sm.ij.ij iiiiHWl"l)"i'l'f"'M WmmMB I want any person who Buffers with ML lousness, constipation, ludlgrestloa or any liver or blood ailment, to try my Paw-Paw k'Ter Pills. I jmarautee they will purify tha blood and put tha liver and stomach Into a healthful condition and will ponltlrely cure biliousness and constipation, or I will refund your money. Munyon't Homeopathic Horns Remedy Co., 63rd and Jeflersen St.. Phlla., Pa. E BUY ilDESANoOi Bekj Dealers. belter! r for rw than agents or coramissloa merchants. Reference: any bank in Louisville. We furnish. Wool Bags Free to oar shippers. Writs lor price list .SABEL&SONS EinY6."d LouisTillc, Kj. JZ3 . Ut Jimwiwnniitfil CURED Gives Quick Relief Removes all swelling In 8 to to days ; effect a permanent cure in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment given free. Nothing can be fairer. Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons Specialists, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. A HOSV3ESTEAD Do you want a Land Homebtcadf Information ueutfrre. How to Get r Farm of Land. Address THE COLONY HOMESTEAD COMPANY Eto?rJ of Trade Building Indlananolis. Indiana MEET IN CONGRESS AT ROME International Gathering of Foes of Tu berculosis to Be Held Late in September. Official announcement of the Seventh International Congress on Tuberculo sis, which will include representatives from every civilised country ' in the world, has been made by the National Association for the Study and Preven tion of Tuberculosis. The congress will be held in Rome from September 24 to SO, 1911, and will be similar in many respects to that held in Wash ington in the fall of 1908. The con gress, which meets every three years, will be under the direct patronags of the king and queen of Italy. An American committee of 100 will be appointed as tho official represen tatives of the United States. Mean while the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis is acting in that capacity and its office in Nevr York will be the headquarters for the United States delegation. The secretary general of the congress is Prof. Vittorio Ascoli of Rome. As a direct result of the stimulus of the last international congress held in this country, the American committee will be able to report that the number of tuberculosis agencies in this coun try have been tripled in the three years. More than twice as much money is being spent in the fight against tuberculosis by private socie ties and institutions, and the appropri ations of federal, state, municipal and county have increased nearly four fold. It 13 estimated that nearly $15, 000,000 will be spent in anti-tuberculosis work in 1910. True Independence. You will always find those who think they know what is your duty better than you know it. It is easy in the world to live after the world's opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our own; but the great man is he who, in the midst of the crowd, keeps, with perfect sweetness, the in dependence of solitude. Emerson. PUZZLED Hard Werk, Sometimes, to Raise Children. Children's taste is ofttlmes more ac curate, in selecting the right kind of food to fit the body, than that of adults. Nature works more accurate ly through the children. A Brooklyn lady saysT "Our little boy had long been troubled with weak digestion. Wo could never per suade him to take more than one taste of any kind of cereal food. He was a weak little chap and we were puz zled to know what to feed him on. "One lucky day we tried Grape ,Nuts. Well, you never saw a child eat with such a relish, and it did me good to see him. From that day on it seemed as though we could almost see him grow. He would eat Grape Nuts for breakfast and supper, and I think he would have liked the food for dinner. "The difference in his appearance is something wonderful. "My husband had never fancied ce real foods of any kind, but he be came very fond of Grape-Nuts and has been much improved in health since using it. "We are now a healthy family, and naturally believe in Grape-Nuts. "A friend has two children who were formerly afflicted with . rickets. I was satisfied that the disease wa caused by lack of proper nourishment They showed it. So I urged her to use Grape-Nuts as an experiment and the result was almost magical. "They continued the food and today both children are well and strong as any children in this city, and, of course, my friend is a firm believer in Grape-Nuts for she has the evidence before her eyes every day." Read "The Road to Wellville," found in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the abore leMert A new one appear from time to time. They are genuine, trnc, anil full of human interest. . ' ?Abinet IOM haa meat an' canna eat, And some tnere do mat if But we hae meat an we can eat, And may the Lord be thankit. Seasonable Ideas on Serving. Dainty desserts that appeal to the appetite need not b0 hard to prepare. One especially nic6 and very little work is called Nut Snow Dessert. Place marshmallows in the oven un til lightly toasted, add chopped nuts and serve with sweetened and flavored whipped cream. Orange-Banana Cream. Half fill deep sherbet cups with or ange jelly, made strong in both color and flavor