Newspaper Page Text
WOLVESHHJ AT BUY A GBIIEDY PACK OP ILLS SUEEQUHD A OLEEGY2IA1T8 WIPE. Through the Arrival of Timely Aid She Kscapes from the Terrors of a. Prolonged ' Slega. - Th Rev. W. A. Denton, of Girard, Crawford county, Kansas, tella the fol lowing story of a harrowing experience of one of the members of his family: . " My wife," he says, " was assailed for fifteen years by a combination of ail ments following the birth of onr first child. The food she at fermented in her 6tomach, Bhe had frequent dizzy Gpells, her limbs were swollen and pain ful, her nerves were quite shattered, she was unable to Bleep and she was many times on the verge of heart failure. " Physicians gave her only temporary relief. Finally the favorable reports of some relatives and neighbors led her to make trial of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo People. She experi rienced improvement almost at once. They relieved her sleeplessness, the Bmotheriug sensations have disappeared and have not annoyed her for years. They freed her from stomach trouble and the dropsical tendency "was miti gated. The progress of the rheuma tism, which had begun to mate her fingers crooked, was stayed and the pain was banished. In every respect they gave her more help than any other rem edy she had ever used, and she is today in better health than for many years. " Dr. Williams Pink Pills are our sta ple household remedy, and I am in the habit of recommending them to all wht suffer from troubles like those which af flicted my wife." All the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and repair chattered nerves are contained, in a con densed form, in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppression, irregularities and all forms of weakness. In men they effect a rad ical cure in all case3 arising from men tal strain, overwork or excesses of what ever nature. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold in boxes at fifty cents a box or six boxes for two dollars and fifty cents, and may be hai of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams Med icine Company, Schenectady, N.T. Be sure you. get the genuine; substitutes never cured anybody. PISO'S TABLETS The New Boon for Woman's Ills. SILENT suffering from any form of female disorder is no longer necessary. Many modest women would ratbsr die by Inches than consult anyone, even by letter, abeut their private troubles. PISO'S TABLETS attack the source of the disease and cive relief from the start. Whatever form of Illness aftjlcts you. cur Interesting treatise. Cause of diseases In Women, will explain your trouble and our method of core. A copy will be mailed free with Generous Sample of the Tablets, to any woman addressing THE PISO COMPANY Clark mad Liberty Streets. WAtTRCN. PA SCIENTIFIC ETXATS. ' Although Iron pyrites and copper pyrites are difficult to distiagulsh un derground by candle light, they artvr separated visually by the use of the bluish-white flame of magnastum wire or the acetylene light. A square foot of uncovered pipe, filled with steam at 100 poonds pres sure, will radiate and dissipate in a year the heat put into 3,716 pounds of steam by the economic combustion of 398 pounds of coal. Thus, ten square feet of bare pipe corresponds approximately to the waste of two tons of coal per annum. Oxygenated water at 12 volumes Is pronounced by M. A. Renard the best preservative of milk. Added directly after milking, in the proportion of two to three per cent, it decomposes in six or eight hours into water and oxygen, leaving no foreign substance as, do borax or salicylic acid, and effecting no change like boiling or freezing. The antiseptic action persists long enough to prevent alteration. The new carbon-molybdenum com pound of Henri Moissan is obtained by heating melted molybdenum and alu minum in the' electric furnace. The metallic product is treated with a con centrated solution of potash, when needle crystals of the new compound are obtained. The substance Is very hard, scarcely attacked by acids, un affected by water or steam below COO degrees, and promises to be of value for molybdenum steels. The physiological effects of electric currents have been investigated by Prof? Nernst at Bonn. The safety of the human body when exposed to a powerful high-frequency electric cur rent has been explained as due to the passage of the current over the sur face of the body only, but Pref. Nernst finds the reason of the current's harm lessness to be probably that it does not have time to effect a change in the cellular tissue before the reversal of the current takes place. Experiments on frogs have confirmed the new the ory. Vice Versa. ghe Few men realize how hard it is for their wives to manage on the small allowances they give them. He And few women realize how much harder it is to give than to man age on the small allowances. Brooklyn Life. 7'- r .