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VThe Pul/0/t 1 A SERMON" TAE rex/-' {[Rft-V./kNDERjoN^P^" Theme: Divine Indwelling. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching on the above theme at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, the Rev. Ira W. Henderson, pastor, took as his text Jno. 20:22: "Receive ye the Holy Spirit." He said: The reception of the Holy Spirit in the inner sanctuary of the human heart is the condition of entrance into the kingdom of God. The possibility of the immediate and present incoming and welcoming of the Spirit is reason enough for us to believe that the kingdom begins in this life and at once, if you wiU The fact that the coming of the Spirit into the heart is contemporaneous with the entrance of the individual into the privileges of divine citizenship is sufficient demonstration that spirituality is the key to, and the essenoe of, and the first re quirement of admission to tne mugdom. The one and only way to participate In the joys and blessings of the Spirit filled life is to cease from hardness of heart, and from intellectual self-glorification and self-trust, and to become as little children in humility and in receptivity to truth. Spirituality and divine citizenship are one and the same thing. Growth in spirituality is the test of efficient citizenship. The man who has stopped depending upon his own strength, his own wisdom, and has opened his eyes and ears and mind and heart to the influences and manifestations of the Spirit is ready to receive, and in all conscience will get, the papers and rights of a citizen of the kingdom of the God of Jesus unrisi. Ana mat soul only Is being sanctified unto Godlikeness and fashioned into the image of Jesus Christ who is growing daily, hourly, momently, in the gifts and .graces of the spiritual life. To be spiritual is to become childlike. To attain spiritual development is the aim and the calling of those who are Christ's. The Holy Spirit, the personal, purifying, propelling presence of God in the life of man, is the means unto the spiritualizing of human natures according to the divine decrees. The entrance of the Spirit means death to sin. The yielding of self to the gentle ministrations of the Holy !Ghost is the first step toward individual transformation. The communion of the spirit of man with the Spirit of God brings peace, contentment, rest and a wisdom and energy which are more than sufficient to meet the demands and the opposition of the world. No mere impersonal, unreal, unattainable something is this Spirit which Christ bade His disciples receive, and of which at a later time they received a fuller measure. It is :tbe real, helpful, personal presence of God in the life. The spirit of man is a prey to all sin save the Spirit of God as a constructive, controlling force comes in. The transfusion of the 60ul with the vitality of the Spirit fills the dying heart of man with life. There are three characteristics of the Holy Spirit to which I wish to direct your thought. The Holy Spirit is a constant presence in the life of the world, a controlling energy, a 8011I satisfying comforter. The Holy Spirit is a constant presence and factor in the life of the world. The entire list of graces and -***- -~J vi? ? ?ilis ttuu uicssiugs nu?,u aic uui o at the hands of our Heavenly Father are constant. The gift of the Spirit is no exception to the rule. When God promises to men the presence and uplift of the Holy Spirit upon the fulfilment of certain conditions upon their part He means just what He says. Our Father is not fickle or changeable or inconstant. He is the same to-day, yesterday and forever. And His Spirit, which is His own real, personal presence in the hearts of men, is as constant as all else with which He has anything to do. "When we were far away from duty and were serving sin the Spirit of the living trroe lrr>onlrin or nvon of- oilr hoartc And though we hated ourselves and the depth of our own iniquity, though the world may have despised us and forsaken us, though everything in life may have held us as "unclean" with the leprosy of sin, still the Spirit of our living, loving Father stood waiting to reveal to us the wealth and beauty of the love of God and to revive our dying souls with the fullness of power unto eternal life. The constancy of the Spirit as a factor in life is nowhere better illustrated than in the experience of Christian men who have given themselves up, in less or greater