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A SERMON FOR SUNDAY A DISCOURSE FOR C:RLS DELIVERED BY REV. DR. W. R. HUNTINGTON. rThe Prcaclier I>eiirrihe? Under What Contlhimi!) it 1* 1'onAilrIn For a Woman to Keeunip, in Very Drnl and Truth, ? I.aily Forever?15e Uentle ami l>l|rtiified New Yoi::c Citv. -The Rev. Dr. William li. Huntington. ret tor of Grace Church, jit-cui-hil rtunily a -crmon to a Jasiiieuahic school l.?r .jir's which has attracted much .vtoi ".on. ar.ti t?y leonest it is h re riven. The text \va- chosen tiom ? " Tiwu. -.-.Dt I shall be I.VUUII AH II. .. ? ..VM ~r a i:;?Jy forever." Dr. Huntington said: 1 quou- our prophet m this fragmentary way for the sake of \ ividness. The briefer the text, t lia More likely it is to tie remembered. Mat if. under present circumstances, we would do justice to the man and to li;s though:, some heed must be given to what has gone be to re apd to what follows, "i then by themselves the words sound as if tiny must have been, in the first instance, addrosed to a woman, but they were uot. The aspirant after an everlasting ladyship was no woman at all, but a city?an ancient city, a city opulent, and superb. Mabylon the great. Rmboldtncd like aniicnt Home by its military caonuests, intoxicated like ttiedicval Venice by i:s commercial prosperity, confident liko modern London in the possesion of resources which seemed measureless. this rueen city of Ckaldea had come to think of it ck as invincible and indes ~c " 11... true-time. n ilm" uj ijhihui ..... name it gave t?> i ne of its temple*. "Foundation stone oi hvaven urn! ran tlie vain-glorious appellation <>; another. t?ardcns and parks, the city !i;ni in abundance. A mighty bridge which crossed and a r-;nne) which undeiran the river Eupluates wotr among its eneincering triuninlis. The circuit of the vails, lofty and broad almost bevond belief, was between fifty and ixty miles. But- there was a man in Jerusalem whom none of these things greatly moved in the ense of stupefying or alarming him.* The man's name was I-aiali and his father's name was Atnoz. When people came to him with their panic ta'k about the bigness ?f Babvion and the littleness of Jerus^alem, he betrayed no apprehensions on the contrary, he spoke up and harangued Babylon with much plainness of speech. "Sit thou silent," he cried.' "and get thee into darkness, 0 daughter of the Chaldeans. for thoa sha'.t no more be called the lady of kingdoms. Thou saidst 1 hail he a lady forever?therefore hear thoo. thou that art given to pleasures, that dwellest carelessly?these two things hall come to thee in a moment, in one -1??- ?],n Uij nl nnd widowhood. They shall come upon thee in their perfection for the multitude of thy sorceries and for the great abundance of thine enchantments." Thus sternly. almost fiercely. Isaiah, son of Amoz. addresses mighty Habylon. He speaks of her as to a woman of rank whose pride and indocility are presently to prove aer overthrow and to transform her pleasant palaces into ruinous heaps. She leans upon her advantage of high station all unaware that the staff is too brittle for the weight. Forgetful of the duties .which condition privilege, she fancies that old time prerogative and the accumulated prestige of many generations will be lie r safety. God's prophet determines to shake her out of this illusion, to compel her to open bcr eyes to the hard fact and he does it, an we have seen. With the tc;:l tisus we'd in hand, we proceed. Under what conditions is it possible. either for a city or for a woman, to become, iu very Jced and truth, a lady forever? This is the question to which I shall ask you to bend vour thought to-night, and whether we have respect to the week wliioh ended yesterday or to the week which has been entered upon to-day 1 cannot but account the topic a tiineiy one. It may seem to be comuaring small things with great to name the commencement week of a scnool for girls in the same breath with the commemorative week of a city which has lived through the fourth part of a thousand years, hut, perhaps, oefore we are done, my boldness in venturing thus to couple the two may be forgiven me. Of the sorts of ladyship of which I have made mention, that to which communities and that to which individuals may attain. Vwe will look at civic ladyship first. With tivic ladyship we associate those qualities which win tor cities au aumiring iuve. Physical strength, riches, commercial enterprise will give c. city lordship. That is one thing; hut ladyship is quite another. For the compelling of respect lordship may suriice a city, tor the winning of atfection something of hu.