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Current News. Kansas City has an organization, known as the Employers' Protection, Association, which is worthy of note, ^ "In that it indicates possible important development of the controversy and attendant troubles between capital and labor. Though but recently founded the association has grown very rapidly and is now powerful, for it lias on its membership roll the more important employes of labor of the city, excepting those of the implement and packing house districts. The purpose of the association, as explained by its officers, la to afford protection against certain demands often made by labor unions. It is not, on the other hand, opposed to the organization of labor. * * * The association has already had opportunity to act. When, a few days ago. ""vrv ? oecmHa.l o nurtv rs f nrm union men. the association prompt!;** offered SoOO reward for the arrest and eonviction of the men or any of the men responsible for the trouble. The police beard of Kansas City promise J to co-operate with the association in its efforts to see that the law is nv intained, and shewed on this occasion that it* was In earnest by causing extensive transfers because the police seemed to be at fault. King Edward, during his recent stay at Lisbon, drew attention in one of his public utterances to a fact of which but few are apparently aware; namely, that Portugal, in spite of its diminutive size and relatively small population, is one of the greatest co'mtiial Powers of the world. In fact, only England. France and Germany have larger colonial empires than Portugal, whose over-sea diminlons comprise an area of considerably over 800,000 square miles, as compared with Germany's 1. 27,000 square miles. France's 4,367,000 and England's 11,168,000. After Portugal carries Holland, with colonies covUjfog an area of 783.000 square miles. Both Portugal and Holland ranked hfter Spain as a colonial Power prior to the latter's war with the United States in 1893. But to. ay Spain has no colonies left to speak of. save a few tray remnants cn the northern and west coast of Africa. Until a few days ago John Wanamaker was believed to carry more life insurance than any other American, his amount being $1,500,000. Now he has been outstripped by his son ."lodman. who. lu addition to the million which he carried for some time, has taken out another policy for an equal amount. FITS rtr^nnMitivcrrfo.NOfltsornervon- i aw after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Cire.it ! XerveKestorer. iatrialbotticandtreitise.rei j Dr. K.h. Ki.i> k. J.td.. vsi Arch St.. 1'hila., i'\ i The fe'.'cw m l?o speaks oi his "Iceract"" | ia trying to put o:i lugs. Hotr'i This? offer One Hundred Do'lars Rc-virtl' ?? i ?y case oi Cat.irrti ma: cannot bo cured r/ j Mali's (.'alarm t are. F J. C'seskt A Co., Pror>?.. To'edo, O. We.theuuJ 'rsiimeJ, have known F. J.Chs?ey for the las r13years, and believe him perfectly konorab'e in all business transaction* and financially abio to carry ou: any obligation made bv their lir a. urn a iutax, WnolesaieDruifffist?,Toledo, Ohio. Waldincj. K r? s a n & M ab vtn . W holesale Dr it 5gistg, Toledo, Ohio. HalTsUatarrut.'ureM taken internally, act- I tag directly upon the blood and mucous surJaoes of the system l'rice, 7be. per bottle, hold bv all Orudis 1.:. 1 estitnouials lree. HaII's Family Fills are the best. The best way to pet along with your neighbors is not to know any of them. Aek Your Dealer For Allen'* Foot-Ka*e, \ powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, xJunions. Swollen, Sore.Hot. Callous,Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes now ortight shoes easy. t \ ^11 Druggists and Shoe stores, J5 cents. Accept no substitute. Sample mailed Fbkk. Address, Alien. S. Olmsted. LeKoy.X. V. There may be plenty of room at the top, but most of us wi mid prefer to get iu ou I the ground floor. If every man profited "fy his o.vu mis- | takes wc should ail be rich. All creameries use butter color. Why not do a> they do ? use ju.tu Tint Huttee Couoi:. It is possible to become .sadder without 1 becoming wiser. riso's Cure for Consumption 1? uu Iof-ni'y ? i medicine loc coucus tuxd ?X. Mf. bAML'KL, Ocean <>r ive. S. .J.. t-Vo. li, 1JJJ. There is nothing new under the sun. Even the cxcasts have all been invented. at?B?e.. -v-: ?u O.' > ,iwMT.tr <r Weak? 1 " I suffered terribly and was ex- ! tremely weak for 12 years. The 1 doctors said my blood was all turning to water. At last I tried Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and was soon feeling all right again." Mrs. J. W. Fiala, Hadlyme, Ct. No matter how long you have been ill, nor how poorly you may be today, S I Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the g best medicine you can a take for puriiying and en- g richinp the blood. Don't doubt it, put your g whole trust in it, throw ! away everything else. ?1 00 a boil'c. A'l B Ask your doctor what ho thinks o? Avor'a 6 Sarsapanlla. lie knowcillabotitthiscraad B old farthly ncedidne. Follow !iis advice aud & we wiil be 3nt.sfied. {j j. c. Aver Cc., Lowell,"an. re * 1 ho. 21. A SERMON FOR SUNDAY A SCHOLARLY DISCOURSE BY THE REV. DR. C. H. PARKH'JRST. Eol>|ect* Inconspicuous flrtt'.aMi? A Person May Have mi Immense Amount ( L. of Virtui* anil Vet >r Mny Xtwtr Arret.t ' the World's At tout Ion. Xiay Yore City.