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Sty ru P?fFgs ^OixirffS enna (acts gently yet promptly onthe bowels, cleanses u\e system pj|ectually, 'assists one in overcoming habit ual constipation | permanently. To got its oenejici'ol objects bay tKe Pennine. . flanujactuccdi hy tlie CALiFQENIA : ITt nl x^TSrT3TT T O) r<r* I I ' A. v J*. v ^ ar v-7 SOLD BY LEADING DRUCGISTS-50* p.-BOTTLL THE COUNTRY EDITOR. The Important Place He Occupies in His Community. Ncwburyport. Mass., News. The able Portland Orcgonian, published. as its name indicates, in a "country town" of over 90.0(10 population in the extreme Northwest, dis courses delightfully and truly upon the eharaeteristics and privileges of the country editor. It says that lie is far more than the butt for aped jokes about his calling; that he holds a most important position in the ('(immunity. II says that he is much nearer his renders than is the man who writes for the mil) eitv dailies that while this environment may prevent a _^r study of all the divergent phases of human nature, such as may he found in a citv, it admits closer communication with those which arc more desirable and shuts out others which can never be conducive to human happiness. It further says that the country newspaper has sent forth a i large number of men who have attained high places in the State and nation and that on nearly all the big liAvspapcrs of (lie Tnited States will i lie found men who begun newspaper work in the olttee of a country news jiuj.er. II says, too, a good tiling conecrnb ing the newspaper as such, so good, indeed, that we ?|u?>11* ii entire: "There are always more good peopie than had people in a community, ami the newspaper, nt'ter all, merely 1|B reflects the sentiment of the peoplo B V who support it. The newspaper cank V not be much better or bigger than the people it serves. For any healthy, | thriving eitv to fail to support a Wi good newspaper is nearly always $ much more of a reflection on the L people than on the editor. The local p * newspaper has become so mueh a pa:t of the industrial and social life of our country that the town or city too small or too indifferent to support a paper is of not mueh conseThis is no more and no less than a simple statement of fact. In every community the newspaper respects m>v its constituents, and it never fears H but that if it deserves it. its constituents will accord a respect which is fully reciprocal. And that it is the aim of every good newspaper to deserve respect is evidenced by the time and money which it puts into the It effort to fulfill its community mission, even beyond the measure of service which the community of its own volition may require, Having made this effort and performed this service, it is rarely disappointed of its reward. In any event it finds reward in the consciousness of having done its duty to the community and to itself, j:V- Certainly not even the country nowsnnner hns nnv imml i<> t i*i?.i i... m . ? ...XV. !?' m uwiliiiru uv twlint Tin? Oregoninn calls "aged jokes." lis editor is generally a good humored person and correspondingly philosophical. If lie isn't he has "got in the wrong pew." Persistent. "She tries so hard to be young." "Yes, and seems to mo that she is bound to.succeed." "Does it* Why?" "She has been at it so long." J K.WJKR TO WORK | J Health Regained by Right Food. The average healthy nian or woman Is usually eager to be busy at some useful task or employment. Rut let dyspepsia or Indigestion get hold of one, and all endeavor be comes a burden. "A yenr ago. after recovering from an operation." writes a Mich. lady, "my stomaeh and nerves began to give me much trouble. )?. "At times my appetite was voracious. but when Indulged, Indigestion followed. Other times 1 had no appetite whatever. The food I took did not nourish