-ship is esser.ta!. How about the Lady of the Hudson? Has she any better ground for counting uoon the perpetuitv of her ladyship than had the Lady of the Euphrates? Can we trust her any mere impliedly than Isaiah trusted Babylon wlwa : ho says confidently "I shall be a lady forever." That depends upon the relative measure of importance which the city, in the long run. shall assign to the treasures of the market as compared with the treasures of the soul. I am Using the word "soul'' m a large and comprehensive sense. Religion and religious interests are of eour.se foremost in my thought, since, without a due regard to the- no city can permanently live; but wlu 1 speak of tin* treasures of the sou! as e- t t;a! to the city that would adventure la p 1 have in mind ail of those precious > ;.ags that co to make up the idealistic . nntrasted with the materialistic >idc ... human lite? Righteousness? Yes. Worship? Yes; but beside these, ijoeiry. letters and whatever else there may he that ministers heauty to tlie eye oi harmony and melody to the ear. These last are what make the treasures of the sou!. These, mingled in due proportion, give to a municipality what silver and gold and negotiable securities oi themselves can never give?that indescribable quality which 1 have ventured to call civic ladvshin. The prevailing note diu'-ng the past week has been the note of sell-congratulation. \\ hatcver flags and flowers could do to convince people through the eye. or speech and song to persuade them through the ear has been attempted. It has been jubilate throughout, as was proper enough in connection with birthday festivities, and yet there is another side to it all. The statistics of the city's trade are marvelous. but what oi the invmtory of its spiritual po-?tssions and the roster of its great men? llow many poets and how many seers, haw many composers and how many arti-t?. hoiv many scholars and divine*. how many philosopher and statesmen has this community produced in the oouree of its two hundred and iiity years of organized existence? Nay, ot tho.-e whom we recall as having come under one or another of these heads, how many have been of first rank, how many even of sec? -l- ...l. _ . ? ..f omi runic. Hum mc I ic mwus >>? "the great of old" is taken into account? v riie.se. perhaps. are humbling reflections, ^but they are wholesome. It is by count of heroes, not by count of heads, that a city's place in the final list of honors is to be determined. Whether litis city of magnificent opportunities is destined to aceom?lish ladyship remains to be seen. The B'ance trembles. In what sense it is open to you girl graduates of this passing year, dreaming your early dreams of what success in life may signify, in what sense is it possible for you to attain ladyship forever? Before attempting to answer the ouestion, let us clear our minds as completely as may be of prejudice and misapprehension. The word "ladv" lias fallen of l",.e years (the more's the pity1 somewhat into disrepute. (".aimed as a right by ilie many, the title has come to be lightly esteemed' as a privilege by the few. In fact, so cheap is it accounted nowadays that to t* discard it altogether, carefully avoiding | the use of it iu common conversation, is not seldom taken to be a mark of good breeding. Ail do not go to this extreme and, yet the number or those who would prefer to be spoken ot and addressed a ? "women," rattier tluin as "ladies,"' has been steadily increasing for the past twinI iv jva'v. and '.his incu.isc, 1 tiiink I am I safe m saying, lias i.eon in fixed ratio to j our progress as a p.e in cuiti\ation and ; retineinent. J venture it acciuin. tin-, an j imiortunate stat <>; tilings, sin-v "ia-.lv" I is a word which tiie language cannot lo.se without sore mipovti.-hiuctu rr.u one lor which the vocabulary ever} day intcieourse has no synotiy.vs. "Lady," be it observed, is a title, not a 1 genei.e wold, ne.es-.