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DR. T ADM AGE'S SERMON The Eminent Divine's Bunds? Discourse. Subject: "Different Modes of M?uarin| the Flight of Mbjo"?Idfo Should Not Be Wholly Spun of Yeuvs?The Carae of Wealth?The True 'Onus*. Text: "How old art thou?"?Genesis xhril., 8. The Fgypttan capital was the foous of the world's wealth. In ships and barges them had been brought to It from India 'frankincense and cinnamon and Ivory and diamonds; from the north, marble and Iron; from Syria, purple and silk; from Oreece. some of the finest horses of ths world and some of the most brilliant char, lots, and from all the earth that whlnh could best please the eye end olmrm tbe ear and gratify the taste. There were temples aditine with red sandstone, entered by the gateways that were guarded by pillars bewildering with hieroglyphics and wound with brar.en serpents ana adorned with winged creatures, their eyes and beaks and pinions glittering with preolous stones; there were marble columns blooming into white flower beds; there were stone pillars, at the top bursting into the shape of the lotus when in full bloom.. Along the avenues, lined with sphinx and fane and obelisk, there were princes .who came In gorgeously upholstered palanquins, carried by servanta in searlet or elsewhere drawn by vehicles, the auow-whlte horses, golden-bitted and six abreast, dashing at tull ran. Oh &oors of mosalo the glorias of Pharaoh were spelled out In lettera of porphyry and beryl and flame. There were ornamenta twisted from the wood of tamarisk, embossed with silver breaking Into foam. There were footstools made out of a single precious stone. There were beds fashioned out of a crouobed Hon In bronze. There were chairs spotted with the sleek hides of leopards. There were sofas footed with the claws of wild beasts and armed with the bealcB of birds. As you stand on the level bench of the sea on a summer day and look either way, and there are miles of breakers, white with the ocean foam, dashing shoreward, so it seemed as If the ?eu ui mo worm ? puioii nou wuaiia in me Egyptian capital for miles and miles flung itself up "into white breakers of marble temple, mausoleum and obelisk. It was to this capital and tho palace of Pharaoh that Jacob,the plain ebepherd, came to meet his son Joseph, who hud become prime minister in the royal apartment. Pharaoh and Jnoob met. dignity and rusticity, the gracefulness of the court and the plain manners of the field. The king, wanting to inakethe old country man at ease and seeing how white his bear.l is aud how feeble his step, looks familiarly into his face and says to the aged man, "How old art thou?" On New Year's night the gate of eternity opened to let in amid the great throng of departed centuries the soul of the dytug year. Under the twelfth stroke of the brazen hammer of the city clock the patriarch fell dead, aud the stars, of the night were the funeral torches. It is most fortunate that on this road of life there are so many milestones, 011 which we can read just how fast we are going toward the journey's ond. I feol that it is not an In appropriate question tnat I ask to-day when I look Into your faces and say, as Pharaoh ?lld to Jnoob, the patriarch, "How old art thou?" People who are truthful on every other subject Ue about their pges, so that I do ? not solicit from you nay literal response to the question I have asked. I would put no one under temptation, but I simply want this morning to see l?y what rod it is we. are measuring our earthly existence. There is a right way and a wrong way or measuring a door, orawall, or an arch, or a tower, und so there is a right way and a wrong way of measuring our earthly existence. It is with reference to this higher meaning that I confront you this morning with the siiipemloua question of the text and ask, "How old art thou?" There are many who estimate their life by mere worldly gratification. When Lord l>un.las wan wished a Happy New Year, lio said, "It will have to bo a happier year than tlio past, for I hadn't one happy moment in ail the twelve months that litivu gone." But that has not been the experience of most of us. Wo have found that though tlie world is blasted with sin it Is a very bright and beautiful place to reside In. Wo have had joys innumerable. There is no hostility between the gospel and the inerrimeuts and the festivities of life. I do not think that we fuliv enough appreciate tlio worldly pleasures flod gives us. When you recount your enjoyments you do not go back to the time when you were an infant in your mother's arms, looking up into tiie heaven of her smile; to those days when you filled the house with the upronr of boisterous merriment; when you shouted as you pitched the oall on the playground; when 011 the cold, sharp winter night, mu tiled up, on skates you shot out over the resounding ice of the pond? Have yon forgotten ail