measure, to His dominion. What a joy, what a comfort, what a stay it is to know that whenever and wheresoever we may turn to the Spirit for th? nortion of refrpshm<?nt that our souls so sorely need we shall always find Him ready to supply our wants. There Is no sense and no reason in much of our constant petition to God to infill us with His Spirit. The influences of types of thought and of prayer are hardly escapable. We have grown so accustomed to ask God to fill us with His Spirit of power. But I submit, would we not pray better and more to the point if we thanked our Father for the favors of His love and acknowledged to Him in person, what He already knows, our shortcomings and our lack of appropriation of the gift of His Spirit. The showers of spiritual blessings are forever falling free, full and sufficient upon human souls everywhere. Our prayers should not be of petition that God may give us showers, but rather of thanksgiving for past, present and future blessings and of dedication of self, through the riches of His grace and powers to a finer and more fruitful life for Him. The presence and Influence of the Holy Spirit in the liCe of the world is a constant gratuity. If you are not the deeply grounded spiritual man that you should be the fault lies not with the Spirit, of which there is abundance unto all men's necessity, but with you who have refused that wealth of spiritual power which, under God, might be yours if you would. Everywhere and continually the Spirit of the Lord is active. He knocks ever it the door of the sinner's heart. He is forever pouring out the inexbaustible waters of spiritual life upon the parched souls of men. But neither God nor His Spirit can fill an inverted cup. The showers of blessings can not nooa a ciosea neart. Then, too, the Holy Spirit is a controlling energy in the life of the man who is susceptible to His influence. Christ tells us that His Spirit shall lead us unto all truth; that He shall be our Guide, our Teacher and our Helper. The catalog of the activities of the Spirit in the life of man is strengthening and sustaining. By Him we are led into the entirety of divine self-revelation and of eternal Iruth. / Under the guidance of the Spirit of the living" God we may progress from truth to truth as the wonders of God's universe are revealed to us and tho application of everlasting verities brought home to our hearts. May no man flinch to follow the Spirit whithersoever He may direct. As Dante went through hell a:id heaven and the intermediate regions of the world beyond, and told in allegory and song the wonders that he witnessed and the sights he saw, so may we. with the Spirit as our Guide, be given grace to look truth squarely in the face and portray it faithfully to the woi'ld. And If we, as Dante, or beyond him Christ, shall be hounded by those who fear the light of truth we shall yet be certain that the truth, the truth alone, is worth men's fealty and shall make them free. The Spirit as the Comforter appeals to the hiiart of every Christian. Who of us does not joy in the fact that above us and within us is this comforting Spirit of the Lord our God? The human heart cries out for comfort when distress and danger and destruction come upon it. When our hearts are bowed in anguish and our souls are crushed with grief, when every human tie is severed and no mortal hand may avail to dispel our utter darkness, then the Spirit of the loving Father strengthens, sustains, sanctifies the soul. "Save me, O God, for the waters are come into my soul," we cry out with the Psalmist. In the Judah wilderness - --*? Utm or tne wona our huuid muoi, 1Ui our flesh longs for Him as in a dry and thirsty land, where no water is. Then the Spirit comes, and with His entrance the live springs of refreshment minister to our souls' deep need. The Spirit as the Comforter is God in His presence ministering to the humanest of mortal needs. No man can live happily without Him. No man can weather the trials of tribulation and the temptations of prosperity without Him. Lending the sorrowing light hearts He keeps the successful level headed. The sense of the constant presence of the Spirit of God in the individual and world life is the certain indication of a true religious experience. No man who lives near to God is without it. It is elemental in Christian experience. And this consciousness of God's abiding and guiding is the mainstay of the soul. Without it progress is impossible in the truest