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A K?ng of Long Descent. Tko Sultan of Brun*! 1B 83 years of aire-at. least so he told me. And while lie stoops as he walks, he makes tn* appearance rather of a temporary ia valid than of an old man. He seem ed pleased when I told him that he might pasa for 60; and indeed he mliht for his face is singularly free from wrinkles. HIH expression of . benevolence suggests the late Leo XIII.-hi? smile is engaging, albeit tinged with sadness. Ills house was niling when the Ro mtjx empire had hardly ceased to crumble. His ancestorsi gave the law to a vast Eastern empire when Eu rope was but a patchwork of barbar ous cMefs, and when, after centuries, Spanish and" Portugese found their way to the Spice Islands they laid propitiating gifts at the feet of the Borneo Sultan-as vassals, humbly begging the right to live within his dominions. Brunel ls still the metropolis of na tive Born so-indeed, the name Borneo is but a corruption of Brunel--yet few maps show the existence of this em pire.-Harper's Magazine. i-, / Mirage Off Coney Island. Early marine observers on the snowy beach at Coney Island yester day morning had a fine glimpse of air shipping. The sun. was about an hour high, the breeze light, and the sea had just enough of a lop on to give a slightly scalloped horizon. Strung out in order from the sun track the^e were seen coming In a tern, a Haber man's sloop, a schooner with topsails drawing, and a liner making her way np the main ship channel. This lit tle fleet in the offing was held in a mirage which rifted every vessel above the horizon by about ten or twelve degrees, and left a strip of clear air beneath every water line. Thus float ing in air, they stood up the harbor on tCalr way like an argosy in the sky. AU at once something happened to 'the meteorology which had produced the vision, some invisible air current rolled athwart the line of vessels. First the liner dropped back inco the sea, then the topsail schooner, then j? the fisherman, and last of all the tern; one could almost imagine the splash, as'the ships of the air returned prosai cally to the ocean.-New York Sun. Old time "Curl Up" Skates. Few ol the present generation of skaters evor saw a pair of old fash ioned "curl up" skates or know what they are, but if they are native born their parents or grandparents can probably tell them about these old time appliances for skimming over - the ice. The boys -and girls of today have quick fastening, light and hand some skates, and in many cases keep them attached to shoes that are used j only for skating and are put on at the pond side. In the old days straps for the "curl ups" were unknown, leather thongs or stout: strings being used with a sort of "harness" to keep the skates on the feet The term "curl up" comes from the manner in which the forward end of the skate irons were .curled, extending over the toe of the foot. Doubtless many of the old folks can remember when the cheapest skates consisted only of a wood bottom for the foot and a strip of metal for an i-lce surface. These were "cheap" in . deed.--Hartford Times. DON'T TB3NK YOU. ARB OLD. A certain amount of social life ls absolutely essential to the old as well as to tue young. A woman never grows so old that she ceases to enjoy the company of others, and generally the older she grows the more she en joys it It is always a pity to see a man. rall into a-state'which he ex pla&Vby saying:. "Oh, we're getting old; and don't car? for so much va "riety in our lives," says Woman's Life. In the pure selfishness of his soul he always speaks of "us" and "we," SR \ if it naturally follows that because he is getting antiquated his wife must keep jac3 with Mm in his decline. Let hbi . cap in touch with the.world, and both he and his wife will be the better and the younger for it MORE BOXES OF GOLD And Many Greenbacks. 325 boxes of Gold and Greenbacks wfli be sent to persons who write the . most interesting and'truthful letters of experience on the following topics: 1. How have you been affected by i coffee drinking and by changing from coffee to Postum? i 2. Give name and account, of one < or more coffee drinkers who have been hurt by it and have been in duced to quit and use Postum. i 3. Do you know any one who has - been driven away from Postum be cause it came to the table weak and characterless .at the. first trial? 4. Did you set such a person right regarding the easy way to make lt clear, black and with a snappy, rich , taste? 