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DYSPEPSIA : Bets almost Immediately on trbe Gastric f juices ami cives tne ntouiucli tolie sua j | Strength to digest almost everything thnt I 1 baa been put nito It. It aoothea sore and | " IrrltnteU stomachs that have been Impaired by phrsle and Injnrlooa drugs. We cannot too urgently advise all pe-raous who suffer from auy of the fo"owlng symptoms to try this rc-nedy: L>lstrcaa after eating. , bloating of the stomach. Rising of the 01 food. Vvnterbrash Sour Stomach. Heart- t] barn. Loss of Appetite, Constipation, . Dlzalnc*. Falntness. Palpitation of the ? bcart. Shortnesa of breath, aud all affec- h ttous of the heart caused by Indigestion. We want every discouraged aud despon- l5 deut sufferer from Dyspepsia or Indfges- |ji tlon to cast aside all other medicine and gtvi this remedy a trial. If It faita to P1 give satisfaction I will refund your money. MUNTON. For sale by all druggists. Price, 2Sc. He nealeth the broken in heart ir gnd bindeth up their wounds.?Bible a h SuEered 14 Years from Piles? ol Tetterine Cures the Case. i]< BelUlrc. Mich.. Nov. 18. 1D08. n Mr J. T. Shnptrlne. Savannah. Ga. Dear Sir:?About sixteen years ago I 11 had a case of Itching piles. Like many jy others I trlod first one thing and theli another until I had tried all the remedies I had heard of. Some of them cased for tr a few days, then they got worse. They seemed to bother me more at night than 111 any other time?I could not lay In bed for five years only on my back, and for weeks I never lay down at all. They got Si ao bad till at times they caused my blood V( to fush to my head and render me unconscious. I moved up In northern Mich- n Igan th-ee years ago and the same old | D , case for owed. me. Last February I went j 1 streer. in Chicago. and asked the clerk r, to give me the best thing he had for my trouble. He sold me n fcox of Tetterlne. tout It smarted so when I put It on till I i, left It ofT and got a milder salve. I came on hark to my home and finally run out O' of all the other salves but Tetterlne. so I r. tarted using It again, but more lightly: at first I noticed It seemed to do me p good, and 1 did not use but half the box p before I was entirely cured. That has 1 been five months now. and there Is still J no algns of Its reappearing. It seems so good to me that, after fourteen years offering. 1 have at last found a cure, t] 'ctterlne did It. It's the best thine In ie world. Grady O. Wilson, R. FT ft. *' o. 2. Pellalre. Mich. S Tetterlne cures Eczema. Tetter, Ring h dform. Ground Itch. Itching Piles. In- n fant's Sore Head. Pimples. Bolls. Hough 11 8cc.lv Patches on the Face, Old Itching f. Sorer.. Dandruff. Cankered Scalp. BunIons. Corns. Chilblains and every form of lj . * Skin Disease. Tetterlne 50c: Tetterlne Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by mall f?o?n the manufacturer. The Shuptrlne Co., y 1 Savannah. Ga. If you are wise, thrust not your n hand in the flame.?St. Jerome. ? Try Murine Eyo Remedy s For Red, Weak. Weary, Watery Eyes, ^ Granulation, Pink Eye and Eye Strain. Murine Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pain. n ?/ Is Compounded by Experienced Physicians; n Contains no Injurious or Prohibited Dnus. u if Try Murine For kour Eye Troubles. You . Will Like Murine. Try It in Baby's Eyes tJ for Scaly Eyelids. Druggi-ts Sell Murine ti at 50c. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, c. ( - will send You Interesting Eye Books Free. ^ Perfidy often recoils upon its a' author.?fca Fontaine. T S( Bough on Bate, unbeatable exterminator, ai Bough on Hen Lice. Nest Powder, 25c. v< Bongh on Bed bags, Powder or Liq'd. 25c. jl; Bough on Fteae, Powder or Liquid, 25c. Bou^h on Roaches, Pow'd, 15c., Liq'd, 35c. p( >. Bongh on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c. J)f Bongh on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25c. , E. S. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. A diamond with a flaw is better ea than a common stone without any imprefection.?Chinese. So. 20-'09. ^ EARNEST ADVICE. h? Rev. G. M. Gray Feels It a Duty to V- Speak. RC n> Any person Buffering with back- ar -"ache, urinary disorders or other evi/-yt-jiu.. dence of kidney trou- a, ble may feel the ut- UJ meat confidence in ^ 'Jthe following stateTifi^rF mcnt made by Rev. ai ? "ml M" ^ray' BaPtlst in mLjk.JEffjk clergyman.of Whites'APW boro, Texas: nj "I am the happy n] mt3 n recipient of great re- p lief from pain. tc BR w through using Doan's {l IvJ W Kidney Pills. Five tt IS years ago when suf- a faring from distressing lumbago 1 took Doan's Kidney Pills and they removed the trouble, including em- (, barrassing urinary ills. Doan's Kidney Pills are an honest remedy, and 0 I feel it a duty to tell my experience, t, though not seeking publicity." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Fo3ter-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. II A surplus is that part of your inK come that would rernnin with you ex- e cept for the fact that it never does. ^ Ask Tear Dealer For Allen's Foot-Fate. t< A powder. it reals ibe tret. Cures Corns, p Bunions. Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweat in? Feet and Ingrowing is ails. Allen a Foot-Fuse makes new or tight shoeseaay. At ? II Druggists and Shoe uteres, 25 cents. Ao- tl a no sulistitute. Sample mailed FkkS. _ Iress Allen S. Olmsted, LeKoy, N. Y. ^ h Next. It . A broken pitcher was offered as tea- I a Lg. timony that Ephraim Jackson, the col- * iV ored prisoner, had whacked his wife ? jF* on the head. "The testimony doesn't ^ hold water," said the learned Judge. , ?From the May Bohemian. | HoVk TblsT p We offer One Hundred Dollar* Howard %m any eaae of Catarrh that cannot bo K wmed by Hall'a Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cms.xrr k Co., Toledo J). I' V K- Wo, the undersigned, bare known T. J. n e Cheney for the last 15 years, and bsllew .. |f transactions and financially able to carry y SR nt any obligations mad# by his firm. 1: ^K' IriUUMO, Kiwjtaw k Mamvi*, Whole- . * sale Druggists, Toledo, O. I CatarrhCw^istakan?? tornnWr,set- ' ' r . . .* v *5*: ' bUIHU. rm as wcarv as a child Thai weeps uixm Its mother's breast 'cr joy of eoml'orlinq:. But I Have no sueh place to rest. am nsi weery as u bird 111 '"a 11 wild wln-ls far out to sea, I"hen 't regains lis nest. But, oh. There wa.ts no nest for me. I'hat think you may sustain the bl'rd That linds n ? it <uslng after night. IIU unai uic liutl* LilUU WIIBUir, Who wH-i.s clone at night? -Tliuodosia Garrison in Harper's Uazaa [ Substitute Pastry.' Clintcn Palmer was exceedingly for r pasuy o: every descrip.ion, but 1 rcw the line when ho had to eat tt ind manufactured by his w!fe. P ad been mat-tied three months ar rided himself that he possessed tl ost wife 011 earth. If she would n< ersist in trying to cook pastry. If Palmer did manage to cat it li ife would bo happy and satisfied the or cooking wr.a a success, and Pa icr wculd bo sicl:. Every time he ai pie or cake of hers it gave him eaduchu and threw his stomach o\ f balance. That meant a trip to ti rve'.or the n^xt day. The doctor meat isr.cy, ar.d the time Palmer lost froi is business had been the means ( taking him lose a number of goc istomcrs who went across the sl;et > liis rival, who was fortunate enoug ot to be married. Picking up a newspaper Palme lanced absent-mindedly over the ae oittsemcnts, and suddenly sat up 1 is chair and gave a whistle of sui nse, ror n:s eyes had fallen upo 11 advertisement which read in It blowing- peculiar manner: "Pies and cakes made by young an lcxporicnced wives, disposed of wltl ut suspicion. Satisfaction guarai led. Reasonable leims. For furtlit arliculais address The Newly We as try Company, Incorporated, No. S ohn St." The next day Palmer went down t lie address given in the advertise lent, which proved to be a luxuriovi et of offices, in a large building. A is request to see the manager he wa sliercd into the presence of a shor fit-faced man, to whom he statod hi ashless. "Why, yes, we can help you