THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON VI, SECOND QUARTER, INTER NATIONAL SERIES, MAY 6. Text of the Lnion, JUatn. xl, 2080. Memorr Venti, 2S-SO Golden Text Math, xl, 28 Commentary Prepared by the Her. D. M. Stearns. rCopyrigbt, 1900, by D. M. Stearns. : 20. "Then began He to upbraid the cities wherein most of Ilia mighty works were done because they repented not. We find the word "upbraid" only in two other places in the rsew Testament. In Mark xvl, 14, He upbraided them with their unbelief, end In Jas. i, 5, lie glveth wisdom to all who ask and upbraideth not. But the same word is translated "revile" and "reproach" in Math, v, 11; Mark xv, 32; I Pet iv, 14, etc. He never upbraids the penitent or the seeking, but only the hypocrites and the unbelieving. His mighty, works were the works of Go as He testified, "The Father that dwelleth in Me. He doeth the works (John xlv, 10), and these works testified that He was sent of God (John v, 86, 87). That all men everywhere should repent and turn to God and receive forgiveness of sins is the will of God. 21. 22. "Woe unto thee, Chorazin! Woe unto thee, Bethsaldal" And why? Be cause of the great condemnation that would come upon them in the. day of Judgment. There will be a time of judg ment, and all who have ever lived will have to appear before the Judge, who will be none other than Jesus Christ our Lord, the risen Christ, God's own appointed Judge (Acts xvii, 81). There will first Be the judgment seat of Christ for His re deemed ones (Rom. xlv, 10; ll Cor. v, 10), then the judgment of the living na tions iMath. xxv, 81, 82; Joel Hi, 1, 2); and after the thousand years the great white throne for the rest of the dead (Rev. xx, 11-15), but in each case the Judge will be the same (John v, 22, 23). 23, 24. "And thou, Capernaum." It sounds strange to hear of Tyre and Sidon and Sodom being at the judgment with Chorazin, Bethsaida and Capernaum, and that it shall be more tolerable for the former than for the latter, but the Judge Himself has said it, and He knows, for He can declare the end from the begin nlng (Isa. xlvi, 0, 10). The future of Sodom and other nations is mentioned in Ezek. xvi, 53, 55; Jer. xlvili, 47; xlix, 89. That the judgment will be according to knowledge and privileges of those who are judged our Lord Himself Bald In Luke xli, 47, 48. 25. "At that time Jesus answered and said, "I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent . and hast revealed them unto babes." At that time, when John seemed to be doubt ing, Israel was mocking and men despis ing, Jesus said, Father, I thank Thee. He is the possessor of heaven and earth and doeth according to His will both in heav en pnd on earth (Gen. xlv, 18-22; Dan. iv, 85), so that nothing can happen without Him, and it therefore becomes us in everything to give thanks, knowing that this Is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning us (I Thess. v, 18). Babes are not innocent, for sin Is in them, but they are helpless, dependent, teachable, believing. Concerning such little chil dren, who in their helplessness depend wholly upon God, believing all He says and looking to Him alone, the Saviour said, "Of such Is the kingdom of heaven" (Mark x, 14; Math, xviil, 10). 26. "Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in Thy sight." Or, yes, my Father, this is so because that Thou hast found it good (French text). Eli said, It Is the Lord; let Him do what seemeth Him good (I Sam. ill, 18). David said, I was dumb; I opened not my mouth because Thou didst it (Fs. xxxlx, 8). This from our Lord is as much greater than either as He was greater than Eli or David. Never was such submission seen on earth as was seen in the whole life of our Lord Jesus, and In all His life perhaps it was never greater than when in the garden. 27. "All things are delivered unto Me of My Father." Understood by no one but by His Father, and He alone know ing the Father and able to reveal Him, to whom shall we go but to Him who only can show ua or tell us of the Father and in whose hand are all things and who has said, "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father?" (John xlv, 0.) What a com fort for saint and sinner that He has said, "Him that cometh to Me I will in no wise cast out" (John vi, 37). In John ill, 85, it is written: "The Father Ioveth the Son and hath given all things into His hand. All life and power, all for giveness and all judgment are His." Of fering the riches of His grace and glory freely to all, He is gathering out of all nations those who come to Him, and they hall be His body the church and, as I now see it, also His bride the Lamb's .wife. 28. "Come unto Me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I wlU give you rest." God so loved that He gave, and He who spared not His own Son, but de livered Him up for us all, how shall He not with nim also freely give us all things? (John lli, 16; Rom. vlii, 82.) The Son of God