me and 1 grew weaker gaL^,.. than ever. "I lost Interest in everything and I ' wnntf>H trt hn ol/.nn ' "' _ ciuiir. I 11,111 UIWHYS g had Rood nerves. but now the merest K! trifle would upset me and bring on a jji violent headache Walking across K. the room was an effort and prescribed H j exercise was out of tlie question. "I had seen Grape-Nuts advertised, ^ but did not believe what I read, at & the lime. At last when It seemed as if l were literally starving, I began to at Grape-Nuts. "I hnd not been able to work for a l year, but now after two months on Grape-Nuts T am e:i::i-r to In- work 3 again. My stomach gives me no trough ble now. my nerves are steady as ever, and Interest In life and ambltion have conie hack with the return "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Go., Rattle Creek. .Mich. Head "The Road to Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. B Tliey are gnmlltf true, and full of hitman (;it. mt r, ' - 1 BIK. lAtiS KELIUIUN President Roosevelt Says It is His Own Private Concern PEOPLE SHOULD NOT INTERFERE The President-Elect's Rclicious Belief, Declares the President, Is Purely His Own Private Concern; a Matter For Which He Is Responsible Solely to His Maker, and Net r. Subject for General Discussion or Political Discrimination. Washington, Sp vial.?*' Secretary Tal't's U'hjj'.iirx faith is purely his own private <on?e:n and u??t a matter for iieneml discussion and political discrimination," sa\s President Iuiostn.lt in a letter lie ma<!e public i hi which lie answers numerous oorj respondents. The President says lie defected the publieatioii of the letter until now to avoi I a.nv agitation likely to inlluenee the elmtion. The let I er ft How s: November li. lifltS. My Dear Sir: I have receive,! \onr letter ruutring in port as tbllov^o: "While it is claimed almost uni\ersally that religion s! onld not enter into ptdities. yet there is no denyintj that it t!o< s. and the mass of the voters that are not t'atholies will not support a man for any oil ice, especially for President til the linted Stales, who is a Roman Catholic. "Since Taft has been nominated for President hv (lie Republican parly, it is hoinjr circulated an I is constantly ursred as a reason for not voting for Tall that he is an infidel (l"nitarian) and wife and brother Roman Catholics. * * If his feelings are in svtvpath\ with the Roman Catholic Cliurcn on account of his wife and Inoth.-r haisnr Catholics, that would he objectionable to a sulli?ienl nunihcr of voters to defeat hint. (In the other hand, if lie is an inlidel, that would he sure to mean defeat. * * ' I am w i it iag I his | -iter for I he sole purpose "I yivintr Mr. Taft all opportunity ;< let the world know what his religious belief is." I received many such letters as \ours duriii" the cnmpni<>n. expressing dissatisfaction with Mr. Taft on I religions umund:.;: soiik of them on u?e ground (hail lie was a I'uitarian, anil olhets on 1 !u* ground iliat lie was su^pi'vti'il lo In' in sympathy v.'th ("atholies. I did not answer anv of these h'ltel's during the campaign because I regarded it as an outrage even to auilate sneh a i|iiestion ;is a man's religions eonvietions. with the purpose of influencing it politieal eleetion. I*ut now tlmt the campaign is over, when there is opportunity lor men ealtuly to consider whither sueli propositions as those you make in your letter would lead. I wish to invite them to eonsider them, and I have selceled \our letter to answer heeausi you advance hot It the objections lommenly urged against Mr. Tall, namely: that he is a I'liitarian and also that lic'is suspected of sympathy with the'Catholics. You ask that Mr. Tat't shall '"let the world know what his religious belief is." This is purely his own private concern, ami it is a matter between him and his Maker, a matter