out c our (rouble," confidently asserted th mnagcr with a smile. "Your case ) o different from the thousands c thcrs we have handled successfull; low do we manage it? Say, for It lance, your wife announces at tt reakfast table that she is going t :ake an apple pie for your dinner ths igiit. which you secretly l\now wi ot be fit to eat. You call us up o 10 'phone and make us aware of th ict, and about five o'clock our ma ills at the house with an apple pi lade by our exper* cook, and take way the pie which your wife madi ho transformation is effected by you irvaut, who is put wise to the gam id paid to keep her mouth shut, or b lurself- when the onnnrtiinitv nffnrri self." "It certainly sounds good," admitte ilnier, "but just imagine what'll hap sn if my wife catches on to th ick." "There is no need that she should, [claimed the manager. "Have you ever experienced an; ouble?" asked Palmer, thinking tha was the most unique idea he eve iard of. "Yes, once," admitted the managei t man 'phoned us that his wife wa ing to make a custard pie, and w isunderstood him and senit aroun i apple pie. His wife caught on t e game and got a divorce from hir id then the man sued us for breakin; ) his home, but we won the cast owever, that was the only time w er had any trouble, out of the thou: ids of customers we have been serv g dally." "Well, if you have accomplished s uch for o hers you can certainly hel e out of my dilemma," exclalme aimer, thinking tfiat he saw a wa > please his wife and his stomach a le same time. "What are you ;rms? I want to try your service fc month." "Twenty-five dollars a mcnth," r< lied the manager. "This means th aily furnishing by us of as man ies and cakes as your wife turn at. If you follow out our Instructioni lere is no danger of detection and a arties will be satisfied." Palmer found out by experience tht tie Newlyweds' Pastry Co., Inc., wg nc of the greatest blessings he ha ver encountered. "Do you know, dear," his wife sai 5 him one day, "it seems strange n< 1 hpur VAii nrvmn'otn oKnnf mu "^1 ig any more, and say that it gainst the doctor's orders for you 1 at any pastry. Now you'll eat an: tilng 1 make and actually seem to ei jy it. My cooking has Improved' opefully. "It certainly has, my dear," Palnn ssured her. "It proves that when roman really sots her mind npon a omplishing a thing she does wo ers," winking at the oook. "Ti ies and cakes are splendid now 'his was no falsehood. Palmer assurt imself, for he did not state who; ies and cakes. One day his wife informed htm th he was going on a visit, and that si ntended to make a pie which si nade him promise he would not e mtll she came home next day, i he said the pie would be much bett f it was allowed to stand for a day i o. His wife baked the-pie. placed It he oven, warned him again not ouch It, and went off on her trip. 8! tad hardly gotten out at the hou i fiifri' iihafLfrf ~ in ' . ; ,' r^ f\ ' wnen Palmer called up the company, end requested them to send up one of their best apple pies and take thla particular one away. When his wife came home and asked Falu:er, if he had touched the pie, he truthfully answered that he had not, which seemed to please her very much. "She'll never fled out the deception," he assured himself, ir. "CliC.on!" almost shrieked his wife, who was in the kitchen, "come here and lcok at this pie." "What is the matter with it?" asked JF'lmtr, as he came out into the kitchen. "Didn't it turn out good?" "My pie turned out all right," cried his wife almost in tears, "but this cr.c isn't my pie. While I've been away id someone has taken my pie and left 10 this one in its place. Oh. I wish I had 19 never gone away," bursting into tears, le "Why, I would not take the supid posed less of an old pie so much to le heart," exclaimed Palmer soothingly, at "Ouo apple pie is the same as another, and ycu have no sure way of asceris taining' whether this is your pie or it not. il- "But I am sure that this is not my te pie," cried the wife, making a brave ela tort to stop her tears. "When 1 