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INEXPENSIVE SULPHUR BATHS AT HOME People travel long distances and spend large sums of mouey to secure the benefits of sulphur springs and baths because for generations sulphur has been known to be one of nature's most valuable curatives unequalled as a blood purifier, Hy dissolving 2 to 4 tablespoonfuls of Hancock's Sulphur Compound in a hot bath you get the same effect and your Bystem ubBorbs the sulphur through the pores of the Bkin. For prickly heat and summer skin troubles of Infants and children use a teaspocnrui or the Sulphur Compound In a bowi of warm water. This makes a refreshing bath and quickly alleviates the pain. Sold by all dealers 50c. a bottle. Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, Md.?Adv. Safe! The McTavish family was dining, and each member eagerly watched Mr. McTavish carving the fowl, none so eagerlj, however, us the dog, for that intelligent animal never took his eyes off the bird. Suddenly the knife slipped and sent a fragment of poultry rolling on the floor. "Michty me," cried McTavish, "the leg, my own favorite bit. The dog'll get it." "No, it won't, father," said the youngest McTavish. "He'll not get it. I've got my foot on It."?Young's Magazine. i No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX This is a prescription proparod especially for Malaria or Chllla and Fever. Five or si* doses will break any caae, and if taken then as a tonlo . the fever will not return. 25c.?Adv. j Their Kind. "These girls are very popular. I understand, at the purlsh social gatherings." "Yes; they are regular church belles." Modern Proverb. Ixj! Behold the man who eateth and drinketli gluttonously in the hot weather, how he persplreth like unto u cake of ice on a hot stove, cuss him. ?Meditations of Jerebiah of Joppa. To (Jet Hid of Mosquitoes You can Bleep. Klali. Hunt or attend to any work without til-Inn worried by the biting or alngtng of Mosquitoes. Sand-fllt-a. (Junta or other Inserts by applying to the fnre. rnrs nnd hands. Dlt. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC IIEA 1.1 NO LIE. 25c. A man should be a credit to himself, but he wants a little cush thrown in. Every time some people try to think they make a noise like a boiler shop. SAVED FROM OPERATIONS Two Women Tell How They Escaped the Surgeon's Knife by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I Swnrthmore, Penn. ? " For fifteen years 1 suffeYed untold agony, and for i mm . , one period of nearly ^ two years I had hMnjMEi&MtlaJL orrhages and the W doctors told me I y would have to undergo an operation, E^V>u--x V ^ut * began taking _ -- - Aprs? Lydia E. Pinkham's "" ^ %.?? Vegetable Compound and am in jSKfm good health now. I a tn all over the - ' 1 ^ " Change of Lifo and cannot praise your Vegetable Compound ; too highly. Every woman should take it at that time. I recommend it to both old and young for female troubles." ? Mrs. Emily Summeksgill, Swarthmore, Pa. Baltimore. Md. ? " Mv tronhloo twmm with the loss of a child, and I had hemorrhages for four months. The doctors snid an operation waa necessary, but I dreaded it and decided to try Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Tha medicine has made me a well woman and, I feel strong and do my own work."? Mrs. J. R. Picking, 1260 Sargent St., Baltimore, Md. Since we guarantee that all testimonials which we publish are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has the virtue to help these women it will help any other woman who is suffering in a like manner? Thf; Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable ^Uy'on "th."'1 .jHlUklLKS fiv? Cure \&wSF WHILE BihousnIiver hlp"S* ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature IOUN UTtlOMlHUM HONHSCO.,Truf,N.T, W. N. U, CHARLOTTE, NO. 2E-191S. ... ^ i *r< fefamteffla Tte BALTIMORE.?All American girls ' lacking millions but possessing beauty and the grand manner, take heart! Dukes and lordB and counts who woo and wod our belles are nearly always as poor as their brides are rich. Titles and exalted social positions are bartered for the gold that brings luxury. If not happiness. But the Due de Richelieu, half-American and heir to a great fortune. Is unique. Love alone caused him to make Elinor Douglas Wise his bride. The Baltimore girl who Is now on her honeymoon with Richelieu Is wealthy only in her loveliness, in her j wit, in her sprlghtllness. It was the luro of her personality, the cadence of i her voice that caused the most elusive ; catch in all the French nobility to fall in love with her at sight. When the sparkling bride fairly 