University of South Carolina Libraries
W^^B^^^^U^^EwifrCatari'h? Relief Days. J^iESS ABB 8ESS CUIEO PE-RU-MA !ioi>i:ison, 4 Rant street, I writes: "Peruna wus recommended to n about 1 a year ago as an excellent remedybr the i BH troubles peculiar t our sex. and as that all that was said of this niedioe wa* ] Sm true, 1 am pleased to endorse it. BB "J bejan to vh it about even Vm month* ago far ne tkiien< and erv-* ess. caused from over war. and t#>*.?we*K. and jound nut n a ) .j/8 I beau n to groic tit ron nty 1 te Increased and I hem tt j ' \setter. route ineuti y vi|f -rt- . 1*** passed nana and lh- ink- , <? the pe/rAc organs moHlis- < W^-^mppeured and I ha re been-i'lL i I and strong ever since. " Address l)r. S. R. llartinan. Prdent V of The Hartman Sanitarium, C'o!u?b, I 0., for free medical advice. All <regI pondence strictly confidential. Bu'Jjji, j , To better adrertise the South'a L??i| Baal net* College, four scholarships a>ffered young persons of this county at lasac cost. TVRITK TODAY. 6A-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Mac? | BUSINESS m EBUCATIG < ; 134 p? p' i SCHOLARSHIPS* lYLr j Clip till notice and |?re*ent or tend i DRAUGHDN'S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEi . ?r, w ; ^ T-HUUEIGH COLUM ' IA, A I L rt lilt, x .. | V1LIE OR. FT. WOR.TH and you will receive bookiet contaii almost 100 mis-spelled words explati that we give away. ABSOLl'TF FREE. 134 scholarships to those tin< most mis-spelled words in the booi* Most instructive contest ever conduc Bpdklet contains hundreds of letters : j-" hankers and business men giving r? i ons why you should attend one of D. I B. C.. Those who fail to get free sci 1 arship will, as explained in booklet, ^ 10 cents for each mis-spelled word fou Let us tell you all about our great <j , ^v_cational contest and our ~ GREAT SUMMER DISCOUN' , I ' | That Checkered ! Feeling t i |1.00 at all druggists?or write f ( I sample bottle, free. Do this toda Checkers Medicine Co. Winston-Salem. N. fc??t? ? S^k^J 122 Best Couiib Sy.-up. Tastes mum. vw? > O 'a urea. Sold by druRgnu. Vast Increase in Immigration. Immigration into the United Sti will rise this year to astonishing HV por'ior.s if record for the : [ quarter of the current year be m I tained to its close. Over 11,000 ft eigners arrived in New York in I days in March, an unprecedei V showing. The number of arrivals ft ing the first quarter of 1905 has n< ft been exceeded during a like perio ft former years. It is probable that I Immigration this year will be do I that of 1904. Extraordinary ef! ftr are being made to furnish transp< R. Uon. Ships hitherto engaged in c service are in demand for the ti I portation of the coming hosts : Europe and steerage accommcdaf M are booked ahead for several moi I ^Philadelphia Ledger. I ALL DONE OUT. Veteran Joshua Heller, of TOG ! I Walnut street. I'rbana, 111., says: B the fall of 1890. after taking t %M1- *-.1.1 I Kidney rins i ium tbe readers of this paper that th y had * relieved me of kid- nr <j? n<^ trouble, disof a lame sk back with pain ff/' across my loins and V ' I beneath the slioul- / 4 der blades. During /[ / the interval which /& / has elapsed I have /Jkf t 'had occasion to re- L?s' sort to Doan's noy Pills when I jBf IflM noticed warnings of g| an attack. On each ^HO and every occasion the results ot were just as satisfactory as wh pills were first brought to my I just as emphatically endor preparation to-day as I did ovi years ago.'" Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, proprietors. For sale by all drt price 50 cents per box. - AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. C. E. JEFFERSON. Snbject: 'Wanted: A New Vision of God. ) New York City. ? In the famous j Broadway Tabernacle the pastor, the j Rev. Charles Edward Jefferson. I). D.. j on Sunday preached the following sermon entitled, "Wanted: A New Vision of Cod:'' The groat word on the lips of the j coming preacher will be "God." The name which is above every name has i j been too much neglected in these re- ! cent years, eveu by the men anointed to proclaim it. There have been reasons for this neg- i Ject. The evolutionary philosophy j : awakened a new and thrilling interest j in man. Whence he came, how he started, what have been the processes j of his climbing, these are the questions j which have bewitched and absorbed us all. The phenomenal achievements of the last half century have worked