Pointed Paragraphs. Nowhere is the heart mora hungry an in a house of gold, file canaot love the sinnor who does 't ha to eia. . Anxidty antedates mr cares and stponea our pleasures. Love says, "You are mine;" but iater love says, "I am vours." never rebuked people for be- tolerant with thernseleves. Chorus Girls Ways. Tho atae and its environments as factor upon the morals and de;iort snt of the girls who compose the orus has been argued pro and con ' ages, but no solution is fully ac Cpted. tMany persons depict the life of the rus girl as one of danger, studded ,h innumerable pitfalls. An equal Snaber of opinions uphold stage life saying there are good and bad pla In every employment, and that kg girls aro usually deserving ol Aater consideration than is accord f them. c:in thing in which nearly all chor Vi girls aro alike rs indifference to fait-. J TUnnn. : t , ..r. lifil (n 11 wuiu. iucac guia wic nine iui I lr promises. To the average ehor-Jf-Clrl a signed contract is like a ipte of waste paper, unless she real jpiwants the engagement. In that fa, she will hold on to the contract jj grim death. Jjlanagers are busr men, but they htn known tn rmnrt tn law tn ftpel the heedless young lady to ect the paper she has signed. iad...na Record. h r An Automobile Adventure. rla extraordinary automobile escape pold by the London papers. It Is thing beyond the usual when mo tets find safety, machine and all, f)t tree. hi French artist had been staying ake Como, and was driving an au bile with three friends near Bru . when descending a steep hill the P struck a large stone, swerved ntly against the parapet protect lithe mountain road from a preci- I and, breaking through the ma J y, went clear ovr the edge. lly, the branches or a tree g-ow-from the side of tho rock, and ting nearly to the road level, it the car as it fell, theraby sav four men from certain death er being "treed" for some hours, arty 'was rescued from their un I ant position. Why They Buried Her. incident that happened long Ih ago to maka its telling harra- esan with the meeting of two ncinnatians en the street. Lock- Sums, so runs the tale, they strol- owly along, discussing various Personal nnes were touched at last, and after exchanging solicitudes for several mo- . the Judge asked the Major: I dear, old Mrs. , your aunt? ,-ust be rather feeble now. Tell w is she?"" ied her yesterday," said the ei her? Dear me. dear me: good old lady dead?" that's why we buried her,' be Major's method of ending tlject Life. ? PAYS TO CAPONIZE. a of four pounds per head i and of ten cents per pound is quite worth while when yon ?r that it can be done on about e amount of feed. It is wise ize every cockerel not wanted ling. There is very little pain by the operation if done slul--i at thft rizht time less pain lotten endured by cockerels in its with one another. But the ill never forget the cold chills 1 him to witness the bungling of some of the pupils at a school. It is rank cruelty to such an operation without king on dead birds. uess is nev&p found b'y hunt- t. So. 26-'06. THE DOCTOR'S WIFE fees With Ilira About Food. tied nurse says: "In the prae- py profession I have found so bints in favor of Grape-Nuts t I unhesitatingly recommend ny patients. delicate and pleasing to the essential in fowl for the sick) be adapted to nil ages, being with milk or cream for babies ed when deficiency of teeth mastication impossible. For ients or those on liquid diet I pe-Nuts and albumen water rishing aud refreshing. This my own idea and is made as Soak a teaspoonful of Grape- la glass of water for an hour, d serve with the beaten white Y and a spoonful of fruit juice ng. This affords a great deal hment that even the weakest can assimilate without tin? isband is a physician and he pe-Nuts himself and orders it pes for his patients. hally I regard a fltsn or urap i frih or dtewed fruit as the akfast for anyone well or tame given by Patunj Co., eek, Mich. case of stomach trouble, ner- stratlon or brain fag, a 10 1 of Grape-Nats will work (toward nourishing and re and in this way ending the "There's a reason." and trial pkrs. for the famous little h9 Hoad to 'vYellviUe."' HE HELPETH ALWAYS OUR REGULAR SUNDAY SERMON The Actual Affairs of Men Aro Guided By the Hand of an Over Ruling Providence. r.rooklrn. N. Y. The Rer. Allnu Douglas Carlile. D. 1)., who has re ceived a unanimous call to the