-iVlStSSH la i i Og TV&ff' ' f -ff , '-u-r-: i-m - -,iii.. .1 ssAt iii- h'b i7 ' i i i' ' mil in ii 1 1 i ' m 'i ' "- - -r n -t i n iMni r f f-. i - ;.- -. . r-t j ,aj-" c v?2Srt. itK Columbus Journal PRETTY PASTIMES. ton ForJhe Mms mwBmmmim we tmii ,V The Two Great Commandments By COLUMBUS JOURNAL Co. x v t - -4 s.-"T "J DEVICES BY WHICH HOSTESS MAY AMUSE QUESTS. - columbus. NEBRASKA. FsBjf B Vi fi M BY Bft-ii3:5s ggKBna1BI5SKlMB T3 psa? - --eW BBBBBBBBBBW n - V BTBMlaTsMttt mi if WW)JB& BBB1 BBB1 sbw'Bsw BBC" BBfl, :sbbWKsbi BaBb" 1 M I I I II J -fp - v mz a : ii Prof. Bearing's Discoveries. roL von Behring, whoso tubers tools investigations are more than over interesting the adentiflc world, recently anode tea party of French scientists a store detailed statement of his achievements thaa has hither So appeared. ' la this he affirmed that ke has been able to prepare a fluid named talose." differing radically from Dr. Koch's tuberculin, by as-, lis which he had been able to check the infection of animals by malignant tuberculosis baciliU. He frankly ad mitted, however, that he had not yet succeeded la developing a serum aim ilar to diphtheritic anatoxin, and that ha considered the future discovery of such a serum "extremely doubtful" Yet It was aot impossible that by further experiment the "tulose" could be made to develop curative proper ties. Meanwhile, says the New York Post, clinical experiments have shown that injections of this new fluid are of value la the treatment of children suffering from tuberculosis or scrof ulous troubles. Finally, Prof, von Bebring announced that, until further experiments have shown for just what uses "tulose" is best adapted. It will be dispensed only to a few select hos pitals aad clinics, which will pledge themselves to use It only in accord ance with certain conditions pre scribed by him. If this calm state meat disappoints those who have al ready seen the white scourge disap pearing before Dr. von Behrings magic, it is yet proof that a great scientific advance has really taken place. aSS WBK BBSaaSk flBBI IBM m SS , mw .VJ J U V V III BsbbW aflBiaV OBsWasrwsi BBB t TK0 Z&r r ,2Sfc-X i J ' ' aaw- Cleanliness at Home and Abroad. England, which has been properly and justifiably horrified at the reve lations made concerning American packing houses, will be yet more ap palled at learning' that the food prod ucts of her own country show, in many cases, an equally disgusting dis regard for cleanliness and asepie conditions. Two government inspect ors. Miss Deane and Miss Suieres. have found conditions in the sausage, jam and chocolate factories of the most repulsive "character, says The Reader. Apropos of all this, an in teresting traveler, the count .of Turin, cousin of the king of Italy, who has been making a tour of America and Europe, says that after visiting sev eral of the local London packing houses, he has come to the conclu sion that the Chicago establishments were the cleaner. The truth is. we require of wholesale purveyors a standard of cleanliness which we too frequently fail to enforce on our farms and in our bakeries. The Amer ican traveler who goes no further than the local boarding house, the country inn, the urban hostelry or the railway eating station, has data enough for a startling culinary essay, were he minded to write it; and what goes on in our kitchens is something of which most of us were happier to re main In ignorance. New York. A letter has been re ceived in this city from the capital of Finland which throws many sidelights on the social, political and revolution ary conditions there during the tu multuous days of the Sveaborg mu tiny. The letter was written by Mrs. Isabel Donner, widow of Herman Don ner. for 22 years United States con sul at Helsingfors, and addressed to her son. Prof. H. Montague Donner, of New York. "Helsingfors, Aug. 10-23. There have indeed been terrible events hap pening here. The days of the mutiny were very anxious ones, and the con tinual firing both from Skatuddeh, arid the various fortress islands was fear ful to hear. The streets were full of Russian soldiers and Cossacks, and many families fled from their homes. I see that In the account of the end ing of the mutiny In the American papers what Is stated to have been the real determining cause Is not men tioned. On one of the Islands held by the mutineers were two large pow der magazines. One of these was struck by a shell from one of the men-of-war and exploded, causing great loss of life, and If the second and much larger one had also been struck later the whole island would have been blown up and a great part of Helsing fors also. A building close to It was struck by a ball and set