We also teach Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Pen ma n*l / manufacturer! . ( Booklet tflvew. B>\lljKji^r^w6?MiaM??t^ W?,v homo romciijr 8P0HW MEDICAL CO., Chtx FADELES iy other dye. One 10c package colon all fibers. Thi rfree booklet?How to Dje, Bleach and Mix Color*. MC s the price of HUNTS CJURE. TUte B rice will be promptly refunded ff - / t does not cure any case of M SKIN DISEASE I mLL drug stores j i ^Mjlcharda Medio I n< Co.. Sherman, Tex. | headache "My father has been a sufferer from sick \ H adache for the last twenty-five years and ' <*j*J ver found any relief until he began ^ cing your Cascareta. Since he na?^ 'jig gun taking Cascarets he has never had i headache. They have entirely cured < n. Cascarets do what you recommend im to do. I will give you the privilege > [ $ usrtag his name."?E. M. Dickson, 20 Resiner St, W. Indianapolis, Ind. Pleasant, Palatable, Potent Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken/Weaken or Gripe. * 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold In bulk. The een* . 'ijl. nine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to -< core or yoor money back. 925 Talking Parrot ..J *r. ana uage * a Y?? cm have on* ,X' .FjeL of theie Parrou In your home for (tira* aoafU I on trial. If It doein't make a good talker?ara I gladly axehang* It for one that will. I The cage we funiUh U a large, bright. itael I cage, II inchea high. 3 The Parrot and cage. 110 delivered tr?? any^* ? I CUSUY&MOLLENi^USSrft M The Largeat Pot Shop In tho World, I Dropsy ? V Removes all awelling In 8 to SO .. ^jl iv I' days; effect a permanent cure ia I WsL 30 to 6o days. Trial treatment I ?'veD,ree- Nothing can be fairer. I Write Dr. H. H. Green's SoM ' Tra Specialists. Box B. Atlanta. fiC I Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color/ RKMOVKS DANDRUFF An SCURF , V'gH| ivigoratei and prevents tbe hair (rots tailing at, _ :J For Sat* by Drugglata, ?' aant Blroot'fey '/jjwj ANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia . ^ 1c? fl ft So til*; Sample BotUa jsc. Sen* f?f ClrtatuR . ?i f. N. U., CHARLOTTE. NO. 41-1910, | -1 irience I | ieed Cardui, to bring roses I J gy into their weary frames. I I&ln irt Root, of Amanda, Ohio, B ience, and how she found H a headache, and often had I |.'(J she writes. "I was sick B red a great deal from neu- B aking Cardui, the woman's , and now I can do all of B ling, and my friends say,I B ;~?ji ^ 10 i's Tonic I >ibly come'to young or old B nan's tonic. Thousands of B RoOt, to tell of the great B its ingredients are mild, B n ?mmanlv rnnstitutinn.' M 11 UiV IT VHIUIU; J id vital energy. gfi and reliable?Cardui is an women. |g ' Tb^ North Carolina Is for^V. "Cim 7 nislling the Negro youth 9 D WW upon the lowest terms, the W m ery best facilities for industrial training? RAL AND MECHANICAL 90LLEGE is :rs, skilled mechanics and well prepared .00 per month? 1 this opportunity? LY to President Dudley, Agricultural A A SCHOOL WITH A VcM# REPUTATION for DOING ^ HIGH GRADE WORK 'HE LARGEST, THE BEST. The strongest in all other Business Schools in the State, Write for Handsome Catalogue. Address 1 Carolina, or Charlotte, North Carolina, lip, etc., by mall. Bend for Home Study Circular. AXLE GREASE Keeps the spindle bright and free from grit. Try a box. Sold by dealers everywhere. iSTANDAND OIL CO. ' ^ (Incorporated} ,T DISTEMPER d very eoelly. The sick are cared, and all others la d matter how "exposed," kept from having the dls> f bPOUN-a LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE^Glye on : la (cod. Acta on the blood and expels germs ot stemper. Beet remedy ever known for mares In fooL iran teed to cure one case. COcon^ll a bottle; tSaod ugjflstcand harness dealers, or sent express paid by j. L'ui ano?a now w |njaiun> 1IUV evervthlntr. Local igtou wanted. Largest telling Ln existence?twelve yours. auti?=<m?urioioguu, Coshen, Ind., U.S. A. 1 iS DYES w; sr dye In cold water better than any ether dre. 1MROE ORUQ CO., Qu/noy, Illinois I