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f. *-. ' fr, , i I The Pulro/t 1 A SERMON' ?/Tri?REV'- VStef T[R?VW- /iENDERjoN i Subject: The Son of God. , Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the ; Irving Square Presbyterian Church ; on the theme "The Son of God," the. ; Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor took as his text 14 Matt. 33, "Of a truth Thou art the Son of God." He said: In this expression of the faith of the boatmen in the Christ as the Son of God we have the consensus of a host of men and women who, for nineteen centuries, have followed the ' gentle Galilean. The disciples pro- ' claimed their faith in the reality of the Sonship of Jesus after a visible, external, objective exhibition of His ' power. In ages past, however, many ' a song-sung martyr and many an ] unknown saint has held firm to the : same faith, seeing only with the spiritual eye. And to-day every sincere ; follower of our Lord acknowledges, with a joy that passes all human un- ' derstanding, "of a truth Thou art the Son of God." From the fullness of a rich and enriching spiritual ex- ] perience do we, here and now, re- ! rmr hplipf in thp siinrpmp rif vine Sonsbip of our Savior and our Lord. Jesus of-Nazareth?the place from" .which nothing good was held to come ?the Messiah of the chosen people of God, proclaimed by angels, adored by the wisdom of the East; youthful confounder of priests and prelates. He it is of whom the apostle writes. Jesus?the man of parables and of miracles; Jesus, the expounder of those wonderfully well-put doctrines contained in the Sermon on the Mount; Jesus the Christ, the King of Israel, the Savior of the world. He is the divine human of whom the disciples said: !'Of a truth Thou art the Son of God." Let us look for a moment into the claims of this Man, this despised Nazarene, this carpenter's son, to the title and to the office of the Son of God. Has He any claim that we are : bound to respect? Is there any rea son why we are called upon to serve 1 Him, shall we believe upon Him, or shall we reject Him. What, in the last analysis, is the proof that is final 1 .that Jesus is divine. If you will glance through those pages of the Old Testament which give the history of the life and of the 1 hopes of the ancient Jewish people, ! you will find that, running through 1 them all, the coming of a Messiah? ' that is to say, a Savior?is prophes- ; led. To His people God has promised a King who shall give to them eter- : nal power and an endless peace. Step by step, incident by incident, is 1 unfolded in the old prophetic books 1 the coming pf a Christ. Thus we see that the Man who is ] to be the Son of God, the Messiah of the Jews, the King of Israel must be ' a man who measures to the standards 1 of the God-given prophecies of the 1 centuries. So much for the historic demands ' upon the claims of the Messiah. No < less imperative, however, is the need 1 that the M&n who is to be the Son 1 of God and the Savior of the race ^ shall be such a revelatipn of God as i our hearts demand. Yo'u and I can- 1 not trust in the Son of God save as we meets tne requirements 01 our reasoning faculties and highest sense. ,The Christ must not only be a Goddeclared Messiah, but also a selfproven incarnation of Almighty God. He must not only bear divine letters of recommendation to us, but also convince us by a living divinity that He is what He claims to be. And above all the truths of His messages must be provnn practical forces in our own lives ere we can believe. Jesus is the Son of God. the Savior of., the world, the Messiah of the Jews, the King of Israel. As we have seen the man who is theBe must measure true to the standards of the God-given prophecies of the centuries. Jesus so measures. Throughout the whole of the New Testament the revelation of Christ as the fulfillment of prophecy is set forth. He is the Messiah. He is the King whom God has promised to. His people Israel. He is the Son of David for whom the holv men of manv venerations . yearned. Christ satisfies all the de- ( mands of the Old Testament pro- , phetic writers.. From that stand- , point He is the Son of God and Sav- ; ior. But whether or no there had . been given prophecies aforetime, there are grander and more glorious . reasons for faith in Christ as