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Write For This Free Book?Shows 20 Beautiful Modern Rooms? tells how you can get the very latest effects on your walls. Contains a sample of the Color Plans out artists wm iurmsn you, FRKE, for any rooms you wish to decorate. Alahasiaiig The Beautiful Wall Tint fomes in 16 exquisite tints. More artistic than wall paper or paint at a fraction o! the cost. Kalsomine colors are har?h anc common beside the soft-hued water coloi tints of Alabastine. Absolutely sanitary? easiest and quickest to use, goes furthes- ! and will not chip, peel, or rub off. Doesn't need an expert to putl on Eisy directions in e*ery I package Full 5 lb Plc?.. while, l SOcj regular tints. 55c. Alabastine Company SS Grsadvllle Rwd, Grind Rapids, Mich. New York Qty, Desk ?. 105 Water Street DON'T FAIL to WRITE FOR THE FREE BOOK Dr. M. C. KREITZER'S ioc SALVE 25c has been in use over 50 years. Should always be kept in the house ready for any emergency. Its soothing and healing quali "ti?s make it unexcelled in the treatment oi SWELLINGS, FRESH WOUNDS, BOILS, BURNS.CARBUNCLES,FELONS,SCALDS TUMORS, ULCERS, CORNS, BUNIONS, SORES, ETC. For sale by druggists or mailed direct on receipt of price. For 2 cents we will mail, you a sample box. W.C.P0WER&C0.,1536N.4t^ St.,Philadelphia,Pi EYE ACHES Pettits Eye Salve Some people impress us as being too polite to get all that's coming to them. Garfield Tea i.? unequalled either as a/ occasional or a daily laxative. Trouble. "That man seems to be greatly de pressed about something." "Yes. He must live in some town whose baseball team is at the tail end." Burduco Liver Powder Nature's Remedy: is purely vegetable. As a cathartic, its action is easy, mild and effectual. No griping, no nausea, makes a sweet breath and pretty com plexion. Teaches the liver to act. Sold by all medicine dealers. 2oc. Milky Way Causes Glaciers. Another suggested cause of glacial periods is that they have been due to the shifting of the milky way, such as is known to have occurred. Assuming that much of the earth's heat comes from the stars. Dr. Rudolf Spituler finds that the change of position in re lation to the milky way might have given a different distribution of tem perature from that existing at the present time. The stars are not only crowded in the region of the milky way, but many of them are of t)ie hot test type. ALL FREE. pay the minister when we were mar ried ? New-Wed?Nothing. Mrs. New-Wed?How was that? New-Wed?He didn't dare to take my money for fear that it was taint ed. KNOWS NOW Doctor Was Fooled by His Own Case For a Time. It's easy to understand how ordi? ilary people get fooled by coffee when doctors themselves sometimes forget the facts. A physician speaks of his own expe rience: "I had used coffee for years and really did not. exactly believe i* was injuring me although 1 had palpitation of tt>e heart every day (Tea contains caf feine-the same drug found in coffee? and is just as harmful as coffee. > "Finally one day a severe and al most fatal attack of heart trouble frightened me and I gave tip both tea and coffee, using I'ostuin instead, and since that time I have ir-ui absolutely no heart palpitation except on one or two occasions when 1 fried a small quantity of coffee,which caused severe irritation and proved to me 1 must let it alone. "When we began using Postum it seemed weak?th.it was lucsuise we did not make it according to directions ?but now we put a little bit of but ter in the pot when boiling ami allow the Postnm to boil fuI' 13 minutes which gives it the proper rich flavor and the deep brown color. "I have advised a great many of my friends and patients to leave off coffee and drink Puatutn, in fact 1 daily give this advice." Name given by Postnm Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Many thousands of physicians use postum in place of tea and coffee in their own homes and prescribe it tc patients. "There's a reason," and it is explain ed in the little book, "The Road to ; Wellville," in pkgs. Ever rcrtd the above letterT A new one appear* from time to (line. They are genuine, true, and full of humu Intcrcu t. of fearless fight ers that "las terror ized Carroll county, Virginia. The question