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A woman who is sick and suffering, and won't at feast try a medicine which has the record of Lydia E. Pinkham's * Vegetable Compound, is to blame for her own wretched condition. t There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in t the United States who have been benefited by this famous 1 old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering. t Read what these women say: Camden, N. J. ? " It Is with pleasure that I send my testimonial for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, hoping it may induce other suffering women to avail themselves of the I benefit of this valuable remedy. " I suffered from pains in my back and side, sick headacbeSL no aopctite, was tired and nervous all the time, and so weak I could hardly stand. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made me a well woman ?and this valuable medicine shall I i' always have mv nr?l<i? " ? ih?i w *? ?.? ?? """ * ' w _ ^ ft a v i>iciiiiiii3| wis ljincoin J Ave., Camden, N. J. 1, Erie, Pa. ?" I suffered for five years from female troubles, and at last was almost helpless. I tried three doctors but they did t me no good. My sister advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's L Vegetable Compound, and it has made mo well and strong. I o hope all suffering women will just give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, for it is worth its weight in gold." f ? Mrs. J. P. Kndlich, R. F. D. 7, Eric, Pa. | * Since we guarantee that all testimonials which we pub- f lish are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. ^ Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had the vi *tue to help these women it will help any other woman who is suffer- ^ : r . t mg lrum me same trouble. lt E For 30 years "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No siek woman does justice to W[ j^yo\ herself who will not try tills famous medicine. 7/ \ \ Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and 1 7 .yj I has thousands ot cures to its credit. II V^ j/ / / t If the slightest trouble appears which CA Jn) 1: you do not understand, write to Mrs. j Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for her advice ? it is free and always helpful. ^Classified Advertisements) _ Ho* 3 Thls For Mud? I ?/^A^/V\A/\AAAAAAAA^NAAAAAA/ Ol till tl)6 VflmS tllUt CVCT CtHDG ^ salesmen wanted down the line, regarding deep mud, 117 ANTED?Active, energetic men 10repro- the following should be entitled 10 ' 2,.^ *?"iJi?" P"?fltJb,e po?lti< n?. Hustlers {jjue ril>bon. It happened in the make hUr money. Cash weekly advance*. Com- . . II Dlete outfit free. Write immediately lor our place where mud originated. A man " ^^'oLDiwMiNioN NURSERIES. was walking along the roadside ono * Mention this Paper. Richmond. Va. summer day and noticed a fairly good last aoixt* WAKTKn. looking hat out in the road. ReacnW/ANTED-Lady a?eiiu in all part* of the ing out with his cane, he gave it a [' United States to advertise and sell rut find wsir stirtlpH i/, lip.. ? voice ' Black Crow Stockens" to wearers. Good com- c,u, a.na ?as siartlcd to near a \ Oice mission. Address. exclaim: "Here, what the duce are Black Chow stockkn Co.. Newton. X. c. yQU doin^a Then he made the astonT7? - jcivery mail's work, if it is useful, discovery that the owner of j is above him. "ead-pieee was under the hat, up ?; - to his ears in mud. "Great Heav- . Tetterins for Poison Oak. ens!" exclaimed the man who had hit .j5 Kr. J. T. Shuptr'.ne. Savannah. Ga. tup tu_t 1 ?? deen Dear Sir:?I enclose 50 cents In stamps l"e "al* , *S u<* as ae?P .as ii for a box of Tetteiine. I have poison that? Deep! cried the victim. t. oak on me again, and thai is all that <<\Vhv man nlivo T'm Qtnnrlinrr nn a I ver h/is cured li. Please hurry It on to, man alive, I m Standing on a : Tours respectfully. m. F. Hamlet. load of hay.?May Lippincott's. 1. Montalba. Tex.. May 21. 08. J u Tetterlne cures Eczema. Tetter, Ring Ci Worm, Ground Itch. Itching Files. In- She Proposed to BOSS. ? fant's Sore Head. Pimples. Bolls. Ko'ign Mewed f after the i.drnm.invl Scaly Patches on the Face. Old Itching lailcr tile ceremony;. c Bores. Dandruff. Cankered Scalp. Bun- "Dearest, do VOU reallv think I'll e| Ions. Corns. Chilblains and every form of t ? ??, Skin Disease. Tetterlne 50c; Tetterlne PTe a sntistattory mate? M.S. r, Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by mall from Isewed: "Oh, I guess you'll do as Th? Shuptrin* C?