to' w.inl the same result. Never has mail been so wonderful as now, never Las I he done such mighty deeds. He is a miracle worker who says each evening, I "I will do greater things to-morrow.' j His prowess, cunning and mastery are : astounding, and to chant his praises ' has been our pastime and delight. The miseries of man have also conspired to lix our attention on him. He has come from tue country to the city and he is in trouble. He has become the victim of all sorts of economic and social forces, which have left him lying bleeding and half dead by the ! side of the road along which the I strong have driven furiously to wealth and power. To lift the man who is down and place him on our beast and get him into the nearest inn is a problem of vast dimensions, and has taken a deal of our thought and time. We have been caught in the complex of secondary causes, and have little inclination to consider the Cause which underlies them all. To many minds Cod's preseuce has become dim. His personality vague and doubtful. His holiness has been by many quite forgotten. In admiriug or pitying the creature we have gotten our eyes off i the Creator. Our first duty is the step of the prodigal. "I will arise and go back to my father." The prophet of the coming days is going to say in the words of one of old. "I have yet somewhat to say on God's behalf." Man's cause has been pleaded eloquently and long, and the time has arrived for the forthputting of the claims of Go*'. Beginning at the earth always ends in Babel, beginning at the throne of God leads to j Pentecost. We are coming back to the old evan- j gelism of the apostles. Wherever Paul went his message was. "We pray you j in Christ's steaJ, be ye reconciled to God." Simon Peter met the uproar ! in the streets of Jerusalem on the Day of Pentecost with a great dec aration of God?"I will pour out of My spirit upon all*flesh"; and from first to last j it was upon what God had done in : Christ that he based his passionate ex- j hortation to repentance. All deep-eyed men are seeiug with i Increasing clearness that it is not by ecclesiattical might or political power, but by the spirit of Jehovah that the mountains of iniquity are to be leveled and the rough places made smooth. The evangelism o? the coming days will begin wi.n uod. Three doctrines will be counted car- | dinal. In the forefront will be placed j the sovereignity of God. . If the Puri- ; tan passion has died out of our blood ! it is because the Puritan conception of God has faded out of our hearts. What we need to see to-day is a throne with God on it. Democracy ^ias made havoc with our ideas of authority, and the result is a fiabbiness of responsibility and a laxness of_cooduct,which. unless counleracfed. "will lead" toTour ruin. The pessimism and hopelessness so prevalent to-day, even among professing Christains are the direct result of a failure to grasp the fundamental doctrine of God's omnipotence. ' Along with the doctrine of God's 'sovereignity will go the doctrine of His immanence. It is an old doctrine coached in fresh phraseology and with new light shot through it by modern science. The doctrine is written large ricross the pages of Scripture, and in Uvery land and time the saints have >nown that God dwells in the hearts >f men. In Him we live and move nd have our being, as the apostle onng ago declared. And centuries beyore Paul's day a Hebrew poet thrilled _y the thought of God's omn-potence Pi'rote the Joiith Psajrn. ? That God is" above all and through 11, and iu r.ll, and that of Him and irough Him and to Him are all Aings is one of the commonplaces of j?le Bible; and whether we use the old Hirase, "the indwelling God." or the Mirase now most popular, "the iuiruaEfnt God," the thought needs to be M^inhasized and wrought into the con ?iousness of the Christians of our day at Cod is in His world and dwells ate special fulness in the hearts of those prcuo love and serve Him. grs\or will the holiness of God be foraintten. The decadence of the sense . ^ sin has been caused by the blurrg of the doctrine of God's holiness. Father vv.s the title by which atequs kuew God. and it is thus that dur- must know Him if it is to be well everh our souls. The forms in which d itfibution was often preached in pregenerations were so grotesque arbitrary that some of us have . k' n ashamed to say it right out clear strong, that God punishes men .heir sins. In the coming