[HUSBAND RESCUED ' DESPAIRING WIFE Altar FMT Yean of Dhr—ragtag Csa£tiaas,llrs.Bißock Garo Up in Despair. Husband COM to Rescue. Catron, Ky.—ln an Interesting letter trom this place, Mrs. Bettle Bullock writes as follows: "1 suffered tor four yean, with womanly troubles, and during this time, I could only sit up for a little While, and could no walk anywhere at ID. At Ones, I wou>d have severe pains in my left side. The doctor was called la, and Us treat ment relieved me fo a while, but I was aoon confined to ar* bed again. After flMt, nothing seemed to do qrt any good. jJjpfjV" ** , ■ ( SUNDAY SCHOOL. Lesson IX.—First Quarter, For Feb. 27, 1916. (THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Tent of the Limn, Acts vi, 1-7 Miw •ey Vmm, 2, » -Ooldon T»>rt, dsL vi, i—Commentary Proparod by Rev. O. M. atoorno. ' IscriiM of Dombm, even la or dinary church members hip, does not alwiyi tend to Increase or sren con tinuance of pence, especially If It mean* pleasing more people, as In often the case, though It should not be •o. Pleasing people la not the business of the preacher or Ibe session or the vastly or the committee; not pleasing men, but Ood, like the apostles In the last leaaon. In our lesson, while the number of the disciples was multiplied, troubles multlpled also, for soma were neglected or felt that tbey were In the dally ministration. Today soma people are not happy If they think the pastor seem* to neglect them In his pastoral calls or in not noticing them after church or on the street, and no committee can rectify this. The twelve decided, wisely or un wisely, certainly for tbelr own com fort, that they could not attend to this boslnees of serving tabfos, but must continue to give theoiaatves to prayer and Bible staily and teaching the Word. When competed with aorne other lines of asrvtes that of prayer and teaching would bo to many a de lightful preference, but ordinary serv - lea must be attended to also and often rsqulres mora grace. The preacher's wife may need more grace and pa tience for the housekeeping than be doe* for the preaching, but any kind 01 service needs a special anointing of the Holy Spirit. A committee of Sevan Spirit filled men of honest report waa choaen for this special ministry, the first two of whom we shall become better ac quainted with aa w* go on In our stodl**. Stephen, the flrtt of tb* •ev en, occupies tb* prominent place In till* chapter and the next, wbllo Philip Is the most prominent in chapter vlil We do not hear of Peter again until chapter vltt, 14, and that ia tb* last mention of John In the Acta except in xU, 2, where he la m*ntlon*d aa th* brother of Jim**, who waa killed with ■ th* sword, it I* poesibl* that eom* other* may bar* wished that tb*y had been among those cboaen aa apoetl**, bat here are two of **v*n aeamtngly ordinary man honorad a bore aom* of th* apoetl**. It I* well to remember that th* Spirit give* to *v*ry on* serer •lly aa He will and to be content to All any place be Ita Berries email or greet. It la written of Stephen that he waa • man full of faith and of th* Holy Gboat, full of faitb and power; that be did greet wonder* and mlraclea among the people, and tb*y were not able to fwriat tb* wisdom and th* spirit by wblcb be spah* (vereee 6, S, a too that by th* word of Ood tb*, number of tb* diaclpl** In J*ru*al*m multiplied greatly, and a greet com-1 peny of th* pHeats w*r* oMtal tel the Atlth (vera* T). In chapter v, M. • we beard th* high priest and othar* Wondering where onto this movement would grow, and we still aee it grow ing even unto this our day, but It does look aa If we bad now come almoot to the completion of th* growth of Hla body, the church. Tb* one thing to do is to be full of faith and the power of the Spirit and faithfully and fear laesly witnsee unto Illm sod Hla sal-' vtUon aad His coming again nntll we in called oat of the body or op la th« air to moot Him. The power of Stephen ta overcoming thoee who disputed with him (NM 10) wu la accordance Vith oar