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. - - -J*-: $ ' ~.!v .- ' . iThe Jo,Unit 1 A SERMON" '&W^& nr irfe revC'([RA-V /teNDEI$o>f^|Pjl^ S-^'.- V> I ^ Subject: Hypocrisy. * j-Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, r>*>/3 Wiorfiolrt xraiiiuui g ateuuc auu ?. . ^ ? street, on the above theme, the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, said: '^The subject reflects a feature of me that is as real and general as it is unfortunate and reprehensible. Per hypocrisy?that is to say, the assumption of that which we are not, or the uncandor of inconsistency?is a prevelant and pernicious factor in life. It'is present everywhere. But nowhere is it more pernicious than *ih our own midst. America is beset with the vice of hypocrisy. And it is especially unfortunate that it is so. For the position of this country in the front rank of the nations and of progress makes it insistently necessary that we shall have candor as we consider ourselves and that we shall not arrogate- to oirselves any characteristics or virtues that are not of the bone and sinew of our national life. For insiheqrity is as fatal to a nation as to j an individual. He lives best who is genuine. Not otherwise is it with a j nation. \ Generally when we speak of hypoc- j . * risy we conceive the portraits of the nfeu who.lead dual lives, of falsefaced friends, of the insincere habit- ! lies of an insincere society. They ar.e truly to be condemned. Their ex- i ample is a warning. . But they are not the offenders of I whom most I would speak to you to- | day. For the hypocrisies of individuals are co-terminous with death so far as this world is concerned. The hypocrisies of nations however,, by virtue of the constitution of society, have a tendency to perpetuate themselves and to become in a larger sense most lasting and pernicious. i It is because of the tendency of national hypocrisies to be, in a way, self-perpetuating that I would, this morning, have you attend to the hypocrisy of America. Because our national hypocrisies are to some degree unconscious they are the less to be excused and they are more to be feared. The subject Is not pleasant. It is not over nice to admit that as a na-. tiozi we are hypocritical. We may wish the truth were otherwise. But the truth has a very peculiar fashion of -remaining fixed and constant regardless of our desires or our dreams. America is hypocritical. And we are hypocritical socially, governmentally, intellectually, morally and spiritually. The counts are many but' we shall have to admit their validity. Si- - And they are true despite the unquestioned supremacy of our people in many fields of national endeavor and success that constitute the great jucdo vi a America is hypocritical in her social relationships. Jack London in a recent story tells a weird and gruesome, tale of how he witnessed as a tramp Xhe flogging in most merciless fashion of two unruly gypsy boys by the leader of a gypsy camp. The story is horrifying in that it reveals the existence of such cruel inhumanity in the midst of a civilized society even in a kgypsy camp. Our eyes fill with tears" and our blood runs hot with indignation as we read of such unphil?soph'ical and unscientific management of children. We can understand such conditions as they exist among amoxjg the chill snows and under the benighted civilization of Russia. But here'they appeal, even though they are infrequent. But while our pulses beat faster over the sins of a gypsy camp" we are strangely unresponsive to t^ piercing wails of the multitudes of our own children?no, not our own?to the wails of the multitudes of our neighbors' children, who, day by day, in a land of freedom and Christian enlightenment, are crushed in the mechanism of our modern comniercial system. We have ears and hearts and ready hands to help the midery of the Chinaman who cries out against the greed of "most Christian England" as she forces the the curse of opium upon an unwilling nation. But we seem hardly to hear the call of the throngs whose lives in America are wrecked because of the unholy-traffic in alcoholic beverages that to-day is permitted to exist by and with the consent and suffrage of the adult membership of the Church of Jesus Christ. And just so long as we mourn over gypsies and wax ..indignant over the wickedness of the English people, the while we wax our ears against the call of our children in the homeland for help and a chance to live as God meant they should we are, to say the least, socially