University of South Carolina Libraries
York City.?Deep yokes are |||?|^Py generally becoming and just now i f^n^e among the most fashionable of all , models. This very attractive waist i ?1MMK ; FANCY YOKE TTAIST. I shows one of cream colored lace over 1 chiffon combined with a full blouse of ' pale blue c-repe poplin and includes 1 6leeves of \he very latest model. The 5 trimming also is a novelty and consists < A LATE DEJIQN B ' u I I ^ of rucbings of the material gathered i through the middle and finished with j tiny silt braid over the stitching. In addition to outlining the yoke and concealing the closing at the front it is continued round, tie lower edge fall- 5 ing pver the belt to give a bolero sug- 1 testion. The sleeves are of the "leg ( o' mutton" sort and generously full I above the elbows, snug fitting below. I At the waist is worn a shaped belt of 1 paune velvet and a little fall of lace 5 completes the front * The waist consists of the fitted lin- { ing, the full back and fronts with the I yoke. The yoke is hooked over onto ? , ihe left shoulder seam while the waist f t and lining are closed separately at the front The sleeves are made In one * piece each, arranged over fitted foun- c dations that are faced to form the ^ cuffs. The deep girdle is smoofhly. s litted and extended slightly below the- 1 s waist line at the front. c L The quantity of material required r for the medium size is three and five- f tight yards twenty-one inches wide, ^ three and one-half twenty-seven Inches s wide, or two yards forty-four Inches s wide, with one yard of ail-over lace and five-eight yards of velvet for belt. f Petal Dree*. One of the loveliest dresses is of fcatiny Liberty silk in delicate pink. And it might well serve as a costume for a bal masque if the fair wearer Lad a floral headdress, though it is not tt all loud and none too showy for any evening wear. This dress is a flounced affair, the skirt being in triple flounce effect. Each flounce is cut out in petal shape around the edge, and between I these petals another petal of palest pink chiffon is introduced. The petals are edged with tiny pink sequins and the veinings are done in glistening Bilks. Three shaped flounces form the elbow sleeves, and the pretty blouse bodice is likewise formed of three overlapping sections, these like the skirt flounces being edged in this petal effect. | Beits and Bodice*. Belts and bodices of all sorts and descriptions are worn with waists ot dinner and ball gowns. Silk, satin and ' velvet on the bias are in favor, or ribbon, but the long sash ends have not ruet with popular approval, and the Dodice is fastened with buckles or fancy buttons. The different colored bodices considered so smart last sea- 6 son will be as fashionable as ever, and y jertainly they are a great addition to a almost any gowD, besides making it * ,, i _ tyTnuyca. I' I' possible to have a variety of different effects for the one gown. These bodices ^ are often elaborate affairs of pleats j which are really a part of the gown f itself. On one gown, for instance, the 1 folds of the bodice are high at the * back, carried up in a point. j How to wear trie Mat. ; < Both English and American -women j J must come to Paris to learn to wear I j their hats with distinction. Oniy !a | Farisienne understands just how to al- j < ways wear correct headgear. Never j j ioes she wear a superbly large and 3 flaring hat laden. with expensive j i plumes trcept she be en grande toil* | j I, Eyelet Embroidery. i i Very many of the most beautiful new j Moth gowns are worked in eyelets, } ilong with other embroidery, in bro- t lerie Anglaise fashion. j t Severe an<l Gentle Tailor Made?. * Two kinds of severe tailor mades are * o divide feminine affection, and fashou will smile alike upon both the 6e- < i-cre and ornate style of coat and skirt 1 ostume. The dividing line will be j "ound even more distinctly than for- < nerly. the severe gown having for its * jasic fabric the rougher tweeds and j niztures and the frock of lesser sever- J z fir Koiiior crmirtlr ovnlvpd from one of I V VVillfc V".?. vV V ? - he Jegion cf new smooth cJotfcs, which, 1 i T n/?T nflNTON. ; i^ : | f possible, are more attractive than ast season's productions. Girl's Kox Pleat?tl Dress. Box pleated dresses in Russian style iuit young girls admirably well and ire essentially smart. This one is luite novel, inasmuch as it includes irpfpiipji -which are arranged under the Jloats arid give 1he broad shoulder ine that is so marked a feature of the