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* ^^H^^KqUENT SUNDAY SERM&N Bt ^^^^H^BISHO? D. A. COODSSIL. Subject: The Face of Chrirt. Brooklyn, N. Y.?A very large audiBH^r wee filled the Tabernacle Sunday to j| listen to Bishop D. A. Good^ell. His MB subject was "The Face cf Christ." ZW" The text was from II. Corin hians iv:6: 1 y "The glory of Cod in the fa e of Jesus jrv Christ." Bishop GoodsaJ *-aid iu the course of his sermon: As you read the Bible both in the Old and New Testaments you are impressed with the great number of ti times which the word "face" is used. When you travel in Eastern lands you (find that this word is usea far more often and in many different relations ngK among the Eastern people than we ourselves are accustomed to use it. I This word face is used in reference to a man's whole character, I am tola, m everywhere in the East, and we have > y a great many traces of it in the Bible; H \ and now when we come to think of it V I isn't it true that we are accustomed B \ to recognize each other more by the I face than by any other one thing. Is I it not wonderful that upon the few [ elements in the face, the forehead, the BL ' eyes, nose, mouth and chin there | should be such an infinite variety of ^B expression stamped by the great Ore- j ator? There is a general convict.on among , us that the face will work out the j inner character, so that whatever may j be the beginning of life when we have 1 lived with ourselves a long time we .will be pretty apt to show upon our ! faces what kind of a person we have j IL lived with. It is impossible for any X person to give way to avarice without j showing it on their face. If he had an Bm open face once it will change; and so : Hjjk the man who gives way to the forces B^ of passion, whether he give-; way to lust or whether he gives way to drink. > gsM or whether he gives way to appetite / for food. It will show out on his face. We write upon our faces whet we live moii con wear a mask so i wivu auu iiu v?... -- ~? , completely that those who are wise in ^ these things are not able to read be- > kind the mask. Now,, what one is there among us that has not desired again and ugain to have lived when the face of Jesus H Christ could have been seen. I think there is no devout soul that in his trouble has not said. Oh. that I B could look into my Master's face. Oh. P?7 that I could," live as the little children j Sj did, "have rested my head against His breast and have beard Him say to me J( as He said to them, 'Suffer them to come.'" [ You can scarcely go into a Christian | home to-day tyhere Christian education * has presided where there is no: at least one or more representations of the face of Jesus Christ. I have observed according to our experiences, accordi ing to our wants, we fasten upon the * representations of Jesus Christ's face i; , that are most satisfying to us. most gi fitting. So that if we are under deep penitence of sin, we are apt to have * ' the face of the suffering Christ upon the Cross, and if the sorrows of the t world have burdened our hearts, we will carry there the face of the thorncrowned Christ iu our homes. If we , have dwelt upon Christ in His strength, in His power, in His resistance to evil, in the calm majesty of one who knows he is innocent, we lI would most likely have the picture of Christ before Pilate. From the days of the Catacombs up to the present ^Ime, men have been trying to put Christ's face before humanity, and why? Because all souls iu then greater Ji " moments, in their spiritual moments. ! and therefore iu their religious moI ments. would like to have Him brought i near by. They would like to have Him made more real. The best thing is to so carry Jesus V Christ In our heart that we shall see * ' Him and. behold the glory of God in J ;o(i the face of Jesus Christ. /.j The actual picture must remain the same. We may study it. we may urT derstand its history. It is not at all ^ probable that any one is going to see in \ a moment what it took the artist years to produce, though this may hap- j <Jpyn- But as we grow spiritually it is : ^"Tfossible for us by spiritual sight to ; 8$ ' behold our Lord, to behold Hi:n more j clearly as the years go on. * f When we study this one word, the word face, we find that it stands relat- , . *T ed to three great facts and to none other that I know of. and these three ' 1 facts are, first, revelation, then in;j spiration and finally reward. This is Ife; exactly what the Apostle means by ' this