by soaking the peel of two oranges in the water before adding to the gelatine. Mash two .bananas, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice and a fourth of a cup of sugar. When light and smooth fold in one cupful of whip ped cream. Heap this on the jelly and serve. Casserole of Lamb's Liver. Lay the liver in slightly salted water an hour to draw out the blood and make it firm. Rinse and wipe dry. Fry slices of salt pork in a pan until crisp; remove the pork and add an onion sliced; when brown remove the onion and add the liver, turn and cook on both sides, then put it into a casserole with two cupfuls of stock and a dozen pota to balls and as many small onions. Cover closely and cook until the vege tables are tender, in a moderate oven. Send to the table in the dish in which it was baked and you have a dinner all ready to serve. A Nice Supper or Luncheon Dish. Cook a dozen tomatoes until soft, put through a sieve and stand aside. In a frying pan put three tablespoonfuls of butter and half a dozen eggs; stir and cook until smooth, add the strained tomato and three tablespoon fuls of Parmesan cheese and serve with brown bread. Omelet with ham is a good break fast dish. Prepare thr- omelet as usual and spread with seasoned and chopped ham, place in the oven to finish cook ing. Beet Relish. Take one quart of cooked beets, chopped, one quart of cabbage, one half cup of grated horseradish, two cupfuls of sugar and vinegar to moisten. Put in cans and seal for win ter use. ONVEKSATION vlnar; ' Give no more to every guest Than ho la able to digest; Give him always of the prima. And but little at a time; Give to all but just enough; Let them neither starve nor stuff. And that each may have his due Let your ne'.ghbor carve for you. , i Scott. In the Canning Season. Look up the choice recipes that you were anxious to try, make a list of them, then in the stress of the sum mer work, important things will net be forgotten. This is the month for "putting up" peaches. One famous cook who was an artist in canning peaches always prepared them the night before and let them stand cov ered with sugar until morning. They had a richness no other method gave. Can as usual. Here i3 a recipe which many may like to try while the cucum bers are in their urime: Cucumber Catsup. Choose fresh green cucumbers of the size and quality used for slicing. Reject these that are at all bitter, peel and grate them. Put into a bag and drain them, or a sieve may be used. To every quart of pulp add half a cup ful of grated horesradish and half a cupful of grated onions, two table spoonfuls of sugar, one tablespoonful of white pepper and two tablespoon: fuls of salt. Add a quart of cold cider vinegar and seal in air tight jars. Plum Catsup. Boll the plums with as little water as possible until soft; rub through a colander and to every five pounds of pulp, add two and a half pounds of sugar, a cupful of cider vinegar and a level tablespoonful each of cinnamon and cloves. Cook half an hour, stir ring steadily, and seal boiling hot. This Is especially fine with beef, veal or ham. To Pickle Plums. Gather green plums before they be gin to turn; make a pickle of mustard seed and salt with vinegar enough to cover the fruit. Bell apd pour over the plums three mornings in succes sion. They may be used in place of olives. Grape catsup is prepared the same as plum catsup and is a choice relish to serve with ham, venison or anj game. Minced Salt Mackerel. This is a nice way of using pieces of mackerel left from a previous meal: Free the fish from skin and bones and mince fine. Make a cream sauce of two tablespoonfuls each of f.our and butter. When bubbling add a cupful of thin cream, cook until fmooth and thick, season with a lit tle onion Juice and salt if needed. Place the fish in the sauce until heated. Serve In mashed potato nest.' sprinkled with chopped parsley. fflll v 1 TEMPERANCE LESSON Sunday School Lesson for Sept. 25, 1919 Specially Arranged for This Paper LESSON TEXT. Galatians 5:15-26. Memory verses, 22,' 28. GOLDEN TEXT. "If we live In the Spirit let us also walk In the Spirit." Gal. 5:25. Suggestion and Practical Thought. The adventure with Apollyon the great dragon that fought against Bun yan Pilgrim, in order to prevent him from reaching the Holy City sjmbol ized a heavenly character, a heaven of eternal life, an earth transformed into heaven. . In the lesson appointed we have a characterization of Apollyon, "the foul fiend," "a monster hideous to be hold, clothed with scales, with wings like a dragon, feet like a bear, and a mouth like a Hon," amid fire and smoke, throwing "flaming darts las thick as hail." Some years ago, in an article in the New York Journal, John L. Sullivan said: "Remember, young man, that if you couldn't lick John L. Sullivan, you can't lick the thing that is stronger than he is. Leave whisky alone." Sullivan was not the kind of man from whom one expects moral teaching, but when the great fighter admits that whisky defeated him and took him into captivity, he becomes an object lesson for every young man. With the newspapers and reporters. The- Golden Rule that is the spirit which wants to do to others as we would have them do