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HPVc. 'Ik! HO >? 11(1 V nHra^Hnrish effects in Bk|^K' Fashion, witli fiaSBpMfl her characterNmS^msr-Klinc cut in BHn^Hits of the sort. BSRS^Khe best of the BBHHerit of simplicQmbB' made from BgiSrlown flannel, Hj^Kh flannels, or, SHg^Biterial that i.^ DhH sort, in the 1111 jjlpp ied Terry cloth is simple embroidered a cord and a tassel, is made with fronts ck being plain while aid in one pleat at ; neck. There are oat style with turnbig, wide collar tinof material required I I size is seven yards ! i and one-half yards it and three-fourth ches wide. -* the Moment. ine silk crochet lace I the gown material, I ^ hhobhu ' / HSgBBarent" of conMHV pleated white ?HHM pretty collars, for cloth and ^SSM^Rson. Foreign BHqH buttons a id |?HS*tly worn. The HEHH consists of a BRnH zone, white, with three KSlSn^B'.udrfrrf bands H^SHlor encircling |H0|^wiely studdei BnWH J 1.1 L Sl-tu I Clj. in various MHuBiPH^lue, amber, natural waist belts HHgW ^HhkeGhBMS^ks H HMBHjj^Hj^ng^Hjj^Hp BjfirBinBwWfiitIra mbm^MbPW i rryfiiwcA Sk-inlet Chain Nick liters. Very lovely ?>re the lit-ie necklr of slender chains with small pei j pendant at intervals. ISats ?:1* Silk and Crepe. | "Wide picture lints are more of i of silk crepe or ribbed silk or nil velvet than of pile velvet. Osti j plumes hold first place for the i nit tires. Mid one sees inure loos , curled than uncurled featlv though the latter arc worn. Lace Initials New. It is an open bit, as open and ! as can ho, the only heavy part ab it. the strong little ei'^e, and letter, which apparently "happo: right in the centre. Even il' then no lace on chemise or corset co\ such an initial adds a pretty lii touch of individuality without add the work of embroidering. Browns Blues and Grays Rule Writes a discerning Amerii woman in Paris to a New Y< friend: "Browns, grays and hi are to be the fall colors. In p chasing brown make sure you wood, snulf or tobacco shades. T latter is very becoming. Dark i metal grays, known iu London 'smoke,' are attractive. Blues ; coming in. The new pony coat making a hit with the woman wh hips are not larger than her she ders. Her Louis XIV. coat is prop gives an air of slenderness to woman with good shoulders s bust, whose hips are not too lar Sleeves are three-quarters lengtl no longer." Fancy Yoke Blouse. The waist that gives the sugs tion of a chemisette is the favoi one just now, and is always dai and charming, and this one inclu also an entirely novel yoke. In illustration it is made of v< stitched with belding silk and cc bined with a chemisette trimn with a pretty applique, but it i: very generally useful model and adapted to almost all the materi of lighter weight. It would be chai ing in messaline or crepe de *Chi 4r>. fmclininro nr in faot nnr*ii that can be made full with ducc< Again, if liked, combinations of i terials can be made and the yo the cuffs and the girdle can be of silk, while the waist proper is wool. The waist is made with a fiti lining and consists of the front a the backs. These last are laid in I pleats, and the front also is laid inverted pleats, while between pleats there are groups of tucks t provide soft and becoming fuln below the stitchings. The waist arranged over the lining, which faced to form the chemisette, f the yoke completes the upper ed The sleeves are of moderate size, the fashionable three-quarter lenj finished v h shaped cuffs, while ' girdj?--is bmoothly fitted and gi _lht> latest lines to the figure. The quantity of material requii for the medium size is four and thr oiyluli yi-.'-'s twenty-one, four ya twenty-sever., or two and one-fou yards fortv-iour inches wide, w one-half yard of all-over lace and < varcl of appii'jne. i MaUit'i' III no Hat. A charming h;it is ol Nattier b straw, trimmed with two In pinnies, one mauve and tlie other blue. I i />' $ONDAy'j~'0""| Subject:. Loyalty to the Truth. ices " :irls Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at t' Irving Square Presbyterian Chun on tin; theme. "Lojallyto the Truth the Rev. I. W. Henderson, paste ,on took as his text I. Kings L'2:l cut "And Micaiah said, as the Lord li 'ii !i Gih, what the Lord Faith unto m ;ar- that will I speak." He said: The fnnr luinrlrfwl fnlxp nrnr.'ic LM.S were mere flatterers. They inte preted and delivered th'j oracles suit the king's whim. They pa small attention to the measure truth that their judgment containe ac.y if they discovered wrong, they ke out quiet about it. If they foresaw