A VETERAN OF THE BLACK HAWK, MEXICAN AND THE CIVIL WARS. j CAPT. W. W. JACKSON. Sufferings Were Protraclei and Severe Tried Every Known Remedy Without BeliefSerious Stomach Trouble Cured by Three Bottles of Peruna ! Capt. W. W. Jackson, 705 G St., N. vY., Washington, D. C, writes: "I am eighty-three years old, a veteran of the Black Hawk, Mexican and the Civil Wars. I am by proteion a physi cian, but abandoned the same. "Some years ago I was seriously affected with catarrh of the stomach. Mil sufl'e ri n tjs ice re p rot r acted and severe. I tried every known, remedy without obtaining relief. "In desperation 1 began the ute of your I'eruna. I began to realize immediate though gradual improve ment. "After the use of three bottles every appearance of my complaint was removed, and I have no hesitation in recommend ing it as an infallible remedv for that dis order." W. W. Jackson. Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus, phio. ' So. '20. COLORADO HAS A SODA LAKE. Remarkable Discovery Made in the Heart cf San Luis Valley. One of the most remarkable dis coveries ever made in the region is that of a lake of liquid soda in the in accessible desert between Crestone Col., and Hooper, in the San Luif. valey. The lake is an acre and a quar ter in extent and lies at the bottom of a little basin valley in the desert. On its surface soda crystals have collected to a depth of eighteen inches the whole lake having the appearance of a body of ice with a hard snow covering. A recent examination by the state school of mines shows that these cry stals arc 37 per cent pure soda, purei than most of the commercial soda offered on the market. A Denver man E. M. Falke, has secured a lease of tht land containing the lake and is now installing machinery which will con vert the native crystals into market able form. There are 4,000 tons ir. sight. The school of mines experts saj that the soda is a creation of feld spar. The granite mases of the Sangre de C'risto rar.se stand sentinel on two sides of the little valley. The feldspar in the granite, undergoing decomposition, collects in the lake basin, where it is held in check by an impervious clay, and proper condi tions are furnished for concentration and evaporation. Banks as Public Benefits. Many people who deal with banks every day do not really understand the proper object and purpose of bank ir.g. Banks can not create money, but they can gather small sums which are distributed among the peo ple and thus create an aggregate which cpii he made available for im portant business operations that pre vious would have been impossible. Individuals, nzch possessing a few hundreds or a few thousands, invest it in siock in a bank, and thus a fund of.S."0.""0 or $100,000 is established in a town or community as a great aid to the business activity and pros perity of its people. There is no more money in the community than there was previously, but it is in a form where it can be made to assist in the successful conduct of five times or ten times the amount of business than its actual sum stands for. New Orleans Picayune. Owl'; Devotion to Dead Mate. A remarkable instance of bird in. Etinct and devotion is reported from Quaker Neck. Early last month Hen ry Brown, a farmer there, set several jump traps about his farm to catch prowlers, of whatever nature, that had been playing havoc with his flock of fowls. A day or two later he miss ed one of the traps. Bartus Trew, a neighboring farmer, discovered two owls in an apple tree. One, a large horned owl, was in evident distress, trying to shield and warm its mate. To a leg of the dead bird was hang ing Brown's jump-trap with chain at tachedPhiladelphia Record. There are some people who think that Heaven will reward them for giv ing the -iiirch a dime for a dollar en tertainment. COMES A TIME When Coflee Shows What It Hag Been Doing. "Of late years coffee has disagreed with me," writes a matron from Rome, Y., "it's lightest punishment was to make me 'logy and dizzy, and it seemed to thicken up my blood. "The heaviest was when it .upset my stomach completely, destroying my ap petite and making me nervous and irri table, and sent me to my bed. After one of these attacks, in which I nearly lost my life, I concluded to quit and try Postum Food Coffee. "It went right to the spot! I found it not only a most palatable and refresh ing Coverage, but a food as well. "All my ailments, the 'loginess' and dizziness, the unsatisfactory condition of my blood, my nervousness and irri tability disappeared in short order and my sorely afflicted stomach began quickly to recover. I began to rebuild and have steadily continued until now. Have a good appetite and am rejoicing In sound health, which I owe to the use of Postum Food Coffee. " Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Read the little book, "The Roafl to !WellvUJe," found lu each pk. A VERY BAD POLICY OUR REGULAR SUNDAY SERMON. An Elegant Discourse by Rev. Wm. Young Chapman. Brooklyn, N. Y. Dr. William Young Chapman, pastor of the Lafayette Ave nue Presbyterian Church, Buffalo, preached Sunday at both services in the Central