OCR Text |
Show QUEEN OF ACTRESSES PRAISES 1 Mist Julia vfc Marlowe glad to write mv endorse tnentot the great remedy, Peruna. I do to moat heartily. 'Julia Marlowe. Any remedy that beneUU dlgestloa etrengthens the nerves. The nerve centers require nutrition. If the digestion la Impaired, the nerve centers bocome anemic, and nervous debility 1 the result. PARKER'S HAIR aih BALSAM btutut ih htlr. luxumitl irrowth. Never Faila to K est or Urty Hair to ua Youthta! Color. Curui trip diMw- hftlr iUluufc fl"and l.nt Dnifpiiti V fcfmctd with tent ;w. untj ft Thompson's Eyi Watir HIS HOBBIES. Is Watson a pleasant talk- Jlmpson ing manT Simpson Tcs If you don't get him started on religion, golf, automobiles or politics. Terrors of Frankness. "There la no worse vice than frankness," said Hoolh Tarkington, at a farewell dinner In New Vork precedent to bis departure for Europe, "How should I feel, for example. If I asked you for your opinion of my plays, and you answered me frankly, quite frankly? "Why, I should feel like the poor lady at the bridge drive who said to her hostess' little daughter: " 'Your eyes are such a heavenly blue. And what color are my eyes, darling?' -The child's hlRh treble traveled easily to the further corner of the quiet room as she replied, looking earnestly up Into her questloenr's face: "'Dwab middles, yellow whites and wed wlnis!' " Tit for Tat. Stranger (to prominent clergyman) I came In here, sir, to criticise your church manngement and tell yon bow It ought to be run. Prominent Clergyman (amaced) What do you mean, air? How dare you? Wbo are you, anyway? "I am the bumble editor of tbe paper you have been writing to." Life. Remedies Too Costly. household Get out tbe remedy book and scratch out two remedies, one advising raw bnofitteak spread on a bruise and the other advising bacon for a felon. We can't and baron on bruises waste and felons these days. Atcklsoo Globe. bet-fstea- k How Carelessl Smith Why did your jretty oook leave you? J on rs Got mad. Smith At what? Jonn wife Hhe caught Cleveland me Visiting tny leader. Berlin. Theodore Roosevelt appeared Thursday before an audience that tested the capacity of the aula at the University of Berlin, and delivered a lecture on "The World Movement." He spoke in English and was listened to with the deepest In- terest. Beginning with an eloquent eulogy of the German race and its achievements, the lecturer soon reached the main theme of his discourse, and reviewed the civilization and culture, so far as we know them, of the earliest peoples and their contributions to the modern world. He then continued: At lust, a little over 400 years ago, th movement towards a world civilisation took up Its Interrupted march. The beginning of the modern movement may roughly be taken as synchronizing with the discovery of printing, and with that series of bold sea ventures which culminated In the discovery of America; and after these two epochal feat had begun to producs their full efforts In material and Intellectual life. It became Inevitable that civilization should thereafter differ not only In degree but even In kind from all that had gone before. Immediately after the voyage of Columbus and Vaaco da Gam a there began a tremendous ferment; the awakening of Intellect went hand In hand with the moral uprising; the great numea of Copernicus, Kruno, Kepler, and Galileo show that the mind of mnn waa breaking the fetters that had cramped It; and for the first time experimentation was iiRed as a died upon observation and theorize tlon. Since then, century by century, the changes have Increased In rapidity and complexity, and have attained their maximum In both respects during the century Just past. InHtead of being directed by one or dominant people, as was the cane with all similar movements of the post, the new movement waa shared by many different nations. From every standpoint It has been of Infinitely greater moment than anything hitherto seen. Not In one but In many different peoples there has been extraordinary growth In wealth. In population. In power of organization, and In mastery over mechanical activity and natural resources. All of this has been accompanied and signalized by an Immense outburst of energy and restless Initiative. The result Is