those good days that the Lord gave you? Were you never a boy? Were you never a girl? Between those times and ihis how many mercies the Lord has beHtiiureil imnn von! Ifow rmtnv invs hhvh breathed up to you from the Mowers and shone down to you from tho stars and chanted to you with tho voice of soaring bird and tumbling cascade and booming sua and thunders that with bayonets of lire charged down the mountain side! Joy! Joy! Joy! If there Is any one who Las a right to the enjoyments of tho world, It Is the Christian, for Ciod has given him a lease of everything in tho promise, "All are yours." liut I have to tell you that a man who estimates his life on earth by mere worldly gratltleation is a inost unwise man. Our life is not to be a game of chess. It is not a dunce in lighted hull, to quick music. It is not the froth of an ale pitchor. It is not the settlings of a wine cup. It is not a banj^q.uet, Yflth intoxication aud roistering. It / is the first step on a ladder that mounts Into the skies or the llrst step on a road that plunges into a horrlblo abyss. "How old art thou?" Toward what destiny are you tending and how fast are you getting on toward It? Again, 1 remark that there are many who estimate Uieir life on eartli by their sorrows and misfortunes. Through a great many of your lives the plow-share hath gone very deep, turning up a terrible furrow. You have been betrayed aud misrepresented, and set upon, and slnpped of impertinence, and pounded of misfortune. The brightest life must have its shadows and the smoothest path its thorns. On the happiest hrood the hawk pounces. No escape from trouble of some kind. While glorious John Milton was losing his eyesight he heard that Kaimasius was glad of It. While Sheridan's comedy was being enacted In Drury Lane theater, Loudon, his onemy sat growling at it In the stage box. While Bishop Cooper was surrounded by the favor of learned men his wife took his lexicon mnn uscript, the result of a long life of anxiety nnfl toil, and threw it into the Are. Misfortune, trial, vexation for almost everyone! l'ope, applauded of all the world, has a stoop in the shoulder that annoys him so moon that he has a tunnel dug, so that lie may go unobserved from garden to grotto and from grotto to garden. Cane, the famous Spanish artist, is disgusted with the erucillx that the nriest holds before him because it is such a poor specimen of sculpture, and so, sometimes 1 through taste, and sometimes through learned menace, nnd sometimes through physical distresses?aye in 10,000 waystroubles come to harass and annoy.. Again, I remark that theroare many people who estimate their life on earth by the amount of money they have accumulated. They say, "The year I860 or 1870 or 1898 was wasted." Why? "Made no money." Now, it is all cunt nnd insincerity to tulk against monoy, as though it had no value, /t may represent refinement and education !! and lea thousand blessed surroundings. It Is the spreading.of the table that feeds the obildren's hunger. It Is the lighting of the furnaoe that keeps you warm. It is the making of the bed on wbloh you rest from eare and anxiety. It is the earryingof yon out at last to deeent svpulcher, and the putting up of the slab on which is chiseled the story of your Christian hope. It Is Imply hypocrisy, this tirade in pulpit and leoture hall against money. But while all this is so, he who uses money or thinks of money as anything but a means to an end, will find out his mis* take when the glittering treasures slip out of bis nerveless grasp, and he goes out of this world without a shilling of money or a certificate of stock. He might better have been the Christian porter that opened bis ' gate or the begrimed workman who last night heaved the coal into his cellar. Bonds and mortgages and leases have their use, bat they make a poor yardstick with whlob to measure life. "They that boast themselves in their wealth and trust in tho multitude of their riches, none of them oan, by any means, redeem his brother or give to Ood a ransom for blm that he should not see corruption." But I remark, there -are many?I wish there were more?who estimate their life by their m Dral and spiritual development. It is not uinful egotism for a Christian man to lay:, "I am purer than I used to be. I am more oonseorated to Christ than I nsed to be. I have got over a great many of the bad habits in which I used ta Indulge. I am a great deal better man than I used to be." There is no siuful egotism In that. It is not bane egotism for a soldier to say, "I know more al^out military taotles than 1 used to before 1 took a musket in my hand and learned to 'piesent arms'and wan^t pest to the drill officer." It is not base egotism for a sailor to say."I know better how to olew down the mlzzen topsail than I used to before I had ever seen a ship." And there is no sinful egotism when a Christian man, fighting the battles