- T)r. 0'nir>* H. l'ark- j hurst. pastor of the Madison Square i're.;- j bvterian Church, preached a sermon Sun- i ? ----- ? - -i.--?. ?i.:. i. I nay morning 0:1 .j suo.;ect v. nn-.-i termed "Inconspicuous (iJ rootless." He oho-e as his text Mark xii: 41-44: "And Jesus sat over ag .inst tli? treasury and hehe', d how the people ( a.-t money into tlic treasury, and many tli.ii were rich cast in I much. And there tamo a certain poor ' widow, a fa site threw in tw.> mites which ' make a farthing. And lie railed unto Hint ! Hi- disciples and saith unto them. Verily | I say in.to voi that this poor widow li.ith | cast ivrc in than ail tiny which have cast j into !hc trcasiuy: for all they <iid cast in of j their abundance. hut s.he of her want did > ca.-i in ail that he had. even a!' her liv- I iti;:Dr. J'arkhurst said: Which undoubtedly was in imprudent j tiling 'oil the woman to do. for oero.ms at j a later hour of the sarue day she l ad to borrow, beg or steal in order to nu-et the ncct s?i.if - <>f her subsistence but a b-.autifill intention may still he beautiful even if it is a little careless and unealculating; indeed, wc like it still better if it is not too careful and too oaleu'atinv. "'"he eas; is like that related bv Nt. Matthew of the woman with her alabaster box of ointnie it. who spent ?in one sen*e of the word wasted?a prodigal amount of money < :i Jesus* anointing; it was extravagant ai d reckless, but the recklessness of it v.as one | of ii? . hr.rme. for it made onlv more ev'- ! dent the sweet sincerity of her affe'-tion, and if she had been more economical with the smkenard less of the fragrance migh> have floated down to our own day. Jesus pres umably was the only person in tlie temple that day that took any account of the woman with the two mites.* She was simply one of a crowd and as uninteresting and unpromising probahK as are the members of any crowd, but the faci that she was. outwardly at least, uninteresting makes it interesting that Christ was interested in her. and it is one nf the features of our Lord's character that He was impressed l.v unpromising people. Whoever it might be that He was dealing with He seemed to feql that He had a good deal to go unon. No one. we should say. appealed to Him to be ordinary. Wc were "peaking | here some time since about the hariliar_?rd way. one might almost say. in which lie selected His disciples. as though any one He ran across that day. when He was walking along the ed"e of the Sea of (Jalilee. would answer well enough for a disciple, and so for au apostle?this to be understood not as disparagement of ihe position He select;d them to fill, but as recognizing that even common men were so uncommon as to be inherently able to fill the position. He could doubtless have continued His walk along the seaside and have selected another twelve just as competent as the first twelve, if Me had cared at that time to have so many. And. certainly, it is not venturing much to presume th.it lie could have come into this city. yes. and into this congregation, and have found a dozen people with natural qualifications that would have nndc them as capable as Peter. James and John and the rest to lay. in co-operation with Himself, the foundations of the Christian church. Probably the most ardent loveler in the world would not claim that ail men are fundamentally alike, and fundamentally equal, and this is not the place, certainly, to be drawn off into any nice speculation upon that matter, but apparent differences between people are not at all to be taken as just measure of their actual differences; Christ's eulogies are conspicuous for being pronounced upon the inconspicuous, and that is a fact to be thought upon as tending to change the attitude 01 our feelings toward the submerged ninety-nine per cent, of the race. And I ain urging this po nt not for the purpose of establishing a theory, but in order that those of you who are evidently of a good deal of account may sec more reason for reflecting and honoring those whose claims to your respect and admiration are of an undemonstrative type. Onee let them have an open field and a fair chance and