Presbyterian Church. In the morning he had as his subject "Churchgoing Abolished." The text was from Revelation x.f:22: "And 1 saw no temple therein." Dr. Chap man said: Among many things in this stiDilmo apocalypse of St. John hard to be un derstood there is one thing that stands out with clearness and certainty, and that is the vision of the perfected church, the ideal society. It if? the same church triumphant and lierfect there that is militant and defective here. The same roiils that struggle and suiter here arc they that walk in white and wave palms of victory there. Here we see as in a glass darkly. There they see face to face. Here we know in part, there they know as they are known. John had given to him a divine horoscope, revealing the consum mation and absolute perfection of the essential characteristics of the kingdom of Cod concentrated in the imperial capital of the universe the city of Cod. By every sort of figure and sym bol are its glories set forth. And we le::n as much about it by what is said negatively as by what is said positive ly. Thus we are told it has streets of gold and gates of pearl and a sea of glass and all the most costly and beau tiful things of tiiis world, while all that is disagreeable pain, sickness, sorrow, sin, "death is wanting there. There is nothing to hurt or annoy, no night, no more sea, no temple. And it strikes us at tirst thought as very strange that there should be no temple, no central place of worsiiip in a city which Ave are accustomed to think' is altogether devoted to religion. And yet the text states a great truth which 1 want to treat broadly, and 1 'believe the text contains easily the sub ject by which I have chosen to entitle this discourse, Churchgoing Abol ished." The end being attained, the means are discontinued. Hence there are no more churches, no times, nor places, nor forms: no liturgies, nor rit uals; no ecclesiastical machinery such as we know here. And, surely, this must come as a wel come announcement to many a tired churchgoer in this world who finds his religious duties more or less irksome, atid to many a non-churchgoer, who does not feel quite comfortable in his neglect of formal religious exercises. Many there are who indulge an indif ferent hope of heaven as a sort of .Mohammedan paraise, where they may enjoy an eternal holiday, basking in the uncreated rays, drinking from and bathing in the waters of the foun tain of life, eating the twelve manner of fruits and sailing on the glassy sea. But they would hardly be attracted to a place where this ceaseless round of ecclesiastical duties should go on for ever. Imagine such a one enjoying the delights of that glorious city, counting the towers thereof, marking well her bulwarks and admiring her founda tions of jasper and sapphire and chal cedony and sardius and emerald and sardonyx and chrysolyte and beryl and topaz and chrysoprasus and jacinth and amethyst, when suddenly there comes a peal from the golden bells and poor soul, he must take himself off to prayers. Let such a one be comforted, for John says he saw no temple there, and we dare to infer from that statement that there is no synagogue, nor meet ing house, nor Sunday, nor formal re ligious exercise, "for the Lord Gcd Al mighty and the Lamb are the temple of it." It becomes us to inquire more closely into (lie truth involved here. And if what John saw was the church trium phant, if the conditions he saw were the perfection of what is rudimentary here, if the Holy City, New Jerusalem, is continually coming down from God out of heaven, then we ought to be re alizing more and more on earth that heavenly condition. I believe that condition is illustrated by the progressive church of Christ on earth. Think for a moment of the ad vantages we have over the ancient Jewish worshiper. He had his central place of worship. Three times a year he must make his pilgrimage to Jeru salem, from even the remotes!; corner of the land. Over many a rugged mile he must travel with his family and his sheep and oxen for sacrifice and his tent and provision for his journey, in order to perform his religious duties. There at Jerusalem was the temple. There he expected to meet God. or at least there God would be propitious. There was the priest who could offer his sacrifice and present his confession to God. There was the holy place and the most holy place, the locus of the Jewish worship. Even in far oft lands, when ho worshiped he turned his face toward the temple, as if his heart were there, in any case. Then, too, his daily devotions found expression in a most elaborate ceremo nial. There were divers washings, as there were multifarious causes of un cleanness. There were tithings and manifold offerings. There were sin of ferings and peace offerings, all asso ciated with infinite trouble to the wor shiper. These minute requirements were infinitely multiplied by the Jew in the time of Christ and His apostles, so that I'eter spoke of it as a yoke "which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear." Now it was immunity from these in tolerable burdens that was the first great practical boon