on fire, npon which the mutineers hoisted the wiiite flac and capitulated. "When the explosion occurred I was sitting by my open window, and ft seemed to me as if a cannon had been fired off close to my head. Sofie. my maid, rushed inhortly after, say ing that many of thewindows In the adjoining house had Jeen shattered and that every one expected a second and worse explosion, when we should he all blown up. and urged me to fly at once. But I pointed out to her that I had nowhere to fly to and that the who were only finally dispersed by the Russian troops. The brutal wretches kicked the dead bodies of their vic tims and trampled on them. All the seven there were an artist and an architect among them were burled by the town in one large. grave, side by side, and the funeral was attended by thousands, although It poured with rain the whole day. ( "There was a strike of, the whole police force a short time ago because they did not like the officer who in structed them, and the Skyddsgarde had to turn out in their place. The next day they were induced to return to their duties on the promise that the matter should be inquired Into. Two thirds of the force, it now appears, are of the socialist-revolutionary par ty, and mostly themselves' members of the Red Guard, and sided openly with the latter in the Hagnas riot, and on other occasions of turbulence and bloodshed. The police are very poorly paid and are thus drawn only from the lowest class now it Is atrongly urged that some million-odd marks should be granted to giving bet ter pay and augmenting the force, be sides having a body of mounted police armed with rifles. But the senate de ary party, hitherto the principal ter rorist organization, -repudiated - the butchery at M. Stolypm's "villa. The worst fears inspired by this crime are thus confirmed. The central commit tee long ago lost control over the pro vincial assassins and revenge com mittees. It is no longer the predom inant terrorist influence In the .cap itals, indiscriminate slaughter has become the "mot d'ordre" of every body who can .get .hold of a revolver or a bomb. Gen. Kuzmin-Karaviev, one of the leading liberals, an ex-professor of law in the military academy of jurispru dence, thus sums up the situation laid bare by the tragedy on Apothecary Island: " ' "Extremists on both sides now re sort to murder. The government has found the existing laws, the dictator ial ordinances, martial law, and mili tary courts too great a restraint, and leaps across these barriers at every step. It has put Itself on the same plane as the revolutionists' method and surpassed them, and now the revo lutionists are borrowing from the gov ernment Policemen Slaughtered. "Formerly ministers were killed. murs at the expense! Yet unless and j but rarely governors, and subordinate until this is done there can be no safe- 'guard for the public safety and order but in calling upon the Russian mili tary. The Red Guard have been for mally prohibited from meeting and acting in future, but who is to enforce this? They' permeate the whole of the. working classes and terrorize all who disagree with them, and they have no distinguishing badge, unless they choose to assume one. They are now undisguised anarchists' and give free expression to their hatred of the upper classes, threatening all sorts of bloody reprisals and committing continual outrages. 'Wait and see what we will do!' a droschka driver streets now were unsafe. Mr. Cooke, said to a gentleman yesterday whom officers almost never. Now mere po licemen are slaughtered by droves. Formerly pains were taken to avoid accidental victims, as in the case o', Kalaiev, the assassin of the Grand Duke Sergius. Now no thought It given to this. Why is this? Former ly 'only the principal authors of ter roristic acts were executed. Now nc distinction is made between those that prepare or throw the bomb3 and per sons engaged in revolutionary agita tion. How many have perished in the Caucasus, the Baltic, and in PoIanO without inquiry as to their gradation of guilt? Formerly there were order ly courts to establish the truth: now neither lawyers, nor appeals are al A good deal of nonsense is being talked and written by opponents of spelling reform about the danger that words will lose their etymological identity: that their derivation will be lost or obscured, and all that But as a matter of fact, says the Indianapo lis News, only the scholars are con scious of the derivation of words in any large degree, and no matter how you change the spelling they will re main just as conscious of the source and origin of words as they are now. Indeed, some philologists assure us that derivation would more easily be