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% FITS permanently cured.Xo fits or nerv ous- * Bess after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer.$2trial bottle and treatisefree ; Dr. R. H. Kline. Ltd.. S31 Arch St., Phils.,Pa When a woman wants to put on airs she peaks or her husband's salary a*, their in come. Ask Tour Dealer For Allen's Foot-Ease, I A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Dunions, Swollen. Sore.Hot. Callous.Aehinsr, 1 Btreatins; Feet and Injrrowius Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tiRht shoes easy, t all DruRRists and Shoe stores, 25 eents. Accent no su'?-ti:ute. Sample mailed Fkeu. ? ?- .11 o / hi r v v i /Luuress, a urn >. vhumcu, ajciiv; , ?i. a. Giving to charity doesn't keep people poor unless they spend a lot of money adTertising the fact. J do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumotlenhas an e (Ual for coughs and colds?Jout I.Toyek, Trinity Springs, Ind.. Feb. 15,19W. : Safety pins are peculiarly Americar. We J use 144,000.(HX> of them each year. Old >>fas. Hacks of Chairs, etc., can be dyed with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. ninor Mention. Owls acquired their reputation for wisdom by saying one thing and sticking to it. It is up to the opera singer who nepde n rhanee of air to break into I the church choir. The man wlm waits on oppoutunity never accomplishes anything. So. 24. TttaekHdA " I have used your Hair Vigor ^ for five years and am greatly A pleased with it. It certainly rein stores the original color to gray hair. It keeps my hair soft."?Mrs^ Helen Kilkenny,New Portland, Me. Ayer's Hair Vigor has been restoring color to gray hair for Fifty years, and it never fails to do this work, either. You can rely upon it I for stopping your hair from falling, for keeping your scalp clean, and for making your hair grow. SI.OO a bottle. All Jraxfials. ' If your druggist cannot supply you, end "us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Be sure and give the name of your nearest express office. Address, J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mass. fl Cartridges. !t also stands I H for uniform shooting and satis- IS me yuur ucaict iui u.-lll.w* am ARROW end NITRO CLUB 9 Smokeless Shot Shells. 9 . The Union Metallic ^ M BRIDGEPORT, J? j^anaaaggiBBBMMBJMee^^ RIWS RITANS Tabuks" I\a fin/I IKXlUIi tUlU A god prescription For mankind. The B-cetit packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle (price 60 cents) contains a supply for a year. fthe sun gets big Hires 1 Rootbeer I should be around. . JsM A package makes five gallons. J^r. . PM&RIFSF HlRFSM JrMflfM H&K Malvern. Pa. f apudine Cures Nervousness AND NERVOUS HEADACHE. 10c. 25c, ?nd oOc. at Drugstores AAMPrn ctRtD WITHOU CUTTING, I fl|?|.r.ii A New Vegetable Remedy. Piles. Fistula and Sores. Cure Guaranteed in Every Case Treated. RATIONAL CANCER MEDICINE COMPANY, Austell Building, Atlanta, Ca. m> ILfaLrgJII 1 Jj J.I jfc I ?w**~tjir* i |*|CURES WHERE Ail ELSE FAILS. Efl brf Beet Cough ejTup. Tastes Good. Cm Fl eV* La lime. Sold by druggists. If A SERMON FOR SUNDAY -h pi AN INTERESTING DISCOURSE BY b DR. HOWARD DUFFIELD. v a Subject. Heart Failure ? The Atttobioc- v rnpliy of Our Soul* I* Often Stained With tlie Very Faithlessness Tt liidi Blots tlie Memoirs of the Apostles. K r --? ^ rv_ it ?,i t JNEW J OHK Ull.-m. uvnaiu ^ . pastor of the Old First Presbyterian ) Church, Fifth avenue and Twelfth street, ( preached Sunday morning on "Heart Fail- t ure." He took his text from Mark xiv: J 50: "And they all forsook Him and (led." t: Dr. Duffield said: a What cowards! Comrades of Jctts, t shall a lltrec years' friendship with the r Master come to such an end? Shall the f intimacies of man months go swirling t like leates in the wind before a puff of r panic fear? Apostles of Jesus, whv will c ye be pilloried for poltroonery? M'hen i defeat brooded over the hills of Gilboa t and the remnants of the armies of Israel lay strewn through the Judean valleys, t Saul and Jonathan died together. When t Socrates kept tryst with death the prison c vard in which he sat became like a hall of 1 banqueting and the jail stones echoed with a the converse of devoted friends wistfui of * sharing with linn the tun 01 ncmiocs. ? When the sun of Austerlitz that had bathed the earth in glory at it.'; rising. sank i eclipsed in blood behind the plain of Wat- s er'.oo, the files of the imperial guard drew ?' up as on parade and died beneath the flag, f But in tlu hour of His extrcniest need the * comrades of Christ "forsook Him and * tied." Those that had seen Him walk the 1 storm swept lake: conquer disease with a 1 linger-touch and dethrone death with a 1 syllable, when a squad of hirelings wkh t swords, and the riffraff of the city with 1 staves, came out to take Him, they forsook 