The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, March 04, 1908, Image 3

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r New York City.?The over blouses that give a guimpe effect are in the height of style, and this one is sus ceptible of great variation, while it is both novel and chic. In the illustra tion louisine silk is piped with velvet and worn over a guimpe of thin lace, but for the blouse itself everything seasonable is appropriate, while the guimpe can be made of lace, embroid ery or of the still simpler lingerie material or of chiffon as liked. It is jntirely separate from the blouse and consequently it can be varied as often as may be liked, so that really with rery little labor the one blouse can be made to take on two or three quite lifferent shapes. Again, the model Is just as well suited to the odd waist is to the entire gown and conse juently is an exceedingly valuable icquisition to the possibilities of the wardrobe. In this case the guimpe is made wmi tne new long sieeves, but it can be made quite sleeveless, and those of the blouse only worn if liked. The blouse is made with fronts and back, which are tucked on becoming lines, and to which the pretty three quarter sleeves are attached. These eleeves are finished with oddly shaped cuffs and to the lower edge of the blouse is joined a basque portion, which keeps it perfectly in place. The guimpe is made with front and backs and plain fitted sleeves that are made with upper and under portions. It is closed invisibly at the back and the neck is finished with one of the new stock collars that rounds up back of the ears. The quantity of material required lor the medium size is three and a half yards twenty-one or twenty-four, three yards thirty-two or one and seven-eighth yards forty-four inches wide; for the guimpe two and five eighth yards twenty-one, two and three-eighth yards twenty-four or one and five-eiehth yards thirty-six Inches wide with one and three eighth yards of all-over lace if the long sleeves are used, seven-eighth yard for the short sleeves. Dressy Wraps. Artistic effects are rife in the dressy wraps of kid-finished cloth, supple velvet and handsome furs made on the ecclesiastical lines of the Bchasuble, says The Delineator. The stole-like fronts and flat back are en riched with embroidered bands, and the open spaces under the r.rms are filled with wonderful lace over chif fon, with embroidered filet, or with elaborate lace work built up of braids, or of taffeta covered cords, underlaid with satin veiled in chif fon. Belt Worn Straight. Belts are worn straight around the waist. ( A Silk Waist Hint. If a silk waist is laid away without taking out the shields, the rubber will cause the silk to crack in a short time. Sleeve Smartness. Sleeves have undergone several changes. The very newest model id the draped sleeve. This is arranged In horizontal folds to the elbow. Like the majority of tbe newest tailor made sleeves, it is cut in one with the bodice. The Prettiest Dresses. The prettiest afternoon and even ing dresses seen this season are those of mousseline, trimmed with cloth. Banded at the bottom and trimmed lightly at the corsage, the effect is the best, and it should be dyed tc match the others. Such a gown is not perishable, and may be worn by women of almost any age. in DiacK it is wonderfully striking. Shirt Waist or Blouse. Every fresh variation of the shirt waist meets its welcome. Here is one, that while it is made in tailored style, departs somewhat from the regulation model and is exceedingly chic and smart. In the illustration it is made of white linen and the lit tle chemisette is of the material tucked, while the band is of the same trimmed with pearl buttons, but there are a great many possibilities in the design, simple as it is. It can be made of washable material and left unlined. or it can be made of silk or of wool and used with or without the lining as liked, while the little chemisette can be of embroidery in place of the tucking, or can be treated in any way that may be liked. Again the plain front affords exceptional op portunity for embroidery and can be elaborated in a variety of ways. The waist is made with the fitted lining, which can be used or omitted as liked, the centre front, the tucked side fronts and the backs. The chem isette portion is applied over the plain front and if liked the material beneath can be cut away. A collar finishes the neck and there are regu laps and straight cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and a half yards twenty-four, three and an eighth yards thirty-two or two and an eighth yards forty-four inches wide, with a quarter yard of tucking for the chemisette. \ 1HE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY : HP T H. WHITE. Subject: Preparing to Receive Bless- '3 ing. London.?A' very practical address was given at the opening of Keswick { Convention. The sermon preached , by Dr. T. H. White befitted so pre- j paratory a gathering. Attention was { directed