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ll broken DOWN.- f Appetite?Just a Continual ^HVph McCauley, K. Chicago, Sachem of Tecnmseh ^HHHHodge, says: "Two years ago my health was completedP^os? lame that at times 1 y was hardly to 111V ilPPet*te and was ^SgwH^r'r^unahle to sleep. There P^?LSgrLh' / seemed to be no relief until * t00iJ Doan's KT- Kidney Pilis. Four ^ boxes of this remedy effected a oom^ plete and permanent eure. If suffering V humanity knew the value of Doan's Kidney Pills they would use nothing else, as it is the only positive cure I know." For sale by all dealers. Price .r?0 cents. Foster-.Milburu Co., Buffalo, X. Y. When you get to thinking that love is a lottery ycu are likely to prove it by ^ drawing a blank. FITS permanently en red. Xoflts or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kliue's Great i NerveRestorer,$2tria'bottie and treatise free Dr.R.U.Kline,Ltd..931 ArehSt..Phila., Pa. There are no less than 540 agricultural ocieties scattered over Servia. J Mrs. TVinelow's Soothing Syrup for children r teething.soften the mims, reduces inP. animation,allays pain,cures wind colic,lioc.abottle. Asparagus is said to be the oldest plant used for food. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.?N. W. Saxcel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. Immigration into Canada is increasing rapidly. Itch cured in ."50 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never Fails. Sold by all druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly tilled by Dr. E. Detchon. Crawiorosville. tnd. tCAR LAWS AND RULES. Church?There is a law against expectorating in the cars in New York, is there not? Gotham?(Xa, res. "2s"And is there not a law against atanding on the platform?" "Certainly there is," I "I suppose, of course, there's a rule against getting off a car while it is. in motion?' "Oh, yes, there are laws and rules against doing everything in the cars except standing up!"?Yonkers Statesman. It's a poor grace that doesn't make a man gracious. A boy go^b to school so as to have a lot to unlearn when he con es out. Dyspepsia of Women ABSOLUTELY NEEDLESS AGONY Caned by Uterine Disorders end Cared by Lyflla E. fisEBan t vegeiao i uonpeuna A great many women su ffer with a form of indigestion or dyspepsia whioh M does not seem to yield to ordinary treatment While the symptom; seem to be similar to those of ordinary indigestion. yet the medicines universally pre\ scribed do not seem to restore the pail tient's normal condition. ^\ v I ^ Mrs. Pinkham claims that there is a kind of dyspepsia that is caused by a derangement of the female organism, and which, while it causes a disturbance similar to ordinary indigestion-, cannot be relieved without a medicine which not only acts as a stomach tonic, but has peculiar uterine-tonic effects also. As proof of this theory we call attention to the case of Mrs. Maggie Wright, Brooklyn, N. Y.. who was f<t completely cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after every * thing else bad failed. She writes: " For two years I suffered with dyspepsia A. which so degenerated my entire system that I was unable to attend to uiy daily duties. I felt weak and nervous, and nothing that I ate tasted good and it caused a dis.urbanoe in my stomach. I tried different dyspepsia cures, bat nothing seemed to help sue. I was advised to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, and was happily surprised to find that it acted like a fine tonic, and in a few days I began.to enjey and properly digest my food. My recevery wai rapid, ana in five weeks I was a well woman. I have recommended it to maiyr suffering women/' No other medicine in the world has received auch widespread and unqualified endorsement,or hassuch a record of cures of female troubles, as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound THE FISH BRAND SUCKER l a i/n iirr> restrain n value:u rnium "A good many yean ago 1 bought a FISH BRAND Slicker, and it ha* proven a valued friend for many a ?:ortny day, bat now k it getting old and I matt bare another. Please tend me a price-StL** (Tte bum of Ota wo*th? doctor, obb'fod to bo oat is *11 ton* of wootkor, will bo (iroo to oppUcotloa.) HIGHEST AWARH WOUfS HIE. MM. 1^^.