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I 8UFFERED FIFTEEN YEARS. i i !How Chronic Kidney Trouble Wai Permanently Cured. ! F. P. Semmel, Sr., 236 N. Gth St, ILehighton, Pa., says: "For over 15 years I suffered from kidney trouble My kidneys were weak; the secre ttlons contained sedi ( ment and passed with a smarting sensation. Sharp pains shol through my body and i bent me almost double. 1 I became so bad 1 could not drive to my 1 work. After doctoring 1 without benefit, I began taking Doan'E 1 Kidney Pills and soon received relief. 1 Continued use cured me. I believe ' Doan's Kidney Pills saved my life." J Remember the name?Doan's. For fcaffi hv nil ripalprs SO ppnts a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y ' Love him and keep him for thj friends, who. when all go away, will , perish at the last.?Thomas a Kempls , Mrs. WlnsioWs Soothing: Syrup for Children teethtnjr, softens the fjums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. It is never quite polite to contradict a girl, except when she says she doesn't want to be kissed, and then it can be done silently. For COLDS and GRIP Hicks' Cal'UBINE is the best remedy?re lleves the achiiiR and fevcrishness?cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid?effects immediatly. 10c., 25c., and 50c. At drug stores. The Way It Looked. Mrs. Benham?How do you like my hat? Benham?You mean the one with the mayonnaise dressing? ' A Biased Opinion. "Do you think buttermilk will prolong one's life, Colonel Soaksby?" "Ahem! I have no doubt, Miss Plumper, that if a person had to drink 1 UfitAwmillr AV/MMf j-J TT { t" m O L'Q f UUCLC1111 11 A. C? CIJ UCIJ Aw ?? isuiVA uacixxc v life seem longer." ? f Like the Other Kind. It was in a "down east" village that t the young man .met his sweetheart, a c charming country beauty. When he 1 returned to the city he sent her a jar 1 of cold cream to keep her cheeks as g fresh as the budding rose. a On his next visit he asked her how t she liked his little gift. t "The taste was very nice," 6he d said, with a rather sickly smile, "but e r I think that I like the other kind of c cream best, dear."?Lippincott's. d t Tit for Tat. Lloyd C. Griscom, in an interview a In New York, said of party dissen- t sions: | \ "They are animated by a nasty spir- j d |t, a tit-for-tat spirit; and they go ! ? from bad to worse. | 5 "It'ff like the case of the engaged f 0+ fVin ooflcirlo Hqtipo Thft r young man, a little jealous, said cold- c tty to his fiancee at supper: i " 'Let me see?was it you I kissed \ In the conservatory?" I '"About what time?' the young girl c answered, with a little laugh." t Popularity of Thais. . : "Every other young actress ts call- . lng herself Thais," said Henry E. Dix- t ey at a dinner at Mauquin's. "Thais McGinnis, Thais Endicott, Thais j ^ Schmidt?the thing is universal. "Universal and ridiculous; for they whokhave read Anatole France's story of 'Thais' know* that she' was a very naughty little girl, indeed. I am quite cure that no real reader of 'Thais' would ever, under any circumstances, / V consent to be called such a name. "It makes me think of a man who, 8 taking his infant daughter to be bap- 13 tised, told the clergyman to call her Venus. 8 " 'But I refuse to call her Venus,' c said the clergyman, indignantly. 'Ve- 8 Zius is the name of a pagan goddess.' r " 'Well, Liow about your own girl, 1 Diana?' said the man." a History of Red Cross Seal. : "Charity stamps," first used In 1 .Boston in 18C2 for the soldiers' relief t jfunds during the Civil war, were the r original forerunners of the Red Cross 8 (Christmas seal, which will be used a (this year to bring happiness and cheer t :to millions. The Delaware Anti-Tu- F }berculosis society in 1907 for the first Itime in America made use of a stamp \ F for the purpose of getting revenue to |1 ;fight consumption. In a hastily or- c jganized campaign of only three weeks 8 they realized $3,000. The next year. '1908, the American Red Cross con- 1 iducted the first national tuberculosis 8 -stamp campaign. From this sale $135,- 1 1000 was realized for the anti-tubercu- 3 jlosis movement. In 1909, under many c adverse conditions, $250,000 was rea- 2 lized from these stamps. This year the slogan of the tuberculosis fighters 1 and the Red Cross is "A Million for e Turberculosis From Red Cross Seals 1 j In iqt0." t V C Toothsome \ Tid=Bits ! ; t 111 