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B^^BmX'ITION after H^Vition is secured mBj^p 10 who clip this notice and send to DRAUGHON'll PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Kxleigh. Cb.vmanL. hi.oxvilir. Allj.nl*. W?co. j F?. Wo'lV o' Nt^hyille, Tenn may. without giving notes, pay EVERY CENT of tuition out of salary after i good position is secured. If not secured i no pay required. COURSE BY MAIL FREE If not ready to enter you may take j lessons by mail FREE until ready, I which would save time, living expenses, j t, or complete at home and get di- I na. D. P. B. C. Co.. has SSuO.OOO.'O tal, 17 bankers on Board of Direc- J . and TWENTY Colleges in THIR- | SN states to back every claim it makes. Established SIXTEEN years. Cl.p and send this notice, to-day. The Aztec Tnc':c.ns ot Mexico are noted ' for their strength Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'* Sanitary I^otior. Never ^ails. Sold bv all druz?ist-=. si. Mail orders promptly filled by Dr E Detclion. (rawforosville, Ind. i The dfc-savincr do?? are valuable aids to the police department of Paris. FITSpermai.e ntlycured. NoIlt?or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveEes'orer."$2trinlbottle and treatise free Dr. K. H. Klixk. I.td.,931 Areh St.. Phila., Pa. The T)ukc of Portland's picture gallery is 236 feet Ion?. La-li?? Can W?*r Shoes One she smaller after usintr Allen's FootEase, a nowdor. It makes tisht or .now shoes easv. Cures swollen, hot, sweatir n. aehins; feet, insrrowin-r nails, corns and bunions. At all drusrsrists and shoe stores. 25e. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package Fref. by mail. Address. Alien S. Olmsted. LeRov, N.Y. Skeletons are now being sold in Russia for $1.13. "Wrc TVir?1n:r*< lun??<vtum f/M>. KiLlcAn teethimr.soLca the gums. reduces inllammn* tion.allays pain,cures wind colic,25c.a bottle. V The United Kingdom spends $4,400,000 a year on raisins. Jam sure Piso's Care for Consumption saved my life three voars ago.?Mas. Thomas Robfcixs, Maple bt., Norwica, N. 1., Feb. 17, liWJ. The chronic borrower is usual I v out on a trikc. Is It Night? Is it right for you to lose $4.20 that a dealer may make oO cents more bv selling r- fourteen gallons of ready-for-use paint, at $1.50 r?er gallon, than our agent wili make by selling you eight gallons ol L. 1 M . and six gallons of linseea oil, which make fourteen gallons of a better paint, at $1.20 per gallon? Is it right? Sold everywhere and by Lor em an & Martinez. New York. Paint Makers for Fifty Years. There have been .119 statues of the Kaiser erected iu Germany. Taylor's Cherokee Itemedy of Sweet Gum And Mullen is Nature's great remedy?Cures Coughs. Colds, Croup and Consumption.aud all throat and lung troubles. At druggists, to*-, 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. Souvenirs. Mais on sont les nelges d'antan? Where Is the glove that I gave to him. _ ? j .-J ?>n rm f rnm m \? o rm tVlf) t feriumeu bmu ?ann nv ..... ?... ..... night? v And where is the rose that another stole When the land was flooded with June V moonlight. And the satin slipper 1 wore??Alack. i Some one had that?it was wrong, I fear. Where are those souvenirs to-day? But where are the snows of yester, year? The glove was turned at his next love s prayer. And the rose was lost in the mire of vhe street: And the satin slipper he tossed away. For his Jealous bride had not lair.v feet. Give what you will, but know, mesdames. For a day alone are your favors dear. Be sure for the next fair woman's sake They will go?like the snows of yesteryear. ?Anne Reeve Aldrich. You can make a man so mad he can't see by telling him how everybody admires the ability of one of his ; friends. STOP! > AND CONSIDER THE ALL-IMPORTANT CATT nv a That in addressing Mrs. Pinkham yo are confiding your private ills to a worn a ? a woman, whose experience tfcith man's diseases covers a great many year: You can talk freely to a woman when i is revolting to relate your private trouble to a man?1'besides a man doer not under stand?simply because he is a man. Many women suffer in silence and dr: from bad to worse, knowing full well tl ought to have immediate assistance, but a modesty impels them to shriek from exp elves to the questions and probably ejai even their family physician. It is i Without money or price you can consu whose knowledge from actual experien Airs. Pinkham's Standing Invit Women suffering from any form of U ness are invited to promptly communical Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters a opened, read and answered, by wome woman can freely talk of her private il woman; thus has been established th< confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and tb oi America wmcn nas never ceen uruaen of the vast volume of experience which has to draw torn, it is more than possib that she has gained the very knowledg that will help your case. She asks notl login return except your good-will, and he advice has relieved thousands. Surely ar woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if si V does not take advantage of this genero' offer of assistance. ? Lydia E. Pinklia Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Following we publish two let-, k t-ers from a woman who accepted this invitation. Note the result. First letter. 44 Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? 44 For eight years I have suffered something terrible every mcfath with my periods. The ! pains are excruciating and I can hardly stand ! them. My doctor says I have ovarian and womb trouble, and I must go through an op- ; eration if I want to get well. I do not want to submit to it if I can possibly help it. Pl.^ase tell me what to do. I hope you can relieve me. '"-Mrs. Mary Dimmick, 59tn and E. Capitol St-c, Benning P.O., Wash.ngton,D.C. Second letter. 4 Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? ? 44 After following carefully your advice, . and taking Lydia. E. Piokbam'i Vegetable Compound, I am very anxious to send you my testimonial, that pthers maf know their valueand what you have done for me. ' < THOUCHT SHE WOULD DIE. Mra. S. W. Marine, ot Colorado Springs Began to Fear the Worat? Uoan'i Kidney Filla Saved Her. Mrs. Sarah Marine, of 4"S St. Urn in street. Colorado Springs, Col.. President of the (.Jlen Eyrie Club, writes: _ "I suffered for three years with severe backache. jf \l The doctors told H jjEffiV \i me wy kidneys S K.^Sr a ^were affected friend advised me to try Doan's Kidney Tills. Within a week after I began using them I was so much better that I decided to keep up the treatment, and when I had used a little over two boxes 1 was entirely well. I have now enjoyed the best of health for more than four months, and words can but poorly express my gratitude." For sale by all dealers. Price ."0 cents. Foster-Mjlburn Co., Buffalo, X. Y. Thf Eternal Fumtninr. Grandfather, doing some carpentry work, and finding he needed some screws, sent little Mary to the hardware store to get some for him. When she got there she could not remember the word "screw." At last she said: "Grandpa wants some nails with rutiles on."?Life. Beware of Olnt?n?it? For C*:?rr'i Th%\ Contain Mercury, ns mercury will surely destroy the senseo! smell and completely derate tbo whole system when enterin^ it thraigii the mucous surfaces. Sucharticlesshould never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the dam aye they will do is ten foil tn th? irood vou can Dossiblv derive from I them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufacture! by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is ta'-cen internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoussurfaces olthesystem. In buying Hail's Catarrh Cure be sure"you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made ia Toledo, Oaio, by F. J. Cheney A Co. Testimonials Tree. bold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. 'lake Hall's Family Fills lor constipation. It takes rough tools to remove the rust from our hearts. So. 15. The I'resent Kate Law. Tiic duties of the present Inters-ate Commerce Commission are to correct all discriminations in railroad rates. If it finds that an unjust rate i6 in effect, the railroad is notified. If it declines to change it. the Commission can bring suit in Court and ;f the Court decides in favor of the Commissioners' finding, the railroad uiust obey, or its officers may be brought up for contempt of Court and summarily dealt with. _ Wants Tip from the President. The president received an earnest letter to-day from a man in Cork, Ireland. "I am a large Investor in American securities," he wrote, "and I hear disquieting rumors that you Intend to send a special message to Congress urging a revision of the tariff. If you do it I am a ruined man, for I am heavily loaded up with American stocks just now." After begging the president to do j nothing to disturb the tariff, "for my i sake." the Cork man concluded: "If you must send such a message, please cable me several days in advance, so that 1 can unload."