traced and followed, in the simplified or phonetic spelling than in the pres ent illogical and wildly varying forms and symbols. There is no more doubt, to take a single example, of the derivation of filosofy than of philosophy. ggist says that not The National Dru a few of the coffee substitutes which are advertised as preferable to coffee contain more or less coffee. This may be teste, by shaking a teaspoonful in a bottle half full of water. The bot tle must be thoroughly shaken, so as to wet every particle of the sample, when nearly all of the non-coffee in gredients will sink to the bottom and the coffee float on the top. The reason for this is that coffee contains a large amount of oil which buoys up the particles. Peas, beans, wheat. corn, chicory, etc., are heavier than water and, having no oil, sink to the bottom. it A mule in Dallas, Tex., objected to the noise of an automobile and wrecked It with Its heels. Horse pow er In automobiles is not a guarantee against the destructive power of a mule. A Kalamazoo wife buried the wrong man, and it appears that though her intentions were the very best, her husband doesn't like it A man who climbed Mont Blane says. It gave him "rheumatism In the head." He seems to have found pleaty of rheum at the top. Fay Templeton's new husband Is winiam J. Patterson. We believe. aaya the Houston Post, the world Is now in a fair way to ascertain definite ly who struck Billy Patterson. We J-. schooling ourselves, says the Newark News, to regard the ohoru3 -drl as an admirable and very effective nethod for keeping the rich from Crowing richer. The Yale professor who insists that horse flesh Is economical and pala table cant have In mind the ltt to l the English consul, had warned me that morning on no account to leave the house, so that we were as safe at home as anywhere else, and must risk whatever might happen. Poor Sofie was nevertheless full of alarm. There were no windows broken in this house, strange to say, although many were shattered at quite the other end of the town. The Red Guard at Work. The incident that most painfully affected me was the affair at Hagnas square, close to the Longa Bron (Long Bridge), where is situated one of the power stations and rar houses of the electric tramway. Kro, as perhaps you know, the Re:i Guard had attacked and wrecked fome of the cars, being determined that the general strike should bi car.'ied out, f"om which all the better class of the townspeople dissented. amla when the Volunteer Skyddsgarde (I. e., Safety Guard, the Communal Guard spoken of in the dispatches) came up to the defense of the cars the Red Guard, lying in ambush behind the booths and angles of the houses, opened a murderous re upon them from their rifles, killing seven, including the captain and lieu tenant, formerly officers In the dis banded Finnish army, and wounding many others. The Volunteer" Guard were armed only witn revolvers and could not even see their assailants. he had driven a short distance, shak ing his fist in the face of his fare as the latter was paying him. "It seems quiet now on the surface, but there is all manner of seething going on below it" Attempt to Kill Stolypin. The attempt to assassinate M. Sto lypin, the new Russian premier, took place, as everybody knows, at about four o'clock on the afternoon of Satur day, August 12-23, in the minister's villa on Apothecary Island, near- St Petersburg. The minister escaped the explosion of the bomb, concerning the introduction of which no two stories agree, but from the ruins of the build ing 28 corpses were later recovered and the maimed bodies of 32 wounded persons were taken to the hospital. The attempt to take the life of M. Stolypin is of the greatest importance as marking the end of one epoch and the beginning of another in the Rus sian revolution. In its lurid light the present situation In Russia is clearly discernible. After the failure of the Sveaborg revolt and the Kronstadt mutiny signs were not wanting to re veal the fact that the phase of the revolution which consisted of the "re moval" of officials highly placed had got beyond the control of the execu tive beads of the revolutionists. On August 10-September 1 the central committee of the socialist revolution- lowed. Formerly a few were executed in a year; now hundreds are shot in a month." Another phase of the reign of ter ror is to be found in the raids made by small bands of revolutionists on government buildings such as banks, post offices and churches; considerable sums of money and a large amount of treasure have thus been seized. The revolutionists operate In broad daylight as fallows: Five or six sol diers are standing before. a govern ment