varied as It Is striking. Conquest of the World. In the first ptaee. representatives of this civilization, by their conquest of space, were enabled to spread Into all the practically vacant continents, while at the same time, by their triumphs In organiza- to tion and mechanical Invention, they acquired an unheard-o- f military superiority as compared with the'r former rivals. To these two facta Is primarily due the further fact that for the first time there la really something that approaches a world civilization, a world movement. The spread of the Kumpoan eope since the days of Ferdinand the Catholic snd Iran the Terrible has been across every sea, and over every continent. In places the ronqtieta have been ethnic; that Is. there has been a new wandering of the peoples, and new commonvilths have sprung up In which the people are entirely or mainly of Rurortean blood. This I whst happened In the temperate and regions of the Western Hemisphere. In Australia. In portions of northern Asia and southern Africa.. In other plaee the the conquest has been purely nolltl'-al- . most for the Kurnpeans representing part ada soldier and small of caate merely ministrators, as In mst of trenleal Asia end Africa and tn much of tropral America. Finally, here and there Instances where there haa been no conquest at all, but where an alien tople ' profoundly and radically changed by the mere Imps rt of western civilisation. There are of course many crudes between these different type of Infl'ience. but the net outcome of whst ha occurred" that during the last four centuries is now eer-,'r- e of the Koropesn type more or less profound effect over practically the enftre world.It There are has not yet root s and erro rs to which at present no penetrated; bill there la large space of territory In which the general movement of civilized adivtty doe not make Itse'f more or less felt. This something wholly different represent hitherto been een. from what h tn the greatest davs of rsnmsn dominion waa fdt over only of rtitne Influence the a relatively small portion of t! e worWs urfa-much Ih larger part of the world the process of rhanee and develep-- r ent was abse'iilelv onarTected br anything that occurred In the Kornan empire; and those communities the pisy of whose Influence was fell In action and reaction, oc-n- ir Hvl-I'satl- ) rvr cnr e Children Especially and Like The sweet, "toastie" flavour of Post Toasties Crisp, fluffy bits of perfectly ripe white corn cooked, rolled and then toasted to an appetizing brown. Served with cream and sometimes fruit, this dainty food please3 the whole family. Give the home-folk- s treat. In among Inter-actlo- nevertheless. All the Nations Linked. Frowning or hopeful, every man orof leadeffort ership In any tine of thought must Wow look beyond the limits of his own The student of soclolory may live In fwiln or sit. Petersburg, Itome or tendon, or be may live in Melbourne or Kan Francisco or Ruenoa Aires; hilt In whatever rl'y he liven, be tmtl pay f men Who live In ree1 to the etldle When In Amereach of the other eltle ica we triiily labor problems and attempt to deal with subjects such as life Insur we turn to for and we what yon do hre In rman, a too turn to what th fsr-oe- ; Is konwealth of New Zealand doing. When a great Oerrnan eden'lst Is warring d man-k'ndread-of most enemies the gainst ! Infinitesimal whi'h rriwre ofreveals h In blood, be the mbroscope may spend b's holidays of stny In central Africa or In eaaiem A'a1 and be know what la accomplished in tbe ro't laboratories of TcWo, Just as he must know the details of that practical arplir-tiothe rf science whlfh has arhsnT'd rtath-trafhrcna ofIs Panama frrrn resort. almost Into whal Frery halh In Chios Is er1vin to Intro-4-rand of western roef-oof f;i;rnpean administration, and hundreds hooks are now tnlaied a4 The Influence of t:nropeai Intn ci Ires rii!lei'y II- governmental prindrlea for hy the fa't that admlra'ioa of litn ha hrot-e- down the Iron har-erej p r- ed'i'-atio- d a themeve. Ihe were grouped Immediately around Now. however, the whole Mediterranean. tm never as bound toed her before; world the bonds are sometime those of hatrd rather than love, but they are bonds n 1 The Memory Lingers NtitfM lie see I Sc. I B CreeS. Mick. itM a y.fieii Ttrrfi has ron-rrat!'