1 Him and tied. : Jesus walked the pathwav of tears, and ; no one kept step with Him. The hour ] has sounded for chivalry, and His friends } exhibited poltroonery. The call was for 1 heroes, and those Ho loved showed their I backs to Christ, instead of their faces to 1 the foe. Ocasion beat the long roll, but 1 the battle line became a rout. Imagine 1 that scene reversed. Imagine that cordon I of apostles buttressing Christ against as- i sault as with a citadel of rock. We can J almost sec them rooting themselves like ; storm-defying oaks, and opposing the i metal corslets of Christ's foes with the 1 breastplate of their invulnerable affection, i We can almost see them converting Geth- 1 semane into a Gibraltar of affection, and ; shattering the onset of embittered persecution upon the impregnable front of a < devotion that was stronger than death. We are well nigh envious of their oppor- ' tunitv of renown. The possibility of such loyalty has not i yet passed away, it has not yet become im- ? possible for one to show a stalwart allegiance to Jesus Christ in the face of con- ; tempt and antagonism. "They are not yet dead that seek the young child's life." ( Christ docs not recede with the ebb of ( passing years. The men of His age are , 6leening in their sepuichers. The rirst clement of heart failure is dis- , appointment. The apostles had a very well defined theory as to what Christ had come i to do for them, but they had thought very little of what they were to do for Him. ] They had a clear conception of the nrere- , quikite of discipleship. They were deeply concerned as to the pattern of their crowns, j They knew to a nicety the comparative altitude of their thrones, and they were ] anxiously parcelling opt the cities over which they were to ride. With their feet treading the very ascent to Calvary they were badgering each other as to which of them should be greatest. Jesus had come to give them a life of ease and self-satis- ( faction. No more stormy nights out upon Gennesaret; no more tugging at the nets and nulling the wet cordage of their boats; no more weary days brawling in the Capernaum market place to get salt for tfieii meat and butter for their bread. Christ had a whole cornucopia of splendors to empty into their lap?kingships, and dignities. and thrones, and scepters. When ; as with a lightning stroke all these fond | dreams went whistling down the wind, and their cloud palaces vanquished like < mist at sunrise, disappointment thrust its iron into the soul, and away they went, < spurred by an impulse which for the moment was irresistible. Their thought had 1 been centered on the good they were to get. not upon the good they were to do. It is not impossible that you and I should just as mistakenly interpret the purpose of Christ's mission. In some piv- ] otal moment the consciousness of sin unexpectedly leaps up and chills us with its ( shadow. Wc are lashed by the scorpion whip of conscience. Wc shudder at the thought of death. The awe. of eternity < overshadows us. With timid lingers we open the Book of God. With ea?er eye i we scan the page of Scripture. A wondrous j gospel salutes us. Glad tidings ring like i music through our hearts concerning One ; who has a welcome for the outcast, who can whiten the most soiled soul, who will i uplift the fallen and recall the wandering j and who lias planted His mighty heel upon the head of death. We kneel rejoicingly , at the foot of the cross. We surrender our life into the keeping of Jesus. We yield Him the ready homage of our hearts. Then i comes the danger hour. Then we are ir peril of thinking how much Christ has to give, and too little of what He is training ] us to give. Then we are prone to dwell in i imagination with the spirits of ju>t men 1 mauu fitrntrci, ?nu tnc ruiiniaiuo vi mc shining ones who walk with Christ in glory, until we lose touch with the men and women who throng about us warped and stained with the sin and sorrow, of the world. We forget that forgiveness is not the last word but \the first word of the Gospel. We forget that pardon is not the last utterance but the first utterance that Jesus has spoken. We overlook the fact that there is a culture of character which demands the energy of a hero and the patience of a devotee, that there is a service of others that calls for the crucifixion of self. Another element cf heart failure is doubt. How was it possible for the apostles to recognize a Messiah under arrest? Was this the upshot of centuries of prophecy? Was this the story that the messengers of God had been telling of majesty and glorv and of victory? Was the Prince j of the house of David to be dragged away , in chains and the Lion of Judah to be thrust into a cage? Clouded in their per- ( ceptions, confused in their thought, eon- : founded by the iHrush of doubt, Jesus' j