is an interesting one entirely apart from the academic the ories of heredily It is a question th' 1 sands of law abiding Americans doubt less have asked since the commission at Hillville of one of the most aston ishing acts in ihe criminology of a civ ilized country. No man is better qualified to an swer the question than Judge David W. Bolen. He !s a leader of the Car roll county bar, was a delegate to the Virginia state consolidation conven tion, and Is one of the most thorough students of Virginia history to be found within the borders of the Old Do minion. A neighbor of the Aliens j from boyhood, their attorney and coun sellor In many of their civil and crim inal bouts with the law. he has per sonally known the Allen clansmen of three generations As counsel lor Floyd Alien, he stood beside ms client when the latter open ed fire upon the court officers and jury, and Judge Holen himself narrow ly escaped death irotn the bullets in tended for the convicted man He es caped by prostrating himself upon the court room floor until the rain of lead had spent Itself. It is not without reason that the Carroll county Aliens are referred to as the members of a clsm The first - - ? I? U I r? of their forbears wtio seiueu iu iuio vicinity in Colonial times came of ( Scotch-Irish stock?a strain often of | sterling worth, but ever with a ^ touch of clannish family pride, and t usually with more than a touch of pug- t nacity, impatience of restraint and r fighting courage. 1 In Revolutionary days what is now 1 Carroll was Montgomery county, Vir- < ginia One of the members of the 1 Montgomery county militia who left i his plow and his ax to march across i the Blue Ridge in time to take part t in the battle of Guilford Court House, t N. C., was William Allen The militia > detachment marched across the Ridge 1 by way of the Fancy Gap road, the c same thoroughfare over which armed s scouts have been scurrying to and fro I in search of ibis Revolutionary sol- 1 dier's scion, on whose head the out- f raged law has r?ut a price. t As William Allen marched to battle J he observed that the rolling land on * the far side ot ihe Fancy Gap was at- 1 tractive When '.he Revolutionary war c was over he and one of his fellow sol- * diers settled there aud so the Aliens Ia became established In the quarter 1 which they have ruled ever since like feudal barons. ' Traditlor says William Allen was a - good soldier He was destined to be ^ the progenitor of many good soldiers. v He had two sons, only one of whom, * William Allen. Jr.. concerns this nar- ^ rative. for the second. William, was s the father of two sons. Bailey Allen * and William Carr Allen > Bailey Allen had four sons?Lemuel. ' William. Carr and Bailey Allen, r Of ( the four three were gallant soldiers In f the Confederate service during the 1 Civil war Lemuel was killed In a charge during the second battle of ' Hull Jinn or ua in ypiiprnllr V nated in the south, the Hattle of Manassas William, who was a pri-J: vate iu the same company, saw his | brother fall, paused long enough to | lift his stricken form and to note that J 1 he was dead, and then went on In the |u charge upon the Union position Carr Allen survived four years of i active service. He was a so'dier a whose dash, courage and gallantry j were uniformly praised by his officers. I ( As a Confederate veteran and a ?<)od !s neighbor, he lived until about ten j v ARTIST AND C< The painter is likely to be brusque i Even when he possesses a bit of tact, i c he Is not wont to waste it on "Philis- j " tines"?even if they are customers j; and persons of distinction No such i chartr? however, can be brought against ;in eighteenth-century painter j named C handler t He was commissioned by William j ^ IV to paint the attack commanded I f by the sovereign, wh^ri Duke of Clar- j ( im\ :i fi>rt ross fin I Ik* Spanish I i coast The attack ti.