- s eo tt-a- t thdr lo'r'v In jieion invest. the very TrVr or Aip'ricatt (He fpt'n-- e of F cr the tn JMMa. fh' tl e form of i"mand n that .js close he r e it'-i te aeelml'ated .. a- -d hecor-- e lrla; borr-ln- whMe ryt'. -- p-- rr e well-nig- LUCKY. - Interesting Lecture on "The World Movement" Delivered at the University of Berlin by the of the United States H CltsutM I'roiiKiiM n but limited numbers in th pearfe mercenary armies by which they were plundered. Gradually this has sll changed, until now practically every army Is a citizen army, and the mercenary has almost dtsHppesred, while the army exists on a vaster acale than ever before tn history. This Is so among- the military monarchies of Europe. In our own Civil war of th United States the same thing occurred, peaceful people as we are. At that time more than two generations had passed since the War of Independence. Ouring the whole of that period the people had been In no struggle: and yet, when the Civil war broke out. and after some costly and bitter lesaona at Ex-Presidethe beginning, the fighting spirit of the nt people waa shown to bettor advuntuga than ever before. The war was peculiarwar for a principle, a war waged ly, aide for an Ideal, and while faulta and shnrtcomlnga were plentiful among the combatants, there was comparatively little sordldncKS of motive or conduct. In ly to what It Is In England or the United such a giant struggle, where across the Eta tea. intereats Is shot the so So much for the geographical side of warp of so many woof of many purposes, dark strands the expansion of modern civilization, nut and bright, strands somber and brilliant, only a few of the many anil Intense acalways Intertwined: Inevitably there tivities of modern civilization have found are was corruption here snd there In the Civil their expression on this side. The movewar; but all the leaders on both sides, ment has been Just aa atrlklng In Ita conand the great majority of the enormous quest over natural forces. In Its searching manse of fighting men, wholly disreInquiry Into and about the soul of things. garded, and were wholly uninfluenced by, Conquest Over Nature. pecuniary considerations. The conquest over nature has Included Wealth and Politics. sn extraordinary increase In every form contrast tn the course Another of knowledge of the world we live In. and of modern striking civilization ss compared with also an extraordinary Increase In the powor later stages of the Graeco-Uoma- n er of utilizing forces of nature. In both the clnsalc civilization la to be found In the directions the advance haa been very relations of wealth and clasIn politics. great during the past four or Ave censic times, as the civilization advanced toturies, and In both directions It haa gone ward Ita zenith, politics became a recogon with ever Increasing rapidity during meana nized of great the last century. After the great nge of wealth. Cuesar waa accumulating again and again on Rome had passed, the boundaries of the verge of he spent an bankruptcy; knowledge shrank, snd In many caaea It enormous fortune; himand he was not until our own times self by the money which herecouped made out of that her domain was once again pushed his political-militar- y career. Augustus esbeyond the ancient lundmarka. About the tablished Imperial Itome on firm founda150 D. A. year Ptolemy, the geographer, tions by the use he made of the huge published hla map of central Africa and fortune he had scqulred by plunder. What the aourcea of the Nile, and thla map was a contrast Is offered by the careers of more accurate than any which we had aa and Uncoln! There mere a late us ISM A. D. More was known' of Washington few exceptions In ancient days; but the physical science, and more of the truth Immense majority of the Greeks snd the about the physical world was guessed at. Hnmnns. as their civilizations culminated, In the days of Pliny, than was known or g on a large scale accepted guessed until the modern movement bess one of the Incidents of a successful gan. The case waa the same ns regards public career. Now nil of this Is In sharp military science. At the close of the Midcontrast to haa happened within dle Agca the weapons were what they the laat two