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UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM SOUTH CAROLINA PRAISES PE-RU-NA. Ex-Senator M. C. Butler. Dyspepsia is Often Caused by Catarrk Of the tonach-Peruna Relieves Catarth of h' Stomach and t:; Therefore a Remedy For .Dyspepsia. 4 H-on. M. C. Butler. Ex-U. S. Sena- t * tor from South Caroina for two * ternis, n a letter trom Washington,; 4 D. C., write- to the leruna Medicine ! Co., as 9olows: * **I can recomnmend Peruna /or 4 dyspepsia anud stomach trouble. 1 : have been itsing yoar medicine : 4 for a short period and I feel very * matrh reLieved. it is iLdee:L a 4 wonderfata medicine. besides aj 4 good tonic." ATARRH of the stoimseb is tne cor rect narne !or most case ot dvs.epsia. In order to cure catrch of the stom ach the atarrh must be eradicated. Qnly an internal catarrh retnedy, such as Peruia. is availabe. Peruna exactly meets the indications. Revised rormula. "For a number of years requests have come to me from a inultitude of griatefUl friends, urgii:g that Peruna be given a slight laxaive oualiLy. L have been ex perinienting with a laxative addition for Quite a le. zh of time. and now feel grati :fed to announce to the friends of Peruna that I have incorporated such a quality in the medicine wlich. in mny op:nion, can onjV enhauC. its wel.inown beneficial chsractor. S. I. H 1 V A - Nv . .M. I." Automobile Bargains. Weare th L,.k-4"(EST~l~i )is ofNEW and SEC. OND HAND AUTO.,cOBILE it the WORLD. Send lor OUR barinaixi list ot Automuvt~les en ihand. TItmes Jquare Autoutwbile Co.. :25-:!: W 4th.1:.. NY. City. So. 19-'06. -1 woman can throw a hint straigh - ter than a man can throw a rock. Strnck by Lightning. Mrs. Nancy Cleary, of Brewers, N. C., suffered as it struck by lightning. She says: "I was almost paralyzed fromn my waist down and my back hurt me constantly, from femaie troubles. I had headache, seemed always tired, and felt as if I was dying. I took wine of Cardhui, which cured me. and now I feet like a new person.'' Cardui relieves periodical pain, and makes sick women well. $1.00 at drug sto res. USEFUL HINTS. Burned or discolored enamel ware nay be cleaned by a rubbing with a paste made of kitchen salt and vine gar. For wagon grease or tar stops rub well with kerosene while the grease *is fresh, then wash out in cold, soft water, using no soap. *Kerosene will remove inkstainE. and fresh paint. while nothing tak~es out bloodstains better than cold soap fsuds, to which kerosene has been added. Do not dress salads with sugar and vinegar or salt and vinegar: the han ter is an admrirable comnbinlation for sccuring brass, but is not good for ne's stomach. Use a mixture of oil aned vinegar. lightly seasoned. 'Candles should be stored fcr six r eight wee'ks be-fore being tused. hey vwill the'n burn more brightly and more slowly than when lighted at nce. _______ WiheP.TWISTED. Witii-Pa. essage isn't good tO et, is it? Pa--No; what are you trokling bout?I Willie-Why Mr. Tangier, our Sun v-school superintendent. kept tell 'g us all the time todtay that "Essau old his birthright for a pc~t of nmes ge.".-Philadelphia Press. The net earnings of the railroads seven hundred millions of dol ars-which means. says Senator T11l an, that once in every three years very dollar in the United States ecomes a part of their net earnings. REPAIRING BRAIN. A Cert.?ni Way Ily Food. Every minister. law ~yer. .iourun:st. 'uielan, a1u'dor or buisiness mani is reed under pressure cf modern con ions to the netive and somnet~~ime r-ac-tive use of die bra iu. Analysis of the exereta thirown oiut ie pores shows that bratin wor: iks <own the phosphiatP of po:asi:. atrat iug it fronm its heavier comipan iches that this e9lementa Il~ prociple 't i;C e :i duce inao the bodhy anew I~ .h dia. f we- -o: replac-e thie lct '\> know' thaut thelt li~~ phe~shte of pot t. ;pr.2sentedi a: ieirtn tield t is the only vway ay r'ut i er to take~ th (rudle thiospi~c ash f :t- rug i~m fo n~v'-" I9 THE TULT'. AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY B!SHOP C. C. M'CASE. Subject : The Preacher's Commission. Brook yn, N. Y.