of Christianity. Our Lord stated the prpcious truth io the woman at the well. Said she, "Our fathers worshiped in this moun tain (Terezitn), and ye say that in Je rusalem is the place where men ought to worship." Jesus saith unto her, "Woman, believe Me, the hour cometh when ye shall neither in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem, worship the Father. But the hour cometh and now is, when the true worshipers shall wor ship the Father in spirit and in truth. Gr.rl is a spirit, and they that worship Iliru must worship Him in spirit and In truth." It was one of the first mean ings of Christ's sacrifice, to abolish the ten-pie. When Ho bowed His head in death on Calvary and said "It is fin ished," "the veil of the temple was rent In twain from the top to the bottom, and the whole significance of the tem ple service passed away. The temple itself did not long survive the death of Christ, and the ecclesiastical capital was soon destroyed. Henceforth the Church of God in the world was on a different basis. Henceforth God be came accessible without offering or priest, without temple or altar, and ir respective of locality. We are enjoying in a measure that rest which Christ came to give rest from ceremonial burdens. We are living in the dispen sation of the spirit, and the church is wherever the spirit moves men to wor ship. Wherever the Holy Spirit has go-'" and planted the gospel of Christ in the hearts of men, turning their thoughts and affections to God, there is the cnurch. It matters not whether it be in Greenland's icy mountains or In dia's coral strand. It matters not whether it be in gorgeous cathedral or in mountain cave. It matters not whether the worshiper be white or j lUs.;-!i. whether he worship on his knees j or on i:js feet or on his back, so long as lip worship in spirit and in truth. Chris. Sanity so far as it consists of a visible performance at all is the most natural and spontaneous outgo of the religious instincts to God. and religious worship is essentially a personal com munion with God, and in such form and place as js begt suited to the wor shiper and most in accordance with the will of God, Hence, you will see, one of the prime characteristics of the church triumph ant is perfect liberty. "Get religion," said Augustine, "and do as you please." By which he meant if you truly get re ligion you will always please to do right. Paul means the same thing when he says, "If ye be in the spirit ye are not under the law." And Jesus meant the same when He said, "Make the tree good and his fruit will be good." And hence, the ideal Christian life is perfectly -pontaneous. Obe dience is not by compulsion of law, but by impulsion of love. "AH the law is fulfilled in one word, 'Thou shalt love.' " We have heard not a little about "the consent of the governed," and we are likely to hear more. The state ment as it stands in that fall ous docu ment Will not beat' a literal application. But there is good reason to believe that our fathers knew what they were talking about. If they had said, "gov ernment derives Its potency from the consent of the governed" they would have been tittering the exact truth. Statutes are Inoperative until the sub jects consent. Ferfect society implies perfect acquiescence in the will of the superior or law making power. The more society progresses toward unity, the simpler and more equable will gov ernment become, because the more gen eral will be the consent or acquiesence in the government. Paul says, "I con sent unto the law that it is good," and in the perfect society of John's-- vision each man enjoys perfect liberty be cause the will of the governor and the governed are in perfect correspond ence. Each individual does as he pleases and at the same time does aa lie pleases. In some such way the perfect com munity is characterized by perfect unity -without uniformity. Each per forms his own duty in his own way, but ij all the while in perfect har mony with his neighbor. Again, in the perfected society there is no distinc tion between the religious and the sec ular. Here we have our times and places of religion. We gather here in this house of prayer, believing thai God is present here as He is not in other places, as, indeed, He has prom ised to be. It is God's concession to our limitations and infirmities. But it is far from the ideaL We are apt to identify religion with the means ol religion, rather than religion itself. Weget grace by our religious exercises to keep God's commandments in all our walks of life, and that is religion. The members of the church triumph ant are equally religious every day ol the week and every hour of the day, and hence, church-going in our sense of the word, is forever abolished. In that society, one does not need to say to his brother, "Know the Lord," for all shall know Him from the least to the greatest. There is no more preach ing, "no temple therein." Once more; it is obvious that the more faithful and devoted we are tc the means of religion here the sooner we shall be fitted to do without them. Your child, learning to play the piano, finds it hard labor to spell