pertiaeat Parasrapis. However well meant your criticisn 0f another, at last if forces . a por heart to dwell in the shodows because 0f its withering blight. "The prating saint who would correct an evil would do well to read his own book of life; Xbe Man of GaHilea in His Memor able refusal to condemn the helpless woman, left no room . for criticism. fort Worth Record. . :: Cotton Seed Oil for TuberciiiosiaD Dr, George Brown, ex-president of the American Anti-Tubercolosia league, recently said ; " Sev enty-five: per cent, of the people can take and digest cotton seed oil, while only 25 per ceuu tau hulo anu cugec liver on. Cod liver oil possesses no property that cotton seed oil does not posses? in a more palatable and easier , di gested form. It is today the greatest flesh former, tissue builder and re construction tonic of any preparation known to man." . , j , , , , Good cotton oil can be Obtained at nearly every grocery store. 25cenfct bays a large can of it. 1 ; RECIPES. VV' Apple Salad Take red apples, pot . fsh; dig out inside and fill with appte. celery and nuts. Serve on a leaf of lettuce, covering apple over with may. cimaise dressing. Plain " Caramels One pound of brown sugar, one-quarter of a pound of chocolate, one pint of ; cream, one ; teaspoonful of batter, two tablespoon fuls of molasses; boil for thirty min utes, stirring all the time. Test by dropping in cld water. Flavor with vanilla. Turn into pan and cut off in squares. ' . ' , ' '..'' "- ' Poor Man's Cake To a scant cup of sugar add one egg, tablespoon of but ter, two cups of flour, two teaspoons of baking powder, half cup of water, and flavoring.' Bake In two layers. Mocha Pilling To one cup powder- , d sugar add butter size of an egg. Cream. All two teaspoons dry cocoa and two tablespoons black coif ee, one teaspoon vanilla. Banana Emitters. Remove skin from 4 yellow Bananas, put in halves," crosswise, then length-wise, in" not too thin slices. Dip in batter made of the yolks of 3 eggs, 1 gill milk, little 6Jt, 1 cup sifted flour.' Mix thorough ly. Fry in hot fat . and serve with sweet sauce.. ' Peach Pudding Peel and cut G large peaches into small pieces, re moving the stones, then sprinkle with sugar. Heat 1 pint of milk in double boiler to boflias point, and stir in quickly but carefully 3 well beaten eggs and 3 tablespoons of sugar. When it thickens and cools ' flavor with vanilla and pour over fruit. Whip 1-2 pint of cream, put (on "top of 'pud to, set on ice until cold. Ctocolate r Pudding One half cup sugar, 1 teaspoon melted butter, 1 egg, 1-2 cap milk, 1-2 teaspoon cream tar- tar 1-4 teaspoon s&leratus, 1 cup' . Sour, l square chocolate, melted Steam 1 hour in buttered tin. Sauce One cup powdered sugar, 1 table spoon butter,. 1 white of egg, beaten Co cream; flavor. - , " "De! Poverty Place." Dar whar you run on de Poverty place, " . ' Trouble is lookin' you al in de. face; But here's what ter say '. . Wen he comes in yof way, " -v "Fer bein" right sociable dis ain't' my day!"' So. 44-'07. ; His Conclusion. The editor of the L County Jour nal thinks that this is the conclusion of the whole matter: 11 The man that nothing his may call Is often doubly blest Since grub and labor M take it all And taxes get the rest."' , .. , , TAKE THEM OUT Or Feed Them Food They Can Study On. When a student begins to break down from lack of the right kind ot food, there are only two things to do; either take him out of school or feed him properly on food that will rebuild the brain and nerve cells. (That food, is Grape-Nuts. A boy writes from Jamestown.N. Y. saying: "A short time ago I got lntc a had condition from pver3tudy, but Mother baving heard about Grape Nuts food began to feed, me on it. It satisfied my hunger better than any other food, and the results were mar velous. I got fleshy like a good fel low. My usual morning headaches disappeared, and 1 fountl I could etudy for a long period without feel ing the effects of it. "My face was pale and