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Show A TEXAS CLERGYMAN Bpsaks Out for the Benefit of Ing Thousand. Rev. Si BBS- - 1IGE Suffer1 Ilf Q. M. Cray, Baptist clergy Whltesboro, ... Tex., says: : ! "Four year suffered misery with lumbago. Every movement a as one of pain. Doan' Kid nef Pills removed the whole difficulty lafTer" only ashort time. Although I do not like to have my u i( name UBed publicly, 1 make an exception hi this case, ao that other sufferer from kidney trouble may profit by my experience." Sold by all dealers 50 renta a be a FosterMilbura Co.. Buffalo, N. Y ban. TO HOW THEY LOVE ONE ANOTHER. of - First Authentic Account of the Arct : Explorer's Expedition, by circular. PFHRT nVVlW rtlNKULFR nf Ira PwMiiUl from nKlcrtiif Himself! attiMfcs of iaditfrotioa iWofcuier fur Gives Brief Summary of Progress To and Frf OonittpaMoa . It I diw-a- rnaiu NOTICE nortb pole, TO PUBLISHERS. Ella-t-The- 1clk-U- . su- mmvat' maf Haas !,r..f 'rw' 10 UTonut familj( laMJva. wl UnmiBViilf arent many faces like re left north pole reached Cape Columbia April 2, on board Roosevelt April 2J The Roosevelt left Cape Sbets July 18; passed Cape Sabine Aigfi 8; left Cape York August 26; ar$ at Indian Harbor with all membegf expedition returning In good bfc; except Prof. Ross G., Marvin. drost April 10, when 45 miles north of & Columbia, returning from 86 dep north latitude ta command of thei, porting party. ROBERT E. PElRfr, 7, -- 1 ,A CURED-HI- M. Eczema Cams on Legs and Ankle Could Not Wear Shoes Because Of Bad Scaling and Itching. "I have been successfully cared of dry eczema. 1 was Inspecting the removal pf noxious weeds from the edge of'a river and was constantly la the dust from the weeds. At sight 1 cleansed my limbs but felt a prickly sensation. I paid no attention to it messag explanation C.ofAdams. for two years but f noticed a scum By Cyrus on ray legs like fish1 scales, I did not Member of American Ceograpfcijil attend to it until it came to be too Society J Positively cured bp and sore and Began getting two Itchy New 190. By Copyrights these Little Pills were all running sores. My ankles Times ) wear not sore could and and They tlao relieve Dim I scabby New Yerk. The foregoing dlspgJi, trees from Dyspepsia, 1b How the News Reached the World. to haul I use felt and shoes. earpet difreatlon andToo Hearty though condensed, tells clearly H ti Uppers for weeks. I got a cake of Eatingr A perfect rem leading facts la the atory, not $i y edy fur Dlzzinefta Nam of Jeary Journey to the north g g, On his expedition of 1905-0he tried the Cutlcune Soap and some Cudcura ea SiDWRlnvMt Bad but also of a remarkably fast tig hard to force the Roosevelt a good dis- Ointment In less than ten days I Taateln the Mouth, Coa on boots than less could In sad put my tance west ed to of theover the the lie of Tonfrue, PaLa in th Cape Sheridan, trip open Side, TORPID LIVES but the Ice baffled him. For one rea- three weeks 1 was free from the consea. Bowela. Purely Vegetable. The dispatch says (hat tbs Rfci-ve- lt son or another on the edge of the arc- founded Itching. Capt. George F. Bliss. They regulate the Mar. of Chief Manitoba, Morris, DOSE. SMALL PRICE- SMALL 1908-19Policy or PILL. SMALL did tic he winter last year not it passed the winter of 29, 1907, gnd Sept. 24, 1908." Cape Sheridan, on the coast of On it could not take his vessel along the POMW Cbsau Corp Sol Bmps, Basko Genuine Must Bear Dng Land The vessel had threaded t northern coast of Grant Land to tie so west Signature of Cape Sheridan, and it spent comparatively narrow channels, b i Hit, Helping Hand e al hujuireds ot mUea iu length, V s- last. winter- - not - tws far from its --aid fell man "Him When that First ling from Cape Sabine to the Aff berth In the lcee Jn the winter ol 1905-6- . overboard, why did you throw the ocean. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. The sledge expedition left ttte Roots cigar I gave you after him? Conditions Wars Favorable. Second Him I thought I heard the This journey ta apt to be dlffihht velt on February li, while It was stiD HOWARD E. BURTON, a8cmzm!st.H0 poor devil call for a rope! and sometimes impossible, but j practically dark in that latitude. Th II. told, Oi.lO, 8lnr. prlrM conditions were evidently faverdL snn scarcely begins to peer above the SUrar. Kir, told 60r. Zinc or Copper, It. Maillot True. Owite eorekwHi and full prire list aonton sppllcstlon. The ship that disappeared, in thsf hills for a few mlputes a day, even Coetnil sod umpire work .illiltod. LeedviUe. "Alas!"