-Tbe New York Ave n1ue Nl E. Church was crowded to its utUloSt capacity Sunday morning when Bishop N:.cCabe preached the Confer eee sermon. Bishop McCabe preached for nearly an hour. His sermon was a typical. old-style Methodist oration, and evidttly pleased his hearers im mensely, for .Iiis remarks were punc tuated from start to finish with cries of "'Amen." "Ialleiujah." Yes, yes." and freqtuent iaugh- or. Bishop McCabe's lubject was "The Preacimr': ComnIission," and he took for his t-xt tle passage in Hlaggai: "And the desire of all nations shall coi." Ile siid: Hag a~i was one of the prophets who weIm to I!lhe captive h aelites to help to rebuild the walls of the ruined temn pie and of their destroyed CiY. Zech .!riah w:r: the other one. They were both raen of vast hope and mighty faith. and God gave them vision to read the future. and. because they saw the futllre. they were optiinistic men. They did not helieve that anything was too good to be true. We ieed such mnen). We have enough men who tell us how muich better the past was than the present. and who discourage us. and we need men who talk hopefully; me-n wvity speak of the futi re with de light. because they know t hat the Lord's prayer-thlit the will of God shall :Jc oni on earth :s it is in 1eavel-will some day he fulfilled. These- two proplhets 'went to the Israel its', to .eui-isalem. and struggl'd to rebuild tihe temple, and they were greatly Ieeded. Cyrus. the King of Persi. allowed them to go. Cyrus was tihe conquerir of Babylon, anid these Jews had fallen into his hands and he treated the:u finely. Cyrus was a ,ran who believed in religious liberty. It is strange that 2500. years ago there was :a i-n:i in a high on earth position who believed that every man had a right to worship God according to the dctates of his conscience. I know Cyrus believed in religious liberty be euse h3 was not a Jew, and yet he allowed these Jews to go and rebuild their temple and ruined city. I think God loved Cyrus on this account. I know He (id. because He sent him a message by Isaiah. "I will go before thee and mr ike thy way straight before thee." Cyrus would have made a reat Czar of Russia: there would be no more massacres of the Jews. And what a great Sultan of Turkey he would have made' There woufld be no more massacres of Armenians sim ply because they were Christians. I trust in God that the time will come when a great man like Cyrus will or eupy every throne on earth, and wvheii the idea tha-t one man can control the conscience of another shall pass awayv forever. I have myself seen ;580 in strumtents of torture which were used by men and devils-for I think the devil inspired- men to use such instru ments of torture-to make all men think alike. I looked with amazed in terest at the "'Maid of Nuremberg." a terrible instrument called by that name. It consists of great. wide doors. in vhich I counted nine spikes, several inches long. When the victim was asked for the last time "Will vou r pent':" if he said "No," these doors were slammed, and the victim quiver ing on these spikes would suffer more anguish thar-. Jesus Christ did on the eross. M1en and women to-day would rather die than give up this old Bible. or surrender the right to worship God according to the dictates of conscience. We enjoy liberty to-day because such men .iid women hav-e livedI in the wolid. Let us priz'e the hoon which they purchased with suffering and blood. These Israelites had been in captivity for seven yet rs: 42.36C0 of them 'vent to build the termlie. Some were old aind some you nz. The youihg men shouted Solnns Temflple, but the old men (11(. and they wep'lt. They wept, first, b~e cause of the contrast between the P ount oif money wichl David gave Soo:non TO buildJ the temple with and the sum tihey had now. Secondly, be case of the contrast between the nuber of muen-Solomon lhad 80.0010, 2d now there werei' but 42.360. Solo mon had; 0.1:')mt overseers to keep the peoplo at work-walking (delegates, if t'tes were for that purpose. I won ier if the. eve haL d a strike among them. I womier if TG.000 of these Sf). E~i saidl to the' othe" eihrh v-font tper :ent.: "Unles., you jon our sceter you :tnniot work-i at al. It woul1d not have~ *ee allowecd in Solomuon's t ime. I and a letter . u.era fronm a prom 'ent mani ini t'is city, skim; meI