5. Have you ever found a better way to make it than to use four heap- . lng teaspoonfuls to the pint of water, let stand on stove until real boiling ~ begins, and beginning at that time j when actual boiling starts, boil Juli 15 minutes more to extract'the flavor ( and food value. (A piece of butter , I the.size of a pea will prevent boiling , over).' This contest is confined to' j those who have* used Postum prior ^ Wo the date of this advertisement. Be honest and truthful,don't write poetry or fanciful letters, just plain, truthful statements. Contest will close June 1st, 1907, and no letters received after that date Will be admitted. Examinations of letters will be made by three judges, not members of the Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. Their decisions will be fair ami final, and a neat little box containing a $10 gold piece sent to each of tie five writer? of the most Interesting' letters, a box containing 'a $5 gold piece to each of the 20 next best, a $2 greenback to each of the .100 next best, and a $1 greenback to "each of the 200 next best, making cash prize? distributed to 325 per sons. * Every friend of Postum-is urged to write, and each letter will be held In high esteem by the company, as an '* evidence of such friendship, while 1 the little boxes of gold and envelopes . of money will reach many modest ] l iters'whose plain and sensible let- ? ters contain the facts desired, al though the sender may have but 1 small faith in winning at the time of 1 writing. Talk this subject over with your ? friends and see how many among you can win prizes. It is a good, ! honest competition and in the best . : kind of a cause, and costs the com- : ;titors absolutely nothing. : A duress your letter io the Postum < preal Co., Ltd.,. Battle Creek, Mich., < riting your own name and address < early. ? c ] AM I MY BROTHER'S KEEPERT Stpp?so a kindly word of mine Cc-old lift the clouds and bring sunshine; Am I my brother's keeper? Suppose the weary -worker tolls. For scanty pittance delves and molls; Am 1 my brother's keeper? Suppose In penury and fear -My neighbor see the wolf draw near; Am I my brother's keeper? Suppose beneath a tyrant's heel Some distant nation anguish feel; Am I my brother's keeper? Perhaps-who knows?-perhaps I'm not! Self-centred soul! hast thou forgot The marvel of our common lot. The mystic tie that binds us all Who dwell on this terrestrial ball, Stupendous.hope of time and song, The bourne for which the ages long? How hard our hearts must seem to Thee, Exhaustless Fount of Charity! -Henry N. Dodge, in the Christian Regis ter. . < ' ? THE CAPTURE 1 * OF iv SQUINTY SMITH. I """"""~ & Bj JOHN H. RAFTERY. * nf, ??j I|I ifr I|I ?I? ?|? tfi <|> ^jn?M8Hlt^>4wfr< "Yander he comes, Mammy!" yelled the little yellow-headed, freckled, boy, running Into the rickety shanty and out again, dancing with delight A scrawny, withered, weary woman came out of the house with two dirty chil dren at her heels and behind them a half-grown, red-headed, gangling girl, with two fierce little fiery braids stick ing away from her poll. A burly man on a ragged pony came galloping down the country road. "Supper ready, Mag?" he bawled at the woman. "Supper! Why, 'tain't no mor'n 7 o'clock. What's up?" v "What's up! Everything is up! Squinty Smith has' gone an' done it right this Urne. He killed Frank Cop ley in the Hazard s'loon, put four cold uns in th* dep'ty sheriff, and- Lord knows how many he's ashot sence I left town." The children stared in awed aston ishment at this bloody news and fol lowed him round to the corral. "Well, what y'all lookin' at? Here, yon, Siss," to the red-headed girl, "get i move on you. Maria, don't stand thar all night like you was locoed. Git my supper." , "Did you see him, Hank?" . "See who?" "Why, him,. Squinty Smith?" "See him! Of course I didn't see him. If I seen him it'd be all up with him! I'd a ribbed him up with lead till he'd i-sunk his own grave. But I didn't have no gun, nohow. Sher'ff Hous man says I must jine the posse," an' I says, 'Sher'ff, if Id a-been sher'ff 'stead 3' you, I wouldn't need no posse for to ketch Squinty Smith nor no other orn ery outlaw like him.' So I didn't have ao gun, so I just come home for .'git supper an' ready up my arsenal. Git a move on thar, Siss." The red-headed girl tossed her head md disappeared into the tumble-down kitchen., The mother got busy with pot ind pan, and the man, blustering fierce ly about what "he'd a-done if he on'y had his weepons,' pulled his Winches ter out of the closet and began to slip cartridges into the magazine. "I don't want no mor'n a peep at that ?ol-dinged Squinty Smith, nohow. He allua wuz ornery, an' he otta been put outa biz a long time ago. He's had Sher'ff Housman bluffed for two year an' more, an' he's got purty nigh every man.in Plankton buffaloed! But CU show him!" The man's slatternly children stood about him in gaping admiration. The red-headed girl stuck her head in at the door and said: "What did you fetch feat, daddy?" "Dry up, you ninny; I didn't have no time to think about fe tebin' home nothin', 1 come home to git suthin'. I come home to git my weepons, an* if ever I? ketch a peep at that blamed-" At this "instant there was a sharp, rasping click at the open window and a blue barreled gun muzzle jumped into the light. "Hold up your hands, Mitchell!" said a quiet but very distinct voice. The big man at the table held up his hands with a foolish effort to smile at the face that looked over the gun. "Quit yer foolin', Smith," he said, weakly; "put it down an' come in." Squinty Smith, a bull-necked, one eyed ruffian got in at the window without foregoing an instant of his advantage. "I'll take charge of these, Mitch," he said, coolly putting hia host's pistol in to his coat pocket, "and this. Both unide-lookin' guns, but I'll take charge o' them," Mitchell