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TORTURING TWINGES I f Much to-called rheumatism is caused by weakened kidneys. When the kidneys fail to clear the blood of uric acid, the acid forms into crystals like bits of broken glass in the muscles, joints and on the nerve casings. Torturing pains dart through the affected part whenever it is moved. By curing the kidneys, Doan's Kidney Pills have eased thousands of rheumatic cases, lumbago, sciatica, gravel, neuralgia and urinary disorders. A NORTH CAROLINA CASE ?*? ? ? J. F. Williams, CzJS. Onrden St., Marlon. MT1 N. C.. says: "1 was \Ae all run down from Vfi l kidney troublo and f fV,. doctors hold out nn t.aV \ hope for me. I hart f nr I jyjK J rheumatic p ft I n , fjf IFNwSk*'^ didn't sleep well ?nrt |'|k\L \ / w as nervous. The V Jfr-, g-Jypj kidney secretions \f[^ were In bftd shape. 1] J too. At last I began ? ?/ taking Doan's Kid- Jfl 3 III ney fills and they JT 'f / ,#H soon cured mo. I f f Kg%. / 333t haven't had the * slightest sign of kid- f ' ney trouble since." Get Don's at Any Store. 60c Box D OAN'S V.IIV FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. Are You Suffering Auto-tntoxic; the state of being poisoned, from t body." This is a condition due to tl pores of the body failing to throw off I are suffering from this trouble. This Is nervousness, headaches, loss of appetil Symptoms produced by Autolntoxlcatio DR. PIERCE MEDICAL ? t la TmbBmt of Uqutd i vrlll remedy the trouble. It first aid expel accumulated poisons. It acts as a enables the body to eliminate its own] any outside aid. Obey Nature's waroir In medicines will supply you, or you may sen package ol tablets by mall, Address Dr.fCV.F Solace. "Aren't you worried about these public questions?" "Yes," replied Farmer Corntoesel. "Hut I'm thankful fur this much There's enough of 'em so that when you get tired of worryin' about one you can rest your mind thinkin' about another." Cllll.I.ff AND FEVER AND AOl'IO Are Promptly Currd by Kllxlr Ilnbek. "I rocommend 'Kllxlr Unbelt' to nil sufferers of Mnlitrin and Chills. Have suffered for Hevernl years, have tried everything, but failed, until I came across your wonderful medicine. Can truly soy It has cured me."?George Inscoo. Company d. 4th Bntalllon. Kllxlr Unbelt 60 cents, all' druggists or by Parcels Post prepaid from Klociuwsltl & Co.. Washington. D. C. Puzzled. Husband?I see that a German has invented a clock that tells the day of the month by sounding the number. Wife?I don't see how it can tpll the 10th. 20th nnd 30th of the month. It cnn strike the one. two and three all right, but how cun it sound the cipher? A Poignant Anecdote. "The great fault of American servants is familiarity. To be familiar is . to be inefllcient. A familiar cook is as inefllcient as a pessimistic doctor." The speaker, Mrs. Iloardtnan llarriman, is perhaps the most brilliant conversationalist in New York?a fact which renders more poignant thiB anecdote. "1 had a cook," she continued, "whom 1 tried to break of her over-familiarity. What was the result? This cook, discussing me in the servants' hail, said: "'I don't say she's a bad mistress, but she'B a woman with only one Idea. Why, 1 can't never get her to talk of a single thing but eating.' " ForThrush and Foot Diseases IJK HANFORD'S Balsam of Myrrh , For Galls, Wire Cuts, Lameness, Strains, Bunches, Thrush, Old Sores, Nail Wounds, Foot Rot Fistula, Bleeding, Etc. Etc. ^ Made Since 184a AVonuuudy Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 All Dealers ^BOOT!Toverton| Dyspepsia Tablets I atop Intestinal Fermentation. Immediately. I1 Kellere t?a? and IM*treiw after Kntlnir. Ono I aire only, ftOc. Money refunded If they ilo I ^ not liclp, or write for Free Sample liox and TUY them flrnt If you wtatl. ;> I it BroH.iu onntu ni/romu rn u?- *?* Whenever You Nee ^ mmmnmm fe The Old Standard Grove's ~i chill It Equally Valuable as a General Stre Liftr. Drlrn Out Malaria, Enriches thi Too know what yoa are taking when j the formula it pripted on. every label, tonic properties of QUININE and IROl Fever, Weakness, General Debility and Norting Mothers ana, Pale, Sickly Child Pair Word* or Nothing. "George," said the wife to hdr generally unapprect&tive husband, "how do you like my new hat?" "Well, my dear," said George with great candor, "to tell you the truth?" "Stop right there, George! If you're going to talk that way about It I don't want to know." No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX This is a prescription prepared especially for Malaria or Chills and Fever. Five or six doses will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the fever will not return. 