the Son . of God. Christ is such a revelation J of God as our hearts demand. For J as we read the story of His life we ' see manifold instances of His divine power, purity and perfectness. Time and again we see His godhood and divinity in His workings and His words. He is the fullness of grace and truth. Yes, my friends, in His miracles and His messages, in His. acts of love and His conscience-touching truths, this man of sorrows and of griefs reveals His Sonship divine. The power of God shows through His physical miracles, the love of the Father shines through the spiritual transformations that He wrought. From what other lips do we hear such deep, such soul-satisfying prom. ises and commands. Nowhere in the history of all the -world has there been another such a man. Mohamet, Confucius, Buddha?the ethical and philosophical teachers of all peoples and of every age?are incomparable with that personal, sanctifying Savior of the Christian soul, whose name is Light and Love. But Jesus not only meets demands as a revelator, He is also assured of our confidence through the fact that His words and His life are in harmony. Jesus not only revealed by word the sort of God for whom inwardly we yearn, but He also exemplified in His life the fullness of truth which He preached. Telling of the ]ove that crowns the character of find He was lovelv. Preachine: the essential spiritual nature of the Father He was Himself spiritually controlled. Telling men that the truth of God and Jehovah Himself were to he spiritually apprehended and dis-' cerned Jesus walked and talked with God. Preaching the Kingdom of Reaven as love, peace, joy, purity of life, the Savior went about loving men, seeking aDd pursuing peace, bringing joy into saddened souls, leading hardened hearts into purity of life. Believing that the cultivation of godliness is the business of > mankind Jesus was holy, upright, ? ?- J * ? TT{?p???iAlf A n/1 i t i e KanoiiQA T T n guuiy niuisca not only preached truth unto life eternal but lived also the life that shall gain and keep the crown of rejoicing that we hail Him Lord. History makes Jesus the Son of God. His clear-cut. reasonable revelation of the character of God by words so declares Him; His consistent practical revelation of divinity in His daily life marks Him as God'9 Son. And yet it is not until we have taken His truth into our hearts, and proven the richness and practicability of His theories in our owq lives that we can yield to Him the adoration that is due Him. The application by a normal man to his own life in true fashion of the truth* of Jesus <jnnsi win prove mem iu oe mighty unto upliftment and enlightenment and practical principles that shall make for good when practically used in life. The truth of Christ will be found so full of divine inspiration and revelation, and the life of the man who revealed it will then be found to be so godly that the human heart will hail the great revealer Son of God. Jesus Christ cannot be understood save by those who have entered into that manner of spiritual life that shall open their eyes unto the divine wonders of His life. No man can enter into the fullness of the truths revealed in the messages of the Master save as he stands ready to be born again and move ahead in the spiritual life. The disciples did . not glory in the divine Sonship of Jesus, until they had had their eyes opened in part to the spiritual mysteries which underlay the objective miracles that Jesus wrought. We know how slow they were to see the depth and the application of His principles as He preached to them the truth. And yet with them as with us the secret of their faith in the Master lay in the fact that there was no discord between the truth that He preached and the life that He lived. They waited' the long-promised Messiah from God who should deliver Israel; they gave Jesus ahearing as a self-styled and heavenproclaimed Christ; they heard the music of heavenly truth in all He saiJ, and above all they marked the fact that He not only talked divinely well, but lived even as God would live. And so they followed Him. But they were not able to have con Bdence in Him mai bdouiq euauic them to bear witness of His divine power until they had tried for themselves the sort of life He lived and applied for themselves to their own lives