if tihe hurch w'as the friend of labor. I want to state ptulie-y the ceed of ths M. . ChIurchx Wi. are the friends of aor0: we are' the friends of alli I laor f every nman and wvoman who 1has to -arn a living by the sweat of the face. W\e are the ltriemis. not only of the ~ixteen per cenit.. but of the 80.000: of 109 per ('enlt. of labor, w antuybody who is not a friend of 100 per cent. is mt a ti'ue friendi of latbor. That is the *reed of tile M. E. Church, and I state for them heeniuse they do not seenm rsOed to state it for themnselv-es. Anxd I believe I staite the creed of al' PIotestant churches in this country. Then. again, I think the 01(d menf aent beca use of' the contrtast in tile )hinls of the two teml)es. "The Desire of .All Nations," That is mel 0o' the namies of Chist.~ He' had ver 3f0 differ'ent atppeLllations.T lacob ~aed IHim "Shiloh:" Joh. "T1he rDeliv 're:" D~avid. "The Shepherd;" Isaiah.l~ 'onderful." "Counselor."l "Mghty od"' "Everlhisting F iahr and Prince of Pence:" John the BP ttist. 'e Lamb of God;' Paul, the "Fore annr:' at the Isle of P atm'os.TJeus rid: '"I am .i lpha alnd Ome.:a he "n~ii n the ht. til'e bridht al n mor't nt' s-ar. an~d .Tohnt c lie Hinm "King if Ih ::ndm Lord of Lo'ds." But le wee'test l:ame of all is Jesus, (1. .-ht a swer (a'mie a iN. ie is myb 'avour. It tonk ::n anigei to brnt that *aeGaril in:"Hsnaeshl Ime of l- H s a:sa: : b v He dlid come. "'nd is~ own received [m not." T he 1 ews~ are stil1 looking i Him. Thati the most pathetIe Ivre scola ha':us trains -lted the~ er1- '' i Time t' in: elbrew~ "s a lit -ar rem.~cure. andi a r~man iqi, n mi it. I ho .w i '' 11 Coiunl *r-rte. for tha !- th 1i'- s wayi'X to herear.,w~moennvrte J-ws? Let Now. "what' tL: i y' of Chri- :" Is he wearer of a.: t'm Zlor'ioust nameis 'inC or inmian m-: ni: aniice! m think He was a good man. a typica man. the best man in the world. bu say He was not divine. They do no even admit that He was an augelil being. Some think H1e was God-man "God manifest in the flesh. .esus divine. Peter believed that. Paul be lieved it. Ie said: *By Him a. tbinzs created that are in Heaven an in earth. visible and invi.,ible: al thins - rwere made ,y 11im. ScicI thilgs cannot b S.id about an :1n2 or a human heinz. I think 1i:e opistl to the Ilehrews was J wriiieo! 70y Pau to prove the d;Vinity of Jests. Son! sebolars say Apolios wvrote it. and no Paul. but Paul wrote it. There wa not anybody elseo gireat enough to writ it. We must have a divine Saviomn No angel or human being could d what we need. He must be an A mighty Saviour. One who is "might to save and strong to deliver." OU sorrows are too great for human cor solation: our sins are too mighty ft the power of any man or angel. W must have a divine Saviour-and 'w have Him. Do you believe TJesu Christ ean save a soul in an instant I know it: I have seen Him do it thousand times. He can do it. H stands ready. Will you have Him Do you desire Him? Bri-thren in the ministry. it is you business to preach Christ's Go.spel I th world. Hurry with the Gospe This is a sad world. There is one ri ligion that teaches that sorrow is . inescapable, that the best thing the can Ihe one is to be blown out lik" ca ndle. and 5i00.000.4000 Buddh ists hi liove it. Hurry with the Gospel. Ren .lohn xiv: "Let not your heart 1 troubled: ye believe in God. beiiev also in Me." The presence of sorro affects mie strangely. 1 have never g< used to it. It ought to awaken t sympathy off every human heart. read a story of a Pullman car when. i the night. all was quiet except a baby voice. One man called out. angril. "Where is the loather of that cd11 I wish she would keel) it quiet." TI father of the child answered: "TL mother of my babe is in her coffin i the baggage car. I hope the passel gers will excuse' mje: I am doing tl: best I can." The ot h:r man rushed ot and said: '"Sir. forgive me. I did ni nderstand. I would not have said if I had known. Let me take th, habe. I will keep it all night and yo shall rest: You must he tired." H heart was changed and full cf syn pathy. Oh. the world is full of corrow au sin: but we have the remedy. L< your feet be like the roe's upon til mountains. God grant the commissio anew to-day to preach the Gospel. The Timie is Short. Ah. my dear friends. you who ii letting miserable misunderstanidin; run on from year to year: you who ait keeping wretched quarrels alive b cause you cannot quite make up yot mind that now is the day to sacrifi< your pride and kill them: you who ai passing men sullenly on the street. 