text, that he who studies the face of Jesus Christ, he who enlarges his vision by spiritual imagination, will have the revelation of the divine truth come to him. For do we not knew that Jesus came to reveal God to us, to rent veal God to a world in which the dim t eye of sin could but imperfectly see I Him. But the trouble is that our eyes ; I i jtee as we are educated to see. I have Irf . often noticed while passing along the m*-"' street that a man is usually inter[ ested in the trade he represents. If he L iwas a hatter, he looked at my hat; if L he was a tailor he looked nt my B clothes; If he was a shoemaker be looked at my shoes; if he was a bootblack he looked to see whether they were muddy or not, and so our vision i ^^B is trained by what we are doing, by what we are thinking. If our eyes Hi are trained only to the things of time. ^^^B then all the beauty that we see is in ^^^B the things of time, but by using these as stepping stones to something higher and nobler, then we see by the power ^^^B of God's revelation that there is a ^B^kGod here in this world, and that He is ^HH ruling the world in the interest of ^^^B Jesus Christ. ^^^B I believe that you would have ^^^^Bhought yourself victims of fate if you ^^^^Biad not been taught by Jesus Christ he doctrine of divine fatherhood. You would have thought perhaps that this U^^vwonu was maue uy cuaure u yuu { had not seen Him standing in the ; ^^B stern of the ship and saying ;o the j Hjl troubled waves. "Peace, be still." But | because He has come, because He has passed through all the phases of our ^^^ life from infancy to maturity, because ^HHe has been tempted, because He sub^^^Bmitted to wrong in order that He might do a great and holy work, beBi cause He has given the most j ?rfect example of what humanity ou ht to 0W be under all phases and circumst noes, because He is here and was God manifested in the flesh, we, His breth-46b in the creation, and we. His brethren in the redemption of the cross, know that we are dear to God., for God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son to die for us. I have to travel a good deal in my work, asyou know. Very often I wake i early in the morning, and lift the cur- j tain of my sleeping car that I may see where we are, and what the prospects are. Sometimes it is clouded, sometimes it is clear. There are pools in the ditches beside the tracks, or ' perhaps we are running alongside the lake and I look at the lake and out there I can see things mirrored. It has been a great pleasure to me some is Orion and there is Sirius, there is the big dipper and there is Jupiter and there is Venus, the iporning star, and. there is Mars. 1 didn't have to look up. I looked down and saw it reflected. i And thed I would see the round orb of the morn and I could see what phase of the moon was on by looking down as I coukl by looking above. I Then 1 have seen the wind set the glassy surface into waves, and it would be only belts of broken light. That is the way it is in human society. We are looking down upon the world which reflects human weaknesses, human sin, human passions. There isn't a glassy place to reflect the glory of Christ in. There are all kinds of passions at work and the best that we can see is the ! ruttied surface of humanity, but I see bars of light that are 011 the surface, | then, when I look up I see the glorious i Christ. Now. finally, the glory of Cod in the face of Jesus Christ is revealed, not only as a revelation, not only for inspiration, but for reward. How full the New Testament is of this idea that the sight of Jesus Christ shall be the reward of the saint and the Old Testament. too: "My eyes shall see the King in His beauty." "We shall be satisfied when we wake in His likeness," "We shall see Him and know Him as He is." How many more passages does your memory bring up out of your religious education that teach this doctrine? We who are here this morning, if we believe in Cod we shall not only see those who have gone l>efore. who have been in our homes, but the great ambition of a devoted soul will be gratified?we shall see Cod. rflessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see Cod. According to the measure of our inward purity do we seem to see Cod here. When we shall, by the washing of regeneration ami the renewal of our hearts and the sanctification of our spirit, until we can say the Lord hath made mo whiter than snow, wo waiK wmi nuu. vm baud is in His hand and our head is on His bosom. He carries us