- a mate, all right. Now look me over t< , ~ " 7 , and tell me what vou think of your f? The best way to make friend, a captai?.?._May Lippincott'S. By making good. So. 1S-09. _ Take Garfield Tea! Made of Herbs, it is Things move along so rapidly now- 8| ^Pr^yhTor^S^ion. hverand a*da>s that P">Ple wh? sav "II can>t ?' Mitoey At all drug stored. | be done," are interrupted by someI It is a foolish fish that bites at tho ^ody doing it. a same book- takes more than a corkscrew, p Mia.Window's Sootl.mg byrup tor Children now-a-days, to draw a customer's or- 11 iteething.softenathegunv?,re?iuo?B intlainm*- der. 11 fie*,allay y*jn.curr?*vu).l colic.25c p bottle U A dishonest dolla,r costs more than FOOD FACTS a hundred cents. Wbat ap M- D- I*?rn?l. q i>? toor Feet Acht and Burn? A prominent Georgia physician g bhake into your shoe* Aliens Foot-liate, a went trough a rood experience which powder for the feet. It makes tight or he makes public: new shoes feel easy. Cures Coma, Bunions, "Jt was my own experience that <? advocate Grape-Nut. ? and Shoe stores, 2.5 cts. Sample sent Frijc. food and I also know, from having 11 Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRojr, N. Y. prescribed It to convalescents and a . ; , , other weak patients, that the food Is ? It is unpleasant to turn back, wonderful rebullder and restorer c though it he to take the right way. 0f nerve aB(j brain tlscue. as well as 11 Rough on Rats, unstable exterminator. muBcJe. It Improves the digestion d Rough on Hen Lice, Must Powder, 25c. and 8,ck Pa?ents always gain just as t Rough on Bedbngs, Powder or Liq'd,25c. 1 d,d ln strength and weight very rap- 8 Rough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c. E Rough on Roaches, Pow'd, 15c.,Llq'd, 8Bc. ' wa9 'n 8UCh a low state that 1 i Rough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c. hod to 8,ye ?>P work entirely, and t Rough on Hkeeters, agreeable in uae, 25c. 7'??' mountains of this state, I r JS. s. Weiu, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. DUt lwo months there did not Improve <1 ? . ? me; In tact, I was not quite as well as < Yon cannot save your pie unless when I left home. \ you eat it. "My food did not sustain me and <i It became plain that 1 must change, t People Talk About Good Things. Then l began to use Orape-Nuta food ? Twelve years ago few people knew of and in two weeks I could walk a mile I w'tk?ut totHo., ud ,n 1 ADen's Foot-Ban^-have been told year after returned to my home and nptptip? takln^uphard work Again? Since | j able to millions. It is cleanly, wholesome that time I have felt as well and ] Z22X??tSSiXl!*~ ' "?? " "?; <"?"'? ?' _ It cores while too walk. Orrr 80,000 As a physician who seeks to help j lyliaieiils ' Imitations pay the dealer a all sufferers, I consider It a duty to Ur?ar profit, otherwise yon would nerer mftk# these facts public." 5Lf tiS MSSd'fSt ^SrwdJlT jJk& Trial Id days on Grape-Nuts, when ililea's root-use, and see that yen get it. Ufe regular food does not seem to sua 1 1 " tain the body, will work mtraolea. It's a wise Ann who knows how "There's a Reason." foolish he is. ' Look In pkga for the famoue little |,| ,| guij nirimws booh, "The Road to Wollrlllo." t lL,IJ [,f r r- ^ I Care of the Cow. Do not stay around a cow with a poung calf if it seems to disturb her. Do not stuff her with a heavy feed at jnce. Increase her feed gradually after a comparatively small beginning, so that by the end of three or four lays, if she is in good health and has i good appetite, she will be on about lull feed.?Progressive Farmer. Weigh the Milk. " A farmer with one or two cows kept nerely to supply the family with milk ind butter cannot afford to weigh >ach cow's miik all the time, or even wlce a month perhaps; but the mau vko is giving a large part of his time o dairying, cannot afford not to weigh he milk. It will quickly show him vhcn a cow is dropping off in milk ind that something is needed to get hn Koei rocnlt n e h /? (e nenohln t\f >ven if it is no more- than a dose of (hysic. Besides, the dairyman will mow which cows to keep, which to [ispeso of, and which to keep heifer3 rom.?Progressive Farmer. Importance of Tile Draining. There is great pro.1t in tile drainUg land that is inclined to be low. ["his doesn't mean that only bottom and needs tiling. Very often land hat is gently rolling is benefitted by iling fully as much as land that looks evel and low. A good deal depends n the sub-soil. Tile makes land warmer. You gain rom one to two weeks in the spring .nd you oiten gain as much In the all. The soil is better . ventilated. 