71< spewaking1! to them out of some sill spite, and- yet knowing that it woul fill you with shame and remorse if yo heard that one of those men were den to-morrow morning: you who are le ting your neighbor starve till you he: that he is dying of starvation, or lettin your friend's heart ache for a word appreciation or sympathy which yo mean to give some day-if you coul know, and see, and feel all of a sudde that "the time is sho:'t." how it woul break the spell! how you would go 11 stantly, and do the thing which yo might never have another chance 1 do!-Phillips Brooks. Re'ponsibility For PossessionsA. Do yout wish more strentgtih? But you had more and mnisulsed it vou condemnation would b~e greater than yottr reproaclh now for work undoni Do you wish mare money? But if yo had more its rust would the more sura ly eat your flesh as fire, while the r< sponsibility for its proper use woul bmrdtei the soul. Do you crave a lar'g field of work and influence? But whe if, when gained. ie richi were untilie andl the iniluence that of an evil star A y-oung miinister had few to heatr hi best ::ermonls: he complained to JTob B-rowvn. of lfarlington, and this wa the r'eply: "You have as many hearetm every time you prcech as5 you will car to answer for at the day of judgment. -Paclifc Baptist. Nearer Heaven. Bless God for the wilderness: thain God for long ni;;hts: he thankful thai you ha:ve b~een in the school of pover't and ihave undcrgone~ the searching an i tetiug of miuch discipline. Take tio rigiht view of your' trials. You ari I! 10 ire H vent for the gratves yout ha v dtug. :f you ihav-e accepted bereave ments in the right spirit: you are wise for' the losses yo ae bra vely bo:'m lbnt you are nob icr fo:' all thei sacLrilice. yon have willingly comipleted.-Di Joseph Parker. L.ive H olinese. It is better to live a good life than t be talking about it. better to live hol! ness than to proclaim that otne lives 11 If tihe sun makes a noise we do no hcar it. The brilliant electric light blaze forth without crackling. Th'l lighthouses flame out their rays ove te perilous seas wnhtlout tihe proclti mation of bells or the firing of eannox So the truest, purest andl best live sinply let their light shine, as th' blessed Saviour conmmanded. Need of Backbone. A contemporary suggests that on thing which Christianus as well as oth es need at the present day is back~ hone. Not a backbone lii:e a ramrod that cannot yield or bend, but a wel artiulted spinal column, which ston)Ig eniough to hold a man11 tipright anud keep h ilm fromt being e-rushled be ltea:ll'4 thut'dens that press upon01 hiin1 Th'iese are days of easy going piety and men01 are teo often rulet. by c:om Jruise rat her thanI by consc5ientce. Science in Dcstroying Echoec. ana arcte. c It is. ia'h 'Nd. easier' t< rrk'in: to (i(s::'o:: t h zm. " in :he lt::- mn htilt their greca emls and cat l ais with n<I thogh:ci coutic. Hen e.' whIt~ tr.":7 ami1 te r inigsof t oo: Ie;the :.:- 1,st;es sice tt I "rermit Millionaire" Dead. BC t The late Mr. Robert Davies. of t Bodlondeb, Bangor, North Wales, C. was known as the "Hermit Million aire." He seldom left his house or . grounds for a great many years, and, I though In ordinary health. would see besid his ~'*" or I but few people beside his secretary, e house-keeper and doctor. He was a di, bacheior. The very few strangers ge: who gained admission found in him a shrew d but kindly old man with an sincere though strong religious con- so: t victions. and living in a severely ," simple styla of comfort. Every morn- fo ing hi< secretary read to him from rt the Welsh Bible, after which a por- cu tion of time would be taken up by w Mr. Davies conscientiously compar- fei I ring the various claims upon him by an . the -sociieties in which he wa inter- er r ested. -tmongst which the Salvation Tr e Army found a high place.