University of South Carolina Libraries
? THE MODERN FARMER. w He Lives as Compared With Fifty ! Years Ajjo. HE fanning iifp of to-day. as p contrasted with that of fifty years ago, is a paradise of comfort and convenience. The 6|ly loghouse. remote from market i\devoid of advantages that a half ;I<? of time has made possible, would ireely appeal to the preseut day mer. ?he twentieth century soil tiller has ictlcally all the modern comforts, s mail is delivered daily. He has fpuomc connecuou wmi uae uuymy selling world, affording the !>est ortunlties for marketing to adv-;n;e. His home is of recent archi.oce, constructed of wood, brick or ne, and well furnished. He has lern plumbing and modern heating, i with the advent of acetylene gas, has modern lighting. At night his ne is as attractively illuminated as it of his city brother, for it is a sug|tive fact that "acetylene for counkomes" has so appealed to the farmthat of the SO.OOO users of acetye gas in the United States the farmis one of the largest of all classes, er seeking the best, he has not hesied in availing himself of this new lit. 'he continued growth and progress this great country, ever a cause of nderment, has no greater exempliition than evolution on the farm, ieady the farmer is becoming the t- envied of men?the freest, the thtesf, the happiest! The Sensatiou Jq Her Kdmi> Irma was riding wltii her father. ey reachtb" just in i uc orouijut home from CaK^ ,_o. doctors out they did himji^^JJa,n ?htened to hear th? telling about it she Aly knees were just dizzy when^^ over that track."?Little Chronicle. nit Discrimination in Railway Rates. 1 railroad men qualified to speak I Whe subject in a responsible way i jiikely to agree with President SaniMSpencer, of the Southern Railway, An he says: "There is no division of Kion as to the desirability of stops' all secret or unjustly discriminav devices and practices of whatso r character." r. Spencer, in speaking of "unjustliscriininatory" rates and devices, :es a distinction which is at once arent to common sense. There may discrimination in freight rates Ich is just, reasonable and impera?ly required by the complex comrcial and geographical conditions h which expert rate makers have to I. To abolish such open and honest rimination might paralyze the intries of cities. States and whole secis of our national territory, his distinction between just and iust discrimination is clearly recoged in the conclusions of the Iuterional Railway Congress, published terday: Tariffs*- should be based on commercial iciples, taking into account the special ditions u?hieh bear upon the commercial it of the services rendered. With the >rvation that rates shall be charged witharbitrary discrimination to all shippers e under like conditions, the makiug of >s should as tar as possible have all the ticity necessary to permit the developKr nf thA trftfflp find tr> nrnriii/*#* t.hfi crp?t. results to the public and to the railroads nselves." lie present proposal is, as Mr. WalkD. Hines, of Louisville, showed in remarkable testimony the other ' before the Senate Committee at sbington, to crystalize flexible and tly discriminatory rates Into fixed rernment rates which cannot be uged exwpt by tlie intervention of le Government tribunal, and by this y process to increase "the tempta1 to depart from tlie published rate 1 tbe lawful rate iu order to meet le overpowering and urgent couircial condition."?New York Sun. The State of tbe Ltd. he President bad just returned from Western outing and removed Sec Ery rait iroin tne nu, wnere ne pui when he went away. Well, Mr. Secretary," a visitor re rked cheerfully, but yet sympa tically, "how do you feel?" Oh, I am all right," he responded iE optimistic manner, "but it was gh on the lid." ^serving that Mr. Taft's avoirdus was near the 350 mark, the callei lized the full weight of his anxiety ew York Pres*s. Freparwlneu. egin the morning by saying to thy L shall meet the busybody, th rrateful, arrogant, deceitful, envious Yunsocial, but 1. who have seen th<> ure of the good, that it is beautiful, i that of the bad, that it is ugly, be injured by none of them.?MarAurelius. $ e tlie Packers Receiving Fair Pl?yt rhen tbe Garfield report on tbe iness methods of the packers apred, after eight months' investigai, it was severely criticised and ndly denounced. After three months jublicity it is significant that those ) attempted to discredit it have ed to controvert the figures conled in that exhaustive document. i public is beginning to notice this ssion, and the feeling is rapidly wing that the sensational charges of which the "Beef Investigation" se were without foundation. If the !ial statements of the report are ^eptible of contradiction, a good iy people are now asking why the s and figures are not furnished to radict them. ie truth seems to be that most of chffrges contain unfounded sensaal assertions. A flagrant example his appeared in a recent article in eastern magazine, to the effect that ty Iowa banks were forced to close r doors in 1903-4 by the Beef st's manipulation of cattle prices." ?f Clerk Cos, of the banking dement of the Iowa State Auditor's e, has tabulated the list of banks n in the magazine article and has lcly denounced the statement as rly untrue. He gives separately reasons for each failure mentioned officially states that they have caused by unwise speculations and eckless banking methods. It may veil to suspend judgment upon the :ers until the charges agsinst them proved. New York City.?Nothing that^H. season has developed has mel^Hm greater enthusiasm than jud^Prach fancy waists as this one madd^pskele ton style. I a the illustration It combines a blouse or guimpe of lace "with lawn sleeves and a skeleton waist . of pale green crepe messaline which matches the skirt and is trimmed with yruches of the material held by velvet but its possibilities are many. V^HRvfancy waist and half sleeves all ^P^chiffon" silks and wools are desirable. while for summer wear there are many lovely cotton materials, ana the under blouse can correctly be made from all-over embroidery in lingerie style or from muslin embroidered by hand as well as of lace. The blouse is made in guimpe style with sleeves that consist of deep cuffs with full portions above and which A Late Design b > ' can be made over Qtted foundations or left unlined as liked. The fancy or skeleton -waist is* made with front and s back portions, V-teh are pleated at the ^ shoulder, aad the half sleeves, and is i held at-front and back by ornamental t straps. As illustrated the two are sep- ( arate, {he guimpe being easily cleansed, f but they can be joined and made to 1 form one waist if preferred. The quantity of material required for ? the medium size is four yards twenty- f one, three yards twenty-seven or two i yards forty-four inches wide with two < and a half yards thirty-six inches wide j and one and three-quarter yards of all- < over lace for guiinpe and two and a i half yards of velvet ribbon to make as j illustrated. 1 Peasant TVuist and Skirt, ^ Similar to the bretelle gown fi the peasant waist and skirt. The ?fc5rt is made simply and is always w'de and full. The waist is a low necked rcrsd bodice, with straps over the shonl&ers. This is a very pretty model 'or a young girl. Purple and white foulard combined with purple velvet made a charming gown worn by an extremely blond young woman. The skirt was box pleateu and slurred alternately all around, and hung quite full from the waist. Matching the Costume. The fashion of matching every part of one's costume is being carried to the extreme limit this season. The hat must match more exactly than ever, and many women buy white straw braid and have it dyed to the desired tone. Milliners will have the straw dyed for their customers if de- t sired. Crin and horsehair braids are c easy to color, but some of the straws ? are very difficult, hence expensive. i Tailor Ktd? Garments. Concerning the styles in tailor mad< garments which are favored in the British metropolis, a British fashion magazine declares that "lovely greens dark blues, golden browns, and burnl reds are the prevailing colors," which follow out the game feather effect! that have already been so successful in heavier tweeds, and now, linked as they are with lightweight thin cloth^ will reign with supreme elegance. Her Parasol. One maiden witk an old white parasol has achieved a charming accessory, Last year the sunshade did duty with white gowns. A sligty; tear at the edge rendered it hors de combat. This neat? ly mended, its pretty owner applied a four inch border of white ribbon with narrow black edges and a figure of pink roses through the centre. This makes it very charming with her new piuk patterned white organdie. Summer Fabrics. Among all the variety and bloom In summer fabrics, there are to be found soft gray, black and white, violet and mauve tones for those of conservative taste. These shades, relieved by the soft flow of frilling and draping laces, are charming and modishJy smart, and are to be found In all the most fashionable textures. China and India silks are as much in vogue as taffeta, pongee and foulard. The Gnltnpe Important. There never was a time when