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TELL KB* 80. V AfmA ihirCttci of married life^ In spite of toil and kusineaa strife, l? you value your sweet wife, Tell ber ?ol Prove to jtter you don't forget The bonds to whieh the seal is aet ; Bhe'a of life's sweets the sweetest yet ? Tell her ao! When the days are dark an.l deeply blue, She hu? her trouble*, name an you. Show her that your l<>ve is truf Tell Sir ho! There watt u time you thought it hlisi To get the favor of one kiss. A dozen now won't come amiss ? Tell her ao! Your love for her ia no mistake ? You feel it dreaming or awuke. Don't conceal it; tor her sake, Tell her so! Don 't acl, if she has panned her prima. Am though lo please her were a eriwe. If ever you loved her, now 'a thi lime- - Tell her to! She'll return for caeh eareaa An hundredfold of teuderneaa! Hearts like hers were made to hleas) Tell her ao! You are hern and liera alone; Well .you know kIk-'h ?ll your own. Don't wait to ' ' <yirve it on f atone." Tell her ?o! Never let her heart pfrow r />lii ? - Rieher beauties will unfold. She is worth her weiyii", ',n gold I Tell her ! ? Kxehange. THE MAN AND HIS JOB. The man and hi? job is a good nub j*ot l'or though!. There is no man who can alTord to disregard the im portance or value of hi# position in the Kinallcst degree. No man, furth ermore, can arrange circumstances, and the lalter are very dillicnlt some times to materially modify. ?Nothing1, of course, should he al lowed to stand in the way of a man seeking to take advantage of an op portunity. This is quite n different matter from seeking an opportunity, and we cannot emphasize tho fact too strongly that t liis is no timo for un overseer or a superintendent to tako too many hazards in reaching out for a better place. A man holding h position lias some vantage ground and is ahle to benetit by a clianee opening, but a man without work is an object of distend, ftinl openings seem to close instinctively nt his approach. No stagma should be placed upon a man tmt of eriiplo\ meiit, and every thing should lie done to benetit all such, but the best advice that can be given is this: Your job, while it ia yours, is the best position that you know of, and it demands of you the best that you possess. Loyally to your job ix what paxes the way for opportunities, ami that is the reason that opportunities seldom come to tho^e that seek them. The place seeks the limn. ?Fibre and Fabric. (ientility is nothing but ancient riches. -Lord Burleigh. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'i Snnitury Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Force without judgment fulls bv its own weight. ? Hornet*. riles Cured In (I to 14 Days. l'uzo ointment i* guftrHntood U? cur* any rnHoofIt<hinir, Wind, Blefding or Protruding 1'iU'H in (i to U dn.VKor money lofundtul. 50o Fools have liberty to say wbat t liey jilejise.- (Jerrnan. for ii i:a i>a < ii iv ? ii tok ?* ca rntiNK WlnMlier fiojn fold*. Hrat. Stomach or Js rr\ mi* TruuMe.H. I'apudlnu will rrllrVn you. 1 1 "m liquid? plcnsant to lake? acts ImimvJI aii'ly. Try It. lit'.. ?6c, and ftOe. hi ilrujj Vio/f* A QueotJon Ret?nted. "Were yon over arrested before?" asked the magistrate whoae principal business is Imposing floe* for speed ing. "What do you think I've been do fng all these years?" asked the chauf feur. "pushing a wheelbarrow?" ? Waehington Star. Caught. ' ' I Nliaw, exclaimed Miss Yerner impat M-til Iv. '"I'm sui t' wo 'II miss (he tir*i m( We've wait oil a ^oo<l many minutes for that imitlior of mine.'' ''Hours, 1 should nay," r. K h-> ? i ?tI ed tailor eri'Whly. 'M)\r-V i in, I jonruo V ' she oriel, i? : . ? i lun! liir biuiduntf cheek upon his rh'.rt In-lit. il-V. LA/i j ,'1 TM? w#a tVWJi1 Iv/'.mwus INTER/ IAL cxtravamA,'*:'.: \ % 7 1 \ roi GtOCF.S'Jin 1 rYNJTftOUS I uvMrvt HLL 1!?W A/iD VCHJ t Vf.EL iC B-WIJE l301jQN<j jrotnt: or net IQivv. wi <10 TOR a, NEW iw t>V.A?V. 1 Km.v. THAI W* ws1*' **{?