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BISHOP OWES AND LIFI Ministersof All Denominationn Join in Recommending Pe-ru-na to the. People. Public speaking especially expose: the throat and bronchiat tubes t Catarrhat alTectionas. Breathing the air of crowded assem blies, and the necessary exposure to nigh air which many preachers must face makes catarrh especialy prevalent amon their class. Peruna has become justly popular amonj them. The Bishop's Stroni j L. H. Halsey, Bishop C. M. E. Cht + "1 have found Peruna to be a gre: " with this terrible disease for more : been using Peruna, which has reieved * "I have tried many remedies and : for them, but 1 for.nd nothing so e great medicine. Peruna. e 1 feet sure that Peruna is nol " but it is atso'a blessing to sul7erini " "Every individual who suffers wit, i a magnificent and sovereign- remedy." " Peruna is the most prompt and sur1 remedy for catarrh that can be taken. Many a preacher has been able tc s.eethis engagemen.ts oly because he keeps on hand a' bottle of Peruna, ready to meet a my emergency thai say arise. WHAT'S THE USE OF SAYING "GIVE ME A 5-CENT CIGAR." WHEN BY ASKING FOR A: : "CR EMO" YOU GET THF,BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN AMERICA "The World's largest Seller" What is in a man is more potent that what is about him. So. 6. -Macaroni Wheat. Salzer's strain of this Wheat is the kind which laughs at droughts and the ele ments and positively mocks Black Rust, that terrible scorch! it's sure of yielding S0 bushels of finest Wheat the sun shines on per acre on good ill., Ia.. Mich., Wis.. 0.. Pa., Mo., Neb lands and 40 to 60 bushels on arid lands. No rust, no insects, no failure. Catalog tells all about it. , tST S.ND 10C ANDl THf~S NOTICE to the John A. Saizer Seed Co. La Crosse Wis., and they wil s endl you free a sampli of this W heat and other farm seeds, to gether with their great catalog, wori $100.00 to any wide-aw?kefarmler. [A. C. L. CORNZeIELtDSr ARE GOLD FIELDS -to th amrwho udr stands how to feed his cos. Fertilizers for Corn must contain at lezst 7 per cent, actual Potash1 Sen,d for ou r books-they tell w~hy Potash is as necessary to plant life as sun and rain; -sent free, if you ask. Write day. GERMAN KALI WORKS York-93 Nassau Street, or kanta, Ga.--a2% South Broad St. pea edicn eer made. A hn dd iansoo them have been sox4 netim. So tho adruggists nei' on'ta r soend fromach uch . less onerly y e e t ony iutsT te hrieghs an besiy caao. .dss ein the sa dEealr-ansowyo. HEALTH TO PE=RU=NAs, I. - I tl / 1, p ~ it T tl Despite the prejudices of the medical %, pro-,e.sionl againlst proprietary :ne( ieines. C the clergy have always maintained a strong confidence and friendship for Pc'- t1 I rMild. They have discovered by personal ex-V perience that Peruna does all that is ri claiined for it. t STribute to Pe-ru-na.& d rch. Atlanta, Ga., writes: .t remedy for catarrh. I have suffered' ti than twenty yt,ears, until since I have: ti me of the trouble. V'. :pent a great deal of hard-earned moneyb V,etual in the cutre of catarrh an the.e p onl~y a triumph of medical science, : tl rhu4manity. respiratory diseases wrill find Peruna i C L. H. Halsey, Bp. C. M. E. Church. " s1 ,.....,4.4#*44*444 4q**.44'q-944' 0, 1We have on file many letters of recomn medto ieteoegvnaoe ecan give our readers only a slight glimpse h Iof the vast number of grateful letters Dr. Hiartman is constantly receiving, in b praise of his . -amous catarh remedy, Pe- a runa. r s Generous With His Crusts. o James Mlligan, the Mexican m- t ing man, told a story at the. Waldorf Astoria the other day abouf Milligan, tl -un-or, agd four. T--e yongr t pra-fl:tl "When Fens a f lite-roy-nawy e apte the russa elics the miicale pofemysioa-:st. prpatr eim "Did clerg like them?" inquired Ma e "Yes.g ronieponded thfrient.ior'e h offprng ricvrdb esnle-t esaime freied tilga,Snir Tribute ou mer-a.ae hse"si ch,Atlant, Juni, wriene enl,puh remed or catarrw. disardeed stt Quoftee trouble frM ie s >thagea dalort oalere cmpny b -e,a inahe cureviof a.,rh toohie ea