- 3iA-i TWICE-TOLD TALES. James Jeffrey Roche was having l ciat with President Roosevelt In the white house recently when the tele phone began to ring. There ' seemed to be nobody at hand to answer It, so the president performed the duty himself. The visitor says that this conversation took place: "Well, what is It?" "Hello, is Archie there?" "No, he's not." "Who's this I'm talking to?" "The president" "Well. you'L do. Tell Archie to come over and play ball." And the president proceeded to execute the order as directed. An Irascible old colonel who used to play golf at Sandwich, on the River Stour In England, had a habit, com mon with many, of blaming everybody but himself for his bad strokes. Fin ally one day, becoming badly bunkered, he first took mighty ven geance on the turf with his club, Then, glaring around in expectation of the usual friendly comments, and nobody saying anything, he blurted out: "How can you expect a man to play decent golf on these cursed links with ships passing up and down the channel?" iwo zasnionaDie women were re cently calling on a new neighbor, and while awaiting her appearance a lit tle girl came into the room, evidently bent upon the rescue of a doll recent ly abandoned there. Naturally she was viewed with some curiosity, and one of the callers, secure In the child's obviously tender age, spelled a low voiced comment: "Not very p-r-e-t- t-y." To her horror, the small maiden paused on the threshold, and, fixing a contemptuous eye upon the culprit, remarked, with lofty composure '.No, not very p-r-e-t-t-y, but rather s-m-a-r-t!" fTor. Simon Newcomb tells of the following incident which occurred dur mg a recent visit paid by several young western women to the Wash Ington observatory. "I had done my best," said the astronomer, "to answer with credit to the government and to myself the running fire of questions which my fair callers propounded. think I had named even the remotest constellations for them, arid was con gratulatlng myself upon the outcome when one of the younger members of the party interjected: 'But, as it has never been proved that the stars are Inhabited, how do the astronomers ever find out their names?" RAILWAY BTJMOB. American railways handle about $12,- 000,000 worth of grain a year. A new railroad planned to scale Grays Peak, near Dillon, Col., will attain height at least 200 feet greater than the road which climbs Pike's Peak. The experiment made about a year ago of employing Mexican porters in Pull man cars has not been successful. Forty Mexicans have entered tbr service of the Pullman company, and of that number omly five are left. Timothy J. Lee, an American locomo tive engineer, has been held responsible for the wrecking of a train he was driv ing, near Zacatecas, Mexico, and sen tenced to hard labor ia the salt mines for four years. He was badly hurt in the wreck. His brother is a Denver police captain, The Southern Pacific company has forbidden its men to bring cocaine into its yards or shops. It has been custom ary for the men to use it when they get a cinder in an eye, but it has been used for other purposes; and, besides, the doctors say, its unskilled use in the eye is dangerous. The men have the use of a well-equipped emergency hospital. Of the sum which had been Invested in the world's railroads at the close of 1902 it is estimated, according to the Eng lish Railway Magazine, that more than 3,769.000,000 has been spent on 184, 000 miles of European railroad and 3,232,000,000 on the S37.000 miles owned by the rest of the world. On this basis it is found the roads of Europe represent an Investment of 22,952 a mile, while those of the rest of th world average 11,402. Great Britain's railroads rep resent the highest cost per mile, figures standing at 51,368, while those of Bel gium come next with 30,048. SOME SCHOOL SPECIALS. - A dairy school has been opened in con nection with the University of Califor nia. A registration of 579,854 pupils in the public schools of New York is a record achievement in that line. It is not sur passed or equaled in any city in the world. Thieving has become so prevalent in Stanford university that President Jor dan has Issued an appeal to the whole student body to assist him in running down the criminals. Under a new rule, women inspectors visit the public schools of London and in spect the pupils. Those that are not clean are sent home. But already it has been found that some of the children smear themselves with mud before en tering school, In hope that an inspector will pay a visit. Frederick Dougles Morrison, of Balti more, recognized as one of the ablest educators of the blind in the world, died recently from the effects of on operation for appendicitis. His great-grandfather, Israel Morris, was executor to William Penn, Jr. Prof. Morrison at one time was a member of the faculty of Girard college. Can't Be Seen. Humility is never seen in the mirror. Chicago Tribune. WMIIiiMll VOICES IN NIGHT Sermon by the "Highway and Byway" Preacher. (Copyright, 190, by J. M. KOson.) Chicago. Sunday, Nov. 27, 1904. Text: "And the Lord called yet again, Samuel. And Samuel arose and went to Ell. and said. Here am I: for thou didst call me. And he answered. 