day we ither.going to believe again that whatso:ans-k a man soveth that shall he also from i that without holiness no man can tions the Lord, that there is no peace athsJ the wicked, that the soul that sinI dies in the act of 1U sinning, and God is ceding upon men every* re to repent. i 1 man acquainted with the teachS?otithpf the latest science need be "In'jued or afraid to preach the most )oau's>ous doctrine of retribution. "You rhers do not tell men often enough I every sin brings its inevitable a hment," is a sentence spoken to I ears ago by a physician. Behold j pouness ana severity or coa: in is I" completing statement of the I?, and the prophets who are retbe twentieth century will let the j m ice stant* without abridgment. fLM b cities rotting at our doors and ! nil of the damned ringing in our Mr and with an ancient empire flL nng to pieces before our eyes, gC not hard to believe that while ]|^L 5 ready always to forgive the it He will by no means spare Id your God! will b* the stir- j )te of the coming message, and j >tained y Cod who will stir the hearts en the people will be the God who is notice. |d in Jesus Cnrist. Christ is se the tnifeit in the flesh. He is the t Q I image of His father. Througn e revelat,o:i of the Infinite v v ,s como- *n Him we see > T.? jeFf and we come to the Father lgglsts, -ough Him. We do not see s He is unless we see in Hiiu I . the I authority of a kins. We Wve t^^puch followed the idea of Goetbe and Carlyle. that Christianity is a religion of sorrow, and'that its chief end is tnat of consolation. This leads men like Mr. John Morley to call the gospel a "sovereign legend of pity," and to long for a wider Cospel of justice and progress. Christianity is more than a legend of pity, it is a bugle blast calling men to battle. Jesus is more than the consoler of people in trouble. lie is the anointed King of men. He aunounces His Kingship again and again in His discourses, and it is as Lord and Messiah that Peter presents Him to His countrymen on the Day of Fentecost. To submit to Him unconditionally is man's wisdom and peace. It is not the picture of the earthly Jesus with His j hand upon a leper that this age needs most of all to see. We need to see the Son of God as John, the apostle, saw Hun. with many crowns upon His head, the universal Sovereign of the kingdoms of life. God's condescension will also be seen afresh in Christ. The great words spoken in the upper chamber will be restudied, and upon many hearts they will fall with the emancipating charm of a fresh revelation. "Ye shall know that I am in My Father, and ye in Me and I In you." "If a man love Me he will keep My words, and My Father will love him. and we will come unto him and make Our abode with him." We do not Know God as He is until we have seen Him not otnly high and lifted up. sitting on a throne, but also as the apostle saw Him. standing as a suppliant. saying."Behold. I stand at the door and knock: if any man hear My voice and open the door. I will come in to him. and will sup with him, and he with Me." In Christ also we see God's indignation against sin. He is the holy Christ. Though merciful. He says to workers of iniquity?I never knew you. Though gracious. He says to transgressors of God's will?depart from Me ye cursed. Tender above all tenderness known to mortals. He paints pictures of Ioss and pain and doom so terrible that they have burned themsolroc intn tJiA rAtmoc nf mon*c avoq and Into the gray matter of their brains forever. Wherever His Gospel is preached men cannot go to the judgment saying, I did not know the heinousness nor the awful penalties of wrong-doing. With the Tractarlan method of seventy years ago there began a fresh emphasis upon the authority and sacraments of the Church. To-day it is the Church wL.ch is still uppermost* in many minds, and its worship, its unity and its government are counted all-important themes. With Maurice and Kingsley there began a new interest in the social aspect of Christianity, and men began to labor for the establishment of what was called Christian Socialism. This force has not yet spent itself. But neither High Churchmen with their sacraments, nor social settlement workers with their philanthropies are equal to the crisis which is now upon ! us". It is not a loftier conception of the Church, nor a wider diffusion of culture and social cheer which is most urgently demanded by our times. What is needed is