-London I T Tit-B i 1.i do The Hygiene of the Home. of e Lecturing upon the "Hygiene of the FIome," at the Hygienie Institute, r London, Mr. Somerville Hastings a( r vocatted the aboli"ton of carpets, hang 1. ings, and everythini; that could har bor dirt and dust. The quantity 0t dust that would lie on the point of t a pin was sufficient in which to rear 3,000 cclonies of gems, mcst cf them nocuous to human beings. Our hardy e forefathers of the reigns of Mary, E lizabe.h and James . never washed N- face, hands, or clothing, and a bath t was unknown. King James con. I e fined his personal ablutions to wiping the tips of his fingers with a damp u n napkin. Only students of history knew the horrors of life in the Mid ? dle Ages. It was almost inconceivably th e di:ty. We offer One Hundred Dollars Leward ,o e arv case oi Catarrh that can;o: be cured by cu it hall': Catarrh Cure. su itF. . CHENEY Co., Toledo, 2. 4 it We, the undersigned, 11Lv.- lkno0wn F. -f- ac Cbeney for the lst 15 years, and believe nim I jeriectly honorable in all business transac- C u *ions and tinancially able to carry vu: nay be S obiigatiois made by tneir iirm. ye I- WEST & 'nUAAx, NN hosale Drugqists, To ledo, 0. dr WALDING, KINNAN & 1lARvIN, Wholesal d Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrn Cureis ta-en internllyri e ingdirectlyupont te blood and rmuOUSsar n aces ofthesystem. csrimoaiis sent lree'. 1 Price,'75e. per bottl'. Sold by all Drm.giSt-;. Take B aill's Family Pills lor coustipatiou. e When there is plenty of cham paigne at the wedding reception all the guests never saw such a pretty r bride before. e FIT..t.V itus' lMauce:'Nervous iseaqesper t wa, uitlv ;-. ,d by 1r. K alines (reat N rvo an 1: t~-./ e:tri". ibottlet and treati- iree. tb Dr 1:. H . . :E. i d., :;I Ait hl St.. t'l~ia., la. p1 d. lie U D)ver h.:s-,;ome ,Tne ot the mvotes d mon Fu i l.a hnh rsm ts. th MrS.1WinsloW's Soothin.; Syrup or Children Ct etinkoftenstneguims,reducesinilamma- th unonallays 1-ain,'-ures wind eolic,25c.a bottle W It.*.---- --~ 11u Mn fi through success, while otuers ab w d (Iu::eed through failure. th n Re d. Dysentery, Choleramiorbus Cured bI By a trial of Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cor- de dia:. .\t Druggists 25c and 50c per bottle. tt F2 It's the man who thinks women 13 fcan't make a fool of him that isn't w~orth~ their while to do it on. L. & M.' L. & 31' TL. & SBuy L. d. M. Paint and get a full gallon. Wears 10 to 15 years. because L. &. M1. Zine hardens L. & M. White Lead and makes L.: &M. Paint wear like iron. Ri 4 gallons of L. & M. mixed with 3 gallons gir r oil will paint a moderate sized nouse. ti t C. S. Andrews. Ex-Ma yor. Danbury. Conn.. tra d writes: "Painted my boise 19 years ago M ? with L. & M. Looks well to-day." p s PAINT YOUR HOUSE- an 1 15 per cenat. commnission allowed to any w< a rendent w iere we have no agent. on sale fi s of 1L. & M. to property-owners, at our re- dr o tan pnece. Apoly to LONGMAN & MARTlNEZ. ' ~ Paint Makers. New York. - fo More hcomes have been mads happy 1lv women wvho understand how to t make pop-overs than to do problems ' in differential calculus. Tortuxres of 'Wozneni. e It was a terrible torture that Mrs. sa Gertie Mcyariand of King's Mountain, r N. C., describes, as follows: "I suf 'fered dreadful periodical pain, and be s came so weak I was given up to die, .when my husband got me Wine of Cardui. 'rThe uirst dose gave relief, and with 3 bottles I am up doing my work. i I cannot say enough in praise of SCardui." A wonderful remedy for wo men's ills. At drug;;ists, 51.00. tUnless a mx~an gets excited inan s arrment his wife is afraid he is a getting the worst of it. b Cures Eczema, 1tching Humors, rimples and Carbuncles--Costa Nothing to Try. P U .. B. B. (Botanic Blood B~im) is a certainP and sure curt for eczema. i' .dng skin. hu- d mo)rs, scabs, scales, watery blisters. pim- at pies, aching bones or joints, boils, earbun eles, prickling pain in the skin, old eating sores, ulcers, etc. Botanic Blood Balm F -cures the worst and most deep-seated eases - by enriching, purifying and vitalizing the ,blood, thereby giving a healthy blood sup. ply to the skin. Hleals every sore and ,gives the rich glow of heali.h to the skin.W Builds up the broken down body and mnakes Md 'the blood