the eternal principles that He propounded and found them practical. Men say to me. "I do not believe Jesus was the Son of God," "I cannot accept Him as the incarnation of the Father." And my first question is whether or no they are fully competent to judge. Are they in possession of such spiritual experience as will enable them to pass good judgment upon the case in hand? Many a man who has no experience in the Christ life will without a blush reject all the truths so dear to Christian hearts. If I as a minister presumed to pass expert judgment upon astronomical truth, having never even seen or marked the coursings of the stars or gained experimental knowledge of the wonders of the heaven above us, you would hoot me from this church. Yet many a man with no Christian experience,at all will pass final and irrevocable judgment upon Jesus Christ without so much as a shred of personal testimony that could be worthy of notice. Jesus is the Son of God. And the Dnly way you can come to know that is through the spiritual, personal experience of the fact. Jesus is the Savior of our souls from sin and the anly means to a convincing knowledge of this truth is through the entrance of the saving truth of Jesus Christ into your life. Jesus revealing [he truth, you testing, trying, proving its reliability and reasonableness in pour own personal life. . Life's Every Day Crosses. Life is not entirely made up of ?reat evils or heavy trials; but the perpetual recurrence of petty evils ind small trials iu tbe ordinary auu ippointed exercises of the Christian graces. To bear with the failings of those ibout us?with their infirmities, their bad judgment, their ill-breeding, their perverse tempers; to endure aeglect when we feel we deserve attention, and ingratitude when we expected thanks: to bear with the company of disagreeable people whom Providence has placed in our way, and whom He has provided, or purposed for the trial of our virtue; these are best exercises of patience ind self-denial, and the better because not chosen by ourselves. To bear with venation in business, with disappointment in our expectations, with interruptions of our retirement, with folly, instruction, disturbance?in short, with whatever opposes our will, contradicts our humor?this habitual acquiescence appears to be more of the essence of self-denial than any little rigors or inflictions of our own imposing. These constant, inevitable, but in ferior evils, prppsriy improvea, iurQiBh a good moral discipline, and might, in the days of ignorance, have superceded pilgrimage and penance. ?Hannah Moore. What is Worth Coveting. It requires a well kept life to do the will of God, and even a better kept life to will to do His will. To be willing is a rarer grace than to be doing the will of God. For he who is willing may sometimes have nothir*; to do, and must only be willing to wait; and it is easier far to be doing God's will than to be willing to have nothing to do?it is easier far to be working for Christ than it is to be willing to cease. No, there is nothing rarer in the world to-day than the truly willing soul, and there is nothing more worth coveting than the will to will God's will. There is nn p-rander possession for any Chris tian life than the transparently simple mechanism of a sincerely obeying heart.?Professor Drummond. True Prayer is a Great Achievement. Believe me, to pray with all your heart and strength, -with the reason and the will, to believe vividly that God will listen to your voice through. Christ and verily do the thing He pleaseth thereupon?that is the last, the greatest achievement of the Christian's warfare on earth. Teach us to pray, O Lord!?Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Character Alone Endures. Nothing is eternal but that which is done for God and for others. That which is done for self dies. Perhaps it is not wrong, but it perishes. You say it is pleasure?well, enjoy it. But joyous recollection is no longer iov. That which ends in self is mor tal. That alone which goes out of self into God lasts forever.?Frederick W. Robertson. Be Appreciative. Seek to cultivate a buoyant, joyous sense of the crowded kindnesses of God in your daily life.?Alexander MacLaren. A Poor Reward. A Christian citizen who sacrifices his convictions for a small and dirty victory advertises a pusillanimous Christ. IOEMterISI New York City.?Tho tailored' Jacket is always in style, always smart and always fills a certain dis- ^i tinctive place that is its own. Illus- ar trated is one that allows a choice of the long or three-quarter sleeves and that includes the seams to the shoulders that give such long and becom- re ing lines to the figure. As illustrated t it is made of tan colored Panama t cloth simply stitched with belding d( silk, but it is appropriate tor all ^ Buitings and all materials used for bs separate coats, so that It fills a great je many needs. d The coat Is made with fronts and pr side-fronts, backs and side-backs and ni under-arm gores. There are pockets fii on the hips with deep laps and the th neck is finished with a regulation col- sb lar and lapels. The sleeves are made to to two pieces each with roll-over cuffs no tor the long sleeves, while the three- toi quarter ones are stitched to simulate fei cuffs. wc The quantity of material required wi for the medium size is four and one- j tiv half yards twenty-seven, two and ba three-fourth yards forty-four or two ; pis and one-half yards fifty-two inches i ' wide. V j ba ! o r> The^jStout and Slender. j sh< Nothing is prettier and more be- jiin coming to a fair, slight womaD, with i he a pretty complexion than white; but j lir white gowns must be carefully avoid- s^e ed by her sister of too ample charms. Black is the color for the stout worn- in an, especially if she be of the black- de: eyed and black-haired tyre. A black SCM gown will make her look slighter than anything elsii, while pale blue, light grey and nearly every shade of red will make her "too, too solid flesh" most undesirably self-assertive. A subdued shade of blue, heliotrope and olive green, with black, may be all advantageously worn by the stout woman. Painted Chiffon Frocks. Painted chiffon plays a large part i Iii the afternoon frocks, and a beauty is of white striped ninou made over ? pale blue, the deep flounce of black N glace at the foot looping in tabs over i a fulness of cornflower chine chiffon $ to match the bolero effect of the bodice, folds of blue and lime piping the lace vest ornamented with tiny lime-colored true lover's knots. Separate Wraps Plentiful. It seems that there never were so many entrancing separate wraps as now. They are of every imaginable material, from lace, silk and velvet to heavy English tweeds and Scotch mixtures; and all seem necessary to foi the Derfectlv eauinoed wardrobe? fm the frivolous lace garments, long and i sei short, having nearly as large a fol-1 an lowing as storm coats and carriage ; inc wraps. . to * SOlMli ; High Luster Silk. < Paillette de soie is a silk with a ' gh luster that is used for both day ' id evening gowns. J Cluny Lace Returned. Women with Cluny lace waists will joice to know that they have re- ? rned, after only a year or so of ' >sence, to m'odishness. They are jsirable from many standpoints? irability,becominga?ss and warmth. Tailor-Made Skirts. Without exception the skirts which e worn with bodice coats are stricttailor-made. They may be fashned with tucks innumerable, or ey may be strapped, banded or othwise trimmed, but over all there ill be the tailor finish, which, con asting with coat, gives it tne retired "new" appearance. This effect gained in many ways," and its popiarity is bound to give the pleated cirt not only a new lease of life, at a stronger vogue that it enjoyed ^en at the beginning of its reign. Over Blouse or Jumper. Seldom has any fashion taken so -m a hpld upon feminine fancy as is the one of the over waist. Each ;w variation seems a bit more atactive than the last and there is ;nuine enthusiasm felt for each new ?sign. Here is one that is both ivel and charming and that is adapt[ to almost every seasonable mateal. In the illustration it is made of d apricot Liberty satin trimmed ith velvet of the same color and tnds of the material and brilliant weled buttons, but wool is quite as isirable as silk, linen and all the etty cotton stuffs are charming so ade, while it would be difficult to id any better design for the favorite ree-piece costume that is made with :irt and over waist and little jacket match. The trimming is distinctly vel and effective, but Is not obliga y, and anything that may be prered