to us, the spirit that will make sacrifices in order to know how to help others enlisted the newspapers and the reporters on its side. There can be no inspiration without Information. Hence the teacher and class should be constantly collecting temperance material. A month before the temperance lesson she should be directed to say 'to her class, "I want you all to clip from the papers every article of news concerning the effect of the saloon or drink. Paste these on a strip of cloth, and we will see who has the longest strip on Temperance Sunday." Once in the New Century Teacher there was an article entitled, "Their Exhibits." It told how a teacher asked her scholars to look about during the week for proofs of the evils wrought by the liquor habit. There were some rather unique "exhibits;" one boy brought his bicycle tire that had been cut by a drunken man; others told stories of what they had seen. This same plan could be utilized for a general exercise on Temperance Sunday. For a first attempt, special arrangements would probably have to be made with individuals or with teachers in order to insure definite re ports or "exhibits." "It is reported in the public press that President Taft had turned his back on moderate drinking. At a lit tle dinner at Hot Springs, Va., he not only turned his wine-glass down, but said in response to a query, 'Yes, and it is going to stay turned down; I am not going to drink anything again, ever.' " In his early life Lincoln was ab stemious but not a total abstainer, but he was a keen observer of the effects of intoxicating beverages among his early companions. Very shortly after hi3 removal to Springfield In 1S37, he joined a Total Abstinence society. Seventeen of the presidents of the United States" signed the following declaration: "Being satisfied from observation and experience, as well as from medi cal testimony, that ardent spirit, as a drink, is not only needless, but hurt ful, and that the entire disuse of it would tend to promote the health, the virtue,, and happiness of the com munity, we hereby express our con viction that should the citizens of the United States, and especially the young men, discontinue entirely the use of it they would not only promote their own personal benefit, but the good of our country and the world." "A Pennsylvania lady tells that when General Harrison was running for the presidency lie stopped at the old Washington house in Chester for dinner. After dinner was served, it was noticed ,that the general pledged his toast in water, and one of the gen tlemen from New York, in offering an other, said, 'General, will you not fa vor me by drinking a glass of wine?' The general refused in a very gentle manly manner. Again he was urged to join in a glass of wine. This was too much. He rose from the table, his tall form erect and in the most digni fied manner replied: 'Gentlemen, I have refused twice to partake of the wine-cup. That should have been sufficient. I made a resolve when I started in life that I would avoid strong drink, and I have never bro ken it."' ' The boys and girls can Join the Golden Rule in a series of very in-, teresting adventures with the doctors, medical societies and , laboratories, where from these friends they may obtain ammunition for their warfare against Intemperance. Twenty-three hundred years ago, the question arose whether the Athe nians should grant Demosthenes the honor of a crown. He "had fled from battle, and his counsels, though heroic, brought the city to ruin. Demos thenes' speech i3 the masterpiece of all eloquence. Of the accusation by Aeschines it Is praise enough to say that it stands second enly to that. In it Aeschines warns the Athenians that in granting crowns they judged them selves and were forcing the charac ters of their children. Self-knowledge cures eelf-love. LIFT UP YOUR EYES AND LOOK By BISHOP WILLIAM A. QUATLE Montreal, Canada Text: In everything give thanks; for this is the will of God In Jesus Christ concerning you. Thess. 5:18. Have we not set the song of the Christian life to much to the tune of difficulty, danger and sorrow? "In everything give thanks," I am pretty certain, will, in the multitude of in stances, be translated as meaning that whatever . difficulty or distress enters your life, be of grateful mood. Do not murmur. Be glad , through whatever roughness the water wear as we voyage across their uncertain billows. I am certain-of two things in this matter. First, fhat this is how this Scripture is pretty generally viewed, and second, this is not what it does actually mean. It does mean that, but it means indefinitely more. A farm is on a landscape; and he who confounds farm and landscape is net seeing things as they are. Difficulties are to be encountered and sorr&Vs are to be met and they are to be met with the mood of manly and womanly resignation to the wide-working will of God. But that we are to be grate ful for the clouds rather than the sunrise and the noon and the blessed open sky is to me absurd and a list less Interpretation of the good God our Heavenly Father. To be glad on a holiday is as devout as to be sad on a funeral day. We-shall not need to reset our estimates of Gcd and his will