season. The model is made of army )!ne serge trimmed with fancy braid ! tnd is worn with a while collar and )lue tie. All materials in vogue for ! jirls' dresses are, however, equally ippropriate. The dress is made with backs and rorrts and is closed invisibly beneath he box pleat at the left of the front. The pleats are laid for its entire length md the bretclles are attached to the vaist beneath the edge of the outer ?nes. The sleeves are lull, pleated it both upper and lower edges and inished with shaped cuffs, and at the waist ia arranged a belt which 3s dipped under straps at the under-arm earns. The quantity of material required or the medium size (eight years) is 01K1/8 BOX PLEATED DIUE6. V ve and three-quarter yards twenty- ^ even inches wide, three and cne-half 0 ards forty-four incurs wide, or two u nd one-half yards fifty-two inches " ride. t v \ I k SEEMON FOR SUN& ?f|l * e . n \N ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITL . t! 'FREEDOM IN CHRIST." , ? ' I 11 D "lie Key. Edward Hnnttinc Kndd Sh '8 How Faith Unfoldg (Itself in M y <? Forms of Christian Experience? - 1 pentancc, Growth and Service. jj Brooklyn, N. Y.?The Rev. Edwct n Eluntting Rudd, pastor of the First Cd c< tregational Church, Dedham, Masl w >reached Sunday morning in the Toml t< ring Avenue Congregational Church to I tl arge audicnce. His subject was "Frejj ? lora in Christ," and the test was fron tl Jojbn ii.: 13 and 14: "But as many altl eceived Him to them gave He the righlgj o become children of God, even to tbemoi ;hat believe on His name, who were borriti lot of blood nor of the will of the fleshVn lor of the will of man, but of God." Mr-C Rudd said: u Can I do as I please ? Or must I will to (] lo as another pleases? Am I a free agent >r are limitations placed upon me? Is liberty unrestrained freedom, or am I the nore truly free when my actions and vords are controlled by divine laws, imposed willingly upon man by his own enightened self? To answer these questions intelligently, learly and helpfully takes us at once into hat held of Christian sociology and of the nterrelation of man with man and of man vitb his God which so engages the atten ion of men everywhere to-day. xne piace ind duty of the church is very clear. It s to show men in the spirit of candor, of :ympathy, of open mindedness, of tolertnce, that the word of God gives lis great flemental teachings by a master thinker ind reasoner, who was divine and who .laims the right to influence men. The so alled great problems of iubor and capital vill find a permanent solution only by he arbitrament of the Man of Galilee. But it is your duty and mine to remind rarselves and others that according as we iquare ourselves with the requirements of jod in Christ shall the problems of life ?e mot and be grappled and worth while esuits be achieved. We are here to-day to ask entrance into ,he light. We are here to know more ruth, so that truth may make us free. IVe long to know how to be happily and contentedly free. To have our freedom io used that everywhere men shall xecoglize it as the article they wish, and, possessing it with us, we shall together make nen strong. Bearing one another's burlens we shall surely fulfill in part the law ;f Christ. The'gospel of St. John, simile yet profound, shows us how to gain reedom in Christ. It reminds us what is o necessary to recall in this easy going, ion-thinking age, viz.. that in no real and 1 **!"* mow r>V?\1 Pron nf fln/1 JCI IliailCllO &CIJOC (UV ilitil vuuuiwu VJ. V.V.V* jntil Christ has made them such by vital mion with Him. That we have 110 right o call ourselves children until God Himself transfers that right to us by an act of vill and obedience on our part, so recoglized by Christ., who has in the very proess of our obedience done His part. To laim the friendship of another is not to jossess it. To say of Christ and our rela,ions to Him. as we say of some well:nown people, "Oh, ye?. I know Him well; tie is a warm personal friend," when in eality little more than a formal introduction has been given, is in essence to know >nly about Him, and that in a formal ;ense. instead of being divinely coramieiioned by the living holy spirit of God o be a child of God" and an heir with Jhrist to eternal life. Manifestly, then, his is an important matter to us allien to the careless, thoughtless ones who nake up a part of every audience. Have ve any right to call ourselves "children )f God?" And if we have, what has God, jy His regenerating spirit, done in us? It was our New