the guimpe played such an important part in the fashions, although in old fashion plates of the fifties one sees Innumerable examples practically iden? tiCfll witn toe preseui y May Manton. W"' Shirt Walit Sleeve*. There is no feature of a waist that :o marks its date as its sleeve and non? ivhich is so important. Here are two rery excellent models, which will serve o make any waist of last season up:o-date and which also can be utilized 'or new material, being among the atest and best that are shown. No. 1 is laid in inverted tucks which ire stitched to give a box pleated ef'ect, while No. 2 is tucked and stitched lat. Both are gathered at the upper ?dges, supplying the generous fulness it the shoulder, which is so essential :o present styles. Linen and all washible materials, silks and wools, and n fact every known fabric that is used for waists are suited to the design. The quantity of material required for the medium size for either model is :wo and three-eight yards twenty-one, me and three-quarter twenty-seven or seven-eighth yards forty-four inches' ivide. J THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. JOHN C. AGAR. Subjcct: The First Temptation. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Sunday morning, in the Cliurcli of the New Jerusalem (Swedenborgian), lae pffstor, the Rev. John C. Ager, preached on "The First Temptation." The xext was from Matthew iv:l-4: "Then was Jesus led up into the desert by 'he spirit, to be tempted by the tlevil. And having fasted forty days and forty nights, He after that waa hungry. And the tempter came to Him and said, If thou art the Son of God speak, in order that these stones may become loaves. But He answering said, It has been writx 1 1 A 1 oVi?11 o IKXi, 1>UL uy ureau UlUUC suuii a. uiau live, but by every word that goeth forth from the mouth of God." Mr. Ager said: The gospel d:- Matthew describes specifically thre? temptations of the Lord In the wilderness immediacy after His baptism. The form of the narrative suggests at once tbat these stories are not history, but are parables, which picture the three general ways in which fallen humanity is approached and enticed i / infernal influences. And when so understood they become in tho fullest sense a revelation of divine truth to men. And so understood they .suggest at once that there is some sort of threefoidness in our spiritual experiences. And when we examine our spiritual experiences carefully we are able to distinguish in our inner life three distinct planes of thought and feelirg. The arst or lower of these three planes of life we are all familiar with., It includes all thoughts and feelings, all motives and impulses and appetites that have reference exclusively to our life in this world. This we call the natural man. Distinctly above this lies what we call ordinarily the religious life. Its thoughts and feelings and motives have primary reference to those interests that outlive our life in this world. Its largest and dominant factors are faith, conviction and duty. Faith and conviction are beliefs, though beliefs bave been touched and quickened by religious emotion. Duty is the conduct that belief or faith or conviction Imposes; that is, the dominion of truth over the lower impulses and appetites. Consequently this realm of the life is predominantly intellectual. Its dominant impulse is love of truth and loyalty to truth. It lies distinctly above the natural man and is cabled the spiritual man. These two realms of thought, feeling and action we can easily distinguish. They make up the twofold life of every man who is honestly trying to live a true life in the world. But they evidently do not include the highest spiritual possibilities of human life. There 1* another realm of life clearly set before us in the divine word, although few Christians know practically mbch about it. It is, in fact, the essence of all religious life. It is the life that is defined and enjoined in the two great commandments, to love the Lord our God with all our heart and soul and mind and strength, and to love onr neighbor as ourselves. This means that the essence of the heavenly life is love and whenever that gains possession of us, faith, conviction and duty will all be swallowed up in love. We shall see with the eyes of love and act always from the impulse of love. Love going upward to God and outward to man will be the sole motive power of the life. This is the highest state of man, the highest attainment of human nature, and may very properly be termed distinctively the heavenly or celestial life. There are, then, three distinct regions