a fresh vision of God. a new baptism of spiritual life, a lifting of the heart to higher levels of aspiration and devotion. The world groans and travails in pain, waiting for the appearance of a.new race of prophets?men of insight and of courage, who endowned with the Hply Ghost shall say to our generation in tones which burn with fervent heat: "Le the wicked forsake his way. and the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him; and to our God. for He will abundantly pardon." ? Congregationalist and Christian World. * >.?' * HnpplneR* in Spite of Deprivation*. If I am so happy in spite of my deprl rations, if my happiness is so deep that it is a faith, so thoughtful that it becomes a philosophy of life, my testimony to the creed of optimism is wortfi hearing. My optimism does not' rest on the absence of evil. I can say with conviction that the struggle which evii necessitates is one of the greatest blessings. It teaches us that, although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it. My optimism rests on a glad belief in the preponderance of good and a willing effort always to co-operate with the good that it.may prevail. I try to increase the power God has given me to see the best in everything and every one, and make that best a part of my life. To what is good I open the doors of my being, and jealously shut them against what is bad.?Helen Keller. A Good Man'* Humility. An appeq| jjras made one Sabbath pvonino in ~n ehiireh for volunteers to work for Christ. No sooner was the appeal made than a Mr. Ketchum, a wealthy New York merchant, rose tip and offered his services to the pastor. The minister said. "In what way, Mr. Ketchum?" and the reply was, "As a hod carrier." What he meant was that ht*was willing- to serve in any humble capacity in which he could be most useful. How often have I thought of that good man's humility. And God blessed him as afterwards he went from house to house asking parents to send their children to the Sabbath-school that was connected with his church. Pretent Obedience NeceMary. If you are truly aroused to seek heavenly comfort, you will soon discover that this is only to be found in the path of present obedience.?Chimes. Yon Are Wanted, Men are wanted to do the hard work of pushing the car of salvation along; and men should welcome the duty every day in the week. Organ Grinder's "Human Monkey." On complaint of a number of citizens an Italian organ grinder was arrested in Richmond, Va., because of carrying a "human monkey" around with him. The so-called monkey was a man. who had beer, the victim of an accident, having keen caught in some machinery, resulting in twisted limbs, a crooked neck and altogether a grotesque resemblance to a monkey. His injuries healed, leaving him in this unfortunate shape. The Itniian resisted arrest, saying that the mar. belonged to him, having made a bargain resigning his liberty in return for support, and that he proposed to exhibit him as long as he chose. He was taken to the police station by force, but was subsequently released on his promise to leave town, taking his human monkey with him. A CRITIC AND HIS FRIEND. V.'himpJi^fcn no connoisseur in music.^JBow what I like. Ba^qell^^p surely, you don t mean to ?oy you like what you know>? Boston Transcript. jf . . ? JF? ? We will not weep; fot God Is stifles by us^- W And tears will blind us to the blessed sight; ~y We will not doubt. If darkness still doth try us. Our souls have promise of serenest light. Wo will not faint If heavy burdens bind us. Thej- press no harder than our souls can bear. The thorniest way is lying still behird us. We shall be braver fcr the past despair. O not in doubt shall be our Journey s ending; Sin with its fear shall leave us at the last; All its best hopes in glad fulfilment blending. Life shall be with us when the Death is past. Help us, O Father! when the world is pressing On our frail hearts, that faint without their friend; Help us. O Father! let thy constant blessing Strengthen cur weakness?till the Joyful end. ?William Henry Kurlbert. Useful Hints. Soapbark jelly is the best All round cleansing agent that a woman can keep on hand. It may be prepared by putting a handful of soapbark In a quart of boilipg water and letting it cook The best way to remove sand and grit from small fruit, when washing is necessary, is to lay the fruit loosely in a clean basket and dip the basket in fresh clean water. A