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and S5m?| Get the Cease. mistake ^H^^^^^H^Bidder to the cure the Doan's cured thousands. i n c'. Hunter, burg. Department. and ; residiug at -7-9 / Wylie avenue, ^M^Twas three years ago that I used ^Boat's Kidney Pills for an attack of PHdmV trouble that was mostly back- ! ache, and they fixed me up tine. There I , is no mistake about that, aid if 1 should ever be troubled again 1 would get tuem nrst tmng, as 1 Know wuat i tbey are." For sale by all dealers. Price ~>0 cents. Foster-Mi!burn Co., Buffalo, X. Y. i ' |i Pointed Paragraphs. " Nothing beats a good wife?except i a bad husband. So. 17. If yon are willing God should he your i guide He will be your guard. 1 ^FITS permanently cored. Noflts or !nrvou?- ! j after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great j^^^^Beetorer,y2trialbottle and trea'ise free ^P^rH.KLiXL,Ltd..'J31 ArchSt..Fhila., Pa. ; In some of the London schools the boys I take lessons in cooking. Ask Tonr Dealer For Allen's Foot-Ease. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions. Swollen. Sore, Hot. Cal lous.Aohin; . Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makesnowortlghtshoeseasy. At 1 all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac- < cpt no substitute. Sample mailed Fees, , Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRov.N. Y. < The crown forests of Russia comprise j 30,000,000 acres belonging to the Czar. ( Popular Car*. ? /' The Pope-Hartford and Pope-Tribune gasoline ears and runabouts meet tne specific demands of a large class of automobile users. They are simple in constiuction, free from complication and efficient. Prices 1 from MOO to $1600. For finely illustrated 1 catalogues and descriptive matter, address Dept. A, Pope Manufacture g Co., Hartford. Conn. Glass houses may soon be made stoneproof. Piao'a Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.?Wk. , O. Ekdslkt. Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. A former arxnv officer plays a hand organ ] on the "streets of Sheffield, England. Mrs. Wiuslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething,soften the gums, reduces inG*mmation.allayspaiu.cures wind colic,25c.a bottle. | I Fruits grown in China are usually in| ferior in flavor. ] Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'a . Sanitary Lotion: Never Tails. Sold by all | druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly tilled 1 I byJSp^E. Detckon. Crawfordaville, lnd. j V~ The Peruvian railways have all be?n consolidated. 1 1 Coldness of Spring Water. I 1 "It is a fact," remarked the head ! ] nf a. certain fascinating soda water I i department, "that spring water keeps i .bolder very much longer than ordi- I nary river water, such as Is served 1 through Philadelphia water pipes, t You can make the test, even ir sum- < mer, by going to Fairmount park, 1 drawing a jug of spring water, bring- i ing it home and putting it in your i cellar. Not only will it not ge* wann i during the trip to your house, t>ut it will remain much colder than will r hydra-t water drawn and kept be- o side it for a number of hours. This ; j is said to be due to the lack of warm ? animal matter in the spring water, t which iB filtered through the earth. t At any rate, it's a great pity we f couldn't have just such water here in e Philadelphia."?Philadelphia Record. PAINFUL I Suggestions How to F Sufferi While no woman is entirely free from j V periodical suffering, it does not sc em to K be the plan of nature that women should suffer so severely. Menstrua- ? tion is a severo strain on a woman's q vitality. If it is painful or irregular n something is wrong which shor-ld be fi set right or it will lead to a serio is de- C rangement of the whole female organinn. More than fifty thousand women * have testified in grateful letters to Mrs. t Pinkham that Lydia E. Pinkham's C Vegetable Compound overcomes pain- r ful and irregular menstruation. y It provides a safe and sure way of escape from distressing and dangerous > weaknesses and diseases. v The two following letters tell so con- ' incingly what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will do for jv ? ?o?nnt faU tn hrintr hnnft t WUUUCU, KUWJ vwuuv. ? c> to thousands of sufferers. I c Miss Nellie Holmes of 540 N. Davi-!c ion Street, Buffalo, N. Y., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham " Yaur medicine is indeed an ideal medicine for women. I suffered misery for years with T painful periods, headaches, and bearing-down 1 pains. I consulted two different physicians v but failed to pet any relief. A friend from t the East advised me to try Lvdia E. Pink- a ham's Vegetable Compound. 