thin, but I now round and has considerable color. After 1 had been using Grape Nats for about two months I felt like a new boy altogether. I have gained greatly in strength as well as flesh, and it is a pleasure to study now tha 1 am not bothered with my bead. I passed all of my examinations with ar reasonably good percentage; extra eood in some of them, v and it 4 (rape-Nuts that has saved me front year's delay in entering college. "Father and . mother have botht neeu improved; by the use of Grape Nuts. Mother was troubled , with Bleepless nights, and got very thia ad looked care worn. She ha saiaed her. normal r strength and looks, an 1 sleeps well nighU. "There's a Rason.w; Raad "The Road to WellTiUe, in pkga, : : . F-r-w 1 " - ' &&ricmm. . - . :. ...... Off-fe I UUUUM - Subject: Co-operaUon. v " namhn??il? K Y.-Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, WemmJir wIUe and Welrfleld street,: on the above theme, the Rev. Ira weiSTiw. tlie Pastr. took as his text Ex. 17:12, -Moses hands theo- nd 'th tok a stone, and put it under him, and he sat aSi'l? Aaron and Hur stayed up his hands, the one on the one side, down of the 'sun otner de; and his hands were steady until the going natf? J a8. an? the army of Israelf":upon the field of conflict, cc operated. And Amalek and his host were discomforted.. . texr and the attendant circumstances are illustrative of the law ?!fratIon. tnat rules ln every phase of life. Without co-operation lire could not be maintained. It is a central necessity to the preservation of the integrity of the world of men and of nature. J'MseS:1,edi.-:uPtt-."God'-and.;Ood--placed His confidence in Moses, mioses leaned upon Aaron and Hur for support. Joshua looked to Moses ior victory. The Inter-relation of them all was Inevitable. Their Inter dependence was natural. Their ability to co-operate with each other ahd with God gave them the victory. Moses was essential to the success of the movement. So was God. But not less essential was the faithful co-operation of Aaron and. Hnr and Joshua and the. army. .Mose3 made no effort v. . nua's work Joshua reveals no desire to attempt the labors for hich Moses was inspired. . Aaron and Hur stuck to the task to which God had called them. The army followed its leaders with fidelity and effect. A2Le trIea to do tne other man's work.. But each man did his own. r.J7ey1.dI(i " witn unanimity and with forcefulness.. They co-operated. Each did his best for the good of all, in his own way and in his own station. And they were victorious in a hard fight. mi Co"Peratl011 the law of all life. Turn wheresoever you will and you will observe the evidences of the working ot the law. Color depends upon tne blazing luminaries that swing eternal in' the heavens above. Utterly remove the light and the differentiations that we call shades will disap pear. The tree cannot germinate or bud or blossom or fructify or mature alone. It is by the beneficent and self-sacrificing operations of the sun and the wind and the dew and the rain and the earth and the night that the tree can live. And if these fail to co-operate with timeliness and suf ficiency the tree will, die. If any one of them fails to do Its part for a time the life of theTtree will be impoverished and Impaired and its tuture put In jeopardy. Not otherwise is it with man. Were It not for the co operation of his fellows and of the natural order that is manifest about him he ' could not long endure. For man Is as dependent upon the co operation of nature as is the tree. That which the tree needs he needs, and more abundantly and insistently. That: which the tree requires for Its preservation and sustentation he must have and more. For as his life is more expansive than the life of the tree, so his requirements are more varied. And that which writes Itself as the law of the life of the man and of the tree demands obedience in every sphere and phase of life. ; That which is true of life in the -broad is true of