1 called not, my son: lie down attain. Now Samuel did not yet know the Lord, neither was the word of the Lord yet revealed unto mm. l bam. 8:6, 7. HE incidents sur rounding our text brine: before us a charming and in spiring picture. The rich and state ly and sacred courts of the Tab ernacle of Jehovah, the place He had appointed for His dwelling place in the midst of His people: the scene of the perfunctory services of Eli, the high priest, and the training school and seminary of Samuel, the novitiate There was the outer court with Its crreat brazen altar for sacrifice, and upon whirh the fire burned continually. Be tween it and the holy place stood the laver where the priests washed before entering the temple. Within the temple was the holy place with its altar or in cense, and its table of shew bread and the golden candlestick on either side, Before the altar of sacrifice and within this holy place the high priest minis tered daily. Then there was the holy of holies behind the vail where rested the ark of the covenant surmounted by the cherumbim, and between which there burned the shechinah elory over the mercy seat. Into this holiest place the high priest came but once a year. It was to this tenmle that Samuel as a young boy had been brought by his mother, and consecrated to the Lord's service. It was here that he ministered unto the Lord before Eli. But the word of the Lord was unknown and unheard in those evil days of corrupt priest hood and meaningless ceremony, and there was no revelation from God. The day's ministrations had ended; the aged high priest had laid himself down to rest. and Samuel, his faithful attendant, had sought his couch In the apartments ad joining. JThe gentle light of the seven branched candlestick, burning without in the holy place kept its faithful vigil, and spoke of God's presence, while the souls of men were unconscious In slum ber. AH! HOW often we are unconscious of God's presence. The body, God's chosen temple, is the place where He would abide, but we know Him not. Self, the high priest, is there, to serve and minister to the desires and needs of the life. The thought is not above the phys ical and material. God's presence is not felt. Samuel, the young novitiate, is there, in the person of the gentle, sensi tive soul. It serves as best it can be fore the high prietc, self. But it is not given any service above the mere sensual and material. It feels a higher need and obligation even while it serves on the lower plane of the material. The period of the low spiritual condition prevails and the lamp of God's presence burns fee-bly. Such is the condition, oh, so often, in the heart and life! Such was the condition of Israel and in the tem ple. It was God's chosen dwelling place. even as the body of man is God's ap pointed temple. "Know ye not," God asks, that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?" The temple had its appointed service, meaningless if the true purpose" and 6plrit were lacking; it had its high priest to discharge the religious func tions, and so the body temple has its ap pointed service, its homage to pay to God, its" worship to offer. While self is the high priest in office every feature of the service is subservient to the dom inant, physical, sensual self. The temple had its Samuel, the novitiate appointed of God to rise to the place of authority In the temple and to rescue the holy place and the sacred service from its de based and debasing conditions. And so the body temple has within it the eternal soul, the novitiate, whom God has ap pointed to grow up within and to rescue the body temple from Its low spiritual condition. DURING the still watches of the night voices are heard within the temple. God s voice calls: "Samuel, Samuel." Samuel's voice is heard in answer: "Here am I," as he runs to Eli's side, as was his wont when summoned to minister to his needs. Eli's voice is heard In dull, heavy, uncomprehending pevishness. "I called thee not, my son; lie down again." The three voices heard in the midnight watches of the life's great need. God's voice calling. The soul's voice in answer, and self quieting the query of the soul and bid ding It gs and