loved me and gave Himself for me (Gal. il, 20) it is the privilege of every one to believe and acknowledge, and He it Is who gave Himself for us who says, "Come unto Me and I will give you rest." The greater gift, "Himself," Includes all the others, "Redemption," 'Eternal Life," "Bread of Life," "Water of Life," "Peace," "Wisdom" and "Righteousness." He is one and all, and all are in Him. 29. "Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls." First, we come unto Him, and, receiving Him, we find in Him righteousness and redemption and deliverance from the wrath to come and acceptance in Him, and we rest in nim because He, the Judge, assures us that there is no con demnation since He has borne it all for us. Now, though we are saved by His blood and Lave rest concerning our eter nal welfare, there la the daily life, with all its cares and annoyances and vexa tious things, to be lived to His glory. 8!'VT- "t My yoke is easy, and My fj If we find it otherwise, xe with us. "God is XIIl way is perfect;" """Mjord will perfect ;u (I John Iv, 8; M; PcxTTrMI, A SON C FOR TK IIOME-LAJfO. BY MARGARET E. SANGSTER. A song for the homeland, its valleys and lulls. Its lakes lying blue, and its silvery rills A song for its fields aud their harvests of gold, A song for its iniues with their wealth all untold ; The home-land, the dear land, the home of the free, O beautiful Mother, our hearts cling to thee. A song for the church with its call unto uraver. For the comfort and healiug aud joy we have there; A song tor the school with the nag on its roof, For the lessons it teaches for manhood in proof ; A soug for true brotherhood, sturdy and free, O home-laud, dear home-land a chorus for thee ! A song for our Sabbath that dawns with its peace, From greed and from bondage, a day of release; A song for our Bibles wide open and fair, For our Sunday Schools, and the bauds gathered there ; For the men aud the women whose ser vice is free ; O home-land, fair home-laud, a chorus to thee ! Aud O, may our home-land be cleaused from all stain, And pure as the fathers endowed to re main ! Its banner of stars be fluug out to the breeze. Its fearless ship sail ou the path of the seas. ' God bless it, the dear land, the home of the free. O beautiful mother, our hearts cling to thee ! ' Trusts Are Patting Up the Price ot liS ging and Ties. Savannah News. The cotton planters of the South may again have to resort t") cotton Bheeting aa a coverine tor their cotton ana to seek some substitute for ties to hold the bales in shape. These needful supplies are now entirely controlled by the trusts. Last year there were half a dozen com petitors in each line. This year there are none. One concern has absolute control of the cotton ties. The American Manufacturing Com pany oi.JNew iorK controls ine coiion bagging of the country, and the Ameri can Steel Hoop Company, which is in cluded in the great Federal Steel Trust, controls the tie output. The latter is a comparatively recent amalgamation of several concerns. The result is seen in the changed quotations. For several months the quotations on ties and bagging in the Mornirjg News trade columns have re mained practically urn hanged. Tbere was no necessity to change them, for the simple reason that no prices were being made by the trusts, and none of their products were being sold at any price. Today's quotations will be found to differ considerably from those which have been in force heretofore. An in crease of about zi cents a yam nas been made in the price of bagging, and it is not unlikely that there will be fur ther increases. The trusts have in fact gives notice that a further increase m prices may be expected in June. About fflr; Aycock. Biblical Recorder. The Democratic nominee for Gover nor of North Carolina is a Baptist. His name is Charles B. Aycock. He is a member of the First Baptist Church of Goldsboro, of which Chief Justice Fair cloth, Republican, ex-State Senator Grant, and Hon. W. P. Exum, formerly Populist candidate for Governor, are members, liev. W. Carey .Newton is pastor of this church, and he says it is the best church in the world. This goes to prove that Baptist religion is good for' public men or vice versa! Brother Aycock is a Baptist in the best of standing, being in every fibre a man of faith, of courage, of bensvolence, and of solid character. We are happy in the rise to eminence of any good man; and we take it as no breach of religious newspaper ethics to say that we are glad that the first man in the field for Gover nor is so noble, so whole, so true as Charles B. Aycock; and to express the hope that his 'opponents will be no less so. Why They Didn't Come. Washington, D. C, April 18. Sena tors Allen of Nebraska and Pettigrew of Dakota did not attend the Pro-Populist convention in Baleigh, N. C, today, as had been expected. They both accepted an invitation from the state committee, represented by Senator Butler, several weeks ago, it being