life in its narrower relations? It Is true of commercial life. , For the complex and marvellous commercial society that exists in our day would not be without-and de pends absolutely upon-the faithful and intelligent co-operation of every department and every member that enters into its fabrication. Nothing Is more illustrative of the laws of interdependence and co-operation than trade. .We sit down to our humblest meals only to be brought face to face with the absolute dependence which we have placed, ordinarily uncon sciously, upon multitudes of men and women, in the fields and the shops, upon the railways and -the seas, to secure and to provide and to deliver to us the commonest necessities of life. .Their co-operation gives us our meals. Our co-operation offers them, a chance to labor and to live. Not otherwise is it in mechanics. All movement Is dependent upon co-operation. And. the slightest lack of co-operation upon the part of the simplest and smallest essential portion of a mechanical device will mar the har monious and perfect working of the whole and may render the mechanism, regardless of its beauty or its design, useless and inefficient.' You may build the mightiest press that the Ingenuity and skill of man can devise and construct, but if all its parts do not engage, if you fail to attach it to the source cf primal power, your press is as useless as thought it never were.- And sa it is in military affairs. An army wins, if it wins at all, because of the co-operation of divisions. Co-operation -won for the Old Guard and for Wellington deathless fame that night on the field at Waterloo as the sun set upon the power and the imperial overlordshlp of Napoleon. For the same spirit and law-of co-operation that sent Blucher over the hills to the aid of the Iron Duke and snatched victory from' the face of impending disaster made the Old Guard rally with devotion and splendid; bravery about the standards of a defeated emperor and exact a blood bought . victory. Co-operation made It possible to write history differently. Co-operation taught and enabled the heroes of a hundred battlefields to die with glory upon the field of honor. Similarly, co-operation is essential in our social life. No man can live apart from society. He must live as related with it, dependent upon if, and obligated to it. The good of each must be the concern of all, and the welfare of all the solicitude of each. We must all do our part, or the fabric we have con structed and of which .we are. the interior cannot endure. And the health and perfection of our social system is in direct proportion to the co-operation of each and every individual : factor , In the social order toward the preservation and intensification of the best and salient features that are woven into the textile of our social order. ' - The law of co-operation Is nowhere more Impressively and : gloriously explicated than in the movements of the galaxies that,1 through endless generations, course the heavens that are spread In matchless beauty by the hand of God above our heads. The contemplation of what would happen did;the interdependence and inter-relation and interplay and inter action of the forces and influences that maintain the-equllibrium "and con trol the courses of the superheated bodies that crowd the heavens cease, Inspires , awe. " ; Ceaselessly, majestically,. , noiselessly, so far as we are aware, they-rush through space; each in its own orbit, ' each attending strictly to the laws that are operative In its own. career. The correlation of forces that is active among1 them Is the secret of their transcendant move ment through the charted lanes tharramify the skies. ' - Co-operation Is as necessary and effective in the forwarding of evil as it Is in the promulgation and propulsion of that which is good. It is the watchword of every, evil band and the hope of every evil design. Evil must be compacted and allied to become largely effective. And the best of organized