1 floated out of the century-old cathe dral In Baltimore, after Cardinal Gibbons had performed the ceremony, the newest American duchess bowed and smiled happily to a brilliant assem- j blage that included Klrls of great fortune, destined, perhaps, to gain titles for themselves. But for none of them i will Cupid weave a truer romance. Many a gold-batted trap was set for the Due do Richelieu by socially ambitious mothers. But he avoided them all, and was fancy free till, on a fateful night early last year In Paris, j when he nttended a dinner given by ! Mrs. Seth Barton French of New York ; 1 and Newport. Miss Wise was a guest also. l,ator In the drawing room, lighted by the mellow radiance of wax candles, the Baltimore girl sang French chan- j sons with Buch warmth of voice and with such style and force that her hearers were stirred to enthusiasm. i Love at First Sight. < But the duke! He was entranced. I From that moment he was the singer's devoted cavalier. He did not leave her side for the rest of the evening. It was not long before he proposed to ! tell her fortune. He swore that he would be able to draw aside the veil | of the future and truly solve one great mystery for her. At a tnble In a secluded corner he looked longingly Into the dancing ey^s of the American girl as she laid the 1 palm of her left hand before him. "Everything that Is lovely In woman!" cried the duke, i>o!utlng to a i line. "A love affair," he smiled and I paused. "A probable marriage; sue- j i cess in love." Then he seemed to bo I lost In thought as he studied the pretty palm. I "I see a change coming Into your i life, a wonderful chnuge," he said. I "Before long you will contract a mar- i rlage that the world will call brilliant. I And It will be for love!"- 1 So began the romance of Miss Wise l mm maiio .m-m.ii /\nnanci ae i na- i polio do Jumllhac, l)uc de Richelieu , ] an<l De Fronsac. i i The duke and the new American 1 i duchess are not going to spend all i their time In foreign social llfo. The manalons of the Faubourg St. Germain, | the most reserved and aristocratic In 1 all the world, are open to the Due de 1 Richelieu and his bride, and not many I American girls, even those who have I gained great French names by mar- ] riage, have the entree to that conserv- 1 ative society. ] Will Live in New York. Therefore, It 1r considered remarka- ; ble that the duke and his bride have j < agreed to live In New York during < much of the year, and In consequence I i they have leased luxurious apartments i In the Carlton Chambers, Just north < of the Rltz-Carlton. on Madison ave- ; t nue. Theae are being furnished most ' i artistically and the rooms will be notable for their fidelity to various . French periods. ' < It will bo a novelty for a duke and < duchess to entertain the Four Hun- i dred in their own home in New York! 1 When Richelieu married Miss Wise , I It was the second time that a lt<l- M more beauty had been won by a mem- 1 her of the French nobility. On the I other occasion?it was In the early i part of the nineteenth century? I Jerome Bonaparte, the dashing broth J er of the great Napoleon, married the 1 lovely Betsy Patterson, a reigning belle of her day and often called ; "glorious Betsy." This union had a lamentable ending, for the caprlclouB Jerome deserted his American wife at the command of the emperor, who deBlred to make Jerome a pawn In his tremendous International chess game. Bride a General Favorite. Miss Wise Is popular In her home city as well as in Washington. Newport and Paris. Her friends declare she bears a charmed life. She has been In peril several times. On one occasion she narrowly escaped death when a carriage. In which she and LycurgUB Winchester were riding, was run down by an electric car. The accident happened at the Mount Royal entrance to Druid Hill park In Baltimore on Aug. 2, 1906. The future duchess suffered a broken left leg and a bad cut under the left eye, and for I a time It was feared the cut would mar her beauty. Her companion, who was called the handsomest man In all Maryland, was instantly killed. He was the husband of Katherlne Grlswold Pratt Winchester, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Bache Pratt of Now York. Miss Wise was a good friend of the Winchesters. After a long stay In a hospital Miss Wise went abroad. Her musical talents attracted the attention of Emma Eames, who urged the girl to Btudy for grand opera. 