'Chelation requires air in the soil as fell as water. Available moisture is increased, available moisture is film moisture, be kind tlrat plants feed upon. Film noisture contains the elements of ilant food in liquid form. Plants only eed on liquid.?American Cultivator. Alfalfa Not Credited. Alfalfa is not yet credited for more ban half its worth lor making heef, nilk, etc. In his recent visit to the argentine country of South America, 'rof. Muinford, of the Illinois Univerity, has some good words on alfalfa, thick are just as applicable to this ountry as to that. He says: Alfalfa is grown in most parts of he Argentine cattle country, but not 0 anything like the extent to which t can be grown. It is known that it fill grow well for ten years and it is elieved a fair stand will be mainlined for forty years if not pastured do close. Modern machinery is used 1 some instances in baling and stackig this crop. A fine illustration of the value of Ifalfa is seen in the experience of he manager of a 55,000-acre ranch, 11 In alfalfa. This much now actualr supports more cattle than the 140,1)0 acres of the original alfalfa ranch l the native grass when this man X)k the place thirteen years ago. he alfalfa had much more than douled the production of the land. Some attle that are bred upon the native rass land are shipped to the alfalfa ountry to finish; at the monthly barge per head of stock the alfalfa stums $7 to $9 per acre per year. It requires from one and one-third > one and two-thirds acres of good alilfa, well cared for, to support one teer and two sheep. This means 000 to 4,800 cattle and twice as many beep per league of 6.C72 acres. This senjs equivalent to a steer per acre. Knowing the great increase in yield nd remarkable richness of alfalfa in rotein, the most costly kind of food 1 a balanced ration, yet the wonder it giBuiuunice ui mis crap cunnoi DO nderstood unless It is remembered tnat in Argentina beef cattle are rought to the highest flesh and finish n gras and alfalfa alone, without any rain at all. Ventilating the Poultry House. A poultry house is not much good nless it is well-ventilated, for pure, resh air is very essential to health nd productivity in hens. On account f their higher body temperature, hickens require plenty of good air o breathe even more than most other omestlc animals. Then in addition o this, the unpleasant odors and Ases existing in the poultry house must be dissipated and removed. To correctly ventilate the poultry louse is a more complex matter than nost people think, for the reason that Irafts^and currents of air must be unrefunly avoided. The ventilators, irhtch work quite satisfactorily in [welling houses and barns give very unsatisfactory results on poultry houBis and &ro little or no better than nothing at all. If the windows are aft nnrtlv nnon rtraf?? #n<l wild fur. ents of air blow In over the fowls, or aln or snow may be blown Into the louse. By having a loft above a loose celling In the bouse and keeping this Sited with dry straw or hay, much of the moisture and Impurities of the air are drawn off. But this Is not all that could be desired, for It falls to supply fresh air to the fowls. The modern and model method of ventilating a poultry house is by means of window openings in the sowth side of the bUlldlng which arc covered with a muslin curtain in cold er disagreeable weather. During th< - -c-j. ? ^ remainder of the time, both winter and summer, these openings are covered merely with wire netting. Oiled muslin (or "waterproof sheeting") can be secured at almost any of the incubator and brooder companies or the poultry supply houses, at a cost of only a few cents a yard. Ordinary muslin will answer the ventilating * question just as satisfactorily as the oiled material, except that it lacks the ' water-proof quality possessed by the latter. Either kind permits of a gen- 1 tie diffusion of froeh air from the out- ' side into the interior of the building j while the foul air may Just as readily ' pass out through the porous curtain. All this is accomplished without any direct draft and the action is very gentle although none the less positive, i Instead of having three or four win- i dow sashes to the Bouth of the poultry i house, use muslin for the one instead : of glass. On mild days the muslin i frame may be removed and the house 1 thoroughly aired.?Epitomist. < i Carbolic Acid in the Poultry Yard. ' Carbolic acid, properly applied, is a ' useful drug in the poultry yard. The offensive ar.d unwholesome odors