University of South Carolina Libraries
pV HW % Democrats in State C Name the Presi * . ieeti is mm % Tammany Pacified bv Being * Given Place on Delegation From the State at Large. 4 National Convention at St Louis is Expected to Ratify Action of Pivotal State?Full Text of Platform Adopted. A special from Albany, N Y., says: The democrats of New York present to ihe democracy of the union, the name of Judge Alton Brooks Parker as theii candidate for president. This action was taken in a way that shows Judge rv Parker to be the choice of all democratic elements represented in its state convention. There was but one point of difference, one division, and that had relation only to the manner i; which the name of this favorite son of. New York should be presented at St. Louis. It was a difference of opin ion and of judgment as to the best ? means to attain the end toward wbic all New York democrats are moving ?the nomination of Parker. The name of no other candidate was men tioned. The suggestion that any ele menrt of New York's democracy favor: any other candidate was not even remotely or inferentially made. The division was as to the Dest means to attain the nomination or Judge Parker. The speakers reprc seating both sides view with one an other in their expressions of admira t:on ior tne aistinguisneu jurist auof their desire that there should be done only that which would best pro inote his candidacy-. Those who fa* vored the instructions method wa: , best calculated to impress upon othe states the sincerity of New York's su1 port; those who favored the highi complimentary resolution submitted by the minority, contended that an unii> structed delegation made up of Judge Parker's friends and acting under the. unit rule was calculated to exert the greater influence at St. Louis, an they gave their reasons. All the ad vance predictions of a sensational con, vention fight full of bi ter personal atacks fell to the ground. However. th< fight was carried, to the floor of thconvention, as Victor Dowling predicti t i ji !. ? _ a cxi? uut it was entirety aevoia 01 sensationalism and practically free from u personalities or bitterness of any kind Tammany Given a Place. The instructions resolutions wer< ? adopted by a vote of three hundre; and one to one hundred and forty-nine. Then the convention adopted unanimously the report of the committee on convention delegates with the followin? big four: David B. Hill, of Albany: Edward Murphy, of Troy: James W. Ridgeway of Brooklyn; George Ehrett, of New York. The substitution of the name of George Ehrett. who is a Tammany ra?n.was designation by leader Murphy for that of August Belmont and wa.s determined upon shortly before the convention assembled for its night ses sicn. With the certainty that the real , business of the convention would not develop until the night session, the chief interest of the morning and early pfternoon centered around the arrival of the special trains bringing up the big Tammanv delegation and about the marchine club from Judge Parker's home county which earlr in the day naraded h?rk and forth through the business section. \ DIED IN CLOSE EMBRACE. Woman Resorts to Poison to End Fre, quent Matrimonial Quarrels. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Ctone were found dead in each other's arms at ( their room in a todging house in Ogden, Utah, Sunday night. It is believed by the police that the woman first poisoned her husband then herself. Stone had refused to let her have charge of his children by a former wile and* this had been the cause of frequent quarrels between the two. Jealousy of Stone's sister, who had charge of the children, is supposed to have been the cause of the woman's act. TURKS AND BULGARIANS FIGHT. Terrific Combat at Lipa, Near Salon ica, Wherein Many Are Slaughtered. Advices from Salcnica, European Turkey, slate that serious fighting has taken place between Turks and Bulgarians at Lipa. near Dcmir Kapu i.a valley of the Vardar. GO m'les from Salcnica). The onslaught was terrific and many were killed cn both sides. % i*V . \ - / I im s I i I Vmv^ntirm PrprtifPlllv I 'VU * -* x j J dential Nominee. c J I t g , Text of the Platform. The platform adopted is as follows: A The democrats of New York, in re- | newing their pledge of fidelity to the ^ essential principles of Jeffersonian ii democracy, as repeatedly enunciated in 11 our national and state platforms, mak* j these further