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FOR THIRTY VEftRS MIJOR MIRS 1 SUFFERED FROM GiTTARR OF THE IIDREYS, dANBEROUS KIDNEY DISEASES CURED Pe-ru-na Creeping a Na l^nal Sensation I>< the Cure Of Chronic AUmonts of the Kidney#. Major T. M. Mitra, of the frirut Wisron ?in Cavalry Kegitnent, write* front 112.*) Dunninp ?treet, Chicago, III., the fallowing letter; "For years 1 Mi/fayed with catarrh of the kl'ine yu iot\'racted in the army. Medicine oitl not help hie any until a comrade who had been helped by Per una advined ino to try ' it. 1 b tught nome at once, and noon found bleinted relief, I kept tuUMiy U foar *n*Htk?, atul am now i veil and strong and Jeel better than 1 have do no for the pant twenty yearn, j thanks to Peruna." ? T. If. Morn At the appearand of tho firat Kymptom of kidney trouble Poriiim should be taken. ! Thin remedy strike* at once tho very root of the disease. It at onec relieves the in bitrhaj kidneys of (he stagnant blood, pre venting the CHi'upe of H?i'Utn front the blood. I'erttnu stimulates the kidney* ? " exerete from the blood the accumufut ing poison, and thus prevent* the convulsions which are suro to follow if tl^o poi#oii* u ro allowed to remain. It KivfH grout \ i^ot' to the )?#-? ?-t*M action ami dilutive oyntcni, both Of } ? i t - i i hic apt to fail rapidly i n 1 1 1 1 diuQUfcc. I* c r it n ;i ciirt'H catarrh of the k i < I - ncya Hiinpiy bcruuac it euro* calurruli wher? cvor locatc/l. If you <V> not derive prompt h tirl eat in fact ory l OMiiltrt from I lie; tine of 1'orunn. wi iic,' at oiiio to Dr. Ilurtumn, uivinx a full iftatcmicut of your on ho, and lie will be plonked to give you lii.s valuable ulvico gratiM, Aililrosa Dr. ir:ir(man, 1'rt'nitloiit of 1'lie llurlmau Sanitarium, (.'oluinbuu, O. 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Head ache? It's your liver! Aycr's Pills are liver pills, all Hold for J.R.AnrOft., Vt^iaun,. filly yMrl. Low*!!, Mmi. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE rirrt it*. ??? pmtoohw on it >. iutt > r?v. wakhp*. w. n. Johnson Before Boswell. It must not he forgotten that the picture of Johmon that Hoswcll gives j us Is a picture of Johnson in his de cllnlng years, his character formed, his work for the most part done. The J oh neon whom wo all know in tho fatuous biography, the "tlreat Cham'" of rllteraturo, tho founder of th? famous club, tho revered phllcsipher j whoso grotesque autics moved his , friends to alternate awo and laugh* . ter, tho tender-hearted and rough . mannered man who bullied the strong and bowed hunjbly to the weak, wa* tho product of a long life amid aq environment unknown to Hoswcll ex. cept by report, jfnd of an heredity which, had he known, ho could not have appreciated. ? T. M. Farrott, Id Booklovers Magazine. KIDNEY Swetr tt a rood tt?c to u%?t ftironte KMnrr lUJJcr, rad UrlMrt troabIM iMfbota'i tldocr Fill) iht* (N4Mr the man MwtMXTflw P.O.? ?WW COMFORT. much p*U> In ray baotr; *? tlm* went on I could h*rdly endura it ; 1 could not utaoa ?xcpt for a few montaU at ? Unw; I arreww?s*.k and fihAintrvtt 1 couM do lljcht bouMwork | 1 could MtMoopor bwd; mjr Mtd ach*d MTtNljr ; 1 WMla pci* from wj bead down to mw b?(ll I raiUriK ta Um k? Mr* K wnibtM7. Kllto, ^^sNii,TgS raorw?na? nwfc mm A w*d. I thought I *u aOtut ioM for, when I a?w Itoaa'v KM ??y NWa4wiWL Wit hi a a i ui* aft? enmndtv (MrwIlMMilolMprM*, aatifromttaitttMoaratiMtr ^MrijWir. I Mtd aw ON JOHN WESLEY. OUR REGULAR SUNDAY SERMON. 3t?nd? Out Supreme Among llu I'rticlieri of the Af(i?-A Ureal Influence. Nl'W Voiik ( n V.--1 iiion services oi (ho Lafayette Aveuuoi l'rcabytcnan and Clinton Avenun Congregational churches began Sunday morning in the edifice of the first named. 't he Hev. Dr. M. \V. Strykvr, fYcsidcut of 11 a mi i I ton t'oilege, Clinton. N. i., spoke on "Johu Wesley, ' but used no t?xt. As will be nwn, he paid An cloniumt tribute to the influence of his prescnTtig. Dr. Ktryker said: t'pou Juno 17, 1 703, that in, 2< x) year# ago, win boin at Kpwoiih, Lincohi?hjre ? 