an er. Trimhoere ca nosceince t knmnihty t ntd.eAfrs fr and irtory diames we finll cPerun eaeon ile mn terg of greon menton hoe. the mine iven aboe Ct can give out raier, onl Y'arigt limpCed of tribe Caumer fgteu enters o D tr. Hrtma ias consnl creceiving,:ins prise ofihis faosevetrrh raeedy,Pe Generos' Wit ti ruble, o JamesMillian, ht Mexca tin ing mn, tod a tr t Waldor Astoia he the da aboute tilgn tl junor,age for. he aongster a brekfat hd etentheins inde ofehi toas,levingthe rsts of the sid- of his late E:Ifatesi tohim~ ~vre 1 "Whe I ws a itten b o Inlwayse atethecruts s wllf astheinsiad hardmy tate my.ck he ahi wa "Did you tike dtme.? bnuire just as lian, atunior, ndI a cheerfulaly. "Din lk themton:g w " bothered t is offspheg fr.Teuiaypsae "es," repnfl,ied thesleigan Seire "Wlfl, bo mayve torave ee, sand s ing oehs own ctdaderusnts Newur Yo Times. N .Frsl byQlueerCas. fri ine Fre. minhe, NY aunearMievl,Pa,thed afireea thrn ime a in sano esraon. Thner og r was an in e inteo Mr. Murph ound nar lah-e euntitney and hey fwames were in al godi ae cateratonh asine thughea runk. hog. hole.Thergusn bsbing fhocded,ie Ani oer Frut Rloe, sas d, Conedi 9ofC y erbeCs fe e ears oldf R uprerin. thtgn Sid$h00 Justusg, fruit dealr so e Kidaneby aP in fasvere case-o i-i -prceddoWe-areye grunl, o Fe,reiabe nd any.as stoninr ~ie Thy ae oideve-cheand oter NG AMS C. NEi-IAEN.CNN.t THE TPULTIT. SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. HERBERT H. MOTT. 5nbject: Can a Man Do as He Likes? I3oston, Mass. - The following ser on was contributed to The Christian egister by the Rev. Herbert H. Mott. is entitled "Can a Man Do as He ikes" and the text is: "Choose you is day who you will serve."-Joshu.: ., 15. Can a man do as he likes? Of course not! you say. All sorts of arriers hedge him round. He would ke to fly as the birds fly, but the eight of his flesh and bones keeps lodding along the ground. He Is born or or stupid; consequently he can either buy a steam yacht nor set the hxmes on fire, though he would like early to do both. The force of public pinion compels him to don a tell silk at and a frock coat when he would ich prefer to go about in a golf cape nd a shooting jacket. The force of ublic law compels him to run his auto t ten miles an hour when he very iuch wishes to spin along joyously at se rate of thirty. Every man exists nder a set of compulsions. He is bliged to submit to many limitations, atural and artificial, and he is com elled, by pushes and pulls and press res lie is unable to resist, to do many ings he doesn't want to do. Nevertheless, in spite of a man's ab 'et slavery in certain directions. is ere not some small space. some little rca, in wuich, instead of being .: ave, he is actually and truly free? a epartment of life and c)aduct in -hich he can do as he likes? The old doctrine-the doctrine be eyed by our fathers, and by nearly ie whole of humanity, civilized and neivilized, in every part of the world, om the beginning of recorded time 'a that there is such a department of fe and conduct; that in all vital mat >rs, in all matters that have to do ith the moral quality of life, a ni'in qi do as he likes. Our fathers held at, whenever we stand at a point 'here two roads diverge, we are able ) choose, select. determine, which )ad to pursue. In such a situation ie casting vote remains with us. Whenever two or more governments, aders, employers, claim our allegiance, -e can "choose whom we will serve." his is true, said our fathers, no mat r how severe the pressure. The ?mptation, urgency, force of circum tances, may be so great as to resem le compulsion. It appears as if we rere obliged to take one road rather ian the other. This, said our fathers, appearance only. In reality, when cer two or more alternatives pre nt themselves, whenever two roads pen before us, the decision remains ith us. It is with us to say yes or o, to lift the latch or not to lift it, to ike the left or the right. No matter ow great the pressure brought to ear on us, in the last resort we can lways choose poverty instead