ev the they were equally silent. To be o ns" timistic was to he popular. Self-i ,"is terest dictated that they should r turn to the king good omens or non 0 ' Pessimistic prophesies landed a in: , e in prison: and since Ahab wanted he coddled and cajoled and flattere they humored him to the best of the ability and to his full capacity. Tin were optimistic patriots. Thereto _ they were favorites at court. L ' Ahab hated Micaiali because ] 3 spoke the truth as it came to hi ues direct from God. The monarch di ur- liked premonitions of future evil ai get demonstrations of existing sin. I fhe preferred a fancied security to do ;Un nite knowledge of conditions as th< as 'N'ere- As Ahab complained to J a're hoshapliat, Micaiah prophesied n good, but evil; and for that reason 1 was heartily happy to jail hira. t)Se i Micaiah might easily have tak< 'l,l" j the advice of the king's officer at ier, i become one of the lying multitud the ! lie might, with profit to himself md I the eyes of Ahab, have reiterated <rC> earnest, rather than in sarcasm ; " he did, the prophecy of the falsifiei Self-preservation and the hope self-advancement might, imaginabl Imvo lorl lifm to Vtavo ?rii*on tliA Vii j just the answer for which his hea ;es- | yearned. The profit from the king ite pleasure was at hand and with Qly ; sight, the Lord would forgive hi fles quicker than the monarch. Many ,v man has argued that way. But Micaiah the truth was more precioi )lle than the benedictions of his rule )rn" the favor of Jehovah was more sati led I fying than were the praises of a: 3 a man. "As the Lord liveth, what tl is Lord saith untc me, that will ajs speak," he says; and his words * an inspiration to the iJien ot Amerii as they mark out the strict line < ne' duty we should follow in our time. T00 many of us lack the fideli ;ss. 0f Micaiah because we feor unpop na- larity. .Cowardice supplants couraj ke, in no few hearts that are aglow wit the u vision of the truth because m( dare not defy the disfavor of tl Ahabs of to-day. Smug self-satisfa tion cries down the leader who wou point Ihe wrong; and above all. rig] it. Optimistic patriots in the chur< and out of it, with 110 eye save f< the glowing, lustrous surface whi( I hides a central life bitten deep wit sin, decry as pessimistic the man wl paints tlie evil as it is. Self-slorification is easier the self-examination. There is moi pleasure for the crowd in recountir their achievements than in clarifyir the central springs of life, and i analyzing the depth and the cons quences of their iniquity. It taki less brains to state the achievemen 1 already accomplished than it does 1 investigate and determine the sur ncss ami stability of the foundatioi upon which success is built. It easier upon the head to relate blith ly the unexampled progress of yo; country or your church or your far ily or yourself in the attainment 1 ! material advantage?, than it is to d cide whether or r:o the gain was mac righteously and in the fear of Go and whether or no it will result j future happiness and helpfulness f< all concerned. It is far more sati J factory, from the point of view < the opportunist, to take things ; they are and to make the best 1 them. No man really likes to uneart sin; it isn't nice work and it 1 dirty. But to bury the victims doesn I stop the epidemic. To congratula: j oneself upon the amount of water i | the reservoir, and upon the pow< and efficiency of the pumps at tl water works, In no way diminish! the heat of the fever. In these da; we want and hail men of mind ar ? of action who will look for the hii 0j> j den germs of disease. Then, in 01 i desire to acclaim them we forget tl . i days when, in spite of the self-sati te ! lied, the ignorant, the careless, tl in(l | wicked, they proclaimed the certainl box of our distress and disease; then ^ in forget that those men whom we r the >iled as pessimists are our savior! hat l then we forget the years of researc ess and of patient study into conditio: as they were, we l'orget the premoi ishments of our fools grow wise, i our anguish at the situation as it i lU(1 I say we l'orget. I may he wron, se. Perhaps we only then remember, in | We must have Micaiahs, men < gth loyalty to the truth at all hazarc fl10 and at any cost, no less to-day tha ves in the year that Ahab and Jehoshi phat went against the Arameans : Ramoth-Gilead. Our age, our coui I try, the church has need, and a gre: j need, for men who will speak fort what the Lord saith uni.o them. 1 I 11 rs CIIVQ thncft "whn QVO flin arms in selfish ease" will declai them, as they did the Garrisons, tl Phillipses of the sixties, anarchis and fit subjects for the gallows. Tl man who would liattle with the soci: evil to the death and declare tt wisdom and the truth of God unto white life for two sexes will fiii detractors and enemies on evei hand. He who will annihilate tl monster of intemperan.cand of lega ized iniquity will, I am much pe suaded, lind adherents of the dev even within the sacred precincts < the church of Jesus Christ. Thi economic Isaiah who shall try tl truth of God against the entrencht forcps of trold-zrepdv materialists. i the interest of the men who toil, wi find a fearful and unrelenting arr? against him. He who will prote< labor against itself will be forced \ combat with evil men among thos whom he wishes to uplift. But whi a man may with less timidity advain new thought in the scientific worl in no place will he find, many time , a more uncompromising resistani than ir the church. Be it for goc rltl or ill the simple fact is this, that n> i;h where has new light a harder fig! jne 1>ku among many who are the fa iUWl'Id Ul I11II1 WJ1U w il5> (.111? of all trutli ant] who prayed the si of the Spirit for them that they r.iigl have a sure guido into the fullne; of eternal wisdom. The fight of tl '*?? * church of Cod against truth is tl old auiaziiiii s;?cctac!c of the J -=*>]/" i ; | j 1 QV TME REV~i|% I IRA W- HE:NDER|m IfHE F-AMOUS DIVIDE.The odds against truth to-day are tremendous; but even as Ahab never returned to the city of his rule, so "G surely shall eternal and refining truth c|* conquer in the age long struggle with the adversary. )r? Two things are necessary that truth may win and be accredited. v" First, we must be sure thac our in* 1C* sight is correct, our truth born of Clod. And then we must be loyal tc ts the voicf of Jehovah as He speaks to >r" us. There is nothing more detrimental to the dignity and standing of the Y truth than irrational and ill-balanced " thought. Every bit of truth is tho word of God, but some statements which are caricatures of truth are not P" God-given, no matter how loudly and n" how long they may claim the distince" tion ot' divine inspiration. All truth may well be labeled, "thus saith the in Lord," but all statements that, bear t0 the motto, "thus saith the Lord," arc . not truth. There are false prophets !ir to-day no less than in the reign of Ahab. He who will declare a mesre sage to men must first be sure of his ground. ^ Not less important is it that a man m be loyal to the truth revealed to him s" through the workings of God's Holy 1C* Spirit. Truth may negative most of *e his own ideas and cherished pre* fi" conceptions. It may even subordinate his noblest ideals. But by it he must stana. Micaian went to prison ot for the truth and Jesus of Nazareth 3e to the cross. Stephen was stoned by his enemies, as was Zechariah, the ;n son of Jehoiada, the priest, because he was faithful to the truth. John ,e* the Baptist lest his head for declar|n ins; that Herod had lost his. Luther in withstood a church and the Smithas field martyrs suffered agony that 's- truth might be supreme. The long ot list of heretics and excommunicated. { the host of those who have lost life i and friends, the army of those crusaders who, under God, have battled >'s hard with sin?all testify to the need, in the glory of loyalty to divine truth. m It is no easy thing to lead in the a march of progress or to fight the to forces of evil. Conservatism would i 11S clutch progress by the throat and !r? throttle it to the rattle. Sin hates [ s" the light and would overcome it. _ 1-* But whether or th? opposition ie be fierce we have m^n J who wiU ii'lTuTo^ and "p not flinch in the hot fight. "There i, :a is," we are told, "no more hazardous enterprise than that of bearing the torch of truth into those dark and t>' infested recesses in which no light u" has ever shone." But to that man ?e who. filled with power by the Spirit [n of the Lord, will speak what the | ?n Lord saith unto him there will ha j ie not only the hard warfare on the first line of the skirmish here, but the ! ,d the crown of victory in the life eter111 nal, More and more the need is for 3r men of the mold of Micaiah: men to whom the truth is more precious than much fine gold; men whose integrity 10 is indivisible; men whose opinions are the judgments of minds that | Lr> have been moved upon by the blessed j l'e Spirit of the living God. who