understood at the time that they were wanted merely to discuss national issues. They after ward ascertained that Butlers purpose was to get them toKaleigh as opponents Of the proposed constitutional amend ment and by circumstances force them to speak against that measure. When they realized that they were being made tools in Butler s hands they declined to go. In spite of this fact, however, the Populist and Republican leaders con tinued to advertise that they would bg present to-day at Raleigh to oppose the amendment, and even as late as this morning it was announced in the papers that the two senators bad left for Raleigh. Nobody Can Make Bryan Abandon Free Silver. Chicago, April 24. A special from Wlchit.T to the Times-Herald says: rna nor any one me to aban "H as much as V OCtt WASIUNttTOS LKTTKIl. Special Correspondence. . There is some chance for the preser vation of Porto Rico from being looted by the franchise grabbers who are swarming in this city and who will soon be swarming around the carpet-bag ex ecutive council of the islauds, to which the original tariff bill allots the duty of dealing out the pie. This chance comes through the desire of the President for more time in which to select the officers of the new government and his conse quent appeal to Congress to permit the military office holders to retain their posts until August next. Iu reply to this appeal, the Senate promptly agreed to a resolution granting the necessary authority. The House, however, dis satisfied with having the franchise pro visions of the tariff bill crammed down its throat took advantage of this op portunity to have something to say about franchises and tacked to the Sen ate resolution an amendment limiting the granting of franchises. The Senate aa represented by Mark Hanna ani other friends of the trusts who propose to loot the island, seriously objects to this, ana says that the bin snail never pass with any amendment lessening the powers of the council. But the House too, insists on its point. As only week is left for reaching an agreement, there is little doubt that the House will have its way. Even if no agreement is reached and the bill fails, the Demo crats will have won, as in thaj case, the civilian officers will have to be appointed at once and will be confirmed by the Senate which will have adjourned by ugust. The trusts will not dare to run the risk of having their men nomi nated and rejected and the President will be forced to select far better men than he would have done had they seen able to take office without being con firmed Democrats in this city are amused by the almost frantic search of the Repub- icans for a candidate for the V ice Presi dency who will add strength to their ticket this fall. It is conceded that Roosevelt would do this, but Roosevelt declines to be impressed, and the Re publicans really have no other man who can be relied upon to make up for Mckinley's tremendous loss of popu iarity on accountofhis dodging attitude on the Porto Rican bill. Before this blunder was made by the Republicans in Congrees there was no thought of the party being constrained by the consider ation of local expediency in the selec tion of a candidate for Vice President on the ticket with McKinley. It was not thought to be necessary for the candidate for the 6econd place to add strength to the ticket. It was enough that he should not be a source of weak ness. JNor was it tormeriy ieir that there was any Bection of the country that had to be particularly considered. But now, in consequence t f the univer sal disapproval of the Porto Rican tariff it is felt to be necessary to be guided in the selection ot a candidate by consideration of the weak spots in the west. While one dislikes to believe that the present flurry in Turkish affairs has been gotten up merely for home con sumption, and with a view to the con- ention and election, it cannot be de nied that there is something very curi ous in the fact that it has been saved up until now, although the outrages complained of took plfce years and years ago, and although the missionaries have' been clamoring for reparation ever since. .Long Derore the Spanish war, public meetings were held in vari ous parts ot the country demanding redress at the cannon's mouth: meet ings, by the way, which were ignored entirely by the administration. But now that a closer and bitterer struggle than that of '98 is approaching, and now that the church people all over the country are passing resolutions con demning the President for sustaining his Attorney General in defiantly yio lating the plain intent and purpose of Congress by maintaining the canteen, it is, to say the least, most lucky for McKmley mat he should have a chance to stand out as a "Defender of the Faith" by jumping on the Sultan. Having fought one war without the authority of Congress by calling it suppressing an insurrection," while at the same time holding that the Coneti-' tution and