can be substituted. Applique ?uld be handsome, silk embroidered th soutache braid is always effece and there are r.lso numberless ndings ready to be sewed into ire. The waist is made with fronts and cks and sleeves. Both the fronts d the backs are tucked at the sulders, and the closing is made .'isibly at the back. The fronts are Id together by straps on which the tie bows are arranged and the eves are in bell, or kimono, shape, this instance the waist is cut out sections and velvet is applied unr the edge and is finished with jtacbe braid witnin ail eages. The quantity of material required * the medium size is two and onemh yards twenty-one, one and ,-en-eighth yards thirty-two or one d one-fourth yards forty-four hes wide, with five yards of velvet make as illustrate^ ) # v. . 'v ' Some Animals. m migh A spinster with money to burn re- cow :ently paid $5000 for a bulldog. A 000. nan in Massachusetts has just 1 nought a cow for $8000. Walter *n th 3arvey has a hog for which he re- ?reSa .'used a cash offer of $4000. James calf.r ?eene refused $200,000 for Sysonby, i racehorse. There are several roosters of fashionable blood priced as At Jigh as $800 each. You can buy a state* 3ne- lion for $300 and a tiger for char? $700. By and by we shall have a plate craze for breeding fishes, and a fine tbeloc male salmon, educated to pond life, see c ^ One of the Impor I the Well-Ii il^ is to learn as to the relative V ers ?* me^c^na^ agents, as th< the uniform quality and perfect known to physicians and the V\ Co., by reason of its correct me its product has attained to the h: Rggf is accorded to successful and reli |9A Company has become a guar ante TRUr W appeal to the Well-informed in ff I cess and creditable standing, tl I I enjoy good health, with its ble< If living with all the term implies W of recreation, of enjoyment, of Jk to that end and the use of medii II as in many instances a simple, r*l proper time, the California Fig jR>f truthfully the subject and to si cv ai +v,^ nnnnvfli <->f nhvsicians and tl of the excellence of the combinat AT^I tjire, which is known to the Cali: (?A > This valuable remedy ha Syrup of Figs?and has attai J I family laxatives, and as its pu If known to physicians and the If laxatives, we have adopted the tk Senna?as more fully descrip 1 called for by the shorter name c 11 note, when purchasing, the fu 11 plainly printed on the front of , Figs?or by the full name?Syi Elixlfr of Senna ? is the one la? flH Co. and the same heretofore k H satisfaction to millions. The | K the United States in original ] mm is -fifty cents per bottle. gj| Every bottle is sold uxid Wt Secretary of Agriculture, at W I# misbraided within the mean in ( h CALIFOR] Louisville, Ky. PUTNAM 1 Color more good* brighter an J rajttr colon lb an any o*bar d. aye aaj gannant without ripping apart. Write tor tt? tx America produces in a year 350,000,000 Th tons of coal. to Fi 000,0! The inducements to adopt Nature's per feet Laxative, Garfield Tea, are many! It is made wholly of simple Herbs and is Eiaranteed under the Pure Fobd and Drugs 6k aw: it overcomes constipation, regulates "/gi ;the livfcr and kidneys, purifies the blood 43* and brings Good Health. i /) The Warmth of a Snow.Honse. y Usually our snow igloos allowed nET each man from eighteen to twenty HgW inches space in which to lie down, and just enough room to stretch his Th?oi legs well. With our sleeping bags they were entirely comfortable, no BA*j matter what the weather outside. n< The snow is porous enough to admit ot?r of air circulation, but even a gale of ^?c' wind without would not affect the pea* fitOCK] temperature within. It is claimed spa hv the natives that when the wind blows, a snow house is warmer than *bo< a period of still cold. I could see no difference. A new snow igloo is, how- No! 2s ever, more comfortable than one that ?0.22 has been used, for newly cut snow go.ia blocks are more porous. In one that No! 22 has been used there is always a crust a of ice on the interior which prevents ?6? a proper circulation of air.?From sen< "The Long Labrador Train," by DilIon Wallace, in the Outfng Magazine, a. g. Hot Sea Baths. y* 2 Salt water, so strengthening ordlnarily, is paost weakening when too warm. On most ocean boats there is that 1 an abundance of warm water in the ou^f bath