out note by note, conforming to the rules and rudi ments of practice. By and by she will go beyond the rules. She will acquire the genius of the skilled performer. And the more diligently we observe our religious duties here the sooner we shall get beyond them. The more faithful we are now to the times and places of religious worship the sooner shall we be ready for that society where all life is: religious. . Zacliariali had that vision ages be fore John had it, when he saw "Holi ness to the Lord" inscribed on the bells of the horses and the pots in the Lord's house, as sacred as the bowls of the altar; yea, and every pot in Jerusalem as holy sis the vessels of the sanctuary. That was at least a glimpse of the templeless city of God. And now shall we not keep before us that ideal? Let us not be discour aged by the great disparity between that far-off perfection and present reality. The poet well expresses our feeling: " Oh, Land of Promise, from what Fls gah's height Can I behold thy stretch of peaceful bowers, Thy golden . harvest flowing out of sight, The nestled homes and sdn-illnmined towers ? Gazing upon the sunset's high-heaped gold, Its crags of opal and of chrysolite, Its deeps on deeps of glory, that un fold, Still brightening abysses, ' And blazing precipices, Whence but a scanty leap it seems to heaven, Sometimes a glimpse is given Of thy gorgeous realm, thy more un stunted blisses. Gazing upon that vision, let us bo faithful to our temple duties here that we may be fitted for that city where there is no temple, "for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb ai. the temple of it." No troubles are so great that they cannot be built into the steps of the staircase, by which souls mount up to heaven. Canon Liddon. RAM'S HORN BLASTS ;t HERB can be no spiritual interest where there is no soul investment. It's mighty easy to spurn the bribe that is not ottered you. Every lie is a greater loss within than any gain that can come from with out. Not the things we have, but the things we are, constitute our permanent possessions. If the devil is dead his successors know a whole lot more about human nature than he did. The strange thing is that a man who is satisfied with so little in' himself de mands so much in others. Many men are trying to straightci, the universe with fingers that have done nothing else but get things into a tangle. Faithfulness is its own fruit. There is no vision without virtue. Faith has no knowledge of failure. A change of character accomplishes more than a change cf climate. Self-bos n aspiration may hit the rco" with a thud, hut it will never biciit through. .It is hard to love men unless you have learned to loathe mammon. No solid work was ever done by a man looking for a soft place. What we count the building cf lije may be but God's blasting for founda tions. The devil always gets o"t an extra edition when some saint goes wrong. When one really loves God nothing gives greater happiness than givln?. Sin's web is of our weaving. Every luxury has many relations. Gold always lies under rough rocks. Our problems are His providences. ASKED AND ANSWERED. They had been trotting in matri monial harness fof six months, and the pace was beginning to tell. "What," she asked, after the man ner of a woman, "ever made you fall in love with me?" "Love," he answered, with the bluntness of his sex, "is blind, you know." Detroit Tribune. . &7b FY f2& 1 ( FARM TOPICS. IN MUDDY TIMES. In muddy times do not feed the fowls more than once in the same place in succession, and then; if pos sible, feed on sod or in dry' trash don't feed in the mud is what we mean, nor where they have tramped and left their own filth. Of course, we are speaking of grain feeding; soft feeds should always be given them on a floor er in troughs. HOGS AS MANURE PULVERIZERS. For several years I have employed these inexpensive workers to pulverize many tons of manure in both open mule. and cattle sheds as well as in box stalls. To say they worked satisfac torily is putting it mildly they forked fine. Thirty-eight 125-pound hogs have just pulverized the manure in a mule shed, making nearly 100 loads, finely pulverized as one could wish or better than could be done with a hoe in any thing like a reasonable time. They root up the manure to get the corn that the mules have wasted. If there is not enough corn to induce them to dig for it I put shelled corn or oats there to start them. They can root about eight inches deep when I haul that off and let them resume work. E. W. Jones, in. The Epitomist. GREEN BONE" FOR CHICKENS. Every farmer who keeps poultry and a farm without it ought to be on the order of a curiosity should have a little mill for grinding bones. This is the best sort of material in which to furnish the lime necessary in making the shell of the egg. The fresh ground bone green bone it is often termed is "better than grit for fowls, as, unlike the bits of stone, it is digested in the gizzard, thus serv ing a double purpose. It helps to di gest the grain and is being digested at the same time." Fowls like this character of bone, and so will use it