of the poultry quarters, arising from the exhalations and the fermentation of J their droppings, may be easily and > effectually removed by the use of a * suiuuon ci earuonc acia. Among tne J most troublesome annoyances of poul- ? try-keeping lice must be enumerated, ? These parasites will master the situa- ? tion unless they are looked after. Car- ? bollc acid in solution almost .?.stantly ? destroys these pests. The small t "mites" or "spiders," which live dur- 1 ing the day in cracks and crevices and 1 about the bearings of the roosts, in the corner of nest-boxes, etc., are the most annoying to the fowls at night. Another trouble that may be enumer- j ated under the head of parasites is i "scabby legs." This disease, if di- t stasc it be, is produced by an acarus, ( a minute insect, which burrows be- < tween and under the scales on the < shanks and feet. When neglected for s a considerable time, the scabs or in- $ crustations grow to a disgusting size, i and will be harder to remove than j if undertaken as soon as discovered, t This trouble Is easily cured by the ] use of the acid. A solution for use in poultry quarters for hygenic purposes may be made by mixing one fluid ounce of the acid with a gallon of water. Then sprinkle the inside surface thoroughly?floor, walls, roosts, nests, everything inside of the quarters?with the solution. An excellent plan is to saturate pieces of old carpet, or bags, or worn-out horse-blankets with a strong solution, and hang or tack them up In the roosting-place, or inside the coops where small chickens are kept. In hot weather the so lution should be used in the buildings I at least one a month, and In the coops J for little chickens oftener. The smell given off will neutralize odors or iui- ^ asms and destroy all microscopic organisms and parasites, while it is absolutely harmless to the fowls and chickens. The ointment is made by mixing about one fluid ounce or a large tablespoonful of the acid with a pound of melted lard and stirring until thoroughly mixed. As soon as cold enough it is ready for use. A little of this will keep the vermin away. It will, when applied, cure the "scabby la:?.' ?Weekly Witness. Farm Notes. Hens in the stable are like pigs in the door yard. Both are untidy and unclean. Plenty of shade fbr the hens. And they must have a cool house to roost in at night. Be not weary in fighting the lice, for in due season they will get your fowls if you do not get them. iu picKing your Dreeaers tor next year's stock remember that the roos- ] ter is more than half the flock. J Poor plan to house the young chicks and the old fowls together. The old i birds are more than apt to pick on the 1 little fellows. If the cats are fed extra well during < the period when the young chicks are i running free you will find they will not be so prone to an occasional | chicken dinner. When you put thj Incubator away were you careful to see that the water 1 tank was empty? The ground makes | a good place to set the late broody hen. Protect from sun and rain. To eradicate worms, placing a lump 1 ; of rock salt where the horse may lick it at will, is often useful. Oil of turpentine, one-half ounce, to be followed by the raw oil purge, will dislodge the worms. The successful poultry man is the one who can distinguished the dividing line between the pure bred stock and is all for show, and the pure bred stock that is for the egg and flesh making business. It is Impossible to say just bow soon in her life a heifer should be bred. The distinctive, specialized dairy breeds may be bred earlier than the larger strains. Some heifers at sixteen months are as fully developed as , others at twenty-four. Therefore the experienced breeder will bred accord- I <ing to development. f The United States consumes 80,000,- I , 000 pounds of tea annually. / t _ Blackberry Muffin*. Sift together a pint of flour, two teaspoonfuls baking powder and a tialf teaspoonful salt. Rub In a half nipful butter, or lard and butter nixed with a teaspoonful sugar and i beaten egg. When well mixed add me cupful berries and bake iu well greased muffin tins In a hot oven.? 1 New York Telegram. i Corn Griddle Cakes. For corn griddle cakes make a soft i mush with two cupfuls of cornmeal md enough boiling water. When the j mush has ooolcd add the well beaten J rolks of four eggs and a cupful and i half of flour, sifted with two scant level tableiooonfuls of baking pow- i jei. our in uair a cupiui or miiK ind fold in the stiffly beaten whites of the four eggs. Bake at once on a