red and nmuri~shing. Especially : -advised for chronie, ,'ld eases that doctors. . atent medi. ines and hot springs fail to ;cure. Druggists, 61, with complete direc tions for home cure. To prove B. B. B3. ures, samle sent free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. De scribe trouble, and free medical advice sent a sealed letter. Farming would be v-ery' easy of itj iher didn't rain too mnuch~ or too - little. PUTNAM Colcr more woebriwchter and faster colors than anyVoth dyeany garmieL without rippin::apart. Write for treeb< Tha onstan IX OF WA'ERS FREE-ND DRU3 -CURES BY ABSORPTION, res Balchiln or Gas-ua-1 Breath and Bad Stonach-Short Nrs atht-. BloatIng-Sour Eructations Irregular Heart, Etc. rake a Mull's Wafer any time of the day night, and note the immediate good et :t on your stomach. It absorbs the gas. iintects the stomach, kills tbe poison rmns and cures the disease. Catarrh ot head and throat, unwbolesome food aid ereating make bad stomachs. Scarcely v stomach is entirely free from taint o~f ine kind. Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will ike your stomach healtby by absorbing il gases which arise from the undigested >d and by re-enforcing the lining of the )niacb. erablirg it to thoroughly mix e food with te gastric juices. This res stomach trouble, promotes digestion, eetens the breath. stops belching and -mentation. Heart action becomes strong d regular through this process. Discard drugs. as you know from experi ce they do not cure stomach trouble. -v a common-sense (Nature's) metbod at does cure. A sootbing, beahing sensa mn results mstantly. We know Mull's Anti-Belch W'.fers will this. and we want you to know it. This er may not appear agaiu. 5123 GOO) FOR 25c. 142 Send this coupon with your name ind address and your druggist's name id lo'. in stamps or sl:ver. and we wili supply you a sample free if you av never used Mull's Anti-Belch Wiers, anr will also send you a cer iicate good ljr 25c. toward the pur hase of more Belch Waters. You will ind them inva!tab!e for st:oma.'n trou We; (ur- by abscrption. Address UL.'.S GEAE T.ONIc Co., 32S 3d Ave., Hock Islanc, .11. Gie s!A drss an.! 1 ueft P:au'i . All dr5ggiste. 50c. per b. !r hy ruail cn reriot cf rrice. Stamj aeceited. Nothing sweetens the breath better an holy conversation. . Interesting Letter. .Iary Bagguley oi 117 Peach St., Syra se, N. Y., writes to tell of the terrible fiering of her sister, who for the past years, has been tormented with side he from female trouble. keeping her !ak and ailing. "She took Wine of rdui and is now well. Cardui has en a God send to us both," she writes. >r all women's troubles, Cardui is " fe, efficient, reliable remedy. At uggists $1.00. In Austria fleld labor is still large' - done by women. RUNNING SORES ON LIMBS. tile Girl's Obstinate Case of Eczema Mother Says: 'Cuticura Remedies a Household Standby-." "Last year, after having my little girl ated by a very prominent physician for obstinate case of eczema, I resorted to e Cuticura Remedies, and was so well eased with the almost instantaneous re !f afforded that we discarded the physi tn's prescription and relied entirely on e Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment and iticura Pills. When we commenced with e Cuticura Remedies her feet and limbs re covered with running sores. In out six weeks we had her completely ill, and there has been no recurrence o e trouble. We find that the Cuticura ymedies are a v'aluable house hold stand , living as we do twelve miles from a ictor, and where it costs from twer.ty to 'enty-five dollars to come up on the ountain. Mrs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas, tirmount, W~alden's Ridge, Tenn., Oct. ,1905." The Pekin robin is becoming naturalized the parks of London. A Strange Story. irs. Isaac W. Austill of Chestnut dge, N. C.. tells a strange story of eat suffering. "I was in bad condi nl for months," she writes, "under eatment of doctors, but got no relief, y periods had stopped, all but the .in. After taking, part of a bottle of ie of Cardui, nature worked properly *d without pain. I ativise all suffering :men to use Cardui." A pure speci remedy for women's ills, $1.00, at uggists. Heaven is going to be a