- moaned the egg on the CoL JCeference. Cortkinnte b.lloa.1 Bank. while the crew of Psary ' auxilkh several hundred milts to the south of cook's the for steamer Erik were watching Its de the coast where tha Roosevelt was hftchen table, waiting' VrvmRIV. I man his dessert ifSTTu Al ?KWt KVN1 4MBYHatnho, wintering. It comes into view a little beater, "give every Istl. IUuMAs luuTk OO., Los SUiuUlnl. aa of which and escapes whipping?" more In later latitude northern' that I! and the party made slow time to the Vt i west as it felt its way along. Coast Difficult to T ravel; The northern Grant Land coast is likely to be exceedingly difficult t traverse, especially 11T tAe early spring, on account of the mosses of sea Ice that have been pressed, on the shore or broken Into great blocks tand , treaded along tb sea edge. - It is no wonder that it took the party 15 days to travel westward; as fas as Cape Columbia. It la likely, however, that Commander Peary succeeded, before winter set In, in cache-insupplies to the westward so as to accelerate a little the westward" movement of the slfedge party, before it struck out northward over the sea. Pearys summary seems to- bUuw that he was a little- - ever 35 days on the journey from die land to the north pole. ln thlS; tlmehe .waBjfe layed about 14 days by water leads, leaving a little more than three weeks f ortheractuaf Bledgingwcrrk: Doy6uicnow"ofany ivomanwhovc8rece1vedany We may get a good Idea of the trom taking Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Combenefit the travel by taking average rate of first sea and the north pole records. pound? record on He passed the British If any woman who is suffering with any ailment peculiar March 2 and reached the polo on to her sex will ask her neighbors this question, she will be April 6. The distance between them Is 460 statute miles, anl the time In surprised at the result There is hardly a community in making the Journey was 34 days. Inthis country where women cannot be found who have been eluding the 'time of detention by warestored litof aa is This leads. by this famous old remedy, made ter average tle less, than 12 miles a day. which from a simple formula of roots and herbs. exclusively is the best record ever attained for long route sledging on tfie open polar During the" past 30 years we have published thousands SICK HEADACHE -- Report on the Discovery of the North Pole by Robert E. Peary, Commander U, 6. N Copyright, 1909, by Charles R. Miller, at of th New Ysrk Tims Company. Battle Harbor, Labrador, via Wireless, Cape Ray, N. F Aa It mfiy be impossible to get my full story through In time, partty as a prelude which may stimulate Interest a ad partly to forestall possible leaks. I am sending you a brief summary of my voyage Jq The north polrwhlcb Is to be printed exactly as written. Summary of Expedition. 8uinmary of north polar expedition of the Feary Arctic club: The steamer Roosevelt left New York on July 6, 1908; left 8ydney on July 17; arrived at Cape York, Greenland August 1; left Etah, Greenland, -- August 8; er-Vice-Preside- Women In Postal Serviisi CUTICURA , -- Tb Porpoise I hoar that the sporty old lobster went all to pieces In hla last days. The Tortoise Well, should say he did go to pieces, and small pieces tie ended up In n lobster salad fmim Stella No; but I guess the supply will equal the demand. April 6 All returning The following prsllminary account by Commander Psary of hi successful voyage to th north pole was issued on September 8 by the New York Times Company st th request of Commander Peary and for his protection, as a book only, copyrighted and possd for sals bsfort any part sf It was reproduced by any newspaper In the United States or Europe, in order to obtain the full protection of the copyright laws. The reproduction ef this account. In any form, without permission, -- 4s forbidden; The penalties for violation of this form of copyright include Imprisonment. for any person aiding or abetting' such violation. New York Copyright, 1909, by th Time Company. eiir liffal hr Utkiof ami im Well-Know- DEEP 6EA TALK. In-th- Zac. dfre A dead beat always gets more credit than he deserves. Explanation of Condensed n Scientist. Dispatch By North mine. The distinction of first appointing a woman postmaster doeg not belong to America, nor is tha employment of e -- wornen poatal --servlceIdea. Aa early as 1548 a woman post master was