disciples hurried away beneath the shadows of a night that but faintly suggest , the dark questionings that must have shad- | owed their devoted hearts. j This is an age of doubt. Demon whis- ( pers are upon every breeze. Siren songs | are at every turn. Faiths are under the j scalpel. Creeds are in the crucible. Be- ( liefs are unon the anvil. A searching and pitiless criticism is passing unaer its icns ] everything that men have counted helpful ? and holy in the davs gone by. For one. 1 ] do not regret it. Flame will never harm , gold. A file's tooth cannot bite a diamond, i But ?n age of doubt brines many a doubt- ( ing day into the hearts of faithful and lov- , ing discinlcs. The champions of the faith | had their doubting days, the record of , which is written in the Scripture with a j pen dipned in tears. There came a day ( when David loving, trusting, aspiring , spirit that he was. bemoaned the time ] when God's face was hidden. There came j a day when Elijah, that man with nerve t of steel and heart of fire, lay spent and f worn t?v the stress of mental conflict under j the juniner tree in the desert. There came , a day when John the Baptist, that mount- t ed like an eeglc to greet the dawn of truth. s feit his heart weaken and his eye film. j There comes a Gethscmanc to every one that is following Jesus closely, a time of darkness, of loneliness, of a wrestling in the night, when those that love us most J eem wrapped in sleep, unable to eompreend the conflict that surges within our oul. There are doubting days in the cab ndar of experience when the earth tremles beneath thp feet, when the guiding tars of destiny are veiled with a cloud, rhen the altar flame of life burns into shes. when the eyes of faith are blinded nth a mist of tears, and when hope bows icr serene head and hides her radiant face. Another element of heart failure is dan;er. There was an element of personal >eril that night which we must not forget r? introduce into our analysis of the im* mlses that drove the apostles away from 'hrist. In all likelihood the thought of langer little affected the comrades of fesus. With us it is apt to be the overnastering consideration. The retreating tnosties were not so much afraid of some hings as we are. We talk about absolute nonarchy. We rehearse stories of Siberian itrocitv until the blood chills. There is >nt one absolute monarch?the czar of hunan opinion, the ukase which he issues Irags us all into a Siberia of meanness but ainliy tipyfied by the degradation ol hose glcomv mines that burrow into the \siatic mountains. The opinion of the .vorld exiles finest feeling. It dungeons rue?t manhood. It rivets chain and ball >n our loftiest aspirations. It vetoes i.nde)endence. We dflre not be free and manlj md genuine. Jt makes our feet fast in the stocks of its whims We arc all the while isking which way the weather-cock points -and wc trim. We are diligent in inquir ng how the current sets, and we veer, indead of asking whither the needle points ind setting our prow to the pole star; in dead of reading the chare and laughing tc scorn the fret and roar of the billows. We serve Christ, by the world's permission IVhy should we be so deferential to the ivorld's opinion? If you ?lin, wiil the tvorld help you up? If vou have blotter he fair page of your life, is the worlel leh'ing you to whiten it? If you are sick ivill the world play physician? it you art struggling with ail the- energy that is ir your soul to scale some starry height o purity and of nobility will the world lenc rou a hand? When your pntli enters th< ralley of the shadow will the world wall aeside you on that lonely and mysterioui way? When your stay here is ended wil the world spend one thought upon you keep flowers crowing on your grave or tcai the lichens from your tombstone? Then is one who loves you, one who. whenevei rou slip, has an arm of love ready to catcl you: when you fall has messages of ho pi ready to whisper in your ear. He wil whiten your soul. He will gird your weak ue?s. He will school your ignorance. Hi will share your sorrow. He will eompanioi you as you cross the frontiers of time. Hi will introduce you into an uncloudct eternity beyond. Why care very much foi the opinion of the world in which wc ari but a fraction now. and in which to-mor row we will be a cipher? Why not ven keenly care for one whose love envelopi our being as with an atmosphere? Turn the pa^e and read the later story o apostolic loyalty. The seo.uel is differen from the preface. Call the roll of tha glorious company of the apostles and hea: every compass pojnt ring with fidelity t< Jesus. Read how they sowed the eartl with martyr blood from Abyssinia co In dia. llegin the chronicle with that tradi tion of Simon Peter, who was led out ti death in the Roman amphitheatre whili his wife was