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f . New York City.?Elaboration appears to be the one all pressing demand for the season and almost ev erything except the tailored suit ot the severest, most useful sort is braid trimmed. Here is a most charming little Eton that gives all the dressy effect demanded by fashion, while in reality It is absolutely simple in construction and can very easily be made. Braid of varying widths is combined with velvet to give a really handsome and altogether elaborate effect, but the foundation is just the plain little Eton shown in the small view. In this instance the material is hunter's green broadcloth and the collar and the wider bands are made of yelvet, the collar being overlaid with lace while the trimming con1 slsts of flat braid in two widths and of soutache braid applied over a stamped design. All suitings are appropriate, however, and the model wfll be found especially well adapted i to velvet and velveteen as well as to broadcloth, while it can be made far simpler by being trimmed on differA ent lines. Fpr example, if the horizontal strappings were omitted altoi gether the garment would still be an attractive one or the narrow braids t' in fronts and back could be dispensed with, still leaving a dressy garment. The Eton is made with the back, the side-backs, fronts and side-fronts. Both the side-fronts and side-backs a^e cut to form extensions at the lower edges and these extensions are lapped over onto the fronts and backs, so providing a foundation for tl?>e braiding, which gives the effect of a band. The back is slightly longer than the side-backs and is attached +rt tho hplt nvor which if hlmispc: The flat collar finishes the neck and the closing is made with buttons and loops of braid. The sleeves are in the fashionable three-quarter length ^ with bands at the lower edges. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and onequarter yards twenty-seven, one and three-quarter yards forty-four or one and one-half yards fifty-two inches wide with five-eighth yard of velvet for the collar and wide bands, six yards of medium width, ten yards of narrow braid with soutache, according tn ripKi?n uspd. with one vard of lace. Long Chiffon Scarfs. The long chiffon scarf, fastened to the gown only by a handsome buckle between the shoulders, is a graceful accessory to the gown when skilfully carried, and the air of old-time charm and quaintness that it adds is most captivating. Eodico of Ituffles. The bodice composed entirely of narrow ruffles of lace, laid one above the other on a well-fitted lining, is a *. charminely fluffy evening waist. Wide bands of Cluny pass from shoulders to waist, crossing at the bust. iTTOWOMNl Printed Cottons. Mercerized thin cottons make charming little gowns for home wear and give the greatest possible effect for the least expenditure of time in making, since their floral designs dress up the frock so much that little other decoration is needed. Practical Suggestions. cihiffnn broadcloths, henriettas and the heavier eolians can be made up without the silk slip linings, though even these set better when worn over the well made slip. In selecting eolians, be sure it is the wool and silk, not the cotton and silk combination, for the latter, while somewhat less expensive, wrinkles so easily that it must be constantly pressed to be at all presentable. Tartans All the Rage. Tartans in various materials are exceedingly fashionable, as they are being freely used for tailor-made costumes, blouses, millinery, trimmings and underskirts. The all dark blue and green, without any light checks in it, is certainly the quaintest combination for out-of-door wear, and is equally becoming to fair and dark neople. Odd Little Wraps. Very smart are the smooth brown linen skirts cut en princesse, topped with round waists of net made simply with a yoke of insertion bands and with an embroidered linen girdle or perhaps one of dull blue silk to finish it. Oftener than- not these skirts have jaunty little boleros, ma: ties or pony coats to go with them, for it is rumored that we are to wear our lovely light toggery later on in the season than is customary, and in anticipation the fractious Lady Mode has invented all manner of odd little wraps to be thrown over them on cool days. Fancy Pleated Skirt. There seems literally to be no limit to the possibilities of the pleated skirt. It is constantly appearing in some new guise or other and is seemingly always most atractiv? in the latest. This ono is perfectly smooth over the hips, giving something of a If If 111I li i ^ yoke effect at the same time that the lines are long, graceful and becoming. In the illustration it is made of nut brown broadcloth trimmed with bias bands of velvet