hypocritical. And no man may deny the count. America is hypocritical In her attitude toward government. It is the fashion to declaim about the vices of Babylon, the rottenness of ancient Rome, the sins of Philip the second, the primes of modern Russia, the rapacity of European nations. We are astounded that the civil corruption of any nation could be so totally indecept as to consign sailors to be sent to death inside of ill-equipped and still more illy, handled men of war. ' iWe thank God that we do not live i under an autocracy that is as con scienceiess ana as vniainous as mai which holds the reins of Russian government. And yet, wide-awake as we are to the criminalities of the bureaucratic government of the Russian Czar, we are but half-awake to the realities of the existing corruption all around us. For the-fact is that in the face of our history, our inheritance, our opportunities, our Christian influences, we are a sorry spectacle to the nations. We glory that we have no autocracy of birth. Eut by our own consent we have allowed to reign over us as greedy a set of political pirates as ever sunk a ship. Their y only distinction is that they are able to fool most of the people most of the time. The governmental conditicas.mii&at .to ovvr karjlet > 55. .. ." . and city in the United States of America are so absolutely disgraceful that we ought to be ashamed. Our political dictators, with few, and they lustrous, exceptions, do as they please with the sublimest self-confidence imaginable. And so long as we are grieved over the examples of governmental maladministration, ancient and modern, with which we are familiar, and refuse to secure the purification of our own political affairs, and neglect to procure the political execution of our political thugs aud thieves and highbinders, whom we have allowed to reign over us, we are hypocritical in our assumption of gov" A A mon m nt) ernmeuLiti >n mc. auu uu juau uiuj deny the count. /America is hypocritical intellectually. We rejoice in the heritage of intellectual freedom which is ours. We give God praise that a man may think his thoughts after God here without regard to any man. We regret that China has reverenced the past, that the church in ages gone refused to allow the liberty of private judgment. We pride ourselves upon the opportunity for freedom of thought that is guaranteed to every man who breathes our air. But, what do we do with the man who dares to exercise his prerogatives? What do we, the descendants of the men who mobbed Garrison, who ridiculed the scientific geniuses of a scant generation ago? We are as impervious to a new thought as any nation under heaven. We prate about progress and we maintain the status quo. We want no new thought until it has become old. With our refinements of cruelty we attempt to still forever the activities of those who would follow the gleam 01 the truth of God, v ho would lead us ahead and up. And just so ! long as we talk freedom of thought, ' * _ * - a li. i ? ana regrer, ine xacK. ox. it xu umci lands, while we have a scant attention for the prophets of the living God whose minds are illumined by the glory of His truth, we are intellectually hypocrites. And no man may deny the count. Then, too, we are moral hypocrites. How shocked we are at the Mohammedan system of divorce, and the curse of opium to the integrity of Chinese civilization, and the vicious customs of English barroom, and the free-love of a certain sort of Socialism! But how shocked are we over the "consecutive" polygamy and j polyandry that exists under the loose sanctions of our .legal systems? How shocked are we by the spectacle of our boys and girls, our men and women, deadened with drink; forced to immorality by the social conditions that we permit? How shocked we are lest perhaps our children should be told that which they will learn from questionable sources if we do not guarantee them timely and proper information! And just so long as we deplore the moral sins of other peoples and neglect to attend properly to the conservation of' our own I morals, we are hypocritical. And no man may deny the count. America is hypocritical In her conceptions of things religious. We look with wonder and astonishment upon the inconsistency that is appar| ent between the noblest books of i Eastern religions and the manner o! ! life among the devotees of those rej ligions systems. We do not exalt God by the sharpened sciihitar. We do not roll under Juggernaut. We do not provide money and food at the side ot