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Have ft Hh of and War |^^H^H||H|BHnards Were Pe-ru %%?????*??**????' 10 Delamare frequently troubled ilments. blad^^^^^^^^Ditated, phywas catarrh ^^^^^H^H>rorrac(?d cold to overcome on advanced years, hanlly daring to behelped, but '^^Bo\rnW^^^B*'elief that 1 soon began ^ o NtmHVM' irritation gradually bside^f'jd the urinary difficulties ^^L??8*e<2 ML"V. i fcave enjoyed exW^Bellcnt ~//J-th now for the past seven ^Ht<mt>SJjl enjoy my meals, sleep ^Kmndtivnnd am as icell as 1 was WB^wentyBm-ars ago. 1 give all pra ise I't r irta '' C*. JS. Xewhof. Iiffered^From Catarrh of Kidneys, threatened With Nervous Collapse, ( Cared by Pe-ru-na. Lfr F. R. Richards. 009 E Street. X. N\ ., jjihington. L). C\, War Correspondent. ar;! y six years ago 1 was Med to Cuba as staff correspondent of k Knr York Sun. I was in chart,t of a In Dispatch boat through the Spanishnerican War. The effect of the tropLl climate and the nervous strain showed Lmly on my return to the States. Lassie. depression to the verge of melanlia, and incessant kidney trouble made [ practically an invalid. This undesinv r condition continued, despite the best of iatnaent. 'Finally a brother newspaper man, who e myself had served in the war, inred me to give a faithful trial to Peruna. lid so. In a short time the lassitude t me. Tnv kidneys resumed a healthy con-1 ion, and a complete cure was effected, j annot too strongly recommend Peruna fthose suffering with kidney trouble, j $ay I am able to work as hard as at! time in my life, and the examiner for hading insurance company pronounced nan 'A* risk." Poor Health Over Four Tears. Tu-na Only Remedy of Real Benefit - T-'? v*: oie St ! Ii ir* uuiiu ^inmiu, wippuiww w?m 'onto, Can., a prominent merchant of jt city and also a member of the Masonic rer, writes: 'I have been in poor health generally t over four years. When I caught a bad d last winter it settled in the bladder J kidneys, causing serious trouble. 1 >k two greatly advertised kidney remes without getting the desired results, runa is the only remedy which was | Say Plainly t( That yoi^rant LION < being a sqtmre man, will 1 0^ / thing else. You may no |j What Abort flit Urth J of housekeepers who ha L for over a quarter < | Is there any stronger js Lion-head on Save these Lion-heads sold by GROCE] I I m ufwmE STOCK m LARGEST i If j. ckouch a son. 1 | '~ Qrea * Co The Beat Hoi 'a jHv. Thefcomlng h. ? 106 Stallions arr: . I eral termi made ne^ds a stallion It takes rough tools to remove the ^Hmst from our tarts. ^ Maearaml Wheat. Baker's strain o? this Wheat is the kind which laughs at droughts and the elements and positively mocks Black Bust, that terrible scorch! It's sure of yielding 80 bushels of finest Wheat the sun shines on per acre on good ? m., 1*., Mich., Wis.. O., Pa., Mo., Keb. lands and 40 to 60 bushels on arid lands! No rust, no insects, no failure. Catalog tells all about it. _ i JUST skan xw A3ii mis nviab to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crowe, 'Wis., and they will send you free a sample of this Wheat and other farm seeds, toBh aether with their great catalog, worth MB fl00.00 to any. wide-awake farmer. [A. C. L.] H The trouble with good intentions is that death gets in ahead of them. F I BEST BY TEST I "I have tried all kinds of waterproof I clothing ana have never found anything | at any price to compare with your Fish I Jttrand for protection from all kinds of ' (The nunc and eddrets of the writer of thu unsolicited letter mey bit had upon application J 1 A. JLTOWER ca The Sen of the F* I Boson. U.S. A I Lmwn fiMinuN !^ae?: IhMHL i3Hw& Ohthing ilatrN^Sdneys, der and Don't Know If. ^VWVWWVWW.WtW?V.Vt?VWWWVl j? 1 ,: 5 N i \ PRES. C. R NEWHOF^ ^ i Suffered Prom Catarrh of^Jladder. j> really of any benefit to me. I have not had a trace of kidney trouble nor a cold in my system." Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics. One reason why Peruna has found j>ermanent use in so many homes is that it contains no narcotic of any kind. Peruna is perfectly harmless. It can be used any length of time without acquiring a drug habit, Peruna does not proauce Temporary results. It is permanent in its effect. It has no bad effect upon the system, and gradually eliminates catarrh by removing the cause of catarrh. There are a j multitude of homes where Peruna has been j used off and on for twenty years. Such | a thing could not be possible if Peruna ! contained any drugs of a narcotic nature. ) Your Grocer COFFEE always, and he, not try to sell you anyt care for our opinion, but ri