pastor ate of the Throop Aveuue Presbyterian Chuivh, in this borough, made vacant by the death of Dr. Louis Kay Foote in December last, preached for the first time to the congregation of that church Sunday morning. He is now the pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church in Pittsburg. Pa., where lie is highly esteemed. The subject of his discourse I was Christian Growth. " His text was II. Peter iii:1S: "But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Sa viour, Jesus Christ," and he said: In the Greek the article is before the noun in both cases: "Grow in the grace ami the knowledge." Grace is defined, theologically and abstractly, as "God's loving favor; unmerited by us." The "grace" of our text Is definite and spe cific: "the grace of our Lord Jesus," and. for unr purpose this morning, may be taken as the sum total of the graces that make up Christ's matchless char acter, our development in Christ's like ness, aud not by the acquisition of new graces, but by a growth of those with in us already received. Growth, nor mal growth. Is necessary to health; if life be checked it argues serious mal ady. Christian maturity is uothiug short of Christ-likeness. This we have not yet attained; uutil we do there can i be uo more important question than: Are we growing at a normal rate? Are we better than our fathers? Is the Church to-day better thau the Church of the Reformation? Or in the Apostolic day? Perhaps you doubt the possibility of such a thing. But mark now it grew from Pentecost to John, and then remember that we have the same things before us still undone. We have the same spirit of God to guide us, and we have had 1S00 years more time. Would it uot rather seriously re flect upon us if we had uot advanced upon them? In the days of Ahab, the darkest period in history, Elijah want ed to die because ho was no better than his fellows. In the church, as in nature, there is a twofold growth: One from without and the other from within. From with out the development of what I call cor poration in numbers and in wealth and in the consequent influence upon the world which it has gained in the same way and maintained for the same rea son as any other world power. The in ward growth is development from the heart outward; growth of character, and, necessarily, a growth of individ ual character. The development of the church in character ouly through the development of the individual charac ter. For the church is like other cor porations; it has no character apart from its members, and it depends upon the perfection of each several member for its perfection. One, you see, is growth in bulk, the other in character one of the corporation, of the corpor ation indeed, but only by the growth of the individual, and one is the re building of the temple of God. One is the progress of the kingdom of God wherein we have a citizenship, aud the other the progress of the kingdom of God, which is within you. The first we read, of constantly, the second we hear of rarely. The last is the most important and the less continuous in this our dny. I do not wish to be mis understood. I glory in the outward growth of the church and the mighty works doue for Christ in the world, but all our works mean nothing beyond the whitewashing of the outside of the sep ulchre, save only in so far as they are the natural and inevitable evidence of the working of a God-like character. Are we growing in character at a nor mal rate? We know die standard. Christ gave it the parable of tho tares and the wheat: tares and wheat grow ing side by side, but further and fur ther apart. So are the church and the world growing together, but more and more unlike until the harvest. At sow ing time, even, was uot the dividing line clearly marked? Is it so to-day? If not it shows change of character on one side or the ottier. Which is it? You ask: Is not this spiritual develop ment of so subtle a character that we can hope for its continuance even though not recognized in ourselves or others? IIow can there be change of character without a corresponding t-hauge of life? Look back to the sow ing time, when to cross the dividing life meant martyrdom. We have a harder task to perform than any mar tyr had who died tor Christ. There are hundreds here to-day -who would do that. It is not hard to die for Christ, but I tell you it is hard to live for Christ; to plod