i Can be mads of many ordinary "home" dishes by adding ; Post : Toasties . The little booklet, "GOOD THINGS MADE WITH TOAST- 1 j IES," in pkgs., tells how. Two dozen or more simple in- , j expensive dainties that will delight , the family. | "The Memory Lingers" 1 Postrnn Cereal Company, Ltd^ Battle Creek, Mich. j j |v ) ( Enoch, Man Who f Walked With God J By REV. C. A. S. DWIGHT, D. D. J| Text?And Enoch walked with God; uid he was not; for God took him.?Gen. 5:24. God has many distinguished servants whose dignity is all derived from their heavenly Master. The names and histories of many of these, as portrayed in the Scripturaes, are :oupled with teil-tale epithets or brief characterizations, which have now become familiar as household words, Lhat are significant of the peculiar aptitudes and achievements of the men to whom they are applied. Of Dne man in the Biblo a phrase is used (applied elsewhere to one other, Noah) which is strangely suggestive and wonderfully inspiring?for it is said ol Enoch that he "walked with God." Ail men, good and bad, walk in the 3ight of God, and all good men may be said to walk before or in the pressnco of God?guided by his -eye, ;hone upon by uis glory, and surrounded by tokens of his love?but of lhat primal, pre-eminent man of an jarly rude age it is declared that he talked "with God," which must mean something very illustrious, and denote i nignity almost, if not quite, uneximpled in the whole course of human listorv. The character of Snoch, as viewed iirough the lengthened vistas of the rarying ages, seems to shine with a sure white light almost, if not quite, inearthly. Its gleam v/as never light:ned on man-made altars, the sheen is lot dimmable by earth-born mists or jarish glare or historic contravenions. We cannot know just what vere the psychologic qualities of this loly, happy man, but we may be sure )f one thing, that his character was iingulariy pure, far above that of his ellows, or the unexampled honor of 'walking with God" and of being xanslated without hint or hurt of leath would never have been given to iim. "Be ye holy, for I am holy," must lave been fulfilled in marvelous de ;ree m r^uucu s case, ne was a suuiier, ls were others of his contemporaries, rnt somehow, in closo contact with he fires of the Divine holiness, the Iress of his own humanity was burnid away so that even before he was :aught aawy to paradise, he became letached from earth and filled with he very spirit of heaven. Enoch walked with God it appears, is a prophet. God may have revealed o him in quiet, tender converse many wonderful secrets of his plans. What lid Enoch see in prophecy? Who mows but that in those ecstatic 300 ears there may have passed beore his vision, revealed by the diect will and wish of Jehovah, the lutlines of redemption?the coming listory of the ages, exhibited as it rere, in an elongated panorama, all llustrating the wonders of grace and entering about the cross, whose disant gleam Enoch's quickened eyes aay have clearly seen? Paul, in a ater age, was taken up into the third leaven ? why may Enoch not have leen granted the visicfn of a redeemd earth? We cannot saov that it was o?but we may wonder whether such Ireams and visions did not come to hat holy and unique man. We are told, at any rate, in the pistle of Jude, of a wonderful vision rhich Enoch had of the consummaion of human history, when the Lord rill come with ten thousand of his ingels'to visit a dire punishment on ingodly inein?a message which seems o have been a quotation from or an .daptation of, a prophecy in the Book if Enoch, which last is a collection of .pochryphal stories regarding mony latters in nature and in life which he chruch has declined to Introduce nto the canon, and does not receive .s veritable Scripture. The general ruth holds good at all events that he nearer one walks with God and he more transparent is the moral lature of any believer the broader nd grander is the vision which such . one enjoys of eternal things?for in be highest ranges pi Christian ex lerience being is seeing. There is need today for the translarent, guileless, reverent, meditative inoch-like type of character?a frame ir fashion of moral being which may ,eem, indeed, quite foreign to the Zeitgeist" or prevailing spirit of the imes. . Yet in a rushiDg age, more, if tVi n n Ir* ? ?? ' ku; UJ1U5, CAAM.JU lii O.JUJ \J LUC1 t 14 