laws of the United States did not extend to the country in which the "insurrection" was in progress, it will not be difficult for the President to win the approbation of the missionary societies by waging war on Turkey under the euphemistic title of "collect ing an indemnity. .Long aye im perialism! Mr. Quay has been denied a seat in the Senate by the narrow majority of one vote, and the line of precedents of the Senate in similar cases for half a! century has not been reversed, even by Mr. Quay's "charming personality." It is now probable that never again will it be in such serious danger as on this occasion. Quay, it will be remembered, had been appointed Senator by Gover nor Stone, of Pennsylvania, when the legislature adjourned after a long but fruitless effort to elect. Most of the Senators have held that in such cases the Governor has no right to appoint, as the recognition of such right would encourage personal favorites of the exe cutives to strive to deadlock the legisla tures, with the idea that they could be nominated, by him after it had ad journed.' 'As a matter of fact, this has happened more than once in the past, and any general attempt at this would me 6 .the selection jbf Senators' bythe governors of the states and not by the legislatures, as provided by the Consti tution, , Probably. there will; not . be so isuy deadlocks hereafter. . ' " Ex-Governor John P. Buchanan, of nessee, . has renounced ; Populiepx w,no.j ff) th Democratic party. r THIS IS THE WAY IT VVOHKt), State Journal, Republican. The Western voter baa not the re motest idea of Eastern conditions. The former can not understand why there iasuch intense hatred to Republican ism in the East and why the white peo ple are all Demecrats. In a number of counties the negro vote outnumbers the white vote and in all the counties east of Raleigh and nearly all east of Charlotte the negro is, in the majority if the white vote divides. It ia natural with the negro or any other race cf people to seek office and its emoluments and if the white people divide, the negro at once takes charge of affairs. Go back twenty vears and there was a large per cent of white Re publicans in all the Eastern counties, In some instances they outnumbered me wiiue democrats, but the negro outnumbered the white Republicans, lhia enabled the negro to run conven tions, control nominations and by this means he was soon in control of nearly all Eastern counties; while some : good white Republicans and some good negroes were put in office, bad white men and the ignorant negro were run ning party machinery and in the saddle This state of affairs soon drove the bulk of the white Republicans into the Dein ocratic party ; they had to go there for self preservation. However much they disliked Democracy, they preferred it to ignorant negro rule. - Now this state of affairs confronts us in the East. In many of the counties, with honest elections, that is, with free negro ballot, he controls the coun ties and in some instances the Judicial and Congressional districts and in all the couuties he would control, if the white people divide. The negro never fails to take advan tage of his opportunity; the. past and present is proof of this fact. They go to Congress, they have been solicitors, they go to the legislative halls, they hold county and minor offices. They swarm like bees after positions, county, State and Federal. They demand it; they claim they do the young ana are entitled to them. They run Republican conventions. We speaE not from hear say but from actual observation. This state of affairs prevents the white peo ple dividing and considering any other question but the negro; thereby the in terest of the State Buffers. We ask our white people of the West. white Republicans, should the negro be allowed to control, and with present conditions and a free ballot can he be prevented? Should the wealth, wealth producing and industrial class and busi ness interests of this section be held under ignorant negro domination? Consult your own conscience and white manhood and imagine yourself in like conditions and then cast your vote? But some say it will not dfsfranchise all the negroes. No, it will not disfranchise the intelligent and better element of the negro race, and should not they cast their votes intelligently as much so as any waite manr isut it disiranchises the ignorant ones who should be dis franchised, and to disfranchise this class, which is very large in the East would so much dimmish their yotes that it would remove all danger. One thing certain, it would rrake it less dangerous than at preeent and if we cannot do all that Bhould be done let us make what improvement we can. But there are some who say it ia wroDg in principle to disfranchise the negro. Would this be bo if it improves the con conditiona of the country? Is the prin ciple right that gives the. negro an op portunity to outvote and control the white man? If so, the principle