England poet, Lowell. \ho said: The thing we long for?fhr.t we are For one transcendent moment. But even the poet fails to be true to act unless we have such a definite, genune faith in God's power and willingness :o give us Himself and to make us sons md daughters of the living God, that we eceive Him and by that act avail of Him is our Saviour not only for one transcend>nt moment, but for all the moments for he rest of time, and in that act we are )orn of God, and by that act we are jiven the right to become?aye, to be begotten as children of God. Almost immediately in this sublime, scholarly. and heart searching gospel of fohn, that great disciple, speaking the vords df Christ Himself, begins by dividng mankind into the same two divisions vhich are represented in this audience, md in every audience, viz., those who lave received Him and those who, though ,hey were His own by creation, received iim not, by a regenerating faith. And I vant just now, if possible, to avoid ab;truse, moss covered theological terms and jhraseology, and to clothe these burning ssues in simple, clear Bible language, but tr? remind nnrsplvpa thnt nany of us arc longing to get out into the >pen sky, in some oi the old fashioned, lecessary doctrines of the word of God. iVe have gotten some of the choicest and nost essential statements of divine truth leclouded, and we are not quite sure vhere we are. May God's spirit enlight'n and allay doubt and uncertainty on ,hese truths this day, i -d allign us all n the comforting strength of His own ;onship. And I frankly believe, my broth:r man, we cannot be satisfied in this subime hour by turning to the poets, much as hey will uplift and rest us. Even tuougn rou turn to Emerson, who has been so exilted and almost deified by some in New England Unitarianism and ask him about nan, and in one place he will tell you: 'A man is the whole encyclopedia of facts, ['he creation of a thousand forests is in me acorn, and Egypt. Greece, Rome, Saul, Britain, America, lie folded already n the first man." \es, potentiality lies ?nfolded, but naught else can bring it to surface and to living power save the touch >f Christ the Redeemer of Manhood. Nor loes the statement of Carlyle satisfy me, or you recall in hie essay on "characterStics," he says: "Man stands in the cenre of nature; his fraction of time encir:led by eternity, his handbreadth of space irm'rnl/i/1 V*ir T env tliia / rn ,UV.UV.I^U *JJ iilllltltuuv. M CUJ Wli.J VWi? . lot satisfy you. for you long to know how, rou can best live and expand, while you ire in this "centre of nature,'' and where md how you are to spend eternity. And ou turn to that beautifully human and eal poet, Robert Burns, and remember vith him "'That man's a man for a' that," md here you feel'that you may be argung in a circle, and if Burns had only ;nown more of the Man of Calvary, he vould have been saved many of the sins vhich blighted his whole life. Or you nay stand with that dear English poet, Jray, as from afar he beholds Eton Colege and exclaims, "Ah. tell them they are nen," and those words and this poet's onging, more nearly voice your own soul's vish, and you add, "Ah, tell them of the Jan. who became flesh and dwelt among is, that He might redeem men for Himlelf." It is to this Incarnate word that ve must turn if we are to be enlightened md satisfied. And few passages in God's vord speak, out more hope and immediate Jocoinrr than + tovf " Ac mflnv r?o rp eived Him, to them gave He the right o become children of God." But some one asks, what is the process >y which this is done? And I reply in he continuing words of this same verse: 'Even to them that believe on His name,'' Jut what is it to believe on His name? iVhat is faith? And we reply with Buxon: "'Faith ie the filial, trustful relation, phich the whole man, intellect, heart and pill, sustains toward the Lord .Jesus Christ." Christ 6aid to His disciples, 'Come ye after Me, and I will make you iehers of men." They obeyed. Heart, ntellect and will accepted and believed Christ to have the right and the power o communicate to them "sonship" of iod. Disciples of Him who walked among hem as theif Redeemer. And'when they tad given Hub that' simple confidence and iroved it openly by obeaience to His comaand of public confessipn of His claim, ;lad and-willing to be known-as < His folowers and co-workers, at' that moment yere they given the right to be the chilIren of God. Then were they born not f blood, nor of the will of the fleah, nor f the will of man, but of