> hu. *juu> fv^r. yij 1.00'iLN lir JOHN.fOW YOU In* pui , THAT . V/ILL" Muayoa'a 1'au Pair actMir by g?ni!t mrrouj* Tn?jr rfoJJiJ** or weaken lint are t toal< to im m|^H uil datvm; U)v|fura(? ln*t?*4 of v*M)55?^| rich th# WoM and nal>>? tk? luimifk to mT n^artahmaat from fotd tti.u u p?( lotanTE pilla coauiD nocaloma.; <hc> are aooUttftff, h tJ?d (tirnui aUtiff Kor Mir bj all drujwlauTii !< Ite 1w If you d?w*i medical adrlcts writ# roql Doctor*. Thrj wlli *dviar to th? boat ol ? THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT 8UN0AY SERMON BY DR. JOHN HUMP6TONE. Theme: MkIi? of the World. Brooklyn, N. Y.~ The Rev. Dr. John Humputone/ pastor of JCm manuel Baptist Church, returned from tt world trip of ?eventet*/i months In time to he In Ms pulpit Hunday. HI* subject In the morning whh, "Whence Came the Light of the World?" The textH were from Mat thew' 4:16: "The people that ?at In darkneNB, ku W a great light;" John 8 : 12: "Jesus spake unto them, Hay ing, 1 am the IlKht of the world," and IlehrewH 1:1, 2, 3:" "Cod hath spoken to us III HIh Son ? ? ? the effulgence of IIIh glory and Hut very lmaK<? of HIh substance." Dr. Hump stone Haiti: Those three Herlptures have unity as ariBWflr to 1 qufcHtlon which Is our subject. The land In which, and tho people to whom, Jesus came sat in darkness, a darkness no deep that it could ho described with adequacy only an "tho region and shadow of death." In such surrounding! sud denly appeared one, sane and polnod and effectual, who Bald, "I am the light of the world." How are we to account for Much an emergence? 1h darkness the nource of light; provln clallHin tho parent of uniyorsalfty ; narrowness* of view the progenitor of worldwide outlook and sympathy? Is supreme splrituiil vitality the Issue to ho expected from moral torpor? Could formalism and pharlseeUm be^ get the superbly free sincerities < > f J oh us? Does death bring forth life? Can lie who called and has approved Himself '-The Light of the World" he accounted f<?r my human heredity and environment ? TO KlUll questions Cllll R 1) t P 110(1 faith has ever had l> u t one answer. It la i tho answer of tho New Testument. The supremely good and perfect gift Is from above and came down from (he Father of Light#, tn Whom Is no darkness at all God's Son is the efTulgenco of Ills Father's glory, tho very image of H1h substance, There-, fore is Hp the Light of the World. Suc'h, In outline, are the thoughts now briefly to he expanded Palest ine cannot account for Jesus. Thai Ik the conviction which a visit to the land, conventionally called "holy," leaves within an open mind. If It is to he held holy, the hallowing is due to Him and its associations with Him. lie conferred upon it n distinction and pre-eminence which il did not, could not, Impart, to Him. It ever) where illuminates and Illustrates what He Kaid It nowhere and in no wise ex plains what He was. One has a con tinual pleasure In tracing the paral lels between the Lord's ministry and Ills environment The land and tho gospels are the counterparts of each | other. At every step some word, or image, of His flashes into the mind I with new sense of its truth and beau ty. And this scarcely at all in connec tion with the Identification of partic ular sites or places. On the contrary, the mind recoils with disgust from-Hrr | effort to f i x with exactitude the spot presumptively sacred, because of the I degradat Ions to which the supposed | blent ideation leads There is as much superstition In Palestine to-day as there Is in India, and it is (juito as baleful. Man's purpose to localize Jesus is the defeat of his chief Intent. His "Held is the world." If Ho were now to visit the land of His earthly nativity, He would denounce with righteous anger the vain superstitions which defile the place t.f His transient ministry. As of old Ho swept the traders from the temple courts, ho would He drive away the crowds that cluster about the idols and the shrines their own hands have fashioned, thinking to do Him honor. One can imagine how His tones would thrill as He reaffirmed His declaration, "The hour Cometh and now is when neither in this mountain, nor in Jeru salem, shall ye worship the Father. Ye worship that which ye know not * * * (Sod l?