of the Lord, or if you will have it, voyaging toward a haven of eternal rust, says, "I know more about spiritual tactics and voyaging toward heaven than I used to." Now, I do not know what your advantages or dUadvautages aro. I do not know what your taot or talent is. I do not know what may be the fascluation of your manners or the repulslvsness of them, but I know this: There is for you, my hearer, a hold to cultivate, a harvest to reap, a tear to wipe away, a soul to save. If you have worldly means, consecrate them to Christ. If you have eloquence, use it on the side flini 1)?m 1 n,wl \VllKn.fA.A? T# iinii a nui nuu *T uyoi lUiVJO UOOU iiiuiio. n you have learning, put it all Into the poor box or the world's suffering. But If you hnvo none of these?neither wealth nor eloquence nor learning?you nt any rate have a smile with whtoh you cau encourage the disheartened, a frown with which you may blast injustice, a voice with whleli you may call the wanderer back to Ood. "Oh." you say. "that is a very sanctimonious view of life!" It Is not. It is the only bright view of life, and it is the only bright view of death. Contrast the death scene of n man who has measured life by the worldly standard with the death scene of a man who has measurod life by the Christian standard. Quin, tlio nctor, in his last moments said, "I hope this tragic scene will soon be over, and I hope to keep my dignity to the last." Mnlesherbes raid in his last moments to the confessor: I "Hold your tonguet Your miserable style | puts mo out of conceit with heaven." , Lord Chesterfield In his last moments, when he ought to have been praying for j his soul, bothered himself ubout the | proprieties of the sick room aud said, "Give Duyboles a ebair." Godfrey Knoller spent bis last hours on earth in drawing a I diagram of his own monument. Compare the silly and horrible deparI turo of such men with the seraphic glow ' on the face of Edward Payson us he said in ! his last moment: "The breezes of heaven fan me. 1 float in a sea of glory." Or with Paul the apostle, who said in his last hour: "I am now ready to lie offered up, and the time of tny departure is at hand. ! I have fought the good light, I have kept j the faith. Heuceforth there is laid up for J mo a crown of righteousness which the i Lord, tho righteous Judge, will give me." I Or compare it with the Christian deathbed j that you witnessed in your own household. ; Oh, my friends, this world is a false god. It will consume you with the blaze in ' which it accepts your sacrifice, while the 1 righteous shall be held In everlasting ro| inembrnuce. and when the thrones have j fallen and the monuments have crumbled j and the world has perished they shall ban! quel with the conquerors of earth aud the , liiernrehs of heaven. This Is a good day in which to begin a ! new style of measurement. How old art thou? You see the Christian way of measuring life and the worldly way of measuring it. I leave it to you to say which is the wisest and best way. The wheel of time has turned very swiftly, and it lias hurled U9 on. The old year has gone. The new year (has come. For what you and I have been launched upon it God only knows. Now let me ask you all, have you made any preparation forthe future? You have made prepura-, tlon for time, my deur brother. Have you made any preparation for eternity? Do you wonder that when that man on the Hudson ltiver iu indignation tore up the tract which was handed to him and just one word landed on his coat sleeve, the rest of the tract being pitched Into the river, thfit one word aroused his soul? It whs that odh word, so long, so broad, so high, so deep?"Eternity." A dying woman, in her last moments, salu, "Call It back." They said, "What do you want?" "Time," she said, "call it back." Oh. it cannot bo callod back. We might lose our fortunes and call thorn back; we might lose our health, and perhaps recover It; we might lose our good name and get that back, but time gone Is gone forever. Now, when one can sooner get to the center of things Is he not to be congratulated? Does not our common sense teach us that it is better to be at the center than to be clear out on the rim of the wheel, holding nervously fast to the tlfe lest we be suddenly hurled into light and eternal felicity? Through all kinds of optical instruments trying to peer in through the cr>cks and the keyholes of heaven?afraid that both doors of the celestial mansion will be swung wide opeu before our entranced vision?rushing about among the apothecary shops of this world wondering If tliis is good for rheumatism aud that is good for neuralgia and something else is good for a bad cough, lest we be suddenly ushered Into a land of everlasting health wherethe inhabitant neversays, I am slckl What fools we all Hre to prefer the circumference to the oenterl What a dreadful thing it would be if we should be suddenly ushered from this