lie down again. God's voice Is calling to you and to me. We know not His voice. We are unfamil iar with the sound thereof. Once, twice. God has called, perhaps more, and each time you have settled the matter by urging the soul to the sleep of indiffer ence and oblivion. Will God call again ? Are you indifferent as to whether he will or not? Are you glad that the conscience of the soul has been stilled and its questioning silenced? Do you feel better content within the temple of your body that you can minister to your own need as the caprice and whim of self may dictate? God pity the man who has stilled the voice of God tqJJie soul. Who has so repeatedly turned the soul away with Its questionings that at last God cajls no more, and the light of His presence has left the temple in hopeless desolation! It is an awful thing thus to trifle with God! Twice Eli turned Samuel away, but the third time that God called the old priest was aroused to the meaning of the voice and told Samuel how he should answer and what he should do if again the voice should call. God grant that self may be roused to the consciousness of God, and when He calls again the soul may be bid to say: "Soak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth." SELF rules In the body temple. God wants self ta surrender and fn lot His spirit control. Self as the hljrh priest of the life Is unresponsive to iitiiii God's will and God's leading. Self seek eth Its own gratification, its own ambi tion, its own plans, and is Jealous of its rights. It rules, and proposes to rule. It is not willing to surrender to God. Old Eli in the temple must make room for the younger man. And when at last he opened the way for Samuel to meet God and hear His voice and receive His message, it was that God might deliver His judgment upon Eli and Eli's house for sin and misrule. When self at last is brought to the point of recognizing God's voice and bids the soul respond to God's call, It means that self is at last ready to step to God's judgment bar and receive sentence. It was God's plan that Samuel should fill the place of Eli, and it is His plan. His blessed plan, that the soul should occupy the place of self. Self is under Judgment. It is to be destroyed. As God's word puts It, "the old man is to be crucified, with the affections and lusts," in order that the soul may expand to the in filling of God and occupy the body tem pie; in order that the new man, the new creation in Christ Jesus, may come to the fullness of the stature of a son of God. Self is the present occupant of the body temple that is to be judged and removed, while the soul is to be quickened by the touch of God and ap pointed to fill the high priestly office It is not pleasant for one to contem plate the giving up of self in order that God may be formed In him, except as we view it from God's standpoint. With all the awful judgment before him, Ell could say: "It is the Lord; let Him do what seemeth Him good." And so can we say, as we hear the judgment of God against self and the will of the flesh. r HERE are three things in the atti- 1 tude of Samuel wMch we wish to specially emphasize: First, he was awakened; second, he was stirred to seek, and, third, he was patient to wait. Had he had the spirit of some people when the voice of God at last pierces the heavy ears. and wakes them to con sciousness, he would have listened for a moment or two in impatience and then would have turned over for "a little more sleep and a little more slumber." But the voice of God aroused him, and he was thoroughly awake and anxious to hear and obej He . did not know God in a personal way. God had never spoken to him with distinct voice. Ah, how many there are who are In the same spiritual condition. But God speaks, and the v.oice is heard, and the evidence is furnished in the case of Samuel by his springing out or bed and seeking the voice, and in the case of the soul in its search after the voice that has spoken. Bed was no longer the place for Samuel, and the present place of indifference is not the place for the soul to abide. The voice has called. You are in perplexity and doubt. You know not what it all means. But the voice has called, and your duty is to spring from the place of indifference to that of active search. And "he that seeketh findeth." You will come to know clearly as Samuel did that it is God that has been calling, and then it is your part to patiently wait in faith until God speaks again, so that you may answer in obedience and faith: "Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth." Such must be the attitude of the soul if it would come to know God and hear Him speak. Awake, oh soul, to thy need! Seek that you may find! Pa tiently wait that God may speak to your soul