< a spirit and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and1" in truth. " Hut true as this is, and keen as are the pain and disillusionment the fact occasions, still more exquisite and satisfying U the sense of veri similitude as, New .Testament In hand, one wanders over Judean hills, through Samaritan villages, over Es draclon'M fertile plain, till he finds himself at last afloat on Galilee'* lake. "Ho la not hero, hut risen;" and yet His spirit permeates all. One breathes the air He breathed; one sees the sights He saw; one feels the thrill He felt, and still his compas sions are awakened as one looks upon the people of the land. Nothing could he more perfect than the accord be tween landscape and narrative, apt I metaphor and obvious fact nersisf- I lng custom and moral appeal, physical object and spiritual suggestion. These are His (lowers, that His city pi t on ill*- hilltop; ther?> flew the birds that tan glit 1 1 1 tii (?od's care. This batren wild Is the physical reflex of nils soul's testing. Yonder snowy heiuht. flashing in the sunlight, is the very symbol, whether It were the scene or not. of His transfiguration. To day His sower goes forth to sow; the women He described are yet toll inn at the mill or bearing aloft their \\nterpot9. The fishermen He com pantoned are there, drawing their nets; and even as we are busy watch Ins them, such a sudden windstorm as He quitted sweeps down the valley between the hills and threatens t; overturn out boat Yes! It is good for faith to \isit the land, however much credulity may have defiled it, however sadly superstition has <u crusttd it with unrealities, ftut most of nil ig tt good for faith to see the ac?nai environment of Jesus, that the mind mv>' have sense of the contrast between it and Him ll is so small; He Is tie. great Its color tones are so neutral; He is so resplendent. It is so OrWntal; !le is so cosmopolitan. It is so limited . lie is so universal. It Is so sordid . He it* so ethereal. It is foul with unmentionable tilth; He 1? so pure and clean. It is so eccle siastical; He so spiritual It Is so ilstlnctly Hebraic; He is t-o decisive ly anu inclusive In human These con trasts drive th* mind at flrbt to won der that #uch u personality could emerge In such surrounding.*. As their cogency completes Itself they draw forth to fresh rtverene? aoJ Impel the soul to worship 111m, who said to HI* contemporaries, "Ye are from beneath, 1 am from above; ye #re of thlB world, I an'-not of tUU world" Bpend, then, a brief moment or two In contemplation of this self-con* srlousnesH of Jmui out of which is Kuod contlnuouHly that Htream of self assertion of which one Mingle sped* men Is before us: "I am the light of the world." Hornet linea such utter ance* of our Lord have boen denomi nated "claims." lint as a New 'IVntH inent writer say* : "lie counted notthe being oil an equality with God a thing to be grasped at." To film theao ex presslonB of MIh prerogative needed ho demonstration Such utterances were the spontaneities of IIIh mind; tho inevitabilities of His conscious* nesH. Ho could not but thuH speak, Any other tone would have been out of keeping with his self-knowledge. "I know," Ho said, "whence I came and whither I go." And t h Ih know) edge wuh of that kind no other could Share with lilni. It wan self-knowl edge. "Ye know not whence 1 come or whither 1 go.'"' Standing In that narrow sphere, hnvoua how Ik ho want ing insight, Hpeaklng to an age that had no longer within itself either the