*ok place at night, j , and with t'ie view of relieving the j somber - veil of midnight, the artist j j took the liberty of introducing sea- j j gulls skimming the clouds. I j "Hello!" exclaimed his majesty. I *] when he first saw the painting "It j t wl!' never do to have the birds fiying [ ^ about at night. They were all goue j to roost " t they were, your majeuty." artful- r ly agreed the artist, "but you gave ' t such a rousing broadside with your ! guns that they all woke up and ilew j i about." | i rears ago, when, at a good old age, he vas shot any killed by Mack Howleu. ind Howlett was lynched, after a jand, believed to have included .nem )ers of the Allen clan, had taken him rom the Hillsville jail, the keys of ft'hich were surrendered by the Jailer, vho was a cousin of "Jack" Allen's * it'e. Of tb? four sons of Bailey Allen the ilack sheep of the family was Bailey, Ir. Judge Bolen was called upon to lefend him against numerous criminal iharg^s, and he was finally sentenced ! n a lonz term in the state oeniten I :iary for housebreaking and burglary, j William Carr All^n. the other son ; >f the second William Allen, was the | ather of Jeremiah. Robert and John, i leremiah also was a loyal soldier in | he army of the south. He married j he daughter of one of the most fa nous of the old trappers of the Blue iidge mountains, "Uncle Billy" Combs, j riie Confederate veteran and the | laughier of the old trapper raised a j arge family of boys. Thei/ sons were | \nderson. who died a few years ago ifter having served as a member of he Virginia Reserves during the last en months of the war; Washington, vho was killed by the fall of a tree, /ictor, who is the highly respectable irid respected keeper of a country itore a few miles from Jlillsville, (Jar and, who Is a preacher among the Jrimitive Baptists; Floyd, whose re usal to accept sentence of Imprison nent caused the Hillsville massacre; lasper, generally called "Jack," whose .on Freel is the youngest of the clans nen now Imprisoned on charges ot onspiracy and murder, and finally jidna Allen, who is regarded not only is the most wealthy. but ulsu as the naster mind of the clan A sister of the seveu sons of Jere niah Ailen is Mrs. Ed wards (now Mrs klundy). whose sons by her first bus >and were Sidna and Wesley Ed vards, the first of whom surrendered limself to hi.- uncle "Jack," while .Vesley preferred 10 share the hard- i ihlps of the mountains with his uncle I Sirina The other members of the I ounger generation who are directly nvolved In the Millsville affair are Maude and Victor, who are the sons it' Floyd Allen, and Freel Allen, who Is he son of "Jack " "A study of ihe genealogical tree of he Aliens," said one who knows them veil, "shows that, while many of the lan have been fighting men. it is only hose of the present generation who lave been what is commonly known s gun fighters Old Jeremiah was a < lard tighter eveu after the war was | iver, but he fought with his fists. "All of the seven sons of 'Jerry* A1 1 en were men of strong personality nd of fierce, imperious temper, but < Anderson. Washington, Vicior and I jarland learned the im|>oriant lea ons of restraint and self control, j vliile Floyd, 'Jack and Sidna have i 3URTIER, 100 |: j "Ah. so I di?l!" assented the royal ritie. with more tlian royal naivete. I forgot that Very good! Very jood!"?Youth's Companion. Judging Races by Camera. jl Now that running races are about o commence, further attention will he J ;iven to a highly practical invention < or automatically judging the position j s if horses at the winning post, partit a- < arly in cases where close finishes oc- ' :ur. says London Answers ; I Briefly, the mechanical race Judge I s an ordinary photographic camera < Across the course a fine woolen thread | s stretched, breast high to the horses rho moment this thread is snapped (< lie shutter is opened and a photto graphic record results j?' Tt\? actual development of the nega j ' ive is but the work of a few mo- 1 ' nents. and prints can be actually dis- I ' ributed In quite a short time. I' The chief utility of the invention'1 ies in the fact that it eliminates the j' luman element from the Judge's box I j never brooked restraint nor tolerated ; opposition "To students of heredity it might be j interesting to speculate to what ex tent the soldier strain of the Allen family was tinctured by less noble, more primitive influences engrafted | Into it from the maternal side The j mother of the seven Aliens who are i the middle aged men of the present generation was the daughter of 'Uncle Billy" Combs, the tougnest * old ' woodsman and trapper known to the history or traditions of the Carolina j mountain border 'Uncle Billy' died at the age of 104. "He tramped the mountain fastness- j es habitually in his bare beet, the : heels and soles of which had become j so calloused and hooflike that he thought nothing of killing diamond back rattlers by tramping upon them. "Like other mountaineers of his day, 'Uncle Billy' not only trapped or th/. ??.