1 did so, and \ no longer suffer as I did before. My periods ; s are natural: every ache and pain is gene, and ; my general health is much improved. I [ r advise all women who suffer to take Lydia , I E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." J Mrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D., 1 ' writes: 1 Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? ] "I might have hare been spared many 1 pi ?ir at suffering and pain had I only ^ known of the efficacy of Lydia K. Pinkham s < A* trs. PWLhtB't Airke-i WMMU t Lose Her Kar? Healed Without a Blemish?Mother Thanks Culicura. '"Mv little girl had eczema very bad when she was ten months old. I thought she would lose her right ear. It had turned black, and her face was like a piece of raw meat, and very sore. It would bleed when 1 washed her. and 1 had to keep cloths on it day and night. There was not a clear spot on her face when I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and now it is completely healed, without scar or blemish, which is more than I had hoped for. (Signed) Mrs. Ttosc Ether, 201 Eckford St., Brooklyn, X. Y." Ivor? Congratulation*. A very famous American dentist met the Eugiish husband of an American friend of mine with the gonial congratulation: "My dear sir. I wish you Joy! You have married a first-rate set of teeth."?Fortnightly Review. T)?xfnM< Cannot Hp Curo 1 by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused oy an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is iuflamed you have a rumblingsound or imperlect heariug, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result. and unless the inflammation can be take > out and this tube restored to its norma <>udition, hearing trill be destroyed forevm. Nino cases out of ten are caused by catarru, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh That cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. .Seed for circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hail's Family Pills for constipation. English Shopkeeper*. The upper class iu England is sinkng; the iniudle is rising rapidly, and ;liose who belong to the former keep shops in assumed names, while those who belong to the latter endeavor to occeai that they themselves are conlected with trade. Thr conversation )f both, however, betrays that they ire shopkeepers.?London Truth. Cannot Reduce a Rate. It is stated in Washington that under the Townsend rate bill if a rate is fixed by the commission it cannot be lowered by a railroad. Should an emergency arise calling for a decreased rate ihe railroads or shippers would have to appeal again to the commls?S/n?% Vi siwsv Ka! n rm vy a In+ttustiv n Hati-o/I aiuu, iunc uriiig uv lauiuuc uuvnuit whatever the circumstances. Hitherto a maximum rate has been the rule, but no such concession is made under the proposed legislation. Courting Bad Luck. ' There Is an old superstition that it Is bad luck to burn a piece of bread. The origin of this is obvious, though probably few Indeed of those who religiously adhere to the superstition aave paused to think that it dates from those times when famines were part of the regular order of life. Famine no longer troubles the pagination of men; but the broad ruth under the foolish superstition emains. Burning bread Isn't any nore likely to bring bad luck than vasting it in another way. But wastng anything in any way is extreme >rovocation to what we call "bad uck." If the grown people who habiually waste do not suffer for it their children surely will?for they will follow the example set them, and are Indeed is it that a family can survive the faults of two successive vasteful generations. Waste is not generosity; thrift is tot stinginess. There are millions f Americans, especially among the poor and the not-too-well-off, who >eem to think so. A thorough invesigation would place at the head of he list of causes of poverty; "Wasteulness inherited from wasteful parnts."?Saturday Evening Post. .. PERIODS ind Relief from Such :ng. egetable Compound sooner; for I have tried > many remedies without help. 44 I dreaded the approach of my menstrual ariod every month, as it meant so much pain id suffering for me, but after I hod used the ompound two months I became regular and aturol and am now perfectly well and free om pain at my monthly periods. I am very rateful for what Lydia E. Pinkham's VegeibleCompound has done for me." Such testimonj* should be accepted >y all women as convincing evidence hat Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable 'ompound stands without a peer as a emedy for all the distressing ills of eomen. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound rests upon the vell-earned gratitude of American eomen. When women are troubled with irregilar, suppressed or painful menstruaion, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulieration of the womb, that bearinglown feeling, inflammation of the >varies, backache, bloating, (or flatuency). general debility, indigestion and lervous prostration, or are beset with iuch symptoms as dizziness, faintness, assitude, excitability, irritability, nerousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, hey should remember there is one tried ,nd true remedy, Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes uch troubles. Refuse to buy any other nedicine, for you need the best. Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything ibout your sickness you do not luderstaud. She will treat you with kludness and her advice is ree. No woman ever regretted writing her and she has helped thousands. Address Lynn, Mass. i Best IMentaafe a W?aai'a Kit. t Hw ELOQUENT KERMON BY u DEAN F. K. SA^|?S. OF J Subject: lie Most Eeantiful Book. ? : 1 Brooklyn, X. Y.?In the absence of j 0 Dr. A. J. Lyman, the pastor, the pulpit I r of South Congregational Church was j ? occupied Sunday by Dean F. K. San- ; 1 ders, D. D.. the head of the Divinity I School of Yale University. He took s for his subject "The Most Beautiful * Book in the World," and said: ? My theme rests on the authority of 1 one renowned for his literary knowl- ' edge, Kenan, who is deservedly famous J as a student of literature and of tho Bible. He declared that the gospel of c Luke was the most beautiful book in f the world. No cue can, of course, test j this statement who is not familiar \ * ' - * 1 n<- 11.- I I wuu toe gospei. 10 xue supt-iuuui i reader it is only one of the stories of | s the life of Jesus. The skill, the power, | I the pathos and the sympathy of the j writer become clearer with every rereading of the book. An early tradition spoke of Luke the painter, and said he had painted a portrait of the Virgin. That tradition, whether true , or not. was not very far from right. ! It may be said that he gave us, in a fashion, the most beautiful picture of Mary of Nazareth; it sttfnds out before us with lively distinctness. Everything goes to show that Luke was a Greek, familiar with the best literature of his day, a keen observer and careful investigator. He seems to have had unusual opportunity for observing and describing the life and personality of the < Lord. Among other things he gives evidence of possessing the true historic spirit. You will notice how he is interested in tracing the Lord's active ministry from place to place. The story is told in an orderly fashion that helps us to arrange the facts far better than the other gospels could. You will notice also that Luke is fond of following up the physical and moral growth of our Lord. He is also careful to connect his story with the history of the time?with Roman and Syrian history. He is careful to place the life of Jesus in its larger environment and to show what Jesus was in relation to the world about him. and we shall see why it was that that point of view laid such hold upon him. This was natural to a cultured Greek, and it was necessary if his purpose was to influence his cultured countrymen. What is it. we may ask, that constitutes a beautiful book, and does this third gospel possess those attributes in a supreme degree? It would seem to me that a beautiful book ought to have in the first place a noble conception, which in some way awakens and dominates the soul, and it ought to have a skil'ful, but simple plan of development rielitlv ?rrnRnpd and enloved. There must be good taste and right j judgment in the choice of the material i which enables us to grasp details and j to see the gradual unfolding which the c writer would set forth. And there j should be felicitous expression of everything which the writer seeks to set forth. These r.re the fundamentals of a beautiful book. , First, in its beautiful conception. The theme is the active life of Jesus, * and it is far more than that; it is the broad life which He lived with others. Luke loses no chance to show how out- * siders sought opportunities to come in 'f contact with Jesus and always evoked t a response. We see His parents, disciples, friends and casual acquaintances . with entire directness, and yet it was not Jesus the man that Luke tells i about, but the Lord Jesus. Luke never | J forgets that those to whom he refers I , are now the risen Lord and the apos- ; ties of the church. A famous critic | said: "Luke ever spares the twelve, especially Peter." He omits many little details even regarding our Lord, such j | as the agony in the garden, and many about the