1 #0 mile* from London, and at uhout the cast centre of Knglaud- a man whose in fluencG stands out supreme above all tho men of bis iiKi*. Kiglity eight years old, on the 2d of March, 1701, he died. Thus his lift* compatsed nearly the whole of the eighteenth century, and under Cod it was the most fertilizing and redeeming agency toward the moral foi'ces anil ?ccotnu!Uh> merit* of the nineteenth. And still the world h debtor, and will ever be, to the conviction# and consecrations, the energies and the eflicieucy of that one man- John Wesley. A mighty impulse and u potent organization attested and attests hut win* guTar and rccrcative purpose and achieve ment. We muy well reckon with such a personality in considering the movement of tho modern world. Kvcn the barest outline records a wonder and furnishes a corrective to a hundred superficial philosophies ami a thousand shallow neglect* While We? leyafts and Methodists in all lands are recit ing that story, let us all. with them, who share a like nrecious faith recall aud re joice, ponder Tftid hope. For the element* of it are as deep a* the first principles of the Christian religion, and the fame ami forces of it are the common poauceoion of all who hail the kingdom of the Son of ' lod. This man was born inLo a home, when life in an age that hated anything more than formal religion was exceptional. Tho mother that nurtured hiin was that Susan nah Wesley of whom Adam Clark naid that he never saw her equal. His ancestry wan of that Puritan stoca and stuff whose fiber of conscience had Affirmed the reul Kng land; its vigor* and rigotn had been super reded by the recrudescence of the livid Stuarts, but, 1 hough ignored, it had not de parted, and In hini u,*'l ''y him it spoke again and bore its second harvest Wesley bewail his wcTrk in the Kstah lished and Kpisoopnl Church, and though by it he wa? "oon despised an?l rejected lie loved it always nnd cherished its better part. For {wo years he'Tmmght- in lieor it ia, hut the (.'land duty of that colony in dicted him. There he uttered that notable word, "LJiope to learn the sense of the gos pel by preaching it." Ho came into close touch jwlth Moravian* here* and in Ku rope. I fad that little body done nothing else than directly to deepen, and by its re action to enlurge, John Wesley, it had dona a mighty work. Hut their narrowness he escaped, while retaining their intensity. Over the deep and critical experiences of hi* inner heart, with its unusual combina tion of sensitiveness and decision,- we will not pause. They were basal. In them he found the Light he followed to the end. See liiiii at Oxford, lie was a student? intensely so. Specially and always of logic and language. He found in these an aniplo discipline; fdr language is organized thought. Av able master of five tongues, he learned compass ami discrimination. In his life he wrote or edited '2M) volumes. .At Oxford ho was the centre of a little group of which his brother Charles, and soon Whitfield, were others. Tliey began to live by rule and made their protest and example of a pure life. They served (Jod by .method? all of them at this time zealous and even ultra Kpiscopaliam*. They were cal'ed 1 1??* "(lodlv Club" ? "Hible Moths"? '"Methodists." Oppr^brl.m easily finds de risive names. A hundred years. and more, earlier thi-i same devotion had been callcd j'urtwn." Consider tlu\i eighteenth contiiry into which I hey came. It was a feculent and rowdy tnjje. Head Thackeray'* "FftjUL Georges" ? vcjiu rTccKy a ample titatmeiit who gays "all the dazzling episodes of the reign of Ceorge II. must yield in real im portance" to Methodism. Hear llishop thitler ( 1 7.