Lord"* assurance ta Lake xxl, in. "1 will giro you a mouth and wtedom which all your adversaries shall not be able to galnaay Mr Mht" This and similar assurance®, such as Kx. >▼, 12; Jer. I. 7-0; John sir. IS, 14; zr, T, are all for us today If ws will . - stead for Rim as Stephen did, for His ayee are still looking 'or hearts that are who Is toward Blm, that He may bold strongly with them (II C'hron. Jtrl, 0k margin). If we stand for Him and with Him, aa Peter and John and Stephen did, ws must expect to know something of the hatred of the sdver sary aa they did, for we-cannot know tha power of His resurrection without knowing also the fellowship of ills i sufferings (I'hll. 111, 10). Thorn who ■ftl- could no* ga lossy nor resist the truth Of Ood in the power of the Spirit by fe the month of Stephen could to fslsely accuse Stephen and make "■*» ' lilm oat a liar and a dangerous man to t~ That Is one of the wiles of the devil which he boo practiced ao long that 1 be ,ts eery aUllfnl In It He triad It % even upon our Lord Htmaelf, and we g cannot bop* to eacape, for as the Lord Jesus was persecuted, so must His fm lowers expect to be (John XT, 20). T« gf tkiM flals# accusations before the council we lo not read that Staph I ©avid and like "the Lord Jeeus, be was I bad gotten so weak I could not stand, and I gave up in despair. At last, my husband got me a bottle ot Cardui, the woman's took, and I com menced taking It From the my fat dose, I could ten Ik was helping me. I can now walk two miles without its tiring me, and am doing all my work " It yon an an ran down Iran womanly troubles, dont give up fat despair. Try Csrdtd, the woman's tonic. It has helped more than a million women, In its 90 years of continuous success, and should surely help you, too. Your druggist has sold Cardui lor yean. He knows what it will do. Ask him. He will recom mend it Begin taking Cardui today. WHU to! CfcrtUaoooa Msilctiw CO.. U4W Advisory D«t.. Chaltanooca. Tmn., for Bptciai Instruction* an your cm andM-paca book. Horn* TiaaUMM tar Wwm." aool K siala nam. Mo 14). ft |ii a if real victory when one can keep hIA mouth and hIH tonirue at ouch a' time or of any time (Prov. xxl, 28). Although Htephen was outwardly in the presence of the council, his heart was lu lbe presence of Owl, and it was •eon In III* face (verse IB). Ood was watching over Hie word and bleating It to the salvation of many, includ ing a great company of the priesta. Energy, Persistence and Tact Needed After the War By O. P. AUSTIN, Statistician, Notional City Bonk, Now York WHETHER we (hall be able to hold any considerable share of increases in exports of manufactures after the war is over will depend largely upon the EN ERGY, PERSISTENCE AND TACT with which the American manufacturer and exporters follow up the opportunity thus offered. Tne theory that the nations now at war will carry their bitterness to such an extent as to refuse to trade with each other after the closo of hostilities finds little gupport in the history of the trndo relations fol lowing other great wars. * * * TO Be SURE, EUROPE WILL GET A MUCH UTTER ACQUAINTANCE WITH OUR MANUFACTURES AND, LET US HOPE, A BETTER OPINION OF THEIR QUALITIES, BUT IT MUST BE REMEMBERED THAT EUROPE IS ITSELF A QREAT MANUFACTURING CONTINENT AND THAT THERE ARK SOME IN THE UNITED STATES WHO FEAR SO PROMPT A RESTORATION OF EUROPE'S MANUFACTURING POW- i ER AS TO ENDANGER OUR OWN DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES FROM THE "DUMPING" OF SURPLUS PRODUCTS FROM EUROPEANI FACTORIES. CERTAINLY IF WE RETAIN ANY CONSIDERABLE SHARE OF THE EUROPEAN MAR KET FOf» MANUFACTURES OUR PRODUCTS MUST BE SOLO AT PRICES AS LOW AS THOSE PRO DUCED BY THE CHEAPER LA BOR OF THAT CONTINENT, NOT THROUCH A CHEAPENING OF OUR OWN RATES OF LABOR. BUT BY HIGHER EFFICIENCY OP MA CHINERY, REDUCTION OF WASTE AND GREATER ECONOMIES OF PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION. First Accident Under Nsw Law. The Ant fatal accident ID. or about tb* mine* of the Hsxieton dlitrlrt