of iches, captivity instead of freedom. affering instead of ease, and instead f life, rather than yield, if need be, e can always choose death. This is the old doctrine, and, al iough it has stood both the test of me and the test of experience, there ppears to be, in these days, a widely pread tendency to Ignore it. No one enies that circumstances exercise a owerful Influence over our lives, but ie tendency nowadays is to ascribe verything to circumstances. It is related that the eminent natur list, Professor Boulton, placed the ggs of caterpillars in differently col red boxes, and left them there to atch out, with the remarkable result dat the eggs in the blue box hatched ut into blue caterpillars, those in tihe ed box Into red, and those in the yel >w box into yellow caterpillars. They ere, you see, the product of their urroundings, they were what the tint f their surroundings made them. And o, it is declared, are you and I; we re what our surroundings and those f our ancestors make us. We are the lanes of outside conditions, past and resent, Here is a man who is an enemy of city. He preys upon his kind. His areer is divided between debauchery nd other crimes. He is the victim, a helpless victim, of outward circum tances, we are told. His mother was drunkard, his father was a thief. [e was reared in the slums. What an you expect? True, he has been to reform school; true, he has been elped and aided by various philan Lropic people whom he has merciless rdeceived. But he, poor fellow! ould not help himself. 4Like Profes or Boulton's, caterpillars, he took on Le tint of his environment. 'Born in black box, he turns out black. His urroundings were evil, therefore he ;evil. Or', again, there is the hei'o who, like 'harles Lamb, gives up all, in order to uport some one dependent on him. r surrenders life itself in order to ae the lives of others. We are told ~e same story about the hero as about be thief. He is not brave or self-de ying of his owni accord. He is heroic imply because the conditions in which e was brought up were favorable to eroism, and so hci'oism grew out of is soul, just as cabbages grow out of be soil when the soil contains the eds of cabbages. Goodness and badnes's, heroism and riminality, it is declared, do not re ide in us, but in our surroundings. Ve are mere p)assive lumps of clay, on hichi our surroundings stamp what ver is in thenm. W e are the slaves and ictimis of the conditions in the midst f which we are. When we fancy we 'e doing as we like, going our own ray, following our own wills, we are, a reality. merely obeying the priessure f circumstance.. We are under a rigidl iw of necessity all the time. EvenI hen we stand where two roads di erge. and think that we ourselves hoose io take the left hand or the ight hand road, it is not really we our elves who choose, but a number of ircmstances and conditions, working n us and through us. This doctrine, that we are creatures f circumstance and cannot help what c (10, is a misleading one. It tends to elf-deception. It makes us imagine urselves better than we are. When r do wrong. this doctrine offers he temptation to us to say: "It cas not my fault. It wvas the ault of my education and sur oundings."' And this will lead to-' ay. as it has always done in the past. o a general laxity with regard te 'rong doing-to a habit of thinking ightly of the exceediing sinfulness of This evil doctrine is tne mrore diffi nIt to combat because there is an eie rent of truthi in it. We ar moved id swvayed by circumstainces. Birth od educamtion do cxercise am poweful mr taken into consideramtion. Nev er hoess. the'y don't explainm everythng. -u ii;mtanc and (duIentin,1 ':i.l in vey tran~Saionl we hav the hi ord'. Ti:e proof of this is in our ally conduct. WXe cannot heclp blam m iflmin anmd praising them. nd are accosted by an individual in ;habby garments. You are touched by is tale of woe, and with your usual renerosity you give him an ample 1lms. Five minutes later (this inci lent is founded upon fact) in the crush >f a crowded corner,' you feel an