for his own conscience: and to require it to be made public under penalty of political discrimination is to negative the (irsi piineiplcs of our government, which guarantee complete religous lihertv, ami the right to each man to act in religious affairs as his own conscience dictates. Mr. Talit never asked my advice in the matter, but it' he had asked it. I should have cmpliut ically advised liitn against thus stating publicl. his religious belief. The demand for a statement of a candidate's religions belief can have 110 meaning except tljat there may It" itiseriinination for or ajrai ist him because of that belief. Discriinination airains! the holder of one faith means retaliatory (liscriinint ion against nyn of other faiths. The inevitable result of cnterimr r.p in such a practice would be an abandonment of our real freedom of conscieiiee and a reversion to the dreadful conditions of religious dissensions which in so manv lands have proved fatal, to true libertv. to tine religion ami to all advaneed in eivilint ion. To ,'li . : "tni.iat.' against a thoroughly upright citizen because he belongs to some particular ('lunch, or because. like Abraham Lincoln, he lias not avowed his allegiance to ; ny t'liurch. is an outrni;a against tiiat libertv of conscience which is one of the foundations of American life. You are entitled to know whether a man seekintr your sulTraire is a man of clean and upright life, honorable in all his dealings with his fellows, and tit bv oualitication and purpose to do well in the srreat ollice for which he is a candidate; but von are not entitled to know matters which 1 lie purely between himself 11ml his | Maker. If it is proper or legitimate. I to oppose a man for bein;j a I'nij tnrian, as was .Tolin Qnincy Adams, for instance, as is the Heverond Ivlward Kverctt Hale, at the present moment chaplain of the Senate, and an American of wli?w<> nr.. ..11 ? 1 ? . . ??!? <111 v;w?mi Americans arc promt?then it would bo equally proper to support or oppose a man because of his views on justification bv faith, or the method of administering the sacrament of 'lie gospel of salvation by works. If you once enter on such a career then* is absolutely no limit at which you ian legitimately stop. So much for your objections to 'Mr. Tafl because he is a Cuilariaii. Now, for your objections to him because you think Ins wife and brother to be Roman Catholics. As it happened, they are not; but if 'hey were, or if In were a Roman Catholic himself, it ought not to aifeet in the slightest degree a:iv man's supporting him lor the position of Prcsi lent. i believe that this republic will endure for many centuries. If so there will doubtless be among its Presidents Protestants and Catholics and very probably at some time, Jews. " - PI I Iinve constantly tried while President to.act in relation to my fellow Americans of Catholic faith as I hope that any future President who happens to be a Catholic will act towards his fellow Americans of Protestant faith. Hud 1 followed any other course I should have felt that 1 was unfit to represent thy American people. In my cabinet at (lie present moment there sit side by side Catholic and Protestant, Christian and Jew, each man chosen because in my belief lie is peculiarly lit to exercise on behalf of all our people the duties of (lie oftiec to which I have appointed him. In no case docs the man's religious belief in a.iv way influence his discharge of his duties, save as it makes him more eager to act justIv and uprightly in his relations to all men. The same principles that have J obtained in appointing the members I... ..... i.:.