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♦- “My hair was failing out and turning gray very fast. But your lair Vigor stopped the falling and stored the natural color.”—Mrs. i Z. Benomme, Cohoes, N. Y. It’s impossible for you not to look old, with the color of seventy years in your hair! Perhaps you are seventy, and you like your gray hair! If not, use Ayer’s Hair Vigor. In less than a month your gray hair will have all the dark, rich color of youth. $1.00 > bottle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply yon, send us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Ho sure andgive the name of your nearest express office. Address, J. C. AYKK CO., I^well, Mass. TALMAGE SERMON By Rev. FRANK DE WITT TALMAG1E, D.D.. Pastor of Jefferson Park Presby- teri&n Church, Chic&.4o A Lost Combination. The Chinese had all the grand secrets of electrical discoveries more than 3,000 jears ago, and they made use of the magnet as loadstone long before that. Historical records show where their ar mies were led across the vast plains of the interior of the nation by a combi nation of electricity as a combined power of loadstones and some other substances unknown to the Celestials of the present day. This form of electricity is among the lost arts and must come to the front with other grand discoveries within the next few years. But not the great and learned shall have the benefit of this forthcoming discovery in electricity. The one who shall have this golden key to a grand electric mystery shall have the fruits of his labors. ContaRiouH nineuaca Among; Plants. All the fungous diseases of plants, such as mildew, scab, blight, rust, rot, etc., are contagious. The contagion is carried from year to year in the dis eased part, be it leaf, fruit or branch. The presence of any of this diseased material in the orchard or vineyard in creases the chance of the appearance and spread of the disease another year. Nothing is so destructive to the fungus spores as lire, aud all affected plants Chicago, June 28.—In this sermon the I preacher, choosing a patriotic theme for the nation's anniversary, shows | some of the lessons to be drawn from the Declaration of Independence and J their application to the later conditions >f our o\\»n times. The text Is Psalm cvi, 5, "That I may rejoic in the glad- j ness of thy nation.” When a child is born the attending physician makes out a birth certificate. This important document is sent to the fireproof building where are preserved | the county records. The omission of this certificate or the improper tiling ! of the same might cause inestimable damage. Years hence the lack of it , might disinherit the child of large property interests and involve many ! would be" heirs in interminable legal j strife. Rut though the birth certificate of an j Individual may be vigilantly guarded 't is not so carefully preserved as Is the birth certificate of a nation. Then the sentimental as well as the intrinsic value places it above the price of silver and gold. If possible it is carefully housed within the sacred hall wherein the nation was born. The paper upon which is written the Declaration of In dependence is the American nation's birth certificate. Other nations came to recognition by the slow processes of evolution, but the United States of America sprang into existence in a day, and this Declaration announced to ! an astonished world on July 4, 177t5. the birth of a new member of the j family of nations. As the young King Alfonso XIII. of Spain, having been j born after the death of his father, has the unique distinction among sover eigns of being born a king, so the American Goddess of Liberty at her first appearance took her place in right ought to be free and independent states and that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown,” his own boy was at that time attending »n English school. This American youth, some weeks later, was standing beside one of his teachers when a visitor ask ed, “Who is that boy?” “He is the son of Richard Henry Lee,” was the teach er's answer. Then the visitor placed his hand upon the lad’s shoulder and said, "Boy, we shall yet see your fa ther’s head upon Tower hill!” To this the son replied, "Yes, you may have it Henry Lee, who prepared the famous resolution the outcome of which was this Declaration of Independence, I see a great number of Virginia Lees pass ing before me—Arthur and Francis Lightfoot and Robert Edward and Fitz-Hugh and, greatest of all, Robert E. Lee, the "pride of the south” and the loved and honored of the north. When I speak the name of Benjamin Harri son, another signer, we find him the father of William H. Harrison, the ninth president of ti. > United States, and the great-grandfather of Benjamin the evidence of God given courage, j hi* Last Hope Ketiiized. There are a solemnity and a heroism in I [From the Sentinel, Ueoo. Mont.i its utterances which come only from j In the first opening of Oklahoma to faith in God and dependence upon him. !'