of life in us. The complete man is a three-storied being. Consequently there must be a corresponding threefoldness in all our spiritual experiences. And it Is this distinction that is pictured in these three typical temptations of our Lord. The first is a type of the temptations that belong to the lower or natural degree of the mind, the second to spiritual and the third to the celestial or heavenly. The first temptation is pictured as an aDDeal to a Dhvsical aDDetite. After the forty -days and nights of faetlng Jesus was hungry and there was nothing to satisfy His hunger, and it is suggested by the tempter that He convert into loaves of bread some of the stones that covered the ground. This physical picture has very evl? flently a spiritual meaning, which deals, not with the mere body and its cravings, but with the essential man and his cravings and requirements. It deals with the most universal fact of human nature, v hlch is hunger. From the merely material activities of his physical body up to the highest activity of his spiritual nature man is, in n sense, a mere bundle of hungers. And this is true because he is merely a recipient; and every minutest vesiale of both body and soul is a mouth clamoring to be fed. But it is only a small part of this universal hunger that we are conscious of. As in the body some of the more general organs make us conscious of their needs when they are not supplied, while the needs of the numberless smaller organs and vesicles are met by physical processes that we are wholly unconscious of, so of the universaPhunger ot the spirit only a small part ever falls within our consciousness. And this is so bocause the Lord requires of us only so much as He must require of us to make us Images and likenesses of Fimself. To be that it is necessary that we should contribute to our life a certain measure of activity and effort and co-operation and reciprocation. And to secure that, some of the more external hungers of the body and of the mind appeal to us strongly enough to prompt us to such action as is necessary to satisfy them. But in our present condition all the hungers of our natural life are more or less perverted hungers, which seek for perverted and unhealthy satisfactions. And this we begin to recognize as soon as we begin to see what the true life 9f man is. The first evils the truth reveals to us are the indulgences of wrong appetites, and passions, and cravings, and the first task the truth Imposes on us is to refuse to these wrong hungers or cravings the satisfaction they demand. This repudiation of these cravings we should find a hard task to begin with if we were not helped in it by a counteracting hunger. Am<Jng the sweetest of the satisfactions in life is tho annrnvnl nf tlinco wlinsp nnnrnr.il we prize. And our strong hunger for this approval makes it easy for us to discard reprehensible indulgences and pleasures. This is, of course, a purely selfish aim. and yet any aim or effort, even so dubious a one as this, to see what is evil in our life and to put it away, opens the mind to more and higher truth, which brings all things into clearer light, and this higher truth makes clear to us that disreputable evils are not the only evils we have to deal with, that there are many practices that are approved of and freeiy indulged in by ine world about us that * are sins we no longer tolerate, so our clarified conscience now demands that our life shall be purged of these conventional and reputable evils. .And in this task we are not helped by the approval of public opinion. But there is another selfish satisfaction that does help us. It is the sweet satisfaction oil feeling that we are good and are deserving of all the happiness the Lord has in store for all who are good. This feeling takes many forms in the mind, but in general it is the fueling that we are as virtuous as most of those we know and far more virtuous and kindly and self-denying than very lliany whom we know. This is the sweetest satisfaction our merely natural life is capable of and in many wonderful ways it holds us up to the work of repressing external evils and discarding all lower satisfactions. So, when the hunger for a better life has been thus far quickened in us, this is the way in which we are always tempted to satisfy it. It 1? described here as a temptation to make the stones of the desert into bread. The stones ol* the desert are the aspect that spiritual truth takes on when it is apprehended by the natural mind or the self-life. This is the aspect that spiritual truth takes on in the letter of the word, which is truth adapted to