on clay by day on our unheroic way, persistently, consistently living"" with God in this world. And that is your task and mine. Get the character that will enable you to do that and you may let the works take care of themselves. That question comes: "What is the ne : Does not tne catechism say we are not going to be perfect in this life, but will be when we die? What is the use?" Suppose the death angel sum moned you to-day. In order to stand worthily in the presence of Jesus every thing that defilelh must be stripped off, What would there be left? A babe is perfect, but it is ouly a perfect baby. I once knew a beautiful child, the de light and joy of the household, but. alas! She grew up to the age of twen ty and was still a babe. A babe of three is a child of promise, but a babe of twenty is a monstrosity. And is ft not possible that in the holy city there are babes of three score years and ten whose only place is among the chil drcn? Would that satisfy you? No" Then "Grow in grace and. in the knowl edge of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ." But how? Two things are necessary: The spirit of God in our hearts and the knowledge of the truth as it is in Jesus. The spirit of God you have; the knowledge of the truth you must acquire. For it is by the truth that you will be liberated; by the truth you are sanctified. It is not enough, therefore, to say: "I know I have not done as well as 1 know; I will try to do better." You al ways do as well as you know. The truth you know has bom making you what you are. To be holy you must be wiser; to be better you must know more, for truth is not a thing you cau ecord in a book or formulate in a creed. Truth is a great living charac ter, a life-determining principle: "As a man thtnketh in his heart, so is he." Take the Bible and follow the word. Like growth in Christ growth in knowledge must be gained Individually. You cauuot know another's knowledge any more than you can go to heaven on another's faith. Some years ago in a theological seminary a young man was being examined. He got along well until one of the examiners asked him a certain question, which took hill by surprise. He could uot answer in his then state of mind. If he had been asked suddenly his age he could not have told it. At last on the question being pressed he said. "I believe what the Presbyterian Church believes." He did not pass. It will not pass you. There are some things like that in the church, far too serious to be funny. Such as going to the pas'or time aftei time aud asking: "Is this right?" "Is that man's position correct?" Whore is that spirit that guideth Into all truth? What are you doing to advance the Presbyterian Church, or our name iu His name, by your own development': A danger to-day lies iu believing in the wrong or error that may be in our creeds. Is there anything In them thai ought to be eliminated? It is a great peril to think that all truth is in our creed and that what is not written there is wrong. For that stops ad vancement and is a check to our pro gress in Christ's knowledge and grace and means declension loss. Christ taught the truth and did not formulate it. The apostles enlarged upon it to meet the needs of the growing church; the early fathers systematized truth into creeds. And so it went on down from the time of Constantine to the Renaissance, until we found the truth, not by ecclesiastical dictum, but in ef fect it was the same. I have seen old people so under the domination of their ecclesiastical commentator that they could see nothing in the Bible but what he taught. But as I read the signs of the time the church to-day is on the eve of an advancement in the knowledge of Jesus Christ unequalled in her history. You and I want a part in that. I know some of my ministerial brethren do not so read: they listen to the jarring voices of to-day: "Down with the Bi ble. Lop off lump after lump and give us love in a mighty principle," which is but a sentimentality. That is not what God means. We are at the headwaters of a mighty, flowing river, which is yet bubbling and has not become deep and calm and still. But it will, and when it does we shall have more truth, not less. Be sure of that. Our creeds ought to gather up in themselves all the truth that is iu Christ Jesus per petually, just as He gathers up in Him self the "fulness of the godhead bodi ly." Their confusion