forces to-day are to be .found in the camp and' army of those whose god is the devil and whose ways take hold on hell. That Is the reason why evil triumphs against a righteous majority. That is why for so long a few of the wicked have ruled the world "of decent men and women. The wicked know the -value of co-operation. They know by ex perience. They have proved its power. They are expert in the art and ex ercise of combination. Co-operation of : the reigning order of self-seeking exploiters of the people kept feudalism alive as long as It lived, and with out such combination it never could have lived. at all. -It. was the com bination: and correlation of the forces of unbridled , extravagance and of unphilosophlcal temper that made Paris reek with blood in the days of the Revolution., ' ' , Nowhere Is -this co-operation and correlation and combination of . men and of motives, of ideas and of purposes, of influences and forces, more In dispensable than in-the" Church of that living' God Who hath revealed Him self unto us in Jesus Christ. It is prerequisite to any success whatsoever that shall be of eternal import. It is elemental. And our co-operation as Christians must be continuous, it must be for constructive as well as for destructive service, It' must be an augmenting force. - - Co-operation must be continuous in our affairs as it is everywhere in nature. It cannot be spasmodic." It must be connected. Itr must be sub ject to regularity. Also it must be constructive. We are too prone to ally ourselves to cry out to the world, -Thou shalt not." 'We are slow to -present a program for constructive effort, to assume the labor of direction, and to strive for the accomplishment of the result at which we aim. We are too spasmodic. We do not keep at It. We fail to uprear as we should. Our co-operation further should be augmentative. That is to say, that under its exercise we ought to gain energy, kinetic and potential. The more we co-operate the abler we should, become, the more efficient we win The church of Jesus Christ can never do that supremo work to which her Lord has called her until, her members exercise' that spirit and capacity for co-operation that we have stipulated as essential, among themselves. So long as we magnify small' things, so long as each the other s work will do the while he leaves undone his own, so long as we quarrel and bicker and growl at the failings and fallibilities ' and Incapacities of each other. so lone as Joshuas want the labors of a Moses and the men and women of capability and constructive capacity kick against the pricks of the call of God so long as we forget sympathy and courtesy and charity and pa tience, 'so long as we forget to minister the same favor and forgiveness to our brethren in the Lord that we administer to ourselves, we shall not progress We must co-operate in love and forbearance, we must know, only the strife of slnglehearted fidelity; and service for the common good - Further we need co-operation between the church and the com munity - It will not do for-us to shut ourselves apart from the ways and the concerns of the busy world. It Is for us. to transform the world, to co-operate with every effort, however officered and however semi-ultimate, that has for its purpose the elevation and betterment of the race; it is for us to be interested actively, to carry the leayen of the Gospel of Christ into the multifarious affairs of a complex civilization,, to be lovingly, openly, positively interested in everything that makes for the weal of man. ; And lastly but by no means least, we need co-operation .between pas tors and peoples. Moses got weary, and. he was a. man of unusual and special , privilege and power. Men of less power get weary, too. Even -preacher get tired. -Even shepherds grow fatigued. It is. hard .workto draw a load of drones, to pacify and placate men and women who In the crace and sbnshlp of God-should know -better. Israel prevailedunto vic tory when Aar on and Hur-upheld the tired arms of Moses. Perhaps some churches that are wondering why they do not prevail with God and men, would so prevail,.if a few Aarons and Hurs would sustain the overloaded lorcesof : a 'ministerial Moses. Let us co-operate. , ; I! 1 -C-i ''Ilere'a. Hoping.!.