cannot '? be bought, and who, filled with a j |S high and a holy devotion to their | in divine commission as the revealers, I e" interpretersandtorch-bearersof God's 5S illuminating truth will balk at lto j *s sacrifice; and be overawed by no op- j to position; and be diverted by no power e" from the declaration and the promul* gation of that truth. Oh, that theremight arise throughc" out this land men of the vision and ! ir the fidelity of the prophets of ancient ; Q" Israel. Would that there might arise among the ministers of the Lord to- ! e" day a prophet of Jahwe, Jehovah tue , *e Lord of hosts and of truth; a prophet with a message and with the power | 10 express ic leisuiv, 5r forcefully, fearlessly. May God give s" us a Micaiah who shall tell America ^ the truth concerning the conditions of to-day. The people, in the church i and out of it. are weary and undesirous of platitudes and of unaimed verbiage. Maiwrl-.d awaits a prophet of : 't God. And Wi.en he comes in the j plenitude of wisdom and of power; in furnished with a divine commission; 5r endued with a mission and a mesie sage for a world in sin, may the 1 2S church have the insight and the grace >'s to see the marks of God's calling in him and in his message and not per- j secute him as did the fathers the i ir prophets of God aforetime. 10 "As the Lord liveth, what the ^ord ; s" saith unto me, that will I speak." 16 May this he the motto of every man ty who loves the truth. May it be also >*e our inspiration to fidelity and to a e- glorius ministry unto men in the j >? name aiiu iu tut: nuuui ui iuc jivm& | ;h God. And may we live so near to is God that we may be able to hear His message and to speak with imrnediin ate authority to men. s. The Worker That Counts. jf I saw upon the face of a watch js three workers. There was a very i n thin one, so thin that I could barely : i see it, and it seemed to be moving j ^ in a little circle of its own, and to i have nothing to do with the other I it workers. One of the other workers i h was long and genteel and graceful. ! . q The third worker was short and slow. ' jr I looked at them for a while, and I c said: "There can be no doubt in 10 the mind of anyone who looks at this ; ts watch who the worker is; the worker , ie is evidently tiiat little one that moves . r,i in a circle of its own. I can see it ,e move; it moves lightly, blithely, trip- | j q pingly; I can see it. The long one ' id 1 can hardly see move rit all until I .v have been watching it for a considerable time; and as for the short one, j. I think I may safely declare that it < r_ does not move at all." i] See how a stranger to the mechanic ism of a watch can talk; how ignorant he is of what the workers are 1P doing! You may take off the little ] !cj thin worker and do very little damin age: you may even take off the long ]] and graceful worker, and, though you ty will suffer a considerable injury, vet ct you can do without its service at all. to But if you take off that little, short, ;e slow worker, you could never tell the le time of day.?Joseph Parker. :e The Power Will Be Given. s, ;e When Cyrus captured Sardis, the k1 only son of Croesus, who was dumb, o- saw a soldier ready to give the king, it whom he did not know, a stroke upon 1 ,1- the head with his scimitar. The son ; 1 nmin ?nrii ;i violent effort to save his i i ft father by a word that ho broke the i ; it string of his tongue, and cried out, | <;s "Soldier, spare the life of Croesus!" j ie And so, if we love Christ and His I 10 | cause earnestly, our tongues will by j 1 loosened, f / / f / University of the Poor. Aberdeen University, more perhaps than any other, lias been the r university of the poor. The educa- 1< tion it provided has for many gen- a erations been within the reach of al- t< moaf irj tho InnH nr?H d love ot' education and the reverence c for it which, long before school b boards were heard of, permeated the peasantry of the country within its range of influence have doue more li than anything else to mold the char- X acter and inspire the social life of n that part of Scotland.?Scotsman. fi Fearful SUGGESTIONS HOW \ RELII While no woman is entirely free from ! Cc periodical suffering, it does not seem to re lie the plan of nature that "women should suiTer so severely. This is a ^ severe strain on a woman's vitality. ln When pain exists something is wrong1 nc which Bhoukl be set right or it will ve lead to a serious derangement of the V< whole female organism. Thousands of women have testified r., in grateful letters to Mrs. Pinkham I ^ that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable q( Compound overcomes woman's special r pains and; irregularities. It provides a safe and sure way of J escape frtfm distressing aM dangerous j y weaknesses and diseases. The tw6 following letters tell so con- w vincingiy what Lydia E. Pinkham's j Vegetable Compound will do for j womeni they cannot fail to bring hope j C? to thoufsands of sulferers. Nellie Holmer. of r>40 N. Division bl Street, Buffalo, N. Y., writes: j it "Dear Mrs. Pinkhan.