Judgment of Millions ve used LION CQFFEE of a century ? >roo/ of merit, than the Confidence of the People 1 ever Increasing popularity? iN COFFEE Is carefully seted at tlie plantation, shipped ect to oar various lactories, ere It Is skillfully roasted and D efully packed In sealed pack- I ts?unlike loose coffee, which 8 exposed to germs, dust, In- 9 :ts,etc. LION COFFEE reaches I i as pore and clean as when H eft the factory. Sold only In I ?. packages. | every package, for valuable premiums. IS EVERYWHERE roOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. IMPORTERS IN AMERICA OF THE t German ach-Stallions rse to Crau on Small Southern Mares. Y COLT A HIGH-CLASS ONE. orse for the South Our last Importation of ived Feb. 30th. AH Stallions guaranteed: 11b. Catalogue on application. If your country it rite us. J. CROUCH A SON. Nashville. Tenn. Sharps and Flats. The man who waits to be sent to a ??U 1- k. mnoh nf a fnr/Vk I1CIU IS UUl IlftClJ tu uc 1X1UVU V/i w ftwavv Is it. The California commission to the St. Louis Exposition returned to the State 16,000, unexpended, of the $130,000 appropriation made by the Legislature for State advertising purposes. Practically all the exhibit has been sent to the Portland Fair, which is to open next May. Admiral Togo is a small man. turning gray, with a short-cropped naval beard and a face that shows little emotion. says Frederick Villiers, in his book, "Port Arthur." Most polite in manner, he paid us every attention. J The great man had a peculiar way of standing with both hands spread out on his hips and his arms akimbo. I took a sketch of him in this position, and then I found a most amusing coincidence. His officers, from the cheif of his staff down to the middies, all aped their beloved chief and stood with their arms and hands in the same attitude. FROM MISERY TO HEALTH. X l*roimnent Club Woman of Kansas City Writes to Thank Ooan'i Kidney Fills For a Quick Core. | Miss Nellie Davis, of 121G Michigan ! avenue, Kansas City, Mo., society leader and club wornan, writes: "I can 11UL WV uiuvu . fering from kidkuii ditu, ney troubles brought on by a cold. I had severe pains in the back and sick headaches, and felt miserable all over. A few boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills made me a well woman, without an ache or pain, and I feel compelled to recom* I mend this reliable remedy." i < Signed) NELLIE DAVIS. ^ A TRIAL TREE ? Address FosterMrnbum Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale j^all dealers. Price CO cents. AN ELoJlENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. W. M. BRUNDAOE. I Subject: True MUglon of the Church. ? j Brooklyn. N. Y.?For tlio first sermon of his pastorate of the Unity Unitarj ian Church, the Rev. AY. M. Brumlage j took for his subject Sunday morning i "The True Mission of the Church." I The text was from I. Timothy iii: j 13: "The church of the living God." ! In the course of a strong sermon, list! ened to by a large audience, he said: From the conditions which prevailed a few centuries ago, when the church I was without a rival to contest its auI thority. to its present condition, when it must contend with numerous competitors for the very right to exist, humanity has taken a long stride forward. Freedom has come to be more than a mere name. Multitudes of people have seriously begun to think and act for themselves. Less and less is the church able to live upon its record in the past: more and more has it become manifest that it must justify its continued existence by the work that it does, by the service that it renders to society. Unless our churches of every name can be brought into vital and helpful relations to the real life of the people, they are doomed to perish. The traditions of the past cannot save them. Their service in the past, great though it has l>een. cannot jus- i tifv their present existence. Do they minister in an essential manner to the best life of to-day? An affirmative answer to this question constitutes their only justification. Brotherhoods, clubs, philanthropic associations, without number are competing with them; libraries. newspapers and periodicals, and educational institutions are doing much of the work which they once did. work that was formerly left exclusively to them. We find nothing in the origin of the church that entitles it to claim a divine right to persist. If it persists it will l:e because it does a better work for society than any utiirr iiiMimiiun vuu uu. Wliat is this work that the churches are qualified to perform better than other institutious? Can they feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit and comfort the sick and sorrowing, care lor those who are in prison, minister to the orphan and the outcast, in fine, engage in all sorts of strictly philanthropic activity better than multitudes of existing benevolent institutions? Certainly the churches will continue to do such work as this, because they are organizations of those who love and serve their fellov.men. But clearer and clparer does it become manifest that other institutions can do most kinds of philanthropic work as well as. if not better than, the churches. On the whole, the great fraternities everywhere established in our times can do it better. The organized j charities of our cities, the prison reform associations, the humane societies and others can do it better, more economically, more effectively. Can the churches, however, continue to maintain themselves as centres for the propagation of great dogmatic systems, or, on the other hand, as centrts of mere protest against the dogmatic systems of the past? I do not believe that they can. The forum for the discussion of such systems is being rapidly shifted from the pulpit to the press. The great magazines and reviews and religious newspapers of our time afford n more favorable field for their discussion, while the masses of the people care less and less for them. Incidentally the churches will continue to urge upon their people what they hoUoT-o *o ho o trno nliilosonhv of Cod. of the universe and of man, but this work alone cannot justify their continued existence. Neither as purely sacrair.entarian institutions can the churches long retain their hold upon any large number of the people, because with the growth and extension of new knowledge the claims of sacramentarianism are rapidly becoming discredited. What is called "the high church reaction"' so ! widely known is after all but a reaction and cannot be permanent in its influence. It is but a return to the childhood of religion, and the thinking j world demands the religion of a man. j Can the churches, however, continue i to maintain themselves as social clubs, as organizations of congenial people j who come together to enjoy one an' other's companionship? But when there are so many social j clubs in every community, membership 1 In which can be restricted to people I of congenial tastes and kindred put ; suits as membership in even the mos exclusive church cannot be, 1 do no J believe that the churches can ion: i justify their existence as the mere coinI petitors of these clubs. Has the church then outlived its use fulness and is it about to pass away: Certainly not. if it arouses itself and becoming conscious of its true mission resolutely devotes itself *> its distinctive work. This. I believe, is what the churches can do better than any other institution?they can and do. ii multitudes of instances, act a6 greainspirational centr s ministering to the life of the spirit, to the life of th< ideal, to the life of God in the soul o man. They come into vital ind helpfui relations with the people a just so as they inspire to high thinking ant feeling and loving, in just so far at they inspire and quicken the religious life of the community. Let the churches, therefore, cea: regarding themselves as authoritative ecclesiastical institutions, authoritative sacramentarian or dogmatic institutions, and become free democrats religious societies for the propagation cf pure and uudefiled religion, for inspiration to high and worthy ideals, for actually helping men "to do justly and love mercy, and to walk humbly with their God." The churches that are most truly and profoundly religious forces will best justify their existence in the twentieth century. To foster and develop the distinct fvely religions life of humanity, thb is the true mission of the churches. They must l>e light-givers and lifegivers. They must be spirituallj alive in order that they may impar. life, for life is what most counts. The outward activities of the chnrche> Iiiusi ue tue iiuiurai eAyiessiuu ui ? u.n they are. The methods for the expression ol this religious life will be varied because the dispositions of men vary. This or that particular form of activity Is unessential. A longer or a shorter ritual of worship is unessential, provided the light and power of religion are present. Faith, worship, aspiration, loving human service, these are the essential elements in religion and the forms in which they embody themselves will be vital. The living, inspirational church that is saving men from worldliness and practical materialism, that is