iot griddle.?New York Sun. Portuguese Apples. Choose twelve apples, not too large, >nd all of one size. Peel them and ornove the core. Stew gently in syrup until tender, but not broken. Leave till cold. Place in a glass or silver dish, strain, and then color the syrup pink, and fill the hollow in each ipple with red currant Jelly, melted sufficiently to be poured in. For the syrup use a .breakfastcupful cf sugar, :be same of water, the juice of one emon, and the peel of half.?New fork Globe. Stale Brown Bread. This is the way one woman utilizes stale brown bread crumbs and makes i quickly made dessert. She covers he bottom of a glass dish with powlered sugar and bread crumbs mixed, liver this she puts a layer of whipped ;ream and a spoonful or two of preserves, then more crumbs and sugar ind another layer of whipped cream ind preserves. The cook who pre- 5 >ares this is a German and she calls he simple dainty "gotterspelse."? 1 few York Globe. ^ 1 Corn Meal Mush. c For old-fashioned cornmeal mush, j he best cereal according to many ^ jersons, bring three pints of water v o a boil, add a level tablespoonful of t lalt and then sift In with one hand, ? ittle by little, Btlrring all the time t vith the other, a cupful of meal. 1 loH for ten minutes. Then turn into ^ he upper part of a double boiler and :ook for at least three hours?more < vill not hurt it. Serve the mush hot < >r cold with rich cream or with ma- * )le syrup. Cold and sliced it is de- f Icious fried in bacon fat and eaten I vith maple syrup.?New York Sun. * r Uln?- J..-..-. \ To cover the pan in which fish is :ooking wiil make the flsh soft. One teaspoonfu! of extract will flavor one quart of custard or pudding. A teaspoonful of lemon Juice to a juart of water will cook it that way. Cold cereals can be fried the same is mush; serve with gravy and syrup. Nickel will be kept bright by being ubbed with wool saturated in ammo lia. One tablespoonful of extract will ilavor one quart cf mixture to be frozen. One tablespoon of water or milk ihould be allowed for each egg in an imelet. How may one cook rice, so as to make It in separate grains and keep it white? Honey should be kept in the dark, [f exposed to light it will quickly granulate. One level teasDoonful of salt will season ono Quart of soup, sauce or j vegetables. One cupful of sugar will sweeten j Dne quart of any mixture to be served < chilled or frozen. Alcohol and whiting make a good j silver polish excellent for polishing , plate glass mirrors. ( Black lead mixed with vinegar will 1 be found to give a specially good pol- ' Lsh to the kitchen stove. To raise the pile on plush sponge it < with a iltle chloroform and it will 1 look fresh and new again. A piece of flannel dampened with spirits of camphor will remove stains from mirrors or window glass. 1 When cooking with old apples at 1 this season of the year add a little l6mon Juice to give flavor. Summer apples need nothing b it suear Nails in bathrooms and kitchens on which damp clothes and towels may be hung should be dipped in enamel, so that they may not leave rusty marks. The ordinary French dressing (3 tableepoonfuls oil, 1 1-2 tablespoonfuls vinegar, 1-4 level teaspoonful salt, 1-8 1 level teaspoonful pepper) wiH moisten one pint of salad. To clean silver, ml^c sweet oil and whiting to the thickness of a cream put on with a soft cloth, wash in hot < soapsuds and polish with a chamois akin or a piece of oil soft linen. n .xoatwrnq. - Trr.y^!':v "'"-T'jpt' * ' ' $ r 55t i ?>uv&atj-<&cftoof s INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM. MEXTS FOIt MAY 2. Subject: Paul's x ,rst ellssionary Journey-Cyprus, Acts 13:1.12 ?Golden Text, Mark 10:13? Commit Verses 2. 3?Comments. TIME.?45 A. D. PLACE.?Antloch, Salamis, Paphos. EXPOSITION.?I. Unrnabns and Saul called by the Holy Spirit, set apart by men, sent forth hy men and by the Holy Spirit, 1-4. The church at Antioch had five "prophets and teachers'* worthy of mention bjf ?; name. This early Gentile church became a fountain of light and life "to many other places. The Holy Ghost Bpoke to them "as they ministered to the Lord and fasted." If we would Bpend more time and strength in ministering to the Lord and In fast ing, we would have more frequent and clearer leadings of the Spirit. A Spirit-filled mind rarely accompanies an over-filled stomach. Greater simplicity in our living would be conducive to a clearer perceptiou of the mind of God. It is not said how the Spirit spoke, whether in an audiblo voice, or silently, in the inner recesses