the graves of the departed. We do not let our nails grow for a life-time in order to glorify Almighty God. We have more sense than to do these. But what do we do? Why, we proclaim Jesus Prince of Peace while we proclaim peace a fantasy and exalt the doctrine that the way to ensure peace is to go well armed. We magnify the philosophyHhat says "turn to him thy other cheek." But we keep our gloves on. We believe that "righteousness exalteth." But we acknowledge, as practical men, that it is impracticable to be strictly honest and prosper. We acclaim the eternal necessity for an exact concurrence of thought and speech, word and deed, look and action. But we send our Bibles to China packed beside a hold of beer. We assimilate the Ipdians by the efficient force of arms. We civilize the Philippines by t way of Milwaukee. We sing, "Unto Thee, 0 God, be riches," but we maintain a large proportion of the churches of the living Christ in this land by such devious and precarious methods as would put a heathen to shame. And so long as we scoff at the inconsistencies of foreign religious systems and are satisfied, with a false optimism, to congratulate our own with all its incongruities, we are hypocritical. And no man may deny the count. 1 And all this is to say that we should, with no spirit of mere carping criticism, look over this land of ours as patriotic Americans. For upon our candor and our sincerity depend our success, our power, our future. The American nation illumined and sanctified by the truth as it is in Jesus Christ will be invincible. We must not deceive ourselves. We must be honest. Let us be courageous. Let us cease to be hypocritical. Let us turn on the light. A Prayer For Our Nation. Almighty God, who in former times didst lead our fathers forth into a wealthy place; give Thy grace, we humbly beseech Thee, to us their children, that ^e may prove ourselves a people mindful of Thy favor, and glad to do Thy will. Bless our land with honorable induscrv. sound learning: and Dure man ners. Defend our liberties, preserve oux unity. Save us from violence, discord and confusion, from pride and arrogance, and from every evil way. Fashion into one happy family the multitudes brought hither out of many kindreds and tongues. Endue with the spirit of wisdom those whom we entrust in Thy Name with the authority of governance, to the end that there be peace at home, and that we keep a place among the nations of the earth. In the time of prosperity, fill our hearts with thankfulness; and in the day of trouble, suffer not our trust in Thee to fail; all of which we ask for Jesus Christ's sake. Amen. A Striking Thought. Until Christianity shows a stronger grip on Christians it only plays ;?.g [ wiUf w.ori& ? - / ;" ;_*>-: T" V:-lS^*" -*/. .-^-J^ ' ' " '" * . FLY ACROSS THE ATLANTIC. How Do They Cross 2,000 Miles of Water? The occurrence of American birds in this country raises the interesting question. How do they cross tne intervening 2,000 miles of ocean? Can we suppose a bird is capable of sustained flight for a sufficiently long period to accomplish thi6? On the supposition that this yellow shank can fly at the rate of 150 miles an hour, j it would accomplish the distance in ] 14 hours. And then It must be re- j membered that this bird, being a j wader, would be able to rest from time to time on the water. As regards the migratory journeys some interesting computations are to be found in Katke's "Heligoland as an Ornith- j ologlcal Observatory." His figures are 125 miles an hour for the hooded crow, 208 for the Northern blue throat and 245 for the Virginia plover. At the latter rate the Atlantic could be crossed in about eight and three-quarter hours. Some si* other American birds, including the red-crested snipe and the Eskimo curley, are recorded } from the Scllly Islands. Other American birds, including the j j yellow-billed cuckoo, have been recorded in Ireland, and in connection i with the crossing of the Atlantic by | American birds it is interesting to! note an apparent attempt to cross in the opposite direction. In a British association report for 1887 we read: ! "At Rathlin O'Rine (West Donegan) immense flocks of birds?starlings, thrushes and field fares?passed west I from Dec. 18 to 28. The nearest lan-l to the west of this rock island is American. This is not an isolated j occurrence. The westerly flight of tend birds at stations off the west coast of Ireland has been noticed on | ether occr.g'Tns."