is as black as the negro and the man who advocates it is as black as the principle. Remove this cancer from the political body in the East and you free the white man in political thought and action and then the Eastern white man will divide along political lines. Hal Fixing to Descend. Winston Sentinel. If Hal Ayer sticks to the declaration that he made after he waa nominated for auditor by the Populists it ia not likely that he will be a candidate on any ticket by the time the election rolls around. He said if anv committee at tempted to take down any nominee he would that instant come down himself. It is not to be expected that Butler will undertake a campaign without trading and fusion, therefore Ayer had fis well cancel hia arrangementa for a run to the finish. Best Prescription for Malaria, Chilis and Fever, It is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless form. . . . Sold by every druggist in the malarial sections of the United States No cure, no pay. . . . Price, 50c WHOLESALER. St. I.OUIB, Mo., Feb, 6, 1800. Paeis IIedioiwb Co., City. Gentlemen: We wish to congratulate you en the incrcaced salea wo are bavinp on your tirtner .t 'i'astele8 liill Tonic On exam ining oar record of inventory under date cf Jan. 1st. we find that wo sold durins- tha Chill season of 1888, 2C60 dozen rove's Tonic Wo also find that our sales on your Ixativo JrontcQninine Tablets have been some thing enormous: having sold during tha lato Cold and drip season 4,200 dozen. Please rush down order enclosed herewith, tad obUsQ. Yours truly , WKATHEll IMJICATIONS. Burlington Hawk-Eve. It is an easy matter enough to fore cast the weather like Professor Tice and Mr. Venn or if people would only give their minds to it. By closely reading and studying the predictions of these great weather breeders we have deduced the following rules, by which they make all their forecasts. Hindcasta of the weather are not made until the next day. An intensely blue sky indicates a tem porary absence of clouds. Unier other circamstanccs, again, an intensely blue sky indicates a tornado. When a woman leayes a piece of soap on the stairs where her husband will tread upon it, it ia a dead eure sign of a storm. When the sun rise8 behind a bank of clouds, and the clouds hang low all around the horizon and all over the sky and the air feels damp and there is fine drizzling mist blowing, the indica tions are that there will be a rain some where in the United States or Canada When it begins to thunder look out for lightning. When a man gets up in the night, and feels along the top pantry-shelf in the dark, and knocks a big square bottle without any label down to the floor and breaks it, it is a sign there ia going to be a dry spell until seven or eight o'clock in the morning. hen the spring millinery openings are advertised, look for bright sunny weather all around the house, with treacherous calms and rising barome ter, indicative of sudden tempests and mean temperature. When the cradle begins to vibrate with irregular, spasmodic motions about one o'clock in the morning, look out for signals and try to remember where you put the paregoric the last time you used it. When the youngest boy in the family comes home three hours after Bchool hours, with his hair wet, and his shirt wrong side out, look out for a spanking breeze. To see the head of the family feeling in his right hand pocket then in the left hand pocket, then in his vest pockets, then in his hip pocket, then in his coat pocket8. then at the ceiling, mdicatea "no change. ' If he suddenly stopa whistling at the ceiling and expanda hia face into a broad grimace of delight it means . "unex pected change." If the spring bonnet cornea home trimmed on the right side for the wearer's aeat in church, and has two more, spriga and three more dandelionB than the women in the next pew, it is "set fair." An unusually large number of spiders presages a very mild or a yery open winter, aa the case may be. If the corn huska are very thick the winter will be colder than summer. If the corn huska are very thin the summer will be warmer than the winter. If the cor a-husks are neither too thin nor too thick the summer will be warm and the winter will be cold. If the weather prophet predicts a rainy season and it happens to rain away out in Calaveras County, and it ia dry as a bone all over the rest of Amer ica, this rain must be set. down to the credit of the weather breeder, and all the dry time counts for nothing. The Iowa Populist convention, in session Tuesday, did not say a word, in its platform or otherwise, about the free coinage of silver. The subject waa not mentioned in the platform of the North Carolina Populists, adopted Wednesday, and a returning delegate reports that 16 to 1 was not heard during the session of the convention. Democratic con ventions everywhere are re-affirmina the Chicago platform but plowing shal low on free silver; and yet. it was for this that