thin coating made of three parts lard, melted with one part resin, aid applied to stoves and grates, w^ prevent their rusting. In roasting pork sour apples are sometimes baked with the meat like potatoes. Thcv should be placed on a wire rack to keep them out of the fat. The apples are served with the roast and take the place of apple sauce. To keep a spoon in position when desirous of dropping medicine into it, and requiring both hands to hold the bottle and cork, place the handle between the leaves of a closed book lying upon a table. Silver spoons and forks which are in daily use may be kept bright by leaving them once a week In strong borax water for several hours. The water should be nearly boiling when the silver is put into it. Lime water will sweeten jars and jugs which soap and water fail to cleanse. It is admirable for cleansing milk vessels and nursing bottles. With boiled salmon, cream sauce, hniiori rice is very good. Many prefer it to potato. There rcaliv is no reason why any vegetable should be served with the fish course. Its sauce is auite sufficient. Nothing cleans a doughy roll.ng pin so easily as a wire dish-cloth. That same wire dish-cloth is the greatest labor saver you can have in the kitchen. Streets of the World. "The highest street in the world." raid a globe trotter, "is Main street in Denver. The richest is Fifth avenue in New York. The widest is Market street in Philadelphia. The short est is the Rue Ble in Paris; this street is only twenty feet long. "The dirtiest street is Tehang-tsi in Nankin. The cleanest is the Via Castile in Seville. The most aristocratic is Grosvencr place, London. The most beautiful is the Avenue des Champs Elysees, Paris. The narrowest street is Via Sol, Havana, which has a width of forty-two Inches. The ugliest street is considered by many foreign artists and architects to be our Broadway, with its skyscrapers." Teacher Beat School Board. Nothing daunted because padlocks were put on the door, the stovepipe taken away and no fuel furnished to keep the building warm, Miss Jennie Mowell, a plucky young schoolmistress of Lew Beach, Sullivan county, N. Y? succeeded in finishing her term oi school, though the trustees had offl"ioiir declared the school discon tinued. With the help of her pupils Miss Mowell got new stovepipe and fuel, but she could not get her pay. She appealed to the state department of education, which has just ordered the trustees to pay her full salary and continue the school. POOD IN SERMONS. Feed the Doininte Right and the Sermom Are Brilliant. A conscientious, hard-working and eminently successful clergyman writes: "I nin glad to bear testimony to tbe pleasure and increased measure of efficiency and health that have come to me from adopting Grape-Nuts food as one of my articles of diet. "For several years I was much distressed during the early part of each day by indigestion. My breakfast, usually consisting of oatmeal, milk and eggs, seemed to turn sour and failed to digest. After dinner the headache and other symptoms fo'.lowing the breakfast would wear away, only to return, however, next morning. "Having heard of Grnpe-Xuts food, 1 fin-iiiv f>r>nc!ndeil to ?rive it a fair trial. I quit the use of oatmeal and eggs. and made my breakfasts of Grape-Nuts, cream, toast and Fosiuiu. The result was surprising in improved health and total absence of the distress that had, for so long a time, followed the morning meal. My digestion became once more satisfactory the headaches ceased, and the old feeling of energy returned. Since that time, four years ago, I have always had Grape-Nuts food on my breakfast table. "I was delighted to tiud also, that whereas before I began to use GrapeNuts food I was quite nervous an' became easily wearied in the work cl preparing sermons and in study, .1 marked improvement In this respect re suited from the change in my diet. 1 am convinced that Grape-Nuts food produced this result and helped me to .1 sturdy condition of mental aud physica strength. "I have known several persons whe were formerly troubled as I was, ani who have been helped as I have been by the use of Grape-Nuts food, on my recommendation, among whom may b( mentioned the Itev. , now a mis sionary to China." Name given by Postum Company, Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a ret.son." vftfcrU,the little book, <'The Boad U WellviUe," la le&rti "ft*#; K "why Height tails . inferior artoojal