?Washington Correspondence New York World. A man hardly ever knows enough to pretend to think his wife knows more than she does. rVOMEN, * " As von know, I wrote you that my doctor said I must have an operation or I could not 1 live. I then wrote you, telling you my ail- { mente. I followed your advice and am en- i tirely welL I can walk miles without an * ache or a pain, and I owe my life to you and to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. c I wish every suffering woman would read 0 this testimonial and realize the value of writ- t ing to you and your remedy."?Mrs. Mary o Dimmick, 59th and E. Capitol Streets, Ben- ] ning P. O., Washington, D. C. ,, When a medicine has been successful t in restoring to health so many women : 1 whose testimony is so unquestionable. | J you cannot well say, without trying it, j T " I do not believe it will help me."' If j } you are ill. don't hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable I J Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pink- j ham. Lynn. Mass., for special advice? ( s it is free and always helpful- > j A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. DR. H. C. SWENTZEL. Subjcct: The Divinity of Christianity. Brooklyn, N. Y.?For the first of a series of sermons on "The Religion of Jesus Christ." the Bev. Dr. Henry C. Swentzel, rector of St. Luke's Church, Clinton avenue, near Fulton street, preached Sunday on "The Divinity of J Christianity." The text was from I j Timothy i:ll: "The Glorious Gospel | of the Blessed God." Dr. Swentzel I said in the course of his sermon: Christianity shows the credentials j f divinity. It is not a set of doctrines j and principles which men or even the ! best of them have invented, but it ! professes to come directly from the in- J Unite Jehovah Himself. It is not sim- j ply one among the world's religions. It stands alone and is unique In the nanner and method of its origin. It was not whispered into the ear of a seer by the Almighty; it is not the result of visions: it is not the product of learning and piety. It comes directly from the infinite God. who actually adopted human nature in order that He might talk with mankind face to face. It is immeasurably more divine than the religion of Moses and the prophets because it was delivered personally by the incarnate Lord Himself. The ' themes of which He treats are of such tremendous moment that any solution ! of them ought, to be carefully scrutin- J ized. Who and what is God? Who and what is man? What is the true ideal for the present? What is the outlook for the future? What of im- j mortality and heaven? To these interrogatories the Lord speaks with 1 tones of infallibility which popes and synods have not dared to initiate or even to claim. The author of the Sermon on the Mount was the eternal Son of God and His religion is nothing less than "the glorious gospel of the blessed God." To say that Jesus of Nazareth is a divine Being is not synonymous with* the error which calls Him a divine man. There have been many divine men?men wlio Had a mission aim a j message from the Most Higli, men \fho were called to lead humanity to better and nobler tilings; sons of men who were filled with Hod's spirit, and counted not their life dear if it were I spent in His service, prophetsxof re- \ form, prophets of liberty, prophets of philosophy or literature or art. In the hall of fame stand the images of the vast army of divine souls who have been the champions of God's cause and the captains of His hosts in every clime. In a far loftier sense, in a literal sense which warrants no Jugglery of words and no legerdemain of metaphysics, was Jesus Christ, God's Son. His only Sou. The Christian Scriptures propose this sublime truth which should be hailed with universal acclaim. It is constantly assumed in the four gospels, evefi as it was by Himself, that, though He was born of the Virgin Mary, He was still, in the later language of the Nicene Creed, "God of God, Light of Light, Very God of Very God." In one way or another Our Lord declared His divinity time and again. He made Himself God's equal with such plainness that even His enemies could not mistake it. They accused Him of