helping them to see the unseen and eternal, that is helping them to worship in the noblest sense of that word?that is, to attribute supreme worth to the lofty ideals of justice, truth, love, which are only another name for God. to love. to their rev ^^^V^5rrrrrTso<-iety? such a churcfifet^trnniins: its true mission, by whatever name that church may be called, and is in no danger of being discredited In our mo'dern life. In snob a church there will'be no distinction between classes, between the rich and the poor, no lingering caste spirit, no recognition of a difference of rank and dignity between ministers and people: in the conscious presence of the All Father there will be perfect equality between the worshipers. In such a church there will be no spirit of solemn gloom miscalled reverent awe, an inheritance from a primIA.9 i!-f e I..?f n eniMlf Af 1UVP reil^;uu VL I fill , UUl U ^j;au vn radiant hope, of abounding joy. of genuine human sympathy, the spirit of a larger home. The themes of the pulpit of such a church "will be closely related to the actual needs of the people, selected from every quarter, but selected solely that their consideration may minister most effectively to personal and social righteous character. Membership in such a church will be unrestricted, free to all who share a common spirit and are seriously working toward a common ideal end. In such a church there will be no jealous rivalries between the members, but in place of these a generous spirit of emulation to serve one another and the common cause. As I said before, the practical activities of such an inspirational church will not be artificial and forced: they will be the perfectly natural expression of the vigorous religious life of minister and people. In Wlwr Hand*. A lady, who had been three or f<uir years away from her childhood's ho?e and settled in one of her own, taken seriously ill. Her mother, witlill all a mother's solicitude, was anxious I to be with her daughter at once, and hastened to her bedside. She found skilful physioans in attendance and a trained nurse in charge: there was really nothing for her to do-nothing that she could be permitted to do. Day after day she made brief, silent visits to the sick room (even her presence could not be allowed long) and went away powerless to aid. The ministering was in wiser, more efficient hands than hers, and she could not be trusted with it?would not have dared o trust herself with it. "But it seems strange." she said, sadly, one day. "that even I. her mother, can only stand aside and do nothing. There never before wasn't a time when 'mother' wasn't the one to help and comfort: it seems as if it ought to be so still, and yet I would be afraid to do anything but keep bands off and trust to a knowledge and strength that is greater than my own."' It is the same in many a spiritual crisis through which we see our dear ones pass. We long to lift.the burden, to lighten the trials, to bestow the covered gift; but the Great Physician holds the precious soul in Ilis hands, the hands that will make no mistake, snd we can only stand aside and trust Him.?Forward. The Thing Worth While. I know that many of you are puzzled t to know in what direction you can I start to help Christ to help the world. Let me say this to you in that connection: Once I came to a crossroad in the old life and did not know in which direction God wanted men to help hasten His kingdom. I started to read the Book to find out what the ideal life was. and I found that the only thing worth doing in the world was to do the will of God: whether that was done in the pulpit or in the slums; whether it was done in the college or class room, or on the street, did not matter at all. "My meat and drink." Christ said, "is to do the will of Him that sent Me." and if you make up your mind that you are going to do the will of God above everything else. it matters little in what direction you work. There are more posts waiting for men than there are men waiting for posts. Christ needs men in every community and in every land;' it matters little whether we go to foreign lands or stay at home, as long as we are sure we are where God puts us.?Henry Drummond. "The Loving Look." Some years ago wc witnessed a public examination of a class of little girls at the end of the school term. The distractions of much dressing and much company operated pretty severely on the fickle memories of the children. One little friend lost herself In i - ? * - I confusion and stammerpa 10 a urau stop in her recitation. Just then her mother moved from out the crowd and took