and is stitched with belding silk, but trimming can be braid or anything that may be liked or the skirt can be finished with a stitched hem only. Again it gives a choice of round or walking length, so that it becomes adapted hnth to thp strppt nrw1 to inrtnnr wpnr while it is suitable for the thinner materials, such as silk and veiling quite as well as cloth and other suitings. The skirt is made in nine gores that ar? cut with extensions below the plain yoke portion, which provides fulness and flare, while at the back are the inverted pleats that are so universally becoming. The quantity of material required for the medium size is eleven and one-half yards twenty-seven, six and one-quarter yards forty-four or fiftytwo inches wide, with two yards of | bias velvet to trim as illustrated. - - v; *~.A fife soNDA\iJrr^ni (SfcRMCN ILiUuLli Subject: Vision. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Speaking at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church on the theme, "Vision," the Rev. I. W. Henderson, pastor, took as his text, Ps. 119:18: "Open Thou mine eyes." He. said: Of all the physical gifts which we have received at the hand and by ths grace of a lo-viz? Father the natural eyesight is the hesi. What a blessed bestowal it is. I fancy xL.2t most of us, had we to give up any :>f the senses would relinquish the sense of sight last. Most of us, I believe, would lose all our other faculties before this one. The eyes reveal to us the animate world. They are the windows out of which we look upon the universe of God. With them we study the handiwork of Jehovah in nature and in human kind. Through them we search the wonders of the Heavens and view the brilliant beauties of the paintings of God in sky and cloud, in hill and vale, in woodland, stream, in lake and sea. The eyes are for use. They grow strong and acute and increase in power of discernment by exercise alone. Visual facility is the result of visual activity. The man who does not, or cannot, use his eyes, sooner or later loses the faculty of vision. The poor prisoner in the donjon keep, with only darkness for companionship and with no consolation save the slow approaching hand of death, after years of dark confinement. and of torture hideous and maddening, loses the power to see. Seeinc is not looking. Many neo pie look who never see. They look upon things, but they rarely see into things. Their eyes catch visions, but they rarely pierce beneath the surface. Many people look at things, they cast their eyes upon things, but they do not see. Seeing is a discipline. Looking is a habit of the lax. To see we must cultivate the power of perception. We must school ourselves to look beyond the superficial to the eternal underlying realities. And because they lack perception, because their eyes have not been opened, because they do not possess, through exercise, the ability to differentiate, to discern, to perceive clearly, many people really do not see. It was not until the clear vision of a Ruskin showed to me the purple haze at sunset that I learned to know and love the darkening beauty of the hills. Those who have used their eyes are the world's greatest men. "As one of our wisest teachers has said, the greatest thing a human soul ever does in this world, is to see something, and to tell what it saw in a plain way. Hundreds of people can talk, for one who can think. But thousands can think for one who can see; to se?i clearly is poetry, prophecy and religion, all in one. Therefore, finding the world of literature more 1 ort/) ,Vi ltsts uiviut-u in lu uuuncia auu 'seers, I believe we shall find also, ibat the seers are wholly the greater race of the two." For, as Dr. Hillis has said, "greatness Is vision." I fancy that many a man had bathed In a tub before Archimedes, at his bath, discovered the eternal fact of the displacement of bodies and formulated the truth of displacement Into law. Multitudes of men unquestionably gazed upward into the heavenly firmament and studied the movement of the heavenly spheres before Copernicus; but It remained for him, with the seeing eye, to reveal to humanity the underlying principles of the celestial galaxies. Newton was not the first man who had watched an apple fall from a leafy bough; but he was the first one who really saw the apple fall. Other men had seen it and had not been by It impressed. Newton used his eyes and to us was given the law of gravi-1 tation. Columbus was not the first man who stood upon the shores of Portugal and watched the ships sail hull first over the horizon's edge, Into the unknown bosom of the sea; but In tlie disappearing vessel uoiumous saw the prophecy of the rotundity of the earth. Multitudes of kettles of diverse form had steamed on many a