-, : ' Here's hoping every breeze that blows Across the world so sunny : ' ' Will blow "a bee toward a rose :U-; ; Whose heart is sweet with hdney! Here 's hoping that when . daylight ' dies ' . And earth to Night is given, , ; ; .' The morn, will stine in Love's dear ,- eyes 1 ' )!' ' : ' ' The signal-light of Heaven I Deafness Cannot Be Cored -ylocal applications8 theycannot reach tha toeaMd portion of theesr. There is only one waytocnre-deafaess, nd that i by corxsta tutlonalretafeciies., iDesfBees jscaTwebVjan mflamed conditiortof tk& mnootiB irniug oi th Eustachian Tube. -When this tubeihv Qjuned youhave & rrrmhllug: eooad or imper fect hearing, and when it is eattoely cleeed Eeafneaaia t naresnlt, and uxdesa the iBfiam mation can be taken -oat and this tube re stored to its Bonaal conditioo, heactng will be destroyed forever.. liinecaees oat often arecausedbratagrwMrfttTTit hmamed'coadxtioa f theisconstjsDrfaee&. We wiliivOjXhniired Iollarsfor aay 8eefieafaaftjcaMy3itaTr acbectabyI2CBtaiThCure. Seadfcr tircarafree. F.J.CHXsnrr & Ca,Toledo,tt gold by Draists, 75c. ; i Take Hall's Fasnly Pills for constioatioa. Loife in "Spring and Winter. The iconoclastic singer of the AdU ams Enterprise warbles: . . ; ' ' 'Love for spring- not winter, Well enough ye know Love will wade in blossoms, But will not shovel snow I . h BABY m TERRIBLE ? STATL : Awful Ilnmor Ulating Away' Face Body a Maas of Sores Outicura Gores In Two Weeks. "My little daughter broke out all over ker body with a humor, and we "UBed every thing recommended, but without result. -1 called in three doctors, but fche continued to grow worse. Her body was a mass of sores, and her little face was being eaten away. Her ears looked as if they ' would drop off. Neighbors advised me to get Cutieura Sostp M Ointment, and before I had used half of the cake of Soap and box of Ointment the sores had all healed, and my little one's face and body were" as clear as a new-born babe's. I would not be without it again if it cob five dollars, instead of seventy five cents; Mrs. George J. Steese. 701 Co burn St., Akron, Ohio, Aug: 30, 1905." A Dreadful Possibility. ' "They have located the Garden of Eden-in Georgia, Brother Dickey." : ' 1 My, my, 1 ' exclaimed the old man, does you reckon dey'll be fool ' 'nuft ter plant any mo" apple trres dart BACK GAVE OUT. A Typical Case of Kidney Trouble and Typical Cure. Mrs. Chioe Page, of 610 S. Pitt street, AlssacHa, Va., says: .. "My back hurt me terri bly,' I had sharp, shooting ' pains, changing, to a dull, dragging ache. I could not stand for any length , of time and my back hurt me when I sat down. i J'xg My feet and ankles I y&K- " ".were badly , swollen l&H t&r every evening and ff my stoiaach was out of order. Dean's Kidney Pills cured me of these troubles in 1982, and for five years I have had no return.' Sold by all dealers. K0 cents a box. Foster-ktiTburn Co., BufEale, N. Y,' Fine weather in the, world,. breth ren . .The fain don't come' for the growlers, and unfortunately,' 'there's never enough of it to make them hol ler for rope; FITS, St. VituaTVance :Nervons Diseases per, manently eared by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve RastoTrr. f3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. S. KllneLd.,831 Arch St., Phila Pa. . Opposition to church union ; devel oped in the Congregationalists' con vention. ; u' lteh eared ia 30 samates by Woolford's SaniUry Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. The Countess of Warwick denied friving away the Tranby Croft scan dal. ; -V . '.' ' " ..',. , Mrs. Winsiow's Soothing Syrup for Children tee thing, softens thegums, reoceainnamma tion, allays pamcpreswmdeohc25cabottl Who has not, is not.