crowned with martvrdon before his eyes, to shake if possible thi stanch rock of his bedded faith. Ant while she suffered he called her by nami and addressed her in terms of most endear ing affection and exhorted her to remem her the love of the blessed Jyord and to bi n ? -: i .i._ 1 TJ ill III Ulllll nil' *C1J villi. Alls lUUi V?14?. next. He had but a single favor to asl from God as he stood there in the oh Roman circus face to face with death, am that was that he might remain tirm fo one more hour. He had but a single favo: to ask from man, and that was that h< might be crucified head downward, as i was too great an honor for one who ha< deserted Jesus to suffer in the same wa; Jesus did. The whole company of thi anostles went sweeping home to thei: Master in chariots of fire. They sealet their allegiance to Him with their blood Since the night of panic they had come t< see Jesus under a new aspect. They hat known Him as a friend. He had a plac it their table and a voice in the home talk He had a seat at their firesides and f share in their plans. They had strollet together up and down the field paths fhey iiad paced side by side through tin citv streets. He had colored their s.vm patliie?. molded their character, enricjiei their lives: but the boml of friendship broke in the hour of trial. They hai known Him as a teacher. Thev had baei fascinated by the crystal-clear form of Hi statements. They had thrilled to tlx searching and subtle touch of His moun tain sermon. Thev had felt the subth charm of His parables, but the spell of Hi wisdom did not keep them true on tlx night of His betrayal. They had seen Hiir as a miracle worker. They had belich the storm sleep like a child at His com mand. They had witnessed leprosy con verted into purity at His touch. They hat seen the winter of the sepulcher bloon into the spring when His sandals touchei the lintel of the tomb, but the power o Jesus did not armor them to look upoi the face of fear. But since that hour o heart failure they bad come to know Hiu as their Saviour. They had seen Jesus dii For them. They had felt the touch of lov< that death could not quench. They hat been beneath the arms of the cross out stretched to shelter them. They had caughl Ihe accents of His parting prayer, "Father forgive." They had heard His triumpl shout, "It is finished." As their Re rleemer Jtsus riveted them to Himself witt hooks of steel. In this day of torce worship it is timelj to uplift Christ as the vitalizing energy o humanity. It is pertinent to emphtftiz* the deathless power that resides in Chris tianity. It is interesting to watch it soar ing like a phoenix from the ashes of Jeru infom cmifrirtor lipo n mnilpfl oriflnt tllP for<'e< i)f the Graeco-Roman civilization, sweeping like a white-winged angel of mercy beyonc the Alps and trie Rhine, and scattering jlorious benedictions upon Scandinavian Celt and Saxon; to watch it as it carrie; the same beneficent potencies to the darli continents and hermit nations of our owr time, and blessing with its exhaustles; bounty attic and cellar, avenue and alley, and parlor and schoolroom, and markel place of latter day civilization. In this houi of culture craze it is timely to mark the unique wisdom of flie Christ and to note that through all the ages a train of giftec minds has brought the treasures of theii life and laid them at the feet of Him whe was cradled in the Bethlehem manger: ti observe the masters of hunlan thought bowing with wondering homage before th( sweet and the clarity of Christ's insight; to remark how the boldest of the skeptic.' become deferential and unsandal when they na?s within the charmed circle of this singular personality. But when I see one who dwelt in the light of the face of God hastening down into the shadows and mis ?ries of this stricken earth; when I behold llim stripping Himself of those robes ol iivine majesty which He wore before the world began and appareling Himself witli :hat sad-hued vesture which we mortal* - - J J l :J 1 ?Til ivcar, siainea wiin woe ana uruiuercu mm tears; when I behold Him who was the entre of angelic adoration, in pathetic oneliness. becoming a target for the scorn >f the WQjld. despised and rejected of all nsn. spurned by bigots in the tribunal ol His people and buffeted by brutes in the cuardroom of the Roman; when I mark he holt of doom that was whistling in its light toward my heart bury itself in the losom of His love, and all this for me, for ne. a sinner, then I am His. Then, if ;ver. the elemental depths of being are timed aud a loyalty of affection is eakinlled that knows no swerving. A woman is never so lonely as when she mows a secret and has no one to tell it to. TACOMA'S BIG SAWMILL. With one Exception it is the Largest in the World. At Tacoma I visited a sawmill said to nave a greater capacity than