freely. And then it is held that thus manure may be made "equal to that which wild birds pro duce from eating fishes, and which, when composted, becomes the guano of commerce." GROWING FOOD FOR STOCK. With the planting season not far away it is a time when farmers should go over the last season in their minds and plan to remedy the mistakes made last year. In most sections corn will be the maiu dependence for stock food, and it is right that it should be, partic ularly if one is working along the line of increasing the yield as well as im proving the strain. But then there are other grains which, at least, should be grown in small quantities if for no other reason than to furnish the stock with some variety in the feed. With horses on the farm oats should be grown, and there ought to be some space devoted to root crops for the ben efit of all the stock. If poultry is raised grow a variety of grain for their benefit, letting it include seme buck wheat and some millet. Perhaps you do not like to dabble in small fields, but prefer to do things on a broad scale, but you will find the yield of a half dozen small plots of different things very handy during the next winter feeding season, and this small stuff, may have a decided bearing on the profit made during the winter. The milk record of more than one cowr has been saved by weekly feeds of root crops and the egg supply of many fowls kept up by the odd feeds of dif ferent grains. Indianapolis News. PROFITABLE DAIRY FARM. I keep one single mm and one mar ried man, who live in a house near the barn. With this force I do all the wrork except filling the silos and put ting up ice. I exchange work -with my brother during hay harvest. I don't raise any small grain. I haven't raised but one crop of wheat in ten years. I buy straw to use for bedding. I have two silos. Silo No. 1 is sixteen feet in diameter and thirty-four feet deep. It holds 100 tons of ensilage. Silo No. 2 is twenty feel in diameter and thirty four feet deep and holds 200 tons of ensilage. We commence to fili silos as soon as corn is fully matured. I would rather have it too ripe than too green. We do not use anything but corn for ensilage. The corn is cut with a corn binder and bound in small bundles. It is hauled in low-wheeied wagons. Each man loads his own wagon. Some times we have one extra man to help load. Four wagons will bring in the corn fast enough to keep a sixteen-iuch ensilage cutter going if one doesn't have to haul corn too far. One man cuts, bands and feeds cutter. We keep a good hand in silo to tramp the fod der. One irjnn runs the engine. We use our own teams and pay one in all. We have one pasture for hogs. We get two crops a year off of it. We sow it to rape in the spring and rye in the fall. We use a twelve-horso power gaso line engine to churn with, pump water, grind feed and saw wood. We have a No. 3 separator. My oldest son makes the butter. It is all made in one pound bricks. We ship to New York City. In 1903 we made 10,067 pounds of but ter from forty-three cows and got a net price of twenty-two cents per pound. In 1904 we made 11,572 pounds from forty-six cows and got a net price of twenty-one cents per pound. J. H. Plummer, at Missouri Dairy Meeting. A Sea Telescope. A recent invention, the hydroscope, enables a spectator at the sea's sur face to view objects at the bottom of the sea. The inventor is an Italian, Cavaliere Guiseppe Pino. The ma chine is constructed of steel, and in shape is like a huge telescope. Pointed downward into coral caverns or sunken ships, instead of upward at the sun or the stars, its complex system of lenses, twelve in number, answers to the ob jective glass of a celestial telescope. By the internal mirrors they produce a clear picture of the sea bottom, the rays of light passing up the tube -to a sort of camera-obscura house at th? top, which floats above the surface, and is capable of holding four persons. Chinese Ambassador's Vacation. Sir Chentung Liang Cheng, Chinese ambassador at Washington, has rent ed the house of the late H. H. Goodell in Sunset avenue, Amherst, Mass., for the summer months. He will take his family, his private secretary and a retinue of servants. Two summers ago he spent a few weeks with Mr. Goodell. His boyhood days were spent in Amherst and he is well remembered by the older citizens. Thera are .several active volcanoe 1 Pcermgg EEt Africa. Lobster Race the Latest. Learned men of science gravely lis tened to a lecture In the Paris muse um of natural history this week giv ing the report of a lobster race which has just been held, says a Paris spe cial to the Kansas City Journal. The contest took place off the Isle of Man. A number of young and spry lobsters each with a number attached to its tall were dropped in the sea. The .winner that is, the competitor which so far as known, traveled far thest from the starting point, was fished up thirteen and one-half miles away three days later. The lobster race was got up with a view to ascer taining certain questions relating to the distance these crustaceans are likely to travel within a specified time. It was not ascertained