to Lulce 22:11: "The Mas- ( ter saith, Where is the guest cham- ? ber, that I may eat the passover with i ? ? -1 +Vi*n r\ft poo rrn ? XVIy Ul&UljJltfS a 11U Willi LZJio i | was coupled Rev. 3:20: "Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If any man hear My voice and open the door, I will come in and sup with him, and he with Me." Our Lord was looking for the guest chamber, and is seeking for it. Will He find it in each of our hearts? The word translated "guest cham ber" also occurs in the story of the nativity, Luke 2:7: "And she brought forth her first born son, and wrapped Him in swaddling clothes, and laid Him in a manger, for there was no room for Him in the inn." If your heart is only as an inn, Christ is seeking to make it a guest cham ber, where He will be the Guest. He will only make your heart and mind the guest chamber on one condition I ?He must be the only Guest, and | must have the preparation of the chamber in His own hands. A remarkable word appears in Prov. 4:23: "Keep thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the is sues of life." The heart of man is mentioned nearly nine hundred times in God's Booh, and chiefly in three connections. First we have Gen. 6:5: "God saw that the wickedness of man wad great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thought of his heart was only evil continually." In the New Testament the same thought occurs: "Mary kept all these things and pondered them in her heart." (Luke 2:19.) In both these passages we have one fact emohasized?the heart in connection with the intellect of man. Turn to Deut. 6:5: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, with all thy soul, and with all thy might;" and to 1 Pet. 1:22: "Love one another with a pure heart fervently"?the heart in connection with the affections. Look at Dan. 1: S: "But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile him self with the king's meat;" also Acts 11:23: "That with purpose of heart they would cleave unto the Lord"? the heart in connection with the will. It is plain, therefore, that by "the ^ heart of man" we mean the place [ I TOhoro Me fntplier.t- affections and , will are focuteed; the centre of the [ Intellectual, loving, purposeful self g In every one. If we want a picture D of what we are naturally, we have i it here: "The heart is deceitful . above all things, and desperately i wicked;" and "out of the heart pro- j ceed evil thoughts," etc. Yet what- , ever the condition of every heart, ' Christ is seeking to make it His guest > chamber. v Are we willing to allow Him to do ; this? Have we responded to the in vitation: "My son, give Me thine . heart"?the heart looked at from f the three standpoints we have no- [, ticed? Have we surrendered our 1 thinking, loving and purposing pow- , ers to Him? I It may be that som? one has come ' to Keswick with the desire to know j what is taught here, because you have an idea that it doe3 not fit in with your theological position. God wants your intellect. Are you willing to give Him your speculations, your J criticisms of His word and His mes- > sengers? Are you willing to make a a# fV?n Deolmiof V nil T* 2 I Lilt; UUillC&DlUll U1 IUW ! 0MI4U1WV .r ~ v- . own: "Lord, my heart is not lifted i up, nor mine eyes lofty; neither do I [ exercise myself in great matters or j t in things too high for me?" ( Shall we not begin this convention , right with God by yielding our hearts f that He may cleanse the chamber I ? and make it fit for Him to dwell in? I p Our intellects, affections and wills j ti given to Him, the lower we get be- | jj i fore Him the deeper will be our : | union and communion with Him. I , ^Are we willing to do His will? If j j 'not are we willing to be made will- | I ' Running through the life of every child of God are two great forces? J Divine will and human will. So long J as they are side by side, all is well: j F but ofttimes your will and the will of ] the Master cross, and then there is a j ? stop, and this ig where you find it ) necessary to die to self. The Chris- ' > tian life means the intellect, rffec- { * tions and will made over absolutely 1 to the Master, that He may do what t seemeth Him good. 8 And what will He do? He will S take full possession of the guest to chamber, turning the searchlight of His Holy Spirit into every corner. Eut He does this, not all at once, but gradually, as we are able to bear the c light revealing the sinful thing, need- i ing the Blood that it may beremoved. ^ Then He takes His own wondrous . Word and enlightens it by His Spirit; r and we como to know what is His { will for us, and that the enlightened r tt7^-,1 w?n foo'Mrkn nnr iivPS Th^rS t VV Ul U >V 111 iC40UiVU vu> . vn>. is no pattern in the Word of God for j j the child of God but the Son of God. | t What times we are living in! In ovr morning papers the first thing one notices seems some indication of the coming of the Lord. And if He is coming soon, what does He want j from you and me? You recall His ^ last recorded