^0) . "It h come to pass that many assume Christianity to be purely fieti i iotis .mil no longer a subject of imjuiry." The general sentiment of the ohureh was benumbed, torpid, stagnant ? <lyv essn/ ser mon* were the vogue, a .r.nguid and' hike wiirm moderation held swny, ready to hate whatever molested its sodden indifferent i?in. T?ook into the eavioons' of Hogarth and see if the limes Jte pictured did not need tlie winds of <? ! Consider tlie ve neers 61 Chesterliehl and reckon if that (.tilled and padded and festering society lid not demand the breath of reality! Pub lic life was debauched by the course and frank corruption of the ministry of Kobert W'alpole. It was Wesley more than all others who roused a public conscience to rally about the stern and aggressive hon esty of Pitt ? Pitt. who rescued India, and, liermany, ami America. It was Wesley who under Ciod broke the moral drouth? struck an artesian well far into the sub stratum beneath the. morass of the desert led thq meat reaction which made possi ble the; reform and the power of modern Kn gland : made possible the revival of the nineteenth century ? llebcr. and Martvn. una rveoie, ana ijinaon. lie became an in lliiencc so incalculably, fertile and diffusive (hat to no other man of modern times save Luther, to no other Kuglishnum nave Wv elif, does the world owe ko much. It pleased Matthew Arnold, with an icy Phil istinism, to Heer at NVcsley and to dispar age him as "a- third-class mind.'* Hut by what token this frosty estimate? In that drunken, unclean, insolent century, Wes ley's t* the brightest name, whether his work is iudged T?y i t width or its depth, whether by its immediate or its permanent results. When conformity and nonconformity were alike moribund, he renewed the indi vidualism of the gospel message, personal ized its apnea) and rediscovered mankind! Do not turret that this starting noint of modern religious history was witliin the walls of a college, and lay in the devoted ncsa and relentless aggressiveness of a few men. < The work began in the open nu". " Whit field. with his lively and unselfish charac ter and that wondrous', y emotional voice, led tho way among the colliers of Kings wood in Cornwall. Kugland was full oi pa gan poverty, and this new departure to ward tlif "submersed" and the forgotten ? ? this human compulsion of a zeal that ate up ncttlen and its emhit terment*, broke once for all wnli the traditions of apathy. Th?m John Wesley stormed Bristol town, latlle did men know, little did these men know, what n chord tlicy bad struck, as their in domitable fervor and uninterinittent t ag hurled out of their way the I lungs Vliai would have obstructed them and once more readied after the soul of the common man. It was a radical return to the m\ii ?XttiA.nus |uio Juiipu si ppio.w ai|) ijaitpw ,u)| aqj ' jo potpuui Jt|> ?i spix ?in. on .?\?n UVO Xv.u s isijij ) ni ituiji .liijw o* o | t|7!noua uani sjiios atp' sjun.u ot(.vv ,ii| )ni| i );n?.Vl put/ MiiiM.ia ?ji A<\ pj.vo.id puy o.voi .)>p|p|n{ > pun Aq V?dui.\? uituimj jo ja.vai |vs.ia.\nih .up tuo.ij }i?o poi|.iKd.i jn<\ 'dSuiioJiutf pint uotsuoosapuoa pij* jo apnjijjw urt niojj u.uon tpwox jou pip H jboiiujj .mj'jsnp a.ioa atp }da\\s puv 'doatpi )?oj!fcn|) .ioiju i|t;.u jua.w ; po?) jo omop atj-j .Mptin vpuvsnoip jo cnaj pi vjtuos .wan oi|j .\'q pj(i?ft( 'Xj.woj ot|j jo ?.iuaj at|j a<\ pj7i)duq ai|j .lapuu u.toq se.w >jjoav aqj4 ' -pajduiaj jwun uaaq riioi pci| puu atit|M-w.vv jkoa.inij a?JX *3ut?uuojii ?titojun put? iva.i ?t jmj.u jo guilds am jsisau kav.wiw op oq.w as?ii|t jo sHuijpros put: u.wo.ij atjj 6jo.i oj pvij ??; puc jo \jpipt Thi? is the idea of service upon which alone rest* the power of Christ, Friend of Sinners, and of whon* always tha common people hear gladly when He ia truly told. .The indifference and tUe oonUmpt el men at large for the church i* at any given time the refaction of the indifference and eon tempt of the church for men at large. The sign olrthe apoatfe ia the aign of the etcitle. Ana the other power wae over and through the intenaity with which they bor# It, "thi cleerneee and directneaa of Ihe mtaaage itarlf. It uttered the two funda mental words, "repent" and "believe/* with an accent of impfrativeneea thai am ota the frivolity and mhuman Kuperft eiality of the age. Agnht it tranaflgured the poaaihiKtiee of the lowlieat Man. It Mtd what many only thought and dacud what ferny ugly wished.' Ite husineen wae^ ; \ ?? ? | to convince ftntrland t bat every man had a sou] and that lif? wnat an immortal ^ttir way, ujp or down! It Uugbt o ( a living (<od and the power* of an endles* life. It reviewed th*t alanding article of tli* lUf ormatJon. "Juatfftcation by faith." It car* tied the truth afield and o'/ain ?t lifted the colt?tV lo ot till it touched the ataia. It trod the bottom of human hmging, and while it /orafoned jdtt it) feutful term*. ?? brought the new* ot |?ope uitd joy. N'r< Wonder t ???