MMPRPS BELCHING BY ABSORPTION ?NO DRUCS-A NEW METHOD. A Box of Wafer* Free?Have Tow Acwt* ' ln?Ks?*tior>, Stomach Trouble, 1 r- j regular Heart. Din; Spell*. Hbort Itreath, Gas '.u the Stomach? Bitter Taste?Bad Breath?Impaired Ap- j petite A feeling of fullness, weight and { pain over the stomach aud heart, somewtiines nausea and vomit iug. also fever and eick headeche? What causes it? Any one or all of these: j Excessive eating and drinking?abuse of j \ spifits?anxiety and depression?mental ef- ! \ . fort?mental worry and physical fatigue? \ bad aie? insufficient food?sedentary habits ?absence of teeth?bolting of food." If you suffer from this slow death and j miserable existence, let us send you a sample box of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers absoI..*r x*. .1 rv _ .u. iuieiy jrvr. ->u urug-. l^rugs injure ine i stomach. It-* -?s belching and cures diseased stomach by absorbing the foul odors from undigested food and by imparting activity to the lining of the stomach. enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric juices, which promotes digestion and cures the disease. Special Offer.-The regular price of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a oox, but to introduce it to thousands of sufferers . we will send two (21 boxes upon receipt of 75c. and this advertisement, or we will end you a sample free for this coupon. This Offer May Not Appear Again. 1285 FREE COUPON 128 j Send this counou with your name and address ana name of a druggist { who does not sell it for a free sample , box of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers to I / I / Mull's Grape Tonic Co.. 323 Third : Ave., Rock Island, 111. Sire Full Address and Write Plainly. | Sold by all druggists, 50c. per box, or sent by mail. A jolly father of a family is about as jolly as some of the jokes he tells. ulcerITforthirty years Fslsfsl Eruptions From Knees to Feet Seemed Incur?b!<>? Caticura Ends Misery. Another of those remarkable cures be ?> Cuticura, after doctors and all else had failed, ia testified to by Mr. M. C. Moss, of ;v,. - . . Uameaville. Texas, in the following letter: "Ior over tmny >ear? x mucicu hum j painful ulcers and an eruption Irom ray knee* to feet, and could find neither doctor! nor medicine to Win me until 1 used . Cuticura Soap. Ointment and Pilla. which cured me in six months. They helped me the eery first time I used them, and 1 am glad to write this so that others suffering as I did may be saved from misery." Courage and caution make a splenica working team. Therein more Catarrh in this section of the eooatry thangll other diseases put together, aftd'm&ithe lost.few years was.supposed to beiseurable. For a great many years doctors yf pronounced it a local disease "and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to euro with local treatment, pronounced It incurable. 8cience has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cue, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional euro on the market. It is taken Internally In doses fromlOdropstoateaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure, bend for circulars / and testimonials. Address F. J. Chesev A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation is ttry eicitiug to kiss a girl be- j * / fore she likes you. So. 49. JOYS OF MATERNITY . A WQIUN'S BEST HOPES REALIZED Mrs. Potts Tells How Women Should Prepare for Motherhood PW ' , The darkest days of husband and ''y* wife are when they come to look for- j ward to childless and lonely old age. Many & wife has found herself incapable of motherhood owing to a displacement of the womb or lack of afcrength in the generative organs. I ~Mrs Anna Potts I ???j Frequent backache and distressing pains, accompanied by offensive discharges and generally by irregular and scanty menstruation indicate a displacement or nerve degeneration of the womb and surrounding organs. The question that troubles women I la how can a woman who has some female trouble bear healthy children? Mrs. Anna Potts, of 510 Park Avenue, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: 1 My Dear Mrs. Pink ham:? " During the early part of my married life I was delicate tn health : both my husband and I were verv anxious for a child to bless our home, but 1 had two miscarriages, and could a not carry a child to maturity. A neighbor who had been cured by Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advised me to try it. I did so and soon felt that I was growing stronger, my headaches and backaches left I me, T had no more bearing-down pains, and I felt like a new woman. Within a year I j became the mother of a strong, heulthy child, the joy of our home. Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is certainly a splendid remedy, and I wish everv wsman / who wants to become a mother would try it." * Actual sterility in woman is very rare. If any woman thinks she is sterp ile, let her try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and write to i\irs. Pink ham, Lynn, Mass. Her advice is tree to expectant or would-be mothers. Q WHY f? 9 CALOMEL ? f| H When Mozley's Lemon El H| Elixir, a purely vegetable Bg H compound, with a pleasn ant taste, will relieve you ?9 of Biliousness, and all R-* H kindred diseases without Efe HB griping or nausea, and H leave no bad effects. v; a Ltgg 50c. and $1;00 per bottle B: H at all Drug Stores. ^ MOZLEY'S U | LEMQM EUXtR. | "Okc Doss Cox voices. " i i THE (PUL . | A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. C. R. McNALLY. I Subject: Spiritual Worship. I . New York City.?Sunday morn in?, in the Sixth Avenue Baptist Church, ike | pastor, the Kev. Charles It. McNally. | preached on the subject. "The Spirit i God and Spiritual Worship." The text was from John ivJ.'MM: "The hour cotneth ami now is when the true worshipers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth, for the Father seeketh such to worship Him." "God is a spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in soirit and in truth." Mr. McNally said: These words might well lead nto the byways of philosophy. That, liow| ever, is an enjoyment which we do I not now intend to permit ourselves to indulge in. We might nith profit point out from these words that the man .of old did not think of himself just as man thinks of himself to-day. He was a unit, and thought of nothing outside of his immediate environment. J and of that chiefly from the point of view of its relation to his bodily needs. His mind did not grasp the thought of the beyond or the hereafter. His dead companion was not thought of ns being essentially different from that which hp was in life. His horse, ins tools, etc.. n ere buried with him. with the belief that in some unseen but material paradise or bunting ground he would live as he had lived, needing and usiug the same things. Man dors not now so view himself. | He no longer thinks of himself as a unit. He is divided. His body is one thing and his mind or soul is another. Man stiii views hiuiself ns body and spirit. Deep within the iuncrs of his own nature lie feels tlmt while they are doubtless closely associated, his body is one thing and bis soul quite another. This distinction did not appeal to the ancient. He knew nothing of it. His was the simple, unquestioning life of a child. The religious impulse, however, has always been an integral part of human life, and has ever, in one form or another. sought to express Itself. Crude though it may have been in its beginnings, the consciousness of Cod has never befn absent from the human mind. When it first appears it seems to have been materialistic, or anthropomorphic in the grossest sense. Gradually there was the development of a tendency to look in upon himself and with this tendency man came into possession of the idea of an inner thought self. Thus mind, or soul, was distinguished from the external or material. and n conception of Cod became both a possibility and reality. The development of this distinction may be clearly traced in the Old Testament. For many centuries the materialistic was the dominant one. but alongside of it ^rew up a religion of the spirit, i The former finds its highest expitfssion in the ornate formal worship of Judaism. The religion of the law with all its material accompaniment was the effort of the human mind to grasp the thought of God in the terms of the material. Within Judaism ti.ere was the development of the religion of the spirit. The prophets were its messengers, but the people persistently turned awsv from them, and from their message. The conversation of Jesus with the woman at the wellside is interesting and instructive in many ways. She was a woman and the strain of human nature was very marked in her life as [la shown by the fact that when Jesus had her cornered and face to face with her sin she was like many who have followed her. anxious to divert the conversation from considerations of such a personal nature to a religious argument. Jesus using licr own thought Imparts to her the deepest lesson that has ever been uttered In the realm of religion. When the woman would have Hint discuss the relative merits of formal Judaism, or forma! Samarita.