any ] other in the United States, and, with ; one exception (in Norway), the greatest in the world. It is, in fact, two separate mills, covering a wide, low flat, with docks on the sound where ships can be loaded at the door of the yards. Here the logs from the camp I which we visited are sawed. They are dumped from the railroad cars into ponds of water and held until the mill is ready ta cut them Into lumber. Mr. 1 Royce showed me through this great establishment, with its devices for handling the enormous logs of fir and cedar, hemlock and spruce, which come to it dally, i Nearly every step in the long pro' cess is performed by some human-like \ machine. Logs weighing many tons . are handled like jackstraws, pulled out s of the water, whirled over, lifted about, gripped, slabbed off, turned | again easily, and, directed by the i swift and sure judgment of the expert * sawyer, driven tnrougn nana-saws or I great gang-saws, cutting twenty boards or more at once, and finally trimmed f to certain lengths?everything'moving | at once, smoothly, with absolute exactt itude. In fifteen minutes from the , time the log enters the mill it has been : reduced to lumber of several grades; [ the poor parts have been whittled up j into lath and shingles, the slabs have j been shot out on a great pile for flre: wood, and the remaining bark, saw} dust and refuse have been carried , away to the fire hoap. This mill cuts r 100,000,000 feet of lumber and 90,000,~ 000,01)0 shingles a year, and its product , goes the world over?to Australia, Haj waii, China, South Africa, South ' America and Europe.?From Ray , Stannard Baker's "The Conquest of the [ Forest" In the Century. 1 \ Darwin's Comparison. I In a letter Darwin wrote: "At a r house where we have been staying ' there were Sir A. and Lady Hobhouae, not long ago returned from India, and [ she and he kept a young monkey and i, told me some curious particulars. One r was that her monkey was very fond of J looking through her eyeglasses at ob* Jects and moved the glass nearer and . farther so as to vary the focus. This > struck me, as Frank's son, nearly 2 E years old?and we think much of his ? intellect?is very fond of looking i through my pocket lens and I have u quite in vain endeavored to teach him " not to put the glass down on the obl ject, but he always will do so. Theree fore I conclude that a child under 2 * years is inferior In intellect to a monJ key." r. Victims of Too Much Sympathy. t The Rev. Dr. Lorimer, the minister 1 at the Madison Avenue Baptist church, f is responsible for this story, though p be does not vouch for the truth of i it, useful as It may be to point a moral: J "A nestful of young linnets were in B the corner of a field in India. Having lost their mother, they were cold and | hungry. They flapped their little featherles8 wings, thereby attracting i the attention of a huge elephant which stood near by. " 'Ah,' said tho elephant, 'you poor I little things. You have lost your mothi er, and have nobody to nestle you. I * j am a mother, and have a mother's " | heart. I win nesue you auu awy ^uu 2 warm!' And thereupon the elephant * sat upon the nest containing the poor little linnets."?New York Times. ? ! POINTED PARAGRAPHS. * An electric eel must lead a shocking J life. Everj' thief would like to keep himf self unspotted. i f The world is but a ring on which > men cut their eye-teeth. i j TESTED BY TIME. > Broderick, who ~| j ! resides at 1915 LJtdMitefcrs Virginia St., in San Antonio, '1 f j/ If J r. TexaB, tells an experience that jPH - will interest ^ #& every reader; it X KQ shows as well that Doaa'a ^?S?RKS68^ 1 cores are lasting cures. She WjEiJ^ J says: "Up to ; tb* early part of the year 1002 I had been a sufferer from kidney i troubles for many years. The pain in [ my back became worse and worse until It was a dally burden that interfered with every duty. I was much nf| fllcted with headaches and dizzy spells and was unable to rest well nighis. In ? >lay, 1002, after using Doau's Kidney ) Pills I made a statement for publicaj tion declaring that they had entirely ; relieved me of the pain in my back. I > have since then had a year's time in 1 which to study the effects of the medicine, and while I have had slipht [ touches of the trouble since, the use or tbe*pllle has always driven away all signs of the disorder, and I have be. come convlnce'd of the fact that the i first treatment was practically periua1 nent in its effects, and I know that a I box of Doan's Kidney Pills kept on hand is a sufficient guarantee against t any suffering from the kidneys or back, [ I should advise every sufferer to take Doan's Kidney Pills, and I know that they will be surprised and pleased with ' the result." ^ A Free Trial of this great kidney medicine which cured .Mrs. Broderick ( will be mailed on application to any part of 'the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. 