perhaps they will change places with you. This may have been a part of what the Lord had in mind when He said that "many that are first shall he last, and the last first.'' The idea has been rather hard riddenoverridden?that if the possibilities! of effect arc in a man or woman, those possibilities are bound to cone to their realization, however untoward mav he the circumstances thai stand in their way. It was once elegantly stated by one whose eloquent face is still fresh in the meinorv of many of us?"How tnaiiv Miltons may have died iu their mothers' arms wc cannot state, hut the '.rown-up Mi tons have been heard from.'" Easy to snv. difficult to prove and eminent iv improbable. Of a hundred kernels of wheat scarce one ever fulfills the destiny marked for it in us own constitution. hut the n':ieiy--.'ii:o thru are ground up in the mid arc each as f,i)J of the possibilities i>. "blade, ear and full rem in the ear."' rs the one that happens to be dropped into the furrow. A tropical paint will suiil he nothing les-. than a nalm even tlii.<t<Pi i *i -i Ii.irtllpni t:? t i 1 llfto hnr however abounding in ay be its native energies and vital forces it will i:e unennal to ihc discouragement of short days and early frosts. The apostle Peter lias become a great power in the history of the cliureh and of t hri-.ti.in civilization. but if on the day that '{ .us went strolling along the beach, gathering up disciples, Peter had been out at sea li-iiing instead <>f inshore mending hi", nets it is not probable he would ever have been heard from. It is rather important t? !* somewhere near the trade when the train of opportunity goes by. There is undoubtedly a providence in tilings, but at the same time there is an accident in things in the sense in which that word accident can be pro perlv used by us. You will recall the incident which'St. -Tohn relates as occurring at the pool of Betiiesda. There was some medicinal property in the waters of the pool jierlnps. at any rate at certain times an angel descended iato the pool and troubled the water and the one who was lot tunate enough to be 4Vim iii-^r i a /,/?f tli.a p-oiof if v.'nc trouble!J was healed of any infirmity from which hr might he suffering. That ij?. the man who chanced to he olo?e-i to the truck when the train of opportunity went by could go aboard an<l arrive. As already slid. these are matters to dwell unon because the cor.si 1 -ration oi them enhances our respect for those about us and st relict hens our confidence in the linn] outworking of things. It quite changes out attitude toward what we take first off to be an (.nli-tary man. even to suspect thai time are ii: him the makings of something considerably more titan ordinary, even though < importances are so unpropitious us to jireveut his becoming at present what tlie pood hord had in mind when lie made him and what there is a fait chance of his becoming belore tin- Lord is entirely through with him. If y.iu svspeel ? no more than suspect?that a certain piece of ground is rich in mineral ore, you are willing to nay a good price for 1 it even before it has bc.ti exploited. In such properties possibilities have a large cash value. For some strange reason j>er sonal possibilities we arc more incredmous : about ami prefer to see the metal mined 1 and cast into ir.pols before we reckon it as | assets. It is for that reason we can elbow 1 our way through a crowd of coinmonp.aee I men and women or through a swarm of ' dirty children, oblivions of the diamonds t that quite likely would begin to grow ins- 1 trous ii the dirt were nibbed off. < In 1M icaulay's essay on history there oc- < curs this illustration, which, without any t straining, lends itself to the matter tve are i now considering. "At Lincoln Cathedral I there is a beautiful painted win don" which was made by an apprentice out of the . pieces of glass which had been rejected and thrown away by his master. It is so far superior to every other in the church that, according to tradition, the vanquished artist hi'hd himself Iron. mortification." I Which nuans that the line-t window in the t entire ediiice was made out of that to , an iiupnreciaiive and un-vmpathetic eye was good for ?n?".lling and on: as sheer ? rclVe. The miracle of tlm feeding of t!:c i .",()!?? lets us see among other things that ? Christ had a very distinct regard for what the disicnles probably thought were mere ' odds .md ends, and at the end of the re- ! past gathered u:> more than enough crusts < and scraps to feed the whole company over , again. _ . This arcotials for the surprise- so often ' recurring when men who have never been < ..HMtitml wit J. n'oililv. either intellectual or moral, an- accidentally pushed into places ! oi rcMioiisihiiity and in that way have a pressure put ur on them that crowds tlieir < I itent possibilities int . active power.