(!*) U _ ? 1. _ onuu iuc wiiu uedais ui me muuu mi it. selling their pelts, but he made a re spectable Income by domesticating the wild honey bees and by raising droves of mountain hogs, which, until the ad veut of warm weather, would run wild and fatten upon the chestnuts and acorns of the lorests." Judge Bolen remembers "Uncle I Hilly" Combes in his later years "I | recall," said the lawyer, "that he once showed me a spot on the mountain j where a panther had leaped out from ! cover and seized one of his mountain ! hogs as his prey 'Uncle Billy' went j to his cabin, got his dogs out and then ; summoned one or two of his nearest neighbors For two days and nights ' they stalked the panther, until the , dogs finally ran the beast Into a tree where Uncle Billy' shot It and skinned \ it for Its pelt" "Uncle Billy" Combes stood six feet three inches tall and was muscled like a lion He always wore buckskin ; breeches and a fur trimmed round- j about jacket. On his head a coonskin { cap was poised rakishly. and until his | death, about 45 years ago. he never was seen without his shot pouch and | powder horn. "Uncle Billy," though phenomenal ly strong, was a peaceable man among his fellows, and died much beloved | and respected His son "Jed," how ever, endowed with much of his fa ' ther's physique, was a noted bully of j the mountainside "Jed" had met and ) conquered many rivals, but he had i never tried conclusions with Ike Beam er Ike was. like "Jed," a giant In strength and with sinews of steel, hut j Ike was neither quarrelsome nor am- j bitioue to shine as a bully "Jed" de termined to force him to fight, trump- ; c-d lip some Imaginary debt and went j 10 Ike under pretense of collecting It. i "Jed" knew it probably would give him the opening he and his satellites j . , i._ u... i ?1 Iiail neeil tiavuij, irve usieiieu i_uim ly. Then he remarked: "Jed, you know j I don't owe you no such sum, but folks :s saying I do owe you a tolerable good j thrashing Are you prepared to col lect thai debt, too?" "Jed" needed no urging. The two j mountaineers went at it, and tradition says it was a battle of gianta. Time and again the men. evenly matched, had to cease from sheer exhaustion. Then they clutched each other while | they panted for breath. It doubtless j would have been fought to a finish. 1 but friendt of Meamer interfered Neither man had "squealed." Ac- ! t'ording to the mountaineer code of pu- j icilism, it had been a drawn fight. ! Beamer had lost the index finger of his right hand, which "Jed" Combes had worried in his teeth until he chew ed it off at the middle joint. Ike had Jirust his thumbs so remorselessly into Jed's" eye sockets that the bully w?3 blinded, and did not regain his sight i until weeks afterward. when a race is a very close thing Not i long since, an absolutely perfect dead j heat way recorded wi'.h this instru ment. Early Chimney Pots. Silk hats were known in France J some years before John Hetherinton 1 Frightened Ixmdoners by wearing one rhey came in with the French Revo lution. when all patriotic citizens aban- j lotted wigs and had their hair cut i short. Engravings primed so early ! is l7!tu depict sans culotte dandies i rearing top hats In a rare print of | :he trial of the Girondists, which took l>lace in 1 ~y:i. all the judges appear rnwned with silk hats Although the silk hat Is not much | more tiian a hundred years old. hats -<f that shape were worn hundreds of rears before. In Elizabethan times i cylindrical hat with a brim rather similar to that of the "firties." and with the addition of a plume, was worn by the nobility. According to Raphael, it was worn very much ear ner than that A red top hat api>ear8 r. the cartoon "Paul Preaching at Athens." MiMTiONAL SUNWSOIOOij Lesson | .By E. O SKI.I.KRH. Director ot Kv? n j Intc Department. The Moody Bible in j tltllte of Chlrajfo.) LESSON FOR MAY 26. TRUTHFULNESS LESBON TEXT-Matt. 6:33-?'