God. The genlineness of their faith and sonship was tteeted in various ways. To them salvaion in Christ was equipment for service o others. They did not doubt the diine personality of ShriBt. but thev ta 1? r. " . <." .; - - ' >wed Him. Pj&t child ioves and rejoin 1 you when he obeys you. Christ the reat captain of righteousness is asking len to follow Him. "If ye know these hing<?, happy are ye if ye do them." ThiB leans more* than mere intellectual assent o the doctrines and teachings of Christ, or thij may remain only profession and ot pass into feeling and action. You recall the searching words of Christ peaking to the intellectual failures of the ^arisees, in Matthew xv: 8: "This peole honoreth Me with their lips, but their eart is far from Me. But in vain they do worship Me, teaching for doctrine the ammandments of men." And again, rhen He was speaking to this same arieDcracy of the intellect and sticklers for le strict letter of the law, He said: "And hy call ye me Lord! Lord! and do not le things which I say?" Manifestly, len, Christ was eager that men should ive honest, hearty assent to His claims F discipleship. He then promised potenal freedom, personal liberty. But the ere exercise of faith was not enough, hristianity is something larger and finer lan even the genuine exercise of faith t the person and work of Christ. Faith unfolds itself in many forms of hristian experience and activity, all of hich are embraced in "repentance, pwth and service." When St. Paul tote to that little band of men at Ephewho had exercised their faith in the jfeonal Christ, he bade them "grow up lkll things into Him, -who is the head e^i Christ." But lest there may be some amg us this morning who, in thinking j tlvwhole matter ever, do not find it so i dililt to believe this Divine Son of Gdbut who do not quite appreciate the relbn of a man to his 6in, to his failures deliberate acts of wrong and evil, is Necessary to repent? And what is reptence? "Except ye repent," cried j Joh^he Baptist. Manifestly it is neces- : sarytAnd what is it? "It is a deep ! chnniof the entire thinking, feeling and williaman; and involves as its elements enligfament. contrition and confession, prayebr pardon and peace, counting tbe cost A endeavor after new obedience." j Look Uhese for a moment. Enlighten- , ment!iThis is the work of the Holy j Ghost.jt was not until the prodigal son came thimself that he started on that wondrci pathway to lifelong blessing, i Enlight^ent as to his own folly and | bin uuumsciousness uiau <i lumtrr b ju>c ; awaitedfe return. My brother, if some ] things ^uncertain, pray for enlighten- i ment aifflTe who in the same chapter j proclaim! Himself to be the light _ of I men wilkveal the path to contrition and confVpn. "I have sinned against heaven a?n Thy sight" was a .life giving ronfefci and prayer. It showed that faithV the Father's love was sorry and asbanlfor its past ingratitude. In that heartV for pardon was the .soul's receiving Clt, and because He received, he had the lit to be a son of God. Man repented aifeod by His divine act regenerated. I There arefcers here to-day who will admit the til of miich that I say. but in whom anlhout whom there are obstacles whiclftu have not the courage and the detened patience to overcome. Some of thesastacles are the power of sin in the soifcr, like St. Paul of old, you find a laifcat "when you do good evil is present a false pride in one's own personalimand achievement., for there are not ?|v of us, with "I thank Thee that I amot as other men are tendencies; thelironment of worldly interest* and folships, and the insincerity of many i?ssing Christians. Ah. '#ow many of usl?s this latter include? Nevertheless, not few are enabled to rise above these cfccles and become sona of God. I Again I ask ihatial question of this message, can I dell please? Or must I do as another lies? And I believe an honest study ?he New Testament will show us that tfcnlv freedom whrch is comprehensive ist freedom and liberty which God giv<fc our whole nature when we have aec-eH or received His Son Jesus Christ to bur Redeemer and Master. May you tiday. my earnest, seeking friends, fintfce Christ whose sacrificial love, represad in this atoning blood, and receivingjm by faith, be called children of Gcfend if children, then heirs, heirs of <|and joint heirs with Christ, if so be 1 we suffer with Him, that we may bfco glorified together. \ Every Man a Iter. "Paint me a picture,a gTeat master to his favorite pupft'Taint me a picture," said .the studi "I cannot paint a picture worthy of^"h a master." 