when we are weak, as a shepherd carries the lamb, lie heals our aisease, He comforts us in our sorrows. He is in our homes when we are there, in our shops when we are there, in the streets when we are Walking, on the sea when we are sailing. We shall see Christ, not in His humiliation. but in His exaltation; not as a babe in the manger, but as a king of the universe; not as humbled before Pilate, but as ruling all things and judging all things. I believe in heaven because I believe in God. I do not know where it is, I think that I am convinced that it is a condition rather than a place. This is shown by the parable of Dives and Lazarus, one in paradise and one in hell. Jet they could talk across tlio gulf. That mu^t have been moral rather than physical. But 1 do not know that if God is everywhere, my soul shall soar through space and and Him everywhere. It may be that heaven is everywhere, as God is everywhere to the devout soul. Getting at Life's Values. Things that come easily are not of much value. Vacation time does not often record noteworthy accomplishment. It is when the pressure of life Is at Its highest, perhaps close to the breakiug point, that results usually* count for most. That time that we are looking forward to, when this present grinding pressure will be off and we shall have an opportunity to do something. is not likely to record nearly as good work as we are doing under friction and stress. Those particles of carbon might have been nothing more than coal or graphite if consuming heat and enormous pressure had not crystallized them into a diamond. If such a weight is just now upon us, let us rejoice at the opportunity we have for getting at the precious things of life.?S. S. Times. The Bible. Alone it has civilized whole nations. It is the one book that can fully lead forth the richest and deepest and sweetest things in man's nature. Read all other hooks?philosophy, poetry, history, fiction?but if you would refine the judgment, fertilize the reason, wing the imagination, attain unto the finest womanhood or the sturdiest manhood, read this book, reverently and prayerfully, until its truths have dissolved like iron into the blood. If you have no time, make time and read. The book Daniel Webster placed under his pillow when dying is the book ail should carry in the hand while living.?Newell D. Hillis. A Mockery. To be dishonest during the week, to defraud one's creditors, to rent property for saloons or brothels, to water stock and sell the water to the public, to live in sin and then to go to church on Sunday to worship, or to pretend to worship at home, is mockery. If there is one thing the Bible declares, it is mat uoa uuuurs ?u<.u nvi.-uIF, lie must be worshiped in truth.?Sunday-School Times. The Cheeriest Music. We can set our deeds to the music of a grateful heart, and seek to round our lives into a hymn?the melody of which will be recognized by all who come in contact with us, and the power of which shall not be evanescent, like the voice of the singer, but perennial, like the music of the spheres.?Wm. M. Taylor. The Key and the Lock. Let, then, our prayers be "the key that opens the day, and the lock that shuts the night," and also from morning to night our stafT and stay in all our labors, enabling us to go cheerfully up to the mount of God.?Cano? Ibarra r. Shot and Shell. It will probablv be found that a new record has been established in the matter of rounds discharged by the Port Arthur garrison and the besieging army. The raplditv of modern gunfire must /eclipse nil previous figures. It was considered wonderful at the cioo-o St Sohastian in 1812 that the breaching battery of ten Runs should overage 350 rounds per gun in fifteen and a half hours. The Germans dropned 197.000 projectiles into Mexico, killing, however, only with each 500th discharge. Only two people dropped at Trouville from the discharge of 27.000 shells. Sedan was much mere deadly, 240,000 proiectiles accounting for 9,000 casualties. The Americans, who pride themselves on their marksmanship, expected that V-riible casualty lists would result from their firing in the war w'th Spain. Well, at Santiago they bombarded for two nights, and their machine guns alone were responsible for 23.000 rounds. But only sixty-eight of the enemy succumbed. * 4 ^^^^Polnted Paragraffis. y. When a woman isn't talking about clothes it is a sign she Is listening 11 to somebody else who is. / ii A man hardly ever kno\js enough to 11 pretend to think his wife (knows more c than she does. . / Either people do morp than they h lare think about or they dare to think w it, but not to do it. A woman has an awful hard time ci making herself believe she can't trust ci a man she knows she can't. h Education is all thyhings you don't ! learn when you ko t/f college. s; ?