rooms, and the daily salt bath is a great tonic, but beware of get- Hei ting it too hot. It will turn you . ffeint if you do, even if you are ac- fli customed to an equally high temper- I ature in fresh water at home.?Travel Magazin#. Germany is able to feed about nine-tenths of her nearly CO,000,000 inhabitants on the products of her own soil. N.Y.?20 CHANGE IX FOOD ! Works Wonders ir. Health. It is worth knowing that a change in food can cure dyspepsia. "I deem it my duty to let you know how c -3 tviA Af urape-iNuis iuuu litt& tuicu mc ui indigestion. "I had been troubled "with it for years, until last year my doctor recommended Grape-Nuts food to be used every morning. I followed instructions and now I am entirely well. "The whole family like GrapeNuts, we use four packages a week. You are welcome to use this testimonial as you see fit." The reason this lady was helped j by the use o.f Grape-Nuts food, is that it is predigested by natural processes and therefore does not tax the stomach as the food she had been using; it also contains the elements required for building up tne nervous system. If that part of the human body is in perfect working order, there can be no dyspepsia, for nervous energy represents the steam that drives the engine. , When the nervous system is run down, the machinery of the body works badly. Grape-N'uts food can be used by small children as well as adults. It is perfectly cooked and ready for instant use. Read, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a 1 uson." _ r * t be worth $100.0. The $8000 In has one calf a year, worth $4,- or The female salmon may become uj QotHer of 300,000 little fellows uj e sariie.time, worth in the ag- w ite, possibly, as much as the al ?New York Press. oi ts Verily ThicK Headed. si the Thames Court a man who cc a he did not know his name was jed with maliciously smashing a glass window, valued at ?3 10s, m iging to Costin Peterson, licen- tc if the Alma Public House, West di tant Duties of Ph] ^formed of the W standing and reliability of the 5 most eminent physicians are th purity of remedies prescribed b: fell-Informed generally that the thods and perfect equipment and t igh standing in scientific and coi able houses only, and, therefore, e of the excellence of its remedy. TH AND QUALITY every walk of life and are essen lerefore we wish to call the attei isings, to the fact that it involve i. With proper knowledge of wl contemplation and of effort may :ines dispensed with generally tc wholesome remedy may be inv? ' Syrup Co. feels that it is alikt apply the one perfect laxative r le world-wide acceptance of the ^ ion, known to all, and the origin fornia Fig Syrup Co. only. s been long and favorably know ned to world-wide acceptance as re laxative principles, obtained Well-Informed of the world to more elaborate name of?Syrup tive of the remedy, but doubt! >f Syrup of' Figs?and to get its t 11 name of the Company ? Calif< every package, whether you sim rup of Figs and Elixir of Senna? cative-remedy manufactured by th nown by the name?Syrup of F genuine is for sale by all leadin( packages of one size only, .the er the general guarantee of the ( ashington, D. C., that the remed I of the Food and Drugs Act, J VIA FI6 SYRU San Francisco, Cal. U S. A. London, England. FADELE! yt. One lOo. package colors all fibers. Tfcey aoklet?How to Dja 81ca">- Ml* Color*. MO e net crofit laet year f/pm our exports j I ance and Germany was leea than $71),30. B THIRTT TUM BTAJWARD Of THI WORLD. tidal Ball Wheravsr Btti Ball It Playad, $1.25 Each 1 Boys' Official Base Ball, 75c. Each. E BALL UNIFORMS FOR BOYS. >. 4 Quality, on team orders, $4.00per Suit. x S Quality, on team orders, $3.00 per Suit SPECIAL?No. 6 Quality, $1.00 per Suit. Special No. 6 Boy s Uniform consists of shirt, d front wltn one felt letter, In sices up to 34 best, padded pants In sizes up to 80 inch waist, cap, web belt, and either plain or striped DCT. ORDER NOW-DON'T DELAY. idlng manufactures everything for the ath- J Uniforms and equipment for every athletic ^ DKS YOU NEED-IOC. per copy. Postpaid. Spalding's Offlc'al Base Ball Guide. J 2, Bow to Play Base Ball. tEow to Bat, No. 282. How to Run Bases. How to Pitch. No. 229, How to Catch. 5, How to Play First Base. . fi, How to Play Second Base. I 7, How to Play Third Base. 8, How to Play Shortstop. I 14, How to Play the Outfield. 