* TOWER CANADIAN COMPANY, Limited oj >t-ft Tomato, Canada Wet Weather Clothinf, Sofia, and Hatafbr all kinda of wet wort: or sport RITE FOR FREE BOOKLET 'HOW TO PREPARE A QUICK, SURE AND FRESH BORDEAUX." THE BFST KNOWN FUNGICIDE FOR Fruits, Vegetables and l'otatoes. AMERICAN HORTICULTURAL DISiRIB'T'GCO. MARTINSBURG. W. VA. Manufacturers of Agricultural Chemical* So. 1G. if md Bfst Cough Syrup. Tusk * 3ood. (J?o Fl THE TULTIT. ! A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON EY THE REV. F. F. SHANNON. Subject: The Thousandfold Man. Brooklyn, X. Y.?Sunday morning, in (Jrace M. E. Church, the pastor, the i Rev. Frederick F. Shannon, had for his subject "The Thousandfold Man." The text was from Joshua xxiii:10: "One man of you shall chase a thousand: for the Lord your Clod. He it is that tighteth for you, as He spake unto you." Mr. Shannon said: j World building is not so interesting as man building. Some philosophers held that tasks are interesting in pro JSVIUUU U!> iUf 111 IL1V. lilt IU |il'liuiui, If this be good logic, tben swinging worlds into space must take secondary rank to building a man in time. We have no intimation that God bad any trouble stringing planets along the path of His power. Yet tbe centuries unite in tbe verdict that God has bad much trouble in producing tbe divine style of manhood. Therefore, it is safe to conclude that God never undertook a vaster plan than to build a man. Worlds play out His purposes in the harmony of gravitation. They i spell out His plans in the law of obcj dience. But man ofttimes thwarts i those purposes and destroys those ' plans by setting his own will over | against the will of God. Thus he ! wanders, a kind of lost human pleiad. | through the space called time, always I and ever coming to himself, but never ; wholly arrived. Yet man is God's human worldgreater than any star-world twinkling in space, because he thinks, loves, feels and wills. Now, some meu exercise these functions more largely than their fellows. Then we label them with that ancient degree called greatness. After conferring the degree. we spend the rest of our lives musing over what sjjch men did when they got together. They may have been great thinkers, great lighters, great talkers, great writers, or great ftnATwlc Kiit in tho Inst finfllvsift thp greatness men adore is the adoration great men have given to God. This is why we never tire of studying the friendship of Moses and Joshua. They are .two links in the golden chain wbirh moors this old world to the throne of God. Napoleon said that history is a fable about which men are agreed. Rather say history is a stream flowing out from the Eternal Heart Sitting along its shores, like deathless sentinels, are the men God raised up for handing His name and truth down the ages. Our text asks for a consideration of the thousandfold man, and the reason for his multiplied power. "One man of you shall chase a thousand!" More startliug words could hardly knock at the door of the human intellect. They are too vast in their outranging meaning to be easily comprehecded. Naturally enough, the mind asks for a secoud consideration of them. But a second reading fails to rob them of their significance. Really big things don't grow less on second sight. Like St. Peter's, their bigness only helps the mind expand to a more capable appreciation of their true dimensions. It is so with men. and it is so with the great objects in nature. Just so a great sentence like this, pregnant with large thought, is not stripped or its treasure by a second or third reading. It is a thought centre round J which the mind may revolve with iu! froasiug profit. Strictly speaking, then, what is ; meant by one man chasing a thousand? Does it mean that one man, by his physical prowess, can drive a tbou- : sand men before him? You wonder i at the folly of such a question. Still I some people re so fond of measuring 1 life and men by the yardstick of pbysi- j oal bulk that its absurdity may mock j tbem into a better view. Physical i things never (lid run smoothly on a spiritual track: and they never will, j because it is impossible. Tim thou- i sandfold man. according to Joshua, is ' the man in league with God. housing ' God's purposes and co-operating with j God's plans, awaiting God's signals , and answering God's voices, watching { God's strides in history an 1 hearing \ God's truth, dropped in golden num1 hers, from "the harp of God's eternal I years." He is the man with his feet ! on .he earth, his head among the stars, j and his heart located in heaven, bej cause heaven is located in his heart, i He is the son of yesterday, the man of to-day, the lieif of.to-morrow?grateful for yesterday's goodness, inspired oy to-day's blessings, and rejoicing In to-morrow's hopes. And be is all this because he is In league with God, and knows it; because he is in love with God. and feels it: because he is living in obedience to God, and wills it. Moreover, the thousandfold man Is the man God waits for. It has ever been "one man of you" who