^? Qood Fri-nds. | c] The Japanese with all their free- {i lom from superstition, shudder at the >ight of milk, and would sooner fore- n: ;o a breakfast than mix their tea tl with cream. Their Chinese neighbors , T ill up on almost anything digestible b; ?nough to dodge the risk of a coroner's inquest, but insist on boiling hot I aeverages. What! Does he swallow j cold water like a dog? They gasp at j sight of a foreigner patronizing a ^ fountain. The school of uncompro- j nising vegetarians boast about 300,- ; )00,000 converts, or nearly 20 per cent, of the human race, and pork- t( jphobia is by r.o means confined to j the devotes of Islam and its sister j i creed; the Parsees have.it and the; , Druses of Mount Lebanon, also sev; ?ral tribes of the semi-Christian c ; Abyslnians. And those same Abysin- e i ians will not touch rabbits' meat, though they have no compunction 8 about cutting a steak out of a live I steer and penning him up for future 1 g reference.?Health Culture. : 1 An epidemic of matrimony with chorus-girls has broken out again in the British peetage, states the Argo- b nant. Three young lords and a mar- C quis are depleting the stage of the a sane theatre. Contrary to the recent C announcement by the solicitor of another pe?r that as soon as he married d an American heiress his debts would F j be paid, these theatrical alliances can 1 n have no financial motive. Yet the chorus-girl marriages seem to turn out as well as those arranged on pure- S1 1*. Ki,0UAAn nvtMAlntAo Art/1 mnrrififfrc ^' ; IJ UUOIUCOO puuviptc^. ntiu umt > iMp- w ^ out of their own circle keep the Brit! Ifh peerage more virile than the Con- . gl tlnentai nobility with their intermin- d able quarten'ngs. I o: What's the Use? j We stew and fret and toil and sweat And try to win a name. H i We strive for years with many tears To win a little fame, i And by and hy we up and die w And all is Just the same? . So what's the use? 11 g We all grow old in search of gold And slave our lives away. 0: We s^l our souls for greenback roll* C And barter love for pay. And by and by we up and die C( And then we turn to clay? t< So what's the use? ^ For love we cry. for love we sigh, ? To love we fondly cling. For eyes that shine we peak and pine And wince at Cupid's sting. S' And by and by we up nnd die And everything takes wing? So what's the use? gj We join the race for social niace And hope at last to shine U' And spend our cash to cut a dash fli And when we get in line. l.< Why, by and by we up and die, tt We're planted 'neath the vine? r So what's the use? Just do your best and leave the rest t To fate or what you will. \ Go play your parts and break your hearti ' And drink of life your fill. For by and by you'll up and die, ac And all your hopes be nil? So what's the use? . Colored Folk Fear "Voodoo." Colored folk in the Ninth ward of ' the city of Wilmington, Delaware, arc y, j in mortal terror over the finding by Michael Palese, a bridge tender, of a ! jet black cat with a "voodoo" bag tied | around its neck with yellow ribbon. The bag contained spices, matches, S( needles and other magic charms. The , ! note read: | "Bell Smith, this day do I conjure that vou must and shall leave these i ,( ! premises without delay on the ninth | ^ day Irom this day. And God have (j mercy on you. Amen." w The negroes in the neighborhood r? think the Bell Smith referred to is ly Mrs. Isabella Smith, a white woman at living on East Twelfth street. She L does not seem concerned by the "con- 01 juring." J! Thomas Hamilton, who has the bag, has been given different methods of i getting rid of the conjure, the favorite ru I being to burn it with three red pep- _ i pers, and throw the dust into the river j when the tide is flowing out. Meanj while the black cat has escaped. , children affected By Mother's Food and Brink* Many babies have been launched into life with constitutions weakened by disease taken in with their mother's milk. Mothers cannot be too careful as to the food they use while nursing their babes. The experience of a Kansas City mother is n case in point: "I was a great coffee drinker from a child, and thought I could not eat a meal without it. But I found at last it was doing me harm. For years I had been troubled with dizziness, snots before my eyes and pain in my heart, to which was added, two jears ago. a chronic sour stomach. The baby was born seven months ago, and almost front the beginning it. too. suffered from sour stomach. She was taking it from me! * * * ? ?? ?