words: "Ye shall re- 5 ceive power after that the Holy Ghost t has come upon you, and ye shall be [ My witnesses." Never since that day , has there been more need of wit- * nesses to Him than at the present * time. He may have called you to Keswick to teach you hov/ to be ? witness to Him. We shall be wit ness unto Him exactly in propor* tion as our hearts are the Master's guest chambers, for only as He lives 1 in us can He work through us His f wondrous1, gracious, loving purpose. And what is that purpose? "Whom I ( He did foreknow, He also did pre- I < t,-? ho onnformed to the | UCOWUIUtW l,W MW Image of His Son, that He might be the first born among many breth ren." As He dwells in you He -will shine forth, a:ad be through you a witness to Himself. So, being cleansed, sanctified, and indwelt by the Master, we shall be what He de sires we should be, witnesses unto Him. Excuses Easy to Find. A man who seeks an excuse for neglect or delay concerning religion can find such excuse. The man who seeks religion with his whole heart will find it. Don't stumble over your halting brother; don't get in the way for him to stumble over you.?Bishop Fitzgerald. Right Praying. No nraver takes hold of God until j it first takes hold of the ruan.?Hor- ] I ace Bushnell. fHE WARFARE AGAINST DRINK. rEMPERANCE BATTLE GATHERS STRENGTH EVERY DAY. Drinking Clnbs For Girls?Startling Aspect of a Factory-Life Evil at Birmingham, England?Organ ization That Makes Drunkards. A startling revelation was made a? i meeting of manufacturers in Bir ningham, England, recently, called :ogether by a committee which was xppolnted sometlmeago to Investigate :he causes of the obviously falling >ff in their physical and mental capac ties of the factory girls employed n the Birmingham mills. The committee reported that girls' Irinking clubs in the factories exiated o a large extent. These clubs were ieliberately formed, it is said, for he purpose of surreptitiously intro lucing drink into factories or work ihops, to be consumed in tea, an'd for he promotion of other similar ways >f celebrating birthdays, marriages, ind various social events connected vith .the staff; also for habitual Irinking together by the girls in pub ic houses after leaving work and on >ublic holidays. The committee had ividence that the clubs were seriously tffecting the moral character of many jirl employes, and unfitting them for naternal responsibilities. They ap jealed to the employers to insist upon he suppression of existing clubs, and o prevent their establishment in any orm, suggesting that adequate rules o that end should be posted in fac orJes. Canon Denton Thompson, rector of 3irmingham, who presided at the neeting, said that girls and women rere encouraged, and even coerced, o join these clubs. The weekly sub icriptions are from two to six cents, tr even more, or else collections are nade for the purpose, generally bj ome one in authority at the factory, n some parts of the city the public touses become crowded by women md girls directly the factories ar^ losed. Drink is taken into some factories mrreptitiously; In others permissiqD s actually given to the girls to have t. Tiiere is reason to tear tnat some >f these drinking clubs were organ* zed in the interests of the public louse managers. The committee rec? ignized the seriousness of this state* oent, but they stated that they had ;ood authority for saying that per*' ons in authority in some factories vere authorized to encourage drinks lig habits among the employes.?< few York Times. Liquor Does It. Figures by Amos W. Buttle, secre* ary of the Indiana Board of Statd Jharities, from the monthly reportj f sheriffs, indicates a total of 31,711 ersons admitted to the county jail^ uring the last fiscal year. Of thesq aore than one-third were brought in ecause of intoxication. The numbe* eported for this cause was 11,194 len and 488 women; total, 11,687< 'he white numbered 10,972 and thq olored 715. The expense to thd ounty on account of the in-and-out ses was $5619.75, and on account of oard $33,193.06; total, $38,812.S1; n average of $3.32 for each drunken erson admitted. The jail at Terrt laute leads in the list of counties, 289 persons having been admitted to hat institution during the year on ac? ount of intoxication. Marlon Count?, omes next, with 1191, counting both he jail and workhouse, and then Tip< ecanoe, Delaware and St. Joseph.' rith a few more than 400 each. A Remarkable Result. An experiment on London trains ad remarkable results. Passengers n late night cars were greatly an .oyed by drunken men going home, lober people wanted to be protected, nd eo a drunkards' car was annexed u an uaiua iui scvciai ixuuio m unc veiling. The plan was a failure. Vhen the trains came with men eady to load in the drunkards, there rare none. Most of the steady drink rs, ashamed to be known as occu ants of a drunkards' train, went lome early, and those who remained ite were sober enough to travel in he regular trains. The measure, de igned solely