has opened the largest doors of opportunity and achievement in the history of the world. One man and God?they are absolutely unconquerable. Grasping the tangled threads of history, they have tied them into one solid knot of divine purpose. And that purpose for ever stands the pledge of a better world and a nobler race. Do you wonder that even God can afford to wait for such a man? Then let your wonder give away before this mighty fact: God has to wait, so long as the world remains constituted as it is. for a man to come forward and say, "Here am I?use me." God answers back. "1 have to cse you, because I haven't anything else to use." When a man comes out like that from the littleness of self into the largeness of God, that moment he stands forth in God's universe a thousandfold man! Chasing a thousand becomes the business of his life. Chasing a thousand temptations, chasing a thousand sins, chasing a thousand civic wrongs, chasing a thousand social evils! But does he stop there? Never! Chasing a thousand lost men toward God. chasing them into fellowship with Jesus Christ, chasing them up from their haunts of sin toward the splendor touched peaks of a pure and radiant manhood! That is the mission of the thousandfold man. And in these days the mission is crying as with the lips of God. Where is the man? Furthermore, ir history teacnes one lesson it is this?God has His waits and pauses. And for what? Why, for some man to lay hold of His purposes and carry them out. God has been waiting, and still waits, for men in the everyday walks of life to be true to Him. O, men, that means you and that means me! God calls a few men to carry on great reforms. He calls all men to carry on a reform within their own lives. And it is the man who will do this in God's way, and in the spirit of Jesus Christ, that becomes the thousandfold man. He is i the determining factor in this world's 1 progress toward universal rigkteousI noss. lie holds the balance of power which will usher in the millennial dawn. Gone forever the man fearing spirit. Gone forever that stolid iiulif- j ference. Gone forever that fast shut ' , ^^ Few Instances. "Has ^Ver happened in your professiona^Bfperience that an innocent man waflrent to prison?" was asked of a Ba?n criminal lawyer. "It h*," was the prompt reply. "J | wms just figuring on that yesterday. ' 0! the 400 criminal cases I have defended about fifty of my clients were convicted and sent up." "And they were innocent?" pocketbook. Ho lives for! God. He talks for God. He gives for God. Consider, also, one of the two reasons , for the multiplied power of tlie thousandfold man: "For the Lord your God. He it is that tighteth for you." Any man is braver for the battle if he knows that God is his champion. He may have been ready to show the 1 white flag, leave the field in defeat, i steal away in disgrace. Then let him , lay vital hold of the truth that God is fighting for him. Instantly every ingredient of cowardice will vanish from liis nature. Something akin to omni- [ potence begins to.play along the nerve of his arm. The soul's battlesongs of 1 victory began to swell the rising liar- ' monies in his heart. Championed by 1 God. lie knows that, though the worlds < may fall, he shall not meet with de- . feat. Camping along the path of his destiny is the Sleepless General, who ? holds the stars in His hand, and the interests of His child in His heart. What magnificent music for the soul , to hear, as we go out to life's battle: ' , "For the Lord your God, He it is that Bghteth for you." ' Let us give the truth its proper set- ; ting in our lives. We hear so much ' > fmen fighting God's battles. And we rejoice that this is so. But let not the < lesser truth obscure the greater?that < God is fighting our battles. And do j we not sometimes get so busy fighting , God's battles that we forget that God. . is fighting our battles, which is of much more importance. It may be J that God could get along without our reinforcements, after all. But if God's 1 troops fail to come up, a spiritual Wa- i terloo awaits us for certain. Let us \ make room for this neglected truth in >ur creed. It will make us better soldiers of the cross. It is one of the silent forces which builds the thousandfold man. But some man says, "How does God 5ght for me? I want to know." God s not in the habit of doing things as man does them. Therefore, it Is safe to conclude that God does not tight for i as after the manner of men. His methods are not man's methods, and His weapons are not carnal weapons. . Briefly, here are a few battlefleftls where God has fought for you: On 1 the Judean plains shepherds