--. i nn x ,i 111 iiri , nir UIU *'<-->1 untler mo, 1 ho oflioials to whom is entrusted the work ot' cnrrvir.yr ?"d all the important policies of my administration. are the principles upon which all u< od Americans shonhl act in chnosinjr. whether by election or appointment, the men'to till any office from the highest to the lowest in the land. Yours trulv. THFOpOHK UOOSKYKLT. Mr. .T. C. Martin. Paytnn. Ohio. FOR THANKSGIVING DAY The President Points Out the Steady Growth and General Prosperity of the Nation and Urges Upon Americans That They Return Thanks to the Almighty For the Existing Conditions. \\ ashinyton, Special.?The President has issued the annual Thunkssriviirj proclamation, in which he pointed out the steady growth of the nation in strength, worldly power, wealth and population, and that our average of individual comfort and weli beini; is higher than that of any other country in the world. For this, he declares, Americans owe it to the Almighty to show equal progress in moral and spiritual things. The proclamation follows: Hv ?!..> i? o * .... .... , ...-iiivin hi (iit* i mica States of America. Proclamation. "Once again the season is at hand when, according to the ancient custom of our people, it becomes the duty of the President to appoint a day of prayer and of thanksgiving to (Sod. "Year by year this nation grows in strength and worldly power. During the century and a quarter that lias elapsed since our entry into the circle of independent peoples, we have grown and prospered in material things to a degree never known hefore. and not now known in any other country. The thirteen Colonies which straggled along the seaeoast of tin Atlantic and were hemmed in by a few miles west of tidewater by the Indian-haunted wilderness, have been transfoimed into the mightiest republic which the world has ever seen. Its domains stretch across the continent from one to the other of the two greatest oceans, and it exercises dnmini i alike in the Arctic and tropic realms. The growth in wealth and population lias surpassed even the growth in territory. Nowhere else in the world is the average of individual comfort and material well being as high as in our fortunate land. 'For the vorv reason that in material well being we have thus abounded, we owe it to the Almighty to show equal progress in moral and spiritual things. With 11 nation, as with the individuals who make up a nation, material well being is an inlisp usable foundation. Hut the foundation avails nothing l>y itself. Thai lil'e is wasted and worse than wasted, which is spent in piling, heap upon heap, these things which minister merely to tlie pleasure of I he body and to the power that rests only on wealth. Upon material well being as a foundation must be raised ' tlie structure of the lofty life of tlie spirit, if this nntiona is properly to fulfill its gieat mission and to nccomplish all that we so ardently hope and desire. The things of the body are good; tie things of tlie intellect better; but best of all at % the things of the soul: for in the jiation it is eharnctci that counts. Let us therefore as a people set our faces resolutely agonist evil, and with brand eliarity, with kin Uiness and good will toward all men. but with unflinching determination to smite down wrong, strive with all the strength that is given lis for righteousness in public and private life. "Now. therefore, I. Theodore Roosevelt. President of the United States, do set apart Thursday, the 2f?th day of November, next an a day of general thanksgiving and nraver. and on that day 1 recommend that the people shall eense from their daily work, and, in their homes or in their churches, meet devoutly to thank the Almighty for the mnnv nnrt irr..n? blessings they have received in I ha past, and to prav that thav may ba pivan strenjrth so to ordar tiiair lives as to deserve a continuation of those blessinsrs in the future. "In witness whereof. I have hereunto sot rnv hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affiled. "none at the City of Washington, tlijs thirtv-fist day of October in the year of our Lord one thousand nine '"in 'ted ami eiffht, atid of the independence of the United States the one hundred and tliirtv-thvid. " TI! K OI >0 It K 1 {OC S K V K LT, "Rv lite President: "Al.vrv A. ADEE. * * A"* injr S"ere*arv of State." C.OSH! "Those Japanese are preternaturally shrewd." "How now?" "They weren't ready to have an exposition. so they didn't have it."