LLItJU leed the close converse with their >laker to kep them poised amid so:lal agitations steadily against the issaults of temptation, and cleariyed amid the whirl and swirl of lumberless worldly distractions. It hould not be thought, because Enoch ived in a simple age, that, therefore, le enjoyed exceptional opportunities or being religious, while in this charicteristically worldly day it is quite >ut of the question to maintain a ipiritual frame. The fact is that Snoch livea in an age that was rude, iotous and coarse, when vice was ampant, when the sanctions of so:iety itself were largely lacking,, when here were no Bibles, churches, Enleavor societies, religious clubs or eligious books or weeklies, and, herefore, it was all the more to his )raise that, under conditions even nore unfriendly, perhaps, to right:ousncss than those that obtain tolay, he talked with God and com)orted himsnlt' as beQtter a saint of ho Most High. The Arithmetic of God. The lad with the loaves and fishes svas willing to give up his lunch. 'Subtracting" it from himself, he 'added" it to the resources of Jesus, lesus "divi led" the gift, that it might be distributed, and in the division it ivas "multiplied" until the great throng was fed. So there is a divine arith naeuc. home 01 us ruies may De hintid at here. What We Need. The greatest need today is not more nen. but more man. Not more women, Dut more woman. To be rich in deed md in truth is ultimately consciousloss.?Rev. James Montgomery, Meth)dist, Denvor. THE ANOINTING] K Sunday School Lesson for Oct. 30, 1910 I I-esson Text?Matthew 26:1-16. Memory verse 13. Golden Text?"She hath done what she could. "-Mark 14:8. B0 Time?Saturday, April 1, A. D. 30, the day before the Triumphal Procession. Place?House of Simon the leper, at Bethany, on the Mount of Olives. Sn The place of the supper was Bethany, In the house of Simon the leper. at< We have met this family twice before wi this in their home. One picture of lit them is presented to us in Luke 10: bo 38-42. Here we see Martha busily th< preparing the meal for Jesus' enter- vi< tainment; a busy and anxious house- ho keeper. This was in the autumn previous to the present occasion. foi The second picture is presented to an us by John (II: 20-44). Since the first th picture their brother Lazarus had w:. died, and been restored by Jesus; and si;! although Martha Is even more busy kii than before, yet she is restful and a peaceful In her work. She is not sq cumbered with her business, nor an- 01 gry with Mary, nor casting reflections of on Jesus. She has learned something be in the day of sorrow and darkness. Pr She has not lost any of her power to serve, but the manner of her service has been transformed. Thus the two foi sisters each gained something of the ca virtues of the other. su At the present feast Mary and Mar- BP tha were each serving in the way dr natural to them. Lazarus sat at the WJ table as a guest with Jesus in whose an honor the feast was given. Simon was an at the head of the table. As was customary in the Orient the villagers In were attracted to look upon the scene, an and see the distinguished guests. It is a great blessing to have such a home as is presented to us at Beth- a any, as a living picture to be held up ?* before all the homes in the world, an especially when we add to it the scene where Jesus takes little children in his arms and blesses them. The star ? of Bethlehem for morals and religion, ? ^ for the millennium, stands over the ^ home where Jesus is. There came unto bim a woman. This , woman was Mary, the sister of Martha and Lazarus. Having an alabaster _ box, rather, a cruse or flask. Of very precious ointment, a liquid perfume, Iji more like an oil, as oil of roses, than ji the thicker compositions we commonly fili know as ointment. It was so strong that it filled the whole house with its odor. Very precious. Horace offers or to give a cask of wine for a very small un box of it. Compare the attar of roses, su< made at Ghazipoor in Hindustan, and bGI which requires 400,000 full-grown roses to produce one ounce, and which sells when pure, in the English ware^ jQ( houses, as high as $100 an ounce, or j $1,200 for as much as Mary's pound faj of Spikenard. Anointing the head of a rabbi at st( such feasts was not an unusual honor; but anointing the feet was unusual, aj] and expressed the tenderest, must 0f humble, most