8ure that her pro- j tegee would achieve success, the prima donna herself began to give the fortunate Baltimore girl three lessons a week. That Miss Wise made the most of her opportunity was shown by her rapid advance. In the end her voice did gain laurels for her, though not dl mo Kina mat Mme. Karnes nor the girl had dreamed of. Truly a Love Match. The new duchess Is not tall, has light brown hair and dark blue eyes, 1 with dark lashes and a pale complex- j Ion. She is remarkable for her vivacity and ability to talk with sure < knowledge on almost any subject. I The duke Is thirty-Bevcnyyears old. Ho always told his friends that he would marry only for love, and that ho would wait until he was sure he had found the right girl. Hut certainly the Ihic do Richelieu did not need to contract an alliance for money! On the death of his mother he will Inherit half of her great fortune, and he receives an allowance from her that Is princely. His mother, born In New Orleans as the daughter of Michael Heine, a leading banker there, enjoys the distinction of being the only American woman who ever attained sovereign rank In the Old World, and has figured in ( the courts of Europe, not among the mere nobility, but among the crowned tiends. She gained possession of her place on a throne through her marriage to her second husband, the reigning prince of France, from whom she Is legally separated. The present duke Is the third of the present creation. Through his mother he is related to the Millenberger, the Harkins, the Pollock and the Marigny Tamilles of New Orleans. He has been twice reported as engaged, first to Miss Irwin, sister of the countess of Limerick, and on another occasion to Mile. Pauline Hn St 9?n?iif Brilliant Line of Ancestry. The dukedom of Richelieu, at the death of the {treat cardinal, was belueathed, with the king's permission, to his grandnephew; that is to say, to the grt^.dson of ono of the cardinal's sisters, and Anally came to be the possession of the American woman's son. There are other French dukes with American blood In their veins. One is the four-year-old Due de Chau nes et le Picqulgny, tenth of his line whose mother was Miss Theodora P. Shouts The Due Decaxea will in due course t>e succeeded in his honors by his son Louis, born of his marriage to the late Isabel Singer, and also will come In for much of the wealth which his American mother derived from her Father's sewing machine invention. Then there Is the Due de Prmslln. Tte \ Girl whose Ronton wife was formerly Mrs. Charles Hamilton Paine. His mother was Miss Elizabeth Forbes of New York. The present Due de Richelieu Is simple and unaffected In his ways, and Is much praised for his common sense. For several years he has been Idolized at Newport, where a duke Is dearly loved. The new Duchess Is also of distinguished ancestry. Her father, the late Capt. Frederic May Wise, won distinction In the United States navy, and the Wises were favorites in social circles of the navy Bet. Capt. Wise belonged to the famous Virginia family of that name. His maternal grandfather, Dr. Frederic May, was a noted resident of Washington before the capitol was built. On her ' mother's Bide the ducheBs Is decended from a mingled strain of French and old Puritan blood of the famous Massachusetts family to which John Qulncy Adams belonged. Plan Prolonged Honeymoon. The honeymoon is to be notable. After an audience with the pope they are to go to the Riviera to visit at Monte Carlo with the Princess of Monaco. Later they will go to England to be the gueBts of the former Empress Eugenie at Farnborough, then to visit the splendid Paris house that the duke owns, and finally to the three different chateaux that Richelieu maintains, especially the one In Touralne, which Is very beautiful and from which part of Prance the duke's family originally came. The duke Is proud of his American duchess, and he Is not chary In ex- I pressing himself on International marriages. "They are to my way of thinking," ! he said, "In no way different from rational marriages. Everything de- : pends on the characters of the two, i and the circumstances. I have known American girls for a good many years, j and I believe In them, and In the great ; future American women will have. I have never, though, given the matter of nationality a serious thought. lx>ve, to my mind, has very little to do with boundaries. Any marriage based upon any other grounds than mutual love and respect cannot survive the strain of years " One Woman's Guess. A Pittsburgh man recently returned I from New York tells this little story of an Incident during the great police and public service parade In the me- , tropolis a few weeks ago. He says he was standing at a window in one of tha t'Ull. * * ... nugc ? iiin uvmiuw noieis wnicn