went it j away I felt sure that you would be le carmess about locking the house up it at night, so I thought of hiding all in my jewelry in a place where robbers >r wculd never think of looking for it. :d So I made that pie and put all my :t jewelry inside of a small tin box and ;h placed it inside the pie. That's why I tcld you not to touch it until I came ;r home. This is not my pie, for there 1- is not a sign of a tin box in it, and n there never was. Clinton Palmer, r- what did you do with my pie? Tell me n the truth." ie "The devil," gasped Palmer absentmindedly, leaning against the range d and receiving a good burn for his h- thoughtlessness. "Why didn't you l- tell me you had something inside the ?r pie, and I never would have let the d company take it away. All the jewelry 19 in it? Well, there goes about $10,000 out of the door. It?" o "What company?" interrupted his 5- wife, angrily, and smelling a mouse, is "Pray tell me, Clinton Palmer, what ct right had they to take my pie away? is Where did this other pie come from? t, Palmer thought that the best way is out of this hole was to own up and tell his wife everything, which he )f did. le When he had finished his wife Is laughed softly, and, after looking at >f him for a moment, said: y. "Well, when I married you I gave l- myself credit for marrying a smart ie man, but I never Imagined that you 0 possessed such a fertile set of brains it and were capable of putting them to U such good use. This explains why you n suddenly ceased growling about my e pastry, and began to praise it. Well, n I'll forgive you this time, for this exe perience is going to prove a 'dear less son for you; but hereafter please have 2* enough faith in me to try and eat my ir pastry. A good husband will always e stand up for his wife's cooking?good y or bed." s Palmer tried his best to locate the Newlyweds Pastry Co., Inc., but never d succeeded in doing so.?Arthur Whit - ney, in the New Orleans Times-Demo e orat. PRIMITIVE BULGARIANS* y They Are the Humblest Peasants In 1 All The World. r Bulgaria is the land of the peasant. He thrives there under conditions that would not ho tnlprn.rrwt in minv Euro 8 pe-an countries and yet he Ls satisfied (j with his lot, no matter how humble it may be. The chief reason for this contentment lies in the fact that there are few rich men among the landownf ing class with whom the peasant " might contrast his lowly station in ^ life. The large landowner is practicaliy unknown in Bulgaria and the few who are moderately wealthy are nearly all of foreign birth or descent. The statement was recently made by H a banker in Sofia that he did not believe there were fifty men in the ru. ral districts who possess an annual r net income of $5,000. | It would be difficult to find a Bulgarian Slav who does not own the littie plot of ground which he cultivates. e These small landowners comprise the y vast majority of the total population g and they have grown up from childB hood expecting and desiring no other jj mode of life. Peasants in comparatively well-to-do circumstances often sleep upon mats stretched out on the 8 bare floor, the entire family occupyd ing a single room. Dirt is prevalent and the ordinary sanitary arrangej ments are unknown, but the children reared under such adverse conditions lt. grow up to be wonderfully sturdy ls and healthy. The very plainest of ,0 fcod is eaten and the clothing varies ' but little. Sheep-skin is the customn_ ary garment throughout the year and inclement weather merely neccssi* lilies me weal uis 01 me cuhi insiae iT cut. Bulgaria is truly an exponent of "a the "simplo life."?Harper's Weekly. c_ London and the Great Earthquake. ie ixjndon prides itself on being out of the earthquake zone, which runs >d round It by way of Colchester and up so to Crieff in Scotland. But amid all the horrors of the Italian disaster at there comes the small matter of marie malade, which affects London. Oneie third of our marmalade came from at 81cily as bitter orange, citrons, lem-1 as ons. Even our breakfast table will be er more expensive when the marmalade or is served.?London Chronicle. in No Indeed, to "Time Is ndoney." be "Hard times aren't." ? Harper's as Weekly. .... f ' !