light fr?. Q'JENTLY THS.CMJSE. > 1 IKnmlnaitt of tlie T'iMt, On? All, Have serious Delects?Acetylene l;??, With Its Clear, l'nir*Torlnj, Yet Soft Flame Cannot Hurt the Ejtm. J New York. June 'JO.?No one enn go info our schools or moot a group of children on the street without noticing how large a number of them wear spectacles. The proportion seems to increase yearly, and there are many more who ought to wear glasses. The experience of one teacher '.night be duplicated by the score. She knew Alice was inattentive and she thought she , was unusually stupid. She said so f to tlie principal and sent a note to n the mother, requesting that the child l)e helped at home if she wished her v to keep up with her class. One day p after a blackboard explanation, the ? teacher called upon the child and found that she had not scon what had been e written. She was kept after school t and by dint of much sympathetic ques- t tioning Miss C. found that Alice had s never been able to see what was put a on the board and that her head had j ached so often and so hard that she j, frequently failed to bear what was t said. n Such a condition may be caused by b lack of proper food, but in our Arneri- n can homes it is usually due to the poor a quality of the artificial light. The yellow, insufficient light of the ordinary I kerosene lamp, with its smoky chim- ? \ncy, Is about as bad for.the eyes as p can be imagined. The flickering light from a coal gas jot is but iittie better. | ^ and even the electric light, brilliant i as it usually is, has an unsteadiness : h due to variations in power, and^t glare | b peculiarly trying to the delicate nerves a of sight. The comparatively new il- J ^ luminant acetylene gas produces as c nearly perfect an artificial light as has yet been found. It gives a clear white, ? unwavering light, very brilliant, yet Q perfectly soft, and so nearly like the i ravs of the sun that even coloi-3 an- ? . y I nAflt* oc fn rv"1 ,,w Fortunately, acetylene Is very easily ? niul cheaply produced, and the simple h apparatus necessary can be purchased a and installed in, any home at a very ci moderate cost, and the acetylene can a he piped to convenient points in the ^ house where a light Is needed. It is ? then lighted and extinguished and used 7 exactly like common city gas. Acetylene is rapidly coming Into ?'i common use in homes, churches, f schools and institutions of all kinds. ? and it is reasonable to expect that as its use in the home increases, there will be fewer defective eyes, particularly among childt%n. Poor eyesight and the many ills resulting therefrom will undoubtedly l?b much reduced by * the use of this new illuminnnt. 9 f SAVORY BUTTER. jr Savory butter is made by using ! .some desired savory ingredient in fresh butter. You buy either the tinsalted butter or wash from the salted butter all the salt possible as when you are making some kinds of paste, and then you rub into it with a silver knife or spoon such essence or flavoring as you like. Anchovy essence. Worcestershire sauce, onion juice, chopped Spanish peppsr or parsley, or any one of a hundred things. Then this butter is used for spreading bread for sandwiches or for putting on some kinds of hot meat or fish. FITSpertr.anently cured. No fits or nervousness after iirst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great XerveRestorcr,$2tiial hottleanu treatise free Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd.,S31 Arch St., Pliila., Pa. One of the great pyramids cf Egypt has been struck by lightning. Xik Yoar Dealer For Allefc's Foo?-TCa?e. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions. Swollen. Sore, Rot. Cal Ions,Aching Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes now or tight shoes easy. At ..II n-.,Mflata an/1 ?hn? atOPFA 25 PGHt?. AC* U1 UlU|)5l.-)ko w?vw , ecpt no substitute. Samplo miiiied Free, Aadress, Allen 8. Olmsted. Leltoy, N. Y. A Parisian complains that kissing is out of fashion in France. Mrs.TYinsIow'sSoothicsr Syrup for Children _ teething, soften the gums.reducesinflamma- . tion,allays pain.cureswimd colic, 25c.a bottle. A pig is usually kept in every stable in Persia. I nmsure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.?Mrs. Thomas Robebts, Maple St.. Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,1900 Ovama says he attributes his success to the virtues of his Emperor. Cure* Blood Poison, Cancer, Ulcers. If you have offensive pimples or eruptions, ulcers on any part of the body, aching bones or joints, falling hair, "mucous Catches, swulcn glauds, skin itches an 1 urns, sore lips or gums, eating, festering sores, sharp, guawiug pains, then you suffer from serious blood poison or the beginnings of deadly cancer. You may be permanently cured by taking Botanic Blood Balm (B* B. BA made especially to cure the worst blood and skin diseases." Heals every aom or ulcer, even deadly cancer, stops all acnes and pains and reduces all swellings. Botan-ic Blood Balm cures all malignant blood troubles, such as eczema, scabs and j scales, pimples, runuiug sores, carbuncles, I scrofula. Druggists, ?1 per large bottle, 3 j bottles f 2.50, C bottles ?5, express prepaid. ; To prove it cures, sample of Blood Balm | sent free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm j Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free I medical advice sent in sealed letter. . It is mighty hard for a man not to ! like the rich father of a girl as much ! as he likes her. The Five Boy?. T. D. Meador writes: Have Ave children ! and under no circumstance would I be ' without Dr. Diggers' Huckleberry Cordial in I my house, especially during the fruit sea| son. The result in its use is very gratifying. For all stomach and bowel troubles. * sold bv all Druggists, 25 and 50c. bottle. * When you see a girl picking lint off a young man's coat in public it's a safe j bet that her engagement ring is quite ! new. AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR I _ CoTrred Heiui, Xeck and Shoulders? j fcrcd A cony For Twenty-Five Years 1 Until Cured by Cuticura. \ I ! "For twenty five years I suffered agony% ! from a terrible bumor, completely covering B j i my head, neck and shoulders, dischargim#' . j matter of such offensiveness to sight ma j smell that I became an object of dread. I ? | consulted the most able doctors far and near, to no avail. Then I got Cuticura, ! and in a surpisingly short time I was completely cured. 1 advise all those suffering irom skin humors to get Cuticura and end their* misery at once. S. P. Keyed, 149 Congress Street, Boston, Mass." yThe hand that fills the coal bin robs ' the world. ..". .. v.- . IfoSSaeBy. Nervous Women rHeir Sufferings Are Usually Due to Uterine Disorders Perhaps Unsuspectod \ MEDICINE THAT CURES Can^ we dispute 8 sion, "I amsoner^fox g VOUS. it St'L'IES as if 41 Don't sneak to aake you irritable; you can t sleep, ou are unable to quietly and calmly lerform your daily tasks or care for our children. The relation of the nerves and gen rative organs in r.omen is so closi hat nine-tenths of the nervous prosration, nervous debility, the blues, leeplessness and nervous irritability rise from some derangement of the rganism which makes her a woman 'its of depression or restlessness and rritabilitv. Spirits easily affected, so hfft one minute she laughs, the next linute weeps. Pain in the ovaries and etween the shoulders. Loss of voice; ervous dyspepsia. A tendency to cry t th^least provocation. All this points 0 i^Fvous prostration. ^pthing will relieve this distressing coition and prevent months of prosration and suffering so surely as Lydia J. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. M. E. Shotwell, of 103 Flat bush 1 venue, Brooklyn, N. Y., writes:. " I cannot express the wonderful relief I ave experienced by taking Lydia E. Pinkain's \ eg* table Compound. I sufferetl for long time with nervous prostration, backcV headache, less of appetite. I could ot sle^p end would walk iho floor almost wv night. ' 1 had three doctors and got no better, and fe was a burden. I was advised to try iydia E. Pin kham'a Vegetable Compound, lid it has worked wonders for me. " I am a well woman, my nervr,u*ne? is all one and my friends say I look ten yea it ounger." Will not the volumes of letters fron. roraen made strong by Lydia E. Pinkam's Vegetable Compound convince 11 women of its virtues ? Surely you annot wish to remain sick and weak nd discouraged, exhausted each day, -hen vAu can be as easily cured as tber Cornea. OME TO MONTANA?A-eyr.ntlpnVtne'o'c?-a-igiuirioca 1 i>? H n'Sec.Jn ta o f 1' inflation a-11 soil < liinn e, pr<-> <1 farm la-i.i 'nd n je -i en a to!