building with loaded rifles, ready to fire, when snddenfy each is con fronted by a stalwart youth pointing a reyolverto his forehead, whereupon the soldiers stand as though seized by a cataleptic fit while other revolution ists thoroughly pillage the apartments within. When the operation is fin ished the stalwart youths walk back ward about 15 paces, holding their revolvers pointed and enjoining the military to remain inactive. Then they run. The warriors quickly shoul der rifles and a series of loud reports in quick succession are heard," the smoke slowly lifts, and nearly all the soldiers are seen sprawling on the ground dead or wounded, other revo luptionlsts, screened among the spec tators, having deftly shot them from revolvers before they could fire their rifles. The next day the newspapers announce a robbery in Warsaw. Portrait Party-Easily Arranflod yry Enjoyable Setting for m Harvest 'Homo Frolic in . Barn or Parlor. The hostess, who enjoys a social af fair entailing no brain fag should Is sue Invitations for a portrait party. The, only apparatus necessary Is n .quantity of blank cards or squares of pasteboard, say about Ave inches square, and pencils.' Each gentleman on arriving receives a slip of paper on which Is written the name of some lady in the company, and when the fun Is In readiness the partners thus appointed must sit op posite each' other and draw each oth er's likenesses. At the end of ten minutes the por traits are collected by the hostess, numbered and pinned up on the wall. The men then choose new partners and the game proceeds as before. Each player before the drawing stops must, draw three members of the opposite sex in rounds of ten minutes each. When the drawing Is at an end the company, furnished with slips of paper and pencils, guesses or tries to guess the subjects of the different like-' nesses. A prize, which might be an order for pictures on some photographic es tablishment of the neighborhood, is awarded for the best set of guesses. Another prize could be given for the sketch pronounced cleverest by a con sensus of opinion. A framed photo graph of some portrait masterpiece would make a good choice. Harvest Home Party. The harvest home idea Is a splendid one for an evening indoors, and can be made extremely picturesque as well as amusing. A barn is an ideal setting for such a frolic, but when this is not avail able the parlor can be trimmed to meet the requirements of the festival. Festoon the ceiling with ears of corn wired together to form ropes. If given in the house, bank the cor ners of the room and the fireplace (if not In use) with sheaves of wheat through which you must twine scarlet tissue paper poppies. Have for the mantel or some 'other prominent position a large, prettily arranged basket of fruit and vines, or fruit and vegetables. The hostess and other girls of the party should wear gingham aprons and sun bonnets. Any of the several amusing apple games is in order, such as a race, pushing apples with match sticks, or the game where those present are di vided into two sides and outvie each other in filling two baskets with the fruit, which is carried on teaspoons. - Or introduce a corn shelling contest with a prize for the person shelling his or her ear in the shortest time. Or have a list of names of fruit and vegetables in which the letters are jumbled, and let the men and girls work these out, with a gift for the one setting most words to right3. The supper should be of the good old-fashioned country type. Corn meal porridge, with maple syrup, fried . chick en, waffles, baked apples, milk, tea, preserves and plain cake. A barn dance, or a parlor imitation of it. should round out a very pleasant evening. ScL7.HSS rnjotrtd far TM r-tr. LESION TmCT-Wlrlr 19-9t-.11 ttJI ui;r- -Tzr i - - Hcwurj verses, mi. sl. LIGHT OF OTHER DAYS. Primitive Artificial llluminants In Use Long Ago. The sconce and the lantern were In general use throughout the middle ages. The sconce was a light covered and guarded from the wind, lifted down by a handle and distinct from the lantern, serving somewhat the same purpose, but hung by a chain. Lanterns in the thirteenth century were made of gold, silver, copper, or Iron, according to the means of the owner. r Noblemen and rich merchants took to having luxurious little traveling equipments made for them, and among these were traveling candlesticks and wash basins in fine enameled work, the secret of which is now lost . The custom of having servants carry flambeaux at festivals also became general about this time and a strange and tragic, incident is connected with this fashion.. At a ball given by Charles VL the torches carried by some careless servant