-ism. He turned upon her the full ligut of divine truth and declares what the world has all been too slow to learn, that Judaism ami Samavitanism are nothing, but that the religion of the spirit alone is essential religion. God is spirit, and is not to be worshiped by men's hands, or any external form whatsoever. He is confined to no mountain top. no temple ivniis inclose Hint. Immaterial and Imperceptible to the senses. He fills all things with His being. He knows, feels, ami wills. He seeks those to whom He has given a nature fashioned in His own image to be His worshipers. Only those who have j learned to know Him as the Infinite Mind or Supreme Spirit can have fellowship with Him. and this because such worship alone corresponds with His nature. It takes the Avorld a long time to outgrow its materialism, and to grow into the thought of Christ. The path I of history hat? led into deep valleys and over the mountain peaks. There have been times when it seemed that the race was about to move out into a more spiritual thought of God. Under the leadership of a Paul, an Augustine, I a Calvin, a Luther or a ,Wesley. the dawn of a brighter day seemed at hand, hut from these mountain peaks the pathway has invariably led down 1 Into the low vales of the material and sordidly earthly. We have been, indeed, we now are, for the dawn of the brighter day bes hardly appeared, in one of those materialistic swamps from which arise the miasma of sordidness. worldliness and sin. That this is peculiarty true of America is not without cause and i explanation. Never in the history of the world has it been given to a naj lion to enter into the rich heritage that ( has been ours. The past hundred years has been a period of discovery and development. Discovery in that America and the world has become conscious of the almost inexhaustible wealth unfolded within the bosom of I her lake's niul rivers, lier forests and J 1 her fields and her deep hidden mines. I Wealth is the handmaid of comfort, of , ease, of luxury and many other things, and these are sweet to the human heart. There has been n mad rush to lay hold upon these ready-to-hand sources of ^wealth. With feverish iu-1 tensity men have given their brain | and brawn to the development of these mighty resources and their labor has not been in vain. Wealth has been multiplied with a rapidity unprecedented in the world's life. It has been a ??!n T f olert hoc ontftilrvl ft ?4CttV ---v ? . great loss. It has placed material pood In the forefront, while the spirit of God and the spiritual life have been relegated to a secondary place. The resijlt lias been both natural and inevitable. Honor, virtue and all the spiritual graces have been readily sacrificed to the insatiable greed for gain, but the handwriting of God Is upon the wall. "Be sure your sin will find you out" is an old adage, but true. Man cannot continue forever fo disregard God whhout having ultimately to reckon wijt Him on the basis of the deeds | donaVin the body. Some Instrument iagtt Jne Providence will vindicate the i \ requirements of the spirit God " and the spiritual life. When the finger of God through some stalwart Nathan ic pointed at the sinner, it matters not whether he is a king upon his throne, ho must listen to the "Thou art the man." "wherefore hast thou despised the word of the Lord to do that which is evil in Ilis sight?" and in deep contrition of soul he must cry out for mercy and confess, "I have sinn.'d against the Lord." Nor only have men as individuals been led to a false emphasis upon the material, and to blindness toward the spiritual, but the church herself has become too material in the expression which she has sought to give to the religions impulse. Too much of stress has been and is laid upon form and organization and not enough upon the spirit. Not until the church comes again to the side of Jacob's well and hears afresh the sweet emphasis of the Man of Galilee upon the essential spirituality of God and the supremacy and priority of the spiritual can she ever enter Into her full heritage of divine power. It is high time that ?14 !