4 . * / TO WORKING GIRLS | If^TO FREE MEDICAL ADVICE J Every working girl who is not well is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice; it is freely given, and has restored thousands to health. Hiss Paine's Experience. < "I want to thank you for what you j have done for me, and recommend t Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to all girls whose work keeps them standing on their feet in ^ the store. The doctor said I must i stop work ; he did not seem to realize \ that a girl cannot afford to stop work- . ing. My back ached, my appetite was poor, I could not sleep, and menstrua- { tion was scanty and very painful. One 1 day when suffering I commenced to j take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- , table Compound, and found that it helped me. I continued its use, and ' soon found that my menstrual periods 1 were free from pain and natural; everyone is surprised at the change in , me, and I am well, and cannot be too grateful for what you have done for me." ? Miss Jaket Paine, 530 West 125th St., New York City. ? $5000 forfait M original of about llttir proving gtnllntnttt can net 6 produced. Take no substitute, for it is Lydia E. Pinkham's "Vegetable Compound tliat cures* PILES "I hare suffered with pile* for thirty-six yean. One year ago last April I began taking Cas carets for constipation. In the conrae of a week I noticed ' the piles be gan to disappear and at the end of six ! weeks they did not trouble me at all. Caacareta , hare done wonders forme. I am entirely cored and feel like a new man." Ueorgo Kryder, Napoleon, 0. f The6owels ^ ibiMamo ! . Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, I Keror Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, lie. Sc. Me. Key or 1 told In balk. The genuine tablet stamped CCQ. 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Sold Wherever Civilization Has Penetrated. j ^ J Millions of the world's best people jse Cutlcura Soap, assisted by Cuticura - '*gj Ointment, the great skin cure, for pre- ;'J3 serving, purifying and beautifying the - ; skin, for cleansiDg the scalp of crusts, jcales and dandruff, and the stopping of } falling hair, for softening, whitening , -r? md soothing red, rough and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings and chatlngs, for annoying irritations, or too free or offensive perspiration, for ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, especially moth- iSl era, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery. . f. Sm Cntlcura Soap combines dell cat* J emollient properties derived from Cutl- v;?j cura, the great skin cure, with the pur- _ | est of cleansing ingredients and tbo ' 3 most refreshing of flower odonrs. No .. ->i other medicated soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying and beautifying the akin* scalp, hair and hands. No ottwr for- ."<6 elgn or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for > all the purposes of the toilet, bath and ' *'-j nursery. Thus it combines in one soap ;3 at one price the most effective skin and complexion soap, and the purest and *j sweetest toilet, bath and nurseiy soap ' ever compounded. Sold throughout the troHd. Cation* RmoItvbI. flfe. 't! &^Bforra of CbocoUtt Coated PUle, tie. per fkl oftHa tm*ut, 5V-, Son, tie. Depot* i Leodea, 17 Chert**- - ? bouMls-: Pari*. 1 Rue del* Peix i Boetoa.UrCotaaOM . At*. Potter D?uf ft Chetn. Con., Hole Prop*. _ ?*>8cad for " AH Abeet the Skit, ScmJp sad Hefr."" * , Drnnsv ? Rcmwc^illsi^l^^laSto* I da>?; effects a permanent etna A in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment given free. Nothinjjcan befairct T^&BEb i Write Dr. H. H. Graan's Soa% . ,* Specialists. Baa W. Attaata.4* ^ I SAW MILLS Us 1 man. Ail oar nills arc fitted with the famous Heacock-Klnc :' ? 'at. Variable Feed Works; the simplest, moat. iurablesind best feed 011 the market. -MANUFACTURED BY THESALEM IRON WORKS* W WINSTON-SALEM, V. a So. 24. iG RIFLES?# es are made in calibers suita- u itm tn trri77.lv hears. m hts. Whichever model youf sing well made and finished M im accurate shooter. illustrated cutiloquc. f/lEA MS CO. NEW HAVEN, CONN.?Mg*j wmoRsl d Syrup, taken according to ible barrier against sickness. 2M the Appetite. Creates Energy - Hff i body to properly perform its IH Sidney Troubles. Nervousness, jjs? llotches and Rheumatism are KB r and Blood Syrup M B -ell as a health retainer. ^B c injurious matter, stimulating Bp ngthening every weakened part. SB r that has*been used by hund- ^B >ast 50 years with wonderful |9 K test will demonstrate this. 6V cts. and $1.00. 9 >artment explaining symptoms jBB ree confidential advice. ^B. ~ r Medicine Company,, K Chattanooga, Tenn. M and Presses | BY J* J* AL GIN CO* I am, Ala., k! BOILERS I