*.;..v entering all the I members ot one sex; and as a tit.o it belongs on.y to those who have a right to claim it. Now. who are they w no, 111 point or facr, have a rigiit to e.aim it? In inoo.-uvbiai eoaniries tliere is no uilheiilty I in finding an answer to this question. in Kngiand, lor example, tue fit-raids Of* lice, to winch such nutUers are intrusted, can and wid five you a dehuition in black and white, clear-cut ...id unmistakable. A "ladv," by hng.ish .aw, may be the wile ot a man above the rank oi knight and be ow that oi duke, t he title also belongs to the daughter* ot noo.cnien not below the rank ut earl and is given by courtesy to the wives of knights. Let that pas* for r.ngland. but what of ladyship in America, where no mk-!i sharp divisional lines arc drawn by the pencil ot authority? Here, thank Led, we have a much worthier definition of the word and more satisfactory interpretation of the tiling. Ladyship, under a democracy, means and can mean only one thing, womanhood at its best. Not all womanhood .* womanhood at it.* best any more than all manhood is ma. '.ood at its best? would that it were. And what are the characteristics of womanhood at its best? \\ hat are the tokens by which it is authenticated? We cannot greatly diner in opinion upon this point. Surely o: these characteristics dignity is one, gentleness is another, fortitude is a third and sympathy completes the cluster. It were unreasonable, of course, to expect the fullness of each one of these lour traits in any single personality, no matter how richly endowed by inheritance or carefully matured by training. And yet it is beyond question that some tincture of each one must be found present in a woman before, under democratic conditions, her eiaiin to ladyship can be accounted valid. Dignity?there are a thousand imitations of it, counterfeits bevond number, but how wholly admirable is the gentium article, what "an excellent thing in woman!" Xol bv auim; uicnitv do we become diguified. Aloofness is not dignity, fnuleur is not dignity, stiffness is uot dignity, a pompous manner and a brocaded style of speech?these are not dignity. 'true dignity is not of ice, it is of name. A certain delicate and fiery nimbus which circles the sanctuary of personality to safeguard it from intrusion and encroachment. "Their dignity," exclaims an old Hebrew prophet, giving us the whole thing in a nutshell, "their dignity shall proceed of themselves." Dignity is reconcilable with all forms of occupation, even the most mental. It consorts with many qualities, although with vanity it is reluctant to walk, and with immodesty it will have nothing to do. Immodesty is the sin against proportion. its very name so signifying, and as the philosophic emperor remarks in iiis meditations. "There is a proper dignity and proportion to be observed in the performance of every act of life." llcnce to do anything out of measure and in excess is undignified. Then as to gentleness, our second attribute of womanhood at its best, what shall we say of gentleness? fan we say anything better or truer than that it is the child, the direct offspring of dignity. The truly dignified can scarcely be thought of as the ungentle, for here again that question of proportion comes in. and rough ways and boisterous talk stand sell-condemned. Few things indeed can we so ill afford to spare out of the daily intercourse ui uir a> Muiiuji s ^viiuviu^. mm u only the more true the noisier the world becomes. With life punctuated tor us by the shrieks of steam whistles, the rattle of the chariots of iron and the strokes of all manner of gongs, how restful, how healthful, how reinvigorating are the ac cents of gentleness! Ah. my dear young friends, whatever else you forget to be, remember to be gentle. An anxious fear in the hearts of many thoughtful people, a fear which personally 1 do not share, but of which it is just as well to take note, is that out of all this contemporary struggle of woman for a complete independence, this duplication on her part of as much of man's work as is imitablo, there may come eventually an impairment of the world's total stock of gentleness. I>et us be misers here. The tide of this sweet grace is never the flood. There is no peril of any overflow'. Wc need to treasure every drop there i*. As to fortitude. T chose the word with care, wishing to mark off from courage in general that special form of this virtue which has found frequent r?d splendid illustration in the a:,;:; !