- Italian. FeI bilkratf Oo a putting hdcbf Pat&s 'all over, your lodxt Try raCKS' . nut Krri w0 immi so I . S.a. Clua K. ud SOe. All &sxztea. 20 Mil lo Team Will ! every mrUcle in year laundry,' kitchen r iIn reom. Alt deeiere. wmU, Booklet and fvUr Un 'W him,' lc I'ACUflC tHiAfT KOKAX w Vt. If affiles ed witn weak ITionipsotfs Ey elMer eyes nae I! : fete. - kAtilii- titri.L.J ij "l A7T. MMm".' 'p"" mmmmm. m ' k 1 iiLl xatlGtaem Yr tinmm Arm II Lydia',J;E;'PirtK ELLEN M.1-Q L S O N ;U The sponsibiliferipr;fr dangbtr'a future largely rests with the mother. The riarh' influence and, the !infor. mati on which is of vital interest, to a i - j Ln.. .k : a.i:A -iLLil the dauglxter imparted at the proper V time has not only v saved the life but insured the Success of many a beau tiful rrl.a . jf.: -. - r;- .... When" a girl's . thoughts' become sluggish. Iwith headache,' dizziness on ' a 'disposition to, sleep., pains in back or) lower limbs, eyes 'dim,' ' desire for solitude; when .she is a mystery to herself and'' friends, 'her m6ther should .come to her aid, and remem-, ber that Lydla E. Pinkhara's Vege tablo Compound, made, from native roots and herbs, will at this time' prepare the ' system for the") coming chanse. and. start this trvincr reriod in ybung girl V life ' without pain "J or .lrreguianues. it, nas oeen. uius depended upon for two 1 (fenerations.' Hundreds of letters, .from lyqnng:; girls and their mothers, expressing" gratitude fori what jLydia IE; i JPink- .ham's Vegetable Compound has done for" them; are constantly .being ro-T ceived. ' v . x t y- ilss Ellen Ml Olson, of 417 N. East St., Kewanee; 111. writes:; : i -r.t , Pear Mrs. Pfakham:--f ' ? -f j ..in ;Lhave had the best doctors In our town for my sickness and they all thought $hat an operation was necessary. 1 naa neaaacue, ' ' No ' oiiieT remedV lias uch' a1 ills. Thousands of women residing tinevery part of the United ( . States bear -willing testimony to the" wonderful "virtue 6f -Ijydii1' ' E. Pinkham's ,Vegetable Compound and what it has' done for .them. ;i 'Lydla E. Pinklaias Vegetable -Cocipotind; WIS A , TCI CftmmiCRC W JlllTCn II ILLLUilMrrrLHO IlrlHILU Iu ehars ot ex-Mtlwftr oKeiaU. . K. B. in Skcrol-cnoma. 3m. PoettioiU n& ear grwioMf Tutelar &50 Ovarnty Wit for CvtaOoc NATIONAL TEUiGKPH --Uif'snf-ttlli UrCS UtliiiS . ; , . Malarial FeverS mn. . ... , ;SOc aad4SI , : EI! OOTTJXVIW Jl nit it " t W. Le .DOUCfeAS 03.00 Si S3.50SH0ES gVLKik- liWWfc' w ' I than any other mmnufmoturmr. THE REASON W. L. Douglaa shoes ire vorn by knore people in all walks oflife than any other, make is because of their' exoellnt style, euy-fittioc, and auperior rearing qualities, ' The selection of the Uathen and other materials for each part of the shoe and every detail of the making islooked after by -the post complete orranication of superiatendetxtarforemen and Bkuledshoemakers, who receive the highest wages paidlntheC i shoei ndestry, aod whose workmanship cannot be excelled. ; I could take yout nto mylae factories at Brockton ,Mms, and shew you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made.you WDOld then understand why they hold their shape, fit better. i i..-"1 J'rr.Isnan JLnvOTM' -IVAUTJON I The eenuute have W. L. Douelaa name and price stamped on bottox direct to faotoxy. Sto sent everywhere by inaJ.CajUaogfree., W.LOouglas, Brkxa, &mm. v '- 1 To convince &nv I woman that pax j tise-Anaeptie, will IfTUU and do ail we claim for It.. Wo will send ber absolutely free a large trial box Af PMthm with KrvaV , at . InRtrniv tlons sfad genutae testimonials. Send your same and address on a postal card. ' cleanses and, heals mucous m e nr - fora!ra af fections, such is nasal catarrh, pelvic cataixn and laflamma,Uon eansed by feini nlae Us; Sore eyes, sore -throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur ative power over these troubles is etra4 ordinary, and gives Immediate relief. Thousands of' women are