? Washington Herald. Nothing I Ate Agreed With Me iBb^SfapPqppi^j^: MRS. LENORA BODENHAMER. -Mrs. I.emira lindenhntner. K. K. U. 1. I.ox 09. Kernersvillc. N. C., writes: "I suffered wiih nioniacii trouble ami indigestion for some nine, ami nothing that I nte agreed with me. I was very nervous and experienced a euiitinu.il feeling ol ti noisiness a nd /ea v. I took medicine Iroin the iluvtur, but it did me tiu uiiimI. "I found in one of your I'etuna books a description of my symptoms. I then wrote to Dr. 11 art man for advice. lie said 1 had catarrh of the sfomneh. 1 took l'eruna r.nd Manalin ami followeii his direetions and can now-suy' that 1 feel as well as I ever did. "I hope that all who are nfllicted with the same symptoms will take l'eruna. as it has certainly cured me." The above- is only one of hundreds who have written similar letters to Dr. ?birtman. .lust one such ease :u? thin entitles l'eruna to the candid consideration of every one similarly afflicted. If this be true of the testimony of one person what ought to be the testimony of hundreds, yes thousands. nf honest, sincere people? We have in our tiles u great many other testimonials. l'eru ia is sold by vour local ilruartrist. Huy a bottle today. A Questiop of Relative Merit. A little boy of eight years, attending school away from home, wrote a letter to his sister, from which the following extract is taken: "We hud a spelling match in scltool todnv. and ! spclletl all the hoys down and won the .Meddle." The November Delineator. (<oo?l Tiling to Know. Those who traverse '.tie alkali plains ol' the West and inhabit the sand blown regions of Texas, find daily need for a reliable eye salve. Tlioy never drug the eye, but simply apply externally the staple, Dr Mitchell's Dye Salve. This Salve Is sold everywhere, i'llce Ui>c. Had Seen Both. "It was a case of love at first sight. *' "Must have been in a dim light, though." ANTIOOTK KUK SKIN IIISKASKS That's wtiat tfttfuink is; and it Is more. It is an absolute cure for eoz.eniu, tettor, ringworm, erysipelas and a I other itching cutaneous diseases. In aggravated cases of tlies* afflictions its euros have been i>honoinonal. It gives instant relief and efTeots permanent cures. 50c. at druggists or by mail from J. T. Shcftbink, Dept. A, Sa? t raiiniih, (in. Praise. " ( an she act ' "Act?" Yes." feel 1 v shameful the way she acts." "Well, 1 should say so. It is perl'o Drive Out Malaria unci Ituild Up the System Take the Old Standard Ouovt's Tastei.Kss Oiu.i. Tumc, You know what you are taking. The formula is pluiuly printoc'. ou every bottle, showing it is simply (Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form, at'd the mi>st ell.-ctual form, For grown people alio children, 50c If you have not seen a girl for a year or more, you don't know whether to describe her to an :uteres tiTi friend as hlond or bdunette. CI It K FOR PI I.KM " OA M IMF Tit H A T M K N T of lt?