sacrilege so strongly that they wrung from Him the well-remembered reply: "Say ye to Him whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world. Thou blasphemer, because I said I am the Son of God?" It is true that He loved to speak of Himself as "the Son of Man," but that title really was His assertion of deity. He might have been a son of man without being a divine personage, but He could not be truly the son of man unless He were, more than all, the Son of God. It is no wonder than when the people beheld His moral perfection and saw Hie wnrfcc find lietunp/l tn flip truths as they seemed to coine from the mouth of God, they asked, "Who is this Son of Man?" The record of the memorable interview, which has often been conspicuous in the church's regard, should not lightly be put aside. The Lord said to His disciples, "Whom do men say that I, the Son of Man, am? Whom say ye that I am?" Then it was that Simon Peter made the great confession, "Thou are the Christ, the Son of the living God." In advance of His birth the archangel gave this assurance to the Virgin Mother, "That holy thing which shall be born of thee shall fle called the Son of God." And when the end came and Jesus had breathed cut His life on the Calvary cross, the words of the Itornan Centurion were a fitting finale for the record of His mortal career. "Truly this man was the Son of God." The divinity of the Founder of Christianity Justifies the certitude of His disciples. This absolute certitude should be appreciated. We should willingly take the Lord at His word. And yet He does not demand that the disciples shall enslave themselves?He who came to make them free, to give them "the liberty of the glory of the children of God." That liberty Is surely not a dead letter. The Divine Master would not put shackles on the human intellect. He (toes not discourage the conservatism which disdains to consider the present or to look for a golden age in the future. If VIa hnor/1 orlorlit ITa wi 11 ctimn. late thought and investigation. Better than ourselves did He know that the real advancement of the multitudes is in harmony with His plans and that the period of the finest piety will be a time of the greatest enlightenment. The divinity of Christ should not he treated as a brutum fllmen. Rather is it a truth?a fact?which should steady and hold Christian people amid the growth of ideas and the struggle of theories. Whatever truths may be discovered, whatever thinkers may say or print, whatever conclusions may ensue in the intellectual world, the Christian religion is forever true, because it Is nothing less than "the glorious gospel of the blessed God." It is on this basis that the honest doubter may take his stand. Doubts are not necessarily sinful. People who never think will never doubt. It could scarcely be expected that Christianity would not cause intellectual disturbances. It has to do largely with mysteries incomprehensible and unfathomable. It presents doctrines which it is not always easy to reeon- J cile even with the best ideals of good rien. Ordinarily people have poer raining for such exalted spiritual coneptions as are presented by the Son, >f Mary. We are Schooled to earthly hings, circumstances assign most of ] >ur time and energy to temporal occutatlons; we live in a world of sense, nul the constant tendency is to say hat the only things that are worth vhile are the things which are seen. There are doubts which proceed from ride and conceit; there are people vho are convinced that it is time to , reak away from a religion which ' vas instituted nearly 2000 years ago; here are those who are seriously peruaded that they know entirely too I 1 much for them to consent to accept the Gospel of Bethlehem and Calvary, the Holy Sepulchre and the Mount of Olives. Of course they deny our platform?they say that Jesus was not the Son of God. To us who believe In the Lord's divinity there is this sure refuge, this safe hiding place from the 6torms. When doubts arise, although we should do our best to dispose of them, we should remember every moment in the face of mysteries and contradictions and of alleged offenses against the intellect that the Founder of Christianity could have made no mistake because He was the Son of God. Christianity is divine because of the divinity of the Founder, and it is because of this divinity that Christianity hfis endured thus long and all changes and connections