* o( \\o:rr.r.iood. Courage of the sort which qualities one "to drink delight of battle."' to head storming parties and to volunteer on forlorn hopes is not expected of women, and. for that matter, is not so common among men as men would like to have it thought, hut of that other and more praiseworthy fearlessness, which, without the excitement of conflict, is aisle patiently to suffer. persistently to endure, in this CJuistlike virtue, it is possible?it has ten thousand times been shown to he possible that women should excel. With the aroma of this virtue wholly absent no woman's character even >o much as approximates perfection. 1 hit it is not enough to he able uncomplainingly to suffer?have we learned to suffer with? That is what sympathy means ?"suffering with"?remember that sympathy won the last of the four blossoms we sc., out to twine into our wreath. It does not matter how well bred a woman may he in other respects, it does not matter how varied her accomplishments, intellectual or artistic, if tender heartedness. the power to enter quickly ami deeply into the feeling of others, if this be wholly absent, it is idle to talk about "chann." it simply is not there. It is this insistence upon sympathy, as a necessary ingredient ot true womanhood that renders the Christian type so infinitely superior to the old ciassie type whether or maid or matron. That a woman can look on composedly at a hull light is the opprobrium of Spanish civilization, hut there was a time when not in one corner oi the Mediterranean ex. lu.-lvelv. but a" over t'10 I.-tin world women called ladies lould l oth tolerate and even timely delight i:i the shedding ot innocent blood. \\ lint has ehnnged all this? Onlv mc answer to that question i> possible. .Lsu* t hri-t has changed all this. To H:m we owe it that to-day no. on y dignity and I'ortitude (stoic virtues as well is Christian) not only dignity and iorti?tide. 1 ;;t a>o gentleness and sympathy are :cc<>gni/ed as necessary features of all true ladyship. Hut who is sufficient for these things? Willi the standard set so high, the tests made so severe, who shall pass? Ah. my young friends, how glad I ant that this is Whitsunday, the feast day of ti:e l|.?\v Cl:o-t. for W hi. sillidav points US t i si-i ivt 01 power. ami hands ?.\ii to us the talisman of suece*>. i. is by the strength of God that womanhood struggles upward to its perfection. The ages of chivalry gave to the Virgin Mary the iitie otVoui lady." Judged by some standards of ladyship nothing could scent more inaj?|ktopriate. but judged by the true stuudariOiptliing could be more jus:. "And Mary said, Behold the handmaid of lift* Lord, be it unto me according to .TJiy word." Catch that spirit, and it shall be granted unto each one of you. young women, to become "a lady forever," ye# forever and ever. A Proper Rebuke. Dr. Patton was delivering a lecture recently in his course on ethics at the Princeton Theological Seminary and experienced much annoyance because some of the students ate peanuts instead cf attending to him. Finally he administered this rebuke: "Gentlemen. I have delayed starting the nost important part of today's lecture hoping that the stock of peanuts would be consumed and a restful quiet be restored. As the quantity j seems ample to meet the demands and ! the supply seems inexhaustible. I feel constrained to request that your ap- ? petites be restrained until the conclu- j slon of the lecture. I would be greatly pleased if in the future anyone wishing to conduct a five o'clock tea in the class room would confine the ro- j freshmen's to sponge cake." His "Character." There was an opening for a butler i In the family where Bridget was cook 1 and she promptly applied for the j position in behalf of her brother. "I take it that his reputation mor- j ally is ail that could be expected," | suggested Madame. '"Xcuse me, but would you mind : saying that question over ag in?" asked Bridget. "I say." repeated Madame, "doubtless he is a man of moral character." "Sure, mum, sure?but I don't know if I'm afther un'erstandin' you." Madame waxed slightly impatient. "Oh, is he a good man, Bridget?" "Good, Is it? Sure he could lick th' eyes out of any shpalpeen from Cork to