wintry world Into the May time orchards of heaven, and If our pauperism of sin and sorrow should be suddenly broken up by a presentation of an emperor's castle surrounded by parks with springing fountains and paths, up and down wnlcti angels of Qod walk two and twol In 1835 the French resolved that at Ohent they would have a kind of musical demonstration that had never been heard of. It would be made up of theohlmes of hells and the discharge of cannon. The experiment was a perfect success. What with the ringing of the bells and the report of the ordnance the otty trembled and the hills shook with the triumphal march that was as strange as It was overwhelming. With a most glorious accompaniment will God's dear children go Into their high residence when the trumpets shall sound and the last day has come. At the signal given the bells of the towers, and of the lighthouses, a no of the cities will strike their sweetness into a last chime that shall ring Into the heavens and float off upon the sea, joined by the boom i of bursting mine and magazine, augmented hy all the cathedral towers of heaven?the I harmonies of earth anil the symphonies of I lilt cdlnuf (ul run I rn m n If Innn nna nsnuf I triumphal march, flt to celebrate the ant-out of tho redeemed to where they shall' shine as the stars forever and ever. Seep T Coughing I ii We know I of nothing better to tear the 8 lining of your throat and 8 lungs. It is better than wet I feet to cause bronchitis and 8 pneumonia. Only keep it I up long enough and you will succeed in reducing your weight, losing your appetite. I bringing on a slow fever and making everything exactly right for the germ3 of conM sumption. ^8 Stop coughing and you will get well. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cures coughs of every kind. a. J: I MM mutuary t_uugu uisajjpears in a single night. The racking coughs of bronchitis are soon completely mastered. And, if not too far along, the coughs of consumption are completely cured. ^Ask your druggist for one Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plaster. It will aid the action of the Cherry Pectoral. If yon ham nny complaint whatever and desire the beet medical advice yon ran possibly obtain, write ns frcelv. You will receive a prompt reply {hat may be of great |H valuo to vou. Address. M Uli. J. C. AY'Kit, Lowell, Matt. Bat Every successful farmer who raises fruits, vegetables, berries or grain, knows by experience the importance of having a large percentage of Potash in his fertilizers. If the fertilizer is too low in Potash the harvest is sure to be small, and of inferior quality. Our books tell about the proper fertilizers for all crops, and we will gladly send them free to any farmer. GERHAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nassau St., New York. Malsby & Company, at) S. liroait St., Atlanta, Ga. Engines and Boilers Steam Water Heater*. Steam l'nuips and I'ciiberthy 1 iijeetom. Manufacturers and Dealers In SAW MILLS, Corn Mlllii, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machinery and Grain Separators. SOLID anil INSERTED Saws. Saw Teeth anil Locks, Knight's Patent Hogs, ttlrdnall Saw Mill and Kngine Repairs, Governors, Grate liar* anil a full line of Mill Supplies. Price anil quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue fritft hv inAiitlonttitr flit* unvmr A Great Searchlight. Tho largest searchlight In the world Ik not to be found afloat upon the high seas, but on the top of Echo Mountain, not far from rosudenn, Cal. An electric railway, a remarkable feat of engineering, described iti "The Scientific American," connects the level where the orange and roses grow wllh the summit of the Sierra Madres, 5,000 feet alx>ve. Until the searchlight referred to, the reflecting lens, of which weighs about 700 pounds, was established, at this great height. Its powers could not be fully brought out. The light Is of 3,000,000 candle power, and can'he seen, from Its present location, one hundred and tlfty miles at sea. Its full sweep illuminates the peak of the mountains that are hundreds of miles apart. Caught by Glitter. A hank In New York city has largely Increased Its business, particularly o m fuuhlnntthlo U'/vttiAn hr ieunlua to it depositors gilded cheek book* with monograms thereon. The bank checks are printed in gold from exquisitely engraved plates. ISH " La Creole QUEER LEGAL PROCEDURE. How* Shrewd Lawyer Oot the Rlfht et Way la Coert Time la money, and to no one Is the truth of this better known than to some lawyers whose faces are seldom seen in any court below the supreme. An instance occurred In the Municipal Court In Buffalo, N. Y.t recently which created amusement. Judge Braunlein was hearing an action brought to recover a debt of $8, both parties to the case being Poles. xiir WUIl rvHJlii was CTOWdOQ Wlin witnesses, and his Honor had settled down for a long and hard-fought battle between