sat still; his wife and Siss watching the performance from the darkness of the kitchen, while Smith walked out into the lot and deliberate ly dumped the rifle and' the pistol Into the well. "Got any more guns?" he asked, com ing back. "Nary a gun, Smithy," answered Mit chell, trying to wink knowingly to his wife. id "All right, you can let down your mitts," quoth the outlaw, "You sit that, and here, Mrs. Mitchell, you set alongside. Now make that gal o' yourn Sit me some^supper." i The scared children huddled in the lorner behind their fallen hero. The woman, fasclnat?d into submission, sat beside her husband. The outlaw, his big, blue revolver beside his plate, at tacked the pile of corn bread. Siss, the red-headed, nervous, viperish-looking Slrl, came in and out with a dish of potatoes, some fried bacon and a can 5f water. "What makes you act so foolish, Smithy?" Mitchell was whining, "ain't aothin' wrong, is they? You might a knowed I'd a give you your supper thout no such row" as that" "You mighiT and you mightn't. Got ; my eggs?" growled Smith, leering at j 3188 out of his one vindictive eye. "Ain't got none fur you!" snapped ! ?he little virago, bridlirg vdh fury and j whipping., .her two litle red pigtails ? re?omously,^.. . ... The desperado turned red with fury, : hutched at his pistol and w?.s choking ' >ut a curse when Mitchell iaf?rrupted with: j "See here! - Siss, you little rattle- ' make, fetch him some eggs. That; I iln't nc way fur you to ?0 s'assin' Mr. j Smith! Don't you know no better than7 ! [UT to be gi vin' back talk to folks old- : ?r'n you?" Siss looked Inquiringly at her mother, [rut the weak little woman nodded her . tiead and .piped: "In the stone jar, Sh. You'll find a ! ?ouple o' eggs tn the stone jar." ! "Now, r,?e htfrp Mitchell," said Smith, transfixing tb? hulking cow- ! ird with his mean eve, "tain'!, no use rou lettin' on you don't k:iow. I seen j rou in town today, and you passed me m ? the road. I was under Baggots j :orn crib. I killed . Copley and the Jepty, an' l'-d a kiiled Housman too if ? I'd a chance. I'm goin' to take your j b.crs9, an' If you ? any o' these br?ts | o' youm says a word to the sherill about me, 'r which way I come, 'r what route I took, I'll come back here an' blow th' whole outfit Into-" Sis? came in with two fried eggs.and laid the dish before him. He took his knife and fork and reached for the food, hurrying like a hungry, hunted man. . "I'll come back and blow the whole outfit into-" Siss stood irresolute an instant be side him. Her snapping blue eyes were on the pistol. Quick as a flash she grabbed it up, whisked round the table, and with the cocked weapon held in both her skinny bands and pointed full in the -bad man's face -she yelled: "Now, you Impident pup, I'm a-goin* t' frazzle you with bullets!" Smith was so astonished that he let fall his eating utensils, sat bolt upright, stiff as a lay figure, pale as his dirty hide would go, his lips hectic, his one eye starting and the sweat of rage and fear upon his mottled fore head. The little yellow haired boy crouching in the corner, began to squawl lugubriously. Mitchell and his thin wife sat and stared at the trans figured Siss. "Git up an' tie him, daddy!" she al most shrieked. "Tie him 'r I'll frazzle him over the flodr!" Mitchell looked at Smith and paused, his big hands shaking a bit. "Tie him 'r I'll frazzle the both o' you!" she roared, stamping her foot in an ecstacy of wrath. Mitchell hulked out Into the yard for a rope, but Siss, the little serpent, held her quarry motionless with the glitter of her eye and the portent of the big revolver. But Mitchell came back and the cowed outlaw was limp and weak before the untrembling hos tility of the red-headed girl. And when Mitchell's courage began to come back, and he had fixed fast the lariat about the pinched arms of Smith, there was a clatter of hoof-beats in the road. Smith nade a motion as if to rise, but the blue eye and the big gun bade him sit still. And when Sheriff Housman and his posse came galloping up Mit chell was in the road yelling: "I ketched him, sher'ff! I got him in yander tied up an' licked!"-Chic? ago Record-Herald. RELIGIOUS BARBARITY. As Manifested In'the Torture of Ani-. mais in India. - The Oriental religions have had great credit for teaching their peoples respect for the rights^ of animals and general mercy and kindness to them, and yet these religions are responsible; for cruelties horrible to read of, as for instance, the long drawing out of a lingering death of some diseased ani mal in terrible suffering, on the theory that some frightful sinner of a human soul, having grovelled so as to have transmigrated into that animal, ls re ceiving his allotted punishment. An East Indian humanitarian, Mr. Labhah ankar Lavmidas, writing from Nagar Wado, Junagad, India, a few weeks ago to Lord Minion, begged him to put a stop to the impaling alive of pigs, lambs and fowls in religious cere monies, and the killing of animals with swords, knives and spears in the hands of the populace, to make a religious holiday; and the crushing of miles long rows of tied-up goats under the wheels of a heavy chariot that is driven on the bodies of the unoffending creatures for another sort of religious ceremony. It appears that under- the compact be tween the British government and the natives the government may not inter fere with the killing of animals in the name of religion. Torture of animals means a moral degradation of the tor menters no matter how high and holy the cause may proclaim itself to ,be? whether in India, Europe or the Unit ed States.