25c.?Adv. Softly. "He remarked to her that men are but clay." "Bright." Ana sue asKea mm u mat applied to her." "And then?" "He replied that it applied to all. And now his name is mud." "She threw cold water on him, eh?" Houston Post. When a young man la in love he imagines that he neither eats nor sleeps. ( : From \ ft^HAVI The dictionary says that AutoIntoxication is "poisoning, or axle, substances produced within the le stomach, bowels, kidneys, liver, or :he poisons. More than 50 % of adults probably why you are suffering from :e, lack of ambition, and many other n. Your whole system needs stirring up. "S GOLDEN DISCOVERY Form) The i.te?t edition of Dr. .. . . Fifrrft'a Common Bona* H s the system to u*dic*i A.wuor nhouid X tonic and finally I poisons without bo without It when It will 0 Igs. Your dealer 8 d 50c for a cample plngandra?JHng?tlomj- E* Icrcc, buffalo,N.Y. H.V' I Grounds for Complaint. Hip?Tnste that! Hop?Why, that's the bent soup 1 ever tasted! Hip?Yes; but the steward had the gall to say it is coffee.?Michigan Gargoyle. 811AKK INTO YOUK SHOES Allen's Foot-Base, the Antlm-pllr powder for Tired, Tender, swollen, nervous feet dives rest and comfort. Makes walking n ilollKtiu Sold every whore. i 26c Don't atetfrt any futulltutf. For KHKH ham* pie, address Allen 8. Olmsted, 1 a> lloy, N Y Adv. ' Natural Mistake. "I was only whispering sweet nothings in Mabel's ear," said tlie young man aH Aunt Miriam entered the parlor in search of her glasses. "Strange you should have mistaken her mouth for her ear," retorted the j aunt as she left the room. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottlo of CASTOR1A, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Signature of SST In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Caatoria Forehanded. "I want three afternoons off a week, and n tine letter of recommendation, and?" "But we'll let the letter of recommendation wait until you leave, I?" "Nope, 1 get the letter now. I've ; tried gettln' them when I leave and I've never been able to get a good one , yet." SKIN TROUBLE ITCHED BADLY Glenns P. O., Va.?"My baby's trou- 1 hip hpenn with nn Uohino- on/1 a little bump would come and she could not rest day or night. The trouble affected her whole body. The bumps festered and came to a head and the corruption looked like thick * matter, kind of a yellow color. The Bores itched so badly until it seemed to me she would scratch herself to pieces and then a Bore would form 1 and her clothes would stick to her ! body and pull off the little Bcab. In some places she would scratch and irritate the sores until they seemed j to be large. She was affected about a year. "I wrote for a sample of Cuticura j Soap and Ointment. I bathed her | body in warm water and Cuticura i Soap and then I applied the Cuticura Ointment, and they afforded relief after twice using. I bought some more | Cuticura Soap and Ointment and inBide of two weeks she was cured." j (Signed) Mrs. J. R. Greggs, Nov. 21, ; 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Bold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address post- ! card "Cuticura, Ilept. L, Boston."?Adv. , Real Mourner. "What are you wearing that thing for?" asked Mrs. Gabb, when her husband came home with a band of crepe j around his hat. "For vonr first Iniuhnnd " renllort Mr. (labb. "I'm sorry be died." Uncomfortable. "Is Hoozer stiU on the water wagon?" "No, very restless."?Huston Transcript. )d a General Tonio i rove's Tasteless Tonic ngthenlng Tonic, Because it Acts on th% e Blood and Builds Up the Whole System, 'ou take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic, aa showing that it contains the well-known If. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and Loss of Appetite. Gives life and vigor to ren. A True Tonio and Sure Arpetisor. teed by your Druggist. We mean it. MraAnoNAL SUNMirSdlOOL Lesson (By E. O. SEI.LKRS, Director of Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR APRIL 26 THE LOST SHEEP AND THE LOST COIN. WESSON TEXT?Luke 15:1-10. GOLDEN TEXT- "Even bo. I Bay unto you. there Is Joy In the presence of the anRels of God over one Blnner that repenteth." Luke 15:10. I. Introduction, vv. 1-3.?We now come to that chapter In the llible which contains three of the more celebrated parables of our Lord. In last week's lesson we had set before us the severe terms of disclpleshlp laid down by Jesus to the multitude which followed him as he left the house of the PVarisee. The writer, Luke, makeB a close connection between the final admonition about "ears to hear" in chapter 14 and verse 1 of this lesson. Jesus had sifted the crowd though he had left the door open to himself, for ho was seeking those who were prepared to share with him In his enterprises of building and of conflict, if they could bear his teaching. This Is ^responded to by those outcast ones, the publicans and the slnnerB. They had no righteousness of their own, no spirit- j ual hope centered in themselves and | they turned eagerly to one who was unqualifiedly honest with them though at the same time ho set up heart i searching conditions. Whnt a con- ! trast! The grumbling theologians, criticizing and bickering, grieved that he should demean himself by such | associates. In reply, Jesus shows 1 them the truth of the fundamental purpose of God's attitude toward these who eagerly sought to "hear," by giving them theso parables. In the first two, the sheep and the coin, we see divine love seeking the sinner; in the third, the prodigift, we see the sinner i seeking the fnther. Christ's Idea of goodness consists In saving the bad. , Tho Pharisee holds aloof. Christ goes out from among the Pharisees and among tho outcasts. True and raise Shepherds. II. The Lost Sheep, vv. 4-7.?The shepherd is God the son (John 10:11, 12; Luke 10:10). He Is the "True Shepherd." the Pharisees were false ones. This adds point to tho parable; see tho Old Testament rebukes for the same, Ez. 34:7-10; Zech. 11:16-17; Jer. j 60:6. The lost sheep belongs to the fold, but was out of place. Theso outcast ones were still Israelites and the backsliding Christian still belongs to the fold. A sinner is a lost sheep. ! He is away from the core, the protection. the guidance of the shepherd and i Is torn, bleeding, and "ready to die." ] One such lost one will call forth the shepherd's utmost endeavor to save It, , far beyond the care lavished upon the ninety-and-nine already safe In the fold. This means labor, toil, and privation, and he keeps up the search "until he finds it." This does not mean that all will be saved, see John 17:2, 12 R. V., but every "sheep" that Is astray he will find. Once found It rests upon his shoulders. Is kept by his power, I Pet. 1:5. Over it he and ! the futher rejoice, vv. 23, 24, 32. There is here the evidence of the interest in the flock which is incomplete nnd the interest of the owner as well. The pafety of the lost one God rejoices more over the sinner's j salvation thnn does the sinner himself. The neighbors also rejoice and so do the angels in glory. All rejoice "with mo;" contrast this with the at- i tltudo of the Pharisee. We see here | a revelation of the matchless strength nnd tenderness of God which is on the one hand a rebuke and on the other a comfort to the publicans and the Binners. What a suggestion of peril nnd sacrifice is suggested in this story and what a pean of Joy is sounded at its clofe. Work of Holy Spirit. III. The Lost Coin, vv. 8-10.?These three parables are a.unit in the fact that they reveaJ the attitude of God i toward men who are in their deepest need. Each is the story of something being lost nnd the fact that it is found. The first is a revelation of the son, the last of the father, while this central one sets forth the work of the holy spirit through the church. Rov. 22:17; Eph. 5:25. One of ten coins in this woman's marriage neckhire is IflRf lipncn (ho ln?nmi.l?