appointed to look after the malls of Bralne le Comte, an Im porta nt town of France. In the try Ing times of the Thirty Years't war, the principal office In the postal serv tee-o- f Europe was held by a woman, Alexandrine de Rue. From 1628 to 1646 she was In charge of the malls of the German empire, the Nether lands. Burgundy and Lorraine She fwas knoan aa a master general of the malls. In America, Elizabeth Harvey was the first to hold a place In the She bad charge postal departmenL of the letters in Portsmouth, N. Tl In the beginning of the seventeenth century. A half century afterward Lydia e Hill was placed la charge of the In Salem. Maas. Uo4 cramp Woman thinks she will be mans perior when she gets her rights. ' I Troubles of Psopls on Venus. Inhabitants of Venus, If there are any, must feel It extremely difficult to establish unit of time. Venus always turns the same face toward the sun; so tbs- - planet has no day, and the lack bf a- moon deprives It of a month. Finally, It has no year, for its axis of rotation is perpendicular to tb plane of Its orbit, and the latter Is almost 6 gr 4 Fac-Simi- le - -- -- -- post--offic- -- V- -i vQtngnmuay, j Sprlgg went to a noted physician to ask advice as to his health s In tones ha addressed the doctor T ah have come to ah ask what Is ah the .you ah what doosld mattBW with me eh! , "I find that your heart Is affected," i said the physician, gravely. "Oh ah anything else ah T" Yes; your lunga are affected, too. "Any thing ah else ah "Yes; your manners are also at-- pom-.pou- rr 1 fectedi , Just pn Angel, "My wUe 4a awfully good to me." "Lucky man! How does the show itr - "She lets me spend all the money save by shaving myself to buy ball tickets "Cleveland Leader. 1 base- PRESSED HARO Coffss's Weight on Old Age. "When prominent men realize the Injurious effects of coffee and the change In health that Postura can bring, they are glad to lend their testimony for the benefit of others. A superintendent of public schools in North Carolina eaysr "My mother since her early childhood. was an Inveterate coffee drinker had been troubled with her heart for a number of years, and complained of that weak all over' feeling and alrk stomach. Rome time ago I was making an official visit to a distant part of the country and took dinner with one of the merchants of the place. ! noticed a somewhat peculiar flavor of the coffee, and asked him concerning L He replied that It wasPostum. "I w aa so pleased with It, that after the meal was over, I bought a pack' age to carry home with me, and had wife prepare some for the next meal. The whole family liked ttso welt, that we discontinued coffee and used Postum entirely. "I had really been at times very anx lous concerning my mother's condition, but we noticed that after using "ostum for a short time, she felt so jmtcb better than she did prior to Its use. and had little trouble with her heart and no sick stomach; that .the headaches wore not so frequent, and her general condition much Improved. This continued until the was as well and hearty as tba rest of. "Tf know Testum has benefited my self and the other member of the family, but not in so marked a degree as In the case of my mother, as she was a rlctfm of long stand'ng" Read The Road to WellvlUe," In pkgs. "Theres a Reasqp." the atrare j Etrr mr aimesm from lime In time. 3 hry r araalar, sad rail jif hamaa ad ml interval. trft " tohealth JO sea. Eskimos of th Polar Region. rived Caps Sheridan, at Grant Land, September i; wintered at Cape Sheridan. Th sledge expedition left the Roosevelt Februar- y- 73, '1909, and started for the north. Arrived at Cape Columbia on March 1; passed British record, March 2; delay by open water, March 2 and S; held up by open water, March 4 to 11; crossed the eighty fourth parallel, March 11; encountered lead, March 15; open crossed eighty fifth parallel, March 18; trussed eighty-sixtparallel, March 23; encountered open lead. March 23; passed Norwegian record. March 23; March 24; enpassed Italian record, v countered open lead, March 26; crossed eighty-seventparallel, March 27; passed American jecord, March 28; encountered open lead, March 28; held up by open water, March 29; crossed eighty-eightparallel, April 2; crossed eighty-nint- h parallel, April 4; h h h GHASTLY FUTURE French Scientist FOR EARTH Predicts All Kinds of'MisfortunsTn ths tant Future. Not" Dis- Ia a recent number of llllustra-tloAbbe Th. Moreux depicts the future of our earth as a ghastly spectacle. He