for the comfort of the lecent traveling public, proved con ducive to the cause of temperance. A Governor's Boast. Nebraska has about one-third less lopulation than has Kansas, but Jncle Sam has collected about $2, i00,000 a year liquor tax from the potiIp nf whilft hp has hppn ble to get only about $100,000 from Cansas. The amount of fermented! iquor sold in Kansas is from 6000 o 10,000 barrels, in Nebraska from 100,000 to 300,000 barrels, and in lissouri from 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 larrels.?Governor Hoch. A Mean Fight. Liquor interests in Georgia are re tewing the fight for the restoration of he army canteen, knowing that sol?j liers at the army posts in that Stata an no longer get liquor outside their >osts, and it is expected that thg Jnited States Government will bq irged to violate the laws of one o^ ts own sovereign States by import^ ng and selling that which is prohib< ted by law. Caught Going and Coming. They catch the poor drunkard "com-1 ng and going." His money goes foi vhisky to make him a drunkard rhen when under the grip of the ap? jetite his friends lend him money tc ake the Keeley cure. The saloon jets rich and the Keeley institute jets rich. But we fail to see when he benefit comes in to the drinking nan. Temperance Notes. Three Westchester towns, including White Plains, the county seat, voted igainst the saloon. Of the nineteen women member^ >f the Parliament of Finland, all but me are total abstainers. Hon. William E. Johnson, United States special agent for the suppres sion of the liquor traffic in Indian rerritory, declares that Indian Terri :ory is at present more completely !ree from illegal liquor traffic thaD ;ver before in its history. The Police Department reports that inly one arrest was made in St. Paul, Minn., on a recent Sunday for drunk jnness. The "lid" is on. This record n a city of 175,000 population is on^ evidence of what prohibition enforced with a party behind it will, do seven Jays in a week in our great urbaa centres. mi m AM n rtnnrtA C?T1 nfrtW A PlMlttf Vl r? fl ield that the Pendleton law is con- ' stitutional, and thereby dealt a iurther blow to the saloon Interests, rhis statute was enacted by the Ten lessee Legislature last spring, and makes mandatory prohibition of sa-j 1 loons in all cities in Tennessee ofl 100,000 inhabitants or less. 1 The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known *%lue; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com ponent parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action. hi supplying that demand with its ex cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remark able success. That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine?manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle. SERIAL No. 2065 is your assurance or our guarantee filed with the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. G.a that Hales' - Honev Horehound & Tar the standard remedy for genera tions, is a safe and pleasant cure for coughs, colds and hoarseness. Get it of your druggist. Pike's Toothache Drop* Cure in One Minute. Great Britain uses seventy-two pounds of I salt per capita per year. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. Pszo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any ca-eof Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. Automatic Umbrella Supply. Automatic umbrella distributors will be installed in all the Berlin railway stations neit month, which will deliver umbrellas to travelers at fifty cents a time. If the umbrella is returned in two days the borrower gets back forty cents.?London Daily Mail. THE TIME TEST. t That Is What Proves True Merit. ( Doan's Kidney Pills bring the it quickest of relief from backache and i kidney troubles. Is s that relief lasting? c Let Mrs. James M. c Long, of 113 N. Au- r gusta St., Staunton, 1 Va., tell you. On 1 January 31st, 1903, t Mrs. Long wrote: c "Doan's Kidney Pills t have cured me" (of i pain in the back, urinary troubles, bearing down sen sations, etc.) On June 20th, 1907, i four and one-half years later, she t said: "I haven't had kidney trouble i since. I repeat my testimony." Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box. c Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ( A Noble Work. A suburban minister, during his discourse one Sabbath morning, said: "In each blade of grass there is a ser mon." The following day one of his flock discovered the good man push ing a lawn mower about the garden and paused to say: "Well, parson, I'm glad to see you engaged in cut ting your sermons short."?The Lon don Standard. SHE COULD NOT WALK For Months?Burning Humor on Ankles?Opiates Alone Brought Sleep ? Eczema Yielded to Cuticura. "I had eczema for over two years. I had two physicians, but they only gave me re lief for a short time and I cannot enum erate the ointments and lotions 1 used to no purpose. My ankles were one mass of sores. Tho itching and burning were so in tense that I could not sleep. I could not walk for nearly four months. One day my husband said 1 had better try the Cuticura Remedies. After using them three times, I had the best night's rest in montns un less I took an opiate. 