- ot of- | feet, it has often been to me a matter of t amazement the heavy load that a person with seemingly no draft power, will mall 1 when once lie has boon er,n. lit and liar- ! nes-el and properly driven, and prohahly no one so mm h surprised as the man hint- ( self. The difficulty is not in finding men that are competent to (to what is needed, I bat in getting men to do enough to become i themselves persuaded that they are conipe- , tent. ; Just as there are people that are so in ' tiie habit of thinking they are sick that they nevci get well, and nothing less than a fright or an earthquake will comu'-e \ them into eonvalesecnee, so society and the church and the State are full of competent incapanics who are good for nothing simply j because they have never onvcncod to ' imagine that they arc good for almost anythin;'. ar.d have never been so circumstanced 01 have never ?o had responsibility rolled upon them as to shake them out of < lheir incapacity. Moses is a case in point, j who. up to the time he was eighty, never . did anything noteworthy, so far as we can ' learn, except to kiii an Kgypt'.m?f inda- 1 mentaily the same man. of course, that lie i wis during tiie crowning, distinguishing ( period of his life, but not having happened . during his tir*t four score years to l?e so circumstanced or to he so plucked t by the pull of events as to discover that he was not a nonentity, and when summoned ( to action bv Jehovah, pleading off. as so many like hint have done since, by alleging himself to be constitutionally unequal to the task that was set him. If you ask a ....... ? .t . .-.Munlliliinr wliii thinks hinisClf incompetent and lie says "Xo." yon have io take lus "Xo." The advantage tlie Lord has is that He does not have to take a man's "Xo," did not take Moses' "Xo." | but clang to him. stood him up and put the load on him and told him to co along with it. and just the weight of the load made ' hir.i .i!>le to go along with it. pressure found the limp muscles that had been waiting for abnost a century to he crushed into overturn. and circumstances not made him great, but gave him a ehanee to be what lie and millions of other pcop'e arc in con* j dition to be when the chance c cue#, when tlte assassin's bullet st"ikes. when at liie oiipoiiuni; moment a shove is given into the Vool of Itetbesda. Xo matter what a person is in native acuteticss or in inward moral and Christian beauty, vo give him credit for only so much as has externalized itself and as lias wrought itself into a kind of encompassing halo, and we base c/timite on the Mjuare contents of the halo. You have many a time seen a locomotive looming out of the darkness with its flashing headlight, ami that light has appeared to you so biiliiant in the dense night it has seemed to >vn almost is though the front of the engine were frescoed with a section of the sun and the ground for a hundred rods in advance of the train whitened with almost the brilliancy of daytime, llut if you have had an opportunity to inspect that headlight and to narrow all this illumination down to its fountain source you have very likely discovered there a small glass lamp furnished with a wick and a lit lie kerosene oil. This is not to find fault with the light, but only to call attention to the fact, which you are likely to forget, that in estimating it you reckoned in the reflector that was framed to encompass the light and which made you suppose there wa* a great deal more luminousnesi than was actually the case. That is the way in which our estimates generally are arrived at? original light with the circumjacent nilec tor added in?central Hanie plus lha aureole. Now the Lord in His estimates dispenses with aureole?which is what Scripture means when it says that He looketh notion (lie outward appearance. He is never misled by reflectors or by the absence of icHtrtors. A man may have very little virtue and yet put that virtue into some showy achievement with a large superficial urea, whereupon men get out their measuring rods, figure u]> the area, consult the multiplication table and decide that he has a great deal of virtue; that is what 1 mean l>y computing o:t a basis of aureole, adding reflector to the little I omiic lamp. On tiie other hand, a prr-ion may have an immense amount of virtue, hut circumstances he sue h that it never becomes ma rife-ted in a w.?y to arrest attention?a very beautiful liuht it may lie, hut not shining under conditions that ring it with a halo. Now that was the case with the woman in the temple. The halo hunters saw nothing; l ot a commonplace widow traveling past the contribution bo\. The Lord, with whom nimbus does not