a seat in full view of the little one. The loving look of that siient face brought order out of confusion. Mind and tongue immediately resumed their functions, everything was lost sight of and the lessons all came back in perfect order. The examination was finished in triumph. Many a time since then as we have seen some struggling heart confused by the world's noise and temptation we have felt like bidding it look up into the familiar face of the Heavenly Father and be reassured that all is well. Not only is there life in a look at the beginning, but there is assurance and confidence all along the way. Prayed For Six Tear*. ^ At a revival meeting in Wales a man spoke from the gallery: "I have been praying for six years for the salvation of thirty of my mates at the colliery, and I have kept a list of them that 1 might not forget them before God. I am glad to be able now to say that twelve of them have been converted." What will it mean if every Christian will follow the same plan in 1905J Mr. F. A. Vanderlip, in Scribner"s Magazine, says: "One of the most striking differences b<?jyeen Europe and America is the persistence of racial types there and here the tendency to amalgamate all races into the American. Time seems to bring only increased bitterness to racial antagonisms in Europe, while with us the third generation, at the outside, is completely merged into the American type. I never have been able to understand just what it is that keeps the | rancor of races at such a virulent pitch among near neighbors in Europe, when those same races will here renounce language, flag and racial aspirations, and joyfully and completely merge into the American?all patriotic, all loyal to the Government, all in a generation more anxious to cover every trace of foreign .characteristics with the mantle of sovereign American citizenship than they are to perpetuate a single one of those racial prejudices which for generations made enemies of their fathers." One nerffr secure* tfti essenu&ii without slifhtlaf rom* worn ?attain. a. \ I Evei I Coupon l 1 for a pre g GOOD m oaKing H Buy Good Luck Baking m the most of the purest I mi IJa Furthermore, if you will U find plainly printed on ih V the beautiful premiums w coupons. They are valui JVM obtain some of the tiumer K9 A little book inside of |9 premiums. It shows a pi JH inanv coupons are requirt |H conpons. Take a delight Bg charming premiums. I GOO I Bak | OODLU gj houseke I when Mil A /fljB obtained BH Pifo I oiHB see H wmoiitflJ 1 hH BcNMoMay'^H PUT N A M Color mow *ood? brighter and faster colors than an suits. Ask dealer or we will send post paid at 10c a pa PROTECTION AGAINST A WITCH. Law Invoked to Keep Woman From j Supernatural Detective Work. Once or twice a year some extraor- ! dinary piece of evidence finds its way i Into the papers of the survival of the most primitive forms of witchcraft, and of the belief in. the same, in parts Df Ireland. As a rale thew cases transpire when the law is broken by persons ill-treating the supposed witch, as when last year an unfortunate woman was held on the fire to drive an evil spirit -out of her. But the last few days have shown a novel case, in which the protection of the law was invoked to protect certain persons against a witch. An old Irish peasant woman had suffered from the theft of a small sum of money. Being unable to discover the thief or thieves, she had made a straw image, dressed it up, stuck it full of pins, and placed it on a bier, and proceeded to hold a "wake" or funeral party over it. She then declared that her intention was to bury this image, with suitable invocations, with the certain result that as the j straw of which it was made decayefi away so would the body of the thief j waste and dwindle. Certain of the neighbors (possibly < with guilty consciences) asked mat me police might stop this experiment in witchcraft, as it gave them great un- * easiness. ' \ Record of Missouri Church. Antioch Presbyterian church. Callaway county, east of Mexico. Mo., has a remarkable record. During the" eighty-five years of its existence it has never been without a paS'tor more than a month at a time, and in all that time it has had only three pastors.?Boston Globe. THE TRICKS Coffe* I'laji on Some. It hardly pays to laugh before you are certain of facts, for it Is sometimes humiliating to think of afterwards. "When I was a young girl I was a lover of coffee, but was sick so much the doctor told me to quit and I did, but after my marriage my husband begged me to drink it again as be did not think it was the coffee caused the troubles. "So