1 used one set of Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills, and my ankles healed in a short time. It is now a year since I used Cuticura, and there has been no return of the eczema. Mrs. David Brown, Locke, Ark., May 18 and July 13, 1907." Swans have been known to live 300 years. Do You Want 3 lb. Tea or 5 lb. Coffee for 30c. ? For particulars write Port Morris Tea Co., 206 St. Ann's Ave., Nsw York. nDOPQY NEW DISCOVERY; I* 1 kItmquickrelief ?ndcure# ntint oim. Book of tedtlraonmis c iv , Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS.Box B.Atlantn.Go. I PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any o oaa dyo any garment without ripping apart. Write i Stick to the Country. Our advice is that unless a salary of $1800 per year is in sight, stick to your job in the country. One thousand dollars per year or even eight hundred in the country means more to you there than will $1800 in the city. Besides there is more real downright comfort and happi ness in the country for the man and his family, who has to work for his living, than the city can afford.? Chicago Dairy Produce. Could Readily Believe It. An old country gentleman return ing home rather late, discovered a yokel with a lantern under his kitchen window, who, when asked his business there, stated he had only come a-courting. "Come a what?" said the irate gentleman. "A-court ing, sir. I'se courting Mary." "It's a lie! What do you want a lantern for? I never used one when I was a young man." "No, sir?" was the yokel's repiy; "I didn't think yer 'ad, j judging by the missis."?The Ar- ' gonaut. Consoling Thoughts About .the Yonng Do not expect too much conversa ional wisdom from the young. Tharo aro of VOline net ions: those who do.not think at all, tnd those who think wrong. To hink right requires knowledge, and >f that the young can only ha?e a rery limited supply. A young person, therefore, who ltters mistaken opinions is not nec issarily foolish, but gives the only evidence possible of having begua to ;hink, and of being, therefore, in a lopeful state of progress.?Life. OnJy One "Bromo Quinine" rhat is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look or the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the Norld over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. Ground chestnuts take the place of flour n some parte of France. Millions in Oats and Barley. ^Nothing will jpay you Jbetter^for 1908 .IJUI1 LU buw a Ui vift vitiuiu^ vuto ind barley with oats at 40c to 50c a bu. Salzer's new Emperor William Oats av :raged 50 bu. per acre more than any >ther variety in 1907) would pay immense y while Salzer's Silver King Barley which )roved itself the biggest yielder at the irVisconsin Agricultural Station during 907 if you had planted 50 acres would lave given you in 1907 just $3,500.00 on 50 icres. It is an enormous yielder. JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND 10c ;o the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La >osse, Wis., and we will mail you the nost original seed catalog published ir America with samples of Emperor Wil iam Oats, Silver King Barley, Billion Dol ar Grass which produces 12 tons per acre. Sainfroin the dry soil luxuriator, etc,, etc.. ind if you send 14c we add a package of lew farm seeds never before seen b> rou. Our debt per capita was $13.78 in 1897. ind only $11.25 in 1907. ?ITS, St.Vitus' Dance, Nervaus Diseases per anently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free ir.H.It. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,Pa London eats 180,000 tons of fish in : rear. Urs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forChildrei eething, softens thegums, reduces intiamma ion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25cabottlc The^average^weight of the British salmor a eigut yuunuo. Itch cured in 30 minutea by WoolfordV Sanitary Lotion-. Never fails. At druggists Salt is a Government monopoly in the Chinese Empire. Many Professional Men, clergymen, teachers and singers usr Brown's Bronchial Troches for cur Ing hoarseness and coughs. France now realizes $80,000,000 from_he: obacco crop. Wouldn't you like to try Nature's mild asative, Garfield Tea? Headache Pow lers and Digestive Tablets also upon re luest. Send postcard to Garfield Tea Co.. Jrooklyn, N. Y. Ducks in China. TT-? oro m nro /Jiinlra In f!hinp 1 UCCC U1 U uiWi V v?uv*?w ? ;han in all the rest of the world. 