concerning us before we are in har mony with his mood. He Is the glad God of out-of-door3 and the happy singing things whether they be birds or children or women or strong men. This anaemic notion of religion is un wholesome because it is untrue. God gives no assent. A good man and great said this: "In everything give thanks." Nobody but a good and great man could have said it. The sentiment is like Mount Lycabettus from whose top all of historied Greece lies under the eyes without straining an eyeball. All life lies at the ba?e of a mount of vision and of praise like this: "In everything give" thanks." The fact which is meant to be lifted into light at this moment is that there is a devotional element in all things whalsc ever. We say grace before meals, except we be heathen. We often say grace before labors and battles without or within and reading of books and taking of journeys -and husking corn or going to picnics or a ctroll through sun burnt fields for the sheer love of the crisp grass under foot and the hot sky overhead. We do narrow beyond the permis sion of God this thought of devotion or we must be at church or prayer meeting or at family prayer to be de votional. Those places and occu-i-tions are greatly good, but they do not monopolize the moods of devotion. The devotional frame is the deep con sideration. Are we open to devotion for all things as Paul was? It Is meet to give thanks for the bird voices, and a good way to give such thanks is by listening to tfco voices. That is worth weighing. To love things enough to give things heed Is a mood of gratitude, whereas not to care enough for things to notice them is a first-clas3 specimen of ingratitude toward God and his doings. The cricket's chirp is a species of poetry which may well set the heart singing after its fashion, too. Such a little warmth makes the cricket set his heart to song. Were we as good at the voicing of our gratitude as the cricket of the hearth, what a shout of chorusing would the great God hear from men. -. The religious nature Is wiser and wider than many religious folk are given to supposing. Christianity is generosity "Thank God!" How often have I found my own given to that gust of gratituc-o "thank God!" And I am not slow to believe God hears such prayer and smiles with gladness to hear it. Why should we not give thanks for the finding of a wild flower or the striking graceful ness of a child at play, or the toss of apple branches lit with bloom, or the blue jay's note with its musical un musicality. No. secularitlcs are Just theme for praise and prayer. We have no call to ask for things for which we have not call to answer to God in spon taneous words of thanks. "I thank you" is a phrase which the debonair use frequently. Courtesy is a good habit for a body's own sake. To be genteel is a soul-instinct of fineness, and if a man or a woman lived alone nnd broke bread with himself, (al though such a way of living Is not necessary or to be desired. If one Is alono and has no relatives, then should such a one borrov some child, or, better, some homeless body, some body human, not feline nor canine, to keep alive the humaneness in one's own soul), ho would do well to say: "I thank you" when he passes food to himself, for eo would the method of good manners be kept alive and the spcial impulse would be hearkened to "Father, I thank thee." says the Christ; and "in svery thing gic thanks." says his brainiest follower. And for one I will take thi3 advice and will find provision for devotion in everything, books, folks, church, la bor, song, tears and cares. And for the least and largest to the God and Father of our i.ord Je3us Christ will make my adoration for the Christ, ray Saviour and my Kins. ACT PROMPTLY, Kidney troubles are too dangerous to neglect. Little disorders grow se rious and the sufferer is soon in the Srasp of diabetes, dropsy or fatal Brlght's disease. Doan's Kidney Pills cure all distressing kidney ills. They make sick kidneys well, weak kidneys strong. H. A. Townsend, 19 Knox St., Dansville, N. Y., says: "I am satisfied I would not bo alive were it -not for Doan's Kid ney Pills. I endured agony that no tongue can describe. Doctors did their best but could not help me. Doan's Kidney Pills restored me to health and strength." Remember tho . name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 00 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Someone Might Get Hurt. Pietro had drifted to Florida and was working with a gang at railroad construction. He had been told to beware of rattlesnakes, but assured that they would always give the warning rattle before striking. One hot day he was eating his noon luncheon on a pine log when he saw a big rattler colled a few feet in front of him. He eyed the serpent and be gan to shift his legs over, the log. He had barely got them out of the way when the snake's fangs hit the bark beneath him. "Son of a guna!" yelled Pietro. "Why you no rlnga da bell?" Every body's Magazine. Carve the face within, not dress it from without. For whoever would be airer, illumination must begin in the soul; the face catches the glow only from that side. W. G. Gannett. For COLm and fiUIP Hicks' Capidine Is the best remedy re lieves the aching and feverlshness cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid effects immediatly. 