reverential, unutterable bo affection. Mary not only anointed th< Jesus, but she took "woman's chief se ornament" and devoted it to wiping pe the travel-stained feet of her teacher. She devoted the best she had to even pri the least honorable service for him. John says that "the house was filled bu with the odor," as indeed the church th and the world have been filled with do the odor of this loving deed. When his disciples saw it, they had indignation. John tells us that Judas to Iscariot was the leader and the ey mouthpiece of the indignation against as Mary. The plausible arguments of a Is positive man, wearing a mask of vir- H< uie, ana speamng 111 ueaan 01 some of the very principles their Master had enforced, had brought some of the ra' disciples into more or less sympathy a& with his feeling of indignation. It P? is easy to see how it might seem a cu useless waste, as some now Imagine sa' that the money spent upon; great of churches, and on foreign missions, P^1 might better be given to the poor. SP She hath wrought a good work upon me. The Greek adjective implies J" something more than "good," a noble, ' an honorable work. "The spirit which ^ offers precious things, simply because ar( they are precious, . . . is a good and just feeling, and as well-pleasing to God and honorable to men, UQ as it is beyond all dispute necessary ^ to the production of any great work in gt. the kind with which we are at present vo concerned." "Costliness! is an external sign of love and obedience." "It is not sj2 the church we want, but the sacrifice; Bll not the emotion of admiration, but a the act of adoration; not the gift, but jcc the giving." ov The act was even better than her ha thought. It was her last tribute of tei affection. "Jesus was at a crisis of die his life when it was of the- utmost 0f value to him to know that he had won co< a place in a human heart." thi This story has been told in every dr< known tongue, and is now being re- pe lated in more than four hundred different languages to every great nation w on the earth. No monuments, not / even the Pyramids, are as enduring, Mary ia still i. uring out the precious nard in an endless living stream, the fragrance thereof still Is filling human hearts and lives all over the world. * Like Abel, "being dead, she yet speak- ont eth." For a memorial of her. By tov which her deed shall be remembered; car not to glorify her, but to continue her ^a? usefulness, to give immortality to her ^rc character and influence. She is like ma the fabled founiain, each drop of 3t? whose water was the source of another similar fountain. ^Ir We are told in the Iiritannica that , the late Dr. Septimus Piesse "endeavored to show that a certain scale or ma gamut existed among odors as among sounds, taking the sharp smells to "** correspond with high notes, and the heavy smells with low." "He assert- ! ed that to properly constitute a bou- da, quet, the odors to be taken should ad' correspond in the gamut like the notes m( of a musical chord?o:ae false note among the odors, as in music, destroy- ne ing the harmony." So the fragrance he from Mary's flask of nard fills 1he world with a chorus of odors, the ,ja many forms in which the fragrance of |a, her deed has been expressed by count- <jj< less numbers. IIM PJOfgifENT ?jj HE heart should give charity w JBk when the hand cannot til oil and truth will get uppermost a at last. w i ounce of mother is worth a pound of m clergy. 1 ?Joseph Parker. IE nail Cakes for Various Occasions, b! The following recipes are appropri- n 3 to serve with frozen dishes or bi th tea or chocolate. Many delicious tie cakes and cookies may be ught; but no matter how attractive a ey are, one likes the touch of indiluality which is shown in cakes of c< me manufacture: M Chocolate Nut Cake.?Cream threeurths of a cupful of butter, add one pj d a half cupfuls of sugar gradually, en alternate a half cupful of milk th two and a quarter cups of flour . ted with three teaspoonfuls of bang powder several times to insure 0< thorough mixing, then add three w uares of grated chocolate, a cupful ?' broken pecan meats, a teaspoonful vanilla and the whites of eight eggs aten stiff. A little salt is an im- ovement. Bake In gem pans about 11 enty minutes. b Fondant.?This is the foundation 0: r French candles and Is used for *>' ke frostlngs. Use four cupfuls of g gar, one cup of