un cronted hand busy at your pocket, and, turning round, discover in the would be thief the very man you have just helped. What do you think of this fellow? Do you feel toward him as if he were an invalid, a sick soul, a deluded vic tim of circumstance? On the contrary, you regard - and justly regard-the robust purloiner of Four pocketbook as an ungrateful coundrel, and, if you are a good citi ,en, you promptly and indignantly hand him over to the police. Sorrow rind pity you no doubt experience, but. mingled with sorrow and pity there Rill be righteous indignation. How ever many excuses your kind heart makes for him, you will still blame the man; for you will be convinced, however had his surroundings and his bringing up. being a man. he could have kept straight in spite of all, as many another has done. You know, in our soul, that, however great the ob stacles, being a man, he was still mas ter of himself. He might have chosen differently. He might have taken the right road instead of the wrong one. if Dly he had tried hard enough. You feel, after all is said and done, he was, in this matter, able to do as he liked. Consequently. he is responsible. There fore, we blame him. Take the opposite case, that of the hero. We have all read recently how the Japanese attempted to block the entrance to Port Arthur by sinking steamers in the channel. One of these vessels had reached the appointed spot Her anchor had been let go. The fuse attached to the charge which was tc blow a hole in her had been lighted. The officer in command ordered the crew into the lifeboat, he himself be ing the last to leave the ship. A mo ment lie stands on the gunwale. ready to cast loose. .He counts his men. One is missing. Shall they leave him' The officer has but an instant in whic: to make up his mind. There is an in ward struggle between the rival im pulses of duty and selfiregard. Thtor he climbs again upon the shot-swep1 (eck to seek his lost comrade. Alas it is in vain. The next moment he is killed by a Russian shell, and his crew push off, only just in time to save themselves. Why do we regard this man as a hero? Why was a public funeral held in his honor by his countrymen? Why do we praise him? Because we fee: the brave action was due to him, and to no thing and no one else. Because we feel that he stood where two ways diverged-the way of duty and the way of safety-and that he was master 01 the situation. He determined whicL road to take. Out of his own brave will. out of his own courageous soul, he chose the right way. The decision lay not with circumstances, conditions previous training, or ancestry, but with himself. We feel that he, and he alone, was responsible, and that there fore to him, and to him alone, belongs the credit and the praise. We cannot help blaming the crim inal, we cannot help praising the hero, but, If criminal and hero were simply the victims of circumstance, to do so would be meaningless. We havE no right to condemn the criminal if hE cannot help doing what he does. Ther< is no sense in honoring the hero if th< heroism is due to education or to sur. rounding conditions; that is. to some. thing other than the hero. Yet we d< condemn the one, and we do give oum homage to the other. We cannot heli ourselves. The praise and the blame we bestow arc involuntary acknowl edgment that, In spite of all the theo rie4s closet philosophers may spin there is an ineradicable conviction It the human heart that we are able, ir the last resort, to do as we like, and that as a consequence we are respon sible before God and man both for oum deeds and for our thouxghts. He GiveR Grac. "Bounteous Is Jehovah in His na. ture; to give is His delight. His giftu are beyond meAsure precious, and are as freely given as the light of the snn He gives grace to His elect because He wills it, to His redeemed because 01 His covenant, to the called because 01 His promise, to believers because they seek it, to sinners because they eed it. He gives grace abundantly seasonably, constantly, readily, sover eigly; doubly enhancing the value 01 