commanded a lino view of the pageant, ' while about him were a collection of people gathered from all corners of the country. Among thorn was a New i York woman to whom all looked for Information. She wai able to eatisfy inquiries until the division of the department of water supplies came { along. Equipment of various sorts all bore In great white letters the inslg- j nit, "I). W. S.," and the fountain head of Information was Immediately asked for what they stood. She racked her brains for a moment and then hozarded: "I really don't quite know, unless It means the department of white slaves." Trying Hard. An artist who has a lofty studio on West Twenty-third street lntely spent two months among the darker dwell- : Ings of Ijondon, sketching the laborer ; In the mass, children with dull eyes, I houses with broken window panes. One morning he was In a petty sessions court In the East End, and a battered man was before the magistrate, charged with drunkennoss and breach of the peace. "When you were here thirty days ago." said the magistrate, "didn't you promise to sign the pledge?" "I'm a-goin" to, y'r 'onor," said the culprit, "as soon as I can learn to write. I'm takln' lessons, but I ain't makln' much progress."?New York Times. I MDMnONAL " SiiTMSoiooi Lesson JBy F. O. SELLERS. Director of Evening | Department, The Moody Diblo Institute, I Chicago.) LESSON FOR JULY 20 MOSES CALLED TO DELIVER ISRAEL. LESSON TEXT?Ex. 3:1-14. Read the entire chapter. GOLDEN TEXT?"Hlcsscd are the pure IT, i,.. ,,-f r^T- ?V .-i ,;i u.w. On ft " Matt. I 1:8. Last week we learned that Moses had a vision of a great need; in today's lesson there is revealed to Moses the other half of the lesson, viz.. One who could meet that need: One who could supply all that was lacking when MoseB made his first Ill-advised attempt to free his kinsmen. Bush and Voice. I. The Manner of Moses' Call. His call came in tho midst of his labor as a shepherd. God does not Bet a premium upon idleness and his greatest revelation came through two very common agencies, a bush and a , voice. There wero probably many | other such bushes on the back side of the desert, but this one is distln- ! guished by the presence of Jehovah, i Moses turned aside to see this "great Bight." Why was It not consumed? Because it was divinely lighted. Hav- j ing secured his attention Jehovah spoke to Moses, called to him out of tho midst of the bush. When men pause In tho faithful discharge of the common tasks of life and consider God it will not bo long before they , will hear his still, small voice. God's call is never to the idler and is generally through the common agencies and experiences of life. The time is < ripe for deliverance. God had tested Moses for forty years. Now God is ready to reveal himself here upon Horeb, the mountain of God. Je- j hovah's presence is symbolized by the fire (see chapter 13:21, 22 and 19:18). The lowly bush suggests the incarnation. In Jesus humanity was on fire with the presence of God, yet was not consumed. II. The Purpose of Moses' Call. This was two-fold: (a) Deliverance from sorrow, oppression and the task masters of Egypt (type of sin) vv. 9. 10, 17. (b) Deliverance to freedom, a better land, to service, worship and riches, vv. 8, 12, 21, 22. Moses mado 1 ready response to tho voice of God, saying, "Here am I" (v. 4). He had not grown cold and cynical during his shepherd days, but rather was more keen and teachable. He had, how- > ever, another lesson to learn, viz., the majesty and holiness of God. So It waB he is halted and commanded to remove his shoes (v. 5). The Christian can draw nigh with boldness (Heb. 10:19) but he muBt remember to do so with "reverence and awe" (Heb. 12:28, 29). God's Answer. III. The Credentials That Accompanied Moses' Call. As has been suggested, this call came by means ol two very common agencies, viz., a bush and a voice. While Moses nc longer depends upon his own strength yet he lacks that assurance and those credentials that will justify, in his own sight, a return to the court of Pharaoh. "Who am I that I should go?" 