- ? T AAMAttUAil n ill Lily uisin*P3 1 '.-ui?uuru a 11 icuu of more experience tlian mine, and she told me to quit coffee, that coffee did not make good milk; I lmve since ascertained that it really dries up the milk. "So I quit coffee, and tried tea and at last cocoa. But they did not spree with me. Then I turned to Postum Coffee with the happiest results. It proved to be the very thing I needed. It not only agreed perfectly with baby and myself, but it increased the flow of my milk. My husband then quit coffee and used Postum. quickly got well of the dyspepsia with which he had l>een troubled. I no longer suffer from the dizziness, blind spells, pain in my heart or sour stomach. Postum { has cured them. "Now we all drink Postum from my I husband to my seven months' old baby. ; It has proved to be the best hot drink ! we have ever used. We would not j give up Postum for the best coffee we j ever drank." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Get the little book "The Road to 1 Weliville" ip. each pkg. HOW WO BEAUT : PEL 's I Female Weaknes ?- - _ n lor?e Brought Home Dead Maete A strange crime is puzzling the p ce of Bergamo, Italy. At a late hoi i the night, a horse and trap belon ig to Signor Laroupi, a well know itizen. drew up in front of his hous On the seat was Signor Laroupi eadless body, with the reins tight] 'rapped around the hands. The crime is believed to have "bee ommitted by members of a secret s lety, among whom Signor Larou] ad enemies. The head was afterward found in ick containing Christmas present hich the murdered man had pu based in a neighboring town earlit i the day. After decapitating their victim, th lurdercrs had secured the body i le trap and whipped up the horsi he animal having frequently travele >' the same road, found its way homi Money, but No Friends. J. Arthur Josephs, one of the wits c le financial center, was approache le other day by a well-known cha cter about "the street," who plaii vely put to him this question: "Josephs, would you lend five dollai > a friend in distress?" "I would in a minute," responde osephs. "but I haven't got " "Don't tell rne that you haven't g< interrupted the other. "I saw yc hange a ten dollar bill just now I Iberlin's." "You did not permit me to finish ir entence," said Josephs icily. "Whi started to say was that I haven ot a friend in the world."?New Yoi 'imes. 1 Took Railroad Ccal. The Kansas Southwestern a shoi ranch road running out of Arkansz ity. has opened up a conscience fun ccount. Some time ago the agent i aldwell received the following letter Agent?Will )OU pieuse bciiu me u< ress of the superintendent of tti risco depot, or where shall I write 1 lake a wrong right?" The required address was given, an le following letter came as a r ponse: "Dear Sir?When I was mall child I took some of the rai aad company's coal, which I wish 1 ay for, a3 I am now a child of Go. nd heaven and lost souls are my on! esires." Tn the letter was enclosed a postoffl< rder for 75 cents. lamburg Man Shrewd Advertise There is a piano dealer in Hambur ho runs the following advertisemei 1 a local paper: "To be sold, i reatly reduced prices, pianos, gran r cottage models, in rosewood, wa ut and other cases. These magnii ent instruments were manufacture > complete orders from Port Arthu ut have been taken into stock i oniequence of the siege." riTr ot Ohio. Citt or Toledo, } fl Lucas County. ' j Frank J. Che.net make oath that he I inior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney o., doing business in the City of Toledi ounty and State aforesaid, and that sai rm will pay the sum of one hundred doi irs lor earh and every case of catabb tat cannot be cured by the us? of Hall atarbu Cure. Frank J. Chknkt. Swora to before mo and subscribed in m ?*? presence, this 6th day of Decen seal ber, A. D . 1886. A.W.Glkason, ?v? Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taten internally, an tsdireetly oa th) blool and mucous sur ces of tue syste n. Seud for tostiuioaiaU eo. F. J. Cheney A Co . Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Tale Hall's Family Tills for constipation A man who gets his pay in a mce never works overtime. RESTORED HIS HAIR alp Humor Cured by Cuticura Soap an Ointment After All Kite Failed. "I was troubled with a severe scalp hi or and loss of hair that gave me a gres ?al of annoyance. After unsuccessful e irts with many remedies and so-calle air tonics, a friend induced me to tr uticura Soap and Ointment. The humc as cured in a short time, my hair wa istored as healthy as ever, and I can glac say 1 have since been entirely free fror ly further annoyance. 1 shall always us uticura Soap, and 1 keep the Ointmen l hand to use as a dressing for the hai id scalp. (Signed) Fred'k Busche, 21 ast 57th St., M. Y. City." It takes rough tools to remove tt ist from our heart3. So. 14. gBggEB Bay ^SV we nt ==mmmm purest is light, ^jn/ than oth< Good La Lack is n flff^PwBy country. =9BflH|0 the ( pHMOl ? ^ p* I \ \^BRb9A man " ru=na cures *' - - - - ? i J Mrs. Mable Bradford, 13 Church strc * lington. Vt.4 Secretary Whittier Orator rt J etv. writes: ls J "Peruna is certainly a wonderful m f | for the ills of women. I have hi )] spoken of in the highest praise by d*. J and certainly my experience is well i lC i ?of a good word. :o j "I began to have severe pains acr back about a year ago. brought o id J cold, and each subsequent month t ^ i me nain and distress. a J ' Your remedy was prescribed, and t 0 jit acted upon my system was aim J good to be true. I certainly have re ly: ?my health and strength, and I no * suffer periodical pains and extremi *c-! j tude."?Mable Bradford. Thousands of Women Cured Every Year by Correspondence?This is r' What Dr. Hartman Proposes to * Do For You Without Charge. it Women who suffer should read the e u(i dences presented here. We have thousands . of letters from grateful friends who tell the d" same story. B Half the ills that are peculiarly woman's (d own are of a catarrhal character. Female r weakness \\\Q not understood for many ' years. 10 " tyr. Hartman deserves the credit of having determined its real character. He has I Who Owns the Ksilroads? H. T. Xewcomb. of the District of [i Columbia Bar, has compiled statistics k showing that 5,174,718 depositors in o, savings banks of six Eastern States are d directly interested in the joint owner Miljl UL ^t1.,Uin,UOU Ui aiCC.Ui Kiiuwuu .* securities, that insurance compuutea doing business in Massachusetts hold y 5b4o.S8U,tV{S of steani railroad stocks i- and bonds, and 74 educational institutions depend ou 547.4GS.8-7 invested in . similar securities for a portion of their m income. Other fiduciary institutions - own enough railroad securities to bring such holdings up to more than a billion and a half dollars, about one-sixth of u : the entire capital invested in railroad ! property. These investments represent d-1 the savings of the musses, there being twenty million holders of life insurance policies in the country, as many more of tire insurance policies, and au I even greater number of depositors in d i banking and trust institutions, where , investments are largely in railroad securities. ^ 'do no; bolievo Pico's Cure for Consnranr tionhas unequal for coughs androids.?John |J F.BoTEE.TrinitvSnrings. Ind.. Feb. 15,1900. y Copper money in France is being replaced by aluminum. j. Dahlias. 20 kiuus.fl. H Eur'.Taunton, 31a?* 11 The Aztec Indian? of Mexico are noted e tor their strength' ,t ir Tteh cured in .TO minutes by Woolford's 3 Sanitary J.otion. Never rails. Sold by all druggists. SI. Mail orders promptly nlicti by Dr K Detclion. CrawforJsville, Ind. ie The uic-saving dog? are valuable aids to the police department of Paris. K? Premiums with If our Baking Powc Good Luck Baking Powder and get the beautiful : offering absolutely free. Good Luck is unques baking powder possible to manufacture. Bread i , white, wholesome and nutritious. It keeps long tr baking powders and raises the batter quickest and vt ck is only 10c a pound. By giving the best at the lo iow being shipped in car load and train load lots to It is the idea of getting these beautiful presents fre piality and low price, that makes this a remarkable 1 QOOC 1 LUCk 0 Baking Poi eked in 6 oz. and 1 lb. cam. The coupons necessai y useful gifts, are printed on the label of each ca: e coupons. Save them. A fewAf them will get ne free premium. For details the little book tc every can. Don't forget to aslBor Good Luck r >ave worry, save money, and last at not least save pons and get the beautiful gifts. Arour grocer doe "? ?J ? v: 1 ?- ~:il ?nn are su 11; bCliU Ui Uld UAU1C ?UU nt nm aw ; ? I: BUB CVit 3uTTW?<^A^V?