*< . . ' "'J* T"T?5pF' ' "APERFEOTL'l f^lFSSSv ss ?Cartoon by PRAISES ROOSEVELT, MO RING AFRI New York City.?Ernest er, arrived here on the Kronp news of Mr. Roosevelt's bag cl by wireless and had been entln velt's expedition," said the wrl is splendidly equipped for the best naturalists in America. 1 they are vermin in that part c did shot, and should do well." I Staggering Statistics as to t by Reason of Fra It Amounts to $20,000,000 ; ?One Consignment < Found Sh i Albany, N. Y.?Poor people in th State, who have to buy their foe supplies in small quantities, wer robbed of about $20,000,000 la year by reason of short weights ar small measure, according to an est mate made by Fritz Reichmann, Stai Superintendent of Weights at Measures. Of that loss about $10 000,000 came from the people in Ne York City, in spite of the municip; bureau of weights and measures, < whose head Superintendent Reicl mann has not a very eomplimentai opinion. "The people who lose most throng faulty weights and measures," he d< clared, "are the very poor, who hai to buy in small quantities. This Stai Is so far behind its neighbors that naturally becomes the dumplt ground of short weight and sho: measure goods. Russia, which w consider a barbarous country, is s much better governed than New Yor State in respect to ita weights an measures, as to make us blush." Primarily the reason for this grei defrauding of customers by dealers not dishonesty, in Superlntendei Reichmann's opinion, but the impe feet laws, which leave each munic pality to work out Its own destin: with merely a general supervision c the part of a sadly handicapped Stai department. Thus dealers in one cil supplying retailers in some other cil with different regulations as i weights and measures, or perha] negligent inspection or no inspectio may unintentionally perpetrate fraud, which the retail dealers wou' pass along or intensify. "To be sure," Mr. Reichmann coi tlnued, "there Is much dishonest deliberate and Intentional, In evei large city and manv small ones, ar it Is to guard against this that tl sealers of weights and measures hai to watch constantly. Berry Boxes Short Measure. "I stopped a consignment of 60f 000 berry boxes to New York City tl other day from one of our up-Sta cities," the Superintendent adde "They were short measure. The co signor said they were to be used 1 the 'wagon trade.' " The staggering statistics which 1 produced as to the total annual lo from fraudulent weights and mea ures were compiled by taking twen foodstuffs, the average proportion loss found by the department's tes and the average consumption year of the twenty articles chosen. "They were twenty average coi modules?flour, bread, meats, eg? butter, coffee, tea, sugar, beans ai the like," said he. "Those tlgur< too, are conservative. If anythir the amount would be larger rath than smaller." To take one example. He e* mated that on dried beans the cn sumer paid for some S50.000 wn: of beans more than he received the course of a year. What purpoi ed to be a quart of dried beans w Durchased hv one of the lnsnectors a grocery store for twelve cents. T beans and the bag containing thf were weighed and found to wei; 23 3-32 ounces. The hag weigh 9-32 of an ounce, leaving for t beans 22 13-16 ounces. A corr< quart of beans is supposed to wei exactly thirty ounces. Thus on tl Iowa College Pats Girl on Baseball Ten Des Moines, Iowa.?Miss Josephi Armstrong has just been placed the Still College baseball team to pi centre field. She is pretty, sev? teen, an expert tennis and golf pit er and can throw the ball fartt than any man on the team. She v play in all scheduled games agali the crack teams. She also has a b ting average of .289. Miss Armstrong wears a na bloomer salt and looks not unlike a of the other college players. Maurice Ketten. in the New York World. cau ma. j. V