came too near Um headdresses of certain persons dressed as savages and set them afire. The unfortunate guests were burned to death, and the king at the sight lost his reason, a madness which had a se rious effect on the history of France. Magic lanterns were invented in the time of King Francis L A device on a somewhat similar plan was used as a sign before shop doors to attract custom. Lamps fell in disfavor at the be ginning of the seventeenth century and were only used by the poor and in passages and stables where the smoke could evaporate and a great deal of light was needed. Candles had then reached their perfection and can.Ue sticks their most exquisite form. A candlestick of crystal given by Louis XIV. to La Valliere is still in existence and it was at this time, also, that the crystal pendants came Into fashion. Street illuminations were not seri ously attemp ed in Paris until about the middle of the seventeenth century. In the first years of that notable cen tury the streets of Paris were dark. The rich were escorted by lackeys bearing torches, the middle class folk picked their way, lantern in band. while the poor slid along, feeling their way by the walls. In his edict of Sep tember. 1667, the king provided that candles inclosed in a case of glass should be hung by cords at the height of the first story of the house. -three lanterns for every street, one at each end and one in the middle. At the sound of a bell, struck by a watchman, they were lighted. Paris was, however, considerably In advance of other cities of the world at this time. In iondon link .oys stood about in public places, ccling out In lujubrious tones, "Gentlemen, a light!" The origin of the phrase, "holding a candle to you" Is doubtful, but some authorities trace it to the fact that as the small light stand bad not yet been devised any one who desired to read In bed had to have a servant stand beside him to hold the candle. One cannot Imagine hew reading In bed under these circumstances would be enjoyable, certainly not to one who has been accustomed to solitude and a gas jet easily turned on or off. but there is everything In habit. Gas Logic. Rules for Baking. Beans, eight to ten hours.. Beef, sirloin, rare, per pound, eight to ten minutes. Beef, sirloin, well done, per pound, '12 to 15 minutes. Beef, rolled, rib or rump, per pound, 12 to 15 minutes. Beef, long or short fillet. 20 to 30 minutes. Bread, brick loaf. 40 to 60 minutes. Biscuits. 15 to 20 minutes. Cake, plain. 20 to 40 minutes. Cake, sponge, 45 to 60 minutes. Chickens, three to four pounds' weight, one to one and one-half hours. Cookies, 10 to, 15 minutes. Custards. 15 to 20 minutes. Duck, tame, 40 to 60 minutes. Fish, per pound. 10 to 15 minutes. Gingerbread. 20 to 30 minutes. Graham gems. 30 minutes. Halibut, per pound. 15 to 20 min utes. Lamb, rare, per pound, ten minutes. Lamb, well done, per pound, 15 minutes. Pie crust, 30 to 40 minutes. Pork, well done, per pound, 30 min utes. Potatoes, 30 to 45 minutes. Pudding, bread, rice and tapioca, one hour. Pudding, plum, two to three hours. Rolls. 10 to 15 minutes. Turkey, ten pounds, three hours. Veal, well done, per pound, 30 min utes. Air AH Linens, Cften. Linens should be given a thorough airing every now and then most thorough of all. of course, just after they have come upstairs from the laundress. Plenty of light and air. as well as soap and water, are necessary to keep them in spotless condition, for what occult reason only some one wise in the laws of physics can tell. But the results will tell their own tale airings are the best preventives of "freckles" and mold and mildew. Renewing Doilies. When the hemstitching is begin ning to wear on a good-sized doily or napkin and the linen center remains good and strong, cut the doily all around the hemstitching and make a new hem. drawing the threads just far enough away from the old line to find a strong place. This will give you a smaller dolly practically new. If you do not want to spend the time or take the trouble to hemstitch, make a tiny hem and edge it with a narrow lace heavy enough to match your linens. To Freshen Atmosphere. To freshen ;the atmosphere of a room that has become somewhat stuffy, place a few drops of oil of lav ender in an ornamental bowl half j filled with boiling water and open the GOLDEN TEXT-'Thnn ah1 b. H LJ thy Ged with all thy but."