using' and rec ommending It every day.' 0 cents at 'drnmrlstsorbvmaJL Remeinber. however,. YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT. THE li. AXTOS CO., Kosson, uau;. PO RATA B LE AN D STATION ARV ! no it. t 1 f'.f Saw, Lath and 8nlnle Mills. Injectors. Pomes and Fittings, Wood 8a ws, Splitters Shafts, Pulleys. Beitlng, QasoUne Engine. LO LI BAR Dv AUGUSTA, OA. e M I. llfaiali iCrOe Silk Lined, C1.9 5. oateiofoe. JAY&IK1.L ,WASUFAGTUUIMi ) iO U9U Am 33 MtMW I liu,Wev.Vrlu: :, Jl -1 I S lit T'l. II 1 ' II 1 AND BOI L20 youcanhot spend years andiaollars leamlnaTly experience, so. you mus2 : by Se knowledge ( required by other. We offer this to you. fer only 2i centa. x eu want umb wj w .w. .tiititt " - . . i them as a diversion, f In order to xianuje rww ihuuwiij , j Smi Sout tlm. o meet this want ve are eeUing v Jxtok giving the experience ,i prSuaaiSury rueV for (Only 2Sc twenty-five years. It was written to- i rr'hT.ttnd-If -ou will nrofit by-hJ twe.t ' ltry Yard as ioon as it appears, and know how to remedy It. This book will pMyuT7lt"s haw to detect and cure disease;; to leed ion ?"rsaid. also . fee mSaT' which rewl to save for breedinjr purpoaes; and : everyrhln- - teeO. 'fw3l know on tbfs attbiect to maie It profltabU. Sent postpaid, for-twenty- 0HlANIiOO Vejtnble Compdtiltil- 1 - C t AR V.E DABM STADTE R . .1 sideache. and my feet were so sm I rrwi!. hardly ttanU'I took two bottlae OI Lydia Hi I Piakhamis Vegetable (impound whea my ' periods worerj jgstanlltfieA . ana 3w 1 r susl" 4rithoutyour oedicSi in t&e.hocmi $ hv 1 11 - . m.- told one girl what LydjLa L Inliami Vegetable. Ootapound. . has done for Mini .ana sue is taxing now.- iliss Clara- Darmstadter J of Z2 c; Brfeekenridge St.,Buflalo,N.Y.,writea5 ' Dear krs. naaffl.'l . a ' - few months,, I suffered with' severe 1pisf na' every month,'wlth backaches aodheadaobctv. I bad the blues so bad thatl wis indesnair. r It fa a pleasure to tettyou that tLydi j tuuiuui vegewuM uuuipuujiu & tunu Oft .The change in ray appearsnea, is won- ,"4 . derful and 1 de&ire that this good may cosnd-' fv to every sufferer. . Any one desiring to know further details may write to me and I shall . J' a. . 9 .A V oegjaa xo grve laem." .... . ; ' . v ., . ' c If . vou know of any vounff rirl who iiii 'is j sick: tend needs 'motherly svdTioefc t ask her tor address Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn1, Mass?, and tell her'eery -detail ' of her symptoms, and to keep nothing' , ' back.' She will receive advice abso--Iu - 'lutely free, from Oj source that baa.so t ,riyal in thie experience '6f woman's ' 1 lls and it : willy if followed, -put her i k ,on the right road to a strong, healthy ' tj Iiydia E- pjnkham'sr' iYegetbl,;.." Compound made from native root a . , 'nndlherha VwrpA Whirfi :rtJiiTl?'.-",fail''J'.''-.ii record' of actual i cures of jfetnae.u I i a Woaan Hcacdy for Wocmft IU5. From' thisiMtittitebefoW BextMnprh. TUi' l EetftbUfled ' Twty-on Tetr. i Mrln Vintd 6f l' inc $60 ier month nd.npwar rtolut! rarsate4 I - iorui. Von -n Work fr Vof., ):XbUMIkl ii'i IWSTITUTK, Cluciunati, Ohio. ' -rrtrrtl j ft d X WW? SUsdart for 45 yearsi leaves no bad effects i,k Quinine; pleasant to take; chlttren like It if" - 4 . W - - ' SUndar4 for 45 years I Rsves no bad effects Q ar anteed nser Fod tmi Drug Act of Ime 39, psoe. your druggists; or sent prepaid on reee Ipt of price, t o ; ; ; f r. zc: i ARTHUR PETER & CO.. Cen'f gts. CealtvltkC Hv. I::.') iir.i mate. So. 44K07. T 'I li p Old Domimiba' Horse imd MoIerSEcio : Tb Best MtrUlTk KaCtthi Vtrfaw IRON or STEEL, iGtudiantTOd 'id the "deafer as wetirs9 . , thfihorse-jshoer. If yottr dealer does not carry them im stock, ivrlte as for price, .-. tLD 3 B0mm:r"liM: r Ritixs2 give tnem nelp. ' cannot - do r this Unless you understand them and know how to eater to their requiremenrs, una , i f hAU. nnnnnv . anrl xnAITtt VMir ' .. L jia'. . Al : -u- l, V. mm t if

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