declarations upon the na t tional issues of the hour, reserving ai * expression upon state issues until tht ? fall convention, when state candidate: t are to be nominated. * I 1. This is a government of laws, no; 0 i of men; one law for presidents, cabi n j nets and people; no usurpation; nc 0 ! executive encroachment upon the legis ! ? i lation or judicial department. j u 2. We must keep inviolate the ? j pledges of our treaties; we must re a I new and reinvigorate within ourselves f; l-that respect for law and that love of a | liberty and of peace which the spirit J } of military domination tends inevita i j bly to weaken and destroy. f .1. TTtisieadv national Dolioies and a ! J i restless spirit of adventure engender J n I alarms that check our commercial v j growth; let us have, peace, to the end ? j that business confidence may be re- f, j. stored and that our people may again d j in tranquility enjoy the gains of their ? ! ton. I 4. Corporations chartered by the e j state must be subject to just regula- t I tion by the state in the interest of the ^ i people ; taxation for public purposes >, j only; no government partnership with C protected monopolies. j; 5. Oppositon to trusts and Combina- j] j tions that oppress the people and stifle l ! healthy industrial competition. 8 j 6. A check upon extravagance in *1 ; public expenditures; that the, burden e j of the people's taxes may be lightened, e 7. A reasonable revision of the tariff; * j needless dues upon imported raw ma- g terials weigh heavily upon the manufacturer, are a menace to thfe Ameri- y can wage-earner and by increasing ? the cost of production shut out oui r i products from the foreign markets. r i 8. Maintenance of state rigts and 1 home rule; no centralization. ; 9. Honesty in the public service; t vigilance in the prevention of fraud, 8 firmness in the punishment of guilt J : when detected. t 10. The impartial maintenance of o : the rights of labor and capital; no un- j equal discrimination; no abuse of the R powers of law for favoritism or op- t | pression. * ii : The democracy 6f New York favors ? , UUIUIUCLuuu kjl iuai uidimgui&ucu Q democrat and eminent jurist of our i i t state, Alton Brooks Parker, and the J u I delegates selected by this convention I 0 are hereby instructed to present and j s support such nomination at the ap- \ i proaching national convention. a That the said delegates are hereby j ? further instructed to act and vote as j : a. unit in all matters pertjffilng to said j t convention in accordance with the ; a j will of the majority of the said dele- ? ; gates; and the said delegates are fur- t ther authorized to fill any vacancies a ! which may arise from any cause in t j said delegation, in case of the absence t ; of both the delegate and alternate. ii j p List of Delegates to St. Louis. j $ Among the district presidential elec- i g | tors are: Isador Strauss, Robert B. i v j Roosevelt, Hugh J. Grant. Herman c i Ridder and John D. Crimmins. The list of the delegates to the na- ? ! tional convention follows: Perry Bel- r ! mont, P. H. McCarren. George H. Lind- v j say, Martin W. Littleton. Controller * j Edward M. Grout, Andrew L .Sulli- I ^ I van, formerly postmaster of Brook- s j lyn; James Sheylin, Congressman T. . | i D. Sullivan, Congressman Sulzer, John * j Fox, Lewis Nixon, M. Worley Palat- ! j zek, Bird S. Coler, William McAddo, t j W. Bourk? Cockran, Robert A. Van ? I Wyck, Charles A. Towne, Thomas F. a j Grady, Harry Payne Whitney, Jef- d | l'erson M. Levy, former Postmaster t j Charles W. Wayton, Asa Bird Gardi- ^ j nor. William Temple Emmett, John N. t i Carlisle, Elliot F. Danforth, George y j Raines and John B. Stanchfield. c ? \ ! INTER-STATE SUIT WITHDRAWN. ' Z Georgia and Tennessee's Trouble Over ^ i .. . - tt Copper Fumes Is Ended. c* I The case of the state of Georgia j P against the state of Tennessee pending I t ! in the United States supreme court j for the purpose of securing an injunc- d 1 lion to prevent certain copper coin- o panies at Ducktown, Tenn., from roast- ? ! ing copper and sulphur ore in open j, ; air, thereby destroying the vegetation ii ! in several north Georgia counties, was * | dismissed Monday by that court upon ! ^ j motion of Attorney General Hart and o i Special Attorney Johnson, representing J i the state of Georgia. ^ ; fc PRESIDENT TO TOUCH BUTTON. t r Preparations Made at White House for c j Opening of St. Louis Exposition, j