and progress shall survive until the end of time. One of j the many tokens of its heavenly char- | aeter is that it has conironrea an me powers of darkness and has carri<nl the day in every struggle and on every field. From the outset an effort has been made to banish it from the face of the earth. More than once has it appeared that "the glorious Gospel of the Blessed God" might possibly be obliterated; but somehow after each battle the banners of the cross have j waved in triumph and God's truth has | won. Does any one inquire respecting the outcome? does any one cry out "Watchman, what of the night?" The answer is Victory, a better Christendom, a nobler Church, a purer religion. Let the winds blow and the waves roar: let the powers of evil and error do their worst: let the advance and achievements of the future surpass a thousandfold the knowledge and conquests of the past. Christianity will abide with ever increasing glorv, for jt is founded on a rock, and tha rock is the incarnate Son of God. Justice Keicno Supreme. In this God's-world, with its wildwhirling eddies and mad foam-oceans, where men and nations perish as if without law, and judgment for an unjust thing is sternly delayed, dost thou think that there is, therefore, no justice? It is what the fool hath said in his heart. It is what the wise, in all times, were wise because they denied, and knew forever not to be. I tell thee again, there is nothing else but justice. One strong thing I find here below: the just thing, the true tliirtg. My friend, if thou liadst all the artillery of Woolwich trundling at thy back in support of an unjust thing, and infinite bonfires visibly waiting ahead of tlioe to blaze centuries long for thy victory on behalf of it, I would advise thee to call halt, to fling down thy baton and say. "In God's name, No!" ?Tlmmoc Pnvlrln The Hidden Sin. A majestic tree fell at its prime?fell on a calm evening, when tliere was scarcely a breath of air stirring. 'It had withstood a century of storms and now was broken off by a zephyr. The secret was disclosed at its falling. A boy's hatchet had been struck into it when it was a tender sapling. The wound had been grown over and hidden away under exuberant life, but it had never healed. There at the heart of the tree it stayed, a spof of decay, ever eating a little farther and deeper into the trunk, until at last the tree was rotted through and fell of Its own weight when it seemed to be at its best. So do many lives fall when they seem to be at their strongest because some sin or fault of youth has left its woundipg and consequent weakness at the hfeart.?Dr. J. R. Miller. (Jod'i Double Purpose. God manifestly has a double purpose in view in bestowing blessings upon an individual, namely, the good of the individual and the larger and wider benefits that others may receive through the individual. To Abraham He said. "Blessing I will bless thee, and multiplying I will multiply thee." It is an experimental fact that men are enriched in the best things by imparting them to'others. So it is that graces are enriched by leading others into gracious ways of living. So it is that character is improved by the work of character building in others, and truth more securely and deeply rooted in us by teaching it to others. To shut 1 t-t.l- 'Ul, 4 4a up one s cms aim mue uue n i^ui j? ??/ impoverish and darken one's own soul. ?Examiner. He in Earnest. There are many human forces that make for accomplishment, and the greatest of these is earnestness. Enthusiasm is the flash; earnestness the steady glow. It is that quality which shines through and glorifies the simplest deeds and plainest words. Earnestness improves where all else is powerless. If you are in earnest, ideas will develop, plans and methods will suggest themselves and results will follow. No one can work earnestly unless he Is a downright believer in the object for which he is working, and willing to back it agaiust the world.?Selected and Adapted. The Way of Freedom. If you will let Him walk with you In your streets and sit with you in your offices and be with you in your homes and tench you in your churches and abide with you as the Living\ Presence in your hearts, you, too, shall know what freedom is. and while you own yourselves t^ sons of men. know you are the sons of God.? Phillips Brooks. Sacrifice. The candle is consumed by its own flame, but its exhaustion gives