possibilities or the realization of vis ion, Jesus knew God aa by the parities of His own life. lie knew man an knowing not his features, hut his heart ? what was In him. He knew the world, not as the traveler knows It, but as the Creator perceive* It. His thoughts were of nations more than of HIh nation; of the world rather than of His birthplace. He spoke with a note of authority in every utterance, while His contem poraries were babbling bu of tradi tion. Their eyes were in tho back of their head*; und auch narrow, blinded eyes at that. Ills face was toward the future. All time Ho had for HIh pros pect. He apoko of the end of the age with the Hame calm certitude an char acterized His insight into conditions then existing, lie was in attitude, In utterance, In outlook, in the sublime con ldence of His expectations, in the precision of His foresight, the Hon of the Kteriral. He. saw an in r mirror all the ages and claimed them for His own. He held toward men an atti tude of supremacy which was the correlate of thin souse of Himself. He bade them conic to Him, believe in Him, follow Him, honor Him. He commanded their (service, accepted their worship, declared that, when they railed illin Master and Lord they said well, for so He was. Nor are these assertions of Himself mere dis jecta membra. They are the very fibre of tho revelation He makes. They are unllltd by Himself into a program. lit* was not merely His own subject. He made Himself the subject of Hi:i messengers. He looked forward to the realization of a King Horn of the Spirit', of which Ho Him self whs to be the King. Into this kingdom, as before Him at last for decisive judgment, all natlona were to be gathered. "Every creature." was His objective. As to no other who ever lived or taught, everything hu man was , germane to Him, and fell within the scope of His purpose. Himself the Way, the Truth, the Life, lie knew and said that He came to bring find tin the Life of men: "Be "cause I live ye shall live also." In Him was life and the life was the light of men. And the light shined in the darkness; and the darknefts ap prehended It not. Now such a phenomenon of being and the reality of being has to be accounted for. Hut how? Source must equal issue. By so much as the stream Is strong and free and full, by that same measure Its spring must be high Cause must be adequate to effect. No inslgnlfieent cause ever yet produced po transcendent an effect. Ask yourself the question Jesus urged upon His associates: "What think ye of Christ? Whose Son is He?" Can Joseph, the Galilean carpenter, be the actual, as he was the putative, father of such a son? Must not the Father of such an One have In Himself the Infinitudes, the magnitudes, the uni versalities which characterize the Son's life and service? Who but God could beget such a Son? And every word of Jesus as to His own origin bears out the assertions of the later New Testament: "I and My Father are one." "He that hath seen Me I hath seen the Father." "No man I hath seen the Father, wave He that is from (rod; lie hatl; seen the Father." Thtse are th^ uniform and character istic words of Jesus when speaking of His origin. He know that He was come from God and that He whs go ing to God. For this cauae they sought to kill Him, because He called God His own Father (that Is, Hia Father In a unique and entirely indi vidual sense) making HlmBelf equal with God. This, then, is the one, only, adequate explanation of Jesus: God hath spoken unto us in His Son, who is the effulgence of God's glory; who bears the very impress of His essential life. Thence came the Light of the World? Bathed in iti stream ing radiance, wo are drawn, as chil dren of the Resurrection, to our Mas ter's feet. Our adoration is the ecstasy of Thomas; "My Lord and my God." Make Keliglon a Hralilj. Real religion must either be out for business or go out of business. It must either