. Jarne* 1 1-12. GOLDEN TE'aT?"Puttlnx awav false hood, speak ye -:ruth each man v.'lth his j neighbor; for we are member* one of mother."?Eph. 4:25 In this leBbun Jesus maacP a still j further application, or rather gives ua j another Illustration of- the righteous- ; ness of hie new kingdom, which must be greater than that taught by the j UKoxin/,,,,, 11/ ? hA?t? /-. A \ . A I i new iccco *yc uave eiuuitu iuc ra cred relatious of the righteous We, i now we are to consider th*. matrer oT ! truth. We have first a paragraph from : Jesus, then an ethical teaching and ap ( plication from the writings of James the apostle. Under the old law mei, swore by | heaven which Is God's throue. by the i earth which is his footstool, by Jeru salem which was his peculiar chosen I city. They swore by the head and ; yet they could not change one hair | white or black. Jesus contrasts all of this with his new kingdom in which absolute simple veracity in our j speech is all that is to be required. ; This makes ail oaths profane When i men live in these new relations, with this new consciousness of God they will speak the truth naturally and of j necessity. To such there will be no need for any foiin of speech or oath, for the simplest, plainest speech win be the only necessary and the alto gether satisfactory medium of giving and or creating assurance. How about oattis in court':" Jesus Is speaking to the members or his new kingdom Be tween them yea and nay Is sufficient, but. as between them and others we ' must adjust ourselves and therefore | we do not read Into this any admoui- j tion not to take an oath tn court Shculd Be Swift to Hear. "be not many teachers." We- now j turn to a paragraph from the Kptst/e I of James which has Its peculiar value and Interest as showing the difficulty i of mastering the tongue. In the church of Christ there must of neces- i sity be a great many more disciples j (learners) than teachers. Every man | should be swift to hear, but the posi tion of teacher carries with it such a burden of responsibility that no one should audaciously asssume It, see Eph. 4:11, etc. With this responsibil ity Is also a correspondingly heavier judgment if we stumble. He that stumbles not In teaching, in the use of his tongue, Is indeed a perfect man and one that is able to bridle the whole body; to guide the ship of life, of state, and of the church, amidst the fiercest storms. "The tongue is a fire." It is in deed for it inflames with anger the whole body, the family, society and the nation. History is ablaze with the conflagrations that are a consequence of untimely words and of unbridled tongues. Prov. 15:1, etc. The tongue giving uiierance 10 lue uiougm^ ui me heart (for out or the abundance of the heart It speaks), will Inflame lust, i wither purity and consume strength. | It fires jealousy and burns the sweet bonds ot friendship. It will sever the ties of home, burn away the tounda- j tions of character, of commercial in tegrity, social purity and destroy the bonds of civic righteousness. It is indeed "a world of iniquity among our members." Let us quote from Dr. H. A. Torrey: "The fires of hell are kindled by Idle words that set men thinking wrong about God and sin and (,'hrist and the Bible. Men usually careful in handling fire are careless about the tongue. Whence come the words that inflame the imagination and the passions? Whence come tha words that iinderroioe faith and the credibility of the Bible? If any man question James' words that "the tongue can no man tame' he has evidently j never tried it himself." This does not mean, however, that fhe tongue can ' not be tamed, for what is Impossible with man is possible with God. James ' draws a frightful picture of the un- ' tamed tongue and of its evil conse quences. He shows us that it has ! proved a pnysicai, moral, spiritual eternal death to the whole circle of life. He also draws attention to an- ; other alternative, for with the tongue we may also bless God. James is the most Intensely practical of the New Testament writers and when he alludes to the sixth commandment he strikes at the root