how many finished, but the truth of the reports are now vouched for. Odds and Ends. When the landlord raises the rent he expects the tenant to raise it also. Helpers of men find the help of Heaven. A woman never judges a man's abil ity as a liar by the compliments he hands her. Parents need to remember that chil dren learn twice as much with their eyes as with their ears. ntFK TO OUK READERS. Botanic Blood Baliu for the Blood. If you suffer from ulcers, eczema, serofula. Mood poison, cancer, eating sores, itching skin, pimples, boils, bone pains, swellings, rheumatism, catarrh, or any blood or skin disease, we advise you to take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B). Especially recommended for old, obstinate, deep-seated eases, cures where ail else fails, heals every sore, makes the Mood pure and rich, gives the skin the rich glow of health. Druggists, $1 per large bottle, 3 bottles 2.50, 6 bottles 5.03, express prepaid. Sample sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent id sealed letter. Medicine sent at once, pre. faid. A woman thinks her husband has a fine mind when he is tickled to death because the baby throws his watch down tho bathroom hopper. FlTSpermanently cured. No fits ornervons ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveTiestorer,?2tristlbott.leaDd treatise free Dr. 15. H. Kline,' Ltd.,931 Arch St., rhila.,ra. There are in Germany twenty-one uni versities. LaHa Can Wear Shan One size smaller after usin? Allen's Foa1: Ease, a powder. It makes tight or newshoe easy. Cures swollen, hot, swetting, aching feet. inrrowin nails, corns and bunions. A.t all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't aa cept anv substitute. Trial package Free by mail. Address, Allen P. Olmsted, LeKoy, N.Y. Russia has eighty-six general holidays in a year. , Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, soften tho gums, reduces inflamma tion.allays pain.cureswind colic, 25c. a bottle Winnipeg, Manitoba, is said to be the fastest growing city in the world. .'do not balieve Pisa's Cure for Consumn tionhasanequ il lor coughs and colds. Johs F.BOYEB, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 190J. The production of quicksilver in 1904 is estimated at 3391 tons. BABY'S TERRIBLE SORE Body ISaw Willi Hmnor Cau3o;l Untold Agons' Doctor iil No Good .VI other Discouraged Cnticnra Cared at Once. "My child was a very delicate baby. A terrible sore and humor broke out on his body, looking like raw flesh, and causing the child untold agony. My physician pre scribed various remedies, none of which helped at all. I became discouraged and took the matter into my own hands, and tried Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment with almost immediate success. Before the second week had passed the soreness was gone, not leaving a trace of anything. Mrs. Jeannctte H. Block, 2S1 Eoscdale St.. Ilochester, N. Y." Record Short Names. Here are some short names. Many years ago there was a shop kept in Brussels by Therese O, and there i? a Mme. O living with her two children at Molenbeck, a suburb of the Belgian capital. In 1866 among the Belgian re cruits was a young man named O, who could not write, and signed his name with a cross. In the department of Somme, in France, there is a village called Y, in the Zuyder Zee there is a bay called Y, and Amsterdam has the river Y. In the Chinese province of Honan there is a city called U, and in France there is a river and in Sweden a town rejoicing in the name of A. IN DEEP WATER. "Mind you," observed the party who was talking, "I'm speaking meta phorically now." "Ah!" rejoined the other, T thought you were getting a bit mixed." Chi cago Journal. Cure ForJThe Blues ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS HEVER FAILED Health Fully Restored and the Jy of Life Regained When acheerf ul, brave, light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that perfection of misery, the I5LUES, it is a sad picture. It is usually this way : She has been feeling- "out of sorts'' for some time; head has ached and back also ; has slept poorly, been quite nervous, and nearly fainted once or twice ; head dizzy, and heart-beats very fast ; then that bearing-down feeling. and daring her menstrual period she is exceedingly despondent. Nothing pleases her. II er doctor says : " Cheer up : you have dyspepsia ; you will be all right soon." But she doesn't get " all right," and hope vanishes ; then come the brood ing', morbid, melancholy, everlasting Don't wait until your sufferintrs have driven you to despair, with your nerves au shattered and your courage gone, but take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. See what it did for Mrs. Kosa Adams, of 819 12th Street, Louisville, Ky., niece of the late Gen eral Roger H anson , C. S. A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I cannot tell vou with nen and ink what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I suffered with female troubles, extreme lassitude, 'the blues,' nervousness and that all-gone feeling. I was advised to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it not only