?LcDdon Globe. SEX REVEALED IN COUGHS. Mrs. Flatdweller Enlightens Mr. Flatdwelier on the Subject. ! Mrs. Flatdweller has a bad cold; one of those long, lingering colds; and lately she has had, to add to her discomforts, some coughing spells; and j Mr. Flatdweller hhs tried to be very ! sympathetic; and when he hears 1 somebody coughing in the flat overhead he says: "Hello, there's somebody coughing j upstairs, now." "Man or woman?" says Mrs. J?lati dweller. "Man or woman?" repeats Mr. Flat! dweller, 'why, how should I know? 'Anc^he adds with what is intended to be pleasant good humor: *'I can't see through the ceiling and the floor, you know." "You don't have to," Mrs. Flat- I dweller says. "I should think you f could tell that by the sound of the cough; they don't cough anything at all alike." - ' "They don't?" says the astonished Mr. Flatdweller, "what's the difference?" and then says Mrs. Flatdweller: "Why, one coughs with a man's voice, and the other coughs with a woman's voice." And at that Mr. Flatdweller said nothing aloud; but he said to himself that that was the first time he ever knew that the sex of an unseen cougher could be told by the sound of the cough.?New York Sun. I ~~7~? Prima Facie Evidence. The men had all crowded Into a certain corner where Faith, Hope and Charity stood in all their beauty and radiant loveliness. Sitting around in groups were the wives of the men who were taking an interest in the three graces. "Land sakes," said a middle-aged lady with straggling chin whiskers, "did you ever see anything so outrageous?" "It's perfectly scandalous." admitted the stout woman to whom her remark had been addressed. "I never saw such brazenness in all my life." "I wish I had a horse whip!" 'What fools men are!" "I supose they think those creatures are just as innocent as they try to look." "I wouldn't trust one of them for a minute." "What right have they to be here, I'd like to know?" "I'd like to pour scalding water on them!" "But," said a man who had approached and overheard them, "those ladies represent all that is pure, all that is good, all that is worth striving for in this world." "Bah!" replied both ladies at once; "If they are decent tell us why all the men have flocked over there and left us to sit here alone as if real goodness didn't count for a thing any more?"?Chicago Record-Herald. SICK EYES Go with sick bo<fce9. Eyes weakened by malaria, syphilis and rheumatism are restored to strength by .Leonaril's Golden Eye Lotion. Inflammation and soreness cured without pain in one day. Insist on having "Leonardi's"?it makes strong eyes. Guaranteed or money refunded. Druggists sell it at 25 cts. or forwarded prepaid on receipt of price by S. B. Leonardi A Co., Tampa, El'a. STARTING TROUBLE. Mr. Jawback?Let's celebrate our golden wedding. Mrs. Jawback?How silly! We've only been married eix years. Bk. Aflgy Sk B Rs Beceww at ttv ...y'r. *' ' - "ij-* - - . - - - - --- - . v .- .^SeaaaaSfawaC>.v,. A, Jersey woman whose husband was attacked by a bull saved him from injury by throwing pepper In the bull's eyes. She also vindicated her sex, notes the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, and refuted the slander that a woman cannot hit a bull's* eye. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Nervo.js Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. When a woman hasn't anything to tell she is willing to let a man talk. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only poai&ve cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional 4 *a ( ( '.nro ic filrort iiCatUICiib. uail 0 vavu*tii vuibtu >?.>v>. .... ... nally, acting directly upon the blood tind mucous surfaces of the system.thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature m doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in ita curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold bv all Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Many a family tree has had a bad branch and a shady reputation. FURIOUS HUMOR ON CHILD. Itching, Bleeding Sores Covered Body ?Nothing Helped Her?Cnticnra Cures Her in Five Days. "It is in my opinion my duty to join those who praise the Cuticura Remedies. After my granddaughter of about seven years had been cured of the measles, she was attacked about a fortnight later by a furious itching and painful eruption all over her body, especially the upper part of it, forming watery and bleeding sores, especially under the arms, of considerable size. She suffered a great deal and for three weeks we nursed her every night, using all the remedies we could think of. Nothing would help. We then remembered having heard so much about Cuticura Remedies. We sent for them and after twentyfour hours we noted considerable improvement, and, after using only one complete set of the Cuticura Remedies, in five consecutive days the little one, much to our joy, had been entirely cured, and has been well for a long time. Mrs. F. Ruefenacht, R. F. D. 3, Bakersfield, Cal., June 25 and July 20, 1906." A man isn't necessarily two-faced because he has a double chin. Wajk.MS V rTVel bilious! Got a a&lifctioff headache! Paint all oto* pour monr0\+ i <,&* rrs uoai,^ " I Dltpelt all acbet ' |(|Cf and paint Immediately. 