j ! A Washington dispatch says: h Tentative arrangements have been y completed for the ceremony at the g white house incident to the opening of $ the Louisana Purchase Exposition at c St. Louis. P. V. DeGraw. the east J em press representative cf the ex t position company, discussed the sub 0 jeet Monday with Secretary Lceb. i SERMON FOR SUNDAY .N INTERESTING DISCCURSE BY THE REV. L. H. CASWELL. ubject: "A Little Inquiry Into Tribulalation " ? A Fatlietic Figure la the Shilly-shally Youth Cuddled in Luxury and Shrinking From Life's Combat. Brooklyn. N. Y.?For his Sunday sernon, in the -Tabernacle M. E. Chferch, Ireenpoint, the pastor, the Rev. Lincoln Iollister Caswell, took as his subject "A .little Inquiry Into Tribulation." The ext was from Romans v: 3: "But we ;lory in tribulations." Mr. Caswell said: Unto each the ever recurring questions ome. Whence the mission of adversity? Vhy the existence of trouble? Do pain nd pleasure proceed from kindred laws? low is it that while our earth in its orbit eeps symphony with the host of heaven, t yet bears the undertone of anguish in ts bosom; Snail we answer by impeaching Infinite ustice, by declaring the tryranny of pain, asserting the nondage of suffering? sot so. But rather ino^.re for the-mission f trouble and learn the utility of adversiv. It is clear to the student of ethics hat there is an unknown quantity in the ormula of suffering. In this question x quals life?life of service or of idleness; C a* u'nil'nocc Ar nr nf 1 iUISC Ui V4. ncaautoo) vi lean proportions. Adversity either makes r ruins a man, his individual character lone determining whether he shafi be rushed or exalted. Opposing forces stimlate to heroic action. A man may choose o dwell in luxury, but he must do so at he expense of the stronger forces of charcter. It is hard to endure pain, it is ar harder to resist ease, but by resisting nd by enduring are wrought out those rincely qualities which are attributes of he ideal man. And so we are placed amid Drccs, rude and contrary, that we may ain the glory of breaking and bridling hem. If mature and environment should efriend and never oppose, gratify and ever grieve, satisfy and never smite, life rould become immeasurably less noble. It io not uncommon to think that sufering, as well as sin, comes fleet footed rom Tartarus, whereas, suffering is not ependent upon sin. There is a ministry f suffering, out there can never be a minstry of evil. Is hatred the cause of love; evenge of forgiveness; selfishness of genrosity; vice of virtue? Humility is not he daughter of nride. nor is error th,e Topagator of truth. It is not true for a nan to hold that because he has sinned e is capable of reaching a higher holiness, rive not evil the credit of befriending huaanity. Sin alienates, debases, ruins. Beold how suffering rises above evil! Evil 5 infamous; suffering may be glorious. Ivil merits antipathy; suffering often deerves praise. Evil swears fealty to the nfernal; suffering never, but repeatedly ows allegiance to the Infinite. To punish vil is suffering's smallest province. It xists for a higher purpose than retribuion?for a stimulating, educating, atoning urpose so that "afflictions are but the haaows of God's wings." ' Upon material things a literature is rritten. Read it! It tells of strife, strugle, contention. The law of dissolution eoperates with the law of growth. The ock dies that the vegetable may live; the >lant withers that the animal may grow; he body decays that the spirit may exiand eternally. Counter forces make the ife of the universe. The meteor gleams iecause of resistance; the shimmering contentions that glow upon the brow of tight are but fire balls from the furnace of he sun; light itself, resplendent and vializing, comes from combustion, antagnism and chemical conflict. Adversity nters into the very nature of things. Earth's living forms once slumbered in the ranite rock, and would still have slumbered but for adverse forces active witlia. Chfemicals were there to disintegrate, arthquakes to shatter, fires to fuse, glaiers to grind. There were corrodings, onsumings, erosions, decayings. witherngs and washing until the solid granite infolded its treasures to make possible rganic life. What mean the expressions, "natural plprtion." "atrucrcrle for existence," "sur ival of the fittest?" They indicate that 11 life is an extended conflict, where each rder preys upon the next below and grapJes