are ' watching their flocks by night. Sud- ' denly the heavens are musical with :hoirs of singing angels. Then one ?reat golden star, as if driven out of Its course by the finger of God to ( signal the shepherds, trembles above , he manger. Coming to the spot, they 3nd the babe wrapped in swadling ?lothes. That was the beginning of God's greatest battle for you?and the 1 battlefield was a manger! But that 1 Babe increased in stature and wis- i lorn. He reacnett tne nignest type 01 , nanhood known to man or God. Great ( is a teacher, He was greater as a man. t Great as a man. He was greater as a . God. for in Him the fullness of Godbead made its home. For the first ' lime, man was taught by a Life how to live his own life. God fought for rou in the incarnation of His Son. God fought for you in the mysterious i igony of Gethsemane. God fought for i rou in the blood-red suffering of Cal- } rary. God fought for you in the dark- { uess of the tomb. God fought for you . Dn Mount Olivet, when Christ was t taken up, the glory of His ascending body throwing a shining splendor over ( the track yours will go. In countless ways, the Lord your God, He it is that Bghteth for you! He fights for you in the blessings He rains upon you day by day. In your home, in your ? business, in your society, in every ^ privilege you enjoy, God fights for i you. God's battlefields are smokeless, b hut they are victorious! We discover the second reason for the multiplied power of the thousandfold man in the last clause of my text: "As He spake Unto you." It is Josh- j ua's way of telling us that God always keeps His engagements. "O," says i.. some one, "he is talking about God's ; promises now?and they are old." ! Yes, let us admit the promises are t old. But in growing old they have j kept their youth. What sturdy young- I a sters they arc! We can't afford to j rule them out on account of age. Most ; ^ ,of the best things in this world are : 6 old. The sun is old. the stars are old, ; the ocean is old. the mountain is old, ? ' i- -i l h love is oia, music is oiu, lamer is uiy, i . mother is old, our dearest friends are j old. But we are not ashamed of them on that account. So God's promises i are old. But they have grown old so '] gracefully that we ought to be proud to walk life's pathway, keeping step to $ their mighty music. What would we 11 do without them? Certainly this world would he a very lonely place, if the t old promises didn't now and then g steal into our hearts and hush their fears. A man's spiritual exchequer is worth something when he knows it is v backed by promises as changeless as Q God Himself. "I will never leave thee nor lorsake thee." That promise alone i is enough to make a man a spiritual millionaire. But, remember there are r over 33,000 in God's Word that sing t the same tune. The thousandfold man makes much of the old promises, be- v cause they have made much oi him, ^ Sermonritea. j God keeps a reu aid for the man who ^ who does right. It is a lopsided religion that leaves j, the coachman at the curb. The best evidence of your own salvation is your interest in that of others. When God takes our hand He asks ns to take the hand of another. There is no comfort in Repose when its head is pillowed on an aching heart. The circumference of influence depends upon the man at the centre of the circle. By the prayerful study of the Scriptures comes the knowledge of the divine will. Many a Darent has entered the gates of pearl D^cause the hand of a little child was on the latch.?United Pres byterian. HARD TIMES FOR BABIES. Frequently Made Martyrs to uia Established Customs. Even in some civilized countries babies still have hard times. In parts of Flanders the mothers wind linen cloths around the heads of their children because it is considered beautiful there for girls to have flat temples. In parts of France there is still a worse custom. The style in heads there is to have the back of the skull as flat as possible, so a board is strapped to the back of the infant's head. In Brittany many houses have a pole fastoned in the floor. Attached t> this is a movable arm that is free to turn completely around the upright. The babies are strapped to this arm, and are expected to amuse themselves by lurching around and around in a ring. The Breton peasants imagine that it teaches them to walk, and they don't seem to care that it makes their legs bandy. | It is better to be doing a few hear, enly things than to be dreaming many heavenly thoughts. u "They must have been. When J \ have appealed a case to the last court wept while addressing the jury, talk > pd of the man's dear old mother and