His revelation! SAMUEL, as he listened that night to the revelation of God, discovered three things, and every soul as he re ceives the revelation of God through the Holy Spirit has a like experience. Samuel found a new relationship with God. His life was linked with that of God as never before. He had been serv ing in the temple? Yes. He had been ministering unto the Lord before Eli? Yes. And so may you, and still be a stranger to God, as Samuel was. But when the revelation came, as the reward of listening and seeking and waiting, then was begun a fellowship between 'Samuel and the Lord which the ages since that period when he wrought and served in Israel have only served to make more perfect and complete. And not only was there union with God in will and purpose, but there rested upon him a sense" of new obligation to man kind. Because of the revelation and the fellowship with God his responsi bilities were increased toward the na tion whose prophet and judge he was to become. Has God revealed Himself to your heart? Have you been made one with the Father through faith in the crucified son? Then upon you has rolled a new and heavy responsibility. Dare you be indifferent to it, while you hear the Judgments of God pronounced against sin and the sinner? Dare you keep silent, while men are going down to eternal death? Can you remain in different while friends and loved ones are being swept along In the tide that will plunge the soul to eternal de struction? Yours Is a new and tre mendous responsibility, if the light of God's revelation has shined in your heart. ' And the third expe rience which comes with the reve lation of God to the soul is the realiza tion of God's righteousness and the aw ful sinfulness of sin. Before you re ceived God's gracious revelation you perhaps did not realize -what sin wa3 and what awful" judgments God has pronounced against it, but as you have come into the pure light of God's holi ness and been cleansed from all sin in the blood of . the precious Lamb of God, you have seen with God's eyes, and peered for the first time into the very abyss of the pit. Samuel did not realize the iniquity of. Eli's house, great as he knew it to be, until God revealed it to him that night. And so we must re ceive God's revelation to view sin in Its true light. May God herp us to bear the voices in the tight: The voice of God, speaking to the soul. The voice of the inner self bidding the soul seek its God, the voice of the soul responding to the voice of God, and saying: "Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth." Dr. Wiley's Campaign. .In his effort to establish a standard of purity for foodstuffs, and to expose tho failures to meet the standard, Dr. Wiley has the utmost sympathy of the public. The extent to which the public is robbed or poisoned is appalling. The crime, as a rule, is committed by people who are deemed respectable, even by themselves. Whether the article they make and 6ell is intended for the table or sickroom with equal lack of conscience they ren der it unfit for use by putting in cheat substitutes. OFFIOIAL CUP OF COFFEE. Proper Method of Brewing the Bev erage to Be Determined in Washington. -By direction ef the secretary of agri culture the bureau of plant industry ia to take up at ence experiments to deter mine tba bast manner in which to brew a cup of coffee. To this and, taya a Wash ington report, F. L. Lewtoa, a specially trained expert, has been engaged. The view of the department ia that a cup of colTee is good because ef the manner in which it ia brewed, rather than from the quality of the bean from which the bev erage is made. It will be appreciated by all persons acquainted with the art and mystery of coffee-making that various con ditions, apparently trivial in themselves, have to be taken into consideration in producing the beverage. For instance, in the process ef roasting the beans may he more r leas damaged by being under or over done, and the flavor ot the coffee thus impaired to a corresponding degree. Hence the necessity for ideal conditions in roasting. Again, the effects of water at various temperatures upon the ground coffee and the proper period, for infusion will, for the first time in the history of ceffec-making, be thoroughly and accurately ascertained. The retention of caffeine, the active principle ef coffee, to which it owes its stimulating effects, and the elimination of the caffeotannic and caffeio acids, which are not only injurious to health, but com municate an unpleasant, bitter taste to the beverage, will be, of course, the prin cipal objects. MURMURS FROM GROUND. fitrange Sounds Heard for Many Cen x turies on the Bed Sea Borders. A singular phenomenon occurs on the borders of the Red sea to & place called