the two attorneys. The first witness had been called when Lawyer Locke entered the court room. He looked over the assembled crowd, bowed t>o the Judge, and then, depositing his lmt on one of the small tables within the rail, prepared to wait for the end of the case. An hour passed and still the prosecution kept calling witnesses and piling up testimony. Mr. Locke had for some time been, fidgeting In his chair, and finally, when It seemed as though the entire day would be occtipled In the hearing, he walked over to the attorney for the. plaintiff and touched him on the shoadder. "What hi the amount involved in this case for which your client is suing?" he aslccd. "Eight dollars, Mr. Locke," was the reply. "And the court costs?" "About four more." "Will you t^ke $12," and consent to a discontinuance" of the case?" asked Mr. Locke. "I have an important case of my own and my time is too valuable to waste it here." "My client will consent to a discontinuance on paymeat of $12," said the attorney. Mr. Locke drew a chair up to the table, took his check book from his I pocket, made out a check for $12 and handed it over. The case was at once discontinued and Mr. Locke had the right of way. He had only two or three witnesses; there was no defence, and in a half hour he was on his way back to his office. The Kaiser's Flying Trip. Never again let foreigners laugh at I American tourists for rushing through renowned picture galleries and boasting of having "done Europe" in eight days! The Herman Emi>orer and Empress bent the band in the rapidity with which they did Palestine. Fiveminute steps are made .it the holy nlnoes. and the Ivaiser makes n snoeeli and the Ivaiserin snaps a kodak, and then on tdu.y pass like ?:i sightseeing w hirlwln d.?1 us ton IIoral4. lioiiity Ik Itlooil Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Casrarets, C.md y Cathartic clean your hlooil and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, black heads, and that sickly billons complexion by taking I Cnscarets.?beauty for ten cents. All drugI gists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10c. -Vie, .V).\ i The American Bible Society lias sent ;i.:VKi I Spanish New Testaments to Santiago. Cuba. State of Ohio. City of Toi.kdo. I_ ? Lucar County. \ Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the [ senior partner of the tlrm of F. .1. Ciif.nky & Co.. doing business in the City of Toledo, t 'ounty and State aforesaid, and that said Arm will nay 'he sum of one honored not.i, ark for each and every case of catarrh that cannot he cured by the use of H a t. i.'s Catarrh Cere. Frank J. Cheney. ' Sworn to before me and subscribed in my (? ' ? ) presence, this 0th day of December, < sea I.V A. D. 188th A. \V. til.eabon. I ('?>?') Notary PtibJic, Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal! v. and actsdireetly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. .t. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. I Sold by Druggists, 7.1c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. If a man were toleap as far in proportion to his size as a flea, he could Jump 76 miles. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets t'andv Cathartic 10c or IV;. l!C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. It requires over $:t00.000 a year to run the Crystal Palace in London. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous nw niter nrst uny a use or nr. i\niu>s t?reat Nerve Restorer. #2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. R. H. Ki.INKi Ltd.. (>31 Arch St.. Phils., l'a. Ovor 100 persons disappear in London every year without leaving the slightest trace. Kdiicwte Your Bowels With CaarnrrM. Candy '"athartlc. core const!nation forever. I0c,25c. IfC. C. O. fall, druggists refund money In one of the Canary islands there is a tree of the laurel family that, occasionally rains downs?In theearl> evenings?unite a copious shower of water drops froin its tufted foliage. The water comes out through innumerable little pores situated at the edge of the leaves. To ' u-e a t'old In One liny. Take Laxative Breino (Quinine Tablets. All Drugg lata refund money If It falls to cure. 25o. Those who regret the decader.ee of the beautiful Santa Clans myth should reflect that the modern style of chimney imposes altogether too severe a strain, even upon the credulity of children.?Boston Transcript. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Ufa Away. To rjult tobacco easily and forever, be magnetic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-ToBnc, the wonder-worker, that makes weak tren strong. All druggists. 50e or 41. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemedy Co., I hloago or >ow lork. The pantries at Winder <'astir contain gold and silver plate valued at $7,.ri(X),(>00. I have fonnd Plso's Cure for Consumption an unfailing medlolne.?F. R. Lora, 13(V>Scott St., Covington. Ky., Oct. 1. 