SLAYER. BECAUSE UE ISRLDCA OF "VERMIN." x Thompson-Seton. the nature wrltrinz Wilhelm, and said that the ltd t lions had been brought to the ship si isiastically received. "Mr. RooseIter, "should be of great value. He work, and has with him two of the [ hope he will kill many lions, for yea! >f Africa. Mr. Roosevelt Is a splen- ^ and i ? thai he Annual Loss of the Poor mdulent Weights and Measures ri and for a Year in New York State Alone Lite >f 600,000 Berry Boxes ort Measure. ; n. p< of C is purchase the customer received nine S )d and one-eighth cents' worth. Instead Hb e of the twelve cents' worth for which low st he paid. Superintendent Reichmann id continues as foll?.vs: ,1- "All kinds of tricks are used by te dishonest merchants. Those merid chants who are not dishonest Inteni, tionally may have faulty scales or im- I w perfect measures of which they know hun al nothing because they are not tested. )t The longer a set of scales Is used the Zm i- worse It becomes?for the customer per -y ?unless It is tested and repaired. But It's the average merchant never will ask ;b for a test if he has to pay fees tor e- that test, unless his customers com- F re plain of him. Now, in some towns ehei te there Is the fee system; In others the ?= It municipal sealerof weights and measig ures has a salary and collects fees rt which go Into the city treasury; in re others, again, there is a straight saljo ary basis, and no charge is made for k tests. In some eitles there Is a rigid td inspection; in others absolutely none. Bad Conditions in Syracuse. "We went to Syracuse a time ago ? and found horrible conditions prevailing. There was a municipal dej" partment of weights and measures, l" with a salaried, head, who said he 5L' never had done anything much, be'n cause his predecessors never had done anything but draw their salaries. ^ Things were stirred up; this superin- % tendent was made to see the error of f&i ? his ways, a couple of deputies were 's added to his staff. Now that same ' man Is one of the most active and 1/^ .. best men in the State. He tells me that his working day is limited to I eight hours, but that he wants to 1 v~ work overtime In getting after vlolh- I [ ' tors of the law and does It. I went l! ' j to Yonkers some time ago, and thero was hardly a straight weight or pro- . per measure In the town. Now they i ; 1,0 have a good Inspection there, and the merchants are running pretty much on the level. "But It's so easy to beat the game. , ie How many customers know the differ- 1 te ence between dry and liquid meas- I d. ure? Yet if a grocer sells a quart of 1 n- lima beans, say. In a liquid quart i or measure, he's stealing about fifteen per cent. It's very easy for him to he undersell competitors a cent or two a S3 'quart' on that basis, and thus ho is- drives them out of business or Into ty his own habits. A butcher, say, of keeps several sheets of paper on his its scales. The paper weighs, perhaps, ly an ounce or an ounce and a half. It doesn't make much difference on a n- j t<?u-pound roast, but on a half pound ;s. or pound of meat for the poor woman ad 't tells heavily. And spring scales? ?s, there are as many ways to manipuig, late them as there are makes of er scales.' ! "All our neighboring States have ti- good laws. Canada, on our northern in- border, has probably the most rigid th law in the world. If an Inspector in stops a wagonload of bread and In -j- j? ' * * [ ?.- | uic mdu uiiua uue loai snore weignc | as he confiscates the whole load, gives It in to some charitable Institution and he prosecutes the baker. Massachusetts ?m has probably the best weights and gh measures system in the United States; ed Rhode Island has an excellent sysbe tern; Connecticut now has a bill un>ct der consideration which seems likely gh to pass; New Jersey has a good syslat tem; Pennsylvania and Ohio, too." f, ! Racing Doomed in Japan I, m. and Horsemen Lose Heavily. V ne Toklo.?A tremendous effort has ^ on been made by the race track element ?5 lay in Japan to induce the Government to >n- retract and permit betting upon the <* ly- tracks, but Marquis Katsura, the Pre. Ij ler mler, has stood firm, and for another * rill year at least the race tracks of the nst empire will be without their favorite A at- pari mutuel or any other form of bet- A ting. This means practically an end Ifl tty to horse racing in Japan, and. neces- B| my sarlly, a heavy loss to the various ^ t race tracks. i fa si*?ff t Vf -'M ' ''il :la?bified Advertisement? 