cured mv female derangement, but it has restored me to perfect health and strength. The buoyancy of my younger days has returned, and I do not suf fer any longer with despondency as I did be fore. I consider Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound a boon to sick and suffering ' women." If you have some derangement of tne iemaie organism write Mrs. . FlaKham, Lynn, for advice. A WOMAN'S MISERY: Mrs. John LaRue, of 115 Patersoii Avenue, Paterson, N. J., says: "I was troubled for about nine years, and whac fered will know, about known I suf no one ever I used every reme dy that is said to be good for kidney com plaint, but without deriv ing permanent relief. Often when alone in the house the back ache has been so bad that it brought tears to my eyes. The pain at times was so intense that I was compelled to give up my household duties and lie down. There were head aches, dizziness and blood rushing to my head to cause bleeding at the nose. The first box of Doan's Kidney Pills benefited me so much that I continued the treatment. The stinging pain in the small of my back, the rushes of blood to the head and other symptoms disappeared." Doan's Kidney rills are for sale by all dealers, 50 cents per box. Foster:Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. GRAHAM PUFFS. One pint of graham flour, one pint of milk, one egg, a little salt. Beat thoroughly the ees, and the milk, then the flour, into which has been mixed one even teaspoonful of bak ing powder. Beat all together for five minutes and pour into well but tered hot gem pans. Bake in a very hot oven. How wonderfully developed must be the furniture mover's bump of destruc tiveness! Facts Are Stu Uniform excellent quality for over a quarter of a Century has steadily increased ilio sales of LION COFl'EE, The leader of all package cofiees. Lion Coffee ia now used in millions of homes. Such popular success speaks for itself. It is a positive proof that LION COFFEE has the Confidence of the people. The uniform quality of LION COFFEE survives all opposition. LION COFFEE keeps its" old friends and makes new ones every day. ON COFFEE lias even than its Strength, Flavor and Qual ity to commend it. On arrival from tiie plantation, It is carefully roast ed at our factories and securely paclted in 1 lb. sealed packages, and not opened again until needed for use in the home. This precludes the possibility of adulteration or contact with germs, dirt, dust, insects or unclean hands. Ilis absolute purity of LION COFFEE is thereiore guaranteed to tiie consumer. Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package. Save these Liou-lieatb for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE ST. JOSEPH'S ACADEMY Sixty miles from Baltimore at the base of the Blue Ridge FOR YOUNG LADIES Mountains. Established 1S09, Incorporated 18.16. Healthful n'n wjooro ' location, large shad v lawns, modern equipment throughout. AWU Nilooco Students may pursue either the Classical or the English Course; graduation is attainable in either. Music, Painting and Domestic Econ omy, are branches of specia! interest in tlicir respective departments. Pros pectus sent on application. Address Sis'.er Superior, St. Joseph's Academy, EinmitsburS, Maryland GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad klnnil .tnJ n. th... 1 1.1 . . 1 1 , r . 1 . ... : ' ir.wuu, -,..i.uwu me DiuniKLii, uioEico uoweis, ioui niouic, nwcsclic, maigestioM, ptIIipiC3, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. Vhen your bowels don't move regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, start taking CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay vell until you get your bowels right. Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to ci'-re or money refunded. The genuine tablet stamoed C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and booklet free. Address fcterlint; Remedy Company. Chicago or New Yor's. "so IfKi 3l6r I Don't Be Without Them in Your Home I f SKiSl' jTpvvB Tbey Are Always Ready to Serve lfflT 5l'i Lunch Tongues Veal Loaf 1 f rfSy'MSV- ft Boneless Chicken Dried Beef I I f&Mg&m'V Brisket Beef Soups 0 fWrym&fe. Jellied Hocks Backed Beans f ti5&k$&&m I If l& jjsSSffe" (?J The Booklet "How to Make Good Things W jSgjC-Npig 2gjr to Eat'' sent free. a 1 Libby. McNeill &. Libby, Chicago S a H a S B EE HE BJS BQ11BE3BIIB9 H H BBS as e a a a js u m a h s a a a h a an a sea Bjjja EfflBHBHBES B S 3 B S SB 9 B B B B Sg B H ill ESSBSHHEBaHEl Ik H 8 ifC U V e39Men and women die mm every year, thousands of them who might just na wall livfl. It, in their B ! a SSS Id- --.