hearth before the days of Watts; but only Watts saw the locomotive in the wasted, superheated vapor. With a kite and a string many a boy and many a man had wiled away the pleasant hours; but (t was not until Franklin, with a prevision born of application, sent his frail sky-craft up into the clouds that the wonder of electricity became realized to men. Darwin, Wallace and Agassi, delving into the mysteries as well as the superficiaries of natural life, were not the first to gaze upon the animal life that is teeming round about us; but they were the first to understand, with insight and clear vision, the handiwork of God therein. It is said that Henry ',/ard Beecher could see and reveal more beauty in the top of a head of celery than the average man is able to dis? ?,,11 nf +Vtn tciu in iuc luiruiuuin uciiuij ui rose. Yes, "greatness is vision." The world needs discernment. That Is to say it needs seeing eyes, it needs to cultivate the habit and the faculty of perception. This is true in the intellectual, in the civic and the spiritual world, not to mention others. We need vision in the intellectual life. Too great insistency cannot be laid upon the need for clear-cut, definite. incisive thinking. We cannot afford as men or as a society to do less than cultivate our powers of intellectual discernment to the full. If we are to have a theory of knowledge which shall be valid; if we are to have a wise statement of the underlying principles of life, we must have men who, with keen intelligence and with prevision extraordinary, shall be able to analyze their experl t'uces anu uurs, ai:u give tu uuuiaunji a philosophy which shall explain, as well as be founded upon, the facts of our human existences. All honor to the men in every school, in every land and in every age, who have given their best years and their ripest wisdom to the task of the investigation. delineation, re\'eiation of the phenomena of which humanity is conscious. They have placed the world in debt. And if we in the coming generations are to continue the meritorious service that the philosophers of the past have achieved for us. it is absolutely requisite that we shall have an intellectual fidelity ?.nd power of pre-vision which shall 'be commensurate with the need, the opportunity and our time. Not otherwise is it in the civic life. it nnvwhoro WO TTIllst haV.? J1CIC, 11 Uiij V) .. ? ~ vision. The memories of Washington and Jefferson of Webster, of GY-TMEfR LV^Vi IRA:W- HENDER^omThE pv?iMOOS;D^fe' Gladstone, of Lincoln, project before our minds the crying Necessity for a civic vision. As we stand at the parting of the ways, when to go forward is to accept new opportunities and tc be invested with larger responsibilities and obligations unto service, it is imperative that we shall see clearly and far-reachingly into the future of our civic life. Blind men cannot lead us. Only a !eadership that seer is fit for the front in the march ol progress. But great as is the call for an exercise of insight and for men of vision in the intellectual and civic affairs of men, still greater is the demand for profound vision in the spiritual ,'ife. As Moses and Isaiah saw the truth of God unto spiritual satisfaction, Jor the men and women ol the Israelitish race; as Paul and Luther and Wesley and John Knox and John Calvin and Channing and a myriad of other saints of God laid bare the truth of God to the gaze of the Gentile world; as the Lord Jesua Christ with divine insight revealed the eternal truth of the Father for ttio honofit of cirminc cftnlc an must we, to-day, as we desire to be leaders In our time, have the vision of the prophets and of a son of God, unto the portrayal of the truth of God to the race. No man Is fit to be | a leader for the souls of men until first he has had a vision of the Lord. None of us is capable of lifting men to the level of the life of Jesus Christ until he has had himself a clear discernment and precentlon of the truth of God. The blind cannot lead the blind. The blind do not desire to ba led by the blind.' The blind should not have the temerity to attempt to lead the blind. Only a man whose spiritual vision is unclouded should have either the courage or the audacity to try to show the beauties of the God-blessed life to other men. That man. alone, is competent to be a guide through the wilderness of life, and to lead men along the road of righteousness to the goal of spiritual victory, who has seen already for himself the truth of which he is the revelation. The spiritual vision is the best vision. We may not, as did Moses, wall? with God. We may not sense His presence with the faculties of the natural man. But we may, in the fineness of our spiritual perception, be and become as intimate with God in a