with the next above for mastery. The life of nations is no exception to his law. Civilization mav boast of her ttainments, but revolt and revolution are he arbiters for her progress. She may exit in the "evolution of government," but urnioil, violence, bloodshed cry out, "We re factors in thy prosperity." What people were more oppressed than he ancient Hebrews? Rameses enslaved hem in Egypt. hardshiD harassed them a the wilderness; the Land of Promise iledged but little more than shock on hock of battle. That was the nation? iuffeted, defeated, tried?that became the afe depository of truth, and gave to the rorld as its consummate flower Diety InI ax xxa tt. What has been the discipline by which ur own nation has attained its present trength? It had indeed a wonderful paentage. The brave little Netherlander /horn the Council of Blood, the Inquisiion and the Holy See could not down; he glorious Huguenot fresh from hearing he blood cries of St. Bartholomew; nhe turdy, psalm-singing Puritan who wrung fagna Charta from John., who served lanipden to resist the king, who animated Iromwell and his Ironsides at Mareton loor and Naseby, who taught Varte how o die, who struggled amid overwhelming orces for religious liberty; these, whom he American is proud to own as worthy ncestors, are all sons of hardship and entrance, conquerors in the nobler fields of iattle. Thus out of milleniums of struggle rith the myriad-headed hydra of persecuion arises the America of to-day. The naion's birth was marked by pain. Speak, e noble slain of Bunker Hill! Ye patriots lashing arms with an alien foe! Shout, e pallid lips of the blood stained snow of 'alley Forge! And tell us that freedom is ainea by devotion to death; that liberty ides triumphant over a road macadamized >y the bones of its devotees: tell us that, he advancing stages of national "life are leraldfed by eonflict and hastened by the iresence of a martyr host! Passing into the realm of the inte'llec ual it is found that the power ot incisive ntellect is purchased with the hard coin f struggle. The product of genius is [early bought. No pioneer of philosophy, r science, 6r religion ever blazed his wey hrough untrod forests who was not conrooted by poverty, prejudice or j ardships enumerable. Not in courts of ease; not a rich classic halls; not in the midst of ame and loud huzzas are deepest emotion ngendered, rarest truths found nor subimest conceptions begotten. From a cup f hemlock in Athens; from the cross in erusalem; from an apostle's dungeon at tome; from the chamber of a blind bard a London have come the thoughts that iave swayed the world. Why is the sacred page so tilled with enderness. pathos and comfort? It was iot written with a golden pen in an easy hair, in a scholastic library. For ink, here were tears of a multitude of weepers, or pens, there were fishermen, sheplerds, bedouins of the desert, slaves, conicts and martyrs. For libraries, there /ere desolate rocks, caverns, mountain ides, sea shores and prison walls. Out of uch harsh and unfavorable conditions ame the volumn whicit through all the ears has been coveted by the bereaved, ought by the lonely, loved by the troubled. Excellence of thought come3 by way f toil, endurance, denial. Mind, capable of Infinite thoughts, has j ts Gardens of Getiisemane. Mind wears j A MICHIGAN 1 "1 Know Peruna is i Worn Ou! the crown of thorns in the very hour of lofty achievement. It is said that Ole Bull ascended the rough mountains of Norway. there he saw the majestic storm, heard the weird wail of the pines, listened to the roar of the cascades, and from these he caught those j rapturous tones with which he charmed i the heart of the world. Thus it is be- j cause men have climbed some craggy Matterhorn of chilling adversity, descended in- I to 6ome vale of shadows, lingered by some I wave battered cliff; because they have j braved opposition and hardship; because i they have had passages in their lives where j they have experienced the extremities of | anguish and dsoiation that they have be- J come heralds of truth, have marked the I advance of civilization, have been high ' priests of science, refiners of society, re- j formers of faith. What is it that places this premium on grief? Why are the. great doers also the great suffers? What is it that vitalizes pain, glorifies sorrow, and makes dead j men's bones walk the earth clothed with j tremendous influence? Let Moses answer ' from the mount of immeasurable glory: j "I rejected a regal palace and the trees- : ures of Egypt, choosing rather to suffer J affliction with the people of God that I.! might be a statesman for the oppressed, j liberate a nation of slaves, endure to be j vexed, tried and discouraged through forty j weary years that at last I might stand il- i lumined in the transfiguration of the Son | of God." Let David answer with his wail j of anguish: "0, my son Absalom! my ! son. my son Absalom! would God I had j died for thee, 0 Absalom, mv son. my \ son!" It was in the depth of his mourn- j ing that he sung those poems which have ! comforted the aching heart foi* ages. Let i Joseph and Daniel answer as from a pri?- j on and a den tnev ascend the steps to : royalty and fame. Let Savonarolo answer i loving the red. hot iron of martyrdom more than the red hat of a cardinal. Let Bruno answer, let Gallileo. let Newton. ' Let Luther answer, and Wickiiff and John j Huss, and "Wesley, and Francis Asburv. i It is a noble company. But there are some i whom reverses have ruined, whom af- j flictions have spoiled, who refuse to be j sublimated by suffering or ennobled bv j calamity. I "see yonder a Napoleon, of | surpassing genius, the world's autocrat. ; He builds a throne of steel only to see it J rust and crumble e'er he dies. From his j pinnacle of power he falls and lies pros- j trate in defeat. His failure is ignominious j because his spirit is ignoble. Upon the j barren rock of St. Helena he wanders, a I lion at bay, a soul cowed, a nhoenix life i in hopeless despair. By his side and tow- j ering above him rises Washington. He j comes to the government when there is j nothing to govern. He bectmes command- j er of the American Army when it is small j and defeated. Without navy, without ! monev. without munitions, with traitors j and Tories abundant, with generals con- j niving for position and grossly slander- j ing his character, he meets and defeats the most thoroughly equipped and an- ; pointed government of the world: and j then, notwithstanding ihe importunities j of a people he has freed, he refuses a ! royal crown and passes into history?an j embodiment of unselfish service. ^ i Far in the past 1 see corrupt Nero loll- j ing in his chariot of regal magnificence; | dying by inches a loathsome death, a vie- j tim of the very luxurv and extravagance i - . ? ? ? it.. ? ? ; in which he delights. Koinng over tne nu- j nian way on toward the city, he passes the j Roman gua\-d leading a prisoner to exe- f cution. Unto the prisoner the Emperor ' gives "but a contemptuous glance. That is all?and yet not all. That eaptive commands the gaze of mankind. The name of Nero is a synonym for vice and shameless- ! ness. whi'e the naihe of Paul wields a mightier influence with each succeeding century. Paul still lives! Die he cannot! : It is true that for this nurpose Nero led him forth from prison. But see! Ooes he ; tremble? Does he shrink from his last enemy? ^ Does this spiritual hero who J fought avitD beasts, struggled with waves, , was scarred by the lash, incarcerated. ! smitten, stoned and left for dead, does he ! who, when each stroke of the "tribulum" j fell upon him, shouted, "None of these 1 things move," does he now flinch? The block is there. The blade is ready, j The headsman speaks, "Prepare!" Where I is the tremor in the aged form? With ra- j diant. brow and stately mien ^mrr.orta) bt ' stands. With eve flashing in hone, with voice strong and confident, hear him de- I dare, "I ain now ready to be offered: the ; time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight. I have finished mv j course. I r.ave kent the faith." Nero's i axe cleaves Irs head and Paul, the hero, is j crowned with the abundant life. How has the ministry of the Christ been ' wrought out? In all the centuries of sor- I *nw whose grief comnares with that of j Fim who is at once the .Author and Sa- j viour of mortal man? With uncovered : head how we before the sublime sufferer. { Behold! Out of the anguish of the garden, j out of the y'co-ry of the tomb He of the j riven side. He of the thorn crowned head, ! He of the broken heart walks down the I ages elevating sorrow until it grows with | a heavenly hallow, lifting the burden of i woe from hrtnsed and staggering human- } ity. This is. Re who exalts the Jowly and raises toil to nihility, declaring that pain j shall no longer he accursed, hut that