ilnce (he compenssllon act became effective occurred la th* Jeddo No. 4 colliery of the, O. B. Markle company, where Judas Bambolskl, oMiailetoo. waa killed by a fall of rock* while robbing ptllara. Four Children Burned to Osath. Four children of John Morgan, rang- j inc In ag* from four to flfteen year*, were burned to dea:h In their home at New MartlnsvlKs, W. Va. Mor gan ssvcd one daughter, aad whl'* attempting to roach the other* waa *o badly burned phyilclsn* feare.i be would not recover. Physician Killed aa H* Lravee Mother. Dr. Jam** 8. Bpangier, a Hunting don county physician, was killed byi a Pennsylvania railroad train at Map'*- 1 ton, near Harrisburg, Pa., a* ha wai' crossing the tracks from the home of bis aged mother, who is critically 111. Dr. Bpangier was flfty-flve years old. SIOO,OOO Fir* In Trenton. Fire of undetermined origin dam aged the building of the Belle mead Sweets company in Trenton, N. J., to th* extent of fIOO.OOti. One hundred and twenty-Bve glr s were thrown out of work by tb* blase. Mother Falls From Ladder, Killing Son When a Isdler broke, Mrs. Oott frled Pfsdt, of Erie, Pa., fell, em h Inc to death her son, Gerald. aged three, who was climbing up behind her. 2,400,000 Allies Captured. The armies of the central empires have taken about 1,400,000 prisoners since the' beginning of tb* war, ac cording to eatlmatea made In Berlin. Hiccoughs Kills Dentlet. Violent and protracted case of hic coughs caused the death of Dr. C. L. Yerxa, a dentist of WUllamsp irt. Pa, in a local hospital. 1 . . " His Opinion. Mr*. Yeast—What would you call a man who agrees with everybody T Mr. Yeast—A fool. "And suppose It was a woman?** , "It Isn't posAble that any woman would."—Vonkers Statesman. SUBSCRIBE FOB THB QLBANER •1.90 A YEAR MANSION WITH CENTRAL HALL Design MO, by Glenn L. Sexton. Architect. Minneapolis, Minn - ■ i »• ' r ■ I PURBPECTIVB VIEW—FROM A PHOTOGRAPH. j If;-. INTERIOR VIEW—STAIRWAY The Interior view takes In the central hall, showing the large grand father clock at the foot of the staircase. On top of the newel t>oet la a hall light. Coat closet, closed by a full mirror door, at the rear end of the hall. There are three living rooms and a den on the tlrat door and four chambers and bath on the second. Oak finish and oak floors for the prin cipal rooms In the first story; white pine to enamel for the entire second story, with birch doors, stained mahogany. Maple floor* In kitchen and second story. Size, 32 feet Inches wide by 30 feet deep, exclusive of pro jections. Basement under the entire house Is 7 feet; first story, 9 feet; second story, 8 feet. Cost to build, exclusive of heating and plumbing, ♦ 4,600. , - Upon receipt of fl the publisher of this paper will furnlah a copy of Saxton's book of plans, "American Dwellings," which contains over 100 de signs costing from 11,000 to K. 000; also a book of Interiors, $1 per copy. Period of Greatest Prosperity In History Has Dawned on This Country By JOHN H. FAHEY. President of the United State* Chamber of Commerce PROSPERITY is with us now. It is distinctly here, and there ia no question of its coming in a few months or at some indefinite future period. It lias been rapidly developing during the last year. Bank clearings, general industry, the records of the railroads, all bear this out. In my mind there is nofdoubt that 1916 will be a tremendous year— TIIAT IT WILL BE THE BIGGEST BINGLE YEAR IN THB HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. N-* • In the face of this enormous domestic increase in business of all kinds it would be idle to deny that the foreign complex has been a large factor in bringing this increase about. But back of this are other issues which hare been little appreciated. Last year we produced the biggest crop* in the history of the nation. Our whole domestic mechanism was in splendid shape at the outbreak of hostilities abroad. Temporary in dustries, such aa hare grown up out of the need of war munitions, of course, bring a great stimulus to bear. But meanwhile all aorta of re adjustments in the world's business are taking place. THE TIME WAS BOUND TO COME WHEN AMERICA SHOULD STOP LIVING JUST FOR HERSELF AND BROADEN OUT HER INTERESTS AND SYMPATHIES. IN A SENSE WE HAVE JUST BEGUN TO DISCOVER THE WORLD. Policy of Freedom the Best Yet Devised For Government of Men By Dr. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, FWJent Columbia Univenity I WOULD not have the people of these United States forget the injunc tion of Washington. I would not have them depart from the path of established policy that has been trodden so long and, on the whole, eo wisely. I would not hsve them make an alliance, entangling or other wise, with any nation on the globe. But I would have them enter into rach relations of intimacy and influence with every nation that the spirit and convictions THAT ANIMATE AND PERMEATE THE AMER ICAN FEOPLE MIGHT BE MADE A WORLD CONTRIBUTION WHEN THIS WAR ENDS. • I would endeavor to show to Europe how goma problem* are solved across the sea that are, in kind, their problems. I would try to show that, whatever may be the difficulties which grow out of differences of gsce and creed ana language, those difficulties are only increased bj re pression and are decreased ojr liberty. I would try to show that, on the whole, and despite the dangers and difficulties and the many and baffling embarrassments, the policy of free dom, of hospitality and of equal opportunity solves more questions than it leaves unsolved. AND THAT, ON THE WHOLE, IT SOLVES «0A« QUMTIONI THAN ANY OTHER POLICY THAT HAS VST SEEN PRESENTED FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF MEN. The Trouble. I ZHHZT "Have yon explained the germ sys tem to your children ? everything should be on s practical basis these days." "No," replied th* old fashloo*d slti len. "It seeme Inconsistent to tell 'em not to believe in fairies and then try to get '*m to beUev* in mlcrob**."-. Pitts burgh Port. NOT ENOUGH WKN evet receive the proper baisac* of Ad to enfidently aoorlah both body sad brsin during the growing period when nature's demands are greater than la mature His. This is shown in so assy pale feces, lean bodies, frequent colds, and lack of ambition. ,« For all inch children we aay with nnmlatakable earnestness: They Med Scott's Emulsion, and need it now. It poeames In concentrated form the very food elementi to enrich their blood. It changes weakasss to strength; It makes them sturdy and strong. No alcohol. Gcott ft Bowae, MoeaMd, W.J. New Main* Blahap. The Right Bar. Benjamin Bra water, of Qlenwood Springs, Colorado, *u elected bUhop of the Proteataat Bpto copal diocese of Maine, to auccaad tb« Right R«T. Robert Cod man. who DIED rorently. Dr. Bre water la mlaaloMn bishop of weatern Oolorado. ■*- t~—, f * " Girl Gored by Bull. Attacked by a ball while walktal oa the Cherry Ixne road, naai Btroudshnr*. Fa, eUhtean-yaar-oM Roale Young waa tared by men who heard the ahrieka of seren terrlOal companion! who had taken to tree a. Though gored, abe will recorar. British toaaea M 5.447. Premier Aaqulth, In a written raplj to a request for Information, aaya thai the total Brltlah casualties la all flelda of operations up to January I war* 549,467, of which *4,1« wars officers and 525.345 of other ranks. Bubacribe for THBIJLBANBR- H ls ft y#w In idvance, Making the Little Farm Pay Ey C. C. BOWSdELD City men by scores are taking farms, telng convinced that under modern 1 conditions agriculture la on* or the beat paying vocations. Many wbo wiali | to become fsrmere, Including persons without experience and hired men wbo ate capable of managing a place, nay not have the capital to bay land. In such caaea renting afforda an oppor tunity to make a successful start Buy ing outright la the better plan, how ever, even If tbe start baa to be made with a place of live or ten acrea. Either cash renting or tbe system of sharing profits may prove aatlafactory. Investigation shows tllat fifty-eight cash tenants, in Indiana, Illinois and