is like a puzzle picture from which some pieces are lost. It is your duty, aud mine, to find the pieces and put them in their proper places until our creed becomes a per fect pen picture of the God-man. When it does, we shall have a creed on which every lover of the God-man will stand comfortably. It will be that way in heaven. It shall be that way on earth. Don't you want a hand in that? How? Not only for your own sake, but for the world's sake and the church's sake. "Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ." How? Simply by the use of the means of grace which Christ instituted for that very purpose; by the public ministry of the Word, by private inter course with Jesus, by your right use of the Word of God, by those activities for which you find channels not ouly in the church, but out of it every day. whereby your spiritual muscles and sinews are developed as your physical ones are by use. A Prayer. Lord, I know not what I ought to ask of Thee-: Thou only kiiowest what I need, Thou lovest me better than I know how to love myself. O Father, give to Thy child that which he himself knows not how to ask. I dare not ask either for crosses or consolations; I simply present myself before Thee, 1 open my heart to Thee. Behold my needs which I know- not myself; see and do according to Thy tender mercy. Smite or heal, depress me or raise me up, I adore all Thy purposes without knowing them; I am silent; I offer my self in sacrifice; I yield myself to Thee; I would have no other desire than to accomplish Thy will. Teach me to pray. Pray Thyself in me. Amen. Francois de la Mothe-Feuelon. Secret of Her Power. What was the secret of such a ones power? What had she done? Ab solutely nothing, but radiant hmiles, beaming good humor, the tact of divin ing what everyone felt and everyone wanted, told that she had got out of self and learned to think of others; so that' at one time it showed itself by sweet words; at another, by smoothing an invalid's pillow; at another, by soothing a sobbing chllu. None but nho saw thoce things. Aqjxq but a loving heart coujd see them. That was the secret of ner heavenly power. Ram's Horn. A Heart Throb. O most glorious God, relieve my spirit with Thy graciousness. Take from me all tediousness of spirit, and give me a hope that shall not fail, a desire of holiness not to be satisfied till it possesses a charity that will al ways increase, that I may turn all things into religion, doing all to Thy glory; that, when Thou sbalt call me from this dellciousness of employment. I may pass into the employments of saints and angels, whose work it is, with eternal joy and thanksgiving, to sing praises unto Thy mercies. Amen. Jeremy Taylor. The Victors Mho O'ercamr, The word "tribulation" is derived from the Latin word tribulum, a threshing instrument, by which the Roman husbandmen separated the corn from the chaff, says a writer in the Southern Cross, and it was often used by the Christian writers as an image for setting forth a higher truth, and so the trials and sorrows of this life are "God's threshing instruments'' for separating in men whatever is light, sinful, poor and trivial from what is good, solid and true literally the wheat from the chaff fitting them for the heavenly garner. Man's Ncblnst Acquisition. Goodness of heart is man's brightest honor and noblest acquisition. It is that ray of Divinity which dlgniflea j- dumanity. Mate Komle. THIS State needs better roads. The people are becoming con scious of the fact, and a begin ning has been made. The State has undertaken to meet n large part of the cost of roads which the town ships feel the need of sutliciently to pay a part of the expense. But this plan assumes that the local communi ties will take the initiative. Something more than that is needed. It would give a tremendous impetus to the good roads movement if the State would take the initiative in mak ing some highways of general import ance. It has plenty of money, and no better use for some of it could be sug gested than road making. No other expenditure would diffuse its benefits more generally through the community. The farmers would be especially ben efited by road improvements that would enable them to haul heavier loads to the railway stations with less wear and tear upon their horses and wagons. The urban population would be greatly benefited by anything that would