the boon by the manner of His be stowal. Reader, how blessed it is, as the years roll round and the leave: begin again to fall, to enjoy such at unfading promise as. this: 'The Lorc will g;ive grace.' "-S3purgeonl. How to Win Souls tor Christ. Andrew teaches Christians still the first lesson in soul-winning: G~o fol your own brother. That is, try to brin; to Christ those whom you love, thos< nearest to you. It makes no differenc< whether the nearness is of blood or sympathy. You will succeed wherE you love. Christianity is to win the world b) tiiis process a lone-neighbor in fluene ng neighbor, friend influencing friend It i's like leaven. One part of yeas will permeate two thousand parts o: dough, b)ut only by changing the parti next to it, and so working its waa through the mass. The Worker's Re ward. An English drunkard said to a Salva tion Army lassie, who spoke to hin about his soul: "You must be wel paid for this. I sup)pose you expec as much as half a crown for gettini mec to sign the pledge." She replied "I'm beCtter paid than that. I e'xpcC to get a whole crown, and there'll hi strs in it besie. Night. ome. Night, upon thy raven wings, Plumed with their rich Imaginings. To fill my dreams and charm away The din. and clamor of the day. Fling thy deep shadow over me Till by thy weird necromancy Thou hast dissolved this solid care Andi made it shapeless with the air. Come with thy cup of dreams and be An angel ministering to me. As one who. weak from battling lies, Unconquered, but too worn to rise. The wa'rrior. Day, has harried me. A foemnan pitIless is he.c Yt vane'uished when. with pitying eye And palm of peace Thou comest nigh. Come with thy velvet darkness. Night, Th loak o. f maiil so soft and li t Fomf Car- as uals an airrow' spent Comn. Nirht. upeon thy~ rav'-in ms. Pl1m.n with thei rih mad _J .yI. in New Y'k ims Freak Turnip. A Saco. Me.. man found a freak tu: nip in his garden the other day. ] had fo:ir (distinct tops, vet it was on turip and was grov:n from a singi sed. It weighed szrvcn pounds an Knew How Freshman Felt. The inauguration of Dr. Luther\ to the presidency of Trinity college, Hart ford, which tool- place recently, sug gested an incident of a rainy day some years ago. A freshman was v:alk ing along in front of Northam hall, when the strap that held his books suddenly parted and they were scat tered over the wet pavement. He was just about to punctuate his thoughts with a few well-chosen words, when he heard some one just behind him. Catching himself, he glanced-over his shoulder and saw Prof. Luther, who smilingly said: "Say it: go on and say it-1 never can, you know."-New York Times. FITS nerma1ently cured. No fits or rervore ness after 9rst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nervenestore.,2trial bottieand treatise f ree Dr.R. H KLNE,.Ltd.. 931 Arch St..Phila.,Pa There are 12.520 boys and 4059 girls in the industrial schools of Great Britain. To Care a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on box. 25c. Ants are the most brainy of all creatures in proportion to size. Mrs. Winslow-s Soothing Syrup forchildren teething, soften the gums. reduces inflamma tion. allays pain. cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle The town of Charlott;nburg. near Bcr lin, has an open-air .sehool. Piso's Cure for ('onsumption is an infallib'e medicine for 'ou ghs and rolds.-N. W. SAnUEL. Ocean Grove. N. J.. Feb. 17, 1900. The sale of automobiles in Russia is growing rapidly. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Druggists will refund money it Pazo Ointment tails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50c. A piece of lancewood an inch square will stand a strain of 2000 pounds. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sod by all druggists, $l. Mail orders promptly tilied by Dr. E. Detchon, Craw;ordsville, Ind. There are 44,000 hotels in the United States. GRATEFUL TO CUTICURA For Instant Relief and Speedy Cure of Raw and Scaly Humor, Itching Day and Night-Snffered For Months. "I wish you would pub-ish this letter so that others' suffering as I have may be helped. For months awful sores covered my face and neck, scabs forming, itching terribly day and night. breaking open, and running h:ood and matter. 