sense. With it we may fight with fearlessness, with hope unquenchable, against principalities and powers, asainst the wickednesses of high places and the sins of mighty men. For the abiding Spirit of the living God is the controlling energy in the life of humanity. Bad men may defeat Him temporarily; evil policies may frustrate His purposes and hurl themselves against HI* plans; but the Spirit of God is unconquerable. He is the controlling, the overruling energy of the world. In this Spirit we should find our strength. From Him we should derive the comfort of our souls. Let not your heart be troubled. Come what may, be the storms of life what they will, God will not leave us comfortless. He will not leave us orphans. He is with us. He will abide with every soul who bids Him enter. He will constantly refresh us all. He will give us courage and be our strength. He will suffuse us. He will comfort us. And He does. Conscience Not an Information Bureau If conscience is a safe guide to what is right and wrong then the Eible is not needed. There is no half-way ground here, for a guide that needs guidance is no guide at all. And as a matter of fact, conscience is not a guide, and because so many souls mistakenly think it is, confused and wandering errors in the pathway of life are constantly made. Conscience is a monitor. It prompts and prods; it urges "Do what you know to be right; do not do what you know to be wrong." But it does not instruct us in what is right and what is wrong; it is not a bureau of information. That instruction we receive from God in many different ways, of which the Bible and the training of parents and teachers are some. Therefore it will not do to settle back in the easy assurance that we have a safe guide in conscience. We have a tremendous responsibility to learn, from sources outside of our 1 * *" '!?* + ? ? Knrft selves, W ilclL i& uai UUI), auu. muou sources are always available when we really seek them.?Sunday-School Times. Nature Presses Toward Fruitage. Ripe fruit, which is the immutable promise and purpose of God, is the end of a patient process. After a long and trying pause young spring, like a hope of God, returns; but the end is not yet. It is the season of new breath, new motion and new birth. Everything is astir under the new, universal excitement. The earth, like a bride, puts on her beautiful attire. She blooms and sings. But b'^om and songs are not the end. By her beauty music she announces the exquisite end toward which she is niov ing. She will not pause until sne nas produced her fruit, uor then until her fruit is full-orbed and mellow. She reckons nothing less than ripe fruit to be her fitting crown. Nothing less will satisfy God. Thou crownest the year with Thy goodness.?John Pulsford. "Let the Light Shine In." Is not God, who made the eun shine, also willing and able to let His light and His presence so shine through me that I can walk all the day with God nearer to me than anything in nature? Praise God, He can do it. Why, then, does He do it so seldom, and in such feeble measure? There is but one answer: You do not permit it. You are so occupied and filled with other things?religious things, perhaps?that you do not give God time to make Himself known, and to enter and take possession.?Andrew Murray. Charms Against Death. It is said that the Africans asked Livingstone: "Do people die with you? Have you no charms against death? Where do people go after death?" Livingstone spoke to them of the great Father, of the life hereafter with Him; and they, in turn, thought thin to be a very natural way to think about it. The Reason is Christ. We have insane and blind asylums and public schools in Massachusetts, and not in Turkey, because here we had yegterday a strong sense of Christ, and there they had not.?The TJ r\xr TTranlr PrAHP iCCY. A" * ?