-d Crass PllS i? and Fistula Cure and book explaining Piles sent free. UFA t'U..L,vut.U4.MinneanoUa-MUia II When 1 jp, with a mishap, the safe p prevent the trouble from |j& Weak women need < E to strengthen their syst( fife this trying period. The found it ot' wonderful bci |5 ing times of their lives. Mrs. Fannie Nichol: gj|] "Last year I was tlireat Beware of the Cough ?vK Hn that hangs on pcrsi*tent1v, tyl breaking your t.i|M'< I t and |\l exhausting >ott with the violence |Jpd HH ol the |vir<>xvsm*. A few doses ^|| ttrik P""1 iCrre will relieve won- LJffll fjl derlully ar.y cough, no matter how Itr atlvat'i e 1 or - rriotn *4flj It soothes.md h. sis theirriut'd JjJJ luJB kSl pa (p-i and the COUgh thsip- fnjji / mmm _\ They Can Only Go Three Feet Deep. . I know nu institution with viile, | rolling fields all about it, says Mabel 1 Potter Daggett i 11 the November Do-j lineator. There are exceptional privileges here. A brook sparkles and splashes its way through the wood, and every summer afternoon at the ringing of a bell the boys are marched down there for a swim. A plaeidfaeed lady to whose enre they are entrusted selects the locality and they ' may not go one bush beyond. "They i dassen't go in only three feet deep" j pityingly explained the farmer's boy who was telling me. "Us fellows swims nine feet deep" and he trudged otY down the road whistling joyously between bites of a green apple. There was a lifting note to the time and an energetic swing to the shoulders. It takes green apples and swimming-holes nine feet deep to make the best men. They know how to breast the deep places in life. Over mis picture 1 (oiiui sco liuildreds of boys marching in regular stop, who all through the world arc going to he limited to places three feet deep. Hut an institution must have its boundaries?if it is bringing up boys hv the wholesale. An Indignant Pussy. The family eat was crying and spoiling papa's reading of the evening paper, and he insisted that his small daughter ?ut her out of doors. This sh? did very unwillingly, and coming back seated herself at her I father's feet, with the remark. "You (less ought to see the look on 'at cat's face, papa."- The November Delineator. LITTLE BOY KEPT SCRATCHING. Eczema 1 .asted 7 Years?Face was All "aw ? Skill Specialists Failed, ltut Cutieura Effected ('ure. "When my little boy wjia si\ weeks old an eruption broke out on Ins face. 1 took lorn to a doctor, but lus face kept on getting worse until it got so bad that no one could look, at liitn. ills whole face was one crust and must have been very painful, lie scratched day and night until his face was raw. Thru I took hint to all the best specialists in skin diseases, btw they could not do u;u a for Iniii. I ho ci /.onia got his-arms .ir. l icy,s and \\c . < uld not get a i night's -! \> i.i iiKillt lis. I got a sc. ul j t'uticui. Ii '.ii' lies and he felt relieved the . tirst time i i.scil them. I gave the Cutieura lt.'iu 'I.e. o. good trail ?oid gradually I the ec/oin . I oi;!e.l all up. lie i? now seven years old and I think the trouble will never retain. Mrs doliu <?'. ivlttinpp, Si) Niagara Newark, N. ?l., Oct. Ii and 22. i?J07." Absence nuikes the breakfast table more alluding and the home bed seem a heap softer. Hicks' Cnpudiiic Cures Nervousness, >< neinri' ureu inn. wormm, sleeplessness 1 or what n<>:. It quietsami rcfresnwbrain i jintl lift vif. Vt's liquid and pleasant to take. Trial bottle In . lto?fular sizes vg>o. | uiul 50c.. at <1. ugj-nsts, There may In* some way of falling | ill hive and escaping dire results, hut i if so. the average man lias never I found it out. l'EKKHCT HEALTH After Years of Itxckiictie, Dizziness and Kidney Disorders. Mrs. It. C. Uiehmond. of Northwood, Iowa, says: "For years I was a t martyr to kidney hie bearing down j remedy after another without benDoan's Kidney Pills and the backache ceased. Encour- | aged, I kept on and by the time i had used three boxes not a sign of the j trouble remained. My health is per- j feet." Sold by all dealers. CO cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Ruffalo. N. Y. The man who minds his own business gets skinned neither by his general manager nor by the public as a busybody. W * f MA. ? A ? r U 1 IN A M Color inorc good* and faster color? than u.i. w?t:i tly?