(?n?... ?, vou luvwuij/ntCUCO^. The spirit will not rest until it is found, nor should the church. The woman takes her lamp?the word of God. Ps. 119:105; Phil. 2:15, 16?and sweeps the house. It has been suggested that sweejftlig usually stirs up a dust and that some are likely to object. So the world will object when the church of the living God begins to stir up a dust and they are annoyed j at any eager search for the lost ones, Acts 17:6. The womnn is a sugges- i tlon to us in that she sought "diligently," until the lost coin was found. Then slio, too, calls in her neighbors that they may rejoice with her. I>oes the church keep up a like search? And do wo know anything about the j "Joy" of the holy spirit? Gal. 5:22. j I Thess. 1:6. Over the wellbeing of the home the woman watches and again the search is in the interest of the owner, and in the interest of tho household. Like the other parablo | the flnnl note is one of Joy. IV. Summary.?Tho chief valuo of these two pictures is in their revelation of the work and interest of the son of the spirit. The crowding multitude of publicans nnd sinners, held in contempt by the Pharisees, Jesus viewed as lost ones. Appalling as this s'iggestion is. yet the sheep be- ! longed to the shepherd and tho coin wns the property of tho woman. This suggests the dignity and value of men and the tragedy of their condition. Knowing all this and understanding the full significance of that tragedy, the son as the shepherd has undertaken to seek and to save the loat. tMBS, FOST MU, SOOTH Oi * > " ' ' ? SHEAR THE SHEEP E :: : ' :<? - * -1 w v~? If * A Combination Grain and Hay Rack 5 Fall on the Necks and S Do not wait too long In the spring before shearing. There is nothing gained and it 1b a question whether or not the sheep do as well carrying a heavy fleece after the weather begins to warm up as without it. It will do no harm to shear just as soon as the heavy frosts of spring are over, but of course a dry. warm shelter must be ready for the sheep at night. This shelter should always be left open In the day time so the sheep can pr A Nine-Pound Fleece in Good Condition and Properly Tied With the Flesh Side Out. run Into it in case of rain. A wet sheep is always in danger of taking cold, and "snuffles" are harmful. The sheep should always be driven to shelter when a rain comes on, alPEST REFUSED ADMITTANCE Shipment of Cotton Seed, Infested by Pink Boll Worm, Intercepted by Government Officials. (Prepared by the United Rtat?s Department of Agriculture) The federal horticultural hoard has Intercepted a shipment of cotton seed from Egypt which was found to be heavily infested by the so-called pink boll worm. This is a result of the quarantine against cotton seed which was promulgated by the board some time ago. The seed, which was Intended for planting in Arizona, arrived in Boston, where the customs officials, under instructions from the board, obtained possession of it. The pink boll worm is the most serious cotton pest in Egypt. In that country it does as much damage as the lK)ll weevil in this country. The possibility of reducing the damage it causes lias been considered by governmental commissions and conferences for several years. Like the boll weevil. It works for the greater part of its existence within the bolis. Frequently it makes its way inside the seeds, where it can live for an Indefinite time. In fact, in experiments performed in the ministry of agriculture in Egypt it was found that the worms have lived for as long as seven months in seed in storage. PEANUTS AS SOIL IMPROVER Goobers Do Well on Any D-y Soli and Are Easily Cultivated?Hogs Are Fond of Them. Wo have raised Spanish peanuts for hogs for the last seven years. East season we had 18 acres and the last of September turned in 94 head of hogs, large and small. I would rather have one acre of peanuts for hogs than two acres of corn. With corn and peanuts In the same field hogs will eat the "goobers" first, writes J. E. Summon of Sherman, Tex., in the Missouri Valley Farmer. The goobers do well on any dry soil, and are easily cultivated. If half the vines are covered In cultivating all the better. East year we gathered half an acre by measurement for seed, and when cured and dry they weighed out 42 bushels. 