make the world better, be doing things for the ideals which It sees, or acknowledge that it is noth ing but a dream or a delusion. Now when one is in the thick d{ .as big an undertaking as religion sets before him. nothing less than the redemption r?f (he whole world, he has no energy left to wonder whether ho is as good as ho ought to be. The sickly saints are always worry ing over thoir souls; their spiritual livers aro always out of order be cause they are perpetually examining them. They complain and groan so much that the ignorant, hearing them. imagine religion to be a mourn ful affair The pious hypochrondriacs are so mar to hypocrites that they have the same effect on others. The VoU-e of the Future. I.et us listen not so much to the voire that Is behind us as to the voice that comes out from the great future that stretches before us. T.et us fear the patronage of th? world more than Its persecutions. ? - It. C. Chaumau. BIO DEMAND for red cross stamps. Irom Nashville, Tenn., *n<l for the Christinas Bip becoming great - HmpU are tale m?fij^*adquartern at the 01 hauslrd. rushed fl Waahingj WW/S from the at ores. One thousand, one hundred end eighty stamps ?were sold at Phillips AfButorff's on Monday, the first day tho stamps -were put on sale, and on Tuesday 1,283 were sold * ? a the same store. This Arm i* so ' ~ in the sale of the Christ i that they hare placed the ssoisp :?c;e aesr the door enous place, oven going 9*$ on* aid* *t Uw tor, ) Household Affairs kAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA **^XXXXXXXXXxXxXXXXXX Hcotcli Mtcw. A Hcotch stew make* a ta*ty an# nourishing moat di?h of moderate -out 1'rocure the neck of two lambs, cut them into piece* and roll in flour (hat hat? bean woll waited and pep pered. Cook a finely minced onion in two tablespoonfuht of dripping* until it it* a golden brown and theu put In (bo meat piece* and fry until they are well browned. Add the contents of a quart can of tomatoca which have been tttralned and when they are heated through a bit of bay leaf and a teappoonful of kitchen bou quet. Cover the pot and ultmner until the bones will drop out of the meat. Itemove the meat, take out the bones and cook until very tender. Serve In a border of rice. The kitchen bou quet and bay leaf may be omitted,-? New York Bun. Macaroon Mousse. Tbe favorite dessert .of a young French brldo watt a mousse made of macaroons and whipped cream. A quart of thick double cream is whipped in a churn until thick. It la then sweetened with half a cupful of oonfectloner'a sugar. A half-pound of macaroons ace soaked until aoft In syrup and put in alternate layors with the cream Into a melon or square Ice creom mould. The top and bottom layer in of the cream. . Seal the JointB of the mould after the lid la fastoned on with a cloth dipped in melted hutter, and pack In aalt and Ice for aevoral hours. Serve with candled cherries dotted over the top. If liked, more whipped cream can he piled around the mousse. ? New Haven Register. Stuff <m1 Cabbage. To stiiTf cabbage, select a compact head that la not too large, wash it thoroughly, cover with boiling water and let It atand until the leavea are softened entirely through the head. Then pull the leavea apart (do not loosen them) until the cabbage looks like a great green rose. Meanwhile make a mixture of a cupful of minced cold tongue and ham, a cupful of botlod rice, a little onion juice, salt and pepper. Moisten with a tablc ; spoonful of melted butter and put a little of the dressing in the centre of l he cabbage. Fold the leaves over this and put a layer of the dressing around the next foliation. Again fold the leaves over it and continue until every layer of leaves has a layer of dressing. Then wrap the cabbage securely in cheesecloth and boll for at least an hour in salteJ water. When It is tender, remove from the cloth, drain thoroughly, put into a hot dish and