'But do it for my sake?foy sake," was the response. The studeiwent to his task, and after many mon^of labor he returned to the master aniaid. "Come and see." When the cuiq fell, the greatest picture of the afevas before them, "The Last Supper," ogonardo da Vinci. . * "Paint Me a picture," sajhe Divine Master to every Christian Wer in this -r?~ ??.rr 1 V.O+- * community, jliiuu ouj unui^i t'itiiiiubf for His aid is promised you. 1 int Me a picture of consecrated servic^o it for My sake." And in the comingjc, when we walk the corridors of tlupmortal, perchance we shall see on its ,ier walls our pictures of consecrated eil?. -which shall be to the honor of that i* -which is forever best, because it shallle been "for,His sake." L. Have Faith In God. I Phillips Brooks declared wftould strive to see the loving hand old in every trial and sorrow. He once efcssed this thought in the following dialog^ "What shall I do with this sonYhnt i God has sent me?" "Take it up afcear it, and get a strength and blessingl of it." "Ah, if I only knew what l*rig i there was in it, if I only saw how atyla help me, then 1 could bear it like a pl\!" "What shall I do with this hard, hlul I duty which Christ has laid right iiy | way?" "Do it, and grow by doing-1' "An, yes; if I could only see that it \? make me grow!" In both these castK ' you not see that what you are beggini i is not more faith, although you thinl is, but sight? You want to see for yd self the blessing in the sorrow, the strenj in the hard and hateful task. Faith s? not, "I see that it is good for me, and! God must have sent it," but "God 8entl( and so it must be good for me." I Had the Missionary Spirit. 1 John K. Mott visited a college in Ceyloi where he found a band of students so pool that sixteen of them occupied one room Near the building was a garden, in wbicl they spent their spare time cultivating^ ba nanas. When -Mr. _\iou mquirea: vv/jai do you do with the. money?" they tool him to the shore and pointed to an island off in the sea. "Two years ago," they said "we sent one of our graduates there. He started a school, and it has developed now into a church. We are going to send him to another island this year." The* also said that they had instructed their cook that every tenth handful of rice should be laid aside, that they might seD it, in jrder to have- Christ preached a little more widely. The Coftt ia Great. The cost of not being a Christian'BisDionary is very great. One is in da,p?r of losing the qualities of heroism, of ur"ectcdness, of wide-eyed charity, of self?rgetfulness and naturalness, of deep tellingspirituality, of adaptability, of <at .eloquence of demeanor that flows intimate acquaintance with great fo,s> broadening influences of ere? t.tntocmnnla-f policies.^ iilU>ciucuva UJ1U Rev. Elihu Grant, Saugus, M<i'- ! Little Aid on *}?? S ? A religious man can re-'*ve t)u^ Jittlfc! help in regard to his religin on the public! streets to-day because embody is rush-1 ing to and from their Msiness and very little io thought of the? church nnd God. The streets are pure, Ht some of-the people who walk upon th m arc the ones that are impure.?Rev. Hubert Judson White, Beverly, Mass. No Leanness ot Sot^l. Leanness of soul is* the portion of him who has gotten his -wealth by fraud, but he who chooses poverty rather than dishonorable gain if richer than the mighty. A J way With God. Never attempt one duty without God: you may attempt 10,000 with Him,? ^ 'roes. 1 Vts*fcAv- 7 - - Badly Beaten That Morning. 'X Ft. Fairfield lady living in fhe country says that a short tlaa? ago she was awakened at about 3 o'doci; in the morning by a furious ring of the tele; phono in her house. Feeling frojo "the wildness of the i ring that somebody Is house mu.it be on | fire or that awnebody was bleeding to j death, she scampered downstairs and | nervously seised &e receiver, only to j hear a shrill soprano voice shriek: ! "Got your wasbin' done yet? Had mine out half an hour ago.''?Lewiston i Journal. .l-. rr .