•ettlers in 1889, the editor of this The men who signed this paper were brave men. The last few words which Thomas Jefferson wrote at the end of the last page Indicate their courage. “And for the support of this declara tion we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.” They pledged their lives. Each paper was among the many seekers after fortune who made the big race one fine day in April. During his traveling about and afterwards his camping upon bis claim, he en countered much bad water, which, together with the severe heat, gave him a very severe diarrhoea which it man knew that the signing of this doc- j seemed almost impossible to check, ument. which a few hours later was ! and along in Jane the case became so when you get it!” If Richard Henry Harrison, the twenty-third president of publicly rc..d by John Nixon from the bad he expected to die. One day one Leo for years had been conspiring for American Independence, he would nev er have sent Ids son across the sea t6 be educated under the domination and j influence of the English throne. The Declaration of American Independence was written and signed as a last resort and because the British ministry would not listen to American petitions. It was written because King George with the fatuity of royal and imperial na tures imagined that he had the right to enforce bis will on a people as reso lute as himself. He believed that it j was for him to command and for them to obey and that their protest against taxation without representation was wicked rebellion against divinely con stituted authority. It was written be cause our forefathers believed that in a struggle for right and justice God would be on their side, though they had to contend with a foe more power ful than themselves. Enffland'a Miatake. Standing here, in this year of grace 1903. with our hands upon this venera ble and sacred scroll, we may learn the mighty lesson that the really true, the great, the omnipotent and enduring government is not that which rules by force of arms, but by the all conquer ing power of justice, and of justice alone. This is the historical teaching of England's mistake In 177G. We have now a great nation, stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the gulf of Mexico to the great lakes—a nation of over 70,000,000 souls. But our people will remain a great na tion only so long as they are an honor able and an honored people. Beware of the legislation that would make one law for the rich man and another for the poor man. Beware of the law that would send an ignorant criminal to prison and yet permit a brutally selfish coal baron to traffic in child labor. Beware of a social condition which makes it possible for capital to the world as a sovereign. J he docu- g tarve an( i grind down labor while la ment in which she declared her sover- i Jori w ith an honest heart, is ready to or parts of plants should be cut out aud eiguty and her rights constituted the give capital a l ull day’s work for a burned. old Independence hall of Philadelphia fair day’s wage. Our laws should tol- the most sacred building in American j erate neither tyranny of capital nor .Startling Evidence. history, since within its walls is that Fresh testimony in great quantity sacred birth chamber in which was is constantly coming in, declaring first rocked the cradle of this newborn Dr. King s New Discovery for Con national infant. It publishes to the sumption Goughs and Colds to be un* world that the men who signed their equaled. A recent expression from names at the foot of that immortal T. J. McFarland, Bentorvilie, \ a., document, penned by Thomas Jeffer- serves as example. He writes: “I had Bronchitis for three years and doctored all the time without being benefited. Then I began taking Dr. King’s Now Discovery, and a few son in the little three story red brick house still standing at the corner of Seventh and Market streets, Philadel phia, were the attending witnesses whose testimony gave validity to that bottles wholly cured me.” Equally national birth certificate. effective in curing all Lung and Throat troubles, Consumption, Pneu monia and Grip. Guaranteed by Cherokee Drug Co. Trial bottles free, regular sizes oCh, and $1.00. IJTwenty persons were reported drowned in a flood following a cloud burst in Arizona. Hincocks’s Liquor Sulphur will give you immediate relief and per- manetly cure ail such diseases as Eczema, Pimples, Tetter, Herpes. Ringworm, Dandruff, Diphtheria, Bore Throat, Cuts Burns, Open Sores, and all blood and «kin troubles. Hun dreds of cases of skin diseases have been permanently cured by the usi of Hancock's Liquid Sulphur after ail other remedies failed. For sale by the Cherokee Drug Co. Anoong popular poems Tennysin’s “Brook” certainly has made a long run. Ten^Vear* in lleti. R. A. Gray, J. P., Oakville, Ind., writes, "For ten years I was confined to my bed with disease of my kid nays. It was so severe that I could cot move part of the time. I con sulted the very best medical skill available, but could get no relief until Foley’s Kidney Cure was recom mended to me. It has been a God send to me.” Cherokee Drug Co. It’s easier to have a leg pulled, as a rule, than to have it done to a tooth. A Serious Mistake. E. C. DeVVitt & Co. is the name of the firm who makes the genuine Witch Hazel Salve. DeWitt’s is the Witch Hazel Salve that heals without leaving a scar. It is a serious mis take to use any other. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cures 1 lind, bleed ing, itching and protruding piles, burns, bruises, eczema and all skin diseases. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. It stands to reason that the stand ing army sits down on some things. To Care h Cold la Oue Dajr Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the money If it fails to cure. E. W. Grove’s sig nature isjon each box. 25c. Silberman Bros. Largest Fur House In America. Branehee All Over Europe. HIkIimi caib price paid for all kind* of raw fura. Hold your shipment until you xet our price list. Write Jor it tibitay. We tuail it free. SILBERMAH BROS., 122to 128 Michigan S.t.. Chicago,III. An Immortal 1’niter. The Declaration of Independence as a document is our theme today. I am going to lay down upon my pulpit desk a facsimile of this immortal pa per. I do this for two reasons. First, it is the last Sabbath preeeding our national Independence day; lienee it is fitting and appropriate for patriotic themes. The second reason Is that u few weeks ago. after the death of a very dear friend, the facsimile of the Declaration of Independence which I now place before you came into my possession. I have read it over and over again. I have read it in the chirography of Thomas Jefferson and in the handwriting with which the at tending statesmen signed it. 1 have read it with all its corrections and interlineations. I have read it with entirely different feelings from those with which 1 used to regard it when it came to me in cold and unimpas- siotiiJ type. This most sacred docu ment of American history appears to me in an entirely new aspect, and from it today I would glean some new moral deductions for the everyday struggles of our practical lives. The Declaration of Independence was the startling culmination of manly in tolerance of injustice. The document was not, as some people suppose, the result of a long and carefully planned conspiracy extending over many years. It seemed rather to have been the out growth of the moment. It was the crystallization of sentiments the results of which but few men could foresee. The British ministry had not antici pated it, neither had the American peo- ple. When the First Continental con gress assembled in Philadelphia, on Sept. 5,1774, there was probably not one prominent leader in all America who wished for national independence with the sole exception possibly of Samuel Adams of Boston. “Before the 17th of April, 1775,” wrote Thomas Jefferson, “I had never heard a whisper of a dis position to separate from the mother country.” “When I first took command of the army, July 3, 1775, I abhorred the idea of independence,” wrote George Washington In one of his let ters, “but I am now convinced that nothing else will save us.” All that the American colony wished from Eng land was not separation, but Justice. For night and Jnattce. The two countries in every essential part of their make up were one. They spoke the same language. Many fam ilies had brothers and sisters and other relatives in both countries. The chil dren of prominent Americans were for the most part educated In English schools, where they were taught to reverence the British king. When Richard Henry Lee arose on the mem orable 7th of June, 1770, and read the following resolution: “Resolved, That these united colonies are and of a tyranny of labor, but should afford equal protection to both and facilitate mutuality of interests and friendly re lations between them. It is only when a government honestly tries to adminis ter equal justice and afford equal pro tection to all its subjects that it gathers the robes of immortality about its loins. When a government by unwise laws and administrative neglect makes possible the enslavement or oppression of its seemingly helpless ones such a government is paving the way for its own disintegration. Had King George III. been a wise ruler and had Britain tried to be as just to the thirteen colo nies in 1770 as she is honestly trying to be to her colonies at the present time our country might have remained the brightest jewel in the British crown. Would that our own land, profiting by this great lesson, so closely interwoven with our national birth and chMdhood, might always be just to the helpless, the weak and the poor as well as to the rich, the influential and the strong. Strength In the Right. The strength of our present govern ment is due to the fact that It tries to be just to all its people, irrespective of class. “Ours is a govermneut,” said Theodore Roosevelt in a recent speech, “of liberty through and urder the law. No man is above it. and n<> man is be the l nited States. The name of Philip Livingston among the signers suggests | those of Robert R. and Edward and \\ illlam. Roger Sherman, who was one of the great speakers at this con vention, was a member of the distin guished Connecticut family of that name, among whose descendants is the present able senator from Massa chusetts, George Frisbie Hoar. El- bridge Gerry’s name suggests not one Elbridge Gerry, but many Elbridges. Morris not only means Lewis Morris, but also that of his great brother, Gouverneur Morris. The recounting of these family names alone would prove conclusively that there is some thing in heredity. It would prove that when a man conies from a good ances tral stock it is not as difficult for him co be good or great as if he were born a nobody, the grandson and the great- grandson of nobodics. An EncournirinK A*nnr«nce. Mj - friends, in whose veins flows the blood of ancestors who fought at Bun ker Hill and Brandywine and Saratoga and