aa good as proved an alibi in his case the jury must have rendered a verdict af guilty simply through ignorance oj stupidity." Had a. Derelict fn Tow. Admiral Evans one day noticed two sailors in earnest confab. One of them was imparting information to his companion of a very agreeable nature, judging from his beaming coun- 1 ' tenance. The admiral, in relating the inci- I 1 lent, says the^ manner of the speaker ! irnused him very much. As he passed by the mate ra^ed his voice, j with the unmistakable intention of aeing overheard, saying to his com- , panion: "I mean to give up this seafaring ife when my time is out. I am go? ? ~ n...? o U'rtmon ! ill^ VU 111(111 j ft 1 tvft " 4uv T? nvuioua he derelict of a butcher." "Tody'?" Avatar. Johnson was compiling the dictionary. ? ' Yes," he explained, "I'm Irying to collect a few words for the ci^jus posters." ^ Starting with "aggregation," he hunted for polysyllables. The complaint that New Yorkers lurry too much fails to take into ac;ount that most of the crowds are lurrying to get out of the city, avers ' he Washington Evening Star.. 1 i A Heavy Fine. 1 Under the Elkins law any railroad 1 company which pays rebates in any i form, or any shipper who accepts them, 1 Is liable to a fine of from S1000 to 520,000 upon conviction. It also pro- 1 hiblts the carrying of freight at less than the published tariffs. Th^. Inter- 1 3tate Commerce Commission is empowered to detect and prosecute violators 1 Df this statute. President Knapp, of the commission, states that since this law was passed rebate paying has been as rare as forgery. 1 The Eternal Faminine. I Grandfather, doing some carpentry ivork, and finding he needed some g screws, sent little Mary to the hard- ( vare store to get some for him. When ihe got there she could not remember ] he word "screw." At last she said: I 'Grandpa wants some nails with ruffles j >n."?Life. _ 1 Children Dying. ^ 1 At this season, of the year, when warm lays followed by cool nights and the eating 1 if fruit and vegetables effecting the stom- I k:ii, Doweis, etc., ve near ui su umui v.-unIren dying. Give them Dr. Biggcre' Hack- j eberry Cordial, the great specific for all >owel troubles and children teething. Sold by all Druggists, 25 and 50c. bottle. Pointed Paragraphs. f Book-keepers are merely figureheads f n the busineEs. The motto of some men is, "Give me ? iberty or give me debt." x A man's most distant relatives are t hose who have the most money. t Most women would rather patch up * quarrel than darn their stockings. I Many a good name has been given s he tar and feather degree by idle ges- 8 ip. If a man is unable to keep his word ie can find plenty more in the die- f icnary. When money talks to the most of us t t is the ether end of a long-distance . phone. When a married man laughs in his J leep his wife imagines he is dreaming hat he is a bachelor. ^ There are a few rising young men i:i his world, but the majority keep their eats in a crowded car. , Owing to the high price of wool, the i. rolf finds it rather expensive mas;uerading in sheep's clothing. . There is mighty little poetry in rais- j ng a family of ten. t A man is so unreasonable he would ? ather pay doctor's bills than milliners' , tills. \ Twins are like having pneumonia vhen you expected to go to a baseball j, ame. The devil could get a very big salary I f he would come up and live in New fork. You can generally tell when a girl tas been kissed before by the way she 0 iretends she hasn't. .. "J HONEST CONFESSION. h A Doctor'* Talk on food. > g There are no fairer set of men on g earth than the doctors. Qfd when they find they have been in error they are usually apt to wake honest and manly confession of the fact. A case in point is that of an eminent practitioner, one of the good old school, who lives in Texas. His plain, unvarnished tale needs no dressing up: "I had always had an intense prejudice, which I can now see was unwarrantable and unreasonable, against all muchly advertised foods. Hence, I never read a line of the many 'ads.' of GAipe-Nuts, nor tested the food till last winter. "While in Corpus Christi for my health, and visiting my youngest son. who has four of the ruddiest, healthiest little boys I ever saw, I ate my first dish of Grape-Nuts food for sup per with my little grandsons. I became exceedingly fond of it and have eaten a package of it every week since, and find it a delicious, refreshing and strengthening food, leaving no ill effects whatever, causing no eructations (with which I was formerly much troubled), no sense of fullness, nausea, nor distress of stomach in any way. "There is* no other food that