1, How to Organize a Base Ball League, Mana "Base Ball Club, Train and Captain a Team Umpire a Game. I 3 for llstof books on every athletic sport. New 1 Bail taiaiogut reu w wo uuuicso^ rrcc. 31*11 Order Depi. SPAUHHG i BROS.. 126 Nimu St. HEW YORK, j ? You Ruptured. ? T not have it Cared 7 Send at once letter stal, with your address and principal factfc J 111 mall trial treatment,without cost to too, I vlll slve immediate relief from the effects o.' ersome and dangerous trusses. We also send 11 ree book on the "Cause, Care and Cure of , ire." This explains bow you may be En- 1 y Cured by small cost by th" _ : rnla H filler Co.. 439 W. 8, Erie, Pa. 1 NEW pat Wick Blue flame Because it's clean, Because it's econom- M ical. , ml Because it saves TfS time. Jij Because it gives best cooking results. ]\ Because its flame JJ can be regulated (i instantly. Because it will not overh Because it is better than Because it is the perfected For other reasons see j or write our nearest agen in fhrop ci7pq an 1UUUV ?JLM I?i i vv WMtfVW J with latest improved bu and beautifully nickele whether library, dininglamp warranted. "Write your dealer's. STANDAR1 (IJiCO BMHHOHBI dia Dock Road. At 12.45 o'clock 1 Friday night the defendant went j to a constable and said: "Lock me j, boss." He then went up to th? indow, took off his hat, and deliber;ely butted the window completely jt. His head waa not cut. When iken into custody he said, "I will . nash all the blessed lot in when I ime out."?London Globe, n One test for distinguishing diaonds from glass^ and paste Is to . >uch them with tne tongue. tub iamond feels much the colder. " **" ^sicians and X J rorld "I leading manufacture e most careful as to 7 them, and it is well Mm f California Fig Syrup Mg he ethical character of nmercial circles which that the name of the JH itial to permanent sue- fm' ition of all who would I 1 o * ~ :s the question of right 11/ jat is best each hour t m' be made to contribute ' W- y i great advantage, but v Uuable if taken at the f I ; important to present IJfc emedy which has won jrti Well-Informed because lal method of manufac- 1^ n under the name of? ' from Senna, are well It be the best of natural i ' ?y<? of Figs and Elixir of >.A less it will always be fl >eneficiaj effects .always 1. .? >rnia Fig Syrup Co.? 1.1 ply call for?Syrup Of I # 41 >' | as?Syrup of Figs and Uk le California Fig Syrup igs? which has given , --JH j druggists throughout ?H . * regular price of "which ' * . Company, filed with the iy is not adulterated or VI7 < ' une 30th, 1906. % * i* p CO. rl New York, N. Y. QI SS DYES n ootdwatar totter uun?ay other dffcfoo can MHOK Oktllti CO- UaioSTUU. OUUwwut PILES "I have ?nffered with ptle* (or thirty-fix year*. >ne year k?0 ]ut April I beran taklne CuctrtM -i-' or eonatlpttlon. In the eoniu ef a week I noticed he pile* began to dliappear and at the end of tlx ' isekt ther did not. trouble me at all. Cat carets tare done wonder* lor me. I am entirely oared and ?el like a new man.}' George Kryder Napoleon. QL Best For Q Th? Bowels ^ Iwi nil /ltinTh VVwVWftVWW ,5ys5t/.f$si^a?s^? .'' i| old in bnlk. The (tDals? table* tamped 000. . foaranteed to curs or your ?oney back. Sterling Remedy Co., Ch.?|o or K.Y. 599 INNlML SALE, TEO MILUOH BOXES 1 1 1 EVERlf NIMIXIS OWN DOCTOR | By J. HAMILTON AYEKS A. K. * ?This is a most Valuable Book for the Howjgold, teaching as it does the easily-distinguished 87?P: toms of different Diseases, tke Causea and ot Preventing such Diseases, and the SiJnpleat Bern- < dies which will alleviate or cnf*. ^ P?C*?t l?rofa?ely Illuatrated. tfOc. &nd nn?fnt rtntH or oostaee stamps. BOOIvt'l,lJ? HOi'8K,~134 Leonard pi? Sew Y rk. AGENTS WANTED--^motc 'ZtiZ gentlemen. Requirements: Intelligence and uelng well and favorably known. No muvmsng. V. IMBODES, 28 We?: 34th Strret, K. Y. City. Thompson's Eye Wafer FKUfflV . - J Oil Cook Slove . | eat your kitchen, the coal or wood stove. J Ail e+nvp. stove at your dealer's, tcy. id fully warranted. r ? cannot be equaled for its bright and teady light, simple construction nd absolute safety. Equipped mer. Made of brass throughout d. An ornament to any room, room, parlor or bedroom. Every ; to our nearest agency if not at > OIL COMPANY I BPORATED) X . . r - L_ ' .