Princeton, shall you not serve your country as nobly and faithfully as did the soldier boys and statesmen of 1770 and 17N3? Can it be that we, whose forefathers had so glorious a share in the struggle for national independence, shall ourselves have uo part, no honor able position in the struggles that are going on in 1903 to keep our nation pure and good and true? In olden times tlie Scottish youths were inspir ed to deeds of valor by the knowledge that they were members of the clan MacGregor or Campbell or Stuart or McCoy. They were inspired with the determination never to disgmee the familj’ name. It Is recorded that in one of the northern battles the Mac Gregors were being driven back. Their chief rallied Ids followers and led them forth to a victorious charge with the cry: "My moil, come on! Come on! l ight like brave men! Your ancestors are today watching you!” So let us be brave and true to America’s best inter ests, not only for our own sakes, but also for the sake of those illustrious ancestors who are watching us. Let this national anniversary be to us a day of consecration to the cause of rigid and freedom. As the mother of Hannibal led her son to the grave of Hamilcar, his sire, and there made him swear unceasing war against the en emies of his country, so may we, re membering the graves of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, pledge ourselves anew to the struggle against the evils which menace the greatness and righteousness of the na tion that they established. The Declaration of Independence is an encouraging assurance that in ev ery crisis of our country’s lustory God, if we trust him, will always raise up the right men for the right place. Who was Thomas Jefferson, the penman of the Declaration of Independence? “Oh,” you answer, "he was oue of the greatest Americans who ever lived. He was the third president of the United States. He was a man at whose men tal acumen and noble, patriotic pur poses the more you study him the more you marvel. He was not a cringing politician, but a statesman who could discern the future with the farseeing eyes of a prophet and a seer.” True; all that you say In reference to the sage of Monticello Is true. There was not at the time of his death a name more revered than that of Thom- (•as Jefferson. But who vas Thomas balcony of the statehouse, made each of his neighbors brought him one one of the signers a traitor in the eyes ^mall bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, of England and a fit subject for the Cholera ami Diarrhoea Remedy as a gibbet and Tower hill. Yet when John last hooe. A big doge was given him Hancock knew that he might be sign- while he was rolling about on the ing his own death warrant he picked ground in great agony, and in a few up his pen and wrote In large, bold minutes the dose was repeated. The letters his name, "John Hancock;” then good effect of the medicine was soon as he put down his pen he remarked, noticed and within an hour the pa- “There is my name in letters so large tient was taking his first sound sleep that King George will be able to read for a fortnight. That oue little bottle them without spectacles!” worked a complete cure, and he can- Faith Jantified. not help but feel grateful. The season The signers pledged their fortunes a? for bo ^ eI disorders being at hand sug- well as their lives. Had the insurrec- ^ e3t8 ^ 1 ' 9 i| en “- For sale by Cherokee tion been a failure their personal prop- )TU % ' j0 ’ > L D Allison, Cowpens. erties would have been confiscated. When the millionaire, Charles Carroll, signed the Declaration a bystander flip pantly remarked, “There go a few mil lions of dollars If the cause is unsuc cessful.” Yet so dead in earnest was Charles Carroll to pledge his life, his fortune and his sacred honor to the It is reported in New York that the Gould-Rockefeller interest have a prospect of acquiring control of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Care* Hlood and Shin Disease*. Itching Humors. Send no money—simply write and cause of American liberty that lest his tr y B °t& D ic Blood Balm at our ex name should be confused with that of P e °se. another Charles Carroll he specified If you suffer from ulcers, eczema, and individualized his name as he sign ed it, “Charles Carroll of Carrollton.” But while the members of the Conti nental congress of 1770 were brave men, they were also, as a class, pray ing men. True courage and consecra tion are brothers. They were men who believed In God. They were men who, down upon their Knees, reverently and earnestly and intensely sought di vine light. In the famous historical picture the members of the Second Con tinental congress are shown on their knees in prayer. To the Christian American student that picture ought scrofula. Blood Poison, cancer,eating sores, itching skin, pimples, boils, bone pains, swellings, rheumatism, catarrh, or any blood or skin disease, we advise you to take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B). Especially recom mended for old, obstinate, deep-seated cases of malignant blood or skin dis eases, because Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) kills the poison in the blood, cures where all else fails, heals every sore, makes the blood pure and rich, gives the skin the rich glow of health. B. B B., the most perfect blood purifier made. Improves the to'bo "tT,'e most improssive liiMtork'ai digeotiob 8ttei.gth.n8 ««k kidneys, to dl me mum i Thoroughly tested for thirty years. $1 per large bottle at drug stores, with complete directions for home cure. Sample of Blood Balm sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., At lanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. painting ever hung in legislative hall or in foreign or domestic art gallery. 