***? A Natural ilfsult. The church which ceases to be evangelistic will soon cease to be evangelical.?Alexander Duff. He Opens the Patli. God never fails to open you a path though He may refuse you a philosophy. \ 1 r*u,, o: A 0l,Q ? i\CW 1UIR V/IL%y. OJUJ^IC DIJiCO cUXJ always best for young girls and such ' a blouse as this one finds innumerable | uses. It is charming made with the : open square neck, but can, neverthe-1 less, Jae finished with a chemisette, making it high, if it is found more satisfactory. The trimming at the armholes suggests the Japanese idea and serves to conceal the seams, yet in no way interferes with the simplicity of the design. In the illustration white Habutai silk is trimmed with embroidered banding. The waist is made with the front and the backs, which are tucked to yoke depth, and with moderately full sleeves, which are tucked at their lower edges and trimmed to give a somewhat novel effect. Trimming is arranged over the armhole seams and a shaped band also finishes the neck The chemisette is separate and when * 3 ? ?JK1 Ancn | worn is arrangeu uuu? mc and closed at the back. | The quantity of material required for the 6ixteen year size is three and five-eighth yards twenty-one or twenty-four, two and one-eighth yards thirty-two, or one and three-fourth yards forty-four inches wide, with two and seven-eighth yards of band-1 ing and one-half yard eighteen inches wide for the chemisette. The Useful Glove Handkerchief. An extremely useful article in these days when hardly any woman owns a j pocket is the glove handkerchief. The 1 ziAmop fpnm ahrnaH hut erlove j iuca v^vuito v*-*-4 wv?, - -?? 0 handkerchief is already on sale in the best linen stores here. It is made of the finest linen, not more than five inches square, finished with a tiny hemstitched border, with or without a narrow finish of lace. Some of the finest have the narrow Armenian lace. As the name indicates, the handkerchief when folded is small enough to slip into the glove opening above the buttons. The Coat Shirt Waist. This is the very newest thing. As its name suggests, it has the appearance of a coat worn over a vest or shirt front. To produce this effect a double-breasted vest, with a shawl | collar, is attached to a stiff chemi isette. This design occurs in white butcher linen and the cuffs to the bishop sleeves are often some contrasting shade of linen, which is also used in facing the shawl collar. The Koigning Frock. The gown par excellence of the firesent mode in Paris is the princess, with a touch of empire at the back, where the skirt is drawn high above the waist, and draped with folds across the front below the waist. Hats For Small Girls. Hats for very small girls are bont j down and wired so that they are I broad across the front, and then trimmed with wide satin strings. They usually have a wreath of flowers I on top. An Inexpensive Fabric. Among the inexpensive fabrics Is an imitation of satin charmeuse that is lovely. It comes in a variety of delicate colorings, and can be bought for much less than $1 a yard. Well-Fitting Collars. The newest collars are straight oe the bottom, as all well-fitting collars must be, and are shaped slightly od the top so that they are narrower under the chin and wider under the ears. A Morning Frock. A smart little morning frock is ol dark purple blue cloth?the exact shade of a Princess of Wales violet? and with black satin, with a neat waistcoat of violet leaf green cloth, and a jabot of pleated crepe de chine in the same tone of blue. It is worn with a green hat massed with market bunches of violets and a great bushy green and black aigrette.?Queen. Embroidered Sleeves. The newest tailored shirtwaists have the initials of the owner embroidered just above the cuff in colore matching those in the material of the waist. Thus if the shirtwaist is a blue and white checked madras the monogram will be done in a combination of blue and white cottons. The idea was originally intended for men's ohirfc nniv hnt the tailor-made eirl will not be slow in adopting the fashion for her own shirtwaists. Fancy Neckwear. Fancy neckwear makes such an important feature of the season's dress that its making really becomes a question of moment. Here are designs which provide for a generouE variety and which are very simple, while at the same time they include the latest styles. In the illustration | tho jabot is made of fine white batiste edged with a simple lace, while the turn-over portion of the collar is ol striped material and the stock 1e made of net banded with insertion and edged with lace. The turn-over collar is one of the best liked models and is available for every fashionable material. For the stock collar net and lace, chiffon and the material ol the gown, almost anything that may be liked, can be utilized with trimming to suit individual rancy. The jabot is made in one straight ~ ' 1~ i U in Q rwl OrrO nOO/1 pICCC, W lilUli is gaiuctcu uuu over a foundation. There are two bows which are differently shaped and each is gathered at the centre and held by a cross-over portion. The roll-over collar is made with a band