light to the world. So Is he who lays himself on the altar of a noble self-sacrifice.?United Presbyterian. .Penrose's Entrance Into Politics. Senator Penrose, cf Pennsylvania, jeie-brated his birthday recently In 3h!ladelphia. A Philadelphian, during i congratulatory call, said to him: "I remember Penrose's entrance in0 politics, when he whs a boy or.tweny-four. He won the liking of Senator iuay by a quaint little speech that .he nade to the Republican leader during he presentation of a petition. "This petition was laid before Mr. Juay by a delegation whose spokesnan was insufferably long .winded and odious. The man talked to the Sen- I ttor nearly an hour. Every one stood < luring the speech, and it seemed that t would never end. "When, finally, it did end, Mr. Quay isked wearily if there were any furth>r reasons for the granting of the pcition that -the delegates had to offer. "Penrose, tall atid straight and boy- < sh, smiled and said in a low voice: " 'If you don't grant it, s;r, we'lllave that speech repeated ail over igain to you."'?Louisville Courierfournal. A pope in t^ie pulpit is no better than , 1 boss in the pew*. 1 I PE-RU-NA "up TO" UNQLR SAM?"A H quired of Any Qatarri Been Endorsed by so and Prominent People, If you would knock a stubborn man l down instead of stopping to argue with " him you would save a lot of wind and much valuable time. S BABY ONE SOLID SORE Conld Not Shut Kyei to SUe^-Kort) | Koit? on If end?Spoilt 8100 on Doctor) -15aby Grrw Worse ?Cured by Cutlcuru For So. , "A scab formed on my babv's face. pleading unti! it completely covered her from head to foot, followed by boils, having forty on her head at one time, and E more on tier body. Then her skin started '' to dry up and it became so bad she could e not shut her eyes to sleep. One month's treatment with Cuticura Soap and Ointment made a complete cure. Doctors and ~ medicines had co*t over $100, with baby growing worse. Then we spent less than S5 for Cuticura and cured her. (Signed) Mrs. G. Tucker, Jr., 335 Greenfield Ave.,'Milwaukee, Wis." It isn't the rent a man pays tha^ A keeps him moving. ; Conviction Fi When buying loose coffee or i to have in his bin, hOW do y getting ? Some queer stories a could be told, if the people wh< speak out. Could any amount of mere housekeepers to use Lion ( the leader of all packag of a century, if they had not found Purity, Strength, Flav This popular success of LION COl ?n be due only to inherent merit. T In no stronger prool of merit than tinned and Increasing popularity. If the verdict of MILLIONS housekeepers does not convl you of the merits of LION C0F1 It costs you but a trifle to bi package. It Is the easiest wa; convince yourself, and to m you a PERMANENT PURCHASE! LION COFFEE Is sold only In 1 lb. sealed paci and reaches yoa as pare and clean as when ic lei factory. Lion-head on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valaable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE VWOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, i WNCH jjpgjl 'NEW RIVAL" B & *ts thoroughly m 'nS and the use of o al Vinchester Factorr Loac HinTWBa" ter Pattern? penetration 11ally than any other shell silt cheater natent MmiMti Rival" s^e118 8ive thei Mlfl BE SURE TO GET WII \ I |HNTH'S9tl7H'EU!'VEiI| r tow wiMr no A ^RRflP , Mk WATERPROOF , OlbEP CWOTM1NO. MmWk EVERYWHERE. y ?"=y The bet motaiafa, iillcd worluntn arid ml V/WVMU j. VWU I IUU> fonousjfcp *orfcj o?r Th? arc ?*fc in . block d?!!ow for fill kinds of wet work. TOWFUj andevwhofrefltbeor^theilgnof THE is Ouoranteed to flivc salA&Cjl iifectioa wl reliable dealers sell thm til MiUK A J.TOfkcO b05TO?I.MA^.O,iA. All OICTD TOM CAfUflw CO. fatetWMBft Ctfj PUT N A M Color more (roods brighter and faster colors than any otl I'olts. Ask dealer or we will aend post paid at ivc a pack* rv igh Standard is Re* h Remedy That Has Many Trustworthy \ L1TRITE FOR. FREE BOOKLET Vl "HOW TO PREPARE A (Jl lCK. UKE AM) FRESH BORDEAUX." HE BFST KNOWN FUNGICIDE FOR Fruits, Vegetables and Potatoes. HER1CAN HORTICULTURALDISIRIBTGCO. MARTINSBURG. W. VA. Unufuctureri of Agricultural Chemicals yntte^uwu Big Baream: To better advertise the South'# Leading lustnes* College, (our scholarships are ofered young nervonaof this county at lass than ost WKITF. TODAY. lA-ALi BUSINESS COLLEGE, MacOJ^a. Dropsy II ,^9^ y Rem****9 '( swelling in 8 to 30 " / day*; effects a permanent cure JL in jo to 60 days. Trial treatment AJwjn gjven free. Nothing can befaire' iManrff Wrile Dr-H-H- Green's Sons, SSt^C. Soeclalitts. Boi B Atlanta. 