1 have seen the noted war pictures of Berlin and Dresden. I have seen the form of Emperor William I. in many seenes, flanked by Von Moltke and the nation builder. Prince Bismarck. In Paris I have seen the Napoleonic pic tures and in Loudon the war pictures of Waterloo, where the pale faced Wel lington immovably sits his horse, watching the destruction of the French grenadiers. But in all the art galleries of the world there is no historical pic ture that, to my mind, Is so impressive, It is estimated that persons seek ing divorce in South Dakota spend, while gaining residence for that pur pose, $900,000 a year. Do You Kujoy Wliat You Eat? If you don’t your food does not do you much good. Kodol Dyspepsia so significant, so full of inspiration as Cure is the remedy that every one that historic picture of the Continental should take when there is any thing congress in prayer. with stomach There is Most of the members of that congress do way to maintain the health and came from praying Christian homes. They assembled In the spring and sum mer of 1770 to take the most mo mentous step which the citizens of any strength of mind and body except by nourishment. There is no way to nourish except through the stomach. The stomach must be kept healthy, country can take. It was no light or ; pure and sweet or the strength will trivial act to renounce allegiance to let down and disease will set up. No King George and to defy the power of appetite, loss of strength, nervousness, the British government. These men headache, constipation, bad breath, well knew the consequences Involved sour risings, rifting, indigestion, dys- in such a stop and realized the ueces- pepsia and all stomach troubles are slty of having divine guidance. One quickly cured by the use of Kodol of the members arose and moved that a Dyspepsia Cure. Sold by Cherokee low it. The crime of the cunning, the Jefferson in 1770? He was only thirty- three years of age. He had just en tered public life and had become a member of the Virginia delegation but a few months before. In the realm of debate be could not be classed among tbe great advocates — John Adams, Roger Sherman, Oliver Walcott, Lee aud George Wythe. As a writer he had no such influence in fostering the independence idea as had Samuel Adams. For the most part, in the de liberations of the Continental congress, he sat as a sphinx with closed lips. Yet because Richard Henry Lee had proposed the resolution of secession and also liecause Lee was compelled to absent himself from congress on ac count of his sick wife and as congress wanted to honor Virginia by appoint ing a Virginian in Lee’s place this master mind, the young and compara tively unknown Thomas Jefferson, was pushed forward, and he became the author of the famous Declaration of Independence. Trust In God. I repeat. In the great crisis of na tional affairs God, if we only trust him. will give us the right men for the right places. Did he not give the right man for the right place when he gave Thomas Jefferson as the writer of this immortal document? Did he not give the right man for the right place when George Washington became tbe head of the American armies? Did not God give tbe right man for the right place when, at the breaking out of the civil war, Abraham Lincoln became presi dent of the United States? Did not God give us the right man for the right place when William McKinley sat In the White House and calmly and bravely guided the affairs of state crime of greed, the crime of violence- all are equally crimes, and against them all alike the law must set its face. This is not and never shall be a gov ernment of the plutocracy or of the mob. It is, as it has been and as It will be, a government of tbe people, including alike the people of great J wealth, of moderate wealth, the people who employ others, the people who are employed—including them all, protect ing each and every one if he acts de cently and squarely and discriminating against any one if he does not act squarely and fairly, If he does not obey the law. While all people are foolish If they violate the law or rebel against It—wicked as well as foolish, but all foolish — yet the most foolish man in this republic is the man of wealth who complains because the law is administered with impartial justice.” May God always continue to give to us for the office of chief executive men who are presidents of the whole peo ple, who will see that the government is not a Wall street hireling or a gigan tic monopolizing trusts’ employee; who will protect the rich as well as poor, black as well as white, Jew as well as gentile, woman’s virtue as *ell as man’s honor; who will not cringe to a class, but who will protect and guide all honest people alike! The Declaration of Independence proves the power of Inherited character. I am not nearly so much impressed with the surnames which have been placed at the foot of this Important document as