facilitate comfortable access to the country. It is now proposed to ask the Legis lature for an appropriation of three or three and a half million dollars io make a tirst-class highway connecting the two great cities at the extremeties of the State. The highway would pass through fourteen counties and eleven large 'towns. Its beuefits would be fairly distributed between the rural and the urban population. Counties and towns along the route would be moved to construct branch roads con necting with this main artery. Noth ing else would do so much to popu larize good roads and to incite the local communities to mend their highways as the object lesson of a State high way. The enterprise deserves hearty encouragement. This State, eminent for agriculture, manufacturing and mineral resources, ought to have a complete system of excellent highways, and if the State will take the lead the counties and towns will follow, and in a few years Pennsylvania will have roads that will excite the envy of other States. Philadelphia Record. VTeallh-Consptvinji Common Sense, The law as laid down in the books is simply common sense applied. Suc cessful agriculture is common sense ap plied. Money-making in any legitimate channel is but common sense applied. It may be set forth as an economic fact lhat the Government of the Uni ted States would go to pieces in an as tonishing short time if the principle of common sense were not at the very foundation of its administration. And it is this principle that underlie?, gives force to and will ultimately enact into law the Brownlow-Latimer bill to ex tend National aid to highway construc tion and improvement in the various States cf the Union. Common sense long ago fixed upon the fanner as the first factor in progress and prosperity, and that same common sense points determinedly to the fact, not to be dis puted by any reputable authority, that the farmers as a class are less cared for by the Government which owes its continued existence to them than any other class in the land. The Depart ment of Agriculture,, the most im portant to the farmers of all our in stitutions, states in a bulletin that, for the lack of good roads, the farmers suffer more than any other class, and that it is 111 is which constitutes the greatest drawback to rural life. It is obviously unnecessary, therefore, to discuss the benefits to be derived by them from improved roads. The de partment has gathered facts which enable it to publish broadcast that "those localities where good roads have been built are becoming richer, more prosperous and more thickly settled, while those which do not possess the;-e advantages in transportation are either at a standstill or are becoming poorer and more sparsely settled, and" con tinues this Government authority "if these conditions remain, fruitful farms may be abandoned and rich lands go tf waste." Brooklyn Uptown Weekly. Abolishing Grnrte Cronilnjrn, Senator . Armstrong, iu his amend ments '.o tn New York J.j.ighway law, provides that everywhere railroad crossings at grade shall be abolished, j In a year from this date, when the State Engineer, acting thro gh the town boards and boards of supervisors, has designated on a map the main high ways that are to be improved with the $30,000,000 voted by the people, then it will show clearly how many of these main highways are crossed at grade by ! railroads. Then it will be possible to I Intelligently take up with the State I railroad commission ths abolishment of ! each one of these grade crossings at some time durirg the next ten years, so that the improvement of The main high ways and the abolishing of the grade crossings will be iutellie,eutly and sys tematically doue. Masrhuetls II is li ways. During the last twelve years approx imately ('-- mihs of State highway have been constructed in Massachu setts. These roads have cost, approx imately. 