water and a table- ^ oonful of glucose. Boil until a little ^ opped in water will make a soft, C1 ixy ball. Cool and stir until white 0 d creamy. It will keep for weeks ti d always be fresh for use by heat- ^ I over hot water. Keep the fondant b< a dish covered with a waxed paper b d tightly covered, or it will dry and umble. * h Orange Cakes.?Cream a quarter of ? cupful of butter, add a half cupful ct sugar gradually, the grated rind of' fl: orange and a tablespoonful of the ice, the yolks of two eggs well beat. Sift one and two-thirds cups of ur and half a teaspoonful of cream R tartar and a quarter of a teaspoon- 0 I of soda, a pinch of salt. Fold in ii b whites of two eggs beaten stiff, n .ke in patty tins and ice with frost- H ; flavored with orange juice. B jrej "T IS bad enough for an at- |. J/L tractive young miss to be unable to make a loaf of bread, broil a steak, or use a needle; but the lit is passed when a college makes her :h a little idiot as to think it smart to ast of it." i Similar remarks we hear every day, iming the college education for the h< alishness of a few. \Wben we are pi )king for results from college train- w g let us take the average girl, to be Ir. A man who is selling apples es not show the worst he has in B jck, but the besL It is -cme we meet women occasiony who consider a lack of knowledge household affairs something to M ast of, but let us be thankful that a ey are rare, and they make themIves a laughing stock among good ople. e] It takes brains to run a house and ovide for a family and the woman 10 does the former is as much a ^ siness partner of the one who does a o latter as the business partner g wn town. g Egg Plant, , , 5 Egg plant is such a pretty vegetable A look at, that it always attracts the a ~ +V.Q mnrlret winrloW8. It is not commonly used as it should be, nor it widely grown in our climate, jre are a few good ways to serve e plant: s Egg Plant With Potatoes.?Peel a w egg plant and cut it up in cubes F out an inch in size. Cut an equal h rtion 6f raw potatoes in similar bes. Put the two together in a ucepan in which two tablespoonfuls butter have been melted, add a e ich of ginger, cloves, nutmeg, alIce, turmeric, cinnamon, half a teaoonful of red pepper and salt to h ste. Cover the pan closely and let e vegetables cook in the water gen- T ated from their own steam. If all ^ g moisture is evaporated before they o: c quite done turn in a half cupful of ^ iling water and finish cooking. Egg plant is good sliced and put a< der a weight to remove the Juice en dipped in batter and fried, uffed egg plant is also another farite dish. ? Egg Plant Salad.?Take a good .ed, firm egg plant and cut in thick ces, lay them in cold water, with tablespoon of salt and a piece of F >; leave for ten minutes; then put n er the fire with boiling water and a 11 If tablespoonful of vinegar, boil for at l minutes, drain, chill and cut in :e. Mix with this an equal quantity finely cut celery and two hard * 3ked eggs chopped fine. Pour over tl s a quarter of a cupful of French ?ssing. Serve garnished with grteen pper rings. c< Ej o: Too Honest for a Lawyer. L noted Philadelphia attorney tells > on himself. He left his native m in Tennessee years ago, and ne to this city to practise law. He i been uniformly successful. Hia ither, upon the other hand, reined behind at the family homead. leturning to his native town some le ago, the attorney met an old ky in the road. 'Hello, uncle," he said, but the old n did not recognize the boy he to know in the prosperous look ; citizen who addressed him. 'Well," asked the lawyer, "how are > Blank family?" 'Oh, they're all right," said the old rliy. "Jim Blank has gone to Philelphia, and done made a lot of mey. He's a lawyer, sah." 'Is that so," answered the attory. "And his brother Tom, how is , has he made a fortune, too?" "Lawdy, no," answpred the old rky, shaking his head, "he ain't no | vyer. Marse Tom wouldn't take a 1 sbonest penny from nobody." C< Y< BANKERS KNEW THEIFl MAN i His Customary Condition, and No Further Identification Was Necessary. One day a big city bank received le following message from one of its 5untry correspondents: "Pay $25 to 3hn Smith who will call today." The ishler's curiosity became suspicion hen a cabman assisted into the bank drunken "fare" who shouted that he as John Smith and wanted some loney. Two clerks pushed, pulled nd piloted the boisterous Individual ito a private room away from the ght and hearing of regular deposors. The cashier wired the country ink: "Man claiming to be John Smith Is ere. Highly intoxicated. Shall we wait Identification?" The answer read: "Identlficatlpn jmplete. Pay the money."