agrees with me so well, or sits as lightly or pleasantly upon my stomach as this does, I am stronger and more active since I began the use of Grape-Nuts than I have been for ten years, and am no longer troubled with nausea and indigestion." Name given by rosturn Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Look in each pkg. for the famous little book, "#hc ltoad to Wellville." J Largest Moose on Record. Probably the largest mobse of whlcl there Is reliable record was shot b;! Carl Rungius, the animal painter, ii New Brunswick, in 1901. This ?rea beast stood seven feet high at thi : shoulders and the length of its heat and body together was nine feet sevei inches. The Alaskan moose have thi largest antlers, and one pair from ai animal shot on the Kenai peninsuli has a spread of 78*? inches, and ha: 34 points^ With the dry skull to whicl they are attached, these antlers weigl 93'i pounds, a weight which nothin? but an animal of gigantic strengtl could carry at top speed over tht roughest ground" and through thickij itaa/IaH nnnntrv nvuuvu v\/uuv. j . Their Choice of Hymns. When Burton Holmes, the lecturer, was in England the past summer he visited a famous prison. He was there on Sunday and attended the church services. The prisoners were permitted to select the hymns that they were to sing, and Mr. Holmes said that they threw much feeling into "Free From the Law, O Happy Condition." The last hymn was "God Be With You Till We Meet Again." This seemed curious to the visitor, especially as he noticed that many of the convicts smiled broadly while singing. He inquired about the song, and the warden explained that a prisoner who had been there for years was tc be discharged the next day.?Boston Transcript. Two Blind Brothers. M A wonderful couple are the BarA brothers, who live on Broad street Although they are bcth totally blind and have been so afflicted since birth they are well educated and well read They are about twenty and twenty three years of age, respectively rhey go arm in arm wherever they want to go, without the aty of a guide or even a walking cane. They are familiar with the town and go about the streets, dodging teams and streei cars and never jostle against their relk>w pedestrians. The frequently visit the postofflce and can go to any store In town if given ordinary directions for finding it. They are cheer ful and get more out of life than many who are more fortunate.?Atlanta Constitution. Use Longman ? Marlines Paint. Don't pay $1.50 a gallon for linseed oil, vhich you do in rcady-for-use paint. Buy oil fresh from the barrel at 00 cents >er gallon, and mix it with Longman & Vlartinez L. & M. Paint. It makes paint cost about $1.20 per ;allon. James S. Barron. President Manchester Cotton Mills, Rock Hill, S. C.. writes: 'In 1883 I painted my residence with L. & VI. It |>oks better than a great many louses painted three years ago. ' Sold everywhere and by Longman & Hartinez, New York. Paint Makers for fifty Years. Bulgaria is placing immense orders for gar material in Kurope. MO TONGUE CAN TELL ^ow T SnflTar?fl With Ilrlainr? And Bleeding Eczema Until Cured by Cuticura. "No tongue can tell how I suffered for ive years with u terribly painful, itching ind bleeding eczema, my body and face >eing corered with sores. Never in my iie did I experience such awful suffering, ind I longed for death, which I fell was lear. I had tried doctors and medicines vithout success, but my mother insisted j hat I try Cuticrfra. I felt better after the ; irst bath with Cuticura Soap, and one ap S ilication of Cuticura Ointment, and was j ,oon entirely well. (Signed) Mrs. A. bit- j on, lielievue, Mich." Frmc'u Printing Trade Exhibition, Following British precedent of 11)04, in intentational exhibition of printing, lapermaking. journalism, engraving ind all graphic arts Is to be held in Paris in 190G. It is to be the largest i ihow of the kind ever held. Paper j nanufacturing and wood pulp making j vill, it is stated, be shown i:i operation, j How'* This.* We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for my case of Oatarro thai cannot be curod b/ rail's Catarru Cura. t. J. cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, Lave known F.J. fbeney lor the last 16 years, and believe him >erfectly honorable in all business transacions and financially able to carry out any bligations made by their Arm. Vest <k Tauax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0, Valuing, aixxix & Mietix, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taxea Internally, aotngdirectly upon the blood and mucoassuraces of the system. Testimonials sent free. 