'God's answer Is, "Certainly 1 will be with thee." Moses need have no fear, nor need the Christian (Matt. 28:20). "If God bo for us whc can be against us?" Our commission which is from God is certain of ultimate success. There could be no pos sibility of failure for Moses is told that when deliverance is accomplished "ye shall serve God upon this mountain." Yet Moses is not satisfied for he remembers his previous experience with his kinsman (2:13, 14), what shall he say to them? In answer God gives Moses a name by which ho shall be known "I am that I am." and further he is to tell them that he is the "Jehovah, the God of their fathers." God does not set before Moses a primrose path to follow. He plainly states that Pharaoh will object and that their deliverance will be wrought bv a miehtv hand IV. Moses' Response to the Call. Wo have seen that this call came "in" the midst of the common duties of dally toil; that It was "for" a defl- i nlte, a specific purpose, deliverance from and deliverance to; this call came "by" Ood. A God, past, present, future. God a person, "I am," God, a power, "I will," but the call was "to" an agent. God works his purposes through man, "I will send thee." This agent had assurance, proper credentials, and was promised power, sufficient aid. Moses as this agent was a man of (1) humility (v. 11); (2) lacking In knowledge (v. 13); (3) lacking in confidence (Ch. 4:1); (4) lacking eloquence (4:10). V. The Teaching. Wo thus have presented a wonderful revelation of God The unconsumed bush appealed to Moses. Filled to fullness with the flaming firer of God's glory it, was still unconsumed, a suggestion of what the presence of God means either in a man or among a people. The visible is followed by the audible and there Is brought to our attention the absolute purity of God, the Infinite power of God, the marvelous patience of God, the overwhelming pity of God and the irresistible patience of God. Such Infinite resources are at our disposal. / 4^tO\ Delicacies Dried Bed, diced wafer thin. Hickory Smoked and with a choice Savor that you will rercmbcr. Vienna Sauaage?jual right for Red Hota, or to aenre cold. Try them nerved iike thia: Cut rye brrad in thin abrca, aprrad with creamed buttei and 8 remove cmata. Cut a Libby'aVienna Sainagrm half. 9 lengthwiae, lay on bread. Place on top of the aauaage t| a few thia alicea of Labby'a Midget Picklea. Cover J with other ahce of bread, preaa lightly together. Ar- M range on plate, nerve garruahed with paraley apraya. jj Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago fj L-c! DEFAULTED STATE BONDS Mid unlistStocks and Bonds Botit and Sold. If it has & markot 1 will And It W. J. HOEY, 115 Broadway, New York, N.Y. j*\ i/nniifc Bnd H,?h Qr?<i. f\ KUIIAIVu Finish 111*. Mull LUImB orders * I van Hi?. rmm clai Attonllou. Prim re&aonnbl*. L-BStfln Service 1>I ouipt- Baud fur Price List. htoiu. cuimrot u. u Where there's a young widow's \ will there is a marriage. Many a man's soiled character has been washed in a woman's tears. If rs. Wlnalow'a Soothing Syrup for Children teething, Hoftena the guoia, reduce* InHamuiatiou,allays pain,cures wind colic,26c u bottle.to Many a spinster realizes that girls are wise who marry while yet in their teens. . Some men are kept bo busy maintaining their dignity that they never huve time to do anything else. For HITMHKH HEADACHES Hlrkn' CAI'llDINE is the host remedy? no matter what cause* them?whether from the heat, sitting In draughts, feverish condition, etc. 10c., 25c and 60c per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. When a man can travel as far on his nerve as others can on an excursion ticket the railroads are sure to lose money. Richness Personified. Ikey?Fader, vot means a 'plutocrat?' Fader One of Hum fnllnro Hnt'u CO rich he needn't to fail any more.? Pu<*' * Why Druggists Go Insane. Little l^ola's mother had sent her to the corner drug store for a stamped envelope, giving her three pennies with which to pay for It. "Well, little girl." said the druggist, "what can I do for you?" "If you please, sir," answered Lola, politely, "my mamma wants three cents' worth of stamped antelope." Sensitive "Jeemi." The Nuritches were very proud of the English butler they brought back with them, and so. you may suppose, they were not a little annoyed when, at the end of a month, he gave them notice. "What's the matter, Parker? You have been here such a short time?" "Yessir. But you see when you engaged me, 1 thought you was sparragrass and champagne people; but when I found out that you eats cabbage. carrots and such like common vegitables, and drinks beer, I ses. ses I. this here ain't no place for a sensitive person like me. So 1 must leave you. I earn't breathe a beery atmosphere." A Sweet, Crisp. I Delicious "Bite-To-Eat' Post Toasties Dainty bits of pearly white I 1 corn, perfectly cooked and I toasted to delicate "brown." I u " u a 11 y eaten direct from J package with cream and I ^ sugar. I Or, sprinkle Toasties over j c. saucer of fresh berries ? I , then add the cream and I I sugar ? a dish to remember. I Post Tonsties are cold by Grocers everywhere. * I