spiritual manner as Moses or Abraham or Enoch or Isaiah ever were. Spiritual vision is the best vision. As the Psalmist pleaded, go should we cry out to God in earnest sunnlication. "ooen Thou mine eyes." Not only that we may learn wondrous things out of His law, though we may do that; but that we mav also receive such a vision of the heavenly realities; of the eternal verities; of Him who dwelleth in the secret chambers of the Most High; as shall sustain, uplift and inspire our Immortal souls. Oh, that we might have our eyes opened wide by God unto the discernment of the truth of His Kingdom and of the life in-dwelt by Him, Would that Christ might be allowed to lay His hand upon the eyes ol those who are spiritually sightless. What joy would be theirs. Wha1 contentment would be their portion, What peace would pervade theii souls. What a vision of God's infinite and eternal glory would be opened to their gaze. Yea, Lord, open Thou the eyes oi Thy church. Open Thou the eyes ci Thine erring children. Grant us a vision of Thy truth. And may wf with open eyes, beholding the glorj of the Lord, live as ever in His pres< ence until there shall come into oui vision the reality of the commonwealth of God. the Citv of God. th( habitation of the saints, the land nol made with hands, eternal in th? heavens. The AbsurdJ^y of Unbelief. The other evaning I was ridinj home after a heavy day's work. ] felt weary and sore depressed, wher swiftly, suddenly as a lightning flash came, "My grace is sufficient foi thee," and I said, "I should think ii is, Lord," and burst out laughing. I never fully understood what th( holy laughter of Abraham was until then. It seemed to make unbelief sc absurd. It was as if some little fish, being very thirsty, was troubled aboul drinking the river dry, and Fathei Thames said, "Drink away, little fish my stream is sufficient for thee." Oi it seemed like a little mouse in th< granaries of Egypt after seven years of plenty fearing it might die of fam ine. Joseph might say, "Cheer up little mouse, my granaries are suffi fipnf. fnr thpp." Ae-ain T Imagined t man away up on yonder mountaii saying to himself, "I fear I shall ex haust all the oxygen in the atmos' phere." But the earth might say "Breathe away, oh, man! and fill thj lungs ever; my atmosphere is suffl' cient for thee." Oh, brethren, be great believers! Little faith will bring your souls tc heaven, but great faith will bring heaven to your souls.?Spurgeon. Are You AVorking For Temperance' The great question, after all, ir temperance is not whether all people are working in the same way, bu1 whether they areworkinginsome waj for this urgent cause. People wil never wholly agree upon methods ir temperance any more than they wil! in nnllcv Tf ic ncolpiss trt tr\ to round up all temperance sympathizers in the fold of one society 01 under the leadership of one reforir or one newspaper. This is not tc say that all methods are equallj good, for some are better than others and some may do well for one sel of circumstances, but not for others The best methods must be sought with charity for those who diffei fr^m us. And yet, the great, insistent moral question is not "Are you working in any way for temperance?" but "Are you conscientiously and prayerfully and definitely working in some way to reform the drunkard, to abolish the saloon, to educate the children, tc oppose the exportation of Americar rum to American colonies?in a word, to make the world a cleaner quieter, happier place to live in?? Caleb Jones, M. D., in the Corner stone. Priests to Other Souls. Every humble soul that sees the Father, and lives in that sweet vision becomes a priest to other souls. A sacramental power goes from the voice, the touch, the look, of everj one who is himself loving God. ! f^iAT ! J? ? as with joyous hearts ai how conducive to heal enjoy, the cleanly, regul diet of which they shoul not by constant medical ous or objectionable nal nature, only those of k and wholesome and tr Syrup of Figs, manufac come into general favor of its quality and excelL Syrup of Figs has a they know it is wholeso ble physicians as to tl original method, from c presented in an agreeal used to promote the pic we are free to refer t( | 0 medicines and never fa ? Please to remembe: | always has the full na printed on the front of < I only. If any dealer oi | printed thereon the nan ! I the genuine you will no 111 a hottle on hand, as i (|\ whenever a laxative rei r? ? o i Nests on the Water. i It Is almost unthinkable that > bird should build a nest on the wate , Yet that is exactly Vhat the greb< always do. With reeds, grass ac plant stems the grebe makes a regi lar floating island, somewhat ho \ lowed out on top, usually near tl : open water of a marshy or reec ' lake. We have several kinds < grebes, but their nestB are mut i alike, sometimes moored to the reed : but usually floating freely on tl ' water.?"Nature and Science," in S Nicholas. | . Simplon Subway Ventilated. For seven years work on what m? i well be considered one of the greate ' triumphs of modern engineering hi 1 been carried on unceasingly. Tl j famous Simplon tunnel is now an a complished fact. The work has co over S15.500.000. One terminus i : the tunnel is at Brieg, in the Rhoi . * Valley, and the other at Iselle, ' Italy. It consists of two tunnels, on ' one of which will at present be us< * for trains, the second serving the pu , pose of a ventilating shaft,'throuj j which 1800 cubic feet of air can 1 [ passed every second, bringing tl > temperature down to seventy-sev< r degrees Fahrenheit.?St. Louis Po? Dispatch. Journalism in Siam. J The proprietors of a Siamese new ' paper have distributed handbil containing the following notice: "The news of English, 0, crumt: we tell the latest. Writ in perfect , style and most earliest. Do a mu [ der, git commit, we hear of and t< i it. Do a mighiy chief die, O, crumt , we publish it, and in borders of soi : bre. Staff has each one been c< ^ leged and write, O crumbs, like tl ?' * ? -1 XTT j Kipnng ana ue uiuiieua. wc tui. I every town and extortionate not f , advertisements. Buy it, 0 crumt buy it. Tell each of you its gre? ; ness for good. 0, crumbs, Ready < t Friday, Number first."?Bangki * Times. : A new electric fixture consists of , jeweled, hand-wrought, polishe I brass band carrying a centre lig f with mother of pearl shades and thr drop lights, with shades of the sai i material. Sir Charles Wyndham was educj ed by his father for the ministry ai \ was sent to a Moravian school in G? many for that purpose. [ CRIED EASILY. ' Nervous Woman Stopped Coffee ai ? Quit Other Things. , -No better practical proof that cc t fee is a drug can be required than 5 note how the nerves become unstrui t in women who habitually drink it. f The stomach, too, rebels at beii I continually drugged with coffee ai 1 tea?they both contain the drug| j caffeine. Ask your doctor. An la. woman tens me om siu * thus: i "I had used coffee for six years ai ) was troubled with headaches, ne I vousness and dizziness. In the mor > ing upon rising I used to belch up \ sour fluid regularly. \ "Often I got so nervous and mi ! erable I would cry without the lea - reason, and I noticed my eyesight w; s' getting poor. "After using Postum a while I o served the headaches left me ar " soon the belching of sour flu [ stopped (water brash from dyspe )' sia). I feel decidedly different noi ( and I am convinced that it is becaui i 1 stopped coffee and began to ui , Postum. I can see better now, n ovoc nrp stronger. "A friend of mine did not like Po turn, but when 1 told her to make like it said on the package, she lik( , it all right." Naipe given by Postu Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Always be Postum well and it will surprise yo i Read the little book, "The Road ' Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a re son." - JoyThey Every Ho id smiling faces they romp and play th the games in which they indulg ar habits they should be taught to fo d partake. How tenderly their heal ion, but by careful avoidance of ever ture, and if at any time a remedial ag nown excellence should be used; r< lily beneficial in effect, like the pie; tured by the California Fig Syrup C in many millions of well informed f; ence is based upon personal knowle lso met v/ith the approval of physic me, simple and gentle in its action, le medicinal principles of Syrup oi :ertain plants known to them to ac Die syrup in which the wholesome C jasant taste; therefore it is not a se d all well informed physicians, who c vor indiscriminate self-medication, r and teach your children also that th .me of the Company?California F svery package and that it is for sal( fers any other than the regular Fi le of any other company, do not acb t get its beneficial effects. Every fai t is equally beneficial for the par Tiedy is required ===^-BITl--w?s^^S= Hottest Place in the Country. a The hottest place in^ the United r. States is Yuma, Ariz. The coldest h 38 place Is Poplar River, Mont. Tne n id former place has registered 118 de- c i- grees Fahrenheit above zero, the lat- r 1- ter place sixty-seven degrees below, a le d ly Trees That Grow in Sand Hills. s Df Trees that will grow in sand hills d :h and without irrigation are the latest e s, discovery of the Government Bureau il le of Forestry. In the course of half a v It. century forests are expected to cover c the waste regions of the West. d Rudyard Kipling's novel, "Kim," has just been translated into Chinese. c st To Cure a Cold in One Day 1 is Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, r ie Druggists relund money if it fails to cure. I c K. W. (J rove's signature is on each bos. 25c. f st Esperanto is to be taught to the cadets 0? at the French military college of St. Cyr. d ie Mrs. Winslow'" Soothing Syrup for Children I in teething,softens thegums,reduce8iniiammar- I ly tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25ca bottle g id China has ten railway lines in operation; a r. eight others are being built. Jh No Pins in China. 