of the whole mat- ; ter. Profane Men Classified. "These things ought not to be." i No more can a fountain yield fresh and salt water at one and the saine time, or a fig tree yield olives, than for a Christian to bless God and with the same tongue curse his fellow men. Not only is it unkind but it is un Ohristllke. Sarcasm means literally "to tear flesh like dogs," the chari- j oreer's whip tore the flesh, so <\h use the tongue as a lash, biting the .sensi tive spirits of men; verily these things "ought not to be." Phillips Hrooks i said, "Tell me the words a man uses sinrl rpnmduce his tone of voice ana I'll tell wh;it sort of man he is." It is a literal fact that the truthful man is he who usually exemplifies all other virtues and we cannot em phasize too strongly that no gentle man swears. Profane men are of three classes; those who are tltougiit less, those who are ignorant oi lan guage and have a paucity of expres sions at their command, and those who use profanity to emphasize a iie. and generally the greater the lie ihe more and stronger the oaths. W'e it:u>t j ;tot forget, however, thai by our si lence we may bear false witness and j that a positive obligation rests upon j us lo speak words of praise, com | ii'endation, and comfort, that is near ly, if not quite, as emphatic as the negative admonition to keep slience Please Read Th< The following letter from Mrs. C It is for women to submit to the dac may be avoided by taking Lydia E She was four weeks in the hos worse than before. Then after ham's Vegetable Compound restoi iiJLKi; is HJEK (J Paw Paw, M yery severely w be on my feet treated me for f lief, and at last eration. I was t suffering worse me to try Lydi pound, and I di and do all my o to Lydia E. Pin advise every v female complain R. R No. 5, Pav 44THERE NEVER Wi Rockport, Ind.?W There never 1 than mine, and I cannot begin to t two years I was not able to do any and the doctor said nothing but a father suggested Lydia E. Pinkha please him I took it. and I imprc travel, ride horseback, take long ri from it. I can only ask other suff< ham's Vegetable Coni|>ound a trial ?Mrs. Margaret Meredith, R. J We will pay a handsome reward that these letters are not genuine ai women were paid in any way for t inal letter from each did not come For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkh Compound has been the standnr male ills. No one sick with w< does justice to herself who will niou.s medicine, made from roo has restored so many suffering w m mm Write to LYDIA ?. PIN K H,l 1W (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, JJL Your letter will b? opened, iea?1 by a woman and held in strict c< "HI-" Willis?Why do you call your ma^ chine a "she"? ' Gillifl?It is said to bp the "last word" in an automobile construction. Paxtine Antiseptic sprayed into the nasal passages is a surprisingly suc cessful remedy for catarrh. -At drug; gists. 25c a box or flent postpaid on re ceipt of price by The Paxton Tr.iiet Co., Boston. Mass. The woman who doesn't care who ! knows her age is never over twenty j tite. For HE A I) AC II IE?Hlclm' (API DINK j Whether from Colds, Heat. Stomach or j Nervous Troubles, Capudii?e>viil relieve you. I It's liquid?pleasant to take? acta imniedi- ! ately. Trv li. 10c., 25c., and SO cents at drug j stores. The dyspeptic should choose care- ! fully what he chews carefully. (lnrMeM Tt'ii keeps the liver in condition, ^ insuring a clear heal and j{o<?i general health. ' I)rink before retiring. The man who steals our thunder Is naturally under a cloud. Reduce The Feed Bill Horses and Mules do mure work; Co Sheep and Goats crow better fleeces; Cattle and Hogs take on iniirt fles.li am better health and condition when fed'on Cottonseed Meal an For Breeding or Nursing Stock, valuable Miit-h (setter tnan vVrite for free Booklet containing much vi Raisers to THE BUREAU 1 Interstate Cottonseed i 808 Main Street, W. L. D< a b a mam a SHUbS *2.50*3.00*3.50*4.00* FOR MEN, WOMEN AND W.L.Douglas $3.00 & $.'