> *? AonA Wifh tho hp. we suuuiu unit' uuiic ,. mi ..... fogging and befooling effort to meet the requirements of that God who is spirit, with substitutes that are mere material foibles. It is the Inners of the soul that God desires and requires. It is a damning folly to ofTeT any substitute for that self which God has destined for eternnl fellowship with Himself. Goodness, not goods: character. not cash: piety, not pretense: sincerity, not sham: these are the sacrifices acceptable to that God who is a spirit and who would be worshiped In spirit and with reality. Another truth is placed beyond perndventure by these words of .Testis. True worship is not a matter of locality or nationality or sect. Men love to distinguish themselves by some distiuguishing mark and will congratulate and flatter themselves that it in some way makes them superior to their brother man. If he is white, be congratulates himself that hp is not black. If he Is black, he congratulates himself that his eyes are more shiny and his teetli whiter. Doubtless demonstrations and sects have served some good ends, but if nun bad but learned to sweetly insist upon the truth for truth's sake, instead of lining up against their fellows in war paint and with tontahav.de in hand, in titter disregard of the true spirit of the gospel, the millennium would be much uearer than it is to-day. Argue as best we may. the essence of religion is a spirit in harmony with the infinite spirit: n spirit to which reality, fact, truth. Is the supreme consideration. To truly worship God is to pay to Hint the homage of reverent thought and fpeliflg. and of filial trust and love. The real temple of God is a human heart wtierein the spirit of a man meets in shekinah presence the Spirit of God. Such worship and such worshipers God seeks. Again, true worship is the great solvent of life's enigmas. In one of the psalms credited of Asaph he seek6 to einre-ss the doubt and difficulty that possessed his mind when he sougat to explain the prosperity of the wicked- It is surely n source of constant question to a thoughtful mind that the wicked flourish while many righteous are constrained to live in comparative if not quite penury. The question will arise. "How is it that God's material good 60 constantly ministers to tlio wicked and unworthyV" In honest doubt many hearts hnve asked. "Why should I worship a God who so unequally distributes His blessings?" This was the difficulty of the psalmist. He says: "Then thought I to understand this, but it was too hard for me: until I went into the sanctuary of God. thou understood I the end of these men." When the psalmist entered into spiritual fellowship with- God and saw the glory of that God in all His spiritual beauty there dawned upon his_ sou! the reality of the larger truth, "that God's greatest good is not material good. His richest gifts are not houses, or lands, or mines, or slocks. His richest gifts are those which bring the inner spirit of a man into perfect harmony with divine heart. No wealth tor pelf can ease a restless conscience or lift the burden front a bereaved- heart. Only God can fll! to overflowing the human ?-i-~. ? !?? ??"! ?.i 1 m thnt S0U1 Willi lUiii *!?irt \a.iu, ?..?v pracefulness which makes all life* ft son;?. Dops your heart cry out for God? Would you know that ponce which passeth knowledge? Then be assured, that those blessings can come to your life only as you reco-mize the eternal reality of the spiritual and placing the first emphasis upon the kingdom of God and th? spiritual life seeks to live in perfect harmony with the divjne mind. HIS AID WAS NOT APPRECIATED. Young Man's Efforts to Prompt Had Disastrous Ending. Dr. Woodrow Wilson of Prluceton was talking with some young men about cheating in examinations. "Aside from moral grounds." Dr. Wilson said, "cheating is bad on material grounds. The cheat is very apt, you know, to be found out. "In Virginia, in my boyhood, there was a case of cheating that had a I disastrous ending. "An elderly minister appeared before a board to be examined for some post or other. The examination was public, and the first branch to be taken up was Latin. " 'What is the Latin for goose?' the examiner said. "And the poor old minister at the start was stumped. He could not remember. It was pitiful to see hhn, and a youpg man seated near could not resist-helping him out. "'Anser,' whispered the young man. "But the minister continued silent, rolling his eyes, racking his brain. " 'Ansfcr.' whispered the young man h: a louder tone. "The minister now turned his head and looked at his prompter oddly. '"Poor old chap! He almost heard. He wants me to try again,' the young man thought, and, louder than ever, he repeated: " 'Anser.' "At this the minister turned and shook his forefinger at the youth. " 'Answer yourself, you young jackftnaues.' he shouted." Plenty of Bait. "Dear me," pouted the young wife, who was wedded to a disciple of Izaak Walton, "I don't see why a man can't go fishing without carrying a horrid bottle." "My husband never carries a bottle." confided the matron next door. "How nice of him." i "No. he carries a demijohn. But my yandfather was a great fisherman. He never carried either