life : shall he triumphant in adversity. Is this , our life? Not vacillating, meagre, indo- j lent, but isturdv. unflinching, enduring, j overcoming, decisive?a triumphant life? j This only is life with deathless possibili- | ties, and he'only who lives for the future j ?? *i,a eowot nf the nresent and its j UO.LV1JC3 M1V M trials. Look we beyond diurnal revolu- j tions gauging the sweep of the' planet in j its course around the sun. Trials and I tests, slanders and betrayals, desertion | and opposition are for to-day; character i for eternity. If man in the future expects to rest upon his knowledge of truth, he must find some trial to test it now. If character is to count- forever, some sharp and merciless criticism must prove its integrity new. There i? no more pathetic figure in the world of to-dav than the shillv-shally youth cudc'ding in the lap of wealth and shrinking from fife's combat. We are not wooden dummies, but must be men of | granite, against whom the leaping waves i and mountainous surges snail beat only to I recoil. i? impotent furyj The need of this hour is strong manhood. Persjrverence is the characteristic that wins. Expect not to glide through easy seas, with silken sails tense in. the breeze of favor. You must steer through narrow straits; here a whirlpool of doubt, there a hidden rock of skepticism, where adverse currents would strand the bark high on the barren j beach of despair. You must sail-by the j Siren Isle of insinuating desire; must re- ' sist enchantments which lull to the sleep j of voluptuous death; must feel the grip of ; eternal realities; must move on and out to I the unfoldment of the soul with an iron determination to wrest victory out of de- ( feat, and weave a garland of praise out ?t j the failure of friends, the malice of ene- j mies, the contempt of rivals and the hard- j ship of life. T'ii'j Treasure of Kindness. Guard within yourself that treasure, { kindness Know how to give without hesi- | tation, how to lose without regret, how to j acquire without meanness. Know how to j replace in your heart by the happiness of those you love, the hanpiness that may be wanting in yourself.?F. W. Faber. The Only Sale Road. Accident does very little toward the pro- i duction of anv great result in life. Though | sometimes what is called "a happy hit." j may be made by a bold venture, tlie com mon highway of steady industry and ap- j plication is the only safe road to travel.? ! Samuel Smiles. : t Hon. Xelsoti Rice, of St. Joseph, If grateful patients In his county who o ? Hon. Nelson Rice, Mayor of St. Josep The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio Gen:lemen: "I wish to congratulate win the confidence of the public in Peruna is a fine ton ic for a worn o of catarrhal difficulties. You have tients in this country who have ust by it, and who praise it above all my heartiest good wishes. ' ?Xe.lso 0 MARCH, APRIL, MAY. Weak Nerves, Poor Digestion, , Impure Blood, Depressed Spirits. i Gentlemen: "I wish to congratulate y ' ou on the success of your efforts to win the confidence of the public in need of a re liable medicine. The sun has just crossed the equator on 1 its yearly trip north. The real equator is fntrnivl fli/? n/\rfK nPflrlv pitrhfppn OUUI^U WV? II U4VA W4.AX. MVt VM MVMft -Q? miles every day. With the return of the sun comes the bodny ills peculiar to spring. With one person the nerves arc weak; another person, digestion poor; with others j the blood is out of order; and still others have depressed spirits and tired feeling. rrPT a 111 n X Sweat. Itch, Blister? 1 rrrl H 11 n I Odors of feet, armpit I LL I IIUII I send25c to EATON D paid;sample for2cstamp. One application pr STOF For ill kinds ?nd sis^s of Si l ^ T? into the construction of St lliL L L L .{ in* en 1 state dimensions *i DE J3j JBllC t'HARCJK. an elegant Bh I. ggggggSt gggElB price on one ot our pcpulai 5 Beauti 'I M II ifiT 1 Modern Store Fronts. Wei I ] ||lIn | I f aa bk! Chicago store ?t moderate < MHljgailagjgi SOUTHERN FOUN g*\ ELECTRIC FLUID. Thegreat pain extractor;cures jffiL rheumatism, neuralgia, colic, > "m2 cramps and all aches and pain. /K -Jgf Nothing like it. Try a bottle. A Save doctor's bills. Ask your i ^Higgist to tret it. or send to W. c. HUOHEN, Atlanta, \?m- Agents wanted; big pay. EASILY FOUfJD IN THE DARK. He?I think I ought to take a hot loot bath. Where is the mustard? She?Out in the pantry. He?Pshaw! it's dark out there, and I haven't got a match. She?