20 pounds to the bushel. The hay from the vines is superior to alfalfa if saved. If the nuts are "hogged" down, the soil is improved each year. The roots of the peanut gathers bacteria which form nitrates in the soil, although not to the same extent as stock peas. Peanuts are a valuable crpp in thin soils and should be experimented with in the corn belt if hogs are kept to gather them. Keep Vigorous Brood Sow. As ft rule the old brood sow should he kept as long as she remains vigorous; she knows better how to raise her suckling pigs than the younger mothers. Building Up Soil. If your land is thin make arrangements to build it up. I'se all of the barnyard manure you have nnd begin h system of soil improvement by using commercial fertilizer. Follow the corn, cotton and small grain crops by a legume such as peas, soy beans, peanuts to be grazed or other legume. Why Smutty Oatt? Every* now and th^n one meets a farmer who formaldehydes his wheat and flax, tests his seed corn and then sows uncleaned smutty oats. Why? UtOUNA ARLY IN THE SPRING | - ? - w -;v-:5v- .-v- ,:K. , : > ?o Constructed That the Litter Cannot houlders of the Sheep. though If the shed is convenient to j the pasture they will generally go | into It of their own will, particularly, when a gusty, heavy wind and rain- ; storm comes on. Lambs are silly pates and must always be shown things. If they are made to enter the shed with the mother in time of storm they will soon learn to do so always, but they must be watched or else they may wander about in the rain and get soaked and chilled and die. If the sheep carry heavy coats durt ing the rainy spring months they are likely to become soaked, because they will often stay out till they feel tho water on their hides. Once a heavy fleece is thoroughly wet through, it takes a long time to dry out, particu- j larly in cloudy weather. This is one reason why sheep should be sheared early as possible. On the home farm of the writer we always sheared our sheep in March and with good results, both as to ] ttie wool crop and the health of the sheep. We used the old-fashioned : spring, sharp-pointed shears, but the hand machines of today are much bet- , ter. Some men who go about from farm to farm shearing sheep still use I the old hand shears and an expert will j do very well with them, but the aina- i teur will make sad work of the shearing and clip many a piece from the ; animal's skin. * j With u hand machine a small flock | can be quickly disposed of by the ! owner of the flock, who should al- ) ways do his own shearing. For largo flocks the power machines in tlio hands of experts do the work rapidly , and well. : ' GEN KRAI. TAkM NOTES i If the sow eats her young, it is a i direct reflection upon the feeder. * ? Lime should frequently be scattered around the poultry house as a disinfectant. The quickest and surest way to | down competition is to produce better stock. * When the chicks stand around list- ! lessly and peep, lice very often are ! to blame. High roosts, when one keeps the i heavy breeds, are conducive to buinblefoot and leg weakness. Wet mashes are better for fattening fowls because they are more easily digested than dry feeds. x ne itM K oi goou, snarp grit is tho I cause of many poultry ailments. In1 digestion is one of the principal ones. When the sow begins to carry straw i it's time to put her in comfortable quarters and to watch for the litter to j come. One of the best disinfectants for i a dairy barn is sunlight. After tho windows are installed, the cost is nothing. * * Chicks ten to twelve weeks old I are ready for the broiier market and they ought to weigh two pounds by that time. A good feed of raw onions is a tonic j | and an appetizer for fowls. Feed them in the mash if the fowls refuse 1 them alone. * One of the successful ways to grub out white grubs in old sod ground is I to enlist a drove of active pigs in the good work. There should be plenty of clean fresh water in the pens or runs where fowls can have access to it every minute in the day. Biting Off Too Much. If you undertake to farm more land ; than you can properly care for, tho : weeds will divide tho profits with ; you nnd your subsoil moisture will I evaporate for lack of sutlicient culti- I I vatlon. I Very Important Crop. Hay is a very important crop where* ; there are animals to feed. No farmer ! ; can.afTord to buy hay for his animals 1 with cotton his children produce. A i libernl acreage in hay should ho planted so that the animals will bo properly cared for. Crops for Grazing. Crops should be sown for grazing. For cows, hogs, horses and sheet* opts, wheat, rye or barley may be sown. Any of these grains under favorable circumstances should furnish grazing early, and when the grain crop Is grazed off the land may be turned and a crop of peas, soy boans or peanuts sown. Bad Practise. Feeding moldy and musty grat-* to chickens often means lostvig both the grain and the chickens. -V v V?