-Boston Evening Transcript, PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Helpfulness ls love in action.. Selfishness is the essence of sin. Self-adulation is not self-respect. Morality is more than a matter of negations. Love never remains where reverence has departed. The saddest thing in the world is a self-satisfied soul. The ear does as much to circulate scandal as the tongue. It's better to smile at nothing than to frown at everything. Nothing keeps people faithful better than your faith in them. It is strange that the heart Is starved when we give it neither food nor meal times. You do not have much faith in your .Euther unless you have some in his family. ''There is a good deal of apparent poverty -that needs your time more than your dime. Things do not prove themselves sac red by segregating themselves from secular concerns. Our records depend not on our great plans but the test comes when we find the particulances. No man can have a place in the kingdom of heaven who is complacent to the ills of earth. Heaven intrusts no great cargo to the vessel that spreads its sails to every wind that blows. When a man is getting fat out of the fall of others he is sure to be a warm advocate of tneir rights to fall. It is easy to talk of love for our fel lows, but the test comes when we find the particular fellow in need qf our love. Many a man will be surprised when he gets to heaven to find how large a place his little kindly deeds occupy in its history.-From Sentence Ser mons, in the Chicago Tribune. Tact in Talking. "The v/eather this morning, Miss Dora" "Oh, don't talk about the weather Mr. Happenround! It's such a dreary old chestnut " "I was going to say, Miss Dora, that the weather this morning or any other morning, for that matter, is a milghty poor subject, to use in start ing a conversation. Glad you agree with me. Have you read Prof. All brains's latest brochure on the influ ence of heredity as affecting the ten dency of the human mind toward transcendentalism ?"-Chicago Trib une. An Unblushing Libel. "He's studying dentistry at a cor respondence school." "Rather an awkward way, I should think." "I should say it is. He gave a pa tient gas the other day and then found he didn't know how to remove the mo lar. So he had to write to the school and it was three days before he could get rid of his patient."-Cleveland Plain l^fjfk ?>." ii Late flete* I; In /Brief MINOR MATTERS OF INTEREST Serious trouble in Ecuador is ex pected. Ex-Governor Montague is ill in Norfolk. , Dissolution of Russian Parliament is threatened. Miners are still entombed near Jamestown, Pa. Disgusting conditions exist in Rus sian bake shops. Military government is established in Montenegro. Woman's Home Mission Board meets at Houston, Tex. The Bond robbery at New York i grows in magnitude. Twenty-eight miners are cut bff by flood in Belgium. Inland Waterways Commission meets in Washington. Japanese visitors are expected to reach Seattle this week. Secretary Taft . holds a political conference in Cincinnati. Lack of funds may interfere with Peary's north pole plans. Washington officials are uninform ed regarding mob in Guatemala city. End of contest for control of Tam many Hall is announced a<t New York Unusual kind of government at Te gucigalpa results in fresh .fighting, Receiving bribes is charged against certain municipal officers in London. Vanderbilt's Chancellor addresses Council on Medical Education at Chi cago. Mrs. James C. Frazier, a prominent West Virginia woman, died iii Indi ana. A Cyclone in Texas caused a loss of at least eight lives and great dam age- , . Rev. J. D. Simmons was stricken with apoplexy in a hotel at Buckhau non, W. va. Secretary Taft speaks in Cincin nati, with the Panama Canal for a subject. Mrs. H. L. Williams shot "and per' haps fatally wounded her husband in . Danville. Various municipal officials in Lon don are being tried on charge of pet ty grafting. Two men were killed and. 100 per sons had. a thril?ing escape in a Wa bash wreck. The new Inland Waterways Com mission held its first business meeting and organized. President of Panama to be absent for long while, radical changes in Cabinet resulting. Taft followers are to issue a state ment to the effect that he is only aft* er the Presidency. i Several persons h?ve been killed, and many wounded during the politi cal campaign in Ecuador. A system of 15-day Presidents gov erning.by turns reopened the revolu tion in Honduras for a time. Secretary Taft in an address at Dayton, Ohio, praised the Young Men's Christian Association. Each person in the United States, according to a Government report, eats 76 pounds of sugar a year. A rich Pittsburg widow married a man 10 years younger than she, who had been her instructor at a skating