cover with white sauce. It may be sprinkled with minced green and red pepper. ? New York Sun. Scissors iii Kitchen. Not "a" single scissors in the kitchen, but several; for the kero sene scissors intended for wicks and rough usage generally is sacred to some shed or closet to which is ban ished the kerosene ran. There is the pineapple snipper, which may be used, because of its unusual shape, only for cutting out pineapple eves. There 1b the grape scissors ? a valu able pair, indeed, for autumn, which is grape time, and all through the winter, because grape season stretches out over a long long period. The I grape scissors, unless it be too dainty j and silvered, may be used for the preparing of the grapefruit. The' tough fiber can be managed with dif ficulty if a knife be relied upon, and time, as well as rich juice, may be haved by the use of scissors blades. A vegetable ncisiOrn should be found on a peg lu every well ordered kitchen; for have we not all seen the lima bean pods that will not yield to ordinary pressure when fall tough ens them on the outside, while the bean Is still new inside? The kitchen garden, too, will demand a share In the vegetablo scissors. Fish shears are not so pleasant sounding, but the person who pre pares the uncooked sea food will ap preciate the disappearance of the sharp, finger-sticking fins between the sharp blades. A reasonable pair or two of well polished scissors over and above the special kerosene blades will prove more useful than the unprepared housekeeper has ever contemplated. ^-Harper's Weekly. ilarn Ball*. ? Chop lino cold cooked ham; add one egg and a little flour; boat together; make into bulls and fry brown in drippings. Sauted Potatoes. ? Cut cold boiled potatoes in quarter-inch slices, sea son with salt and pepper, put in a hot well greased frying pan, brown ono side, turn, brown the other side. One Kgg Mnfllus. ? Three and one half cups of flour, six tenspoons bak ing powder, ono teaspoon salt, ^10 and one-third cup milk, three table epoonfuls of melted butter, one egg, three tablespoons sugar. llncoii and Hwcot Potatoes.? -SI Icq the bacon very thin, cut oft tUo rind and hard part before slicing, All a shallow pan with cold sweet potatoes . sliced, cover the potatoes with bacon and bake until pork Is crisp. Short Cake.? Sift one quart of fine whits flour, ruh Into It three table* spoons of cold butter, a teaspoon of i salt, a tablespoon of whlto sugar; add a beaten egg to a cup of sour cream ; turn It Into the other IngrgdlcTnts; dissolve a teaspoon of rod a In a spoonful of water; mix all together, handling as lltttd as possible; roil lightly Into two rctand etkteu; mace on i oaGtorenty.jto twei oveo. 'p* ?2?8SBl ?* ? J*r wit "Home Grown Cow Feed." It in necessary for a milk cow to have the right sort o f feed, in order to K*t the most milk fox the ]ea#t eo?t. The right kind of feed mew is feed containing the right kind of nutri tious elements in the right propor tions. Protein and Carbohydrates ere the principal feeding elements. Protein is the irfost important for milk, and it is also (he most expensive. Pea* and peavine hay in abundance is most excellent feed for milk production. lint sometimes the farmer has to buy feed for his cows, and he should know what is the most profitable to buy. lie must never forget that Pro tein is the great moasure of value. He must insist on a guaranteed analy sis of Protein. Wheat bran contains 15 per cent Protein, and is a splendid feed. But, the cost is too high for this part of the country, because it must be freighted from the west. It costs about $32 per ton laid down. If any one in the cotton growing States wants to buy eattle feed, there is nothing to compare with "Bove tu," which is the trade mark adopted by the Southern Cotton Oil Company, of Charlotte, N. C., for their machine mixed meal and hull feed. It is guar anteed 17 per cent Protein and may