* 4 gu-to 4 *nif Utdt the t.iili U|M>D the barren laud. No Kuixbr thnt turbid "?notion accompanied the Hood of feeling. Many things alnaye ate rent when Satan in cant out. A'way* mich upheaval* jrry stubble upon their currents ? smii tide* awing low unanchored soirit*. Hut par ody i* a counting proof of uower, and the force* of eternity were (Staking a people t<? tin centre. Much wax unwelcome when all was unready. What real prophets have not met opposi tion? These men wen? "abut oflt of the synagogue*" of the establishment. Thev "faced a frowning world." They knew all indignities. Moha led by squire* and clergy men draggul them through horse ponds and howled against their live*. Nothing was <oo foul to (iing at them with hand and tongue. Not a ipan of nil the bishops nave Sapiuel liutler took their part. But dc?jpiV (tin hard eh in* and dangers, thev ?reiv, an.l upon the church that dUowncd them thev nut an indellihle mark, fteing defamed, they entreated, and they lived to bee opin ion change. What a diocese waited this apostolic man John Wesley! Tie touched two hemis pheres. Njv. all the end* of the earth, and his band is stretchcd nut still. In Methodism l>egan in America. Wealev at his death declared, "The best of all, '?<?d la with us." There were then 313 of hit* vusrncher* in Kng'and: in the United State*, liW. Now in (ireat lh'itain there are 700, 300 communicant*, in Canada 300, 000. in the United States 0,000.000, who recur to that now Pentecost. At length in 1S70 Dean Stanley unveiled in Westminster Abbey a tablet with the shining profiles of John WiuJey. and Charles, Tardily but n t a last did a state church ? which in their day "knew not the time of its visitation"? at test the roflex influence of it* prophets and own a work so grandly done! Ip John Wesley tremendous toil and a rare gift for organisation ami order and (Jim loftiest ?uii itual enthuniusm ..ml a sim ple purpose to do one thing were united in the nronortjon of genius. (Jreat he was hy any test. Time is a stern criterion and hy that estimate Wesley survives as Paul does and Luther and Lovola. . ITe is of the few who make eras. He had large sense and system. He wrought witn mighty industry for half ft century. No moment whs wasted. With a giant energy he preached r,00 times a year for fifty years. And* yet with this passion for work he had a pure and calm mind. Self-denying, retined, sweet tempered, considerate, he hud the scholar's vision and a saintly heart. "In seventy years." he said, 'f have n?,t lost a night's sleep." "I save all I can and give all I get." "Make all you can hy industry, save all vow can by economy. give all you can by liberality." Thus he was rich to ward Hod. Peculiarities he had; let small soulif count them. Strifes there were, but who cares for the lo*i<*H) difference* be tween Wesley and Whitfield, since both breached the evangel of a holy and imme diate decision. Thank (Jod for that good home at Kpwortli and for that Susannah's sous! T,et us all ?ec thut religion if. not in ru Ivrio and rite, but in devoted hearts and lives, unsophisticated hy the bribes of cus tom, undaunted by the oppositions of Itol low tradition, instant tn serve, tireless To elleet results, believing (Jod! For one may have all the apparatus of regularity and die a starveling. Power is granted onlv to those who will pay its whole price! Love is cut holic when it is apostolic and can ut ter Wesley's "All the world is my parish." The methodical in Clod's service are the eoiujuerors. Oh, let me say to you Wesley's great text. "Seek ye the Lord while He may be found; call ye upon Him while He is nc?rl" lunula to audh a man! And considering the issue of a totally "surrendered life, imi tate its faith. It is success. It is triumph. It is ? altainnblA Let mo quote Wesley's hymn: \ "Give to the winds thy fears ? lloue and be undismaved: C'od bears thv sighs and counts thy tears ? Hod shall htt np thy hend."