* uny KnrnuMH without ripping apart. Writ** "he Sal 1 lireatened way is to take Cardui and 1 l occurring. 1 Cardui before confinement, 1 mi and help them through 1 >usands have tried it, and acfit, at that and other try- j s, of Mexico, Mo., writes: ened with a mishap and ifp r JLBi ^ ^Vr RHFI1MATKU "nw ?"?r*hlo; tboti?an<1? curort: r?nil l.umrt I loir! Huliasi-cn.iy .tfuiiranlcok'lvotiprioa low. Write iiulclc. Tlir. W ItlGlIT MMI'oru, InJ. A|,WAT? RIRNTION THIS FA PI'II whfn wrtllne A d vertlirrn, an< In b II r i IIE A iltrlf? mlvrrllaril In i)i<an < <>l 11 111 IIa t n k r only llir l.l N I I N Is ?I I)tl DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES! Thompson's Eye Water 1.1 CI D Insist on Having for Nr. MAK ILL'S Preparation fKM gvi I lir Manilnn! Koine*! > . W %J tVl fc SM AT DftUOUIttTB. neuU lor book. "Urlli-I lor Women." FRKKCH DRUG CO., 30 W 32d St., N. Y. City. 8tate or Onio. Citt or Toledo, i Lucas County, \ Krank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner ut the hnu ot K.J.CiieNey A Co., doing business in the City ot loledo. County unit Mute aforesaid, and that snia hrtu will pnylhcsiim of one hundred DOLLARS t?.?r each and every CUSS vd CA7AKSU that cun.-iot be cured by tlie use ot Hall's Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Chunky. 8worn to lietorc me and subscntxxl in my presence, this tith day ot December, A. L).. A. W.Clearon, (skal.) .Notary fublic. I tail s Catarrh Cure in tnken internally .and eta ditectly on tlie blood and mueous surlares ot the system. Send lor testimonials, tree. f. .1. Cli en eY A Co.. Toledo, U. bold br all Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family fills for constipation. Improved Methods Insure Cheaper floods. For hundreds of years mankind used the same style and size of razor and had no thought that it eould he improved until some genius evolved the safety razor. That genius reaped the benefit of his inventive talent by charging from to $."? for each implement. people being glad to buy at those figures. Now mines another inventor who lias made possible a still better safety razor, and for only twenty-five cents. That sum in postage stamps sent to the Book Publishing House. 1 34 Leonard street. New York, will secure a razor postpaid by return mail. This low price is only made possible* by the* invention of scientific machinery which produces wonderful results at suiall cost. A man can win his own admiration so readily that ho sometimes gets mixed up on other people* opinions. Industry is the parent to success, and the success belongs to the man who wons the industry. TRTTERt*E-A KSI.1ABI.K CI UE Tk rvKRis * Is ft sure, sftfo and apeedv cure for eczema, tetter, skin and scalp dismiae-* and Itching piles. Kndors-vt t>v physicians; praised Py thousands who have used it. Fragrant, soothing, antiseptic. 50?*. at druggists or by mail from J. T. Suet* ruts a, Dept. A, Savannah, CJa. People who Tiro always trying to look the part sometimes get so* busy about it that they forget it. <*npt:dine Cures Indigestion I'aitis, Belching, Sour Stomach, and limit burn, from whatever cause. It's Lipoid Kffc. is immediately. Doctors prescribe it. lUc., 25c.. and 50c.. at drug stores. A soft answer permits von to fall an easy victim to the shrewd agent. Mrs \\ ins low's Soot I ling Sy l up . ; ' hilib-ct t . filling, sot tens I lie gums, i educes iiP.iniin . l.ou.allay.sp.un,cutcswiud colic.25c a bottle A day's pleasure ami a ve:*r'? urief.? Modern (Ireek. Much would have more and lost all. (I'ertnan. p- THE J. RJ I Qrv > WIIS W \ I Mnkr? 1U IMITrrriil .1 V / Rxtr?el? nil KIimU, ' C an-V cu*rers 4 <1 \ r M t k K ' ' ^ BEST FPOFOSE1 qui kly and li * '. portancc of this < l.-mrr 1 tti.it an average crop <1 S,)'' '.>0 JKJllIlds of I'ot.isli I'm" Irom 1.000 to 2,<xx> fertilizer. Insist <111 q",,' <>i tilizer?or to increase the ^-r*-t3^?