what or three cenlurlra. During had alwnys been sword, r'lleld, bow. this time there has been a spear; and any Improvement in them was away from the theory that steady growth more than offset by the loss In knowledge Is permissible In an honorable public caof military organization. In the science of reer. war, and In military leaderahlp since the In this respect the standard has been days of Hannibal and Caesar. constantly elevated, and things which A hundred years ago, when this h3 no hesitation In doing wna founded, the methods of Riatcmen three centurlea or two centuriea and trsnrporta!nn did not differ in the which did not seriously hurt s public cafrom what they had been among reer even a century ago. are now utterly the highly civilized nations of antiquity. Wealthy men still exerclae a Travelers and merchandise went by land Impossible. large, and sometimes an Improper, InfluIn wheeled vehicles or on beams of burence In politic, but It Is apt to be an Inden, snd by sea In boata propelled by Influence; and In the advanced sails or by oars; and news was conveyed direct states the mere suspicion that the wealth as It always had been conveyed. A gradof public men Is obtained or added to as uate of your university today can go to an Incident of their public carecra will a or with far lesa conbar them from public life.. Speaking sciousness of performing a feat of note wealth may very greatly Influthsn would have been the case a hundred generally, ence modern political life, but ll la not acyeara ago with a atudent who vlaited In quired political life. Sicily and Andalusia. Optimistic for the Future. Moreover, the Invention and use of maMr. Roosevelt called attention to chinery run by steam or electricity have worked a revolution In Industry as great the fact that hitherto every civilizaas the revolution In transportation: so thst here again the difference between tion that haa arisen has been able to ancient snd modem civilization Is one not develop only a few activities, its field merely of degree but of kind. In many of endeavor limited In kind aa vital respecta the huge modern city differs well ns la being and each of these locality, more from all preceding cities than any of these differed one from the other; and civilizations has fallen. What Is the the giant factory town Is of and by Itself lesson to ua of today? he asked. Will one of the most formidable problems of the crash come, and be all the more modern life. terrible because of. the immense InSteam and electricity have gtventne race dominion over Innd and water such crease In activities and a real To thla as It never had before: and now the conhe replied: quest of the air Is directly Impending. As Personally. T do not .believe that otir books preserve thought through time, so civilization will fall. I that on the the telegraph and the telephone transmit whole we have grown think better and not It through the space they annihilate, and worse. I think thaj on the whole the futherefore minds are swayed one by anture holds more for us than even Ihe other without regard to the limitations of great paat haa held. Hut. asnuredly. tha spsre and time which formerly forced dreams of golden glory In the future will each community to work in comparative not come true unlesa. of heart Snd Isolation. It la the same with the body ss strong of hand, by our high own mighty deeds with the brain. The machinery of the facwe make them come true. We cannot aftory und the farm enormously multlpllrs ford to develop any one set of qualities, bodily skill and vigor. Countless trained any one set of sctlvltles. at the cost of Intelligences are st work to teach us how srolni? others, equally necessary, atroto avoid or counteract the effects of phied. Neither the military efficiency of waste. the Mongol, the extraordinary business The advsncea In the realm of pure Intel-leof the Phoenician, nor the subtle have been of equal note, and they ability and polished Intellect of th Greek availed have been both Intensive and extensive. to avert destruction. Great virgin fields of learning and wisWe. tbe men of today and of the fudom have been discovered by the few. ture, need many dualities If we are to do and st the same time knowledge has our work well. We need, first of all