of the heart, but He spoke in an unmistakable way. It was no vague, uncertain impulse sucn as men sometimes call "the voice of the Spirit." He is ready to speak to-day. If we will supply the proper conditions and listen. It was the Holy Spirit's work to call; it was man's tvork to recognize the call, and net the called apart for the work. Those alio ignore ordination by man are as iinscrlptural as those who ignore a sail by God. But it was "for the tvork whereunto" the Spirit called that they were to be set apart. Too >ften we set men apart for a work ivhereunto the Spirit never called hem. Spirit called men are a great men di our nay. we nave far too nany men whom men have called; )r. worse yet. who have called themselves. Every step in that early :hurch was taken In prayer. It was irayer to which men gave themselves o heartily that they withdrew themselves even from their necessary ood to pursue it (v. 3). The promptless with which this church obeyed he Spirit's command is worthy of lote. He had demanded the best ind they gave them up without a nurrnur. They would have liked to. lave kept Barnabas and Saul, but the Spirit called them elsewhere, and 'they sent them away." But. while hey sent them back of it all they vere really "sent forth by the Holy Jhost." Wonderfully suggestive and n8plring words these. With what :onfidence a man can go forth when ' le can confidently affirm, "I have >een sent on the errand by the Holy Jhost!" He may not know just vhere he is going, or just what he is o do. or just what awaits him. No llrections seem to have been given as o where they were to go; so they nade straight for the nearest port ,nd thence for the old home of Barna>as (ch. 4:36). II. Triumph of Snul, filled with he Spirit, over F.lynias, Full of all iulle and all Villainy, 5-12. They vere true to their commission, "they ireached the word of God." Many a nan has been sent forth by the Holy Jhost who has afterward forgotten vhat he was sent to preach; and so a nission that was divine in its origin >as come to nothing in its execution, f there was ever a day in which their >xampie needed imitation, it is tolay, when men are preaching anyhing and everytb'ng but "Mie v*ord >f God" (romp. 1 The??. 2:1": 2 Tim. 1:2). Opponents of the gn?'<el. who nake great pretensions end do amazng things, are not at all new. One leed not be frightened because men who mako astonishing claims, and vho display extraordinary gifts, arise o lepd men astrav. It was so in th? Irst days of the church's history, and -et the church went right on. in face >f this apparently dangerou? onnosiion. The "theosophists" and "Chrlsian Scientists" of to-day are no more iangerous than the Simons and Elynas of early days. Spirit-fllled men vere needed to oppose and confound hem then, and Spirit-fllled men are leeded to oppose and confound them low. The proconsul. Sergius Paulus, gave good proof thnt he was Indeed 'A man of understanding;" "he :alled unto him Barnabas and Saul, ' ind sought to hear the word of God." Whatever claims to prudence and wisdom and conrraon sense a man may make, he is not "a man of unlerstandlng," if he is not desirous "to tiear the word of God." Elyrnas did not give up without a light. The levil never does (2 Tim. 3-8). His chief business is turning men aside from the faith (v. 8: cf. Cor. 4:3, 4; Luke 8:12). But the opposition of Blymas for all his marvelous powers were vain, for he had run up against a Spirit-fllled man. Paul had been filled with the Holy Spirit soon after / tils conversion (ch. 9:17). But now n new emergency arises, and there la a new filling for the new need. Wo ought not to he conteut because we have once, or fifty tlnws, known what It was to have the Spirit of God como rushing upon us and taking possession of our mindB. and giving- us ? words of wisdom, boldness and power to utter. As each new emergency I arises we should cast ourselves upo* / Him anew. Paul's words are very fj vere and very searching. They erfpose the depths of the infamy of Ely- _ j| mas. Plainness and boldness of - . Ii> speech is a characteristic of a 8plrltfllled man (Acts 4:31; Eph. 6:19). There are eigne, to the St. Louis Post-Diepatoh, ?hat the American suf- ^ rragettee have learned a lesson from -V the experience of their English sisters. So far there bare been no riots, but there is an unmistakable purpose to push the cause along. If men will not pay attention to inodeet, ladylike pleadings they may expect to bars their ears woundad by the shrill cries of -women determined to be tree.