{.50 shoes are of men, because tlieyare the best iu the1 \V. L. Douglas $+.00, $4.50 & $5.00 si Bench Work costing $<>.00 Why doe* W. L. Douglas make and sel and $4.00 shoo than any other manufac BECAUSE: he stamps his name and pric< guarantees the value, which protects the ' prices and inferior shoes of other trilces. are the most economical and satisfactory; by wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. BECA equal forstyle, fit and wear. DON'T TAKE If your dealer cannot supply W. L. Douglas shoes, Shoes sent everywhere deliver)' charges prepaid. \ Why Not Rebuil A Reconstructive MILAM -DC * , vc* undtrrlfn ?itc ??r7 t>?#ric r?*?d7, ? iui f our amSartMiDl. ^.dxtL-/Ji Ci\it C?t>J,i \iLhliO. iB ' ? i '< K w v. . ^ - . ; .?. ' . o tV $S % fc - ?M ese Two Letters. >rville Hock will prove how unwise igers of a surgical operation when it L Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, pital and came home suffering all that suffering Lydia E. Pink ed her health. WN STATEMENT. ich.?"Two years aero I suffered W i % i ~jC . ' ; (- ^ jjjS ' i * ? -m ith a displacement ? I could not for a long time. My physician several months without much re sent me to Ann Arbor for an op ,here four weeks and came home than before. My mother advised a E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com id. To-day I am well and strong wn housework. I owe my health kham's Vegetable Compound and roman who is afflicted with any t to try it"?Mrs. Obvillb Rock, f Paw, Mich. IS A WORSE CASE." tvas a worse case of women's ills ell you what I suffered. For over thing. I was in bed for a month in operation would cure me. My tin's Vegetable Compound; so to ved wonderfully, so I am able to des and never feel any ill effects jring women to give Lydia E. Pink before submitting to an operation."' ?. D. No. 3, Rockport, Ind. to any person who will prove to us nd truthful?or that either of these heir testimonials, or that the orig to us entirely unsolicited. tYOTA E PINKMAM f^QUARTEft CENTURY^ BEFORE THE PUBLIC > Over Five Million Free Samples { JEtivan Away Each Vear. > | The Constant and littxvaslng > Sales From Samples Proves the Genuine Merit of ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. Shake Into Your Shoes AJlen'9 Foot?Ease, Ihe antiseptic powder tor Ihe leet. Are yoa * trifle fen-itivc aiiout the size of your slu'xja? Many people wear ahop* a size amaher by shaking Alien's Foot-Ease into them. If you have tired, swollen, hot, tandeffeet, Alien's Foot-Ease gives int-tant relief. TRY IT TO DAY. 'Sold everywhere, 25 ctt. Do not accept any suustitute. FREE TRIAL PACKAGE wirt bj- mall. Mother Gray's Swset Po#d8rs, ft'AAt Pjib* ** the lwi?t medHMna for Fprfrlih.nicklyf . Q,il<1r**n. Soi?i br, Drunrinti f*ery?) wht*re. Trial packnu^ FREE. Address) ALLEN S. OLMSTED. LE ROY, N. Y. I TlinUDQnU'C 'JiiickJjreIi??<:i?ey? i numraun o irriu>tu>n mused cVC VWATCD l>> ,u" or KlC I? A I LI) win.l .iinokle- fr?? JOHN,L,THOMPSON .SONS &CO.. I'r ty. N. V. -Improve The Animals iWS Rive more and bntier MiiW and Butter; Hons (more etftrx, and all hh well as I fat, and develop more rapidly and keep In d Cottonseed Hulls ires, Cows, Sows or Ewes, it i* especially Hay, far cheaper than l orn. &luable information to Feeders and Stock 5 F PUBLICITY Crushers Association , Dallas, Texas 3UCLAS f W. L. Douff las makes and sells more I v. / i $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 shoe* than any other manufacturer in the world 4.508*5.00 BOYS i worn by millions world for the price toes equal Custom to $8.00 ' 1 more $3.00, $3.50 turer in the world ? ; on the bottom and wearer against high BECAUSE: they you can save money USE: they have no A SUBSTITUTE F0RW write W. L. Uouelis, Brockton, \iass., lor catalog* Fast Color I ti-tL Id Your Health? Tonic Known as ) IT-GUARANTEED d, b?r?b7 o?rtif> thai * ui?o cuo tal 9*1: wing It U b? tiIuaM* lMturt in authorising ta? publication af Q??tT 4 Tr V?tWooki Slrf%\oT Ce. * ( f jri??r)y vA?M^r 3?nlt of ffenrllla. ? ^lrfCV|^__3ook>k??(.?rl Ax*rlc*n Tobaaoo Co. \ ' IbAial**, CbATlct:* 0. 1 1% a Iravalletf rf> ? ?? /? ** * Rlrajai4? CrarAll C?. irih<i Sith 0*. ^fakjLmdinjfeu)tiirer. Tcfctoso * Ktil'liuu NtUi D?r't: Zfit 71? r>cury Uat.a^sv. ?IcC*cc? St^af. Cor^ratiaa C?*xt. 5^ Sltoirloitn ? 4 of frapfor d*P*- a* 0*? jS90tf. WKS Tr?(V4 kcrot*?k tff|. O*. . Fifotor ChuT3&. j?t-u.?ra JUil**/ iTlsil. Mill Ocnfwmu ViutM. *gr Jtewilrg Dc*t. A. t. 0%, Uio41*t Mlnl?t?r. itted?nothing if not.Ask T<wr