the lowest spiritual needs of men. There reward and punishment are presented as the motives for refraining from evil and doing right. It is an appeal to what is called enlightened selfishness. This aspect of the truth is necessary to start us on the way toward the heavenly life. But to convert these stones into bread is to be permanently satisfied with these purely selfish aspects of truth and with this selfish stage of right living, this doing right and refraining from wrong doing for the sake of the approval of others, and for the sake of the self-satisfaction it affords. To stop at this point, to be content with this attainment, which is a temptation that confronts, us all again and again, is to appropriate to ourselves the letter that killeth and to shut our eyes to the 6pirit that maketh alive. For it is making the letter of the food into bread in this way that makes it destructive of spiritual life. The Lord's answer to the tempter teaches us how we must meet this temptation. This answer is quoted from His words of warning to the children of Israel when they had just passed through their forty years of trial in the wilderness. To them He said, "Thou shalt remember all the ways which the Lord thy God hath led thee these forty years in the desert. * * * And He suffered ttiee to hunger and fed thee with manna, which thnn knewpst not: neither did thv fath era know that He might make thee know that man doth not live by bread only, bnt by every word that proceeded out of the mouth of the Lord doth man live." These words, now quoted in part by the Lord as His reply to the tempter, contain the truth by which tills temptation must always be met. The temptation is to permit ourselves to rest in the sense of our own goodness and to; go on multiplying our good works of all kinds and refraining from all out-; ward evils, that we may multiply our spiritual riches and increase and deepen our self satisfaction. i This Js the besetting temptation in the religious life of our time. As the old falsity of faith alone has,faded out of religious belief, this more subtle and attractive; falsity has taken its place. Goodness is everywhere being made the test and measure of religious cbar. acter with very little regard fox the quality of the goodness. To this temptation the divine answer is: "Not by bread alone shall man live.'' Man fan no more live by charity or goot works alone, which are symbolize! by bread than he can live by faitb alone. What man must live by is everyj word that goeth forth from the mouth of God. We live by getting ouf life into its true relation to the divine life; And that cannot be done by recognising this or that particular aspect of truth and trying to live by that. It can be done only by an earnest and persistent effort to shape all our thinking and all our willing and all our doing by every word that goeth forth from the mouth of God. Loved Them Into the Kingdom. One of the greatest soul winners we ever had in Chicago was Colonel Clark, who spent: all the income that he made ?which was a very large one?in rescuing the perishing and fallen. He would go down to his mission every] night in the year, preaching as best hd could. "I thought he was a rather poor preacher, yet those men would flock to hear him," said Dr. Torrey recently in Liverpool. "He was always saying the same thing over and over again, and he did not say it in a very interesting way; and yet that great crowd would come night after night. Why did they come? Because they knewi Colonel Clark loved them. He had more power with them than all the preachers in the city. He used to just stand right up there with the tears running down his cheeks, as he pleaded with those drunkards, thieves, and abandoned men and women. ; "Well, after a while he got a bit ashamed of his tears, and so he said: 'I must not be so chicken-hearted. I must try to keep off crying.' He succeeded. Our hearts <tre hard enough, and after a while he shed no tears. But he got no converts, and he saw he was winning no souls, and he went alone with God, and said: 'Oh God, give me back my tears,' and God gave him His tears, and be won souls for Christ." The Discouraged Alan. Discouragement cuts the nerve of present effort and darkens the sky of hope for better things. The evangelist who coined the phrase, "God cannot use a discouraged man," was a wise preacher; he might also have said that the world has no use for a discouraged man. Booker T. Washington, in his "Up From Slavery," gives the keynote of his own success in the following sensible words: "I do not recall that I ever became discouraged over anything