hot place r some cold-blooded people. AN EVERY.D)AY STRUCCLE. en and Women of Every Occupation Suf rer ilsereis From Kidney Complaint. J. C. Lighitner, 703 So. Cedar St.. bilene, Kansas, is one of the thou .nds who suffer from kidney troubles brought on by daily wor-k. "I first noticedi it eight or ten years ago," said Mr. Light uer. "The dull pain in the hack fairly made me Sick. It was hard- to get up or down, hard to straighten, hard to Sdo auy work that 'ought a strain on the back. I had equent attacks of gravel and the -ie was passed too often and with tin. When I used Doan's Kidney ills, howvever. all traces of the trouble sappered and have not returned. I n certainly grateful." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. ste-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. Seretary of the Navy Bonaparte s elected president of the National unicipal League in New York. HICKS' CAk UDINE IMEDIA TE.LY CURLfS / HEADACHES Breasup COLDS IN 6 TO 12 tlOURS Trial Bottle l0c. At Druatim So. 19-'06. FADELE er dye. one10c. rsekae o colors anU fibers. They ,oklet-Howto Dye, Bleachi and Mix Colors. .M4 Lifcea brought to despair th Stake heart. There If Keeton, of Cephas, \ that 'my dear doctor all the medicines I e took. Now I am well happy, and have all pleasures of life b e f c rne." It relieves pain Sregmlte the functins SKETCH OF 4 HE LIFE U And a True Story of How t Had Its Birth and How t it to be Offered for Pub This remarkable woman, whose 1r maiden name was Estes. was born in I a Lvnn. Mass.. February 9th. IS19, com- s( iing from a good old Quaker family. n For some years she taught school. and w became known as a woman of an alert i ,~ it g: d B r( ti and investigating aind, an earnest d seeker after knowledge. and above I: all, possessed of a wonderfu'ly sympa- h thetic nature. t< In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkharn. a a builder and real estate operator. andl their early married life was marked by ii prosperity and happiness. They had % four children, three sons and a a daughter. n In those good old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies- ri calling in a physician only in specially V urgent cases. By tradition and ex- s perience many of them gained a won- h derful knowledge of the curative prop. V erties of the various roots and herbs. a Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. t She maintained that just as nature so bountifully provides in the harvest fields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains 0 to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies ex- t pressly designed to cure the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medi cines for her own family'and friends. d Chief of these was a rare combina tion of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses pecu- C liar to the female s~x and Lydia E.Pink ham's friends arnd neighbors learned d that her compound relieved and cured t and it became quite popular among them.r All this so far was done freely, with out money and with~out price, as a labor of love. But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lyn p. Its length and severity were toop much for the large -:er.i1estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from r fenrful depression, so when the Centen- ~ nial year dawned it found their prop erty swept away. Some other source f of income had to be found. At this point Lydia E. Pinkham's b Vegetable Compound was made known i to the world. The three sons and the daughter. a with their mother, combined forces tov and considez" - gi POMMEL BR DSLICKEk LIKE. A.L WATERPROOF / CLOTHING. ismade of the best -17 STICKTomH ' NS:IN OF THE FISH THE DAISY FLY KILLERK A aar ornie remy inme. One 20c - ea n n erinS soddrct o.. the cnurnc er. e ar o ei n:he c postpid. i Iot H lo odr apebottleA~. #.i erature re pofn reue! at.3 e Lounc, bye.