100,000. Of these highways about ninety per cent, are of the kjnd known cs macadam roaus. tiie remain ing ten per rent, being of gravel. A British newspaper publishes this advertisement: "Widower, living re tired, without incumbrance, would like to correspond with lady, about forty, with small menus, with one U' pre ferred, with a view lo au early tnar iase." The Summer Girls' Dress. - The 1906 Summer girls will b frocked in frills and furbelows de lightfully feminine, writes Helen Berkely-Loyd in The Delineator for July. From parasol to boot tip, curves, dainty touches, and artistic color effects will distinguish every thing1 they wear. Their' elders, too, make a generous use of color. They are permitting it to appear in their tweed trotteuis and motor coats, and their afternoon and dinner gowns of light, silken fabrics, ,are as often of the new mauve-blue and the warm American Beauty shades a soft white or the always charming pastel tints. The semi-tailored gowns, man made though they are, emphasize feminine curves in a marked degree, and show the most graceful effects. The bolero is seen on a great many of those gowns, the shorter ones hav ing a ceinture attached that is en tirely new. The sleeves ns a rule, are puffs to the elbow, or half-way to the wrist. They are finished with a velvet-inlaid cuff that flares considerably. Among- the little accessories that the Summer girl is wearing, are bracelets of black velvet held with jeweled buckles, and wisps of tulle twisted about the upper arm and the wrist, tied in fluffy bows. Arm or glove garters of satin ribbon, shirred over elastic and edged with frills of lace &iu ribbon are quite new, and as practical as they are ornamental. FRIENDLY CONSIDERATION. Da Long I say, old man, when are you going to pay back the UO I let you have six months ago? Shortwad Oh, in a few days. I would have paid it back long ago, only I was afraid of hurting your feel ings. De Lcng In what way? Shortwad I didn't want you tc think I thought you needed tht money. r-v-" v--- "American ei..ar.i cu poetry," says the London Academy, "is a plant that has not yet fully blos somed; there will be more of it in the course of another hundred yeari or bo." Catarrh Cannot Be Cnre4 With local applications, a tfcey cunno leach the seat o( the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional diseuse, aud in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood nnd mucous surface hall's Cutarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It vr&6 urescribed by one ol the boat physi cians in this country lor years, ami is a reg ular prescription. It j& i-onq ofeed of tin best tonics known, combined itii the besc blood purifiers, actiiiK directly on the mu cous surfaces. The perfect combination ol! the two ingredients is what produces sucii wonderful results in curing catarrn. Send lortestimonials, free. 1'. J. Chkxf.y A. Co., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, price, 75c. lake iiatl's i'amily rills lor constipation Prof. W. II, Schofield is preparing two more volumes of "Literary His tory of England," to complete the series which Stopford Brooke, Pro fessor Saintsbury and Mr. Goos" hav already contributed. TORTURED WITH ECZEMA. TreinPBKlons Itching; Over- Whole Uody Scratched t'ntll Bled Wonder ful Cure Ujr CaMevra. "Last year I Buffered with a tremendona itching on my back, which grew worse and worse until it spread over the whole body, and only my face and hands were free. For four months or so 1 suffered torments, and I had to- scratch, scratch, scratch until I bled. At night when I went to bed thiags got worse, and 1 had e times to get up and scratch my body all over urtt.il I was aa sore as could be,, and until 1 saf fered excruciating pain. They told m that 1 was suffering from eczema. Then I made up- my mind that 1 would use the Cuticura Remedies. 1 tued them accord ing to instruction, and very soon indeed I was greatly relieved. 1 continued until well, and now I am ready to recommend the Cuticura Remedies to any one. Mrs. Marv Metzger, Sweetwater, Okla., Jut 28, 1905." They who will not biiiu on the rock will be broken by it. FITS.St.Yltns Dance:ervois Diseases per. manently cared by Dr. Kliutvs Great Nerve lte&torer. 'i triiii bolti ;md treatise free. Kb. il.it. Klixk, j.)., AraiiM..ruila.,ra. Duse has no bi ft hp", ace. on a swiftly moving train. She was born Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup lor Children teethinisoi'tens theirum-, reduces inflamma tion, allays tiain.curH- wind i?oiie.'25e a bottle Bank of England notes cost a luli'-per.ny apiece to produce. A I'hynU-lun at Home s Dr. Ulrrzers Huckleberry Cordial. It ;i ways cures Sstoina.'b. and Howe I Truiik-.w, ' Children 'iVethiiij;, etc. At Druggists and 50c per bottle. About 3,"00.000 people are on the sea every day in the year Itch cured in 30 minutes by Wool ford's Rtini-ji-w I rtfi.