'rloe,75c. per bottle, dold oy all Druggists. Take Hail's Family Pill* for constipation. A Sickle's Wartb of Jumps. "A small boy came into my store the ther day," remarked the druggist, and asked for five cents' worth of lumps.' Now what do you suppose ie wanted?" When evervbodv cave It no the drusr law iviu iucui n uub uic ia/j vau uwtu i ent for was bops.?New York Press. I KM premiums free to Cut out these coupon the many articles and < MK you get a superior bakin ^ossesses e) "' ' - ? QUEEN OF ACT PRAIS! v.v.v/.wjwwwwww . v jj } ^ I ;! ~ ' ^ ^IISS JULIA ?J Heartily Approves of Pe ; iW,msmwwvw?WM 1 TX a recent letter to The Peruna Medi-1 a I _ n if lf.^1 UAn< I A. Cine lO? .ULSS uuua jununc, ui V-" II York City, writes the following: "I am glad to write my en- 1 dorsement of the great remedy, Jferuna, as a nerve tonic. I do F mo most heartily."?Julia Mar- ' loxce. . ' I Nervousness is very comrflon among e women. This condition is due to anemic a nerve centres. The nerve centres are the reservoirs of nervous vitality. These centres become bloodless for want of proper nutrition. This is especially true in the spring! ' season. Every spring a host of invalids i I Say Plainly to That you want LION CC being a square man, will m thing else. You may not c What About the United I of housekeepers who have for over a quarter of Is there any stronger pro I 1 ib. J *1 Lion-head on ev 1 Save these Lion-heads fc SOLD BY GROCERS jj.' ' wo WORfflS "I write to let 700 know bow I appreciate yonr Ca?csreit. 1 commenced taking them last November and took two ten cent boxes and passed a tape- i worm 14 ft. long. Then I commenced taking them I again and Wednesday. April Uh, I passed another tape worm 28 ft. long and over a thousand small j worms. Previous to my taking Caacareta 1 didn't I know I bad a tape-worm. 1 always bad a small f. Brown. 1M Franklin St.. Brooklyn, H. T. The Dowels ^ SWwWfl'VWtf candycathartic Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Haver Sicken. Weaken or Gripe, 10c, 25c, tOc. Haver sold in balk. The genuine tablet stamped CCO. fj Guaranteed to euro or your money back. I Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 994 \ IHUAL SALE. TEH MUJOM BOOS SIPS Thompson's Eyewater ( 80. i?. a gp Free Premiums duce Good Luck Baking Powder, we are all users. On the label of every can wil s and save them. The little gift book in: rells how to get them fTC . Besides th g powder and it costs you but 10c per pou OD LUCK ccellent leavening aualities. It is powerful in ger nakes exceedingly light bakings. Its positive pu od baking results. Through these superior qua ng powder has reached the largest sale of any bak Id. Carloads and trainloads are shipped to all y. This tremendous sale makes it possible fo tie price of 10c per pound can. Insist upon hs ing Powder and get a superior article at a modi THE SOUTHERN MFG. CO. Blchmond, Va. BESSES I ES PE-RU-NA.I \W WiVAV.V.V/WMW ^ runa For (he Nerves. ' WMWWAVAWWMMW. " re produced as the direct result of weafc ierves. This can be easily obviated by using 'eruna. Peruna strikes at the root oC 1 he difficulty by correcting the digestion. Digestion furnishes nutrition for th* lerve centres. Properly digested food iirnishes these reservoirs of life with vital* ty which leads to strong, steady nerve* nd thus nourishes life. Peruna is in great favor among women, specially those who have vocations that re trying to the nerves. Buy a bottle of Peruna to-day. If you do not receive all the benefit* from Peruna that you expected. write to Dr. S. B. Hartman, ColumbuH, Ohio. Your Grocer FFEE always, and he, ot try to sell you anyare for our opinion, but Judgment of Mfllioas ' used LION COFFEE a century ? of of merit, than the , onfidence of Ox People ver Increasing popularity y COFFEE Is carefully sell at the plantation, shipped t to our various factories, e it is skillfully roosted and ally packed In sealed pack unlike loose coffee, which posed to germs, dost, In, etc. LION COFFEE reaches is pore and clean as when t the factory. Sold only In >ackages. ery package. >r valuable premiums. > EVERYWHERE OLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. Better Fruits-Better Profits] Better peaches, apples, pears and I use a iciuiiici vvmaiiiiu| uvi tvw than 10 per cent, actual Potash 4 Send/or our practical books ofin.'oAmtionj A they are not advertising pamphlets, booming' I Ell | special fertilisers, but are authoritative m fli h treatises. Sent free for the asking. ^4 VA OEJUUN KAU WOSfkS j?/j NewVsrt?MNassaaSt.,ar JhM * ) Atlanta. Qs." . *QaEBS offering valuable I be found a coupon. side each can illustrates tesa valuable premiums, Powder J b-. ' I