- it, i tneir - a own fault, tool When sick they don't take the proper medicine. You must not consider the cost if sick, for your life is at stake. Get the best, but above all thiiies do not permit the disease to run along without treatment. Our exper ience has tausrht us what Checkers will do. Wo know of no remedy in the world which will equal its marvelous action in the permanent cure of most all known chronic or fatal diseases. EH JSTWa want yon to try Checkers. We want you to use this medicine be cntA it has merit, be Em B 3 cause it will do you good, because most any disease will vanish when Checkers commences to search the system. It will find out what is wron inside it goes to the bottom of every ordinary disease and makes the sick well. Call on your druggist for a sample bottle free or write us. The better plan is to buy a mammoth dollar bottle to-day. BB ssa ChecHer Board and 24 ChecKer Men B S 19 eta atc mm Bi n 5 vaecsers be aa JBja-m m m a a A b s h a a S SB B B B B B IB Dti UBS Pointed Paragraphs. Spiritual birth knows no social bar riers. If a lawyer's success depended whol ly upon the gift of gab, there would be more woman lawyers. If a girl refuses a young man's pro posal, he thinks she doesn't know her mind, so he doesn't mind her no. A woman is as old as she looks, but every woman imagines she is the ex ception that proves the rule. Many a man who has succeeded in carving out a vast fortune for himself would not be able to carve a board ing house turkey. cTVlozley's Lemon Elixir. Is a sure cure for all Liver Troubles ' and a preventive of Typhoid and other fevers. i Grandparent Parent Baby Ask Your Neighbor 50c. and $1.00 per bottle at Drug Stores. rtm i To better advertise the South's Leading Business College, four scholarships aie of fered youiiR persons of this county at Jess thn cost. WRITE TODAY. GA-ALi BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon. Ga esse; more VOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo. Ohio. bb V mm Ba foborn Ttiiiios i 1 J a 1 9 I 3 M fm PdJrvxm tarn H size heavy Checker boards, printed in colors, with B 13 red and 12 blue Checker men, FREE. If he refuses n' to furnish same, write us and you'll be supplied. siedlcrne tftmpany, Winston-Salem, K. C AMI MAY (A f USED -VL FROM :. y " THE If yV: T WE BIRTH fv dm Weinh' inrf tha liuby. Physician?:, nurses, pharmacist?, and chemists throughout the world endorse Cuticura Soap because of its delicate, medicinal, emollient, sanative, and antiseptic properties derived from Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, united with the purest of cleansing ingredients and most refreshing of flower odors. For preserving, purifying, and beauti fying the skin, as well as for all the purposes of the toik t and bath, Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuti cura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, is priceless. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may be used from the hour of birth. TVo Soaps in cru nt one prif" nnrcebj, a TtfpoiriTml find TniWt St iip f.ir .V. j'j-i .P ifrii-r & Chrm. Corp., SJe Prop., H..-ft,-.n. JvmJW ires, "Mow to Care lor iJaby'B Skin, Hca'.n, and iiuir." Concentrated Nature's Great Remedy FOR DYSPEPSIA SBOIC HEADACHE CONSTIPATION. Stimulate tini Liv.ir, regulates the Bowels and ki-pps the entire system la a hiaitby condition. k Natural Pr j lu -1 with a record of a Con tury. If a!TiieU'd try It. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO,, LOUISVILLE, KY. imsEf sfsmt asmv cutht mmmmmmm i You want only tho best Cotton Gin Machinery Ask any experienced Ginner about Pratt, EaqfeSnralfh WSnship, Muoger We would like to show you what thousands of life long-customers s:iv. Write for catalog and testimonial booklet. Continental Gin Co Charlotte, Jf. C, Atlanta. t;a. IMrmfaiBhain, A!n. Memphis, Teun., I)al!ns, Tex. FOR WOMEN TrrKilHefl with ma im1io c:ssful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease fitnns, stops discharges, heals inflammation e.ni local soreness, cures leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh. Paxtioe is in powder iorra to be dissolved in purs water, and is far more cleansing, healim;, germicidal ar.d economical than liquid antiseptics for ait TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Tut R. Paxton Company Boston. Maso. MEDICAL DEPARTMErl V i 1.7 . . "cucai instruction, i in ample laboratories and abundant ho.-i materials are unequalled. Free access is c m ,!erKHaI.Charlty "Plt with S00 bed .io.ijoo patients annually. SD-cial iis-trm ti i Kivcr. daily at the bedMde of the ' next session becins October 19ih 13 15. catalogue and information address PIIOV. K. F. 1'IIIIKC i ... I'ur ..u.-iruwcrjoi. nUW OUJ.EAX s. J. A. CURED Gi"33 Qui oit Re'.ief. Removes all spelling in 8 to 10 days; effects a permanent cure iuioto fiodfiv. . given free. Nothingcan be fairct c w"t? ?r. H.H.Green's Sonc, Soecialistt. Box B Atlanta. 83 w M MTC 11 . - A,d5s of (1) persons of Mil I L LI l'", Ionian blo(.d who are m of n !7 not living with xny trilie, ;K i "-en ho were drafted in Kentuckv aZfLFS?" of "old-e" ha "e been SSSSSffS? on "nt of their re" r- j ja iiivu who served in the t ea eral army, or (r.) tl, nearest H of such NATHAN BICK KO It l, Attorney, Washington, O. C. ' OUR SPECIALTY 3 4 s Three two dollar shirts for five dollars. MADE TO YOUR MEASURE. Vr:t for simples, and nieaswernent bknlg MODEL SHIRT CO Peit-S' "lia,,aii,li, IJ. So. 29. CURES WHERE ALL tlsr i Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Jood. in time, oaia dy arusr-zi .ti Crab irclia tlMu ma it DroDsv Wt Jt Lee m i n Jt

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