apostles, especially Peter, which are given in Matthew and Mark. Why? Apparently because he did not think it was worth while. He was i 1 studying the work of the Lord in rev- 1 erent fashion. It was not his purpose : ( to simply put down facts, but to show ( ( those facts which would bring out the ; ' explanation of the fact that Jesus was i 1 the risen Lord of humanity, and that c the twelve were the "glorious company 1 of the apostles." It was not even just f that, but to show Jesus in all His pow- f er, and greatness, and holiness, and 1 grace, the friend of all who were in c any kind of need, the Saviour of hu- 1 man kind, the one power to whom the J whole world ought to bow. That seems something like the thought that was in Al.. ... * .. ~ fi T ??1>A lilt' UUUU Ul 1>UKI> Eat to go to the plan of development, j It is extremely simple. Mark's gospel j consists of a series of scenes which a bring out the life of Jesus with start- ( ling realism. Luke and Matthew are r not like that. Luke seeks to give the j s historical association, a plain and sim- | l pie view of the development of the life. ! j and it is unique in its simplicity. He j *s has two chapters devoted to the in- | l fancy and* boyhood of Jesus, and in : 2 the last two verses he shows the thirty years of growth of Jesus. Then two chapters serve to bring us to the point when, in full maturity, and with afoso- i lute command over Himself and His j 1 purposes. He was ready for the work 1 y which opened before Him. So three or i 1 four chapters give us the preparation j ? lor this public ministry, tell us of John 1 } the Baptist, how Jesus came to him. J 1 the details of the baptism and tempta- J tion; then follows the genealogy, and ; we are prepared for the actual story ' of the active work of Jesus. Then ' comes the story of His ministry, from Galilee to Jerusalem, and then the last week in Jerusalem, the Passion, and I lastly the resurrection and ascension, i I easy to follow and comprehensive. 1 I Luke adds six out of twenty miracles t j and eighteen out of twenty-three para- c bles and a great deal of choice material. In the third place is the exquisite taste and sympathy. Luke's gospel is , a universal gospel. He emphasizes the , fact that the ministry of Christ was j for all. Dante called Luke the writer ' ' - . l. - Ilm rrantlanncc ftf P.hpkt 1 j 01 int; Biuij i**v? bvMM^v?M w. He alone tells the stories of the good i Samaritan, the prodigal son, the great t supper, the Pharisee and the publican, the dinner In the house of Simon, and, < lastly, the story of the repentant rob- " her. All is a part of his great theme. Nor was it accidental that Luke shows ( us so many types of women and gives them honor, a strange thing in his day. ] i His remarkable delineation of Mary, the mother of Jesus, with her strong. 1 , deep womanliness, gentle, trustful and , pure, resolute and self-controlled; how ' is it done? Just a word here and i there. Truly we call his the gospel of I womanhood, but it is only a part of ( j that broader vision of the true pur- 1 ; poses of Jesus and His work. ] I Perhaps the most direct proof of the I quality of Luke's gospel is in its < harm j of expression. Where can you find anything more exquisite than the story . of the birth at Bethlehem, or of the scene in the synagogue at Nazareth, or * than the pathetic story of the widow's 1 son, or of the woman "that was a sin- ( ner?" We should need to take a whole < book to make such profound lmpres- j Ion?. The stories of Mnf^rtnJJfS^ ba and of Zachens of that walk to Immaus?bow Impossible to read it fitbout having our hearts burn wifhin is also! Luke was truly a portrait ainter. An ancient legend said Luke ras the founder of Christian art. Now the last and finest test of perection is unity. Passages in the book f Luke are like gems in a royal crown, "he book is a tribute of a reverent (lis iple to the I-ord Christ, showing His elationship to man and striving to onvey the impression of His personalty. As if Luke should say: "Cannot ou see that He embodied the uuiveral ideal of a perfectly God-like life; hat He over-passed nunian possibility ind gave in His life the evidence of beng divine?" To be appreciated the >ook must be constantly and reverenty read until it is fixed in the memory. L'hen it will do its constructive work in >ur souls. It will encourage us, that jospel of Luke, to let the whole Bible mve its right of way in our lives, and t will suggest the way in which the iible can become, in our hearts, the ource of genuine and constant upmildiug, The rulplt Vitalized. Pulpit power, which for a time ;eemed to be on the wane, is retiming, and it is largely because the u caching is less of