Kilkenny!" was the enthusiastic reply. Why Many Young Men Fall. It is the fault and the cause of the failure of so many bright, capable young men that, being put into a certain workday rut, they make no effort to climb or even crawl out of it; they do not seek the work that is not routine and go beyond the terms of the * J _ 9 .JJUIa..! l.V. uuuu ill urnrvu ui auuuiuuui lauur in order to attract the approving notice of their employers. They do not go to their posta before nor remain at them after the fixed hour. They are content* to do enough, and no more than enough, to earn their hire. The life of the average clerk is generally genteel, easy, cleanly; he need noi soil his hands nor his clothes, and hir ambition is satisfied with these pleaf ant conditions. Dinger in Delay. Dr. James M. Buckley, editor of the Christian Advocate, is a great favorite with the young men in the Methodist denomination. Often he admonishes them along interesting lines. To a youth who has just begun his work in the ministry he said the other day: "How are things mat rimoniai wun you, ray Doy; i m still single," was the reply. "Don't delay too long." said the doctor with a merry twinkle in his eye. "You don't want to put marriage off until you are so old that you won't be able to manage your children." Multiple Births. The Lancet gives the following statistics with reference to "multiple births" in England. What the corporal in "Ours" calls an attack of "twinsy" is as one in eighty births. ; Of triplets there is only one instance j in 6,400 which justifies a claim on the "King's bounty"; and quadruplets 1 are as one to 512,000; while the chances of a quintette are even more remote, the ration being one in 40,980,000 births. There is a case on record in which a woman presented her husband with seven successive i triplets. ^ Mosquitoes, as a rule, do not fly far. j Light continued winds carry them 1 away from their breeding places, but in heavy winds mosquitoes cling firmly to the nearest point of attachment. Railroad trains and other means or transport have carried raosquitor3 into ; -localities entirely free from them bo- ' fore railways were introduced. DOAN'S (JET Aching backs arc cased. Hip. back, and I loin pains overcome. Swelling of the ' limbs and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick dust sediment, high colored, pain in passing, dribbling. frequency, bed wetting. Doau's Kidney Pills remove calculi and gravel. PEKEnrxD. Ixn. ? " It was called rheumatism. I could j , get no relief from the doc- tf\ tors. I began to improve on Pm JffSL f* * taking I>oau?8 sample and FW PMyjmXfJfj got two boxes at our drug- ISI I gists. and. although 08 years ** V I D of age. 1 am almost a new ,, man. I was troubled a good TA ^ " deal with tny water ? had to >Ds. u r get up four "and live times a night. Thut trouble is over with and once more I can j NAME rest the night through. My backache is all gone, and I t p. p thank you ever so much for the wonderful medicine, STATE Doon's Kidney l'itls." i..., ii ^ Forjree trial hoi. j?. nti.trt, j raiaiT*aiiMum \ o.. i?u """ GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel trouble! blood, wind on the stomach, bloated Dowels, ft pains after eating, liver trouble, aallow akin an regularly you are tick. Constipation kills trior starts chronic ailments and lone years of suffer CASCARETS today, for you will never get we right Take our advice, start with Cascarets money refunded. The genuine tablet stampei booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Compa A Sea Lyric. Thtre Is ?*o music that man has heard Like the voice of the minstrel Sea, Whose major and minor chords are fraught With infinite mystery. For the Sea is a harp, and the winds of God Play over his rhythmic breast. Ar.il bear on the sweep of their mighty wings The song of a vast unrest. There is no passion that man has sung Like the love of the deep-souled Sea. Whose tide responds to the Moon's soft light With marvelous melody. For the Sea is a harp, and the winds of God Play over his rhythmic breast. And bear on the sweep of their mighty wings The song of a vast unrest. There is no sorrow that man has known Like the grief of the wordless Main, Whose Titan bosom forever throbs With an untranslated pain, for the Sea is a harp, and the winds of God Flay over his