-Mark im&Z: T2?,y. April 4. A. D. 3fc PLACE. The temple court la Jeru salem. Thoughts on the Lesson. "The commandment which Jesus cites to the scribe is peculiar to re vealed religion. That is only to say. in other words, that it presupposes redemption. We could hot imagiae such a precept in the religion of Greece, or of Rome, and, of course, we do not find it Who can 'love.' In any conceivable sense of the word. Zeus or Poseidon, Here or Athene? Neither the place they hold In the universe, nor their characters and relations to each other, nor their attitude to men, inspire any such emotion. It is often, said that love cannot be commanded, but that has only a limited truth. Granted certain relations between per sons, and love Is demanded by the very nature of the case; if it is awant ing, its absence is the graves ot moral faults, and brings innumerable others in its train; till it comes, lit eraily nothing can be right" James Denney, D. D. Why Is this the first and greatest commandment? 1. It Is greatest in its nature, being the highest and noblest act of the soul. 2. It is the sum of the. first table of the Law. 3. It has the greatest value, being the fountain and source of all virtue, of all love to our neighbor, because it Is the consecreation of self to the Father of all good, and all men. Her bert Spencer says. "By no political al chemy can you get golden conduct out of leaden instincts." 4. It Is the act the outgoing of the whole nature of man. It is ail-iaclus-ive. 5. It is the most difficult of all things. Love is not a mere sentiment a general good feeling toward God, when all things go right with us; but it is a devotion to God and His cause when that devotion makes us mar tyrs; that enables us to trust Him in the darkest night, and say with Job, "The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name ol the Lord," and "Though He slay me. yet will I wait for Him." Reasons for Loving God Supremely. (1) He is supremely good; He is the sum of all good. He that loves God loves all that is good, and hates all that is evil. (2) He is not only good, but lovable. His goodness is attrac tive; it is worthy of love. (3) All we have and are wc owe to him; and the only way in which we can make any return Is to love him and obey him in love. That is all that is ours to give; to withhold it is unutterably mean. (4) "The best thing in man is love, and 'God wants the best" (5) Such love not only honors God, but elevates man. Love is the most ennobling act of the soul; and the nobler and higher the object and the more intense the love, so much the more is the one who thus loves ennobled, purified, enlarged, exalted in nature. (6) In Him arc found all that ought to move the high est affections of men. Suggestions. 1. Love is the greatest thing in the world. For an unfolding of this great fact see 1 Cor. 13, and read Prof. Drummond's booklet, "The Greatest Thing In the World." 2. Love is the fulfilling of the second table of the Law. Compare "The Spec trum of Love" in Drummond. illus trating the description of love in 1 Cor. 13, and his "Programme of Chris tianity," which is stated in Christ's own words (Luke 4:18). the fulfill ment of the Prophet Isaiah's words (Isa. 61:1). the soul of the Old Testa ment, and exemplified in Christ's mes sage to John the Baptist (Matt 11: 3-6). 3. By loving our neighbor we csn test and express our love to God. This Is more effective 'than even prayers and songs of praise, though these help to inspire and cultivate love to God. So St Johu says. "If a man say. 'I love God.' and hateth his brother, he is a liar; for he that Ioveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God wMom he hath not seen?" (1 John 4:20). 4. Love to God and love to man transform earth into heaven. Compare the conditions given in the twenty-fifth chapter of Matthew, where the good deeds enjoined are not substitutes for faith, and prayer, and love, and honesty, but they are the proofs of a right heart, from which all virtues grow. Not the Amount of the Gift, but the Spirit of Sacrifice. Ruskin in his Seven Lamps of Architecture, "The Lamp of Sacrifice." in speaking of the expense lavished on the tabernacle, says that "the covenant of God with his people was marked and its ac ceptance signified by some external sign of their love and obedience and surrender of themselves to His wiU. The Measure of the Gift. The measure of a gift lies not In the largeness of the gift, but in the largeness of the love and sacrifice it expresses; not the size of the gift but the cost to the giver; not the number i of the sheaves, or of the measures of I fruit but the love and gratitude and I faith that fills them. And in that great day when we present our fruits at the judgment sat. : j sheaves will grow larger by that meao ; ure. and some will shrink into a baud- j ful of half-grown stalks; and pebbles ' from barren fields will grow into gems and gold. is swidenhr plunced iato tfca ncrfectiosi of auserj, the BLUES. Hie a sad picture. It ia onoallj