? Popular Gospel in Wronp. The most popular gospel of to-day in t he gospel of ''Don't worry." The calendars and gift books are toll of daily mot-toe* to t he general effect that one should cant oil all care, fear nothing, live for lo-day, let the other man do the worrying, and it will nil be fhe Maine in a hundred years. Hut no great transforming movement lift a ever been inaugurated on such a platform. There is nothing calculated to stir men deeply U> action, to heroism, to sacrifice, in the announcement that their fears are groundless, and that all is well. Joined with .the very tenderness of Jesus is ever the note of warning, and Hi* message is not complete without it. The old doctrine of hell was very crude and very false, and yet it was infinitely nearer the truth than this modern "Don't worry" philosophy, which ignores tho real dangers that con front the human noul and tells us that evil is simply the result of out4 fears. > It makes a world of difference to a man's religion whether he takes tip with that smooth gos pel or whether he gives heed to Jesus Christ speaking of the dangers of the hu man soul. The degeneration of character which greed or jealousy, or cowardice, or duplicity, or cynicism, or t>en9uuiity, or any other violation of vital law brings i* something whose seriousness becomes more evident the closer we get to it. It is not a matter of faith, but of absolute knowl edge. ? The Rev. W, B. Thorp. The MAklng of it Man. All lito is variegated. It means hftiipi nc*s as well as sorrow. Mind as well as body needs change. A young man needs relaxation and recuperation. By it lite gains elasticity. Christianity when it comes into the heart of man does not drive tho sunshine out. A man is not necessarily . Christian because lie look* consumptive, l'ity with a long face and a deep cough is not Christ's idea of religion. Tnere is nothing antagonists in religion to the helpful influence of si cicty. Society being the nest of rharnecer pos sesses molding power. It will minister to the lower or the hifhevr ideals of life; through it he will either serve (Jod or the devil. If a man has the vulture instinct which seeks the carrion he will find it. If he desires that \. hich is noblest and purest and best he may possess it. The thing that makes the life oi modern society >--o strenuous is the struggle to keep up appearances nt whatever cost, and the idea that many have that there can be no fun without filth. ? The Rev. Dr. Fowler. If ypocrlny . Hypocrisy is contemptible in*any wall; of life; especially is it so in the church. ? The Rev. George Adams, Brooklyn, N. Y. Novel Method of Blackmail. As a personal experience an Eng lishman offers the following: "By the grace of the czar foreigners are al lowed to live and trade in Vladivostok; but the governor can deport any per son or persona he thinks fit at twenty four hours' nctice, no reason given. Thla power, which la absolute, has somo curious results, and proves a large source of incomo to the gov ernor. ' I was much surprised one evening at tho serious effect produced by , what 1 thought an item of mere local gossip; 'The governor had been losing heavily at cards.' But I altered my opinion & tittle while after whan a Russian official came into tho office and remarked, in substance. It not In actual words, 'You're Jones * Co. Ah!' turning to a list In his hand, the governor Is raising * subscrip tion for a bnal of the csarr ,you are down for 1,000 rubles. Pay tip.' The money was p?M and promptly. But the boil ha? sot yer arrtTed." ? Use Mr Isaae Matt** House. One of Dublin's largest booses, for years the torn* residence of Isaae Bett. the faaaoea Irfab M. P, has bee* bevgbt.for mm aged'woeaeo** retreat. BILL ARP. Tli* fcaddc-a ami the sweetest thing' over written were concerning tU-at) and