3 " Bacalar Bitot. 6c and Ste. g I All JDroctftta. B / PAIN\ ^ fillets every one, somewhere* g I sometime. Its greatest 83 S| . enemy Is |? I Johnson's I [jHweiinlnientj I which can be used both internally and tx- I P tcrnally, and promptly removes pain. I ESTABLISHED 1810. # a 25c., three time* u much 50c. All dealer*. I I. S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Man. | mm millp 2e$2? best friend. Urinds jgsuM corn, wheat, breakfast cereals, graXjfZaI ham flour, splces-coffee, eto Cracks tTffriTJ grain for poultry, ku ns very easy (see myym iong crank.) (Jrinds fast and wont tjCjai get out of order. The [SH J BLACK HAWK GRIST MILL IwJ ia the mill you ought to buy. Fills a f/fff dozen uses, and soon saves Its cost. Irlw Th? b?at grinder for the money ever VU built. Weighs 17 lbs. $3.08, prepaid to [IF your depot. Write for free book. tIM A. H. PATCH, Mfr. of Hand Mills and |(|KL Corn Shelters exclusively. Agents MADE i&M tor SERVICE UvwYWhBCI and guaranteed absolutely /V WATERPROOF V\'^ISy '\/7J OILED SUITS. SUCKERS v / / , AND HATS I J Every garment guaranteed Clean - Light Durable Jf J Suits *352 Slickers ?3?9 jots trusr dcau*s trrrrwnm L-^ZaT? CATALOG Ml SO* JXt ASKM "I tzzi;.yjgpwt SULPH020NE CATARRH BALM The Great Antiseptic Catarrh Kemedj A healing antiseptic for the membranes. A reliable remedy for all compli.?.itione arisli from chronic nasal catarrh. Believes the congestion of the nasal passages. at 1* soothing, healing and effective in its raaults. A ?iimed Guarantee Bond to refund the price, cents, if It does not satisfy. Absolutely harmless. b\ a germ-killing remedy for tho cure of catarrh. Ask your dealer or send us SO cents. Moiled postpaii The Hlghtower Drug Co.. - Dnltnn, Gf Thompson's Eye Watei (At40-'07) ug'y, geroy_hojrf._V?? * jBnKSMBBBRRKX&BRBKBMMBB&BSBI [Women Avoid I Operations ^ When a woman suffering from 1 female trouble is told that an oper3 ation is necessary, it, of course, R frightens ner. | The very thought of the hospital, 9 the operating table and the" knife H otr>;irn? +ermr her heart. |] It is quite true that these troub8 les may reach a stage where an ope9 ration is the only resource, but a 1 great many women have been cured j B by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetab'e 9 Compound after an operation has 9 been decided upon as the only cure. J The strongest and most grateful statements possible to make come frc I Lydia E. Pifikham'sV 9 made from native roots and herbs, h I evidenced by Miss Rose Moore's case, I Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-"Lydia E. I i cured me of the very worst form of f 1 to you my deepest gratitude. I sufT< 1 I was unable to attend to my duties i doctored and doctored with only temp 1 to an operation which I was advised 1 E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; and I am now in better health than ! ' This and other such cases should dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoun I Mrs. Pinkhafti's Standir H . Women suffering from any form 9 promptly communicate with Mrs. Pi a . symptoms given, the trouble may be way of recovery advised. IttALSBY COMPANY, 41 S. FORSYTH ST., ATLANTA, OA.. J y & M jawL. -i * *ifl^^k >// BBBwSBsaftghiwBH y lianufactursrs of ind Odors in ill Kicds of MACHINERY AND SUPPLIES. Portable. Stationary and Traction Engine*. Boiler*, j Saw Mill* and Qriat Mill*. Wood working and 8hin gle Mill Machinery. Complete line carried in stock. Write for eatalogne price*. Addr w* all commnnica' tiens to Atlanta. Qa. W* have no connection* is ; Jacksonville. Tin. i r/^aJfcl mmliABWiiyiyiyli jppSNHflili Its a cracking food vehicle. 