assumes that earthquakes have caused Its surface to contract In such a fashion that In course-o- f time t will take a shape of pyramidal n ture from Etah made a good through the passage and arrived safely on the shores of the sea, where the explorer was to start on his sledges for the north pole. But at Cape Sheridan Peary was not as far west as he probably had hoped els, long-chann- to be. He had announced his intention, In the previous year, of making his sledge route, to the pole alowg some meridian much further to the west of bis route in 1906, when he made the highest north attained p lo that time 87 d. 6 m. Impeded by Drift of Ice. On that occasion be was greatly impeded by the rapid 'drift of the ice to the east which a little retarded his progress north, and worse still, car Tied him so (aito the east that he had to make his landing on the coast of North Greenland, many days march from the Roosevelt, bis bake bf sup1 plies. i - form, with four fates and three summits or peaks. The faces are. the great ocean basins, those of the Pacific and Indlan oeenn, and one In the Arctic circle. He places the peaks la Canada, the Baltic and Siberia. . , to the Abbe, According earthquake shocks number shout 30.000 a year. They seem to occur with some regularity. being more numerous In winter than Aa spring, and more frequently happen at night than by day. As volcanic and earthquake shocks Indicate Records of Other Explorers. The Italian, CagnI, of the duke ol the Abruxzl expedition. who made Ahe htghest record till Peary beat It In 1906, made an average of only about seven miles a day on his great journey, and in ten days, on account of deep snow. they covered only 43T4 miles .to the north of their ship Csgnt expressed the wish before he started that he might make ten miles a day, but said be knew this was impossible. Peary has not only reached the pole but he has attained it at an earlier date in the year than any of the other high records In the arctic have been made. He was at the pole one day earlier In the year than Nansen reached 86 degrees and five minutes, 19 days earlier than CagnI reached 86 degrees 34 minutes. This Is significant of the surpassing achievement In sledge work that Peary has accomplished, because all such endeavor Is necessarily limited on one aide, as far as sea Journeys are concerned, by the time of sunrise, -- , the internal heat of tbs earth, and aa terrestrial electricity Is due to the sun, the abbe concludes that the earth is of the great Orb ol day. According to his theory the outlook is anything but bright for our throes planeL Fearful earthquake will cause upheavals and disasters, With regre the abbe predicts that la belle France will suffer greatly, as d lies directly in the track of likely llsturbance and will practically disappear, while the British Isles will be ibllterated from the face of the earth of letters from these grateful women who have been cured and never by. Lydia EL Pinkhamfi Vegetable Compound, - testimonial time we have all in Without that, publisheda the writers special permission. Never have we knowingly published a testimonial that was not truthful and genuine. Here is one just received a few days ago. If anyone doubts that this is a true and honest statement of a womans experience with Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound write ' and ask her." . When I first began taking Lydia E. Pink-haHouston, Texas. Vegetable Compound I was a total ureck. I bad been sick for three years with female troubles, chronic dyspepsia, and a liver trouble. I had tried several doctor! medicines, but nothing did me any good. For three years I lived on medicines and thought I would never get well, when I read an advertisment of Lydia E. Pink- hamr Vegetable Compound, and was adv lsed to try It. My husband got me one bottle of the Compound, and it did me so much good I continued its use. I am now a well woman and enjoy the best of health. I advise all women suffering from snch troubles to give - Lydia E. Iinkhams Vegetable Compound a trial. They wont Bessie JL. Ilicks, regret it, for It will surely cure you.--M- rs. 810 Cleveland St, Houston. ' Any woman who is sick and suffering is foolish surely such medicine this a as to a trial Why should it not give . not do her as much good as it did Mrs. Hicks. -- -- - ms refor sore,weak&1nflamed Eyes . MITCHELL'S A Certain Cu IS MAKES THE USE Of DRUGS UNNECESSARY! W I TUB pq SALVE Price, 25 Cents THAT QlNZTWATttl DwMl ift " |