count, saw ami fc.l what the woman iier-elf meant and was. To Him she was tiie same as though she had dropped iri a thousand shekels, but not to others who wefe present. tor others would have reasoned jus', as people do now, and would have looked to tiie size of her gift to determine the ?ize of her heart and would have concluded therefore that she had a two-penny heart. Already nineteen hundred years ago that poor widow had been become convinced that "nobody has a right to die rich." She acted on the principle when she threw in her two mites. No one made anything of it hut .levus. because there was not gilding enough upon her advertisement of the principle to make the*air bright about it. Nineteen hundred years later the same principle that "nobody has a right to do die rich" was announced by <?:ie <piite differently situated from the widow with two mites; and the principle and the man who announced it were published and heralded e'ear around the globe. In the first instance there was only a two-penny halo, and in the other a million-dollar halo, and the i>i; halo won. It cannot he port of our i>un>o-o to claim thai the illusirmns | ' Scotchmen >s pot just as charitable as tlift inconspicuous Jewess. \\~o are only jtuinu tint the reflector that you li r.ne around the lamp is no part of the lai'p :nd certainly no ] art of the blase that the burning oil sustains. It would be interesting to see the coin- ( motion that would have hern excited over iter there in the temple had a heart as sweet and beautiful as the Lord saw her J heart to !>e. not been he'd under the l:mi- I tattoos or ungenerous circumstance*. and had it been within her means to do all that her heart prompted?in other words, h.ul the conditions under which she lived been wide end open enough to match Iter own personal nobility. Most people live in a very small world: they are in it and they have to stay in it. Influences hereditary. 1 tnd providential if you please, have huiit iround thorn an environment close and imprisoning; possessed of hearts and intelliprence larger than tlte snhere that despotic r-irettinstances permit them to till. Somelimes it may be due to physical debility; . sometimes it comes as the result of those , intow.ird conditions in early life that pre- ( rented the discipline of personal powers tnd graces, certainly possessed, but suficiently cultivated to make them a -'ad tnd serviceable potency. .Such ones are all j ibout us and we could give their names. \ f ! i *UN BY PERSPIRATION POWER. 'ecullar Elevator That Lifted Bishop Potter's Distinguished Guest. During an uncommonly hot week of i summer when Bishop Henry C. Poter resided on North Washington square ho had as a guest a distinguished English churchman, a bishop md member of the House of Lords, rho visitor was afflicted with rheumatism and was unable to ascend the stairs from the dining room without considerable suffering. The residence was equipped with a hand-power freight and baggage elevator, large enough to accommodate one passenger, although not ordinarily used for that purpose. After noticing the evilont cain caused bv the stairway, in the cane of his distinguished guest, it occurred to Bishop Potter that the Treight elevator might be available is a more convenient means of ascent. After dinner en one of the hottest days in summer the experiment was tried. The visiting bishop stepped rtrefully into the gloomy box. Two young men who had also dined well, md to whom post-prandial oxertion was in the nature of a sore burden, were pressed into service to haul on the ropes. The distinguished and afflicted guest was of a portly habit, and weighed more than the average of 'stone." The elevator was not built for great weights, and its lifting power depended almost exactly upon the main strength at the end of the ropes. With prodigious heaving and hauling the ascent was begun. The two flushed and panting young men looked at each other and had emphatic thoughts. As the gaitered calves of the ecclesiastic were disappearing up the shaft, an inch at a time, a deep voice floated down to the volunteer crew: "I say, docs it run by water-power?" And In a gasping duet, the reply ascended from below: "Yes, my lord, by perspiration power."