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Show IKPORTANTTIUT KNOW . : PUBLIC SHOULD Exactly as You Order ABOUT, 6REAT KIDNEY REMEDY .Wi The twtimoni&I I am to girt you com unsolicited. I hare been suffering from lumtico for tea year and at times was unable to ktand erect. A Mr. Dean of this city, saw me in my condition (bent over) and inquired the cause. I told him that I had the lumbago, lie replied, If you get what 1 tell yon to, y ou need not have it. 1 said I would take anything fer ease. He and, "You get two bottles of Dr. Kilmers 6 samp Root and take it, and if it does not lx you 0. K. I will pay for the medicine myself." I did so and am a well man. For five months I have been aa well aa could be. Before I took your Swamp-Rowas m constant pain day and night. This may look like advertising, but it seems to me most important that the public should be made familiar with this treatment aa it is the only one I know which la an absolute cure. I owe a great deal to Dr. Kilmers Swamp Root, and am anxious that others situated as I was should know and take advantage of it. lloping that this testimonial may be of benefit to some one, I am J. A. HOWLAND, 1734 Humboldt St. Denver, Col. ) State of Colorado City and County of Denver ) Personally appeared before me, a Notary Public in and for the city and county of the State of Colorado, J. A. Howland, known to ma as the person wkose name is subscribed to the sbove statement and upon his oath declares that it is a true and correct statement. DANIEL H. DRAPER, Notary Public. We make school pine aad dw pis. Wa coal ana to yooi donga, quality aad low aad wkea Ua Un prica. aoatf you buy thou of w. His Meney a . Worth. "Slxtane shllluns a da did they charrge me for my room at the hotel la Lunnon!" roared Sandy indignant- ot ly, on hla return to Croburgh Burghs from a sight-seeinexpedition. "Ou, aye. It waana cheap," agreed hla father; "but ye must a had a gey fine time aeeln' the slchta." "Seein the slchtf" roared Sandy. "I didna aeet a slcht a the time I waa In Lunnon. Mon, mon, ye dlnna suppose I was gotn to be stuck that much for a room, an then no get the proper use ot! " g Tlt-Blt- SPECIAL are putting on the market We UMth. S. T. lin, HEWLETTS Will Do For You Prove What Swamp-RoSend to Dr. Kilmer ft Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive e booklet of valuable information, telling all about tha kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. For sale at all drug stores. Pnce fifty-cen- LUNETA-TE- A ts and GONE UP. Luneta is a blend of the choicest Ceylon and natural Japan teas. Special care is used in every process of growing, packing and curd, ing Luneta tea, sold only in tins. In your next order for tea ask for the Luneta brand and the fine tea received will more than repay you for the trouble." half-poun- air-tig- rYAAVDAXDJmtfOt xViomncMv nooe Blnka Hells, old man.' you're a eight, you look as though you'd been fired from a-- cannont - Where" la your autot mst has cauum rrLT Acair rsins - re Such stupendous and before England had been snatched frorq the continent by the arms of the sea. .Think of the rubbish heaps of these ancient cltlea being dug up and of there being sifted out from the debris the, story of the dally life of people 3,000 and even 5,000 year gone by. Think of a bundle of letters 3,000 years old that retold and In points corroborated the story of Palestine when the patriarchs were still alive. Think of. digging from the rulna of an ancient metropolis the records of 7,000 years.. The Egyptians were a people, of great deeds, of incredible achievements. .Their first great a tinctures, the pyramids, surpass In magnitude the works of these modern timet. Khufu's pyramid covered thirteen acrea and waa 500 feet high. Seven hundred and e fifty square than a seventh of a mile. Over 84,000,000 cubic feet of mate-via- l quarried out, dragged to the Nile, floated down the stream, dragged up to the desert, and Into place, - How they did it engineers' are Stllt puzzled to know. So closely were these atones fitted together that In the outside courses, which now are In place only at the base, beneath the sand, the lines were scarcely visible and must be outlined with charcoal to be photographed. Scarcely less wonderful were the temples of the mighty Ramses. The gateway at Luxor was 100 feet wide and 80 feet high, and waa flanked by obelisks 82 feet high. Before the" temple at Tails stood a statue of the king. Leading from Luxor to Kamak was a great avenue more than a mile and a quarter long, 80 feet wide, and flanked on either side the entire distance by colossal sphinxes. In the great Hall of Columns si Karnak stands 12 columns 35 feet In circumference and 60 feet high. Flanking these are 113 columns 27 feet In girth and 40 feet high. Crowning these are hundred-toarchltectraves. Here stood huge obelisks 98 and 125 feet high, one obelisk weighed a thousand tons. In one city were 14 of these huge monoliths. Mora than 3,0)0 years ago the gerina of man carved these cyclopean blocks from the rock, transported them