rink. The volcano on" the Island of Stromboli is again in eruption and several persons may have been en gulfed in lava. / The decision- that the meat packers had accepted rebates was upheld by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Paul. A coroner's jury in Macon, Ga., brought in a verdict of justiable hom icide in the case of a man who killed his sister's alleged betrayer. The Supreme Court ruled that a State railroad commission may en force changes in railroad schedules, in deciding North Carolina case. There is a possibility that Com mander Peary may not be able to make his proposed new dash to the North Pole for lack of funds. A letter alleged to have been writ ten by Miss Elizabeth Loving is said to clear Theodore Estes of the charge upon which her father, Judge Loving shot him. General Manager Post, of the New port News Ship building and Dry do ck Company, declares Congressman Wal do's statements condemning private shipyards unfounded. The President has appointed Col. Charles L. Hodges, of the Twenty fourth Infantry, a. negro regiment, a brigadier general. General Hodges is now in the Philippines. Coney Island amusement suspend during-transfer to the last resting place of body of Elmer Dundy. The District Attorney conducting the case against the alleged "Black hand" at Wilkes-Barre says the or ganization is no myth. A savage attack by a Socialist del ?gate on the Russian Government and Army came near precipitating the dissolution of the Doutfa. Franz Endrukaty shot Martha Co rals dead and then tried to kill him self in Philadelphia because the girl iad refused to marry him. Statement by Republican Chairman :n Ohio regarding Foraker-Taft con test. William E. Corey was re'-elected president of the United States Steel Corporation at the annual meeting )f the board of directors. All the jther officers whose terms expired )f 1 3-4 per cent on the preferred stock and one-half Nof one per cent, on the common stock were declared, rhe net earnings for the quarter end ?d March 31 were $39,122,492, an in ;rease of $2,480,002 over the same rmarter last year. THE BURDEN OP BLUFF, iones bought an auto. Why not you? rhe price he paid was high, 'tis true; Hore than he could afford, of course-? 3e couldn't even keep a! horse! ie's just as much in debt as you; ils assets, surely, quite as few; V.nd yet Jones bought a motor car The thing somehow hands you a jar) Jo why not you? Unless It be. fou do not care to do as he, lind bucl;'i3 down to work and grunt ro keep up just an auto front. ndiauapolis News, YOUR GRANDMOTHER USED IT. Bat She Never Had Sulphur in Such Convenient Form as This. Your grandmother used Sulphur as her favorite household remedy, and so did her grandmother. Sulphur has been curing skin and blood diseases for a hundred years. But in the old days they had to take powdered sulphur. Now Hancock's Liquid Sulphur gives it to you in the best possible form, and you get the full benefit. Hancock's Liquid Sulphur and Ointment quickly cure Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum and all Skin Diseases. It cured an ugly ulcer for Mrs. Ann W. Willett, of Wash ington, D. C., in three days. Taken internally, it purifies the blood and clears the complexion. Your druggist sells it. Sulphur Booklet free, if you write Han* cock Liquid Sulphur Company. Baltimore. None can cure their harms by wail ing them.-Shakespeare. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENET & Co., Toledo.0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WEST & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. WALDINO, KIKNAN & MARVIN, "Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation 1 Party is the madness of many for the gain of a few.-Pope. Di op a postal card to The Alaska Packers Association, Advertising De partment,- Atlanta, Ga., if you use "Argo" and get their Argo Red Sal mon Cook Book, with 39 ways of pre paring salmon. A new girl in town wears heels as high as the ideals of a graduate. Atchison Globe. . TEN YEARS OF PAIN. Unable to Do Even Housework Be? canse of Kidney Troubles. Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clin ton St., Napoleon, 0., says: "For fifteen years I was a great sufferer from kidney trou bles. My back pained me terribly. Every turn or move caused sharp, shooting pains. My eyesight was poor, dark spots appeared before me, and I had dizzy spells. For ten years I could not do housework, and for two years did not get out of the house. The kidney secretions were Irregular, and doctors were not help ing me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick relief, and finally cured me. They saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 5 0 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. . WATER HANGING PLANTS. Be sure that plants in hanging pots and baskets get all the water they need. Because they are near the ceil ing, where the temperature is much higher than at the window-sill, they will dry-out much more rapidly than ordinary plants. , They are also ex posed on all sides, and this acceler ates evaporation. I have a method of keeping these plants well? watered which works well. I take a small can or cup and punch holes in the bottom of lt. Make these small at first, until you know Just how much water is needed. Fill these vessels and place them on the surface of the soil. Vines can be so trained as to hide them. Observe the effect care fully. If not enough water passes through to keep the soil moist, you will know that larger holes are neces sary. This matter can be regulated to a nicety, with a little experiment ing. Fill the cup each morning. A treat ment of this Wind enables any one to grow fine hanging plants.