- n.e 'ee e tdyo prain ?ain- . es an rel aM? t,tt*ti c. A 'drwi, Jones Ac Kelly, cxonian, Mo. iana. Reference?Coin'i Bajjfc. ( h CURED rnncH n.? e Ill lllmv Qu!cl< r I *elief# '^5** y Removes all swelling in Ston / days; etlects a permanent cure yf^r' A in to 6o days. Trial treatment /A*. civrnfree. Nothinccan befaire* " Write Dr. H. H. Orean's Sons. 1SntoiaHsts. Box e Atlanta, 08. Let Libby Serve Your Soup Tomato, Julienne, Consomme, Chicken, Mi fastidious. They are quickly prepared?delicioui Libby's ^SSf F Corned Beef Haah Bonelesa Ox Tongues Sou Your Grocer Libby, McNeill <S. The Secret ol Even the best housekeeper coffee without good material, blended coffee such as unscrup counters won't do. But take th< LION COFFEE, the te the coffee that for over a qu&i welcomed in millions of homesfor a king in this way: HOW TO MAKE Use LION COFrtE, became to (jet best r Grind yoorJJON COFFEE rather fine, extra for the pot" First mix it with & little co add white of an egg (if egg is to be used as a se 1st. WITH BOILING WATER. A THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a Utt minutes to settle. Serve promptly. 2d. WITH COLD WATER. Add bring it to a bolL Then set aside, a minutes it's ready to serve. 2 (Don't boll It too loner. ? < Don't let It stand more tl DONTS (.Don't use water that ha TWO WAYS TO J 1st. With Ems. Use part of the white < CO! FEE beforeboiling. ' id. With CoM Water instead of eggs. A aside for eight or ten minutes, then serve throni Insist on getting a packa< prepare it according to this x LION COFFEE in future. (Lioc-hcad on e (Save these Lion-heads i SOLD BY GROCER wc /?. BEST FOR blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, f pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin an regularly you are sick. Constipation kills mor tarts chronic ailments and Ions yean of snffei CA9CARETS today, fdr you wiii'ne7er get w? riaht, Take ?.iir advice, start with Cascareta money refunded. The genuine tablet stampe booklet free. Addreea Sterling Retnedy Comp. You u-ant only tho best , ' ^ Cotton Gin 'I Machinery j Ask any experienced Ginncr about Pratt, Eagle, Smith j Winship, Munger We would like to show you what thousands of life lonsr customers say. Write for catalog and testimonial booklet. Continental Gin Co Charlotte, X. C., Atlanta. Ga. Birmingham, Ala. Memphis, Tenn., Dallas, Tex. CONCENTRATED Crab Orchard WATER H"K? v A SPECIFIC FOB j Dyspepsia jj: Sick Headache 3 | Constipation... T1.1 "tree "Ills" That Make Life a Burden. Nature's Great Remedy j In I'm for Almost a Century. SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS GRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., LOUI8VILL1C. KY. W| i|Tm Addr*>r? of (1) persona o( A rs I p 11 part Indian blosd who are Hll I taU not living wlfh any trHet \ <2)oi n.en who were drafted in Kentuakf. (3) of mothers of soldiers who hare beeb-^ denied pension on recount of their re:nirrinae, <?) of men who served in theF?d? enl .irmy, or (&) th? nearest kin of audi "oldiers or sailors, now deceased. NATHAN HICK FORI), Attorney, \Va?biB|tlon, II. C. -V So. 23. illii'atawnry, or Oxtail wtll ploase the most s to eat?always satisfactory. ood Products Chicken Vienna Snusage pa Ham Loaf t has them , Llbby, Chicago HEBBSHHH&BflBHEBHHHI [ Good Coffee s cannot make a goo<l cup of Dirty, adulterated and queerly ulous dealers shovel over their > pure, clean, natural flavored ider of all package coffees? ter of a century has been daily ? -and you will make a drink fit GOOD COFFEE. Malta you mast nie the best cosee. Use "a ublespoonfal to each cap, ard one * Id water, enoulrh to make a thick parte, and ttler), then fol.ow one of the following rules: dd boiling water, and let It boll tie cold water and set aside live yoar cold water to the paste and ad a little cold water, and in live tan ten minutes before serving, is been boiled before. SETTLE COFFEE. 3f on egg, mixing It with tiie ground LION fier boiling add a dash of cold water, and set ;h a strainer. mnaaae?r????a?? au.i?erwm??? Be of genuine LION COFFEE, cclpe and you will only use (Sold only in 1 lb. sealed packages.) very package.) tor valuable premiums.) S EVERYWHERE )OLSOS SPICE CO., Toledo, Otto. THE BOWELS ^ "a b n* P*\ CANDY j? C CATHARTIO j i. appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad 1 aut rr.outb, headache, indigestion, pimplea, I d dizziness. When your bowel* don't move I e people than all other diseases together. It I inf. No matter what aila you. atart taking I ill and etay well until yon get your bowel* I today under absolute guars a tee to core or I d C C C. Nerer eold in bulk. Saaxplo and I J88 M ^