the country was set by the ears four and two years ago, and men were seized by the slack of the breeches and nape of the neck and thrown summarily out of the synagogue. Charlotte Ob server. Latest information reports from the India famine districts say mat the mis er existing there ia indescribable and unparalleled and that the present relief is quite inadequate. They add that the mortality among the cattle ia so severe that the authorities are trying to adapt farm implements so that human power can replace that of bullocks. Such a drastic measure haa aever before been necessary even in the greatest scarcity of animals. MAKES CHILDREN S 4 ANDADULTS tii 11. u-t hit i nc ' . - ""in EE Ri TAILER. Kedbon, Ills. Pxeis MEDicrea Co. , Gentlemen: I handle eeven or eight differ ent kinds of Cliill Tonics but I Bell ten bottles of Orove" towhero I soil onoof the others. I eold 33 bottles of Grove'i CbUl Tonic in one day and could have sold more if I had had it on hand. Mr. Dave Woods cured five cases Ot Ciiil3 With Quo bottle . Bespcctfallv, JOHN T. VJNYABO. Why the Republican and PopulirfW ' Will Put Oat Separate Stave Ticket. J" Washington Special, 18th. The Republicana and Populists will put out separate . State tickets and the' ' public ia thus made to believe that there is no alliance between the two parties. Senator Pritchard haa author ized a 8tatement that the Republicans and Populists in North Carolina will not fuse on the State ticket. : ' ? It waa stated in the Journal Saturday mat a secret conference waa held in Atlanta looking to a coalition ir the approaching election. It ia a fact Jhat a close alliance on the terms then Stated . waa agreed upon. . The proposition to have separate State tickets waa agreed upon and the publi- cation that the fusion proposition had : fallen through, authorized for the pur- ",; pose of influencing those white Popu lists who oppose fusion to vote' against the constitutional amendment, which ia '. ., the issue of the campaign aud for the .; further purpose of capturing those Democrats who are alleged to oppose the proposition to disfranchise the igno rant vote. The leaders of the two parties, Butler and Pritchard, thoroughly understand each other. - - i. No wonder the negroes have lost their senses. The negro Manly in- suited white women and said thev welcomed the embraces of negro men; the negro White boldly proclaimed in . . Congresa that negro brutes raped white ladies because white men used negro wenches. When negro leaders like Manly and White utter such in sults, justifying the violence of negro brutes, we may expect poor ignorant negro animals to rush blindly into crime of all sorts, crime that even a gorilla or a baboon never commits. It. is natural for such crimes to drive the ' white people to a frenzy of indigna- J ' tion and naturally lynchings follow. And now the negro White, after jus tifying negro rapings and thus mak ing lynchings a certainty if not a ne cessity, threatens to introduce a byl to punish as treason the lynching o a negro brute rapist. No wonder the United States Congress after only three years experience disfranchised the negro in the District of Columbia. Raleigh News and Observer. A suit out cf the ordinary haa arisen in Kentucky, based on the law which requires separate railway coaches for the races. A negro woman is suing a railroad for damages because the com pany permitted disorderly white men to invade the only car in which she waa allowed to ride and in8ult her by their action8 and conversation. 4 Southern Railway. THE STANDARD RAILWAY OF e South ... Th Direct Line to All Points. TEXAS, CALIFORNIA; FLORIDA, CUBA AND PORTO RICO. fttriotly FIR-r-CLiA8S Equip ment on all Through autl Local Trains; Pullman Palace Slep Img Cars on all Might Trains; Fast and Safe Schedule. . . . Trafal by tha Southern and ye ara assur.d a Safe, Comfortable and Exy dlilows Jonrnay. . . AmTTO TTOXM ASaffl FOIl TUTS ALB, S1TM AND GHKIRAL IKFORM ATIOK, . OB ADDKMS R L. VERHOH, F. R. DABBY, T. P. A., C. P. &T. A., Charlotte, N. C. AslieTilU, N. C. No Trouble to Amwsr Questions. f. 6. ftANNTOX, J.M. GULP, W. X TUB, MT'V.s ft. M. Traf . Maa. O. P. A. wassinotoh. rx a First Tasteless Tonic ever manufactured.. All other so-called "Taste less" Tonics are imita tions.. Ask any druggist about this who is not PUSHING an imitation.. 50 CONSUMER. Tonic Whitmbobo, Tex., Sep13, 1SS. Paeis Medicinb Co. , St. Louia, Mo. Gentlemen: I write you a few lines of grat itude. 1 think yonr tai-ove's Tasteless ttoiil Tonie is ono of the bestmedicinea in theworld for Chills and Fever. I havo three children that have been down with malarial fever for 13 months and havo bought Chill medicines of all kinds and Doctor's bills coming in all the time until I Bent to town and got three bottles of Grose's Tonic. My children are all well now and it waa your Tastles Chill Tonio that did it. CSHB.Pt gay too much in its behalf. . Yours truly, JAUES D. i f'tYER BROS. ORUQ CU.