and spread among the many to a degree never most Important of alt. the qualities which dreamed of before. Old men among us stand at the base of Individual, of have seen In their own generation the life, the fandamentat and essential fan.l'y qualirise of the first rational science of the tho homely, every-daevolution of life. The astronomer and ths ties virtues. If the average man will not chemist, the psychologist and the work. If be haa not In him the wtll anj and all the'r brethren In many difto be a good husband and fathe ferent fields of wide endeavor, work with ther:power If the average woman Is not a S'o1 a training and knowlcdre snd method housewife, a good mr,iher of mmy which are In effect Instruments of prehealthv then the state will top. cision difTerentiallng their labors from pie. will children, no nvitter what may go the labors of their predeeejieora aa I lie be It hri'lla-- down, e of arfr'le development rife Is itirTerentlnted from the bow or act levcrm ot. Ittit Mu se homeThe plsv of new forces la ns evident In ly maierial otia'ltle are not enough. There . . the moral and sn'rltiial world as In the In addition, be that power of orvnofT-i-lnnworld of the mind and the that power r.f working In c mn- - n for a One Danger of Civilization. eomnwn end. wh'eh t re German t'""0' One of the prime danger of civilization have shown In such sienal fehlon dor'nt bas elwavs been its tendency to cau-- c the last Moreover, th the loss of the virile fighting virtues, of thtnr of the spirit are even more Importhe fi srhtlng edge. When men get too comtant than the I lilnes of the bov We can fortable and lead loo luxurious lives there do ithout the hrrd Intolerance and Is sleays danger lest the softness eat Hie srld Intelle, tnal barrenness nr what w- sn add Into their manliness of flbr The worst In the vtem of ih barbarian, because of the very conditions past, but there has never been a greater of his life, la force! to keep and develop need f f a llirh nnl fine rehz'mis sp rit certain' hardy qualities which the man of than st the present time f,,. while we some of rltlllzstlnn tends to lose, whether he be can mueh trt clerk, fartoty hand, merchant, or even a the pretensions of modern rertain type of farmer. Now I will not If various tranche, it would he wor--s assert that In modern civilized society than folly on our pirt to Ignore our neej these tendencies have been wholly of Intellectual leadership but there has been a much more Must Steer Middle Courts. rucressful effort to overcome them than Never ha philanthropy, humanitarian-ism- . was the rase In the early civilization s en such development e now. i1 Thla la furiously shown by the military thoueh we must all beware of the folly as bletory of the Graeco-p.omaperiod and the vieioiioes no worse than fo'lv, compared with the history of the last four hhh mark the believer tn the perfec-lihl'lt- y or five centuries here In Kurope and of man hen hi heart runs away among nations of Rnropean deseent. In l.i bead, or when vanity usurp tha elth the Ciredan and Rnmiti military hi.torv v t we mut rerero of the change waa steadily from a citizen her also consdeoee. that It I oeiv by working ioni In the ermy to en army of mercenaries. . the lines laid down by the phllanlhrop davs of the early greatness of Atne-ns- . by tie lovers of mankind that we ran Thehe. snd Fnarta. in the day when the be m our to of rtvlllration pure lifting Roman repvhlic conquered what world It ermanenf plane of wll knew, the armies were filled with cltiren Meber and more be'ng than wa ever 1ta1ned by sny Put gradually the citizens soldier to be clvll'ration. t"nfnt war 10 serve In the armies, or beme but woe to the nation lht doe unable to render good service. The Greek abhotred; not make ready to held its own In time state described by Polvblus. w'th but few of need g.t!ot all who would barm it; etcepttona. hired others In do their fisht-InIn for them The ftomans of the days of and woe thrice over to the na"on which the average man loe the ft ahtlng bad utterly ceased to furnish Angust'i lose the power to serve ss a solany cavalry, and we rapidly ceing to edr. If the day of need should ars furn'sh any Imamrr, to the legions snd dier I If no Impossible dream to build tip a cohort. When