Nakou3, where intermittent underground sounds have been heard for an unknown number of centuries. It ia situated about half a mile distant from the shore, j whence a long reach of sand ascends rap idly to a height of S00 feet. This reach is about 800 feet wide and resembles an am phitheater, being walled by low rocks. - The sounds coming up from the ground at this place recur at intervals of about an hour. They at first resemble a low murmur, but ere long there is heard a loud knocking, somewhat like the 6trokes of a bell ana which at the end of about five minutes becomes bo strong as to agi tate the sand. The explanation of this curious phenomenon given by the Arabs is that there is a convent under the ground here and that these monks ring for prayers. So they call it Nakous, which means a bell. The Arabs affirm that the noise so frightens their camels when they hear it as to render them furious. Philosophers attribute the sound to suppressed volcanic action probably to the bubbling of gas or vapor underground. A Teacher's Testimony. ninton, Ky., Nov. 23 (Special) It has long been claimed that Diabetes is incur able, but Mr. E. J. Thompson, teacher in the llinton school, has pleasing evidence to the contrary. Mr. Thompson had Dia betes. He took Dodd's Kidney Pills and is cured. In a statement he makes regard ing his cure Mr. Thompson Bays: "I was troubled with my kidneys for more than two years and was treated by two of the best doctors in this part of the Btate. They claimed I had Diabetes and there was little to be done for me. Then I started to use Dodd's Kidney Tills and what they did for me was wonderful. It is entirely owing to Dodd's Kidney Pills that I am now enjoying good health." Many doctors still maintain that Dia betes is incurable. But Diabetes is a kid ney disease and the kidney disease that Dodd's Kidney Pills will not cure has yet to be discovered. Fitting Ceremonies. A surgeon tells of a patient who was about to undergo an operation for appen dicitis, but before submitting to the knife sent for his pastor, so that he could be opened with prayer. Chicago Tribune. - CUTICURA SOAP The World's Greatest Skin Soap-Ths Standard of Every Xation of the Earth. Millions of the world's best people use Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Oint ment, the purest aod sweetest of emol lient skin cures, for preserving, purifying and beautifying the 6kin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales and dandruff, and the stopping oi falling hair, for soft ening, whitening and soothing red, rough end 6ore hands, for baby rashes, itchings and chafings, and many sanative, anti septic purposes which readily euegest themselves to women, especially mothers, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery. His Pride. "Why did you tip that waiter? You can t afford to give away money." "I know it, but 1 didn't want him find it out." Detroit Free Press. to Do not believe Piso's Cure for Consump tion has an equal for coughs and colds. J. F. Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. The Russian brand of patriotism may be judged from the fact that about half the population would leave the country if they could get safely over the border. Philadelphia Ledger. BA.A.A.A.i.A.A.i.i.a.A.A.A.A.A.i.A.a.A.A.A.A.ii.l.i.l.i.a.lXA.a.a.An Penetration is the 4 -4 4 4 4 4 4. Jacolbs Oil in the treatment of Rheumatism It penetrates to the seat of lorture as no other external remedy has been known to do and thousands certify to cures. Price 25c. and 50c. 4 TTTTTTTTTTTTT'TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT'TTTTTB r n he3 rs f4 PUTNAM Color mors oo brighter and latter eitors than anyotaer aye. On 10c packifs colors silk, wool anesttaa erBaH well anl is (naranterl ts (It perfect results. Ask dealer arwswaUena pott M at lCc a packata. Vrile ! !rw koaUat-Haw U Dy. Blaacfc asl Ml Cobra. HQSRQB DRUQ CO. CmkoarUJe, Missouri , (L 111 i Twiftvt -wwj 'Miss Whittaker, a prominent club woman of Savannah, Ga., tells how she was entirely cured of ovarian troubles by the use of Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound "Dear Mrs. Pixkham: I heartily recommend Lydia E. Pinkham'S "Vegetable Compound as a Uterine Tonic and Regulator. I suffered for four years with irregularities and Uterine troubles. No one but those who have experienced this dreadful agony can form any idea of the physical and mental misery those endure Who are thus afflicted. Your Vegetable Com pound cured me within three months. I was fully restored to health and strength, and now my periods are regular and painless. What a blessing i is to be able to obtain such a remedy when so many doctors fail to help yon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is better than any doctor or medicine