tkio way: Ska has Leon feeling- "ewtef aorta IEMSLM-SjriBSBT sBssflBwA g gBBJ ssssssMPrSggTKsssfe'assssssssBBr BIBbbbbbPAbbbbb IBbbw--L-KtiOPi 'BlBnl I Bn bcJtj '? ra W NCfssif mBBBii8sV;r'2bV .JVSwf XsMTitt' iT" T . WBY for some time; head baa srhed and back also ; has slept poorly, bera fuite nervous, and nearly fainted oaeo or twice; head dizzy, and heart heats very fast; then that beariagowm feeling;, and during; her periods she is exceed ingly despondent. Nothing ploater her. Her doctor says : Cheer vp : yon have dyspepsia; yon will. ho all right soon " But she doesn't get ' all riht." and hope vanishes; then come the brood ing, morbid, melancholy, everlaating BLUES. Don't wait until yoar sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your eoerajre gone, but take Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vege table Compound. See what it did for Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 8I 13th Street. Louisville, Ky.. niece of the late Gen eral Roger Hanson, C.SJL She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinknaa; "I cannot tell yea with pni end fak what Lydia E. Pinkbam's Veceuhto Cnmrad has done for ma I suffered w.tfc fmak troubles, extreme fcmittaie, tfce Wats, Krvoasaess and thnt all-cons ffcsHns. I was advised to try Lydia E. Pinkhaia's Vegetabfo Compound, and it not only eared my tern deiangementbatitbasppstoredineto perfect health and strength. The buovsiwy ef air yoanCTdayssn3remnMcLaBd'Ietoamt sai ler any longer with desponeVit-r. an 1 4M be fore. I consider Lydia RPinksum" VeRe tin't rnmpruinrf n norm to sift and soIm, fug. women." M yon feave soma dcraBgtBBtnt of the female organisa write Mis. Ptakhant, Lynn, Masa for advice. THE BEST COCO, CIRC When offered else msteaaot Kemp's Balsam stop and consider: "An I ase to get something- as good as this Bicsi cougn cure e If cot sore what good reason is there fcr for taking chances in a matter that may have a direct tearing on my own or nay family a neaitnr Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 90c. W. L DOUGLAS 3.5O&3.0OShoes EST M THK W f!Jiogfe$4GEsffa, C3Waiinm'lat2t7pifc3 To Shoe t-vtrrs: VT. U Dow-fcuT Job. Hat noose is tte most cosifrleteintM country Satdjor Catalog r M kV w m. aw x I KLa. Km I Wj JtV 7LJBj25iBBk jnJi j all rM 1 , wttSSWS & 1 W-i Lriwrd jnRfe p3olT- IHQES It EVEBYBODY AT ALL Mtfcla. try W. L. Dnaglas Weinea's, Mis and Children's nhwn : for style. Ot aad wsar they excel other snakes. If I could take you into say large actories at Brockton, Alass.,aitd show foa how carefully W.L. Doaglassfcoc are made, you would then aderstasd why they fcoid their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are cf greater value than any other males. Wherever yoa five, yoa csa ebtsla W. L. Douglas shoes. His nstre an J price fc tatnrcrf on the Sottas, which protects youasaiBSt hih prices sad iaierior shoes. Take ma mmbsti tits. Ask year dealer for W. L. Dsaclssshccs n4 iasfet ssoa having- ikes. f 'mt Color Euelrti uid ttttf wttl mo mmr brassy. writ for HiMStraiea caujocst i-s'i Myies. w. l. wwjui.a,i, 1 war. 11 HARD days come to over-worked women, because of their weakened female organs, which cannot stand the vital drain that over-work causes. Pain, backache, headache, sideache, etc. can be cured with ? CARDlll WOMAN'S BELIEF Whistling. As an organ of universal benev olence, the Post would thus admonish our whistlers not to whistle in public. We do this in the spirit of the kind old Scotch divine who. having prayed for two mortal hours for everybody and everything, closed with: "And noo, let us say a guid word for the puir dell." Aad then he prayed for the devil. of the speciSc curative effect it has on the womanly afgaao. ft builds up woman's, streagth and stakes her hard days easy. "I often recoTTrmrnd it, in my practice 1 women," wntes Dr. J. P. ln. ler.efRoachilLTex, Tryk. At all DTBjlsU c av rrec Atfvtac statins acanitd Ievrininavoiir sjreirema.to Ladies Advisorr TJeot- Chattaaeeaa fisdkine Co Chattanooga. Teaa. IFYMWUTtorJURMflEY fefM vimreaaBat,- Wit osVr BUCA.SSsa Ia t?Af rBlSUI fur tbu wfi srruie sobscri vlloa for is iwutr atr manailnyelafrblngolfersof iswiieaspfi. smecen amtl ft mait Uom cmsvn t -n. raoa lor a full f ir. fl rS: Snccrt. lfonxw n Ui,m O tnpmtUum And that is the temper we arc tO I tusliseriironmilonoscaca order. Trseclaaa whAa wo forewarn th whfetlpr Wt ! ,la"" " l?r",eie,vHe,,e a.,B 7W -wnen we iorewarn ine wmsuer. was BanyMsnekusu cm me m jtmr list or shan not pray for him. Washington K52i!lTICiSt?;t", f. rsmntestan. betureyss that la Tanning yet wiaaow. rose IK r IT, tssa: ireSfe. -.-; . -;Mfei.5.T1, . .j v v'.,;rV)j-j- ?ti; -tir&,A .j.i-.J.,j . .;,. y , ' ;, j .'".."'