the civilization came to civilization In which morallt. ethical sn end. Iher were no longer citizens In a true feeling of brotherthe ranks of the soldiers. The change hood shall and alike be divorced from fsls front the rltizn army to the army of enf Itnenlatlly. snd from the rancorous mercenaries bad been completed. and evil paaaion which, curiously enough, Modern Citizens' Armies. so often aecompany profession of Now. the exact reverse bas been the stfaehment to the right of man: rase with us In modern lime. A few tn which a high material development ' renturie ago the mercenary soldier was the things of the body all be achieved the ptindpal figure In most armie. and In without subordination of the thing of great h'Tinher r.f case th mereenary the '.:!; In whleh there shall be a soldier ws an alien In the wars of for peaee and jus'lce .without re In Ftno. in the Thirty Tear' lo of those virile qualifies wl'hout war in Germany. In the wars that no lore of peace or lusflee h1 era'! any marked the beginning of the race: in which th fullest development of break-uof great polish kins-lorn- , the scientific research, the rreat d sfingu' shr of fore gn rs!mnformedanila brtgadn and ine feature of our present civilisation, lead ng fa-tnr- e shsfl yet pot Imply belief thai In'el'edi s'riking In every army Too vr men an eer tsi-- the place of character for, of the cm:nry In which the fMfng loo'.; from the standpoint rf the naf'on a of 11 Is character that Is the p!' p1avd merely the tsoohle part a- of- t ne Individual. victims, the burghers and vital i ks session. MODERN CIV1LIZA TION IS ROOSEVELT'S TOPIC PE-RU-N- A. Sarsaparilla Has made itself v.Home in the homes of tha people the world over, by its wonderful cures of all blood diseases and n conditions, It today In usual liquid form oi Ot chocolated run-dow- tablets culled BurMitttbs. v hj-.i- can truly I Offulgood fy r.-- o, mid-Asi- mid-Afri- Nine time in ten whea the lieu is right th ttomacB snd boweli sr right. CARTER'! LIVER Pli wrong eud of a cigar In your mouth? IT WEARS YOU OUT. John t: v"!- - . L. I'eny, Headache, and Distress after Eating. Small Pill. Small Dim, SbuJI Price GENUINE mutt bear signature: Co- lumbus, Texas, enyt: "I waa taken kIc'i about a yeur ago. My limbs and Ice I began to swell and my doctor said I had W.'L. DOUGLAS 82.50 $5, $4, $3.50, S3O &Bo'' Shct O ll f C 4H Ilrlght's disease. I Yirilngmtn't then consulted anW. Jj. Iousliis other doctor who told hlioes arc worn me I had dropsy and by more men Hi an could not live. Doan's uny other make, Tills re ECOAUSEl Kidney lieved mo promptly, and I owe my life over-Com- Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. CO cents a box. Foster-MllburCo., Buffalo. N. Y. A Boomerang. One of the officials of the Midland Glenwood from railway, coming Springs the other day, was telling a young woman on the train how wonderfully productive Colorado's Irrigated ground Is. "Really," ho explained, "It's so rich that girls wbo walk on It have big feet. It Just simply makes their feet grow." "Huh," was the young woman's "some of tho Colorado men muKt have been going around walking on their heads." Denver I'osL v.r )!!. orilere-- t Uij tfu illreet from (teUTernl to the wearer all prepaid. W. L IKICGLAH, Urocktun, ats-a- , ALLEY'S t-f tmme-d'atel- p ie y e Info Yovtr Shor Shnk the antUeptlo Pkk,niiiiii,.wrroa. frt. It A I An owftrr lor Minfui. wtOiwn, nd Mrnml l hi ttvfca Nokifu. ounas lit -- Il'e tut Iwmt. out of (lift ftrrett-- - cwmlwri tlarovrrr of lb tuftlLtm tlxbt AiJo' r4.k-j- An nir or osrtAn run Inc. et.lHia Inside and Out. e Ulm m. Mil, Trat Im iticn'ttttic fttMWMi r atn tr4, clime f4l hftvfrvsspt,U'ltmontalk, Tit TO-llA- V Y t II- 1 lr-il,- e.o--l- "it Is the woman's work to provide for the inner man, and It Is the man's to provide for the outer woman." Know Shaving; Comfort NO STROPPING Kill the Flies Now and Keep sway. A DAISY H.Y KIIXFR will do it. Kill thousands. Iist sll reacn. Ask your dealer, or send 2ic to II. IM DcKalb Ave., Uruoklyn, N. Y. MlM-KKS- DMsjtcin Is Sept ua toaa4. If llarlingloa. uuc fee MAVrs. ft Sooth log Mn. I inflow's leeuitn--- . softens I Iv- Syr-- B v p. .4.M '0' inr. snng yos They P1TFMT simlih.R ' .,aeHwip,. ros- - u,ne SIISI i iuerai4 A Im.. sl.Au.. k,l