a literary characer, less of finished essays and topical iiscussions, semi-secular. It is now nore vitalized and energized with the Spirit's power. Those who heard some ?f our most famous preachers ten years igo would scarcely believe they were he same men speaking if heard to-day. [)r. Gunsaulus, who used to deliver hose polished sermons in Plymouth Church, Chicago, ten years ago, could lot hold the great audience in the lown-town auditorium which hg adlresses now if he used those old|Gine ;crmons, or better ones of the sam^^ler. Something seemed to come in%> his fine man's life a few years ago vhich admonished him that nothing jut the power of God could make a ;ermon great, and lie has been preachng great sermons since that day. Dr. tfillis used to charm a literary audience n Central Music Hall with an essay vhich glittered like a newly cut stone crom the hands of a lapidary, but if reports are true, that is not the kind of (ermons that Dr. Hillis is preaching low. Indeed, lie himself is quoted recently as saying that oratorical pulpit lights are the bane of preaching, and hat clergy and laity shared an equal 'esponsibility in the saving of souls. 'The preacher." said Dr. Hiiiis, "must lot treat on topical subjects Sunday ifter Sunday, but must preach the gosjel of Jesus Christ. The church is not be preacher's field; it is his force, and t is the mar. who has not crossed the hurch's threshold for years upon ivboin you have a.claim." It is that lossibility which makes a preacher's vork inspiring, but also tremendously esponslble. What Sabbath may he lot have among his hearers a soul that s hungering and thirsting for the iroad and the water of life? What an nfinite crime to give him a stone, or luite as bad. a handful of artificial lowers." Be Good For Some tliinc. The highest virtue consists of more ban merely being good. It is beimr mod for something; and good for sorolhing not to one's self alone, but to ithers and to God. That negative, telf-complacent virtue which is only t strict abstention from evil, is of a luality far inferior to the virtue which oppresses evil or helps another to re;ist it. Virtue, in the old Latin sense, s synonymous with valor. It implies lot only an espousal, but a chanipionthip, and, if necessary, a fight. Virtue s not only being good, but doing good, ind the better we are the more we >ught to do. We believe in these vords of R. R. Bowker: "It is bad for the ignorant and the ricious to do ill. It is worse for the educated and honest to do nothing." Disloyalty. When a Christian is at peace with iny sin in his own life, when lie is eeonciled to any evil habit, or be omes indifferent to anything in his >wn character which renders him unike Christ, he is disloyal to his Maspr. In like manner, when a citizen >f the Kingdom of God is at peace vitli any sin of society, becomes rec>nciled to any evil habits of the comuunity or indifferent to anything that s inconsistent with the full coming >f God's Kingdom on earth, he is disoyal to the kingdom?Josiah Strong, X D. Open the l)oors. You close your doors and brood over our own miseries and the wrongs jeople have done you; whereas, if you vould but open those doors, you might ome out into the light of God's truth, ind see that His heart is as clear as iunlight toward you. If you would but et Him tench you. you would And our perplexities melt away like the aiow in the spring till you could hardy believe you ever felt them.?George kffjfilon.nld Christ Walks on Onr Feet. Christ would still seek the lost, but Io must do it now on our feet; He vould still minister, but He must do t with our hands; lie would still vnrm and comfort and encourage and nstnuct. but He must do it with our ips. If we refuse to perform these iltiees for Him, what right have we o call ourselves members of IHp body n vital union with IIim?'josIah Strong. A Wonderful Light. If you are willing to choose the seemng darkness of faith instead of the Humiliation of reason, wonderful light vill break upon you from the Word >f God.?A. J. Gordon. LOSi rann in nmcriM. Joe Grim, the Italian fighter with :he iron jaw, was recently drawn foi |ury duty over in Philadelphia. H< lad made arrangements to fight Huge Kelly of Chicago, and there was monej n the bout. Joe went to court and said to the judge: "Excusa me! Means lotto da mon ludge!" "Are you naturalized?" asked the :ourt "Sure! Good American me!" re plied the pugilist. "Nothing doing, then!" remarket :he judge. "If you go West to fighl you'll go to Jail for life when yot:ome back!" "Mean shame!" cried Joe. "I needs la mon. Wife, she needa da mon Me, greatest prize fighter in Little [taly loosa da mon. I go to my man ig, Mike da Costell. He is a politish He say sure I'll fix it right. Now ht lo nothing. Say he go to jail, too [ go myself to all the politish. Thej jivea me da smile. If I go flghta di Kell I go to pris. If I don't fights la Kell I loosa da mon. America fint country!" And Joe left the cour oom in tears. 