that I set out to accomplish. I have begun everything with the idea that I could succeed, and I never had much patience with the multitudes of people who are always ready to explain why one cannot succeed." Such a spirit will carry one through every difficulty, and over every obstacle. Speaking of a young mftn who was to come, an old prophet said: "He shall not fail or be discouraged." The reason he did not fail was because he refused to be dis ?J /Innrrono l "H <1n I couragea. xutr um uusoi-in, ?, ? not be discouraged," had a big message even though it was wretched poetry cod worse music. The sky is ever dark to him who keeps his eyes on the ground!?Service. Marching Orderg. The Duke of Wellington called the "Go ye into all the word and preach the Gospel," the Christian's "marching orders." The old soldier saw clearly that the command of the Commanderin-Chief was to His followers to engage in the work of recruiting. The obligation to win men to Christ is the immediate and imperative duty of every Christian. It is his first business in the world. German Army Chances Color. The authorities of the German Atmy have decided to alter the color of the u military uniform. The dark blue color e; is to bo discarded as unfit for service c in the field, and a c-loudy gray shade a has been choscR. , Three battalions of C the German Army are already supplied 11 with the now* uniforms. In shape the tl trousers are to remain as before, and h the caps and helmets will not be tl changed. The tunic, however, is to tl be looser in the waist.?London Stand- tl ard. a Automobile Artillery. The Portuguese have adopted auto- c mobile traction for a new battery, of g four quick-firing howitzers of the Sehneider-Canet system of 150 milll- w meters. They were made at the Creu- C sot Works,- France, and the motor i? ? designed to draw all the four one be- L bind the other, a load, that is to say, tl of about fourteen tons, at a speed of ^ at least five and a half kilometers an hour for all slopes. The automobile J besides carries five tons of munitions, 1 etc., and the artillerymen, except four, who will sit on the guns. The motor f, will also draw the guns by cable up i; hills of a gradient of twelve per cent, as shown by the practice in recent English maneuvres? London Globe. -"Backache, Both Symptoms of Orj Women?Thousands of How often do we hear women say: "It I eems as though my back would break," or "Don't speak to me, I am all out of f sorts?" These significant remarks prove r that the systemrequires attention. e Backache and " the blues" are direct g symptoms of an inward trouble which 1; will sooner or later declare itself. It c may be caused by diseased kidneys or some uterine derangement. Nature r requires assistance and at once, and t Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- r pound instantly asserts its curative \ powers in all those peculiar ailments of f wom?n. It has been the standby of j intelligent American women for twenty t years, and the ablest specialists agree 8 that it is the morft universally success- j iul remedy for woman's ills known .to \ medicine. _ a The . following letters from Mrs. i Holmes, and Mrs. Cotrely are among t the many thousands which Mrs. Pink- t ham has received this year from those h whom she has relieved. B Surely such testjpaony is convincing. Mrs. J.G. Holmes, of L&rimore, North r Dakota, writes: ? Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? t " I have suffered everything with backache t ana womD trouDie?x iet utt irouoie nm on until my system was in ruch a condition that I was unable to be about, and then it wag I commenced to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If I had only known how much suffering I would hay* saved, I should * have taken it months sooner?for a few t weeks' treatment made me well and strong, s My backaches and headaches are all gone and h I suffer no pain at my menstrual periods, a whereas before I took Lydia E. Pinkham's e Vegetable Compound I suffered intense pain." j Mrs. Emma Cotrely, 109 East 12th t Street, New York City, writes: s Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Adfice-A Woman I Say Plainly to That you -want LION CC being a square man, will n +ViJ?