a bottle or a demijohn." "Noble man. He must have been splendid." , "Yes, he always carried a keg." in constant tcony. A Wett Vltjinltn't Awful Dlntrcu Through Kidney '1 rouble*. TV. L. Jackson, mere innt. of I'arkersburg, TV. Vs., says: "Dr'vii:g about in bad^ ^ ^ ^t t to use the cathe'e;. i took to fay bed. and the doctors failing to heln. began tising Poan's Kidney Pills. The urine soon cauio freely again, and the pain gradually disappeared. I have been cured eight years, and though over To. am as active as a boy." 5sdd by all dtalers. TO cents a nex. Fj?ter-Milb;?. i Co.. RtiTalo X. X. The Japanese Oovernmeat is printing a complete record of the war. Itch cured in 5;D minutes by Woolford's Kanitnrv T.ntinn nevor fniU KnM hv Druggists. Mall orders promptly MleJ by Dr. Detchon, Craw fords ville, Ind. 1. Beside# tbirtv-reTen ships ot war the I'nited Kingdom last year launches 712 new ships. j Cure* Blood, Skin Tiouble*. Cancer, ttlooa Poison, Great <*t Blood Purifier frree. If your blood is impure, thin, di: ssed. hot or full of hu nors, if you have tood poison, cancer, jarbuncles. eating sores, crofula. eczema, tching, risings and 1 imps, scabby, pimply a tin, bone pains, eatar.ii, rheumatism, or env blood or skin oisease, take Botanic Blotd Balm ( B. 11. lifl according to directions. Soon all sores heal, aches and pains stop, the Mood is made pure and rich, ltavlug th? skin free from every eruption, a id giving the rich glow of perfect health to the ski r. At the same tlmo, B. B. 11. ior?| roves the digestion, cures dyspepsia, streng hens weak kidneys, .lust the medicine foj old people, as it giv?s them new. vigorous blood. Druggists. $1 i per large bottle, with directions for home cure. Sample free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble and apodal free medical advice also sent in seulcd letter. B. 1*.. B. is especially advised for chronic, deep-seated cases of impure blood and skin disease, uml cures after all else fails. Some men niaailv select the iosser of two eveils as a sample. FITSpermanentlycnred. No tUs or nervous- J nessafterflret day'suse of Dr. Kline'sGreat .NenreKeatorer,t2trlalbottlcand treatise free j Dr.B. B. Klim.Ltd.. 131 Arch Kt..Phila.,Pa ' Forest Gate. Kugland. las a three-yearold swimming champion. Jlrs. Winsiow's Sooth|nc Symn for Chiidcen teething,softens tbegums.n duces inflammation,allays pain.cn res windcollc.'iSc.a tottie Kmperor William was recently photographed again. . do not beltev# Piss's Cure for Coasrimo lk>nbMaaeiua( forcougd* and cold*.?.i'o?x i T.boriB.Trlultv Sorin-js. lad.. Ke j. 15, l'J3^ The heat developed by the tirin?r of j heavy guns is remarkable. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Hweet Gam and Mullen la Nature's great remedy?Cureg Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, ami all throat and lung troubles. At druggists, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. ;at that is fond of hunting. Massachusetts Animal an Adept at Retrieving Game. The firemen at the East street enSine house have a black cat which is remarkable for several things. It possesses six toes on each foot, and during the past year it has had about two score and ten kittens which have all had the same number of digits. The cat also has become a follower of the hunting game in more v;ays than the average feline has aspired to. It has an excellent record for hunting rais and mice that can bo found about the premises, but it is aiso a hunter after the fashion of dogs. One of the. firemen takes trips into the neighboring places for hunting birds, and wherever he goes the cat is sure to be with him. Whenever he brings down any game the cat is there to claim the quarry. It is said that the animal will follow the person in question for miles in order to get the game, and it cannot be deceived, for as soon as one of the firemen in the house starts out with a gun the cat is always a faithful follower. Yesterday one of these trips was taken with some success, and the cat seemed as pleased at the results as was the hunter.?Spring ield (Mass.) Republican. Most anybody seems to be abl? to eat eh a crook, but the best lawyers and the sternest judges don't seem to be able to hold him. THE -COFFEE HEART." I: 1* at I)an~?roui n* tho Tobacco or Whisky Heart. ' Coffee heart" is common to nitray coffee users ami is liable to send the owner to his or her long home if the thug is persisted in. You eau run thirty or for.y yards and find out if your heart is troubled. A lady who was once a victim of the "coffee heart" writes from Oregon: "I have been a habitual user of coffee ell my life and have suffered