'cmftffiNT Recbmmen SMor'(|ue^^, Man^lal Senor Quesada, Cuban Minister to the| article in Tlie Outlook for July, 1899, by Ge< at the Esteban Theatre, Matanzas,- Cuba, he the spell of eloquent speech and in the gri[ have rarely witnessed such a scene as at dead patriot, Marti." In a letter to The Pei Washington, D. C., Senor Quesada says: "Peruna I can recom medicine. It is an ex tonic, and it is also an e i almost universal comj. i Gonzalo De Ouesada. /V Congressman J. II. Bankhead, of Alabama, one of the most influential mem- i bens of the House of Representatives, in a letter written from Washington, D. C., < gives his endorsement to the great catarrh remedy, Peruna, iu the following words: ia ntio #1hs>ut medtctne/> I ever tried, ond no family should be without your remarkable remedy. An a tonic and catarrh cure I know of nothing better."? J, H. Bankhead. ^tu/e^utcAbk^JB To totter sdyartise* the South'! Leedlif Business College, four scholarships tie offered younjt pereone of thle county s'lsss then eoet. WRITE V>DA.Y. 6A-AUL BUSINESS COLLEGE, Maciffl, SL 1 Fads Are Stnl Uniform excellent quality \ century lias steadily increased The leader of all Lion Coffee is now used in millions of homes, popular success speaks for itself. I positive proof that LION COFFEE ha Confidence of the peop The uniform quality of LION COFFEE survives all opposite LION COFFEE keep* Its old friends makes new ones every day. LION COFFEE bas even r than Its Strength, Flavor ana <j ity to commend It. On arrival I the plantation, U ^ carefully rc ed at our factories and seen packed in 1 lb. sealed packa and not opened again until net for use In the home. This precli the possibility of adulteration dust, Insects or unclean ham LION COFFEE Is therefore gnat Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Save these lion-heads SOLD BY GROCER Jets and Flashes. It takes more than glucose honey to iiold people to the church. . I Adjust your conscience to Christ and your course will be right. A Frame Home 100 Tears Old. A frame house can be kept in good order for a hundred years, if painted with the Longman k Martinez L. k M. Paint. Jt won t need to be painted more than once in ten to fifteen years because the L. k M. Zinc hardens the L. k M. White l^?ad, and | gives it enormous life. Four gallons Longman k Martinez L. & | M. Paint mixed with three gallons noseeu il will paint a house. 1 W. B. Barf, Charleston. W. Va., writes: j "Painted Frankenburg Block with L. & j M* stands out as though varnished." Wears and covers like gold. Sold everywhere and by Longman &, ] Martinez, .New York. Paint Makers for Fifty Years. < Compulsory education will become gen- i cral in Cape Colony soon. J i The Effect of Warm Day* and Cool Night*. ( A leading physician writes that he has no- . deed warm aavs and cool nights always affect the bowels, and suggests somo preventative remedy. Dr. Bigger*' Buckle" * Ko berry Cordial is the only one uias cwi ??, . absolutely relied upon. It never tails to cure. Sold by all Druggists, 2S and 50c bottl#. No one can look more solemn than Satan. THE HIGHEST AWED AT THE ST.WUJS WgjRBs.PAlB ^oWEe>wwatRproof .. OILED CLOTHING! SLICKERS, HATS . '4H*& POMMEL FLICKERS A- J. TOWER CO.. ESTABLISHED 1056 BOSTON 'WW YORK* -CMCACO TOWMt CAHAMAN CO. UM, TORONTO. CAN TO TT " O Ol Hit THE U. 0? ds P&-ru-na Dnited States, is an orator born. In an jrge Kennan, who heard Quesada speak said: "I have seen many audiences under ) of strong emotional excitement; but I the close of Quesada's eulogy upon the runa Medicine Company, written from ,m<end as a very good cellent strengthening fficacions care for the daint of catarrh."? There is but a single medicine which i i radical specific for catarrh. It is Perum which has stood a half century test au cured thousands of cases. If you do not derive prompt and sati factory results from the use of Perun; nf t>npp to Dr. Hartman. ovine full statement of your case and he will" 1 pleased to give you his valuable advi< gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of T1 Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. A correspondence held strictly confidential A Dropsy H f Removes all swelling in itoj / days; effects a permanent cm >V insoto 60days. Trial treatmer <mBi ^ given free. Nothing can be fain Write Or. H. K. (irtsn's Sons. Socialists. B?t AtUsta.il bborn Things for over a quarter of a the sales of LION COFFEE, package coffees. 