-? | ti " Your medicine is indeed an ideal medicine a.! for women. I suffered misery for years with cj gainful periods, headaches. and bearing-down -i pains. I consulted two diftei %.-&*. physicians but failed to get any relief. A friend from the r east advised me to try Lydia E. tr Vegetable Compound. I did so, and no longer V suffer as I did before. Myperiods are natural; si every ache and pain is gone, and my general m health is much improved. I advise all women who suffer to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable CompoundF Mrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D., writes: ** Dear Mrs. Pinkham-V " I might have been spared many months 11 of suffering and pain had I only known of the efficacy of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable tJ Ask fflrs. Pinkham's Advice ?A Woman Mrs. Sarah Lamb, of St. Pancras, London, remarked on her recent 104th birthday that she "wouldn't s mind living her life over again." j i rmi fness Cannot Be Cured | f by l?^il applications, as thov cannot reach the Qi^eascd portion of the ear. There is. only one way to cure deafness, and that is, a by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. \V!...n ilii? tulip is inflamed vou have a , rumbling sound or imperfect tier, ring, and! J v.hen it is entirely closed. Deafness is the' 11 result, and unless the inflammation can be j ttaken out and this tube restored to its j 1 normal condition, hearing will bo destroyed j c forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is noth.ng but an it:llatned condition of tlie mucous surfaces. s< We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Dcarness (caused brv catarrh) that cannot be cured by Halls Catarrh ( Cure. Send for circulars free. ?g F. .1. CiJKNLY tfc Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by i)ni"iri?ts. Toe. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. ^ C| A man has been imprisoned in . Paris for making his donkey help- j Iessly drunk in the streets. BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA Skin Feeloft Oft' Hands and Fnco?Endured Tortures?Cured by tlio Cuticura Jlemcdies. "1 c.n truthfully say that just two cakes of Cuticuru Soap and two bott.cs ol / L'uticuru Insolvent su; prised me, n the ( skin was peeling (iff my baby's hands and ^ face, and he was suffering awful. When the eczema first appeared he was very healthy, but as soon b was covered with it he lost flesh ra;,idly. 13uf as soon as 1 comi.enced to use the Juticura Kemethes he started to mend. 1 keep 011 using ,3; Hie Cutietira Soap, as 1 think it is an indispensable article around the house. As my baby weighs thirty-seven pounds awl T is only eventcen month' o!c!. you can imagine the torture he endured. -My neighbors can " ouch for this statement as be- 5; ing correct. Mrs. Alex. W eek -, Jr.. '2(18 . y No.th Water St., Newburgh, 1'., Sept. a r, 1005." J v When a traveler in cnina ciesires n % passport the palm of his hand is ?overed with line oil paint and an im- ?i [>ression is taken on thin paper. This P |)ai)er, officially signed, constitutes tiis passport. X. Y.?4S 1 "THE MARRYIXG SQUIRE." Justice Geo. E. Law, of Brazil, Ind., I Has Married 1100 Couples. , Justice Geo. E. Law, of Brazil, j I Ind., has fairly earned the title "The Marrying Squire," by which he i ? known far and wide, a having already mar- J ried some 1400 cou- j pies. Ten years ago r he was Deputy Coun- c ty Treasurer. "At 1 thr.t time," said Jus- 2 tice Lav.