I commenced it again and continued about 6 months until my stomach commenced acting bad and choking as if I bad swallowed something the size of an egg. One doctor said it was neuralgia and indigestion. "One day I took a drive with my husband three miles in the country and I drank a cup of coffee for dinner. I thought sure I would die before, I got back tc town to a doctor. I was drawn double in the buggy and when my busband hitched the-horse to get me out Into the doctor's office, misery came up in my throat and seemed to shut my breath off entirely, then left all in a flash and went to my heart. *fhe docx9 r noi?rAnQ honrt fr nil hip lur piUllUUULTU .1 UCI IUUO ?v?. ... and when I got home I was so weak I could not sit up. "My husband brought my supper to my bedside with a nice cup of hot coffee, but I said: 'Take that back, dear, I will never drink another cup of coffee if you gave me everything you are worth, for it is Just killing me.' He and the others laughed at me and said: 44 'The idea of coffee killing anybody.' " 'Well,' I said, 'it is nothing else but coffee that is doing It.' "In the grocery one day my husbanfl was persuaded to buy a box of Postum which he brought hon^feid I made it for dinner and we botSthought how good it was but said Ahing to the hired men and they thoiwit they bad drank coffee until we iati Agl and told them. Well, we kept on Postum and it was not long beforemhe color came back to my che^^^nd I got stout and felt as good^sl ever did in my life. I have no more stomach trouble and I know I owe It all to Postum In place of coffee. "My husband has gained good health on Postum, as well aa baby and I, and we all think nothing is too good to say aboat it" Name street byjfostum Co., ! ' ' ' 1 . ? y H-tll Counts ?| sent with LUCK fg Powder ?\ ; Powder. In so doing you get ring powder at the smallest cost. save the coupons that you will ViV e label of each can. you can get jHra :e are now offering. Cut out these L/\\ ible It takes but a few of them to ous useful gifts on the premium list. ^7/ every can explains all abont the ^ cture of each gift and tells just how ;d to get them. Don't fail to save the in your baking and secure some of the >D LUC ing Powder blislwi in 189?. The sales have so increased pin^Jood Luck Baking Powder in carload 1< #ne cause of this enormous popularity i epers get not only a positively pure baking j ut at a price a little less tlian they have be< her kind that was not as satisfactory in resul buying Good Luck think of its purity and < I from its use. Remember every Good Lu If your grocer doesn't keep Ciood Luck, s that you are supplied. THE SOUTHERN MANUFACT / Richmond, Va. TaTeuT y other dye. One 10c package colors silk, woo! and rottc ckage. Write for free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and VERY FEW, IF ANY, CIGARS SOLD AT 5 CENTS. COST AS MUCH TO MANUFACTURE. OR COST THE DEALER AS MUCH AS * "CREMO IF THE DEALER TRIES TO SELL YOU SOME OTHER ASK YOURSELF WHY? I For a new industrial college shortly to be opened in Paris a chair of automobilism is to be Jointly supported by j the State, t'ne Department of the Seine and the city of Pari-;, sa>-3 the Motor World. ' i i Stat* or Ohio, Citt or Toledo, i Lucas County. f * Frank J. Cheney make oath that he Is senior partner o( the linn of F. J. Cheney A Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, I County aud State aforesaid, and that said 1 firm will pay the sum of one hundred dollars for each and every case of catarrh j that cannot be cared by the use of Hall's i Catarrh Cure. Frank j. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my . ??? . presence, this 6th day of Decam] seal. [ ber, A. D., 1886. A.W. Gleason, 1 ?y? ' Notary Public. . Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucoas sur; faces of the system. Send for testimonials, i free. F. j. Cheney A Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 70c. Take Hall'9 Family Pills lor constipation. Women insist upon equal privileges with men, but they balk at snoveling snow, chopping wood and hangings. CUTICURA GROWS HAIR . 1 Scalp Cleared of Dandruff and Balr Eestored by One Box of Cntlcura and One Cake of Cntlcnra Soap. A. W: Taft, of Independence, Va., writing under date of Sept. 15, 1904, aaya: "I have had falling hair and dandruff for twelve years and could get nothing to help me. Finally I bought one box of Cuticura Ointment ana one cake of Cuticura Soap, and they cleared my scalp of the dandiuff and stopped the hair falling. Now my hair is growing as well as ever. I highly prize Cuticura Soap as a toilet soap. (Signed) A. W. Taft, Independence, Va." The greatest sorrow may be but a small price to pay for enlarged sympathy. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary I?tion. Never Fails. Sold bv all druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly Ailed by Dr. E. Detchon. Crawforasville, Ind. Tf- nuiniFiM OTOO ai!tftvnrma tn nrndnrA nnfi pound of silk. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after lint day's use of Dr. Klins's Great NerveRestorer,|2trial bottleand treatise free Dr. R. H. Knxz.Ltd.. 331 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Liege. Belgium, is busy with arrangements for an exposition. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gnm and Mullen is Nature's great remedy?Cures Coughs. Colds, Croup and Consumption,and all throat and lun& troubles. At druggists, 15?., 50c. and (1.00 per bottle. The largest stone ever euatried came from a granite ledge in Maine. To Care a Cold la One Day Take Laxative Jiromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on box. 25c. France leads the countries of Europe in theatres, having 304 of them. Mrs. Winslow's8oothlng Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle Irrigation is said to be lowering the temperature of Egypt. lamsurePiso'sCare forConsamptlonsavei my life three years ago.?Mas. Thomas Robbiss, Maple St., Nonrich, N.I., Feb. 17,190J The imperial post in Germany uses 12,551 railway trains daily. ' A Guaranteed Core ftot Piles. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Druggists will refund money if Pazo Ointment fsus to core in t to 14 days. 80c. Eagles sometimes rim to the height of flOOt fmL. >ts to every section of the x>wder of great leavening ;n accustomed to pay for IH .'UDS1UC7 LUC g t/i/t* * ^ ick coupon counts for a j^H end us his name and we MB URING CO., H M SS DYES | in equally well aSd 1. fnanatMd to air. pwftet iw Mis Colon. M05ROB DRCO QO, Poloa-rlBa Mo. ffc . * Lost Calf Found With Wild Deer. An odd story comes up from Great Island, in Portland harbor, in conneetion with the deer situation down there. Last fall a calf belonging to Frank Stevens strayed away and, although efforts were made to find it, J:. could not be located. * X Recently, 'however, some gunnera who were out hunting saw the long lost calf in company with a deer, and ; since that time the two have been seen together N^n several occasions, sometimes the caTf being with several deer. It is evident that the little an* mal has been adopted by Jbe deer of Great Island and has ? of. their number. It has beoffb^^ 1 shy as a deer and in fact llve^BV'x . JhF acts Just as they do.?Kennebec Jon* -. You get what you want if you want """,v ^Bj it with both feet. Sa lflL ILL SICK_ WOMEN M SHOULD HEM MBS. FOX'S LCTTE* In AM Part, of the United StatM Lydl. . I E. PinkhamW Vegetable Oompormd ' Has Effected Similar Carta. ? ol lamftlg (11a JI8DJ nuuucnui i,uiu> v. ? i . are continually coming' to light which * have been brought about by Lydia B. m Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and m {^pSjT /(irE3l .9 yfjnjJ^ raO*) V \^z W^j through the advice of Mrs. Pinkham, ^ of Lynn, Mau., which is given to ride women absolutely free of eharge. Mrs. Pinkham. has for many years made a study of tho ills of her seat she has consulted with and advised thousands of suffering women, who to-day owe not on'y their health but even life to her helpful advice. Mrs. Fannie D. Fox, of 7 Chestnut Street, Bradford,Pa., writes:. Dear Mrs. Pinkham ? "I suffered for a long time with womb . trouble, and finally was told by my nhyridaa that I had a tumor on the womb, I did act want to submit to an opsratfcm, so wrote yea ... J for advice. I received your letter and die aa you told me, and to-aay I am completely cured. My doctor says the tumor has disappeared, and I am once more a well woman. E- .. - ^ _|.U uTT^T-r.KlarVww I believe layout &. i mnnim . pound Is the beet medJcine in the world tor ' women." . . The testimonials which we are eonstantlypublishingfrom grateful women establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com* pound to conquer female diseases. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. She nothing in return for her advice. It is absolutely free, and to thousands of women has proved to be more precious than gold. NO^OOOPlMftforlfaj ^ *or? tad Urn* aw pUaWd ? ^^hiiN'1 Mi au ujr Mtr U r*T9\>*Nh>v, Mia?iiwaiiea W I I h*on-i*r*w?. J i^B H If / "*9 WaaWht Cili?y. ' W V fjt / ww us i^ijiwa L/f 1?00 Kill/ MMVknnb -> v. . A AboratfwpackacMooataiawoTL ^M| II J TwvW*.lw?wrwt*?ergfwa ? ULsaasatf JOII A. 8ALZEI ten 80, V