-. rr flloo Vrtii mn/c nnf r What About the United of housekeepers who have for over a quarter of Is there any stronger pro 1 ib. i Lion-head on ev Save these Lion-heads fo ISOLD BY GROCERS *oThe street tramways of the City of Mexico, which began only a few years ago as a few independent mule lines, now form one electric system with modern equipment. MOTHER GRAY'S ; SWEET POWDERS t FOR CHILDREN, A. Certain Oar* (or Feverl*hlie??, Constipation, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething pisorieri, and Destroy , Mother Grar. Worna. Thay Break up Colda i Nursoin Child- in 34 hour. At 41 ran'* Horn*. Sample*ddr*"fl v-v^rifr A. S. OLMSTED. LtRoy, N T. ' i|SP?iRts^^rits? jkJ Best Coach Ujrnip. Taates Good, uh Sr^ifThomgson's Eye Water \ i " . -5 * Sticking to the Suspect. "A woman ran screaming out of an pstairs apartment on Main street and ailed au officer. 'Come quick.' she ried; 'a burglar has entered our ouse and is murdering my husband. Hi, hurry, and save my husband's fe.' The officer pointed ahead. 'See liat man with his cheek puffed outV* & said. 'I've ,boen following him tiree blocks. He is about to spit on be sidewalk. I shall not abandon lie chase at this time.' "?Ottawa Herld. / Cologne has perhaps the best electric ab system in Europe. tateof Ohio, City of Toledo, I Lucas County. j * Fbane J. Chekey make oath that he li inlor partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney?. o., doing business In the City of Toledo, ounty and State aforesaid, and that said rm will pay the sum of oxe hundbed dolabs for each and every case of catabbh iat cannot be cured by the us* of Hall's Atabbh Cure. ' Fbauk J. Cheney. a worn to before me and subscribed In my , ? ?, presence, this 6th day of Decern SEAL. > Der, A. L)., 1800. A. n. UUSAUOII, 1 ?' ' Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken i nternaily, aad ctsdlrectly oil the blood and macoos suricesof the system. Send for testimonials, ree. . F. J. Chesxy ?k Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take HaL's Family Pills for constipation. Some men lose flesh just by shaving. The Blues'* ? _____ ionic Derangement in Sufferers Find Relief. )ear Mn. Pinkbam:? " I feel it eqv duty to tell all suffering women >f the relief I have found in LytlyK. Pink* tarn's Vegetable Compound. When I comaenced taking the Compound I Buffered v?ry thing with backaches, headaches, mentrual ana ovarian troubles. I am completers cured and enjoy the best of health, and I iweitallto yoa." When women are tronbled with irregllar, suppressed or painful menstruaion, weakness, leucorrhaea, displacenent or ulceration of the womb, that waring down feeling, inflammation of he ovaries, backache, bloating (or lattilence), general debility, inaigeaion and nervous prostration, or axe be* et with such symptoms as dizzinetia, aintness, lassitude, excitability, irrita>ility, nervousness, sleeplessnesa, mol.ncholy, "all gone" and "want-to-beeft-alone" feelings, blues and hopelesstesa, they should remember there is one ried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pinkitm's Vegetable Compound at once re* aovessuch troubles. No other medicine in the world ha? ? eceived such widespread and unqual LCU cuuurocmcuti AlW V? -* mvmv^v ias such a record of cures of female roubles. Refuse to buy any substitute. FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN. Remember, every woman is cordially nvited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if here ia anything about her symptom* he does not understand. Mrs. Pinklam'a address is Lynn, Mass., her .dvice is free and cheerfully given to very ailing woman who asks for it* ler advice and medicine have restored 0 health more than one hundred thouand women. 1 Best Understands a Woman's KUs, Your Grocer ; i )FFEE always, and he, ot try to sell you anyjare for our opinion, but Judgment of Millions | used LION COFFEE a century ? of of merit, than the onlidence of the People :ver Increasing popularity ? COFFEE Is carefully sell at tbe plantation, shipped t to our various factories, e it is skillfully roasted and ully packed In sealed pack-unlike loose coffee, which posed to germs, dust, in, etc. LION COFFEE reaches is pure and clean as when I t the factory. Sold only in I lackajcs. I ery jmcnnge. ir valuable premiums. > EVERYWHERE OLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. loll "I have been using Casearetr for Injomnla, with hlch I hare been afflicted for over twenty year*, nd I can sav that Cascarets hare piven me more ellef than any other remedy I havo ever tried. 1 ball certainly recommend them to my friends u elngaUthey are represented." Tbot. Glllard, Elfin, LU. The 5owels ^ taocoicto CANDY CATHARTIC Pleatan*. Palatable, Potent, Taite Good. Do Good, erer Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 2Jc, 50c. Never 3ld In balk. The genuine tablet stamped CCC. oarauteed to cur* or your sooner back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 597 NNUALSALEiTEN MILLIONBOXES IIIMM