love, Montgomery, ficott. i/mg ft How, l.indley and Hourdlllon an' many others found their tendered ?en tinient* on thceo aubjectw. Limlte? wrote ) i i h BwtetcHi gema on the deftt> of a young lady, J?ut *ui;h auothvii would ho have written had he live/ until onr loved one died. ' Thou aito^osie fj win our ga/.fc llko 8 beautiful dream. Thy grace and thy beauty no more will bo tu-en; Tbo' loat to eight, to memory dear, Thou ever wilt remain; The only hope our hearts ran cheer? The hope to meet again." ? '? * J.ongfellow aaya: "The file la full of farewells to the dying' ,t And mournluss far the dead. There Is no flock, however washed t id fpuded, Hut one drad lamb is tiiuro; Them la no fireside, however defended, HuC ha 4 one vacant chair." Montgomery sayr': "Friend after friend departa VVlu) h:>a not loat a friend? There hi no union here of hearta That finda not here an end." And Ix>ngfellow Bays, by way of con. eolation: "There is no death. What seems rso is transition; This life of moital breath H but a suburb of the life elya!ft.n. Whoso portal we eall death." All this very solemn and rery ?ad, but it has lta counterpart wn?.,? t..--y wrote of love. Scott aays: "in peace love tunes the shepherd's In war ho mounts the warrior's steed, In'frov.rts is Been in gay attire. In hamlets dances on the green. Love rules the ramp, the court, the grove, And men helow and saints above. For love is heaven and heaven is love." Solemn says, "Love in as strong as death" and "God from necessity i>; love" and "Ix>ve thy neighbor us thy self." And Wordsworth says. "A mother's love is the holiest thing ?alive." A mother's love! 1 was watching the eagerness with which our neighbor. Mrs. Munford. was cherishing the memory of her lost daughter, the sweet girl who had charge of the. library lx,oks committee and whose memory now seems like a beautiful dream ? a dream to us, but not to the mother who never will forget. When the Cherokee Club prepared to n^ake a memorial for Mary she pleaded for the privilege of placing it where Mary was wont to sit and have sweet companion ship with those sho loved. Her beauti ful home was nothing and money was nothing. She said the library in in debt Ave or six hundred dollars. Please let me pay It off. for Mary felt like it u as hcr^jlcbl. Let . ma have the floor varnished and have chairs bought in stead of benches, and I warft some nicer tables for Mary's apke. PJease let me have a memorial frir-Mary here and give It her name? The Mary Mun ford Memorial Library?" And so it was done. Who could refuse a moth er's tears for the memory of her lov ing daughter, and so it' was done and the slxn over the door will be the Mary Munford Memorial library. But this is not all of a mother's love. Sho Is going to buy the books that Mary would have bought and make a dona tion each and every year. Now, good people, all who tarry or pass through Cartersvllle stop a little while and see what love has done ? a mother's love. I wish that committee appointed on Mr. Stovallli bill would rome and see this model library and go back and plead (or that $6,000 wherewith to build the Winnie Davis Memorial hall. The patriotic women want it and so do the veterans whosa time is nearly out. May it be your last and best work for Miss Winnie, whom we all loved.? Bill Arp in Atlanta Con stitution. NEWSY GLEANINGS* ^ ~~ w. * The Chicago directory now has a population' of 2,231,000. 'W 'American artist* In Paris are flitting for the summer to Italy and Holland. Tlio iirctt congress of Gorman ohlro "Heys weeps meets in Berlin In Ike au tumn. Boston hospitals arc preparing to uso radium as a cure for cancer ami tuber culosis. Several Portuguese ofllecrs have been arrested for plott in?? against King Charles. Kear-Admli'ul Cotton's squadron will take part in the winter manenvres la the Caribbean. There whs a record breaking attend ance at the recent Epworth League Convention in I>ctroit, Mich. Tlie Hawaiian Legislature with only $15,000,000 estimated (iovernmeut re ceipts in sight has appropriated $8,000, ; 0(h). In the Philippines there are