I am by the family names themselves. When I mention certain names there seem to cluster about them many other names. John Adams! Who was he?' “He was our colossus in debate,” wrote Jefferson. But as I speak the name of John Adams l speak also of Samuel Adams, John Quincy Adams, Charles Francis Adams, senior and Junior, and other Adamses who have added luster to the Adams name. When I speak the name of Richard promineut Episcopalian minister of Philadelphia should be sent for and asked to lead the members in prayer to God. Samuel Adams, I think it was, seconded that motion. He said in sub stance: “I am not an Episcopalian, but I am not a bigot. I feel that God’s hand must lead us in lids national crisis. I second the motion.” The mo tion was carried. The next day this Episcopalian minister came to the leg islative hall. He came in full canonical robes. All the members knelt. I can well believe that all must have Joined In the prayer that the God of the armies of Moses and of Jivshua would lead and guide them. How on any other assumption can we explain their dauntless courage? It would have been sheer temerity for those men to sign that Declaration unless they had be lieved that God would be with them in the struggle that must ensue. And their faith was justitied by the result. The God who heard the pleading of the Israelites in the wilderness heard the prayers of that Continental congress. In his providence England was not left free to use her strength In crushing the infant nation. The life and death struggle in which she had to engage nearer home curtailed her power, and to that fact, due to the overruling mercy of God, our forefathers owed their success. Oh, my fellow country men, let us on tills anniversary exer cise the faith that our fathers had in Drug Co. AnJ earthquake in Asiatic Turkey destroyed a whole village near Erz- room and killed practically all its 2 000 inhabitants. Ladles and Children Invited. All ladies and children who cannot stand the shocking strain of laxative svrups, cathirtics, etc., are invited to try tht famous Little Early Risers. They are different from all other pills. They do not purge the system. Even a double dose will not gripe, weaken or shlcen ; many people call them the Easy pill. W. H. Howell, Houston, Tex., says nothing better can be used for constipation, sick headache, etc. Bob Moore, Lafayette, Ind., says all others gripe and sicken, while De- Witt’s Little Early Risers do their work well and easy. Sold bv Chero kee Drug Co. The lumber yards in New York were reopened after a lockout of five weeks and building operations were resumed. ‘Was Wastiug Away. The following letter from Robert R. Watts, of Salem, Mo.,(is instructive; “I have been troubled with kidney disease for the last five years. I lost flesh and never felt well and doctored with leading physicians and tried all remedies suggested without relief. to pray as our ancestors prayed in 1770 and in 1812 aud in 1861. May we feel as a nation that our God is a prayer answering God, and that he will listen to our petitions, whether lifted in church pulpit or in the legislative hall. Thus on this glorious national holi day I want you to take the Declaration of Independence, which is our birth certificate, and place It between tie leaves of your Bible. There may it speak to us as Christian citizens and as Individuals. While It reminds us of the patriotism and sublime heroism of our fathers, may it also remind us of tlu> obligation devolving upon us to redeem our beloved land from the plague of sin and to promote, as far as in us lies, the righteousness which alone exalteth a nation. And as Individuals may it not remind us of our high privileges as citizens in the kingdom of God? When assailed by temptation and by the evil during the Spanlsh-Americun trouble? that would subjugate us let us remem- ibe God of nation^ May we continue Finally I tried Foley’s Kidney Cure and less than two bottles completely cured me and I am now sound and well.” Cherokee Drug Co. The trial of Curtis Jett ind Thomas White, charged with the assassina tion of J. B. Marcum, began at Jack- son, Ky. Kodol Gives .Streugth By enabling tbe digestive organs to digest, assimilate and transform all of tbe wholesome food that may be eaten into the kind of blood that nourishes tbe nerves, feeds the tis sues, hardens the muscles and re cuperates the organs of the entire body. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure cures Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Catarrh of tbe Stomach and all stomach dis orders. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Tbe girl whose mind isn’t chiefly on her'dress must have anew hat to think about. And shall not God raise up and inspire our future leaders If the American people are a godly nation and unfail ingly look to him for divine guidance? But reading again between the lines of this Immortal ducument, I see In It her the Declaration of Independence which Christ signed for us with his Doubtless' you are progressive. Some medicine on tbe market are own blood and realize In our own lives i old-fashioned. Rheumacide, the great the truth of his words, “If the Son rheumatic cure, is s discovery, a pm- make you free ye shall be free Indeed!” gresslve remedy It is the spring fCopyiight, 1903, by Louis Klopsch.] blood purifier that you want. At I Druggists.