lowa made an annual labor Income of S9OB, while 106 abare tenants made only |B3S, or $163 less than tbe caab men. In the dry summer of 1910 these figures were just reversed. The dry seaaon compelled-cash renters to stand the burden of all tbe loea, while the share tenant waa helped out by bis landlord. That season twenty-seven cash tenants received SOB 9 ngalnst $727 s average Income for tenants wbo were : sharing. For a large number of farms and over a long period of years the cash man seems to come out ahead. He has the greatest' risk, the 'largest Invest ment and the highest Income. A large number of tenant farma netted their operators Incomes as follows: Cash rental, $1,704; partnership, $1,291; •bare cash, sl,llO. A capital of $2,000 A Pi Is needed by the young man who la to atart farming on the cash baslv. How la be going to get this amount? In many cases It Is Impossible. Rather than plod along as a fnrrahaflS or give up tile enterprlae altogether a man wonld lie wise to look to some other ayatetn of renting. Partnership rent ing solves this problem. The tenant here furnishes all labor, the landlord all land and seed, and the stock Is owned In partnership. This plan la elaatlc. Sometimes either of the par ties may own all the Uve stork and machinery. Partnership farms are likely to be handled better than the others. Both sides will aim to keep op soli fortuity and be governed by progressive Ideas. In a partnership the landlord has a voice In all matters which relate to permanent betterment, general upkeep and the type of farming that Is to be practiced. This system of renting Is beat adapted to the young man with •mall capital who la willing to work under the supervision of a landlord. There should be a friendly understand ing before a'contract Is made. If both aides agree on progressive methods the arrangement "will be advnntageons. There should be a full understanding aa to the policy of carrying all the live stock that the place will support, whether for meat production or dairy Ing. ThU contemplates soil fertility as well as the atiuual profit* from live stock or milk. It is also liewt to have a clear agreement ns to the amount of effort to be given to fruit and truck raising and the way trees nud garden* •re to be handled. If two earnest and Intelligent men get together hi a deal on this basis there will be mutual sat Isfactlou and success. Karl A. Roeenfelt, a stock farmer lu Story county. la.. who baa won fame aa a breeder of Angus cattlu, bnllevt* In tbe partnership system of renting. "If I am going Into tbe csttlis business I am going Into It witb all my might" aald Mr. Roseufelt. "and I will not hare time to look after tbe work In the fields " HP believed that tbe only way to solve the labor problem oy a farm waa to-rent out tbe land to bia hired nan. For one-third lntereat in all tbe cropa produced the tenant furnishes all labor for tbe patting in of tbe cropa and harvesting them. He llvmi on tbe farm In a tenant bouae. wlth'iut rent Beaulta from the lout ycar'a efforts were quite aatiafartory. Tbe renter'a •bare amoonted to *1.200, besides which be had bia rent free and uost of hia living. This ought to be cnconrag la« to tbe young renter. Thia man's capital waa virtually nothing, tbe land lord fnrnlabing all tbe machinery, tools and aeed. He kept tbe pastures for bia own two la cattle feeding. Horn Need Pure Water. The neceoalty of plenty of pure drink tag water for tbe laying bena should bo apparent to everybody, but we are aony to say that many bens do not got enough water for their neceaslties daring cold weather. In many poul try booses the water frceies before the bena can get enough to drink. ■ew'a This I W« offer One Hundred Dollar* ttaward tor say gsm o t catarrh that oannol bs ourad by MHMNr honorableisall buKn— tnaaao- Uooa dad■aaaolally sMs esrry oat say 11 ' ifssro •At »»a« r or q Ra i t Catarrh Care U taken internally, aetlaf dtreetly upon the Mood sad awna aurfaoas of the !