1 ALMMIM WilTII) # J ANTED?Active, enerretlc men toreDre' sent us. Profitable positions. Hustlers ke bis money. Cash weekly advances. Comte outfit free. Write Immediately for our sral offer. W. T. Hoop & Co. OLD DOMINION NUKSEHIES. ntion this Paper. Richmond, Va. LAST AOKNTB WAXTEp. f ANTED?Lady agents In all parts of the United States to advertise and sell lark Crow Stock ens" to we art rs. Ooodoom alon. Address, Bi.ack Crow Stock a.v Co.. Newton. N. C. >>?? ??ACT MCSIC. S'YONE sending us names of five persons that play on the Plsno. we will send m Post Paid Free, copy of latest Son* or ?-Step. SOUTHEKiT MUSIC C', * ? at cc Box 80. Ulcbmond. Va. ' j .? A I Main dealing is a jewel, but be that 8 it will die a beggar.?Spanish. iTAMTLY RELIEVES THE ITCH 1MB j von't autler a moment longer from Eczeor any form of skin trouble. Don't itch or rub the akin. Just apply Hank's 8ul|>hur Compound to the affected t and it srtll stop the Itching at anoe, A paratlon that soothes, heals, and cures skin and scalp troubles. Druggists sell Write Haucook Liquid Bulpbur Go., timore. for booklet. II. C. Berry, of tlmorr, writes: ? "Hancock's Bulphur pound bas cured me completely. Iam er without it, for it is the most delightful unct to a bath that was ever gotten up. I not speak too highly of its benefit to Vf Emulation plows, and rivalry reaps, rish. ? ECZEMA COVERED HIM. ling Torture Was Beyond Words? ept Only from Sheer Exhaustion ?Kclfeved in 24 Hours and Cured in a Month by Cuticura. [ am seventy-seven years old, and some rs ago 1 was taken with eczema from d to fdot. I was sick for six months t ? ?j .. U?. A DUUSICU wuguc CUU1U Dot tell. juld not sleep day or night because of 1 dreadful itching; -when I did sleep it from sheer exhaustion. I was one is of irritation; it was even in my scalp. i doctor's medicine seemed to make me se and I was almost out of my mind. I a set of the Cuticura Soap, Ointment Resolvent. I used them persistently twenty-four hoara. That night I slept an infant, the first solid night's sleep sd had for six months. In a month I cured. W. Harrison 8mith, Mt. Kisco, Y., Feb. 3, 1908." jtter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Propu. hiticurn Remedies. Ronton. Mass. [he Wlin crnvn tlio ? "?* ?. -W {)?<v fcMW ISAVII7 uwaj I ?Her young brother, but the felsays he still loves her.?From the y Bohemian. So. 2O-'O0. i. Winrtow'i Soothing Syrup for Children bing,aoftenatheguiiM, reduce* infiamnmL. ailaya pmn. curat wind colic. 26c a bottle give not to the man, I give to aanity.?Aristotle . , < KIR A BACH K?Hick a' CA PUDINR bether frost Colds. Heat. Stomach or rous Troubles. Cai>udlne will relieve you. liquid?pleasant to take?acta lmin-idly. Try U, 10c., 26c, and 50c. at driyr ea. ______________ 'ills must be swallowed without tying.?French. ffAeiisnacide, TABLETS AND LIQUID, Cnre* RbetTmatlam to atay cored. Strlkea the root of the dlseaae aod remove* Ita cauae. 2.V., COr. aod 91.00 > bottle. Bbeumactde Liniment tops pals qalcfcty. 25c. a bottle. A.T DRUGGISTS'. UBsirs EVAPORATED MiLK Contains double the | Nutriment and None of the Injurious Bacteria bo often found in Socalled Fresh or Raw Milk. The use of Ubby*s Insures Pure, Rich, Wholesome, Healthful Milk that is Superior in Flavor and Economical in Cost. Ubby's Evaporated Milk is the Purest, Freshest, High - grade ! Milk Obtained from Selected Carefully Fed Cows. It is pasteurized , ^ and then Evaporated, (the water taken out) filled into Bright, New Tins, Sterilized and Seal ea Air 1 lght until Yoo Need It. Ubby, MeNdll HL& i * *Wt- ' -vil ' jittktMk -4 vjg