foundation, which can be buttoned into place, and the stock collar is cut with the points behind the ears that are so much in vogue. The quantity of material required for the medium si-.se is, for the jabot one-fourth yard of material thirtysix inches wide, one-eighth yard seveuty-two, with three and three-fourth yards of edging, or two yards of lace four inches wide; for either bow one-eighth yard any width, with one yard of edging; for the stock collar one-eighth yard any width, with one and three-fourth yards of insertion and one yard of edging to trim as illustrated; for the turn-over collar one-half yard any width. \ \ HATS OFF TO HEN OF MISSOURI. / Agricultural Report Shows Ni Other Product of State so Valuable as Eggs. ; The Missouri hen promises to he come even more famous than the Mis souri mule and much more profitable to the Missouri farmer and fancier According to reports just complete* by the Missouri State Agricultura i College, during 1907 53,000,000 doz i ens of eggs were shipped from Mis i souri to other parts of the Unite* States, not counting the thousandi > of dozens consumed at the tables o Missourians. No other farm produc has yielded so much profit as the hen The products of the hen sold for mor< than 12,000,000 last year. The "hen fruit belt" lies contiguoui to Kansas City, where some of th( largest and finest poultry farms in th< State are situated. The hen is profita ble, as will be, seen by this estimate made by the Missouri State Agricul tural College: "Food for the hen one year, eigbtj cents; products of the average hen 240 eggs per annum, at two cents apiece, equals $4.80, or a net profit i of $4 a hen a year." Ernest Kellerstrass,. owner of th< i highest priced hen in the world, whe iU - 4* uwiiB Liit; laigcot puuiuj iai ui A*. the world, and perhaps the finest aquipped, Bays it costs about one cent tor every egg produced. Mr. Keller 5tra3S has hens that it costs $1800 t year to take care of, but these hen? ire valued in the hundreds of dollars; in fact, they cannot be bought for it is never known but that on? 3f these eggs may produce a chicker worth several thousand dollars, and Mr. Kellerstrass is averse to letting his fine breed of crystal white Orpington chickens pass out of his control Tor a few hundred dollars that h? might get for a setting of eggs. There are many fine poultry farms around Kansas City in the "egg belt,' but Kellerstrass owns the finest. Oe his farm of 160 acres are his owr private gas well and electric light plant. His hatching pens are heated by natural gas and lighted by electricity. He has steam heated barns and chicken coops on rubber tired wheels that are pushed about ovei the farm. His fine hens all have trap nests and every egg is automatical^ ; stamped with the time and date it is laid and when hatched out a careful register is kept of the growth of the young chicken. Its weights and measurements are taken at regular intervals and if by the time the chick has reached the age of six months it 1e foil n H tn pnnfo i n ttoII miQlifiorl nnlntc that will go toward making it a wini ner at the poultry shows it is put in with the fancy chickens. If not it 1e cast off and killed and fed to the farm hands. Kellerstrass owns 6000 or 8000 chickens, among which are 200 oi more hens and roosters valued at from $250 to $5000. An order for a $1000 chicken is an ordinary business transaction with him. He sold Mme. Paderewski five birds recently for $1500 apiece. Kellerstrass originated the crystal white Orpington breed of chickens which have become so popular with Lttuuieis uau uiccueia. a puitiaiu ui his $5000 hen is being made to adorn the State House at Jefferson City, Mo. ?New York Herald. Difficult Railroading. The exceedingly difficult country over which Austrian railroads are constructed, necessarily making the cost of operating steam locomotives excessive, has caused the railway officials to study the question of electrical traction. It is now proposed to electrify 2000 miles of trunk line system. The Arlberg tunnel, which serves a large traffic and is seven miles long,, will be the first section considered. While the Government has not definitely decided on any one 1 ? " ^1* a 1 J ?n +1\ A f Vl rflfl system iur an uxc uuu, iu& phase will, it is said, be adopted for the Arlberg section. On New England Tombstones. There were several epitaphs which fascinated you for a while, epitaphs like that of "Solon Tyndall, Killed by a Fall from the Main topsail Yard ol the Bark Amazon, in the Harbor ol Buenos Ayres on March 12, 1850. He as a seamon did his duty well, But his foot slipped and from aloft he fell, Fell, but to rise and climb the shrouds on high, And greet his Master with a glad "Aye, aye, aye." Or that which recorded the fate of "Absalom Peters, Shot in the Creek by the Explosion 0f his own Gun."