be bought for $19 per ton f. o. b. Charlotte. It is almost twice as cheap as wheat bran, when feeding quulity is considered. The feed is proportion ed out by machinery and mixed by machinery, so thai it runs marve'lously uniform. A most important thing for a cotton grower to consider in the fact that "Hovetft" is strictly a home-grown feed, and in haying thiu feed, he is patronizing himself. It is made en tirely from .rot ton seed. Friendly Advice. "1 hope to grow gray in their ser vice." "Very laudable ambition, very laudable. Hut don't scorn the hair dye too long. You know there's' a fad nowadayH for young men." Nkln lliinvor ranted 2ft Yenrs. "('utleura did wonders for me. For twenty-five years 1 suffered agony from a terrible humor, completely covering :i:y head, neck and shoul ders, so even to my wlfo, I became an object of dread. At largo expense I consulted tho most nblo doctors, far and near. Their treatment was of no nvall, nor was that of the Hos pital, during six months' efforts. I suffered on and concluded there was no help for me this side of the grave. Then I heard of some one who had been cured by Cutlcura Remedies and | thought that n trial could do no harm, in a purprlslngly short time I was completely cured. S P. Keyes, 147 Congress St., Boston, Mass., October 12, '09." Fore Covered With Pimples. "I congratulate Cutlcura upon my speedy recovery from pimples whlcli covered my face. I used Cutlcura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent for ten days and my face cleared and I am perfectly well. I had tried doctors for several months but got no results. Wm. J. Sadller, 1614 Susquehanna Avo., Philadelphia, May 1, 1909." Large Brains And Great Minds. llow far are the physical charac ters of t he brain indicative of men tal power? The question is still un solved. Two investigators, Prof. W. von Bechterew and Prof. It. Wein berg, have 'examined minutely the brain of the 'late Prof. I). J. Men- ! deljolT, one of the greatest chemists of the last century. They report that the size was above the average, but not remarkably so, the weight being 1 ,.r>7 1 grams (:V> ounces). Several eminent men have had heavy brains. Cuvier's weighed 64 1-2 ounces, Dr. Abercrombie 'a 03, Prof, (ioodsir's .r>7 1-2, Sir J. T. Simpson's 54, and Dr. Chalmer'u 37 ; but no one now thinks that a lnry;e brain menus u great mind. i THE CHARLESTON NEWS AND COURIER. Unpretenitous Merit And Fullness of Reliable Matter it meets the De mands of Appreciative Readers. The Charleston News and Courier is always a welcome visitor. For un pretentious merit how could it be im proved? Its columns are packed with the news of the day, sound and logi cal editorial matter and market re ports to fully meet the wants of those enterprising citizens of 'that, preat historic city by the sea. Devoid of ; flouishes, except by the facile pen of j the editor, and free from sensation : in its contents and make-up it com mends itself to all who want intelli. gence and reliability. Mrs Winslow's Soothing Hyrup for Children teething, aoftenathegu m?, rtdacw inDarom* tion, &!!*/? p&iu, euros wind colic, 26c. * bolU*. Kind words heal wounds. ? Freqeh. friendship's Don't accept a substitute for Perry Davis' Nothina is ns good for rheutna lgia nnJ similar troubles. Painkiller, tism, neura He hurts the good who spares the bad. ? French. ? Allen's Lung Balsam has for yearn cured deep-seated couehs, coldii and bronchitis. Everybody should know about it. lie that always complains is never pitied.? German. For * OI.DH and GRIP. nicW'< Capudinb Is tho lw?t remedy? re lieves the aehinsr and feverlshness? cure# tho Cold and restores normal conditions. It's llijuld- effects Immediately.- 10c., 26c. and SOe. at drutf stores. Every dog is valiant at his own door. ? French. Rheumatism Cured l? i Day, Dr. Detchcn't Relief for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures in 1 to 3 days. It* action la remarkable. Remove* the cause and diaeaae quickly disappears. First dote greatly benefits. 