1 had tried many remedies, but was growing worse, when I started with Cuticura. The firs: application gave me instant relief, and when I had :sed two cakes of Cutieura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Oint ment. I was completely cured. (Signed) Miss Nellie Vander Wiele, Lakeside,N.Y. Reason and Its Lack. Cholly-"But-aw-why do you say you don't like my face?" Miss Pert-"Because." Cholly-Ah! but that's not a pr:ope, answer; there's no reaso:1 in that." Miss Pert--"Well, ther:s none il your face. either." -PhiladelphiaL Press, 'There Is more Catarrhx in this section of the country than all other diseases put together and uiI the last few years was supposed tc be iuctu-able. For a great matxy years doctorn pronon'ed N a local disease and prescribec local remedies, and b)y constantly failing tc cure with loc al treatment, pronounced it in, curable. Secience has proven eatarrh to be constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall'g Catarri Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co. Toldo, Ohio. is the only constitutional curt on the market. It is taken internally in dose from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts direct ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of th system. They offer one hundred dollars toi any case it fails to eure. Se3nd fc:- circular and testimonials. Address F. 4 CnE:;EY Z Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 750. Take Hall's Family Pills tor constipatioa DIdn't Need Monet. Dixon-"Hlow is your- artist frienm getting along in New YorkF' Tomson--Oh,. splendidly! Dixon--ave you heaird from himy Tomison---No; that's the reason know he's prospering."-Detroit Frel Press.. Taylor's'Cherokee Rlemedy of Sweet Gui and Mullen is Nature's great remedy-Cure Coughs. Cokis, Croup and Consumption,anf al throat and lung troubl"s. At druggists 25., 50c. and e1.00 per bottle. The church boss is likely to be th devil's hireling. is offered f< -labels. Besid< \ of wearing appa and quickly-and illustrated above. Luck Premium Bool make it'the mostwie have been sold (many< for a single factory in thi plan-to furnish the b. Good Luck is the best est, whitest, sweetest leavening force, to It is the most ecc any other baki Luck let us1 THE ! - n--~cUTTING OUT CoU Solid Car-load "GOODLUCKT CUT OUT THIS CAR AND GOOD FOR VALUABLE Al EACH CAN. Address: THC THE sOUTHE.RN M'NYFG c.Da'J IftNC TiTING U? PUPTNAM lr :a:ore r'ds brirater and 1aster colors than uIi. A.k de:.1er or we winl send ut: p'aid at ice : Women in o Appalling Increase in the Performed Each Ye Avoid Them. iss Rab Mu.shr5 Gcing through the hospitals in our large cities one is surprised to find such a large proportion of the patients lying on those snow-white beds women and girls, who are either awaiting or recovering from serious opera tions. Why should this be the case? Sim ply because they have neglected them selves. Ovarian and womb troubles are certainly on the increase among the women of this country-they creep upon them unawares, but every one of those patients in the hospital beds had plenty of v+arning in that bearing down feeling, pain at left or right of, the womb. nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back, leucorrhcea, diz ziness, flatulency, displacements of the womb or irregularities. All of these symptoms are indications of an un healthy condition of the ovaries or womb, and if not heeded the penalty hastobe paid by a dangerous operation. When these symptoms manifest them selves, do not drag along until you are obliged to go to the hospital anci sub mit to an operation-but remember. that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved thousands of women from surgical operations When women are troubled with ir regular, suppressed or painful menstru ation, weakness, leucorrheea, displace ment or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache. bloating (or flat ulency). general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration. or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, lassi tude, excitability, irritability, nervous Lydia E. Piskham's Ve*etabk Ca. LAZY LIVER "I Snd Casearets so good that I would not be without them. I was troubled a great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascarets Candy Cathartic I feel very much better I shall certainly recommend them to my frienda as the best medicine I have ever seen." Anna Basinet, Osborn Mill No.23, Fall Elver, Mam. I Best for . cANDY CATIWARIC Sterling Re:nedy Co., Chicago cr N.Y. 6oz ANNUAL SALEe TEN MILLION BOES iohn White & Co. LOUISVILLE, KY. - E stablished 1837 Eflbest market prke. FURS and Hides. ce"as. Field Seeds Coutry r echantS and farmners can save 10 to 2n per cent by writing the Nashville Produce CT. .2 svstietlTenn. for peia cas pies. south. write today NASHVILLE PRODUCE Co., J. J. ODIL, Manager. Your. Prei Your Choice of 6 Valuable Arliei the freight-car coupons on GoW1 Luck Bali sbeautiful pieces of jewelry, the list include! land handsome things for the house. You ou'll be surprised at their value. Five r full descriptiou and pictures of the whol< n each can. The positive purity, the i )D LUCI ychosen of all leavening agents. During irers coming in for car-load shipments), it world. This is only the inevitable result tbaking powder in the world at the lowee cause it is purest, because it produces the ofbaking. These results are due to its uneqi te fact that it contains no adulteration what mnical because it takes less to do the work ; powder. If your dealer doesn't sell 4 now, and we'll see that you are supplied at < UTHERN MFG. CO., Richmond, V 'HFOLLOW THIS UNEThsis& AKING POWDER coupon rount SVE IT. THEY ARE onead can. ~TCLES.5SEE LIST IN FADELE ay other dye. one 10c packAaPe co]ors silk, woo. and co ack. wr..e br fee banklt--Ho W to Dve, Bleach a: uzHospitals Number of Operations aar-iow Women May --. Sed Sey46 ness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all gone "and "want-to-be-left-alone" feel ings. they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. The foLowing letters cannot fail to bring hope to despairing women. Mrs. Fred Seydel, 412 N. 54th Street, West Philadelphia, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "I was in a veiyserious condition when I wrote to you for advice. I had aserious womb and ovarian trouble and I could not carry a child to maturity, and was advised that an operation was my only hope of rcoverp I could not bear to think of going to the hosp tal, so wrote you for advice. I did as you in structed me and took Lydia E. Pinkam' Vegetable Compound; and I am not only a well woman to-day, but have a beautiful baby girl six months old. I advise all sick and suffering women to write you for advice, as you have done so much for me." Miss Ruby Mushrush. of East Chicago, Ind., writes: Dear Mrs Pinkham: "I have be a great sufferer with rqul menstruation and ovarian trouble, atdat r three months ago the doctor, after usingthe X-Ray on me, said I had an abcess on the ovaries and would have to have anoperation. My mother wanted me to try Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound as a last resort, and it not only saved me from an operation but made me entfrely well." Lydia E. P.nkham's Vegetable Com pou~nd at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice and medicine have restored thousands to health. Address, Lynn. Mass. s.- Succees Wh er hs Fre 10 000 Plants fr66. arrden. nd ars aen oat daiser's seds thaa ay &the ia AmeiS 1'hsrear,og*bs emeof ou warran. seaee" o aorse soa ryt.w en.tbd oftowes IOd. s.s..I..i....e 'Jos a.8MZERss F-B90 See..ni.. crease,we.5 Gantt's Pl ntrsan Dtributor Wrt o rIcesas and taloe. GANTT nFG. C.4, Wicn,Ga Best n E o. 6. ~iangPwde Pantran Jisib or WEtractive artTclM. can t get th e andy ou of ctedeim r rfet weolesomsns Eyofte nPo ca r atrchie argestbsns of the preiuna God e c it ee-I thents oud. ledfc -lsmeeso hisyarn 64,1 lofteoid odLc B..