8& jllows Trial anything your grocer happens ! ou know what you are ,bout coffee that is sold in bulk, I ) handle it (grocers), cared to , talk have persuaded millions of ]offee, [e coffees for over a quarter it superior to all other brands in | or and Unfformlty? FFEE I here BSTM|' LACK POWDER SHELLS. odern %nd scientific system of loadnly the best materials which make led "New Rival" Shells give betand more uniform results geners. The special paper and the Winid head used in making "New n strength to withstand reloading, , ^CHESTER MAKE OF SHELLS. GUARANTEED CURE for |R bowel trouble* blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, fpi pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more starts chronic ailments and long years of sufferii CASCARETS today, for you will never get wel right Take our advice, start with Cascareta 1 money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped booklet free. Addreas Sterling Remedy Compai fa dele: tier dye. One 10c package colors silk, wool and cottoi re. Write for free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach aad.l ** Potash^ Is necessary for cotton to produce high yields and good fibre. Write for our valuable books on L;* fertilization) they contain information that means dollars to the farmers. Sent free on request. Write now while j-ou think of it to the GERMAN KALI WORKS WATER IS A CERTAIN CURE FOR Dyspepsia 3 Sick Headache 3 Constipation TTn^ Stimulates the Liver, cures Biliousness, Sour Stomach, irregularities of the Bowels. A A1 UI?AL InC'uui. l, pnjpWU UJ M 'Ucentration; a genuine natural water. Crab Orchard Water Co., Louisville, Ky. Made1 $350 SHOES 5S. W. L Douglas makes and sells more Men's tt.3.fto slioes than, any other manufacturer In the world. Slo.GOO uwAID tossy om who cm disptero tkli lUtczasst W. L. Douglas S3.80 shoes are thh greatest sellers in the world because of their excellent style, easy fitting and > superior wearing qualities. They are just as good as those that cost from tt.~>.00 to 87.00. The only difference Is the price. W. L. Douglas tt'J.SO shoes cost more to make, nold their slinpe better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other 83.50 shoe on the market to-day. W. L Douglas guarantees their value By stumping bis name and price ou the bottom of each shoe. Look for It. Take no substitute. IVi L. Douglas S3-5t) shoes are ?ohl tit rough h is own retal I stores in the principal cities, and by shoe dealers everywhere. No matter, where you live. W. IDouglas shoes are within your reach. EQUAL SHOES. " I hate tenrit W. L. Douglas $SJ0 then for years, and consider Hum equal to any ffijOC shoe not* on the market. They hate (riven entire satisfaction." ? Win. H. Anderson, Real estate Agent, Kansas City, Mo. Boys wear W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes because they fit better, hold their shape and wear lodger than other makes. W. L. Douglas uses Corona Colt skin tn his 13AO shoes. Corona Colt 11 conceded to be the finest patent leather produced. Fast Color Eyelets will not wear Drzsry. W. L. Donfrlas has the largest shoe null order business in the world. Ho trouble u> wet a Ct by null, tseenucxtraprepxyiidellvcry. if you dei'lre further Information, tcrite for Illustrated Catalogue of Spring Styles. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Hats. ? You want only the beat. Cotton Gin Machine ry Ask any experienced V . Ginnerabout Pratt, Eagle,Smith J Winship, Munger J We would like to show fl you what thousands of life long customers say. JQB Write for catalo? and testimonial Doomei. Continental Gin Co I Charlotte, N. C., Atlanta. Ga. m Birmingham, Ala. I MemphW, Tenn., Dallas, Tax. I M CGIIS WHUt AIL llMURir-ttr IS Beat Oouxn Syrup. Taataa Jood. v7i la time. Sold by dragguia jgngXSIS3E3SDE2S^^HR IKE BOWELS ^ CANDY CATHABTIt ill mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples,dif zineaa. When your bowels dont move people than all other diseases together. It rig. No matter what ails you, ?art taking 1 and stay well until you get your bowels today under Absolute guarantee to cure or C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and ay, Chicago or New York. yo SS D V E 9 i equally well and is guaranteed to give diz Colors. MONEUEUBUO CO, UnionYille,^^^^B