* ? , V > - ~ '-Y{ ; -:*yv' ^ _ _. Sick, Worm Is it possible there is a worn; tinues to suffer without giving table Compound a trial after al tinually being published, whicl tion that this grand old medicii ing among women than any othc We have published in the nev more genuine testimonial lettei lished in the interest of any otl and every year we publish man uine and true. Here are three From Mrs. S. T. Richmc Pkovidenck, R. I.?M For the lionet done I wish to state what Lydia E. has done for me. I did some heavj caused a displacement. I have alw after my baby was lorn and inllamn tration. from which I did not recover ham's vegetable Compound. The ( when I hear of a woman with troub to taae your medicine.'"?Mrs. S. rl Providence, R. I. A Minister's V Cloqpet, Minn. ? "I have sufTere pain and inflammation, but your woi ham's Vegetable Coini>ound, lues mar the same to all that are troubled wit nie Akekman, c/o Rev. K. Akehma> From Mrs. J. D. Mim Soi'tii Quincy, Mass.?**Thedoct< and he doctored me for a long time saw Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable vertiscd and I tried it and found reli finished the first bottle. I continue through middle lift* and am now a i woman and earn my own living."? Mvrdocii, 25 Gordon St., South Quii Bl^R^TVrito to LYDIA E. PINKHAM (( ONHI)KM IAt) l.YNN, MA! Your letter w ill 1m* opened, read : by a woman and held in strict coi UrMALAMA'" lLmQ It not sold by your druggist, w on receipt of price. Arthur P< s Rattled by Court Proceedings. An elderly man of the farming type was called as a witness in the ltclfast i ; summons court, and the clerk, proceeding to administer the oath, told him to | repeat "1 swear by Almighty God that the evidence." etc. The old fellow was a little excited, ' however, by being in court, and instead ! of following the words of the clerk, j began amid loud laughter to repeat the I words of the well-known hymn, "O 1 God, our help In ages past.9 IF YOUR SKIN ITCHES, JUST USE RESINOL _ The moment that ltesinol Ointment touches itching skin, the itching stops and healing begins. That is why doctors have prescribed it successfully for more than eighteen years in even the j severest cases of eczema, tetter, ring- j worm, rashes and other tormenting, unsightly skin eruptions. Aided by warm baths with ltesinol Soap, ltesinol Ointment restores the skin to perfect health and comfort, quickly, easily and at little cost. You need never hesitate to use Itesi- j nol. It contains aiisnlntplv nntMna' i that could injure the tenderest skin? J even of a tiny baby. All druggists j. sell Resinol Ointment (50c and $1.00), and Resinol Soap (25c).?Adv. Succinct. Representative Simeon D. Fess of j Ohio believes in looking for the i brightest side of life; he is "strong" i for optimism. His distinction between h an optimist and a passimiet is appar- j ent in the following dellnitlon which * he sometimes gives; "A pessimist," says Representative Fess, "asks 'Is there any milk in that pitcher?' Mut an optimist says. 'Pass ; p the cream.' " j N | B AS FIT AS A FIDDLE y. is a condition everyone would like to j j boast of. It may he that all you need Is two or three Wright's Indian Vege- ; table Pills just before going to bed. Trial box free. 372 Pearl street, New i ? York.?Adv. ? Cynicism. Richard Croker. nearly everybody tl knows, has a cynical wit. Mr. Croker Jj aired this wit in a recent letter to a member of Tammany hall apropos of a millionaire's charities. 1 "To be canonized in American pub lie opinion," he wrote, "give publicly i and steal privately." RUB-MY-TISM. |' Will cure your Rheumatism and al ! hinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia V ('ramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts | Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne. Price 25c.?Adv. ?. j Striking school teachers in Ixmdon I ' have won their strike for a minimum < salary of $500 a year. * Or. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and liowels. , Sugar coated, tiny granules. Kasy to take i as canily. Adv. Flattery pleases a womnn even ? when she knows It is flattery. i Putram Fadeless l>yos are the eas- 1 lest to use. Adv. , Marriage Is more often an assignment than a failure. t I M m in this country who conLydia E. Pinkham's VegeII the evidence that is con1 proves beyond contradicic has relieved more sufferer one medicine in the world? /spapersof the United States rs than have ever been publier medicine for women ? ty new testimonials, all gennever before published; >nd, Providence, R. I. It of women who suffer as I havo Pinkham's Vegetable Compound r lifting and the doctor said it ays been weak and I overworked nation set in, then nervous prosuntil 1 had taken l.ydia E. Pink'ompouud is my best friend and les like mine I try to induce her \ Kiciimono, 100 Waldo JStreet, ^ife Writes: d very much with irregularities, nderful medicine, I.ydia K. Pinkie me well and 1 can recommend h these complaints."?Mrs. JknCloquet, Minnesota. loch, Quincy, Mass. >r said that I had organic trouble 1 Tl, 1 I iliil iki) ir..f .nix- T - IV - " " ' 1 < nni]KHin<l adiff U'foiv I had C\) .1 taking it all 7j/^r?f?W strong, healthy V/ IT _ s?il \ ) -.Mrs. .Iane i). I yy || ucy, Mass. II i ^ I MEDICINE CO. (f\\ )>*-? ? AS SS.,foradvlce. mil answered (gj itideuce. ^tvocCtTn ill be sent by Parcels Post pMpf' iter & Co.. Louisville, Ky. UjiH This is the BEST Saw Mill The Twentieth Pii^^ Century Every single I piece n Wo make \?y guaranteed. these vurm- N ble llelt feeil iinil center frv: lion feed saw mills of the best reefed materials throughout. Steel headblocks ami cable drive. Economical. Write for ilenrrlptlTe catalog of all alios of Raw uiUla, planers, roauwa, twiners, etc. J, A.VANCE &COMrR?TH0cNARSo%MA f The Reliable Remedy I V-s for all foruis of 1 RHEUMATISMJB l.tqulil, Tablets, l.lniiiient for sale by all ^jgy )A1SY FI.Y KILLER gj5?jK'SSV Si AHOLD BOMLK8. 160 DaHklb At* . Brooklyn. N. T. HAIR STAIN "Walsnutta" 'or Gray, Streaked, Bleached and Red Hair or loiutache. Mutchei Shade ? Bight Brown to lack. Does not wash nor rub off. Sold by our Druggiti. Regular size, 60 cents. * ^ Send *o Howard Nichol*. j & t% |QU 220tt Clark A*.. Si l^,..Mo HuQ I (J U and get a FREE. Trial Botile. I I UU :REE TO ALL SUFFERERS t } " !? < ! 'oct of 'Kl? IMIWN'tlirm.i is' i'rntk from kiunbt. iu.aiuikh. sbiivoi ? iubkahks, IIUiiNIO Wk.U?l.?h, UI.'r.H*. OKIN KKt ITInNH. riL**, rlto for FREE ci.otii not ni. mkm<m. m<..,k dm !< ! ? <1i?iiim'* itini w..j.i.run i. ci iikii turinl by HE NEW FRtN CM RE MEriV Nol Mo 2*0 3 THERAPIOW jo-^r'i'nr;: >? rrriKMly for vol >-own aiiininl Al.m.lutri i FREE, o follow lip' rlri'iilam. No obligation*. I l.i.i i kiiij Kl> I'll.. llAVrnvTI" K lit. II A VP*TK ll?, I.I IN IM IN. UNO. Wl WANT Til I'm.VA TIIKIi il'p.li Wll.l, cl'UK TOU. r\ TOURS TO EIIROPF Personalty Conducted Select Parties. Sailing .luin? iih. <lnr.nl.hi '/> dm*. $77ft. Sntlini! .Inri" ITlli. duration 7.1 <1a?s, tt'7.V t or particular-. a ml toll Itlnemry, apply u> 111.I A V LSWOK I II 4 Man ni'V .Slri-nt, I'mvhlonre, It. I. 5 a KODAKS & SUPPLIES jji ' k \V<- nlao iln liiKhmt rlaaa of tliiishing. I'rlri'H mill < aliilu|(ue upon rt*<|ueaU FZ3 S. Galethi Optical Co., Richmond, Va. npnpQV TREATED.usually givennuim vyJ UnyrQIrellef^oob removes swelling C "J A short breath,often kivi-a en tiro relief sL In !Mo2Sdnyn. TrUi I tr.nitrnon thent Free r Dr. THOMAS F,. GR F.F.N. Surrritor lo Dr. H.H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga. K;KNT>?< 'in hull.lit.I to three hundred per nontli. Il. ua. hold article which Bella in every tome ItlK pmtlth Very lllll. capllAl r<lulred. ituaineaa auppllt n caplinl. sample# ree. Write Acme Mf?c. Co., t union, 4 Bit lo. HlllTCn Men t<> become lee cfeuni makers year fbHII I fcll around Jol>. Kfcelletit pny, i?l*< men rho have wotked In tiairi. and cbeeee faotorjea. i tend reform. < .. itox 7h.%. ROANOKKt VA. J XHOIIK ISLAM! Ki US itixl CAM PINKS ^ lie areatoBi Inyerk K^H" 11 .00 per neu.nv up. I-rye look let. UM1 Va. Poultry Varm. hawrontcv.Jle, Va. i/V. N. U., CHARLOTTE. NO. 17-191* J