for miles down stream and across country, and finally lifted them onto high walls or set them &p on end, an enigma to modern engineers. Good Definition. A New York judge, it will membered, recently 1 don't be re- declared uncon- stitutional the new law that an having run over a pedestrian, must atop and leave hla name. The Judge said that the automobUlst had a perfect right to run away and leave the mangled victim to bleed to death alone for the reason that, in criminal cases, no man la obliged to bear witness against himself. James Halden Wilkes, president of the Defense Society of Atlanta, discussed this legal decision at tha society's last meeting. "And that," ha cried -- hotly,-'1 called justice. - Well- ,- Indeed, was a search after justice once defined as a blind man looking into a dark room for a black hat that Isnt there." auto-mobllls- t, Bloodiest Battles we want, said the peace promoter, Is a system that will permit candid discussion to take the place of actual conflict." "Dont you think," Inquired the man who was reading the sporting page, "that our professional pugilists have come pretty near solving the problem "What r First Set Own House in Order. How unconscious we all are of our own faults and fallings! As we see others, so others see ours. It is our own faults we have to correct first before we tell others where' to get off. Makes a feet--mor- -- ' Qt rMTMlf To have with cream or milk. For a pleasing change, sprinkle Post Toasties over fresh or stewed fnnt, then add cream and you have a small feast The Memory Lingers FOSTUM CEREAL CO.. LtA. Baill Cwfc. Mich. ife Rsproved. "When she wasnt looking I kissed her." "What did she do?" "Refused to look at me for the rest of the evening." Philadelphia R equip- - Think of the disappointment when recovered. n magnificent statue cornea out headless, for example. Think of the conjectures ns to the whereabouts of the missing piece and the furore when, perhaps weeks afterward, the lost la found. There la an air of hushed expectancy, a suppressed excitement hovering over, that keeps men np under-whle- th h 95-fo- n Which Have Almost the Force T raditions of-Statu- tes There la a class of unwritten law which doea recognition of mans desire to kill and his right walked coolly In front of tk Uno and was shot In men. not and cannot become written law, says Case to have that desire and that climax of all satishis of the presence and Comment because It approaches so near the of factions which cornea to him who under great revolution has been The law of tbs right provocation slays another. It Is not at all strings danger line that man dare not recognize It to the much talked about and much written about. Every extent olj publishing It and declaring It as a part believes that in his branch there should be an extended that has he the right intelligent citizen of the positive law. -code of unwritten aa written law, unwritten now under certain conditions to oppose the established and alwayz tg be unwritten for the reason that the It Is the unwritten taw of the sea that a capgovernment of his own land and Join In an effort Us in to tain must go down with his ship. Men dare mot recognition given by its embodiment In the Just another place. to establish prior statutes would be taken ts a license by dishonest write It Into the contract, and nations dare not and during the .Civil war there was much discusmen and would Result In harm rather than good. Incorporate It In their navy or marine regulation, sion In this country by learned men on either revolution of It Is an unwritten- - law among the officers of the of know sea and the the the the beside of the right yet tyrants law, and "higher law." lieve that to obey It betters their service, and army that If a subordinate officer kills a superior power" and the "greater officer because that officer has publicly degraded there are few Instances of its being disregarded. The law Justifying one person in the killing of him by striking him or by other action equally it Is the unwritten law of the army and navy another has required the serious consideration of will not conhumiliating then the court-martithat an officer shall not seek cover, or at least, every country. Every criminal code provides cer- -' Til war at Louisville, Ky Cl the homicide, vict. and During them for of shall not show apprehension of danger to his permany tain punishments General Nelson said to General Davis: son, In tlnoeof battle and In the presence of en- ' graduate the punishment with minute particular"How many men have you?" listed men or common sailors. In the Franco-Prusda- n ity, according to the circumstances of the killing, General Dsvis replied. About" giving an apwar nearly four thousand officers of the - so that any one of tlx crimes may be Involved In. German army were killed and the great majority -- a single tragedy. Such codes also attempt to deproximate number. Nelson said, You an army officer and say of them gave up their Uvea because the7 believed fine what killing is Justifiable and what is extheir Why don't you 'know how many men La this law of conduct. 