-You don't need a ^iatch to locate it. It's right alongside of the Limburger cheese.?Philadelphia Press. WOMEN BREAK DOWN. Sometimes women drift into a condition of "half invalid." Continual languor?all tired out, run down, backfi ache, nerves shattered, S headache, terrible n?ui, f/ho appetite, poor digestion. In nine cases out of ten it's because the kidneys fail to do their work of filtering the poisonous system waste from the blood. The kidneys are weak and need the strengthening help of Doan's Kidney Pills. Read how these pills repair a weakened physical condition when this condition is caused by sick kidneys. Mrs. Sadie Mettles, of 394 W. 4th Ave., Columbus, Ohio, says: "Prior to TAnw lOOQ T cnffflwA/1 AAncMoroMw ( Lie J CUL lOvU 1 OUUCl CU LVUOiU^iUUlJ from backache, pain in the head, languor and depression and weakness of the action of the kidneys. The pain was always worse in the morning and I felt miserable. I was induced to procure a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and I began their use. They proved prompt aiid effective. They cured me, and there has been uo return of the trouble since taking them. I owe all the credit to Doan's Kidney Pills." A FRP,E TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mrs. Mettles will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. 1*. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents* per box. 1 MAYOR SAYS: a Fine Tonic For a I System." . l|j Icli.y knows of a large number of j have been cured by Peruna. |n ? h. Michigan, writes: iM you on the success of your efforts to :|| need of a reliable medicine. 1 know .jsKfj nt system and a specific in cases , ?| --is a large number of gratef ul pa- :??j|i id Peruna and have been cured I other medicines, Peruna has |;?3| Jaj n Rice. ( 'Jl ?; i I All these things are especially true of those who have been suffering with ca- -fk tarrh in any form or la grippe. A course of Peruna is sure to correct all these conditions. It is an ideal spring medicine. Peruna does not irritate?it invigorates, lb 3 does not temporarily 'Stimulate ? fl ^11 strengthens. It equalizes the circulation W'vm of the blood, tranquilizes the nervous system and regulates the bodily functions, jjl Peruna, unlike so many spring medicines is 3 ^ not simply a physic or stimulant or ner- ||j vine. It is a natural tonic and invigorator..:%j If you do not receive prompt and satis? ^ factory results from the use of Peruna, 4fl write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving C..11 A f AAAA ? *1/1 ItA 1*7* 1 1- 1>A 14111 Ul wuctj auu uv itiii ?*p pleased to give you his valuable advice >3 Address Dr. Hartman, President of Tbe J M Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. itOYAL FOOT WASH cures them. B*move* ; japffl s, etc.; stops chafing. If not at druggist* % BUG CO., Atlanta, Ga., for full size,poet* -r,;f'3gi o^es its merit. Money back if not wtlsfied. |9 ffl !E FRONTS M tore Buildings*. We furnish all material entering >* &S ore Fronts. "Write ns about your proposed bulla- . ,jua2j8 id stvle ef front and we will send you, FREE OF le Print Plan, and quote you an extremely low ful, Everlasting .r'W rireyoualHhestyleof an elegant New York or |jl |B DRY CO., Owensboro, Kentucky t Cotton Gin: M Machinery? PRATT. MUNGER.:j9 - M,m MWU' EAGLE. aiming j We mane tbe moat complete line ot concern la tbe world. We aleo make W ENGINES and BOILERS, ! | LINTERS tor OIL MILLS. | we sail everything needed about a cotton ^ Write for ninetrated CataJofue. r-J-JJl Continental Gin Co^fl Birmingham, Ala. .|8H DYSPEPSIA 1 "Baviae taken. Tour wanderfnl "Caaeayeta" to# -jglMl month, and beine entirely wind of ?MtAAM h and dyepegeia/I think a word of pralae la too to Caecar?U''for their wende:?ul eompo.ttion. ' heve-taken naaerooe other io-cali.d rem.diet 'VjJfflK it withoat avail and I find that Caicarrt* relievo more la a day than all the other* I have teJuia ;/jK would in a year." Jams. MitSuno, 108 Merer 8t, Jertey City, N. Jw Ple**?nt, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, Do Good* . IjjS] Kerer Blckea, W??k?n or Gripe. lie, J5c, We. Xerft '9^ old in bulk. The genuine ublot sUrap?d 00 QU *'^H; Guaranteed to cure or your jiouey back. ''"-rff Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.7. 5ga .^H| OHUILSILE. TEH KILLIOtt BOIES If S Best Cou?h^jrup.^Ta!eu? Goo& Bee M . llj 12 in time. Sold by drogglsta. . Ill ^EBEBSEESIEiagl