10c., 25c, and 50c. At drujr stores. Some men need to be called down about twice a day. If you had positive proof that a certain remedy for female ills had made many remarkable' cures, would you not feel like trying it ? If during the last thirty years we have not succeeded in convincing every fair-minded woman that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has cured thousands and thou sands of women of the ills peculiar to their sex, then we long for an opportunity to do so by direct correspondence. Meanwhile read the following letters which we guarantee to be genuine and truthful. nudson, Ohio. " T suffered for a long time from a weakness, inflamiaation, dreadful pains each, month and suppression. I had been doctoring1 and receiving1 only temporary relief, when a friend advised mc to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. I did so, and wrote to you for advice. I have faithfully followed your directions and now, after taking only live bottles of the Vegetable Compound, I have every reason to believe I am a well woman. I give you full permission to use my testimonial. Mrs. Lena Carmocino, Hudson, Ohio. It. F. I. No. 7 medicine and female diseases. We possess enough to convince the most ilia -m. For 30 years Lydit. E. PInkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from jroots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit. tejta Mrs. Pinkham invites all siek women UrM to write her for advicee She has guided thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. n m n mi IWi nH For "WefTSXmtrTTy Pink Eye, Epizootic DISTEMPER Sure cure and pw!tlve preventive. no m,tter how hora,t,DT ire are infeci-3 or"e3fix)ed.' Liquid. fri Tea on tbe tonnie; ecteon tbe Blood and Olfcndr: expels U e Piriaonougrennafrotn the body. CMree IUtemper In Dryg and Bbeep alia Choltra In oultry. lArvent anlllng live stock remedy. Csrefl U (irlppo mo&Khumu: betBr and Is anno Kidney retnody. Mc and Si a bottle; 5 and tio a dozen. Cut tjile oo(J Keeplt. show to yourdrujorlst. wbo will eet It tor you. Free Booklet, "DUtetf-fcr Causes and Cures." Kpec'lat Agents wan'-c. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., &cWliti GOSHEN, IND.. U. S. A. Hcoari0 nion unMut iiuoa One of the r.PRt equipped schooln in the South. THE LAKGEST, THE BEST. The Btronp,-! ftwultv. MORE tiHADl'ATES IN POSITIONS than all other Business HrhooU In the Stato, liOOKlvEKl'lXU, SHORTHAND and ENGLISH. Write lov Handsome Catalogue. Addres KING'S Itl'SINESS COLI.KGK. Kalnlgh. North Carolina, or Charlotte, North, CMroMna. We alao toauh Bookkeeping, Shorthand, renwanship, tit, by wtU baud tor Home Study Circular. oes Your Baby Suffer mm SMisfrf K ar a V mr - - w v He would be a heartless father in deed, who did not allay baby's suffer ing as did Mr. E. M. Bogan of Enter prise, Miss. He says: "My baby was troubled with break ing out, something like seven-year itch. We used all ordinary remedies, but nothing seemed to do any good until I tried HUNT'S CURE and in a few days all symptoms disappeared and now baby is enjoying the best of health." Price 50c per box. s Manufactured and Guaranteed By A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO. Sherman, Texas "For months I had great trouble with rayi stomach and used all kinds of medicines.: My tongue has been actually as green asj grass, my breath having a bad odor. Two' weeks ago a friend recommended Case rete and after using them I can willingly and cheerfully say that they have entirely; cured me. I therefore let you know that I shall recommend them to any one suffer-' ing from such troubles." Chas. H. Hal-i pern, 114 E. 7th St., New York, N. Y. Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. DoGood. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. . 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold in balk. Tho pen nine tablet stamped C C C. . Guaranteed to euro or your money back. 23 Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color; RKMOVeS OAMBRUFr AND tcuitr Invigorates and prevents tho hair from falling o9, for Sate by Druggists, or Sent Direct by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Price SI Per Bottle; Sample Bottle 35c Send for Circular MFIiffGE STARCH &rfi2s: W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 39-1910. Bad Hreatfi St. Regis Falls, Y. "Two years ago I was so bad that I had to tako to my bed every month, and it would last from two to three weeks. I wrote to you for advice and took Lydia E.Pink ham's Vegetable Compound in dry form. I am happy to say that I am cured, thanks to your good advice. You may use my letter for tho good of others." Mrs. Je IX. Breyere, St. Ilcgi3 Falls, K. Y. There is absolutely no doubt about the ability of this grand old remedy, made from the roots and herbs of our fields, to cure volumes of proof of this fact; skeptical. Keeps the spindle bright and free from grit. Try a box. Sold by dealers everywhere. STANDARD OIL CO eA Inr.nriMtratedJ Shipping Fever & Catarrhal Fever A SCHOOL WITH A REPUTATION for DOING

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