^3w Muriate of 1'otasli to ear Arrange for Potash tiov ?nr ,>0<,k- "Tr "oKALI V* OI<K r a r if jl. ju other i|v?. one 10 *. p.i<k:ig?? color? #4. flt?crH. l*hc> lor fri'o iKV'klot liow to i \t\ liloicli an*l Mix Colt ri/Vay Wine of Cardui helped me rr any other medicine. Now J h; healthy boy. I think Cardui medicine I know of, for female md I wish all suffering worn try it." Cardui is sold by all relial ?ists, with full directions for n languages, inside the wrapper VALUABLE i" describing ay BOAir rrnrrn ln* valuable binta on I DUOA xXLEiEa for women. Sent free. The Chattanoog A ?? "Hi 1 JTS. JL*. 1/ 1 " FOR. B A r.hoe that is too big may not pine B What you wen is a shoe that mate place where your weighc rests,? not right. SKRKEMRRS are shoes like [3 the style is there, too. Look for th jtij FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockto 1 / * I J.' 1 ^ A pleasant thing never cornea too soon.?-Danish. Tour girls Restored to Health by Ljdia E. 1' Jak 1 ia m's Vejf c tabic Compounds Rend What They Say, MissLUlianUoss.530 I\:i?!t 84th Street. Now f" PiHkhttin's VcgetaMOF\**tt?^?sW Compound overBo:^r!jw -me Irregularities, peS3J IP Vlriodic suffering. and PVt i Mncrvous headaches, "^v " > <Wuf'er everything else \lu *-'. 1 to holp lue, \fln. ' nnd I fool it a duty to ?8h ,^thCrek"?W |V/ I Adl' ? LJ"ll'a I''- i'inklittui's S?? J*\ bHVogol!>blot\'inpoiinJ 1 wv of situ well. after suffering iKk **> f,,r months from uer? vons prostration/^ ^ ^ ^^'''ovnoondionandsuttw 1'i 11Kh.i\:i' \ i i:ot.-fl>lo Compoit.id made mo my periods, after the failed to liclp me." facts for SICK women. For thirty yours Lydia K. Finkluim's Vegetable Confound, made front roots and herbs, bus been tho stuntlunl remedy for female ills^ and bus ]?ositivoly cured thousands or women who have been troublcii with dis]>la(H>inents. inflammation, ulceration, tibroitl tumors, irregularities,, periodic pains, baokuohe, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion,dizziness,ornervot\s prostration. Why don't yon try it V Mrs. Pinklintn invites all sick women to write Iter for advice. Site has guided thousands tohealth. Address, Lynn, MassSo. 40-'03. Nothing New or Mysterious. p'-t "ask a voir Y^^JJ grandpje s* Vc \T|?A mother." immilil Kur ninny genernlloni diu.?' . t-c iwc? roi'iijiujp Uj # wonlsrful rcniodiil i-vdnnn In trmtlmr and ourlmr I'luMimw:.t. Orippe, III..11111.tl-IT. ...1,1 v...o....? .... *.ii mvi. in? GUIS \ HK 1,1 S I M K ST U liuiilf (r un ,> ir<? trrcA-tp, with Oth??r valuaBle ouriulv.- iii?r*dlonts aililfil Try it 25o ?At nil I>rnKci?t? ami Drnlrrn -l5."lo. goose grease company. tireysc?owATKINS MEDICAL CO. ION A, MINNESOTA. Lrlh'lr^i; lloaiacholtl Kctnvtllt**. Ktiia orlitg . '!*??11? t l*r?'|>iirall(inh, Kliit* Nimiiim, Kir-. Vanted in E-cJcry County. kpfrlrnrr, [TON Ei^? nFFERE" AGENTS on* than thine to make ^ ~ NiSWa / , .? --*1 ibaqe ead up solidly. Tlir imit is evident from the fact f cabbage removes from tlie yS&jE: ' i"'1"at ymfaifcf&J pounds per acre of a 4-7 0 V2K ' 4 l'ot.isii in your cabbage forPotash o?o ad?l 22 pounds of li 100 pound* of fertilizer. 1. Potash is profit. irmjnR." in frco to formers. h' iS, CandlerBldg.,Atlanta,Ga. % New York- 93 Nassau SI. CRieago?Monatfnock 6ld(. f s- ^ s s dyes (> In ? ??l?! water h"ttor than any other ilyo. Voa >r<. illO' HOI. Hit! t? CO.. Oiiincy. Illinois. MBS. FAlttm NICHOLS |j|| istrated Book, "Horn Trtatmrn! for 'mptoma of Female Diseases and grit*. j&S health, hygiene, dist, medicine, etc, HS postpaid. Address: Ladut Adx-itory a Medicine Ca, Chattanooga, Tenn. . r t t 1 nnHBanJ^ MEN "1 :h, but it is a bad fit just the same. 19 :h s the shape of your foot ;it the Uj too larpe or too small, but exactly 'S that, and ?? ? ? 9 e label. "AM ! n, Masa. HtfPFFltUDfc i ?itocKTp<t Mm j