'about!' Interpretation the with by cusable and In the the describe unto law conditions thla Fairs gut bound himonly In obedience you haver And with that be struck Davis courts attempt to face with his glove. Davis shot and killed him, self to the mast, Lee rode to the head of, his der which one human being can kill another acquitted Davis. and the court-martiThe Hebrew code almost stands alone to lta charging column at the bloody angle, and Lawton A I I r - - - With the Oldest Bank In the Intermoiintaln reglen hasp cask vim II may 5 stake er Seel a lailar with ratneca to (hi a. alid, street iaditatiaa, aed yaar accaaat Sarieg dipertmeel receive mam (ram fl.M ep, payiaf 4 par cast bttraal, twica a yaar. Writ far hfwiHaa. Dm leak. cam-pes- KALKE1 BROTHERS BARKERS, Balt Lahe City Must Have Been Baa. "My little boy can ' gives perfect Imitation of a phonograph." "Why dont you send him out on the vaudeville circuit?" Do you think he would mak i hit?" America has joined hands with the old world An American profesIn prosecuting the work. now with the staff In the Is Dr. Whlttemore, sor, An American secretary, Mrs. Marie N. field. Buckman, baa been assigned to the direction of the American office, located in Tremont temple, attained. Wonderful are the result Boston. Every student of history and literature, every student of the Bible la vitally concerned In the confirmations yearly coming to light from the sands of Egypt There la need of haste. To extend the arable district of Egypt Is an economic necessity. Accordingly, the British government has erected at - Assuan a great dam, whose head has sent the waters of the Nile back over great areas of hitherto dry ground.' Already a dozen great temples have been flooded, and ere long will be forever lost to sight Alresdy beautiful Phllae, at the head of the first cataract, is gone. The soli is becoming infiltrated, and the stores of treasures, especially the papyrus manuscripts, are being ruined even before the waters cover the ground above. 90-fo- UNWRITTEN LAWS under ths 'most tenss strsln work is of necessity conducted. some Post Toasties -- csltfor msnt xm a .considerable seals. By. tha.courUiy has of Sir Gaston Maipero, the government loaned to the Fund a light railway with equipWork must be rapid. - December i to ment. April 1 marks the working year.- Every moment Is precious. Every car load muat count Every shovelful of earth muat be carefully aifted wherever there la a possibility of a find. Even a basket brigade la sometimes pressed Into nse. As soon as some apparently valuable piece of located, workmen are called off, experts are sent In, every man la on guard; carefully every Inch of soil la watched aa the last few baskets of earth are removed. Every fragment muat be saved and laid away until everything has been Not only art there such outward evidences of Egypt's wealth. From the burlala corns the very objects with which the people were wont to surround themselves. The tombs of the kings have given us the grave of loua and Tioua with Its chariot, funeral sledges, mummy cases, chairs, beds, and jewel box all gilded and paneled; ala- baster VMes.sadlarder still stored with food; Good Breakfast Better undertakings 'rd ... -- Jinks I don't exactly know, think Its coma down yet cured, necessary buildings erected for the health of workmen and the preservation of antiquities. Not only are actual remains u be sought, but also Important historical or artistic questions are to be solved. Indeed, the Egyptian Exploration Fund was the flrat to employ thla method of clearing old monuments tnd of showing the world what they were. ht . - J No; but. anything la bettor than the house." having him around Houston Post A POSITIVE aad PERMANENT CUU FOK Crunkennexs and Opinm Diseases. TEe b aa iHitila iAM, m tUr a inrun, im w. SmA t. THE KEEUT Lab QtV. U D.dnt Naad Monty. was his first 8unday at church. He watched the proceedings with Interest frequently asking questions until hla fond parent at It last replied: "Donald, dont ask question. Decide for yourself and do as you think best." Donald silently contlned watching, when, finally the collection was announced and the box passed. As it came to him he looked up and murmured politely: "No. thank you;-- 1 have some." Philadelphia Times. j8prlng Cleaning. little too gay yesterday "I got could beat and was boasting that my weght In wildcats."' "What happened?" "My wife made me beat double my weight In rugs." Went for the Same Reason. "What makes the crowd gather so over there?" Oh, vulgar curiosity. Let's go Silent Partner. over. Removing an Obstacle. Tm afraid," her father replied, "you would not be able to support my. style to which she daughter has become accustomed". . t man said, after "Well," he had thought; the matter cter briefly, "Im not proud. FlTTet you help." In-t- he the-youn- g As the Reformer Would Have It. He I never could see any sense In the expression, "Six of one and half a dozen of the other." She How would you have It? He Why six of each, of court. |