sl.iniwi. L.U One'cnn'l always dlr guise the breath of suspicion by spicy talk. Salt Lake City, W. N. No. 20-19- Each of the chid or sns of tbe body is link in the Chain of Life. A chain is sx stroaftr tliao it weakest link, the body no at roo rr than its eakntf .of stomsch, liver or lun, there is , If there svesk link in fie c'nn of 1,1 which msrsnap st anytime. LMlcn I hit ' weakness is caused hy lack l n ttr.Jiim, tbe result of weskoe or disease of the storast h and other orC.ms .! digestion and oulrifion. Discs ami weaknesses of the stomsch and it allied organs arc cared try the Use of Dr. Tierce's (k)ldcn Medical Discovery. When the weak or diescd stomach is cured, disease of other organs which scrss remote front the MosBach bet whids hsve their or.iCm in a diseased condition of l!ie stomsch and Miter organs of dctliun and nutrition, are cured also. Tfce sfronj man ham B mtronl ainntmch. o-f- n. so-csl-lej rccomsefef and yoar mar harm m atrvag arj" m mch and hotfr Tata tha mbore "Olmear atom atroni Ctvtst Awsr. tr. Pierce's Common Sene Medical Adviser, is sent frr on receipt of stamps to py Ik revised . Semi 21 ooe-ceevpeftse of msilinf stsmps for the bcak in paper over, or 31 ttarnp for the rloth-bouovU sine. AdJrrs Dr. K. V. Pierce, BuiTsto, N, Y. nt d wm 9 lyw m &4ihaBWa)&kA A Woman's Home be her priAn. Ymir home sfxuH your own lrKl.viilna.ity. Yen cannot have jeria.l wall partem tm by yon for earh rornn-y- nti out a Alahastine decora-liv- e nrrfsr heme for those hrwim can be leader M your mrnrrsanttjr and bar rat borne tbe talk of Jour t neoda. ere-wi- refle-- t de-sim-ed per-ia- J l The Stylish Wall Tint al tntitt re, srfl eiS)ip ?sl hi tessit. W I H ! . hvw ftie.reeTsie eeV effee-rlsssie etetrctl ilesigTM. simI m Art lprtraent at yew servM-e- . tts tiili A srV bmfc tl r 4 Ses. atMl f r IsisnS lews W e ' n' t is in ro. Ms. tal r1 4er-ns- a ATsSnrfef. fnt Altystine t s r"-tse h wis svlmmi rnis M tmna brssls. ear h srkff. Pail direr st.osf wail r Hew Tsr 4 Alabatline Company Or. H T, k T lltMK. - s s wnrk. ft. eretlts t a.tiMtt- en In ses H1r1 nsn4 W e niiIT resi't, hi Valesi.ie wiiui m.hinr nirn stnsii simI .,. . w.'i.a n uini iree. vs. ism. mm. is., Nothing is there more Iricndly to a man man a trlend In need I'lautus. yoreht, l 'en (ir. iii r, niaAi tt.iHiiit fssl, bntllsnt extnr. - lap her - av.)ie st dealer, In s.M-fft, see.l lis- slalin- nwrf 4esmn4 ar4 teime sill iwicbl aUi4!rwvuuii so, n) ,t. .r rat r.L. -l. M have no IroiilUe. mhere ovta wosilo DYOLA DYES FR PlKIf.t erm,s trl2c. this fler1al,le buttle aS rtlKKV laniVW tit. cm Slummer Tria KNOW Ave-bury- terrors In the hnnshild NO HONING , To help others la no easy matter, but requires a clear head and a wine Judg- . ment, aa well as a warm heart. eol-d'e- cf-e- FOOT-EA- SE T tMHtsMvrr'issTta, r Speaker Cannon, at a dinner in notmml ttMb.iHiiIv nrrfpl in Kent la aUamisB. a to said, soothingly, Washington, young suffragette: SfOTIII'lt-. tJltAV'H SWEET "After all. you know, there Is room i- lie.1 rcadieins I'T I'llH I1 u kl, U-Uliiulrtta. hwid by eserisb. 'or both men and women In this world. In ar plnrh, Urn's t imi.tlrni. Isst Luc" r Men have their work to do aud women T...I l( I K,Ls A4,trs, ALl.LIt S. oLMhllU, liu,, K.Y. have theirs. I nV-s- 42-6- a..' n pre-rcit- sen'l-ment- S3. iv. i.. noiigiusavi.no and S4.oohfMcHiiat, In style., lit Mint wear. oilier make oostiua; Ml. ini tn .IK. .LAO, W.t.Oottglas k'4.iH SJ t.(Hl, "il-. ami wlioes are ttie lowest priee, finality eonsids erud, kut lie world. Fait Color f wfefl. The cennlne hsT W. t-- Ponvlss nnntesnS rtca aUitl'MSt tin tie tMilloin. Tithe Si Sil,sil(e. If they Ask ilenler hr ra tiut f'r Mle In vnur town wttui for MhiI Mter I'll. lOTIItll full ttlreetiitliB hew In uelef by aislt. Shoe to them." nr-st- l x-re- atipation, Indigss tion, v helf-een'iir- . -1 ly Don't wait for serious illness; begin using Doan's Kidney rills when or r;:l.o you first feel backache urinary disorders. t" J f gently but Iirmly com- Uvea- - lO pel a do K duty, Cutes C Lower the Vitality Kidney Trouble of the Whole Body. money-makin- g I never did a hasty act for which I waa afterward sorry. Sinnycuss Didn't you ever put the h money-makin- that Bay Make the Liver Do its Duty Crasal Ravsa. Mka. stl JME PACKAGE. 1 |