rhythmic breast. And bear on the sweep of their mighty wings The song of a vast unrest. ?William Hamilton Hayne, in the Atlantic Monthly. Crar.k Day at White House. The appearance at the White House of an old man named Barney Hughes, who said he was 100 years old and that the President had promised him a house and lot, which he had come to i get, moved one of the secret service 1 men at the White House to say that , Friday Is cranks' day there Why it wits so he was unable to state, but: it was a fact. "I have often won- | dered about it," he remarked after he had persuaded Mr. Hughei to go away, j "Nearly all these funny-house people i ccme here on Fridays. Ever since I ; have been here I have recognized the ; ?Uaw FvMaw o o m a a unnw A fViaf I ' 1 til -I, miCU a i i via j vauiv ntvuuU| bunt, a i would have some work to do, because It was sure to bring on a concourse of muddjr-headed people."?New York T.mes. Some women's idea of being strenuous is to belong to seventeen different societies for the suppression of th.ngs. ? ! * **************** ******** X % NERVOUS HEADACHE i S PIIDCn without anv diMRreeable fj Jr bUnCU result by a dose i>r two of R | Drug' Store*! CAPUDINE \ J (Liquid.) S i**MkkWXS*M EXQUISITE [if tor hot weather. Cools the blood M B and quenches the thirst. ? Hires 1 || Rootbeer A KifiCA A packwm makes Ore pallnna. Sold^^BRj IB eyerywlnrv, or sent for a cent*. JBwIi UB^ iicware of linit.vjoua. /B SjJggH^CIUSLCS K. unui IsTw MILL$1| ??? 1 men. All our mllla are fitted with the famous Heaeock-Klni? j 1'at. Variable Feed Works ; the simplest, most durable and best feed*un the market. ?MANUFACTt'RKD BY THE? SALEM IRON WORKS, W1XSTQX?8ALKM, X. C. A World Wonders. A man who has been an intimate friend of Charles M. Schwab for many j ears says: "The world wonders why j Schwab is so strong with the steel j folk. Perhaps there are a score of , nen each of whom would make just as food a president of the Steel Trust as Charlie, but it is not as a steel man pure and simple that he is in such rc- j quest. Schwab's groat power lies in ' his ability to handle men. He is the [ ablest director of labor that the world j ever knew. The vast army of steel ; workers trust him implicitly. But for ; him there would be strike after j strik-3." | "back rest!Believe heart palpitation, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness, dizziness. Doan's Kidney Pills are now recognized as a known remedy for kidney, bladder, 1 and urinary troubles. They bring relief and cure when despair shadows hope. I The free trial is an open door to self proof. _ | Baxttti SpRrxcfl, Kavsar. . ? "I rareived the free sam- j pie of Doan's Kidney Pills. OdnS LJSsk For five years I have had j . much pain iu my back.which j OnSV physicians said nrc*e from ( ??? my kidneys. Four boxes of 1115, Doan's Kidney Pills have en lhtv tirely cured "the trouble. I ' *0*" think 1 owe my life to these hmt?vPills, and I want others to ' know it." Sadik Davis. Baxter Springs, Kans. j ? ? FAtJtotTn. Va ?' ! suf- 1 j fer?*d over twelve months - -? ? I with pain in the small of my 1 mull this oonpon to ,back Medicines and plasffaJo. X Y. If above ; tew Z*vt' onl.v .temporary rite addrew ou ispa- re'ief. Doan's Kidney Pdls ' cured ice.'1 F . S. Buowx. F;ilmouth. Ya. _ ~ THE BOWELS ^ Wwwwlly CANDY f L CATHARTIC i. appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad )ul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, d dirziness. When your bowels don't move t people than all other diseases together. It ing. No matter what ails you, start taking 11 and stay well until you get your bowels today under absolute guarantee to cure or i CCC. Never sold in bulk. Sample an4 . toy, Chicago or New York. 30a I DOCTOR ADVOCATED 0 PE-R1H1A MADE C1ATARRH is a very frequent cause ) of that class of diseases popu.aiiy known as female weakness. x. i e . i_ l..:^ r< npnnnf?P5 t .Harm or ine ntrivii; ui-?ur- ? such a variety of disagreeable and irritating symptoms that many people?in fact, the majority of people?have no idea that they are caused by catarrh. If all the women who are suffering with nnv form of female weakness would write to Dr. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio, and give him a complete description of their symptoms and the peculiarities of their troubles he wiH immediately reply with complete directions for treatment, free of charge. Mrs. Eva Bart ho, 133 East 12th street, JV". J'. City, ?V. ?., writes; " I suffered for three years with leueorrhea and ulceration of the womb. Ihe doctor i advocated, an operation which \ 1 dreaded, very much, and strongly objected to go under it. Mow I am a changed woman. Peruna cured, me; it took nine bottles, but I felt so much improved I kept taking it, as I dreaded an operation so much. 1 am to-day in perfect health and. have not felt so well for fifteen years."?Mrs. Eva Bartho. Miss Maud Steinbach, 1399 12th St., Milwaukee, Wis., writes: "1-ast winter 1 felt sick most of the time, was irregular and suffered from nervous exhaustion and severe bearing down pains. I had so frequently heard of Peruna and what wonderfuf cures it performed, so I sent for a bottle, and in tour weeks my health and strength were entirely restored to me."?Miss Maud Steinbaeh. Everywhere the a*omen are using Peruna and praising it. Peruna is not a palliative simply; it cures by removing the cause of female disease. Dr. Hartman has probably cured more | women of female ailments than any other living physician. He makes these cures simply by using and recommending Peruna. If you do not derive prompt and of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hat your cane and he will be pleated to pi Address Dr. Hartman, Presldei Columbus, Ohio. Natural flavor Cottage= Corned Beef ?s ????????? it rig Keep It in the house for emetgenciea?for s you want something good and want it quick, appetizing lunch is icadv in an instant Libby, McNeill & Libby, Ch I tMlaSON1* v iMffiWOI tOCENfS. i CVAS W aastu PAINfAHSHl V . t\i \3 A MASTERING : ANGELTHOD: i |; Soldeverym?re.\ i thrr : -nrS1? I so. ; ff* Dropsy i; ^ Removes aJl swelling in 8 to 20 ! / days; effects a permanent cure >1 iu joto 6o days. Trial treatment MljIZMit given free. Nothingcan be fairer MujM^ Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sana, i , litti- saacfaUtta. Bos p. Atlanta, (-a. , - wm Ay ' PERATION? I ' KNIFE UNNECESSARY. satisfactory results from the us* tman. atvlna a full statement of tve you Kin valuable advice graHe* it ot The "**art man Sanitarium*, , v. ike cnr choice corned beef, cook it and season J . ? C ? - tm > I ] aon - oy expend?ucucj in?u > '. When just right we put it in cans to keep J ht until you want it. ujppers. (or sandwiches?for any time when ) bimply turn a key and the cants open. An . inatf a Write fot onr free booklet, "How i lOd^f;. t0 Mate Good Things to Kit." J BABY'S FUTURE Something for Mothers . to Think About Lives of Suffering and Sorrow Averted And Happiness and Prosperity Assured by Cuticura Soap, Ointmentand Pills When All Else Fails. Every child born into the world with an inherited or early developed tendency to distressing, oisflgurlng humours of the skin, scalp and blood,, becomes an object of the most tender solicitude, not only because of its suffer- * Ing, bat because of the dreadful fear that the disfiguration Is to be lifelong and mar Its future happiness and prosperity. Hence, It becomes the duty of mothers of such afflicted children to acquaint themselves with the best, the purest and most effective treatment available, viz., '1 he Cutlcura Treatment. Warm baths with Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the t-kiaand scalp of crusts and scales, gentle applications of Cuticura Ointment, to allay Itching, Irritation and Inflammation, and soothe acd heal, and mild doses of Cutlcun. Kesolvent, to cool the blood in the severer caso3, aro all that Can be desired for the speedy relief and permanent cure of skin torturrd infants and children, and the comfort of worn-oat parents. Millions of women n>c Cutlcura Soap? assisted by Cutlcura Ointment, for preserving, pnrifyiog and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair and hands, for annoying Irritations and weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic purpose* which readily suggest themselves. Sold 'brooghont th? world. Cottar* Roaolmt. Sir. (tm 'orni ot chocolate Cottrd PIU?, 23*. ncr rial of CO), O.ob, ntat, Hie., Snap, tie. DcnoO: London, '3 Chart-rbnaao fcj.: I'ltl*. A Rim do U hlii Bncfcxi, 1 "J Colaaibua ira Pottrr Drug * Cbrm. Corp. Pmprtrtn-*. *r Senator - How lo Can Baby Uamoan." ??!F5Si,"2t Tktinpiw'i Er* w.h?