>*■■. tVeilaiuiilala «ea» tree. PHoa % ceata par bottle. Sold by ail "SSStia-. Family Ptllf for ooatUpaUon. ii? TiTp^l 'm m&L i M I Woman Suffrage Move ment a Fight For Democracy By the Rev. JOHN HAYNBB HOLMES, New York City THE suffrage movement is simply one expression of the modern • fight for political and jpdna trial democracy. It is one of the last of the long .aeries of battles for tbe complete emancipation of man-\ land. In the case of this fight, as in the case of every fight for an ex tension of democracy, the foes to be ' fought and overcome are those of ignorance, prejudice and selfishness. Nothing, however, in the long run can stop progress, the progress of democracy,, and nothing in the long run can stop the triumph of woman suffrage. INDEED, IN VIEW OF WHAT HAB BEEN ACCOMPLISHED IN THE LAST FIVE OR SIX YEARS, I AM PERSUADED THAT THE FIGHT FOR WOMAN SUFFRAGE WILL BE PRACTICALLY COMPLETED I N j THIB COUNTRY LQpO- BEFORE OTHER AND .DEARLY SOUGHT CAUBEB OF DEMOCRACY ARE CARRIED THROUGH. Woman's Intuition Would Be of Value in Mat ters of State By Judge WESLEY O, HOWARD, Supreme Court of New Ydrk I HAVE a fixed opinion that grave dangers menace this republic J dangers with which the states men of the age seem unable to cope] dangers of which perhaps they are unconscious. WOMAN HAB PECULIAR APTI TUDE AND TALENT IN CERTAIN DIRECTIONS. THIB MUST BE AD MITTED, AND THE UTILIZATION IN STATECRAFT OF HER INTUI TION AND GENIUB MIGHT PILOT THE SHIP OF BTATE MANY TIMES OUT OF TROUBLOUS WATERS. The other great stock exchanges of the world are regulated by law, but the New York Stock Exchange is immune from law. WHEN WOMEN BECOME STATESWOMEN IT SEEMS TO ME THAT THIS AND A MUL TITUDE OF OTHEB EVILS WILL RECEIVE ATTENTION. French Losses 2,500,000 M. Longuet, a French Socialist, deputy, who addressed the Brltlsl labor conference in Bristol, Eng., od being questioned regarding th« French losses, said that 800,000 sol dlers had been killed, 1,040,000 had been wounded and 800,000 had been taken prisoners. . Fell 125 Feet; Will Recover. _ C. H. Ice,, a painter, of Donors, near Monongahfela, Pa.,' fell 125 feel from a scaffold, sustaining a broken; arm and leg and a slight concussion of the brain. Physicians predlot tat will recover. Ice, It is said, owea his life to the fact that he fell Into mud. Ugh! Calomel Makes You Deathly Sick Stop Using Dangerous Drug Before it Salivates you ! It's Horrible! You're bilious, sluggish, consti pated, and believe you need vile, dangerous calomel to start your liver and clean your bowels. Here's my guarantee! Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone and take a spoonful to-night. If It doesnt start your )iver and straighten you right up better than calomel and without griping or making you sick, I want you to go back to the drug store and get your money. Take calomel to-day and to-mor row you will feel weak, sick snd nauseated. Dont lose a days work. Take a spoonful of harm less, vegetable Doason a Liver Tone tonight and wake up feeling great. It's perfectly harmless. Give it to your children any time. It cant salivate, so let them eat anything they want afterwards. Burns Kill Mother and Baby. Mrs. William A. Lamblg, wife ol a fanner near Apollo, Pa., and hei baby daughter, Margaret, died from horns received when Mrs. Lambii tried to start a lire In the kitchen stove with coal oil. Good Roads Bill Passes. By a vote of twenty-eight to eighty one, the hocse passe 1 the Shack elford good roads bill, authorising the appropriation of $28,000,000 to extend federal aid In the construction of poel roads. * Coughing Fit Kills Woman. As she was about to go to bed, Elisabeth, wife of Frederick Bgge, ol Allentown, Pa.. Was seised with s coughing spell, snd died before the oldest dsughter could swaken the younger children. BE CHEERFUL. A ehssrful and glad epirlt at tains to perfection much more readily than dees a melancholy spirits—St. Philip Neri. Brazil Nut Trees. The Brasil nut tree does not begin U bear fruit ontil It attains the age oi fifty yean or thereabouts and contln uee to produce crops Intermittently Trees known Jo be hundreds of yean old have produced crops. CeastlpaUea. When costive or troubled with constipation, take Chamberlain h Tablets. They are easy to take and most agreeable in effect. Obtaina ble everywhere. adv. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE QLBANRB tI.M A YEAR The Kind Ton Hare Always Bought, and which haa been la DM for OTer 30 yean* haa borne the signature of - and haa been made under bis pep* sonal supervision since its infancy, i* ' f-UCA44& Allow no one to deceive you In this* J All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Juat-as-good " are bn* Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health ot Infanta and Children—Experience against Experiment. What Is CASTORIA Castoria la a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- ' gorlc, I>rop« and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nareotlo subitance. Its age Is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverlshness. For more tbaa thirty years It haa been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels* assimilates the Food* giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. QENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought 1 : ~ ' 1 ■ 60 YEAQS r OuT\TIOM A B A RAL6M) ' Warranted To Cur« , TALL SUMMER SICKNESSES b |y- Graham Drag Co. I itee istheAnswerTm F WEBSTEICS R * NEW INTERNATIONAL TIE Mown rami ■mr day In Toor talk ud nrfhl.il borne, on the street ear. In the offlc«. shop and school you likely question the mean ing of some imp word. A Mend asks: '•What makes mortar hardo*" Ton seek tbojacatiokoff safcJTafrfasortbepronnn clatlon of JuJuUm. What Is mkit, como This New Creation answers all k|pds of qneatlona In Lanraace.History.BloKraphy, Plctfon,Forel(n Words, Trade*, Arts and Sciences, with Mmml amtktritt/, 400,000 Wards. CKJU , , MOO lll—trsHsl, /3K\. \VV || ' Cast MOO.OOO. ZtßttMiSS,). The only dictionary with t the mm dlvUil yi—char. iV | as "AStrHta of I On thin, opaque, jml. India paper. What a w'ia- MMKMff7]/Mm •ftctlon toownthe Jfsrrtom Mmm* IfliU Webster In a form ao ll«ht MBm/H HI/M/V and so comenlcnt to osel £9|((|ii fl Uw/11/ One half the thickness aadMWHB Hlftff//// weight of Regular Kriltkm. ■MjunA : ||| I In YM I Waai? mCanhii Tte Woman's Tonic m SALE a ALL MOOTS The Ruling Passion. It la related of a'ceitalu German aa rant, to allow how KtrmiK the ruling passion hi lir ileutli. thai aa lie was dying he exi-lniu:o.l In French, in which laiimii'.tfe lie hum Ure|ny lonrn ed, "Je cieura" il illim Civltv «.... n h. | apened his eyes te'o e i sx n- invuj and added. "Man kuiiu jucli Jememerrs"' .Que • . ii, Prc;i ' nae the reflrslve Uv-. if i 'u- >■, I, -i dlf.") Ilia Inst INr'nr of ii.t.-n ;| » in the word rn. '.'e t i.-u; t| u . f,.,., , daalh Fam.iiai r. y~. i "Weil, Davie, uiu i.u , i j I It to tbe museum?" "Yea. mother." "Do you remember uuy of "the iikv thlnge you aaw?" "Oh, yea, 1 remember lota of them.' "And can you tell me what they were called V "Yea; moat of them were called 'Do Not Touch.'Exchange. *Tha Post Again. He had long hair and a pensive look. He wrote a poem entitled "Why Do I live?" He aigned it Augumua and aaat It to • magazine. The editor wrote him aa followa: "My dear Augustus—The reason why /on lire Is because you sent the poem by mall Instead of bringing it person ally."—Paris Journal. Uai»g Hla Nsm The agent who sold me this aet ol books told me he wanted to oae my name with other citizens." hi^ e^H olnf U> * t ' *" ri « bt I Wm telling a gnug bow easy yoo were."—Pittaburgh Post Itch relieved in 10 minutes by Woodford's Sanitary Lotion. Never foil*. Sold by Graham Drug Co, I trade marks mwl copy rtffht* obta! rwcl orno H ■ fee. Rind model, sketches or photos end de- ■ ■ scrtption for PREB SEARCH report ■ ■ on patentability, Jte&k referent**. ■ PATENTS BUILD FORTUNES for ■ ■ you. Our free booklets tell how. what to Inreat ■ fl sad save yoo money. Write today. *D. 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