~ trea r, Vht oe ice i a curubfooraaly or pairand a.,wites:"Lrf Sapla bten di,_rogh oneo1 rete. CriT verrtueteeuo rqet r eLOILERUA~o~ w r O mu IF A F LYD!A E. PINKHAM he Vegetable Compound he "Panic of '73" Caused lic Sale in Drug Stores. store the family fortune. They -gued that the medicine which was good for their wornn friends and .ighbors was equaliy good for the omen of the whol world. The Pinkhams had no money, and ttle credit. Their first laboratory as the kitchen. where roots and rbs were steeped on the store, radually filling a gross of bottles. hen came the question of selling for always before they had given away freely. They hired a job inter to run off some pamphlets tting forth the merits of the medi ne, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's egetable Compound. and these were stributed by the Pinkham sons in. ston, New York. and'Brooklyn... The wonderful cnrative properties of ie medicine were, to a great extent, -If-advertising. for whoever used it !commended it to others, and the de and gradually increased. In 1S'7, by combined efforts the fam y had saved enough money to com ence newspaper advertis'ng and from iat time the growth and success of ie enterprise were assured. until to ay Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vege ible Compound have become house old words everywhere, and many >ns of roots and herbs are used annu lly in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pir.kham herself did not ye to see the great success of this -ork. She passed to her reward years go. but not till she had provided leans for continuing her work as ffectively as she could have done it erself. During her long and eventful expe ence she was ever methodical in her -ork and she was always careful to pre rve a record of everycase thatcame to r attention. The case of every sick -oman who applied to her for advice ad there were thousands-received reful study. and the details, includ ig symptoms. treatment and results ere recorded for future reference, and >-day these records, together with undieds of thousands made since, are rairable to sick women the world ver. and represent a vast collabora on of information regarding the rcatment of woman's ills, which for uthenticity and accuracy can hardly e equaled in any library in the rorld. With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her aughter -in -law, the present Mrs.. inkham. She was carefullyinstructed - i all her -hard-won knowledge' and :r years she assisted her in her vast rrespondence. To her hands naturally fell the irection of the work when its origina. r passed away. For nearly twenty ye years she has continued it, and othing in the work shows when the rst Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her en. and the present Mrs. Pinkh.m, ow the mother of s. large family, t'ook up. With woman assistants, some as apable as herself. the present Mrs. inkhamn continues this great work,and robably from the office of -no other erson hlave so nmany women been ad ised how to regain ;health. .Sick wo en. this advice is "Yours for Health* reely given if you only write to ask rit. Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink am's Vegetable Compound:; made rom simple roots and herbs; the one eat mecucine for wonmen's ailments, nd the fitting monument to the nobl~ oman whose name it bears. -*~ 7 N. L. DOUCLAs f. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. !.\.00JGL4 sHOES PRIC ES. INd WORLD - JULY 6. 1876. * CAPITAL a2,500 f. L DOUGL AS MA NES & SELLS MO rEN'S $3.50HOES TH ANANYOTH ER IAUFAC TURE R IN TH E WOM.O. 1 009 O RWARD o anone who carn dieprove this statement. If11 could take you into my three large factories :Brocktron. Ma. and sl'ow you the infinite tre with which every pair of shoes :s made, you ould realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoe. ist more to mnake, why they hold their shape, tbetter, wear longer, and are of greater trinsic vac than any other $3.50 shoe. f L. DQe ~Stron.g Made Shoes Ifo. Mn, $2.50. 2.00. Roy' School & Dess Shoes,$2.50, $2.$.75 .5O CA UT ION N.-In- ao zpnanv W og shoes. T.tke nmo el-titute. 3.ne getanlne - ithout his unme at price~ Si r.pa l nbotto.i. ast Celor Ew'fr?. ud ; threu will :-u? wear brasey. Write for 111en.ratr.-l Cam :lag. W. L. DOU1.GLAS,.Brockton, ifass. D 0 SiCUREID Gives Guick Bellef. Remove, all swetling inI S to 20 day:2; e~ects a permanent cure in toto do damn. Tiatre:tment vein :ree. Nothinagaa'oefairer . seSacfalistc. Bez e Ala~t;. Ga. omeesaen rnale diseasos. should TSery. Mrs. John A. to me for years. All 'eucei me more thian