^%JW^^^^C^kA^H t ?j fl ooco rc v*tw# ?u ahuc^M S?l cut m H W |i n MOi CAM <u?,w r? S^M <fB ^ pj This is the coupon found on every can. E SOUTHERN MANUFACTUR RICHMOND, VA. I / ? ' I / " pu. I ' ' IFUL WOMEN ESCAF VIC CATARRH BY fll ;s Is Usually Pelvk ; Catarrh Wherevei <*, B?r-? (( M3 Wm4 10 Soci-J \\ IM/fT \ iJP longer? ~?" > lassi ? miUje catarrh and catarrhal dis- i ] { eases, including pelvic catarrh, a ; an ? life long study. ? Peruna cures catarrh, whether of the J ari fcivic organs or any other organ of the I Tf uman body. I th Pe-ru-na, a Natural Beautifier. Peruna produees clean, mucous mem- 4 branes, the basis of facial symmetry and a 1 1 perfect complexion. #| The women have not been slow to dis-1 i r i cover that a course of Peruna will do more ! toward restoring youthful beauty than all'Jj the devices known to science. * Many a girl has regained her fad*d *"] beauty, many a matron has lengthened tne ?( days of her comely appearance by using *c Peruna. Its | Truths that S I Your grocer is honest and?if I you that he knows very little 1 I sells you. How can he know, wb I how it w I ?or whe JH coffee lo< youexpe tnecessll millions at oar t iMiBpBpWHiFi' your horn ^ tcratetf.01 I dlrt,gcrn k t_ l 1 ?r t tav ri 1 ill CiKU VI XJx\s?v v 9 pound of Pure Coffee. Insist 3 (Lion head on every package.) sj ("Save the Lion-heads for n I SOLD BY GROCERS i WOOI ~ tot lBrniHK====== ^ lcr wW premiums tionably the made with it j^J er and better *oi cry thoroughly. 0u' west cost Good all parts of the Al e, in addition to ? premium offer ^ | i ? ? ?'ED ID OF PE-RU-NA. ; Catarrh. Per Located. ling, 3134 B Clifton Piace, St. Loots, ! fl . i. trying many differ 3111 medicines j 0 health, that Peiuna was the j; t could be depended upon. I be- j: rhen I wa; in a decline, induced ! ics) end overwrought nerves, tl stronger during the first week j; id my health improved daily until;; , eet health and enjoy life as I nev-1; -Lizzie Redding. . . eeeeeeee?e4eees?tt??eeeeeeeeseM [n Peruna these women find a prompt d permanent cure. Thousands of testimonials to this effect s received by Dr. Hartm&n every year, le good that Peruna has accomplished in is class of cases can scarcely be overtimated. If you do not derive prompt and11 atisfactory results from the use of! > r'eruna, write at once to Dr. Hart- ]! i nan, giving a full statement of yoor , i ase. and ne will be pleased to give 1 [ '* ou his valuable advice gratis Address Dr. Hartman, President of \ 1 The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbos, <1 )hio. All correspondence held strictly ]' onfidential. 1 ? ~ trike Home x he cares to do so?can tell about the bulk coffee he B ere it originally came from, as blended?or With What in roasted? If you buy your Dse by the pound, how. can ct purity and uniform quality? COFFEE, the LEADER OF I LCKAGE COFFEES. Is of ly uniform In quality, i and llavor. For 0V9 A OF A CENTURY, LION COFFEE n the standard colfee In > oi homes. ?OFFEE t* carefully ptlw<l actor tea, and until opened la 1 e, has so chance of being adnl- H r of coming in contact with dust* flj is, or nnclean hands. 1 DFFEE you get on6 full R upon getting tbo genuine. 2 tillable premiun.s. J B EVERYWHERE 1 ^SON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. 1 PILES [ hare icIrreJ with pilea for thirty-all yean. year wo laat April I began taking Caenta constipation. In the course of awcek I noticed > piles began to disappear and at tbe end of aia eks they did not trouble me at all. Caeearen re done wonders forme. I am entirely cured am il like a new man." Georco Kryder, NapoleooTQk tS&&. . tajacoJiiflto cakov cathartic leases!. Palawbla. Potent, Taste Good. Do One^ rer Sicken, weaken or Gripe. lie. Me. Me. Sweep d In bnlk. Tbe genuine tablet stamped OOflL sranteed to ewe or you money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.T. SB9 IIUAL SALE, TEIMILUOI BOSS So. 14. ipg Thompson's Eye Water GOOD POTATOES ' BRING FANCY PRICES ' To I row a hive crop of rood potatoes, the soil must contain plenty of Potash. Tomatoes, melons, cabbage, turnips, let toe# ?in fact, all vegetables remove large quantities of Potash from the soil. Supply Potash# I'berally by the nse of fertilisers containing net less than 10 per cent, actual Potash. B'eucr and more profitable yields ara.sure to folic!*. Our>an)phlet3 are not advertising circulars booming special fertilizers, but contain valuable information to farmers. Sent free fcr the s asking. Write now. GERMAN KALI WORKS A New Ytttc-93 Nassau Street, or A ^Atlanta, Ga.-sx'i South Broad St