2hina, literally, Is white with these )irds, and day and night the country esounds with their metallic and icornful voices. Children herd ducks >n every road, on every pond, on ;very farm, on every lake, on every iver. There is no backyard without ts duckhouse. There is no boat, ittle or great, without its duck quar ;ers. Even in the cities of China lucks abound. They dodge between he coolies' legs. They flit, squawk ng, out of the way of the horses, rheir indignant quack will not un leldom drown the roar of urban com nerce. All over the land there are ' ?T-?of/iViJrtor ccfohUc^moTita ,icai nany of them of a capacity huge snough to produce 50,000 young lucks every year. Duck among the Chinese is the staple delicacy. STIFF, Yl WETAND DAMPCAU COLD IN THE JOIN $ JACOBS TAKES OUT THE PAN ONCE.REMOVESTHE S NESS. PREVENTS RETURN, TOO. FINE BRUISES, SPRAINS SORENESS. Price 25c and 50c. ktmmi $3 99 SHOES m , SHOES AT ALL PRICES, FOR EVERY MEMBER OFTHEFAMILY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHI w. L Douglas makea andaoHa men'a $2. BO, *3.00and$S.B0t than any other manufa cturmr i world, bocauao they hold 'X"'I "L'S&SiJZXlSZ'X n^Vu> arm or Jfrwmtmr m-a ....... _v i/iom tn thm world to-day. W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot ? CAL'TIOV. W. T* Douglasname and prlc Sold by the best shoo dealers everywhere. Shoes m trated Catalog tree to any address. FADELE thor dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers. They tor free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colo CHICKENS EARN U Whether you raise Chickens for fun or get the best results. The way to do this is We offer a book telling all ject?a book written bv a MHHH 25 years in raising Poultry, [ had to experiment and spend ||fc ? way to conduct the business? J CENTS in ^postage ^stamps, anu i/uru xsiacuac, huh w Market, which Fowls to Save indeed about everything vou must know on POSTPAID OX RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS Book Publishing House, 13'< /AN IMITATION 1 f PATTERN THE There was never an lmltatl< tators always counterfeit tho ge what you ask Tor, because genuine Imitations are not advertised, but ability of the dealer to sell you so cood" when you ask for the genuli I) on the Imitation. Why accept lmlt j> ulne by Insisting? | REFUSE IMITA1 You won't tell your family doctor the whole story about your private illness ? you are too modest. You need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pink' ham, at Lynn, Mass., the thingsyou could not explain to the doctor. Your letter will be held in the strictest con fidence. From her vast correspond ence with sick women during the past thirty years she mav have gained the very knowledge tnat will wis Wr.Vi V mt Mm J'W& help your case. Such letters as the toi-, lowing, from grateful women, es tablish beyond a doubt the power of LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND to conquer all female diseases. Mrs. Norman R. Barndt, of Allen- , town, Pa., writes: "Ever since I was sixteen years oi age I had suffered from an organic de rangement and female weakness;, in consequence I had dreadful headaches and was extremely nervouB. My physi cian said I must go through an opera- , J* A wilk Xion lo g'et vven. a xixcuu . wxu < about Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound, and I took it and wrote you for advice, following your directions carefully, and thanks to you I am to day a well woman, and I am telling all my friends of my experience." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E.' Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbg, has tjeen the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indices tion, dizziness,ornervousprosirauoii There is ail American book which should be counted among the best sellers. Over 3,000,000 copies have been sold. It Is "The Horse Book," issued by the Government. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chewey & Co., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known P. 3. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all businem transactions and financially able to carry oat any obligations made by his 6rm. Walding, Kinna* & Marvin, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hal 1*8 Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, att fngdirectly upon the blond and mucuoussur faces of the system. Testimonials sent tree. u-'o- Krttfla SJ/-.M lie all Dniiririfltfl. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The expression "a canary bird ap petite" Is a misnomer, for a canary bird eats more than its own weight daily. ' N. Y.?7 AT riFF ITS FOR AND IONEY! SS DYES dye In cold water better than any other dye. Too re. MONROE 1IRUU CO., Qulncy llllnolfc If You Know How to Handle Them Prdperly profit, you want to do it intelligently and to profit by the experience of others. you need to know on the sub man who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sura of 25 It tells you how to Dctect Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and the subject to make a success. SENT I IN STAMPS. i Leonard St., N. Y. City. TAKES FOR ITS>, REAL ARTICLE $ :>n made of an Imitation. Iml- $ nulne article. The genuine Is $ articles are the advertised ones. <0 depend for their business on the ^ methlng claimed to be "just as ne, because he makes more profit $ ations when you can get the gen 'IONS-oeiaswW I VV>!>vv~'v ^ v!