73c. and |I. All druggist* Let not the shoemaker go "beyond ! his laat.T? lift tin. _ "? f < ? ?? ? ? ? To Core * Gold in 0?e Take Laxative BroaM M.fun4 money if it fa ik to B. W.Grove a signature is on stab box. |M'.|N4Wl*ARt : We Give Away . Absolutely Free of\ Tb? Peopln'e Common 8mm Medio*! Advi#J Eoiliah, or Medieine Simplified, by K, V. PU (jhitiCoMuilia| Pbyiielu to the loyilidi1 H< fical loatitute at Buffalo, ? book ol 1008 Uu over 700 illuetratiooe, in etronj paper c?v*r*? ?tamp* (o oovor coal of mailing ?nty, or, in , rej Over 680,000 eopiee of this complete I'amil/V* binding at regular price of $1.50, Afterwarda, i were given awajr ?? ibov?, A new, up-to-det* for miilial, HeUcr Mad NOW, before all are | riNiAty Mhoical Association, l{. V. I'ierce, M. w*. riKRCE'S favorite THE ONE REMEDY for womm'i peea that iu makeri are not afraid to print OA i ?fry ingredient. No 8eereto-Nu Dp fcj THE ONE REMEDY for women wlif* so b?bit-foriiiia| drufe. Made from oativa i' >f weB eitablkhed awaffra vlue<_ 0* ?A? win ait< iM )vnn.vo ? *ta^?ffooUw? rJfurra/ Uru?C THE NBWS ANA OBBBBVlsLR A Marvel of Power, Enginuet'y, Enter prise and Resourcefol&flM. Tlie News and Observer of Bale N. (,'., is a marvel of power, inj nuity, enterprise! and resourcefuln Its circulation is wide and its po larity is a tiling of wliicli to be pro l It goes onward and upward and e braces such an extended field frc which to gather thd news of the dt that scarcely an item of eigni&K news escapes its watchful fljye. 7 yoar 1909 has witnessed the groi of the circulation of the only mo* inj{ daily at the capitol of North ,<J| olirta to a point that showf |ts gr popularity. At the beginning of year the. circulation of tlMi j^ftpcr in the neighborhood of eleven tl sand ; during the year the inereae daily circulation is more than thousand, so that the News Observer ? now prints over fifl| thousand papers daily. Ralejg white population does not e] over fifteen thousand, so th?r prints as many papers every di there are white men,; women children in the town in which; printed. It is doubtful whethej other paper, in the world* print a town of that population has large circulation. J; MW&ii*; WiUOR y often meaiij jest for MkJ child- Little ones 1 4o palatable to take, fife*, JwfeU, 25 c?nti. ifinfr RICHMOND TIMES-DjSPJ One of Our Best Metropolitai nal8 Necessary to the Nwspaper Reader. The Richmond hovers about the pinncle or* politan journals. Each of ouSf^ dailies has its distinct indivinl as well as much that is common.? and if one reads all the otheri store of knowledge is iucompleftj his aesthetic tastes are lacking gratification without the Rid Times-Dispatch. THE SUN IS THE CHEAPEST HI THE NEWS OF special correapondentB of Interesting monger. Afl a chronicle of while lta bureaus in tlve and financial oen< AS A WO and IntollootuaU: features that can THB BUN'S market ne for the farmer, the me; reliable Information upon TUBS SUN la In eve opinions, just In Its dell people. By Hall THE SUN THE SUNDAY SUN, oontalns all ths features o op of articles of Interest t< The DAILY ftud BUND. Y RW. MT\ ewiutino ^2.50 of stu "dents qual T2ED poai? 'fli'ded. Great illustrated Nothing New < Mysterious. "ASK YOUR GRAND MOTH BR. For man* jt?n?r?Moj r*oo*n l(*d u ? Wondj In tr??tlnr tnd.nn Rheumatism and Niu ORtASK LIN! KS1&A (rreiM, with other Yl dUnta ?dd?d.^i^y It. tSe-At kin)rng|t [.3aLfrti!-*axr SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF fc GREAT SPECIAL OFFERS" Now open to those wishing to learn and RAILROAD AGENCY. Tuitioa., dents' railroad fare paid* Excellent,) ify in 4 to 6 months. Our graduates POJ t ions paying $4.r) to $65 per month to 8|af demand for Telegraphers. Write today catalojjuo which gives full particuli SOUTHERN, BOX 272 $s^'sgg?***i result* No IB isaJofe