? Collier's. Food For Man and BeasC. Lady (after tendering a shilling for fare)?"And here ars two buns you can have, my man." riahhv?"Thank vou kindly, lady. I suppose you don't 'appen to 'ave a wisp of 'ay for the 'orse?"?Casseil's Saturday Journal. BUILT UP Right Food Gives Strength and Brain Power. The natural elements of wheat and barley, including the phosphate oi potash, are found in Grape-Nuts, and that is why persons who are ruD down from improper food pick up rapidly on Grape-Nuts. "My system was run down by excessive night work," writes a N. Y man. "in suite of a liberal supply oI ordinary food. "After using Grape-Nuts I noticed improvements at once in strength anc nerve and brain power. "This food seemed to lift me up and stay with me for better exertion, with less fatigue. My weight increased 20 lbs. with vigor and comfort in proportion. "When traveling 1 always carry the food with me to insure having it." Name given by Postum Co., BattU Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read theabovc letter? A new one appears from time to time. Thej are genuine, true, aud full of humar interest. Zinc Mining in Mexico. Zinc mining in Mexico has become important only in the last three years. The most important zinc deposits are 0 near Monterey. At Calera there is a large amount of mixed sulphide ore, while the Tiro General in San Luis Potosi is also producing zinc ore. TORTURED FOR SIX MONTHS By Terrible Itching Eczema?Baby's 0 Suffering was Terrible ? Soon Entirely Cured by Cuticura. "Eczema appeared on my son's face. We went to a doctor who treated him for three months. Then he was so bad that his face and head were nothing but one sore and his ears looked as if they were going to fall off, 60 we tried another doctor for four months, the baby never getting any better. His hand and legs had big sores on them ; and the poor little fellow Buffered so terribly that he could not sleep. After he 3 had suffered six months we tried a set of the Cuticura Remedies and the first treat3 ment let him sleep and rest well;, in one s week the sores were gone and in two 1 months he had a clear face. Now he is 3 two vears and has never had eczema acain. Mrs. Louis Beck, R. .t. D. 3, San Antonio, Tex., Apr. 15, 1907." Electric haulage has supplanted animal power in the Comstock lode and twelve of the muies which were brought to the. surface had not seen daylight for twenty years. I)o Yonr Feet Ache and Barn? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions. ; Swollen, Hot, Smarting and Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Sold Ijy all druggists and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent Free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRjy, N. Y. Carious Horseshoes. In Iceland horses are shod with sheep's horn, while in the Sudan they are Bhod with camel's skin. A German not long ago invented a horseshoe of paper, prepared by saturating with oil of turpentine and other ingredients. Thin lay??-s of such paper are glued to the hoof till the requisite thickness is attained. The shoes thus made are said to be duras ble and impenetrable by moisture.? ' London Globe. FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL. Discharged Because Doctors Could Not Cure. Levi P. Brockway. S. Second Ave., Anoka. Minn., says: "After lying for tflve months in a hospital 1 was discharged as incurable, and given only six months to live. My heart was affected, I had smothering spells and sometimes fell unconscious. 1 got so 1 couldn't use ray arms> eyesigm 1 * was Impaired and 1 ! the kidney secretions were Sadly dis1 ordered. I was completely worn out and discouraged when 1 began using 1 Doan's Kidney Pills, but they went right to the cause of the trouble and did their work well. I have been 1 feeling well ever since." Sbld by all dealers. 50cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Diseased Pigeons. The tribe of pigeons is peculiarly j liable to disease. We believe it to be a fact that a large majority of the i pigeons in London are consumptive or diseased in some way or another. ?London Outlook. N.Y.?2-i One of the > ? _ m * Jbrssenttals , of the happy homes of to-day is a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and right living and knowledge of the world's best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide acceptance through the approval of the VVell-InfoTned of the World; not of individuals only but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtaining the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sale by all leading druggists. I If you want a pair of shoes that-you d Eg and wear a week until Uiey^rgtyrtrj human foot > u(f^r=tkli made by have the sty ticular you a jh9r&? rBBlFRttCUL cppn f. I BSD CXTS*. MA5S. i 1 <z*7Zr,.. " * Itearavupw >AN IMITATION 1 i PATTERN THE There was never an imitatii # tators always counterfeit the ge (1> what you ask for, because genuine j 1> imitations are not advertised, but i ft ability of the dealer to sell you so g good" when you ask for the genuii K on the imitation. Why accept imit 5> uinc by insisting? I REFUSE IMlTA'l C. JJiiiCCC i.; ? ijil It is no use ad1 , you have the Go having the Goo advertise. I * Bf. :'..x :;::;vl^B This -woman says Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound saved her life. Bead her letter. Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manmng, Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " I can truly say that Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound saved my life, and 1 cannot express my gratitude to you in words. For years I suffered with the worst forms of female complaints, continually doctoring and spending lots of money for medicine without help. I wrote you for advice, followed it as directed, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and lb iido icBwreu mc uu perieub iieaiiiu Had it not been for yon 1 should have been in my grave to-cay. I wish every suffering woman would try it." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? i Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has gruided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass* ?? ?* There are forty-eight different materials used in a piano. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance, Nervous Disease* permanently cuied by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.. I'a. The Irish, next to the Negroes, are leas* given to suicide. Mrs. Winslow'r Soothing bynip lor Children teething, softens the gums, reduces intlamma- :vv3 tion,allays pain, cures wind cohc.25ca bottle Five men can hold down a lion, bat it takes nine to manage a tiger. THE DAISY PLY KILLER* niea and afford! comfort to or?7nome-in dlnmc room, mmmm v ^ T. Beautiful Reversible Rugs made from you* old carpets. Send for circular. American Hug Mfg., 294 Vermont St., Brooklyn, N.Y ..t\ WHIBtJW?'undor N EW LAW obtained JOHN W. MORRIS, IrENSIl?.N& Washington, D. 0. | Thonipson'sEye Water CHICKENS EARN MONET] f . II You Know How to Handle Then Properly- { v*> Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you Weill L lo UU lb lUbUll^tuvij ^ ? . tad get the best results. The & * way to do this is to profit br I /j the experience of others. We {j^ A offer a bcok telling all you Bk need to know on the subject ?a book written by a man W . who made his living for 25 fflJpflpr < years in raising Poultry, and fjnEpr in that time neces- ESSrOC? sanly had to ex- V* a P&'iment and spent I ^ much money to Id learn the best way _ to conduct the J^OwSjSr \ Stamps business?for the fe small sum of 25 H , cents in postage stamps. ft k It tells you how to Detect DL. and Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for $&??? ?? Market, which Fowls to Save f wffl for Breeding Purposes, and 3 indeed about everything you must know on the subject i 7 to make a success. i , Sent postpaid ou receipt of 25 cents in stamps. ujfe; BOOK PUBLISHING BOUSE. 134 Leonard Street, <3 New York City. jVj MEN | on't have to 6queezo your foot into >tohed into the shape of your foot, a - ' MERS- They are made to Jit the E rhere your weight comes, and they , le to suit you, no matter how par* Sj re. Look for tho labol. a FIELD CO., Brockton* Mass. h ni?ij||Wl im\ r A l/FC FOR I r-11%1.^ m m w -w. REAL ARTICLE 4 do made of an imitation. Imi- $ nuine article. The genuine is $ articles are the advertised ones , depend for their business on the \|> mething claimed to be "just as $ ne, because he makes more profit vjj ations when you can get the gen- $ 'Tn"WC GET WHAT VOU I lv/ilD"" ASK FORI ?1 vertising- unless ods, and no use I ids unless you I ! in-. n1 T"