?Success [agazine. IIS HANDS CRACKED OPEN "I am a man seventy years old. Mj ands were very sore and cracked pen on the lnsldes for over a yea: 1th large sores. They would craci pen and bleed, Itch, burn and achc > that I could not sleep and could dc ut little work. They were so bad T 1 <4 *VITTOfi1 f In fV c lau 1 UUU1U UU1COO ili/CUU iu UL1V torning. They would bleed and the lood dropped on the floor. I called a two doctors, but they did me nc Dod. I could get nothing to do anj ood till I got the Cutlcura Soap ant3 lutlcura Ointment. About a yeai go my daughter got a cake of Cut! ura Soap and one box of Cutlcura lntment and in one week from the me I began to use them my handf ere all healed up and they have no1 een a mite sore since. I would nol e ,without the Cutlcura Remedies. "They also cured a bad sore on the and of one of my neighbor's children ad they think very highly of the Cut! jra Remedies. John W. Hasty, So. Ef ogham, N. H., Mar. 5, and Apr. 11, '09.' Slightly Mixod. Two Englishmen were resting at the ed Home inn at Stratford-on-Avon ne of them discovered a print pictur lg a low, tumbling building undereath which was printed: "The ^ouse In Which Shakespeare Was orn." Turning to his friend In mild irprise he pointed to the print. His lend exhibited equal surprise ana illed a waiter, who assured them ol le accuracy of the inscription. " 'Pon my word," said the observing nglishman, shaking his- head dubious"I thought he was born In a man sr!" Free Blood Cure. , If you have pimples, offensive eruptions, d sores, cancer, itching, scratching :zema, suppurating swellings, bone pain| )t skin, or if your blood is thin or imire, then Botanic Blood Balm (B.BJB.) ill heal every soro, stop all itching and ake the blood pure and rich. Cures aftei 1 else fails, fl.00 per large bottle a1 -ug stores. Sample free by writing Blood aim Co., Atlanta, Ga., Department B. More to Be Pitied. Tramp (to lonely spinster)?Come :Isbus, arst yer 'usband if 'e ain't gol pair o' trousers to give away. Spinster (anxious not to expose hei riitude)?Sorry, my good man, he? a?never wears such things.?Punch TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY or Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyei ,nd Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn' Imart?Soothes Eye Pain.' Druggist lell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid. 25c Oc, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve' ii useptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Booki ,nd Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Apainst Orders. "If you refuse me, Miss Gladys, hall get a rope and commit suicide.' "No, colonel, you must not do that 'apa said distinctly he would no ave you hanging about here." ' Tired Out. "Is the first edition of your nove xhausted yet?" "No. Why?" "I thought it might be from stand lg so long on the counters." O DRIVE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD UP THE SVSTEfl Ike the Old Standard UROVH'S TASTBLKA' BILL TON 10. Yon know what you are taking be formula Is plainly printed on erery bottle K>wing It Is simply Qolnlne and Iron In a taste ss form. The Qolnlne drlres oat the m&larli id tne Iron bnllas up the system. Sold by al salors for HO years. Price CO cents. Its Advantages. "There Is one appropriate use of s ood poker hand." "What is that?" "It will shovel in the money." or HEADACHE? Hicks' CAPTOIM Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach oi ervous Troubles, Capudlne will reUeve you 's liquid?pleasant to take?acts immedl tely. Try it. 10c., 25c.. and 50 cents at druj ores. Considering what most people ar< illing to do for money it's a wondei lere are not more millionaires. Br. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar iated, easy to take as candy, reguiati nd invigorate stomach, liver and bow Is. Do not gripe. Life is a grind, but the world is ful t cranks. No Man is Strong Than His St A strong man is strong all over. N strong who is suffering from weak sti consequent indigestion, or from some of the stomach and its associated orgi pairs digestion and nutrition. For whi is weak or diseased cnerc is a loss o contained in food, which is the source strength. When a man " doesn't fei when he doesn't sleep well, has an feeling in the stomach after eating, is ent, he is losing the nutrition needed t Sacb a man should use 1 Discovery. It carcs dlseas orians of digestion and so Invigorates the liver, stren the nerves, and so GIVES U THE WHOLE BODY. You can't afford to accept a secre alcoholic medicine of known composi may thereby make a little bigger profit PUTNAM )lor more goods brighter and (aster colors than m can die any garment without ripping apart Writ / Hn Poor Prospects. V "Yes," said Miss Passay, "I found I a very nice boarding house today, but. | the only/ room they had to offer me had a folding bed in it, and I detest those things." "Of course," remarked Miss Pert, "one can never hope to find a man under a folding bed."?Catholic Stand- ; ard and Times. News to Her. / He?Concerning love, everything ? possible has been said and thought. " She (coyly)?But not to me.?File- ?. gende Blaetter. IB CONVINCIN OF THE VIR LyVia E. Pinkham's Ve What is the use of procrasti evidence as the following lettp-i I sick woman or know one who is you for not giving Lydia E. I pound a trial ? For 30 years we testimonial letters as these?th genuine and honest, too. everv 1 Mrs. S. J. Barber says: 0PLnJdiam'i Vege- | cine in the world jj for women?and | I feel it my duty ii to let others ij know the good it !j hasdone for me. jj which the doctor k said would have C. ' to be removed by an operation or I fc could not live more than a year, d or two, at most. I wrote Mrs. Pink- a ham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice, and I > took 14 bottles of Lydia E. Pink- p ham's "Vegetable Compound, and to- a day the tumor is gone and I am a n perfectly well woman. I hope my I testimonial will be of benefit to otb- I ers." ? Mrs. S. J. Baebeb, Scott, Y. I Mrs. E. F. Hayes says t "I was under the f :j d o c t o r' s treat- | menc ior a noroiu h WSf W1 tumor. J suffered | ! jjlM^ "Si. Will with pain, sor?> I 1 fllS ness, bloating. 1 |j|\ y |? and could not ? i ^ yp:i$u walk or stand on i \ i /"v/^L-v _/V wrote to Mrs. | /7 Pinkbam for ad- I vice, followed her r kt- 7/ Idirectlons'and L! took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.. To-day I am a well o woman, the tumor was expelled and. g my whole system strengthened. I o advise all women who are afflicted e ; with tumors-or female troubles to h try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable s ! Compound." ?Mrs. E. P. Hates, j> 1890 Washington St., Boston, Mass. Is 1 For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham Compound has been the standard I female ills. No sick woman do< herself who will not try this famo Made exclusively from roots and has thousands of cures to its credi Mrs. Pinkham invites all to write her for advice guided thousands to health fre< Address Mrs. Pinkham, i SKiiBbB8KI5?!B^ There are lamps that cost _ ygef price. Constructed of ao I __ n[ ornament to any room In a if _P? XLA of lamp-making that can 3TEAOT giving device. Erery df descriptive circular to tht W. L. DOU( 1! *3 *3= & *S4 SHOI BOYS' SHOES, $2.00 $2.50 A W.LmDougBas $3. 00, $3*50 and are positively the best made at ular shoes for theprloelnAmo the most economical shoes fa Do yon realize that ray shoe* have boen tin 5 SO yeora, that I make and sell more 83.0C hoes than any other manufacturer In the I " LAR FOR DOLLAR, I GUARANTEE MY SI - ahape, look and fit better,and wear longer thi i S3.60 or 94.00 shoes yon can buy 7 QnalJ 1 made my slioes THE LEADERS OF THE 1 Yon will be pleased when yon bny my sh< and when It comes time to r yoa to pure has pleased because the last ones wore so well, a rAIITIAM f None Kennine wlthont W. L.Don 1 I Iwlli name and price ntvnped on ? ebot If your dealer cannot supply yon with w. L. Dongla* W.L.l)OU6LAJi, I . Do You Kn That the NORTH CAROLINA AGRICULTT turning out graduates vrho, as scientillo farn ? teachers, are In great demand? That board, lodging and tuition cost only ? That graduates and under-gvaduates are eo That you, young man, cannot afford to mis For catalogue or free tuition write TODA1 r iNcowotArco One of the best equipped schools In the South. ' faculty. MORE GRADUATES IN POSITIONS tl BOOKKEEPING, SHORTHAND and ENGLISH. 