pub* llshcd twenty-four papers In Spanish, or in native languages, and tea ia Eng lish. , Connecticut has an inspector "Who looks alter the garbage" amt iCWlg# disposal of the summer resorts In the State. , A ten per cent* Increase in the next freshman class at Yalo University 1b indicated by returns from the entrance examinations. The expedition, headed by Mr. Mc Millan, of St. Louis, to explore the Blue Nile's course, lost its boats and wtl compelled to return to Jlbutll. The State of Minnesota has been paid $*27, 000 for expenses incurred in aiding the United States to raise the Volunteer army iiv the' war with Spalp. The Montana Supreme Oottrt bata ~de? elded that iusurance companies ?per at in# in that State are liable for taxes ui>on the excess of premiums receive*! over losses and expenses, In the comity, where the agents conaa<$ frost n< as. Ever Notlee Itt "A man never gets credit for liK ha doaa or says while on Berth," growled the chronic peafUglat. "Tree* replied -the ?nr?li% tlmlat, "but aftar he fliriilirt % |M for the mderihlnr he la cradttai wbh three tlmea ae mwch ee he ?*# M ? ? r.m* Ifa a good thing .far mm. paapk* that lattice to wot always daws. v* ' - - - V^MrMMfttly euttd.H* flUoi^Trirou?: lMt?A?r tnt j?/i of Dr. KUae ? Ore** Nenr?Be?to?er,#Mrtal bottle and treatlaefrea J)r. B. H, Kt.ittm T,td. M! Arch Bt., Phtla.,Prt The fellow who U always aakin# some body else to pat in ? good word (or him is eeldoin worth the trouble. Use Alien'* r#flt'K?ir. It is the only cuW for Swollen, Kwartf ?(?. TJred, Aching, Hot. Bweatlu* Fe?>t, Corns and Bunions. Auk for Alien's Foot-Kane, a powder to b? iIirWu into the Cure* while you walk. At all Druggists and Hhoe Btorea, Don't accept suy substitute. Bample ?ent t'mr.r. Addreas, Allen 8. Oluiited, LeHoy, N.Y. It'# til right to be eo/t'he*itC'l if you Are not also aoft headed; Mr?.\Yiaslow's8oothiag4yrupfor oiilldrai teatliluK.Hofteu the gain*, reduces inflamma tion, uilnya pain, euros wind coll<\ 25?. a bo ttle A girl'a own brother in nevfr as nice as other glrla' brother*. Plan's Cure for Consumption is an infalllbU aaedlciae for coughs and colds. ? N. W. Bam p A,, Ocean Prove, K.T., Feb. 17, 1WJ. (ienius doesn't always look well ifl even ing clothes. ?_ 1 _ * ' / Virginia negroes are trying to rfllae $20,000, with which to pay for the ?er vioea of John H. Wise and John G. Car lisle in their contrst over the validity of the Buffrake aeotlons of the new Virginia Constitution. T? I.aun4<r Oarm?nU. Many of the e*pe nwlve And beautiful sum mer garments which will not stand ordinary washing inay, with oare, bo auoceaafuilv. laundered. Use Ivory Roap. If water will not causo colore to ruu, IVory 8oap will not, and avoid extremely hot weather, hot sun, and a too hot iron. . JGdUJfPJ> H. PAHKKa. Egypt has exported 125,821,000 worth of coftou from Ine season's crop, half of which went to England. Court Huitaina yoot-Kaae Trade-Mark. Buffalo, N. Y., July JJftth.? Justice I.kuJ<hlln In Huprome Court. has. granted n permanent tnjuuotlon with, Cost* against certain NeW York City dealers, restraining them from making or selling a powder whleh is an imi tation and infrngement on "Foot-Ka?o," now so largely advertised and sold. The owne of ''Foot-Ease" is Alien 8. Olmsted, of Lo lloy, N. Y.,and the dooislon upholds his t rude-mark and makes liable thoso attempt ing to profit by "Foot-Ease" advertising Jjy marketing a similar-appearing preparation. The man who. knows it all is generally looking for some one to try and convince him that h? doesn't. Mrs. Laura L. Barnes, Wash- i Ington, D. C., Ladies Auxiliary to Burnside Post, No. 4, 0. A. R., recommends Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound. " In diseases that come to women only, as a rule, the doctor is cabled in, some timos several doctors, but still matters go from bad to worse ; but I have - never .known ol a case of female weak ness which waa not helped when Lydia^E. Pink ham's Vearetabla Compound was used faithfully. For young- women who arc subject to headaches, bSclcache, irregular or pain ful periods, and nervous attacks due to the severe strain' on the system by some organic trouble, and for women of advanced years in the most trying time of life, It serves to correct every trouble and restore a healthy aotion of all organs of the body? " Lydla EJEMnkhario'S Vegetable Compound is a household reliance In my home, and I would not be with out it. In all my experience with tnia medicine, which covers years, I have found nothing to equal it and al ways recommend it."