-, "I was si;f- 1 fering from an annoying kidney trou-' ble. My back ached, t my rest was broken at night, and the 1 passages of the kidney secretions vere too frequent and contained sedi- p aient. Three boxes of Doan's Kidney t Pills cured me in 1S97, and for the past nine years 1 have been free from Hrlnev eomnlaint and backache." Sold by all dealers. DO cents a box. n Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. e: i Helps. Man could direct his Trays by plain eason and support his life by taste3ss food; but God has given us wit nd flavor and brightness, and laugher, and performers, to enliven the ays of man's pilgrimage, and to harm his pained steps over the urning marl.?Sidney Smith. A ?"urkish irade has been pubshed ordering the purchase of fifty [axim guns In Germany and counterlanding the contemplated order for fty French Hotchkiss guns. . Pains VOMEN MAY FIND LF. impound sooner; for I have tried so many incdies without help. "I dreaded the approach of every month, it meant bo niucn pain and sutteriug for e, but after I had used the Compound two onths I became regular and natural and ara >w perfectly well and free from pain. I am ry grateful for what Lydia E. Pinkhain'a egetable Compound hag done for me." Such testimony should be accepted I 7 all women as convincing evidence I iat Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable I impound stands without a peer as a J imody for all the distressing ills of | omen. The success of Lydia E. J?inkham'.<? egetable Compound restsi-iupon the ell-earned gratitude of America? omen. When women are troubled with pais irregularities, displacements or ul;ration of the organs, that bearing)\vn feeling, inflammation, backache, loating (or flatulency), general debily, indigestion and nervous prostra* j on. or are beset with such symptom* | ? dizziness, faintness, lassitude, ex* tability, irritability > eeplesanecs. tbe7 shoula imemh'-1' there is one tried and iuK remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's egetable Compound at once removes jch troubles. Refuse to buy any other ledicine, for j'ou need the best. Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. 'inklinm if there is anything bout vour sickness you do not nderstand. She -will treat you ith kindnefig and her advice is *ee. No wo Win ever regretted rriting her and she has helped^ liousands. Address Lynn, Masa. Best Understands a Woman's Ills. Watercress i.s an excellent biood purifier. Parsnips possess the same virtues a* arsaparilla. 'ITS,St. V'itns'Dance:Nprvoas Diseaseppernanentlycured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve i iestorc-r. $2 trial bottle and treatise free . )r. H. R. Kline. Ld. t*31 Arch St.. Phila., Pa.. Signing your name to a friend's note i% j | bad sign. 1 I The 20th Century Limited. 1 To Chicago in IS hours. Leaves New fork 3.30 1'. .M.? arrives Chicago 8.30 next loming?a night's ride by the New Vork 'entral Lines. "America's Greatest Kaiload." A dozen other last traiCs to Chiago and St. Louis. A perfect service. But few girls are as homely as the.-? nnelinies act. L. DOUGLAS 3.50&$3.00 Shoes DE8T IN THE WORLD f.L Douglas $4 Gilt Edge i innotbeequaliedatanyprica /? t>in<* House \? ite most I coi.*,)le^cmui!?country | \ Jfjj V HOES FOB EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES. J Mon'e Shoes. S5 to $1.30. Boys' Shoes, $3 U to $1.25. Women's Shoes, $4.00 to Sl.SO. V Misses' & Children's Shoes. $2.26 to $1.00. I ry W. L. Douglas Women's, Mifcscs and M Children's gIiocs: for style, fit ancl wear they excel other makes. 9 if E could take you into my large ictories at Brockton, Alas?-,and show I ou how carefully W.L. D^aglasshoes re made, you would then understand M rhy they hold their shape, fit better, V /ear longer, and are of greater value n han any other make, BJ "" ?"' ? von ran rvnt.iin W. HI ouglas shoes. His name and price is stamped H n the botto i, which protects you against higli H rices and inferior shoes. Take no substU Bl jfe. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglaflihoef H nd InsUt imon having them. HI Caci Color Eyelets used, they uiii noi wear brassy, Hh Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. B. fV. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. ! $, Brockton. Mas$ H You Cannot ill inflamed, ulcerated and catarrnal con- H litions of the mucous membrane such as H iif*?rinftratJirrh caused B ly feminine ills, sore throat, sore nouth or Inflamed eyes by simply losing the stomach. Uut you surely can cure these stubborn ift'ections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic uch destroys the disease germs,checlcs lischarges, stops pain, and heals the nflammation and soreness. 3axtine represents the most successful ocal treatment for feminine ills ever roduced. Thousands of women testify o this fact 50 cents at druggists. : 1 r? Sena ior r ree x n<*i dua h rKE K- PAXTOX CO? Boston.- Mssa 9 iSf&'iu Thnmnsnn's Fvp. Wafer 1 res, u?e uwmj'wwM ? ?j ?