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Douglas shoes are won In all walks of life than any other make, is 1 excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior w< The selection of the leathers and other materi of the shoe, and every detail of the making is the most completeorganization of superintend? [skilled shoemakers, "who receive the highest w shoe industry, and whose workmanship canno If I could take you into my large factories at and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas sho would then understand why they hold their i ! wear longer and are of greater value than any 1 Aty S4.00 and SB.OO OUt Edgo Sho CAUTION! The genuine have W.X. Doug No Substitute. Ask your dealer for \V. L. 1 ! direct to factorv. Shoes sent everywhere by mi i JT CRESCEJ | GREATEST HE) i, I flg Wi Non Poisonous, Non Ii - ? A pain from any cause. As * ? A Twillr burns r_ ; BM& f""/J b?w? uiiia. iWik \?fcures sores and inflamnu fowls?cures choLsra, sort guaranteed. I For a&ls by ?U First-Ci&ai Dealers. MXgd. by CRE8 >m women who by taking 'egetable Compound ave escaped serious operations, as ? ^28 of 307 W. 26th St., N. Y. She writes:'inkham's Vegetable Compound has :/jj? emale trouble and I wish to express > Bred intensely for two years so that yW? and vras a burden to my family. I X orary relief and constantly objecting 4to undergo. I decided to try Lydia it cured me of the terrible trouble ; [ have been for.many years." encourage every woman to try Ly- * d before she submits to an operation. & ig Invitation to Women i of female weakness are invited to 2r nkham. at Lynn, Mass. From- tna ---"'Sjji located and the quickest and surest mx CUMBERLAND-EVERBEABfe1907 KECOKD APRIL 20 TO JULY 1"H. Ml*' A Mtrrel of BMvtj. RigJVad ' bIsM R^tmtsstst ai . m P? y and h?T? borriaa 10 aifl I' -'3 lv y Weeks next Sprla*. 8?ad for 1 ?\1 'J?3 1 bow catalogue and book]#* . *1 . "SS ly "How to Beautify Horn#." <0. 1 \u THE CUMBERLANO HUBSEHIES, J ^ WIHCHBSTgR, TBJH. ?'J 37 H ^rpci in beferemck to 1 * <* ? JOHN K. DICKEY'S f\\A DnlJoMa EVP WATPD Viu I\VI 1UL/1W L4 S 14 T > * Mi\ - fSi It carta torn ?rw sad granulstcd Ilia. It strengthens ?Mk em. ' :,<sj3 It eooi* and soothes a sow eye. It refreehee end itrsngthens e tired eye. It don't hart when applied. It feel* good?children don't dread it .-IdSH The genuine Always oncloeed in a red folding tax. ->353 Avoid imitations cr something recommended last ae good. For chronic sore eye lids, stiee and diseased condition of roots of eye lashes, use Dlder's Old Billable Eye Salve. Atall stores or by mail Bote. DICKEY DBUG CO.. Sox SO, Bristol, Toon. ^ THE DIXIE PSSSSaS^ PEA HULLER fjdjbp For the seaaon. Improved. *??? iWJCo) made stronger, neater. ^ HiFTM Hnlls 8 bushels peas per !nr>tr honr. two cranks, no peed S cracked. Fully guaranteed. ?? PHiC?i&nd 011 *** ^ W-i SAlfDBES MFG. CO., -f|S * Dalton, Ga. I W? Bh ^ If? improve her heallL 9 S S. in f *11 al\y'e | send her absolutely free a large trial n h I box of Paxtlne with book of Xastrue- V>5^S lions and genuine testimonials. Send 333 your name and address on a postal card. n*YTIIICrflA I liltsfections, such as nasal catarrh, pel vie 33B catarrh and Inflammation caused by feminine ills: -sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, hy direct local treatment. Its cur- j. -jS? Bi.ivA nower over these troubles is extra* ordinary and gives Immediate *etieL Thousands of women are using and rec- ommendlng it every day. 60 cents at " 1183 druggists or by mail. Remember, however; 0: IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT. < 3?i THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Maaa. ':* EPAIRS IBS, Bristle Twins, Babbit, 6c. for any nalu !NGINCS* BOILERS and PRESSES airs for same. Shafting, Pulleys, Bcltlag, l? , Shingle, and Lath Milb, Gasoline Engines -&? )N WORKS AND SUPPL) * Tsmith's I 1L, TONIC I Standard for 45 years: leaves no bad efeefs Ike quinine; pleasant to take: ohildren like It, :>. seldom falia to make permanent cure. g '. s Guaranteed under i-ooa ana urugs *ci wi mnc B JO, 1906. At vour druggltts; or sent prepaid :i :~M >n receipt of price. 3S iCS 1/v^I-n.l aft?? hv tnts,"foremenan<i WW ages paicTiu the Wj/fTtJar Brockton,Mass., - y&oW *' es are made, you ^Cg \?M(: ^fSS ihape, fit better, N other raake. "TOD^?e? ^ am cannot bo aqua/tod at any price* las name and price stamped on bottom. Take louglas shoes. Jf he cannot supply you. send dl. Catalog free. W.L.Dou*laa, Brockton, Mass. YT ANTISEPTIC VLER KNOWN TO 8CIENCE. nutating. Allays Inflammation and stop* strong aa carbolic acid and as harmless 0 instantly; cures old and chronic sores; ition from any cause on man or beast. For i head and roup. Satisfaction positrrelyj CENT CHEMICAL CO., Fu Worth, Teaag