-The Home Magazine. TEACH LITTLE GIRLS. That happiness ls a matter of spirit, not "things." That it is possible only when every member of the household is consid ered. . v That to be In her own place, wher ever that may be, a beautiful home maker is the loveliest ambition any woman can have. That it is better to be a beautiful 1 homemaker than a fine housekeeper, says Home Chat. That the one indispensable quality in a home is happiness; every home, no matter how beautiful, which misses that is a failure, but no home. Surprised the People. reopie m me neighborhood of Ashcake, Hanover County, were as tonished to hear of the elopement of Miss Mary Cross, daughter of Mr. Wert Cross, a well-to-do farmer, and Edward Smith. The bridegroom is 32 years of age, while the bride ls ? bnt 16. The bride retired at night as usual, and it ls supposed ?hat she slipped out of the house after the j household was wrapped in slumber. So successfully did the sweethearts keep their secret that their plans were made without the prospective husband visiting her le her hom?. . Fred S. Hoback, of FFoyd County, 1 who has been serving a term of 12 1 months in jail for unlawful shoot- 1 ing, has been pardoned by Governor ' Swanson. Hoback waa convicted of 1 shooting Dr. John L. Jett In July 1 of last year. The pardon granted by the Governor ls based upon a pe tition signed by the judge and jury ' who tried the caBe and by promi- ? nent citizens of Floyd County. It < ls also said by the Floyd jail phys!- * clan that Hoback's health is poor md that further imprisonment would ! andanger his life. u YrWt THIS LINIMENT KU \M CURB AND Wa J. Arthur Brubeck of Simeon, Va n& LINIMENT tho test he ever used, gi lt entirely, and it is also a suro ct K hos used it for, ho says it is the I A RAI NF SS Mr. W. E. Bruner of Richmond, ' B bruise, which ho sot from riding Sj friend recommended YAGER'S LI SS less than a bottle cured it entirely W TAKE NO SUBSTITUI THE FARf 14 MAKES YOU WELL ALL OVER " New SclentiAc Remedy Tiaat "Gets at tho Joints From the Inside." When you get up in the morning with a headache, pains in th? joints and muscles, and a dark brown taste in .he mouth, ii is ample proof that your blood is in bad condition. Pills and stimulants may give you temporary relief, but they will not cure.-" Rheumacide goes right to the seat of the trouble, sweeps all the germs and poisons out of the blood, cleans up every plague spot" in the body and "makes you well all over." Rheumacide tones up the stomach, relieves indigestion and constipation, regu lates the liver and kidneys and restores each organ to its natural functions. By building up the entire system, Rheu macide fortifies you against La Grippe, Pneumonia and winter Colds. Through its thorough cleaning of the blood it wards off Malaria ana prevents Spring Fever. No other medicine has yet been found that cures Rheumatism to stay cured. A remedy that is powerful enough cure Rheumatism also removes the germs of all other blood diseases. Powerful as it is, Rheumacide is a pure ly vegetable remedy that does_ not even harm the stomach of a baby arid acts en tirely through nature's channels. Your druggist sells and recommends Rheumacide. It is less to suffer punishment than to deserve it.-Ovid. Argo Red Salm?n is packed by The Alaska Packers Association, the larg 3st salmon canning firm in the world. They pack over 65,000,000 cans a Fear. At all grocers. We lessen our wants jy lessening our desires.-Labernus. Instead of experimenting with drugs and strong cathartics-which are clearlyharm fnl-take Nature's Mild laxative, Garfield Tea! It is mado wholly of Herbs. For con stipation, liver and kidney derangements, sick-headache, biliousness and indigestion. The heart knows his own bitterness. -Solomon. A Woman's Back Has many aches and pains caused by weaknesses and falling, or other displace ment, of the pelvic organs. Other symp toms of female weakness are frequent headache, dizziness, imaginary specks ot dark spots floating before the eyes, gnaw ing sensation in stomach, dragging or . bearing down in lower abdominal or pelvic region, disagreeable drains from pelvic organs.falnt spells with general weakness. If any considerable number sf tho above symptoms are present there is no remedy that wiHjrive quicker relief or a more per* maaent cb?e than Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pres?