1 KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Raleigh, Nort ' {y We also teach Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Penmnna 'i omacb&HE1 j o man can be b; amach with its JkS&BL pt t other disease Q ins, which im* S#? ]jt en the stomach -\ f the nutrition 60^ ( * of all physical ^ cl just right," ._ uncomfortable : languid, nervous, irritable and despond- ^ o make strength. &? Dr. Pierce'a Golden Medical I es of the stomach and other trltlon. It enriches the blood, J1 Qthens the kidneys, nourishes y EALTH AND STRENGTH TO * t nostrum as a substitute lor this non- ni tion, not even though the urgent dealer _ Ingredients printed on wrapper. I w FADELES any other dye. One 10c oackaoe colors all fibers. Th< ?for Irt# booklet?Ho* to Dye, Bleich and MUColors. MC RHEUMATISM I l 6 PROOF TUE OP 9 getable Compound I inating in the face of such , s represent? If you are a : ;fl ?, what sensible reason have I 'inkham's Vegetable Com- I ; have been publishing such jJSB lousands of them?they axe one of them. B Mrs. George May says: fl wmwmffl&x* , m ible Compound, and the pain soon ^ isappeared. I continued its dm '4 v;^jjn d am now in perfect health. I ,ydia E. Pinkhanrs Vegetable Com- 8 otmd has been a God-send to me fl s I believe I should have been in fl ly grave if it had not been for Mrs. inkham's advice and Lydia E. -|fl Inkham's Vegetable Compound." -ft 1 -Mrs. George May, 86 (tin Ave, ' aterson, N. J. B Mrs. W. K. Honsh says s j a^m's Ve^etaWe . waM^^recom- 1 I Because your ease is^a difficult I ne, doctors having done you no - I ood, do not continue to suffer with- fl ut giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegtable Compound a triaL It surely | as cured many cases of female ills*. J uch as inflammation, ulceration, dis- fl lacements. fibroid tumors, irrego. I irities,periodicpains,backache,eto. I s Vegetable l remedy lor jjjv. -jm as medicine. 7/ wi<fc.^s\r - I l^herbs, and | Vj?* W J sick women fA J >'of charge. I Lynn, Mass* ":|] high grade lamp, loM tt a low price. 1 more, but there! s do better lamp mado at amy I lid brass; nickel plated?easily kept clean; ast 7! ny bouse. There 1 a nothing known to the art ' ? add to the ralue of tho RAYO Lamp asa light- ' ;Ml :a)er everywhere. It not at yonra, write for H 1 nearest agency of the Vfi| D OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) 1 3LAS,r^ ETQ FOR MEN M , bO & WOMEN Mm _ JEt' a NO $3.00. aS $MOnhoos fm yg*. ? wdmoat pop- M|2v ' Sy pica,and aro <p you to buy* j s standard for over tW||BsSfSSf-f] ?, 03.50 and tU.OO i r.S., and that DOL- A. IOES to hold their JB. /? an any other #3.00, IHaJ %?!;; / \JJBJjki i^^coant*. It haa fjlPr^ wf IMS becatue of the fit and appearance. o another pair, yon will b? more than nd rravo yon bo much comfort. SS.TAKE NO SU BSTITUTE Shoe*, write for Mall Order Catalog. , 14s spark Sweet, Brockton, Mom. , i That North Carolina Is furj nishing the Negro vyouth M H Till/ upon the lowest terms, the [ K very best facilities for Industrial training? TRAL. AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE la iers, skilled mechanics and well prepared 7.00 per month? < .rnlng from $50 to (150 per month? is this opportunity? ST to President Dudley, Greensboro, N. (X ^ A SCHOOL WITH A | REPUTATION for DOING HIGH GRADE WORK THE LARGEST, THE BEST. The strongest lun all other Business Schools in the State, Write for Handsome Catalogue. Address h Carolina, or Charlotte, North Carolina. hip, etc., by mail. Send for Home Study Circular, eAi C rvrv i Twenty horse power Return Tubular oiler and 18 horse power Liddell-Tompns Engine, together with a Moffitt Heater, 1 in good condition and can be had at a irgain. Above in operation now on our ?- ? / * r.r?v, < CllllbCb V^Ul UCi JL II ill OUU VyUWUgW UUVWU}, I harlotte, N. C., and can be inspected :fore purchasing. Address 30UTHERN NEWSPAPER UNION harlotte North Carolina Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color? .. REMOVES DANDRUFF AND SCURF iviporatta ?nd prevents tbe hair from falling ct, For Sal* by Druggist*, or ftont Direct by ANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia [ca <1 F?r Baltic S*mpl? Bottle 35c. Send for CfmiU/4 rriAMPr CTARPH easiest to worfcwltb and .rinnliC. OIHnun gtarchoa clothe* nlcaafc N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 43-1910. ;S DYES >y dye In cold water better than any ether dye. fMROE ORUQ CO., Quincy, ////no/a# 1 ' .^5 /l,,: .