-r- npvpr i :l i 1 5 .'.r!ii liv I)i'I1t- rist5. Mail orders promptly tilled by Di'. i Uetcnon, era wioriisviuc, idi. i. There' many a true word spoken in dis-ru-t. Lite. HICKS CAPUDINE IMMEDIATELY CVRES HEADACHES Breaks up CCLD5 IN 6 TO 12 HOUR.S TrjJ lanlt 13c At Onuses you cannot spend years and buy the kno-.vledge required cents. You want tnem to pay their own way even if you merely keep them aa a diversion. In order to handls Fowls Judiciously, you must know eoma tmng about tht m. To meet this want w are scutng- a book giving the experlenca of a practicp.i poultry ra-nier ior v.u!uy a man wno piu an ms iiunu, anu uran, en raising not as a pastlni?, but as it buoiness and if you will profit by his twer ty-flve years work, you can save many earn dollars ror you. tne point la, t:iat you must be sure to detect trouble In tha poultry Yard as Foon as it eppears. and know how to remedy it. This book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs and also for fattening;: which Fowls to save for breeding perpescs; and evorythlng. Indeed, vou should know on this wiblect to mBKlt profiiat"1. Sent postpaid pr twenty tva cenU la ampa. EOOK PUB-'SUINS HOUSE 1 Leonard St.. NtwTorkClt ALL HAIL PE-RIMJA. A Cos of STOMACH CATARRH. -ilisfl Marr O'Brien, 306 Myrtle Are, Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: "I'eruna exit ed tne in five week of t'O.tarr-1 of the xtl-icU, after suffering for four years and doctor ine without effect. In common with otSer grateful ones who have been beuefited by your discovery, I say, AU hail to Peruna. ' Mr. H. J. Ilenneman, Oakland, Neb, writes: "I waited before writing to you about my sickness, catarrh of the stomach, whick I had over a year ago. "There were people who told me it would not stay cured, but I am sure that I am cured, for I do not feel any more Q effects, have a good appetite and am get t.in; fat. "So I am, and will say to all, I u cured for good. "I thank you for your kindness. ' Peruna will be our house tnedt cine herea tr. Catarrh, of the stomach is also known in common parlance as dyspepsia, gas tritis and indigestion. No medicine wiil be of any permanent benefit except it t move the catarrh. A Great Tonic. Mr. Austin M. Small, Astoria, Ornt, writes: "During the hot weather of th past summer I lost my appetite. I tried Pcruixi, and found it pleasant to take, splendid appetizer and a great tonic." 6UM TEED BY A BANK DEPOSIT Cd3MJOUf R. R. Fare Paid. Notes Takst " 500 FREE COURSES GORGbViuS! K ESS COLLEGE, Macon, ta Frmtfl Products - . . ft I V. don't H br bona o aritd wbaa Tu bur titan. Nothing te into Libbr can bat cUaa, Imb. wQ-eooksd meat ikat k retcfar to cat. Libtr' PnxlucU am toot and ttouUa aaj aney-aw aauappaata aumiuaten. Libbr s BomUm Giickan with MayoanaiM - DrcBuia sulcus oulelt uUcL vet ai dalicioui a ooaatyou crr ata. k all chic km, a ad all good chickaD mostly white ami. Try k wbaa ycv'ia Karried or baafliV. Booklet fraa. "How toMaka Caod Thioai lo Eat." Wru Libby, McNeil! & Libby, Chicago I Jt"' You Cannot all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh , uteri ne catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, soro mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing tbe stomach. But you strrelv can core these stubbora affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs.checks discharges, stops pain, and heads th inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. '50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box- THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mua, LICE POWDER Sure Death lo Lice and Vermin Tliey can't live where il ii. Emty to apply. Dust it io "Killed every louse in my Dork of 250 hem." D.Perry. Monrop.Win. Prica 25 and 58c a tht. Ry mail. 40 and 71c PnuaaiAN Rcmiot Co.. St. Pul, Minn. EfXj WBSIf bE5 Wheal. Ilntlir l wrnera. aid t P ?2 1 amp;- frre. Sft!ze UBti I bat a s.tei i.o.HoxO A.iCroc.Wla, SO. 26-'06. if ajrev? STteson's Eve Water nth EARN MONEY If you ;jiv taem help. You ruimot riii thi unlers j-ou understand them and know liow to cater to their requirements, and dollars learning by experience, so you must by others. We offer this to you for only 25 lac.) twenty-nve yars. it was written by a.nu money to maxing a success or Chic Chicks annually, attd make your Fowl , fOLL THE LICEi uMjft" CHICKENS witk I 11 PRUSSIAN xl T

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