>?V?taS?t has a record of over forty years of cure? fo.ls the, most potent invigorating tonic and strengthening ner vino known to rqgdlcaljcience. Iiis made of the glyeerlc extracts" of native medici nal roots found in our forests and con tains not a drop of alcohol or harmful, or habit-forming drugs. Its Ingredients are all printed on the bottle-wrapper and at tested under oath as correct. Every ingredient entering into "Fa vorite Prescription" has the written en dorsement of the most eminent medical writers of all the several schools of prac tice-more valuable than any amount of non-professional testimonials-though the latter are not lacking, having been con tributed voluntarily by grateful patients in numbers to exceed the endorsements given to any other medicine extant for the cure of woman's ills. You cannot afford to accept any medicine of unknown composition as a substitute for this well proven remedy OF KNOWN COMPOSITION, even though the dealer may make a little more profit thereby. Your interest in regaining health is paramount to any selfish interest of his and lt is an insult to your intelligence for him to try to palra off upon you a substitute. You know what you want and it is his busi ness to supply the article called for. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the original ?Little Liver Pills" first put up by old Dr. Pierce over forty years ago, much imitated but never equaled. Little sugar-coated granules-easy to take as candy. _ . From little things men go on lo great. _ Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo. It is more noble to make yourself i great than to be born so.-German. FITS, St. Vitns'Dance :Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve ? Restorer. S2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa, A blow threatened was nevr well given.-Italian. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails, At druggist*, Use can j/most change the stamp j of nature.-Shakespeare. Argo Red Salmon can be prepared in nearly a hundred different ways. It i-j one of the most nutritious and healthful nods sold. At all grocers. The tears of the night equal the smiles of the day.-Rousseau. Garfield Tea, Nature's remedy, brings \ relief from many ailments; it overcomes I constipa ?on, regulate? the liver and kid- | neys, purifies the blood and clears the com- I Ijlexion. lt ir> made of Herbs, and is abso- ! utely Pure I There is never much talk of a thing but there is some truth in it.-Italian, i There is nothing nicer to have In the larder than a few cans of Argo Red Salmon, just the thing for unex-.' pected company. Wait is a hard word to the hungry. -German. SKIN CURED IN A WEEK After Suffering Six Months With Dis figuring Red Spots and Pimples Cleared Away by Cuticnra. "Cuticura Soap and Ointment are the greatest remedies for skin diseases on ?arth. I have suffered six months from a lisease which I cannot describe, but I will .ell you the symptoms. My r"kin was full )f red spots and my face was full of red limpies. It made life miserable for me ind I was discouraged with everything. I went to several doctors, but it was use ess. I resolved to try the Cuticura Reme lies, and after using them for about one veek I became a nevr man. The pimples ind the red spots have disappeared and hey made my skin as soft as velvet. Uberfc Cashman, Bedford Station, X. Y., tfov. 29, 1905." Providence for the most part sets s on a level.-Spectator. CREAR CHLOROF* ? Bl :LS PAIN-AND SHOULD B SCRATCHES. ., writes : I have tried it, and find YAGER'S One of his horses had a curb and lt removed VV ire for scratches, and man y other ailments ho Li best of all liniments and recommends it. se wi UL BRUISE. Pt Va., writes: I had been troubled with asevere ** a horse bareback and could not cure it, a ' MM EXT, one application relieved him, and in , he says tt is the best liniment he ever used, it i rE-ALL MERCHANTS AND D PERIOD MISS ADELAIDE NICHOLS While no "woman is entirely from periodic suffering, it ctoeS ! seem to.be the plan of nature t, women should attifer B? seteirelyJ regularities and pain arc jposij evidence that something is wr which Should be set right or it: lead to serious derangement'ol feminine organism. Thousands of women, h?| found relief from all periodic f?ring by talcing Lydia E. I ham's Vegetable Compottndi .tvl is made from native roots and " as it is the most th brough f regulator kitoy^n t8 medical scie It cures thc condition, yVfiJ causes so inuch discomfort and rt that period of its terrors. Women who are troubled with painful or regular* functions should take immediate action to ward o?r the serie consequences and be restored to health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comp'cimj Miss Adelaide Nichols of - 324 West 32nd Street, New YofU Git] writes:-Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-"If women who, suffer would only.fej upon Lydia E? Pinkham's Vegetable Compound their Iroublefi froulfl.tf quickly alleviated ? feel greatly ind?bt??. for, the relief end Heall which has.been.'broughtto me, by your inestimable remedy." . . j t?ydi?..?..Pi??B?m'S Veget?Bl? Compound cures Female Complain! sticH as Falling and Displacements, and Organic Diseases lieadachr General Debility, Indigestion, and invigorates the whole ??r?inii system. For the derangements of tho Kidnc-ys of either s?? Li E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is excellent. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Won* Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited j write Mrs.Pinkham, atLynn.Mass From the symptoms given, thc trout may be located aiid the quickest and surest way of recovery advi OFFERED WORTHY YOUNG PEOPLE ? 0 matter how limited roar means or educa bien, if yon Trish a thorough business training and good position, write today for Our Great Half-Rate Offer. Success, inde pendence and probable FORTUNE guaran teed Don't delay-write today. GA.-ALA. BUS. COLLEGE, MACON, GA. THE SWISS SO EA I LY THE KING OF A 1,1. ' H)"VDtS IFIXTJ.HESTEDWRI' TUE MAUl'GC CO., Tracy City ." lAtAAAAAAAAAAAAAiAAAAAAAAAAA A A ? A&A ?\? A, A Ai A?AAYft Uki 3 The Only ^'Adver tised Brand" of North Carolina Flue-Cured Tobacco 3 The Original "Break Plug" Tobacco. 2 Showing a GAIN EVER Y YEAR since introduced. tl 34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT Our vehicle* and harness hare bera told direct (nm our fictory to war fer t third of a enrury. We ?hip lor enmlnr?rasadMrrartlaad guarantee ss/e dollvery. You ?ra ont nothing If ?ot Horned aa m style, quality and price. - * . We are the Largest UanafaetBrcr* ta Otc World tallia? to the consumer exdcitvcly. We taiko SW styles of Vahlde*, 48styles of harnett). Scud (ar h^fS, tree ataceos _ ten?o'n^op^f?re?: Elkhart Carriarje & Ifcvnese MT-. Co. ^fr^^?^?^SSl?S Price complete, 078.?, ' ElKiiarf, In?iem . Tint. Tfafm^*, ffl.Cft,. Though bitten twice by fi montey and warned that a, third bite would be fatal, Mrs. Powell, of Bath, Eng" land, refused to part with the animal. She waa bitten again, blood poisoning set in and death from heart failure followed. expects to be called Mr. Bull.-Ger HICKS* CAPUDINE IMMEDIATELY CURES HEADACHES Brenks up COLDS IN 6 TO 12 HOURS Trial Coule 10c At Druitfss To convino? woman th tv t Pfcx tino Antkrptio will improve her health ui\d do all we clahn Tor it. "We will send her absolutely free a. large trial box of Paxtine with book of ihstruo tions and genuine testimonials. Send your name au J address on a postal card. cleanses and healo mucous BW&$*ttm 6 m - H?BBbrane ?f. fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused by iemU nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur ative power over these troubles is extra-' ordinary and gives immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and rec ommend ing it every day. 50 cents at druggists orbymail. l?omcmber, however, IT COSTS YOU KOTO ING TO TRY IT. TUE lt. PAXTON CO., Booton, AUoo. ? LICE! ^'"V CHICKENS** LICE POWDER Sore Death to Lie? and Vermin The Small Buyer of Paint who takes care that the Dutch Boy trade mark, shown below, appears on every keg of white lead he buys, is perfectly pro tected; as perfectly as if he were a railroad official buying hundreds of tons, and' with a corps of chemists at his back to see that no adulterant is palmed off on him. Pure White Lead and Pure Linseed Oil are absolutely nec essary to good painting. SEND FOR BOOK "A Talk on Paint," gives valuable infor mation on the paint subject. Sent free u?.on request. They can't live wcere it is. Easy to apply. Dust it ia "Killed every louie ia my flock of 250 hens."-D.Perry. Moaroo.Wis. Price 25 and 50c a Pkg. fly mail. 43 tai 7ic ?fjpnuaaiai? RCMIDT CO.. ST. PAUL. MINN.S WOOD, IRON AND STEEL ALL KITTOS 0? BELTING AlfD MILL SUPPLIES Lombard Foundry, li ?chine snd Boiler Warb L Supply St?r? _AUGUSTA, GA._ Side and Centre Crank Engines LARGE STOC "LOMBARD All trad Backed tn 1307 bears thia mark NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in whichever of the follow' ing cities it ntarett you . New Torie, Boston, Buffalo. Cleveland, Cincinnati. Chicago.- St. Louia, Phila delphia (John T. Lewis A Bros. Co.). Pitts burgh (National Load A Oil Co.) foundry, Machine ind Boiler Works end Supply Ska, AUGUSTA, GA. CURED filvea Quick Relief. Reno vcr ali swelling in 8 to 90 dava ; ejects a permanent cur?) in 30 to iio days. Trial treatment given free. Nothlngcan be fairer Write Dr. H. H. Creon's Sont,.? Socialists. Bax e Allanta. Qa, -A.r? You IlTipttiroci? Why not li H vi- it Caved V Send at once lett?! or postul, with your address and p lnclpal facta, W v will mail trial i rcatment.w Itboui cost to yon. that will (five Imm <Hate.relief from the effects of i-uinljoi-ionio aud danserons trusses. We (Uso isac our free baot on the "Cause, Care and Cure of Hnpture." This explains how you may be En* IJ rely Cured by small cost bv th * Werah! Healer Co., 4-39 Wi 8, Erle, Paw So. 19-'Q7. E FOUND IN EVERY HOME AND STABLE CURES SWEENY AND RHEUMATISM. Mr. Thos. G. Price, stockman for the Mononsah Coal and Coke Co., Monongah, Va., writes r-They usc 125 to 150 horses and mules, and have used YAGER'S :NIMENT in their stables for years, past, and it has never failed to euro. For veral months a veterinary worded on a horse with a severe case of sweeny :ti no results, when three boUle3 of YAGER'S LINIMENT cured it. Mr. ice was laid up for eleven months with rheumatism, seven months ia d ; two bottles of YAGER'S LINIMENT put him on his feet When you need a liniment buy YAGER'S and you get the best-keep a bottle your homo and stable, it wOl bo the best investment you ever-made-Have ready for emergencies. RUGGISTS SELL IT-LARGE BOTTLES, 25 ?TS.