very much in recent years from ailments which I became satisfied were directly due to the poison in the beverage, such as torpid liver aud indigestion, which in turn made my complexion blotchy and muddy. "Then my heart became affected. It would beat most rapidly just after I drank my coffee, and go below normal as the coffee effect wore off. Some times my pulse would go as high as 137 beats to the ruiuute. My family were greatly alarmed at my condition, and at last mother persuaded me to begin the use of Postum Food Coffee. "I gave up the old coffee entirely and absolutely, and made Postum my sole table beverage. This was six mouths ago. and all my ills, the indigestion, inactive liver and rickety heart action have passed away, and my complexion has become clear and natural. The Improvement set in very soon after I made the change, just as soon as the coffee poison had time to work out of my system. "My husband has also been greatly benefited by the use of Postum. and we find that a simple breakfast with Postum is as satisfying and more strengthening than the old heavier meal Ave used to have with the other kind of coffee." Name given by Fostnm i'o.. Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Bead t ie little book, "The Road to Wellvllie,". n pkgs. REGULAR AT CHURCH SERVICE. Two Philadelphia Cats Have Pro nouncid Religious Turn. Opposite Hunting Park, on Old York road, resides a family. Torpey by name. The Torpeys own two cars that are different from other cats in that they so to church. As regularly as Sunday morning arrives the pair of felines mity be seen following the Tcrpcys to St. Stephen's church. t V/> mflttnr lilUc'.U ttiJU OUliCI ^ . ? VI. .IV what the weather or transpiring* on back fences, the two pious cats brave probable attacks by impious mongrels and set an example that many humans would do well to follow. Neighbors will attest :o the truthfulness of the statement that the churchgoing felines spend the very early morning hours of Sunday in licking themselves into that state of cleanliness which is "said to be secondary only to godliness. Their fur is glossy, their paws immaculate, and not a whisker Is out of place. Arrived at the church, the cats content themselves with peering in at the door. They are seemingly content to delegate the praying to their owners. Then they slip into the vestibule of the priests' house adjoining, curl up and doze until church is out. whea they follow the Torpeys home und live normal cat lives until another Sunday. ?Philadelphia Telegraph. | Your F I Goes Fi lira Here's a pointer ongetti BaS dollar from jour flour. U HO powder, which raises the IH light, crisp baking, andde' of the flour. No chance to i with Good Luck baking . H always depend on its stren how much raising power t W no guesswork, no soggy d< Igoo I lu /|fl SB is sold at an honest priceBrE Notice this coupon with CUT OUT THIS CAM AND SAVt IT. 1 999? VALUASLX ARTICLES. 3 EAV.n VMn. A9ar^M . ini M TH SOVTttW KVFTt Cfr ^ ? *Q? L^IlJ1t3B9WO3Sr^SiSTCTE K"| w i c BBg RIFLE AND Winchester Rifle |p>. -** calibers are load( the shells, supp powder, and seal using first-class i mdr system of loadi Chester Cartridge excellence is m THEY SHOO yTvr./R 0 S a renovat< . food for st is unsurpassed, est possible yield any given soil, a /" T"V tion Ot POTASH The best methods leadin explained in the 65-page illi free to farmers who write for results attained with cow pe; Address, QXB.lt J New York?03 Nuiau Street, or PRICE,^ii Ct. in JaRf r*- IN ONE MY WMUPsJ! TM5*0?QHU.F0RftaUNfl|r V Cell for 70m *" ' ? - " vMV?ir .3^ F. W. Diet Even' ? l% : 1'eruna as a catarrh remedy are pouring :n . ex-Goyernor 01 Gregoa is- an ar t from every State in the Union. Dr. Hart- ?(li ^ ^5 [EfrJr fJ! He* I man is receiving hundreds of such letters i4,? l|je bouse. 'n * letter .o Dr. ^ | daily. All classes write these letters, from "a,tmah. he n , i ,b, hi?h?t to th, E*lS1?5?%S?SSn?T.f The outdoor laborer the indoor artisan. The p,runa Medicine Co., Co him bus. 0:S-S the clerk, the editor the statesman, the Uemr Slr*~-i tove hadoccaoton to p.-acher-all agree that Peruna is -the utte your nrA medicine In my catarrh remedy of the age. 1 he stage and for colde, and U proved to ha rostrum, recognizing catarrh as their great- un excellent remedy. 1 have not had, est enemy, are especially enthusiastic in occasion lo use It for other aUmekte. jS their praise and testimony. lour* very truly. W. M. Lord.. -1. Any man who wishes perfect health must It will be noticed that the Governor , ^ be entirely free from catarrh. Catarrh is says he has not had oocasion to use rerun* well-nigh universal. I'eruna is the best for pther ailments. The reason for this ia? vV:>raa safeguard known. most other ailments begin with a cold. ? V' Ajfwj .Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna Almanac for 1906# A m ??^ ^ rj lour IpCT l#* ^ j igth. You know just iMKiwy |^Wwi Ml /W/; i*Q here is to a spoonful? yF* | j Q | iM Va w * ? wgh^oo wasted flour. -HH JU- . mj ^ 4 CK Baking PowderV i picfUre of a freightaur. You will find one on the back of every can? outside. Cut out the coupon. Inside of can.you ? 'HS this una ||> wj^ gn(j good Luck gift book. Pick from the c^n pift book the premium you want and we will send H lUtTAHtl I tt to you in exchange for your coupons >..4? JrJ n h e s t e r W.L. Douglas PISTOL CARTRIDGES I $3*JP & f3*^ SHOES? : and Pistol Cartridges of all I W. L? Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line id by machinery which sizes I cannot be equalled at any price. dies the exact quantity of I I I : ts the bullets properly. By I I sale** /? l\ I naterials and this up-to-date I ( f&kHtS pi \|-'N ng, the reputation of Win- I HE JH| jjfl- ? s for accuracy, reliability and | ^ JKlflKlj SfcS^. ' I '' v laintained. Ask for them. H ^yHH \ T/l I gl T WHERE YOU HOLD I ^ mHfef Dr of soil and as a jjlpj, ock, the cow pea To get the larg^ ? AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. ^ / *1(1 AftA REWARD to myose whs cat of cow peas from w. ~ , 1 cellfnt style, easy fitting, end superior w :arlag qualities, achieved the largest tale of any 93.39 I /-? | I shoe In the world. They are Just as good as nlPntlTllI innllPCI- ,h#** that cost you $3.00 to 97.00? the only PlCIl 111 til aUUllvd difference Is the price. If I could take you 1st* 1 11 my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest la .. ? * the world under one roof making men's fins shoes, and show you the cars with which every ? 7^ i;-* n/aoOCCdffl pair of Douglas snoes Is made, you would rsallzs llCCCjjal y why W. L. Doutlas 93.00 shoes are the beat J shoes produced in the world. If I could show you the difference between the c it., shoes made In my factory and those of other Of" tO Certain success are IUlly makes, you would understand why Douglas ?^ j 45 , 93.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold - "** ustrated book, which we send it. It tells of the remarkable ^^'5^ , is nourished upon Potash. RS/1?om ?.? Mll( f?r inspection upon request. X | I I |H 1 Fast Color Fytltti inod; they will not woar brastf. I B Ul II I I I II ' ^rite for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stylefc > CVARAlSii; io cJk" ! W. I- DOUG.'-A3. Brockton. S?l. I COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. | CONCENTRATED tl-Orlptae toad aaler who won't Osarantrr It. I ^ r KO?f Y BACK IPITDom'TlTKB. ner,M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Jf? / T ^ _ 1_ ^ ' v/i uD WEBSTER'S ' , 4 intermationalJ Orchard f^^lDICTIONARY I w (^raffia \X/cii-i3n* [THE BEST VV HLCIodd ^ CHRISTMAS , GIFT Imd AuttoritatiTO. No other gift will so of tan be a reminder of the rirer. 23*0 p.Tgcs, 6000 iiluatratlons. Rocenily A SPECIFIC FOR enlarged with 23.000 new words^ a new . . Gazetteer, and new Biographical Diction- | ?* ?? * ary. editedby W.T. Harris, Ph.D., LL.D., g IW^PFPSlA ? U. 3. Commlaslonor of Education. Grand 9 ^ L/I JrCriJlrt, a Pmc,World'sFair,St.Loula. Got tho Best. I J ^.p|/ HPAHArHF A VTcbsier'tCollfriM* Dictionary. Largo*! o( oar >bruJi; I I* C f\ LrrW^lI C y I *J CONSTIPATION. J 1 : Brits for "Dictionary Wrinkles "-Free. j ^G. & C. UEBRIAM CO., Opringfleld, bZzss-J The three "Ills"' that make life a burden. iiihbi i ma nil Nature's great remedy. In use for almost . a century. Sold by all ilruggl3' f CRAB ORCHARD WATfciJ^ FOR WOMEN JS* T? T days; elects a permanent cure- I troubled With ills peculiar to /K\ St in .*> to fcodnr*. Trial treat meet H their sex. used at a doucho is nurvelously sue- kKr.W'. ^ .ffl|i'riTgnfrW- NsH-lnttcah ,f" cetsful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease terms, fc/ QBMK Write Dr. H.H.Grtan sSona. H stops dlschartes, heals inflammation and local 1 jWtepcefrlists. Cox B Atlanta, ur. Bf soreness, cures leucorrhoea and natal catarrh. | - ' fejfl Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pore 1 [M MB B water, and is far more cleansing, healing, seimickUl 8^^1rf?VdBan?T3B7sl-l?W N ?ar .?P? ^^ ?atrvJu uVuITr7iu" [JT I TOILET AND WOMBhTS SPECIAL USES , B3 omjirti ayruo. i v.'a k>A u" H D Per sale at druaLts, 50 cents - box. ES ' > tnaa. Sold brrugs' 'U. J?1 HI Trial &?z and Book ot Instructions Pnc. IfSJF? H US a. PiETON'COM FART BOSTOSU NaOfc- tlgf / ???? * 99 lips' ft & 1