I ever had. Very truly yours, Miss Last Whittakeb, 604 39th St., W. Savannah, Ga." No physician in the rrorld has had such a training or such an amount of .information at hand to assist in the treatment of all kinds of female ills as Mrs. Pinkham. In herofUce at Lynn, Mass., she is able to do more for the ailing womea of America than the family physician. Any woman, therefore, is responsible for her own trouble who will not take the pains to write to Mrs. Pinkham for advice. Her address is Lynn, Mass., and her advice is free. A letter from another woman showing what was accomplished in her case by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. t J ' Danville. Va." The testimonials which we are constantly publishing from grateful women prove beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound to conquer female diseases. $5000 FORFEIT if canmt forthwith prod oca the original letters and signature of above testimonials, which will prove their absolute genuineness. , Lydia J. rinaixam Med. Co Lynn, SlaM. rnrE WANT YOUR MM 7ffi?3CT&3 V SUCCESSFUL COLD. SILVER. COPPER, LEAD. ZINC AND QUICKSILVER Mln- il f ind Companies, if you will send us your name and address. Mining Maps Fre. WW AfiBUCKLE-GOODE COMMISSION CO.. 325 Olive St., St. Louis, Mo. Her Mistake. "Mamma," said a little West side girl yesterday morning, "1 can't go to school to-day. My tooth is achin' awful." "All rigkt, Lucy," said her mother, "get your jacket and I'll take you to a dentist and have the tooth pulled." The child hesitated a moment and then said: "Oh, mamma, I made a mistake. .It ain't my tooth it's my head that's achin'." Kansas City Times. As if the eye vrire not a weapon with which every young woman ia already ex pert, certain rules for an eye drdl have recently been promulgated. It seems that the beauty of a woman's orbs lies not so much in their shape and color as in the way she uses them. Hence a long list of directions for rotating them so that the muscles may be best trained. Man never knows when he is safe. Boston Trans eript. cardinal virtue of nTu Gsxiivrxt Lciit n. Fourvd per "Wcclt This la the proper rla- If 1 "doesn't, the taull lies with the stomach. Dr. McGee's Baby Elixir makes lean baoles fat and sick rabies welL It puts the stomach and bowels in such a perfect state of health that all It eats goes into nourishment. Cures diarrhoea, summer complaint, sour stomach and all disorders arislnir from tuih nr. uooa winter sou. sum mer. Pleasant to take. Guaranteed to contain no opium or poisons. Splendid for delicate wo men with sick Ptomacha. At your druggist a. 25c and 10c a bottle. IS S FISTULA- f7 YEARS Wtsw FREE a& sT Lin . an -CTIBtieUCn tfMTISS rilia. uiiLiuk or the HECium fnafes BI5F15FS OF WOmTH. Of tks tkouiandt of prsmiseat ptojls carta bt ear itfpitfesd, HONE P4ID A CEIT TILL CMHB faral tittr atmsi B. THORNTON & MIHOa, y&VtttVtrV CFIT tii entrg- funis tittr simst FADELESS BYE " Dear Mks. Pinkham : I am so grateful to you for the help Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has given me that I deem it but a small return to write you an expression of my experience. ' Many years suffering -with weakness, inflammation, and a broken down system, made me more anxious to die than live, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound soon restored my lost strength. Taking the medicine only two weeks pro duced a radical change, and two months re stored me to perfect health. I " am now a changed woman, and my friends wonder at the change, it is so marvellous. Sincerely yours, Miss Mattde Eejtbt, 429 Green St., mmmm I 1 Potash as Necessary as Rain The quality and quantity of the crops depend on a sufficiency of Potash In the soil. Fertilizers which are low in Potash will never produce satisfactory results. Every farmer should be familiar with the proper proportions of ingredients that iro to make the best fertilizers for every kind of crop. We have published a series of booVs, containing1 the latest researches on this all important subiect, which we will send free if you ask. Write now while you flunk ot free HJ tot 1 et. I it to tne CERJtAX KALI WOHCS Hew Tor k 93 Nmts 8treet, r Atlanta. Os 22 South Broad Street. ROPSYHS Cured. Gives quick Kemovesall ; in 6 to sr m 1 -aw mm y o pel uiaiicut . cure 30 to todays. Trial treatment free. IDr. H.H.Green's Sons. Box D. Atlanta, Ga. WHKJT "WRITING TO ADVEKT58 EKS pleiM state that yon saw the (erttaea meat la this paper. Clikf S WHl-kf All HSC CJIIC Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. in time. tna by drutrptsts. A. N. K.-T 2030 tnd nwtpaid t 232-m r ncTiii j nicrir id iotp!a a 232-strs a a g PUMairais 'rwrfNo f.ionsy TILL CURED tns liners ta iflDiiciliss. Kansas iry. mo. ana reet, St. Louis, Mo.. i ' ' TJBer 2T3p