18&1. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething.softens the gums, reduces inflammation.allays pain,cures wind colic.. 35?. a bottle. A liondon tailoring magazine complains that tailors themselves seldom dress well. No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, tl. All (lru (gists Some one has exported a ton of Irish turf for an Irish fair at San Francisco. " Hair Restorer is a Perfe< SiiruiinmiTinmni . i I t / Jo M Every farmer's wife kno\ ? the milk buckets, pans, churi Ltne dairy De penectiy ciean a mon yellow soap that smeHs o for washing these. Such soa] you would not use for any i sticky and the soap will get inl stay there. Ivory Soap is pu sweet, clean materials are use< IVORY SOAP IS 99^ C?prrtfM, 1W. Tb# PmK 1 Gerstle's Fer 2 i Which is absolutely the best female re ? itit 11 iii'KiiBfiu mill iiimwpii uiseaFO to i simir of being cured. This medicine those ingredients intended by nature $ ters not if other remedies have been tri (A male Panacea will not fail. If tl digestion or biliousness, move the bow Joseph's Liver Regulator. If you writo us and we will send them to you. Panacea, $I.OO per Bottle. L S L. dERSTLE & CO.. A Lesson in EVERY ONE SI It Shows the Only Method by Wh Organs Can Be Ri Paiiftge ?t the feng. Constructed m u s vjp-ywl CvL. to He it and Dry *VW the Air before entaring the Bronohl- h? alTubes and Lungs MliSSCil 9en?e ofkmell de- /'/IKSK 7 > stroyed here b r J^3c^Q| / J2 strong Liquid Mea- I TONGUE. /llMf Sense of taste de- I 'iffefi f troyeil by strong ITIfejll EPIGLOTTIS. (fj^Vg Liquid medicines Vl\\ In Sprays, Douches, lf% \\\V Atomisers and J\ m \\\1 Vapors stop here. V I 1 \ \A J is the only germicide ever found volatile enough to ing It free, from moisture, thus enal l ug this power sages In the head, throat and lungs, where it pit one Denfuess, Asthma, Coughs. Colds, Bronchitis, and < IT /MiDBC DV V W It MB The ftrst and only method of treating theee dine ' Hyoinei " Inhaler Outfit. $1.00. Kxtra Botrloi healer, 39o. Can l>e obtained of your drugMlet, at oil froe. Send for the Story of " ilyomel." Mailed K1 SPECIAL OFFER.?S a complete " Hyoinei " Trial Ontflt, 001 Dropper, bottle of Hyomei sufficient U tions for titling. We also sentl FREE box of Hyoinei Balm, the wonderful n bruises, burns, sprains, scalds, chatYm irritations. Send at once to the MAIJ THE R. T. BOOTH CO., ITHAOA, jt Dressing and Restorer. ! ?r| . a B vs how necessary it is that as, and other implements of nd free from taint. A com- " f rosin should never be used I ps are made of materials that ? purpose. Besides, they are ? to the cracks and corners and 3 re, it is well made, and only *| i. Then it rinses readily. 3 ? PER CENT. PtJRE. ? ir > O?>bW O., Clarta?d ^ GERSTLE*S#*| jmale Panacea # ires All Diseases of Women. T ANY women are under the impression that the diseases peculiar to their sex ^B are natural and incurable because sc ' suffer constantly from them. Tliis is a ^B ke. Few women are so badly diseased xr that they cannot be cured. It is true. ^B that had they taken a remedy that was efficient when the firat symptoms of dis- ^B ense appeared, a more rapid cure would have been the result. No woman should ^B neglect herself, when the monthly period becomes too frequent, ppinful. pro- ^B fuse, obstructed, or irregular in any way. aT or if she suffers from faliinicof the womb. ^B whites, or any other female trouble.she should at once resort to the use of ^B m 1 1 J r? ?/-? r* r? A I idle; rai latca ?"*. F, )""* 5f medy offered her, Even if she has fasten it.seIf upon tier she should not dc is n purely vegetable tonic, containing is a remedy for suffering women. It mat- , ed and proven failures?G?rstle'a Folere is any tendency to costiveness. indiels gently with a few mild doses of St. r druggist does not keep these medicines all charges paid.UDon receipt of price, Ivor Regulator, 25o per Package. Chattanooga, Tenn. Z Physiolog} HOULD LEARN. ich Diseases of the Respiratory cached and Cured. 857 , '?r Closed by lrritat?? lng Sprays, Douches v! && &Jmr Atomisers and / Vapor*, causing f "VyijBr Deafness. L / Dry air only can \ I enter the Bronchial V\ I Tubea and Lunge. 31 1 Through it alone W\ \ can Disease* of m\ \ these Organs be reached and cured t ?3MUE2X iraprexna'n every particle of air breathed. yet leavfnl irerin-destroyer to reach ovory part of the air j>a?e kill ? the bacilli wbtch cause Catarrh, Catarrhal Consumption. INHALATION. ase* ever endorsed by the medical profession. ? "llvomel," 60c. " Hyoiuel "Balm, a wonderful nee, or by mall. Pamphlets, consultation and advlc* 1KB. ill mail to every person sending us 2?o. raps or cash, mentioning this paper, nsisting of an Alnminnm Inhaler, Wire > lost two weeks, gauze and full direc"The Story of Hyomei " and a sample luti-septie healer and cure for piles, g, saddle-sores, eczema and all surface J OFFICE AND LABORATORY of N. Y. Price $1.00.