?New York Mail and Express. REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. The successful liar Is always care fill not to write them down. When a man gets off somewhere with a girl in the dark, that is spon taneous compilation. No woman is old until she becomes afraid to have even her children see her as she really is. | Is the Standard R The ONLY compound on the disease without doing irrepars UNEQUALLED as 1 CHEERFULLY R Gentlemen:?I had rheumatiem for > I had to use crutches or cane. Wascon at a time, several times. Last spring 11 bottles before 1 noticed any benctlt. cure seems to be complete, as I have I can cheerfully recommend your mc For sale by Druggists, or sent ex Bobbitt Chemical Co., P.IW* J Which ? A lean and potash-hungry soil, wasted seed, wasted labor and idle gins?A MORTGAGE. Or, plenty of Potash in the fertilizer, many bales and a busy gin?A BANK ACCOUNT* ^ ".wig- 'i (^j3^ Generally Right | Take advantage of is tSKBe^Sp her vast experience ? and ask her what is j best for your Liver, j Kidney and Blood Troubles. We I think she will recommend i 03. THAGHER'S LIVER AND I BLOOD SYRUP | because she has tried it and knows it I: cijres Been on market 50 years and is IS reliable. You try it. .' V and J1 00 at {rood druggists. Dr. 1 Thacher's Liver Medicine (dry;, li">ceiits. H Yes. your druggist, setts it. Be sure n it's Dr. Tlh:cher>. though. |S| Write our Consultation Department, H W explaining; rynit l, tns. and receive free En W THACH^ t*SED,C",'ET COMPANY. ^ f APUDINE Cour ^ CURES Stomach ? AND ? , . Indigestion 10, 25 and 50c. at Drugstores. Jennine stamped C C C. Never sold io balk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something just as good." ^o/iTlS Thompson'! Eji Wafor ,. : -rrt ' . iheumatic Remedy. I | market that cures this terrible f ible harm to the digestive organs. 3 a BLOOD PURIFIER. | IECOMMENOS IT. 9 Freestats. S. C.. Aug. 13.1002. a about twelve years. Oreatdcalof tbetlmc I fined to bed, nearly helpless, three ra<v>tba >eiran to take " ItnECMACiDE." I used two Altogether I used seven bottles and the J had no symptoms of rheumatism since. * dlcine. D. F. FUN 10AX. I presiage prepaid on receipt of fi.oo. I Baltimore, rid. g ' | 11 HA worn tUKtl) WITHOUT CUTTING, I I I n PI L LII * New VegetaWc Remedy. I ? . Also Piles. Fistula and Sores. Cure Guaranteed in Even Case Treated. i NATIONAL CANCEK MEDICINE COMPANY, Austell Building. Atlanta, Ou. I " .so. 21. i , . -. . r2 oosjsi jyfx , SW 11 IMERSON'S /L ejnj mm 10 CENTS. Mn CURES All fjL HEinACHES. r&k Vfc - ? ? { - - ? ? ? Natural Flavor I C o ttage= Corned Beef W: l it righl Keep it in the house for emergencies?for sa| you want something good and want it quiclt. S appetizing lunch is teady in an instant. Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chic A Beauti ul Young Society Woman's Letter. . St. Paul, Minx., f *. '* 521 Wabasha St. ' J , I Dr. Hartman, Columbus, 0., j Dear Sir: "I took Peruna last dimmer when I was all , , ? run down, and had u headache and back iche, and no ambition , for anything. I now feel as well as I ever din in all my life, and alt thank8 is due to your jj "xcel/rnt Ferima." ? | Bess F. Hcu/y. The symptoms of summer ca tarrh arc (juitc un.ikc in different cases, but the most com mon ones are general lassit>'de, played-out, tired-out, used-up, run - down feelings, combined with more or less heavy, *tu pid, listless, mental condition, iteiish tor tood and the at>ilit> < > to digest food seems to be lost. Skin eruptions, sa.low complexion, biliousness, coated tongue, fitful, irregular s.eep, nelp to complete the picture wlueh is so common at this -.eason. l'eruna so exactly meets all hese conditions that the demand is so great for this rem edy at this season of the year that it is nearly impossible to supply it. it you do not receive prompt tVi and satisfactory results from ' M the use of l'eruna, write at kV once to Dr. Hat tman, giving a V full statement of your case, and A lie will be pleased to give you \ 1 liis valuable advice gratis. ' | Address Dr. Ilurtiuan, Prcf.i Jj Jj dent of J he llartinan Sanila i *., ^jjI Dropsy! Removes all swelling in B to an davs; cfiec! s a pernianeiit core in 10 to 60 da vs. Trial treatment given free. Nothinucan be fairer Write Dr. H. H. Green's Son* *q Specialists. Box B. Atlaota. to. TWFfWRrTERS ; I CHEAP I . 1 I Pig 1 ot >ec<md-h? d Machine* of J- all niAlces talt-n*. part P*y<orth? eps S9R Pverv Dav ''''* h Can be Mail/ made with 4ms * Well Augers & Drills 9& Onr m in and ont, horse recnf red. W? f are the onl/ makers of the TtOn Wall* > Bonog and Rook-DnlllJg MaflhlM Warranted the Beat mm Karlll Haay of onr customers make from M( t? $4* a 4ajb Boo* *nrt Circulars FBB?. Addruaa, LCOMIS MACHINE CO., TIFFIN, OHM. I i t JjJ CU*LS?hT?1All list FAii/l^Bb kjjjl Best Cough B7rup. l utes (kxxL Uta M Cd In time. Sold by dnjc.:l?u. F*f 8^3aGHQZE53ECag|8 srvbus f v f iiiraldc adaches um.'&ST? ? J 4 CKLY CUBED BY :oho,p ,eU5?W? ?f>m,y?H?. Jtlf' 11 ' ce ourchoice corned beef, cook it and scasan done by experts?better tban is possible at When just rieht we put it in cans to keep t until you want it. :>pers. for sandwiches?for anjr time when imply turn a key and the caa is open. An ?adn Write fot our free booklet, "How to Make Good Things to Eat" :