*-Mxs. Laura L. Bashes, 007 Second St., N. E., Wash ington, D. 0, ? $um ir 0/ ?tin /?M?r prffmt |)*m s MM?{ Ss Bach testimony should be Ac cepted by nil womeif as convinc ing evidence thst ijdta E. Pfnkham't Vegetable Compound stands without a wfcer as a rem edy for all the dtstreAsTOff 1U? of women.' CAPUDJNE CURES and FEVERISH CONDITIONS. A MuJIOMBta, kt Dre??to'?i DRILL WELLS with Loon la' tat* lupro^l machinery ?nd jroa caciTnako lam profit* on eapMal Inverted They an Itwlan Id tlM Una. Th? moat afftec tlT* and dnrablo W?ll BrUMf MmUmm U AmmtIm. Adaraaa U?0M,l? MtCHUt CO., nffll, waft ??M HIM caw fally w4 aplaloa ??<] Prt?? for a ?ar*. ?Tnmi Maaafcpa* m^Urf litfSfglllllilMrt 6f ?|t?r " 1 have used Ayer'g ll?jr for rhirty yeard. It is elegant 7<ft? s hair dressing and for k/teping tli* hair from splittiny, m ilih cuds,"-' J. A . Grucnenfeldtr, Oramfork, iiUi Hair-splitting splits friendships. If the nalr splitting is done on. your own head, it ioses friends for you, for every hair of your head is a friend. Ayer's Hair Vigor In advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop It. JI.M a toitlt. AH Ai nfgM*. If jrour druRififet cannot aupply jroa. send us ouo dollar ami we win oipr eaa you a bottle. Ilu ?ure a??j jplve th? njut l* ot your nearest cxnreta office. Address, J. V. AVEJt CO., Jewell, M? m. In Do* Daw use to keep the stomach clean, brain clear and liver active. It coota tne blood, cures lie.it erupt tony.? relieves constipation, aids difces-?f tion. Effervescent ; /1greca6Uft A 'eluible. ?. ^ I'sed l>y Ariel ifnn Musicians ' to! IIMrlv Co \ fit i s. - --x-A 00c, mill 01 .00. Al Druggists or by mail from iSiM, The Tarrant Co., Ncfyoitz lliitlr.cia esiatiliaiicd nipansTabtrteanr# the best ' dyspepsia iinodlolne ever mtfoc. 'a hundred million# of them have beeft.. sold In the United^ States lu a single ~ year. lOvcry illnefaii arising from a disordered Btomaclv;^^ relieved or cured by their use. So i-oiumou is it that diseases. from the stomach it may be safely itsVf verted there is no' condition of. JU;. h''ti It li that will not l)e beuctlte.l or cured by the occasional use of- nhmm Tnbules. Physicians know them and: speak highly of tlicni. AH (lrug^timE sell them. The rtvc'\cent pnckn^^mS enough for an ordinal occasion, and the Family Hot tie. sixty cents, contain^ a household supply for 11 yonr.v-^Q?^ generally gives relief within twepijgi minutes. jUie $63 TO $81 i Endowed Colleges and Correlated SchooL. Ediuvtea mon and women, bora and girl* no4 bnt la Flv* Scpsrutn lactltnllnns untlrr out i m rnt. Tho combination ouaUica as to offer 1 edrantagra and to Save Tirfi# and Money For particular*, addreea, ateting Ago and Mt< Chanoeltor WM. W. SMITH, A?f College Park, Lynohburp, AVS l OXRl TION AKlfe RFSvTf..rojrtt? . of n i !v?c nam Piedmont High 8< One of the l*-t Preparatory Fchople in Perot n-i. A* le Faculty. Mountain M lleallblul OMmite. Smlan ooen? Af Wiiteto W. U. Hli HNS, l?wnil ED1CAL COLLEGE OF VIW Euabliahed 1938. .Determents . of Medicine," and I'littmur, The,#l*tirH 8lon will commence September 1ft tion feea and living expenses ere ate. For announcement and further-*! Mon, addrers, I'hrletoplier Tom| HI. D? Dean, Richmond* F.lRlit miloa from Aahevll e. We WSlltj hnve our oiiIaIok, AddrBSB, MAKV1N A. VI FREE A BtAUTlFUL., SOUVtl LOUKBur ' ; and a Picture of the Ore?n HltiJ where the First Conlcreic* jin M. B. Church was held In 1785, ^ tddrau 1VF.Y AU.KN.8ee.. LOUlftBURGU Drops,, Removes all swelling it days ; effects a i*m?f la ,ioto 60 days. TrUtt' given free. NothinrcNl Write Dr.H.H.fir# SoKiUHtli. B?? R, 80. 31.