0CS' I eded ^ H VA VVUlWt ?W y?AAU9| ? ay H Is. The absolute purity ol I ranteed to the consumer. I Lion-head on every package. 1 for valuable premiums. 1 S EVERYWHERE J OLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio^M $IO0SITl PAY TUITION AFTER POSITION IS SECURE! First 10 who clip this notice and send t DRAUGHON'S PRACTICAL BUSINESS" COLLEGE Raleigh. Colombia, Knoxville, Atlanta Wac< Ft. Worth or Nashville, Tenn. may, without giving notes, pay hivuin: CENT of tuition out of salary afte good position Is secured. If not secure* no pay required. COURSE BY MAIL FREE If not ready to enter you may tak lessons by mall FREE until ready which would save time, living expenses :tc., or complete at home and get dl ploma, D. P. B. C. Co., has J300.000.C capital, 17 bankers on Board of Direc tors, and TWENTY Colleges in THIS 1'EEN states to back every claim 1 makes. Established SIXTEEN yean Clip and send this notice to day. ItleH iifimi i ' iL i*rt i L U Best Couch Syrup. Tum ./ood. Use W frl in Hoe. Sold by dru*gL?w. Ml BEST FO QUARANTEED CURE for alt bowel trot: blood, wind on the stomach. bloated bowel pains after eatinc, liver tronble, tallow skii rejularly you are sick. Cooatipation kills i starts chronic ailments and lone years of at C A8CARBTS today, for you will never f et H(ht Take our advice, start with Caacai money refuadod. The genuine tablet star booklet free. A A Ansa BterUn?ReaaodyCo i j| CrabOrchard WATER A SPECIFIC FOR Dyspepsia 3 Sick Headache 3 Constipation... The Three Ills" That Make Life a Burden. Nature's Great Remedy In Use for Almost m Centurjr. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., LOUISVILLE, KY. A Tobacco Grower's Profit is dependent upon a properly bal- I S^vai contaitl at *ea8' Potash Test It: Supply one patch with fertiliser with plenty of Potash. saothe.- with little or no potash, sod note .be results. Erery tobacco arower shouAl hare our little book. "Tobeeeo j Cultuse"? It will be sent free? writs to: ' QESMAN KALI WORKS. 93 Nam St.. N. Y- er 'S Atlanta. Ga.-2M Sooth Broad St. hyrrjif^ w. l sovuai una aits nua F^w vou xxjri hn mn ma a*t r5 /: W orau xAiror ACTtntxx a tu woaus. mJSW 510,000 NBWANO Wj# cam SNprm this <?! > J W. L Dooilu S3.50 shoe* in the (n?t?it ivllcr* In the wortd becum of their excellent (trie, easyflttins and superior wearing qualities. They are Just as good as those that cost from S5.00 to ?7.00. the only difference is the price. W. L. 3.50 shoes cost more to make, bold tnelr shape better, wear longer, ana are of greater value than any ot.hjp ?3.30 shoe on the market today, W.t. Douglas guarantees their _ value by stamping iila name ud prl? on tM bottom of each shoe. Look for It. Take no substitute. W. L Douglas f3,lf shoes nit) sold through his own retail stores In the principal cities, and bar shoe dealers everywhere. No matte* where rou live. W. L. Douglas sheas, are within your reach. "Thm Boat I Ewmr Worm." ul itrite to tap that I hare van? f??r jtn shoes for the putt five yeaned And them the best 1 ever irorr." ? Ret. Frank T. Ripley, SM East Jefferson St., Loumstte, Ky. Boys wear W. L. Douglas $2-50 and S2-00 shoes because they fit better, hold tbdr shape and wear longer than other awilraa W. L. Douglas uses Corona Coltshnjnkst S3 JO shoes. Corona Colt is conceded to be the finest patent leather produced. FaV Color Eyelets will act wear brassy. . W. L. Douglas has the largest shoe mailorder business In the world. No trouble to get a fit by mall. 21 cenu extra prepays delivery. If you desire further Information, sent* for Illustrated Catalogue of Spring Styles. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brnklea, Mass. " I You want only the best Cotton Gin Machinery ) Ask any experienced o Ginner about . Pratt, Eagle, Smith , Winship, Munger We would like to show r ? ' J { you what thousands of r life long: customers say. J Write for catalog: and testimonial booklet. > Continental Gin Co !' Charlotte, N. C., Atlanta. Go. I" Hirmlnffham, Ala. 0 Memphis, Tenn., Dallas, Tex. ; IA WFW fl<RD THinK! cards #? - Tips of Fingers instantly disappear f Cards immediately produced again from any place performer desires. Full instructions bv mail for $1. Address J. H. YANDERHAVEN,TAVAUES,fla. ao. 17. J R THE BOWELS ^ twoa, 1 CANDY M iblea, appendicltia, billouaneaa. bad breath, bad la, foul moutb, headache, Indigestion, pimples, l and diaaineaa. When your bowelWon't mora move people than all other diaeaaea together. It iffering. No matter what alia you, atari takiac : well and atay well until you get your bowels a reta today under abac lute guarantee to cava er npedCCC. Never aold la bulk. Sample ?4 tspeay, Chicago or New Tefk. 9* aI ... ...