\ Sentence Seroionlt \ j Kindness is catching. \ One sin bears many seeds. \ A ledger makes a hard pillow. V Red blood is always better than Muk I vision. i None are so poor as those who do I not love people. i A poor man does not need lo be a j poor sort of a man. ? Living for one's land is greater far I than dyiDg for it. \ IT#, V. ? r, r>Ar. ITTKA V? O O iie iiiis liiuuir uu j.: 1 trai fctiLiO niiu iiao never lost anything. A man never gets much hold on heaven when he grasps humanity with just two fingers. More enemies have been slain by mercy than by malice. Chance Is one of the most profane words in our language. Real religion never has to advertise for a chance to do good. A man's title to glory does not depend on the glory of his title here. Men who are always on the make never make much of anything. An open denial of God may be better than an empty definition of Him. The light of one life shines farther than the brillance of a century's logic. The rainbow of love always looks best against the black clouds of hate. When religion is a matter of busi ness, business is never a matter or Religion. The church is not at all sacred when it thinks that the street is wholly secular.?Chicago Tribune. George Ade on Bis Stage Ambitions. George Ade, the author of Ave pieces running simultaneously, is the man of the hour in theatrical circles, having eclipsed even Clyde Fitch in the rapidity of his rise as a playwright. Mr. Ade takes his success modestly and disclaims any desire to pose as a dramatist .of serious intent. "If I have any single ambition In reference to the stage," said Mr. Ade, "it is to depict every day American life in such a manner as to amuse the public and not offend good taste. If, incidentally, I can touch upon some of the weaknesses and foibles of the present moment without slandering my own countrymen, or holding our home people up to ridicule, the plays will have a value which never can attach to an entertainment that is merely farcical. "I do not wish." he continued, "to Ka at? rlI/In/it'n Tr c?>omc tn mn UC OCa iUUO \J I UJUUV.UVt A i, OV.VUJO IV Ubtv that any writer who can amuse the American public without resorting to the use of questionable topics or physical buffoonery has done something of which he need not be ashamed, even if he sheds no great light on any national problem."?Theatre Magazine. Pointed Paragraphs. Never strike a man for a loan when he" is down. . It is far easier to mete a bullet proof garment than it is to construct a steam laundry proof shirt. Vice is always punished?on the stage. The blindness of love enables young people to economize on gas. A man may pose as a sculptor without cutting much of a figure. A man's conscience is continually re minding him of his neighbor's sinfulness. The so-called new thought is merely an old thought discovered by new people. In Adams' day woman was merely a side issue, but at the present writing she poses as the whole show. "Women have better control of their tongues than men have; jn fact, men licve no control whatever of women's tongues.?Chicago News. Women. (| There were four women: a pretty f( woman, a great woman, a wise wo[ca.3. and a good woman. h Aoout the pretty woman thousands p jitfcsed, asking her how she did her a< ^air. u Hundreds gathered about the great b ivoman, asking her how she managed fc jer butler. .. ' , (4 Dozens drew near to the wise wo- p nan. asking her how she avoided ink- 7 ng her fingers. "ei But the good woman stood alone, a: oioept for a blind person, who could ai kit see That she was either pretty, nor p; :r^at. nor wise, and was. therefore, eu- d nous to know why she was good.? s life d jlA a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a.a,aj [ 1 Penetration is the c ; St. Jaco J . ^ in the treatn A Rheum . It penetrates to the seat of torture 4 \ has been known to do and t I ^ I price 25c and 50c. py TN AM t'olor iArood? brighter and /outer colors than any ot I tnJts. AK&ler or we wlU send poet paid at 10c a packa IShHBK^E MFfclMfcl" Jm W* I 1 Mil Jim/ill li rl Hill iiHItW ,..\ I ' : ^ - - \ Three Queer Animal Tales. thi The Indians say that if a beaver <j0 sent out from the parents' lodge fails fa: to find a mate he is set to repair the be dam. If he fails a second time, he is w? banished. foi An Arab writer has the same story, he He tells us that those who buy beaver be skins can distinguish between the ba skins of masters and slaves. The lat- no< ter have the hair of the head rubbed th< off, because they have to pound the wood for their masters' focd, and do it I with their heads. is One more story is about the puma, thi Pi s f // / > if If // / F To be a successful wif< and admiration of her hi woman's constant study. Mrs. Potts tell their stc of all wives and mothers "Deab Mbs. Pittkham : ?Lydla E. pound will make every mother well, stroi through nine years of miserable existence, I then noticed a statement of a woman tro results she had had from your Vegetable Cc it would do for me, and used it for three m was a different woman, the neighbors rem love with me all over again. It seemed lik< fering with inflammation and falling of tl that and built up my entire system, till I Sincerely yours, Mas. cnafl.' F. Brow:*, 21 I t. -ir_.il 5 /ti?v ? ' vice JTesiuem .uuiucia viuu. Suffering: women should not fail periences; Just as purely as she was c ated in her letter, just so surely will I Compound cure other women who inflammation of the ovaries, kidney 1 and nervous prostration. Read tin mothers:? ? ham, Lynn, Mass., and you will be adv Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has of cases of female troubles?curing thei Remember this when you go to your dr Lydia E. Pinkham's Vet Codd'K Curions Defenhi-B. ^a An interesting book might be writ?n on the subject of "Curious De- I ^ snses." I ' One excellent instance is supplied ere in what was known as "Codd's |*S 'uzzle." Codd was defending a client I ccuseu or stealing a uuck. ne sei p seven defenses: (1) Thfc accused ought the duck and paid for it; (2) On e found it; (3) it was given to him; [) it flew into his garden; i.3) it was jj ut in his pocket while he slept; C and ?? are not recorded; but an amicus jriae suggested that there never was ny duck at all. Then accused was cquitted, not "because they chose any articular defense, but because they H id not know which to choose, and so ||?g ave the prisoner the benefit of the Hk oubt."? Spectator. ?|e: ardinal virtue of ? ?bs Oil i it! lent of Rwii . Delay; atism ? as no other external remedy ^ T housands certify to cures. ^ fadelis her dye. One 10c package colors silk, wool and cotton equi ire. V/rlt* for free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and M lx c r e "friend cf mati." A certain Mainada, a girl of Buenos Ayres, was Isely accused of having sought to tray the town to the Indians, aDd is condemned to be exposed in the :est. An enormous puma guarded * r all night from the attacks of other asts. The next day she was taken ck to town and pronounced to be incent.?Edmund Selous'^'Romance of i Animal World." Co matter how smart a person is, be never quite smart enough to realize it there are others equally smart. , \yjM8tfr jWBIBr' 1!11 jBBHBBy . l| s, to retain the love nsband should be a Mrs. Brown and ries for the benefit i , > Pinkham's Vegetable Com* ig, healthy and happy. I dragged worn out with pain and weariness, ubled as I was, and the wonderful * >mpound, and decided to try what onths. At the end of that time I larked it, and my hueband fell in a a new existence. I had been sufle womb, bnt your medicine cored was indeed like_a new woman. ? Cedar Terrace, .Hot springs, ArJc., > Y to profit by Mrs. Brown's ei:ured of the troubles enumerydia E. Pink Lara's Vegetable suffer from womb troubles* roubles, nervous excitability, 3 story of Mrs. Potts to all Mbs. Petxham : ? During1 the early iy married life I was very delicate . I had two miscarriages, and both nd and I felt very badly as we were o have children. A neighbor who t using- Lydia E. Pmkham's >le Compound advised me to try decided to do so. I soon, felt thai ite was increasing, the headache* r decreased and finally disappeared, eneral health improved. I felt at ood coursea through my veins, thf} tired feeling disappeared, and I b-* ing and well. in a year after I became the mothef g healthy child, the ioy of our hom^ .inly have a splendid remedy, and I ry mother knew of it ? Smcerfely is. Aztsa Potts, BIO Park Ave., Hot Ark." feel that there is anything at all or puzzling about your case, or dsh confidential advice*of the perienced, write to Mrs. Pinkused free of charge. Lydia E. cured and is curing thousands n inexpensively and absolutely, uggist. Insist upon getting fetab/e Compound ?INSLOW ICE SKATES r Ic? Skates include al] up-to-dato linen for v j ary* tiffin 1U4| J UVU) UVJD) Ituw u ???w , ?. ? Hlxtv-one different styles < I of adjuntinenta aud finish. 9 !/et/r dealer hasn't them, ire have; tend to V Address Dept. C for Complete Catalogue, f ie Samuel V^inelow Skate Mfg. Co., t Worcester. Mail. I to VMnnfacturere oj Wtn$low Roller Stall*. 9 J If afflicted with weak eye*, dm ompson's Eye Water 'TURK?Variococele end hydrocele cured [bom ->->eratlon or detention from business isdrrg ons. Advice free. Write The Unter. Iiup.ov .d 1'ruRi-Co - 193 Third Ave, N.Y.City. i?????? cutt? WHirtViHSEfAas/ Sal' ? I Beat Cough Syrup, Taetee Good. UflC M In time. Sold by druggists. Hf , S DYES illy well and is iruaruntewd to rive perfect rw olorn. MONROE DltUG CO, JJulonvllle, Mo. ^ I