3e A member of the Chinese Lega30 tion, clad In Bplendid pale-bued silks, ari - " 1?- - A1__J -A "* stood Deiore tne v^itsmu ai nenyuiu st* "Pins," he said, "cause untidy habits. The right way to f-.sten things is with buttons and buttonholes or with loops and frogs. To ~ fasten things with pins is to make use of an untidy makeshift. To employ pins is to become lazy and sloviy enly. ' _ "We have no pins in China. Cer;jj tain foreign manufacturers shipped millions of them to us In the past ' but we sent them back. We had no use for them. We were too neat."? Providence Journal. THmnemr William sDends half a or *""r - I million yearly in traveling around his i lt' kingdom. N.Y.?1. |, " SAM JOf LIFE AND SAY l(J BY HIS "WIFE V* WAIU'TFTI Agents are coining mone; ht MiaNiO W iin 1 XjIJ Outfltnnd Contract for re ee g Circulars Free. J. B. NICKO ne id ^ ft ft# " MS Dot /rrBBFl stiL IHU %/m t wSSi Fait ]g V X *5 IT ^ 1 jn almost e 1(* J/^ 'ji' l a room ^a ry | the "weather" 6ide, fjjwJ connection. It may be a id jjsy terin what part of the h m&j hallway?it can soon be m: # PERFE I All HV st g mi 11^ M (Equipped with Sm l B Unlike ordinary oil heaters the * B always. First and foremost it J" gg turn the wick too high or too 1< id 3 smoke or smell because equipped p- n Can be easily carried from root v, gj to operate as a lamp. Ornamenl 3e Made in two finishes?nickel and j se beautifully embossed. Holds 4 qua ' hours. There's real satisfaction in a! y Every heater warranted. If not at 3 S nearest agency for descriptive circu' ? a Thc Ifeyb Lamp | ml llsl >U I Improved burner. Made of br*?s throujti | Every lamp warranted. Suitable for r-i i a> J { Bmngj ME ! I ?when in health?and I * -% e, the outdoor life they j| rm and the wholesome | th should be preserved, IB > y medicine of an injuri- I ent is required, to assist I " 3medies which are pure I asant laxative remedy, I Jo. Syrup of Figs has I amilies, whose estimate I dge and use. I ians generally, because We inform all reputaf Figs, obtained, by an t most beneficially and Jalifornian blue figs are cret remedy and hence . U lo not approve of patent " I . ie genuine Syrup of Figs J rig Syrup Co.?plainly 5 in bottles of one size J fty cent size, or having | spt it. If you fail to get IB mily should always have III ents and the children, /II Had No Use For a Bear. Some successful hunter in the footills succeeded in slaughtering a fine it young bear recently, and the car ass consigned to a locai meat wu.i a.eb eached the city by express. The m rrival of the dead bear was highly istasteful to Qneeny, the Gordon etter who has assumed charge of the epot express office, and she protestd at the top of her lungs against Ls admission to the building, and rent on the warpath until the car- . . M ass was loaded into a wagon for ' .'?j elivery.?Sacramento Bee. A crow destroys 700,000 insects in the ourse of a year. riTS, St.Vitus'Dance ^Nervous Diseases peroanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerva lestorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise freei >r. R. E. Kline, Ld. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Paris perhaps consumes more oyster* isS aily than any other city. DISCOVERY? U 1% W a W U glKM cj*l*k r*Uef a?d vow ant ctse* Dook or tntlm?nlal? and lO Dan1 IrttlMt / J' rco. PfwH.IL GREEJTB SOJS, Box B, Atluta, fl* Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar CURES Hoarseness, Coughs, Colds and Sore Throat. The standard remedy used for generations^ 25 Cents, 50 Cents, $1.00 per bottle; the largest size cheapest. At all druggists. Refuse substitutes. 'IKE'S TOOTHACHE DROPS CURE IN ONE MtNUTV mai l mm i lib.li imbbbmi JES' ftk INCS r. Send 60c for Canvassing ugcL.rrltory. Jk LS & CO., \^A 'I er Slaves J 1 I toDo^r I very house there la it uxe neat irom tne ha es or furnace fails to t may be a room on or one having no heat cold hallway. No mattouse?whether room or W\ ide snug and cozy with %% CTION \ 1 ;ater \ okeless Device) B Perfection gives satisfaction m is absolutely safe?you cannot aw. Gives intense heat without H with smokeless device. n a to room. As easy tal as well as useful. F II apau. Brass oil fount rf\L rts of oil and burns 9 V Perfection Oil Heater. S 'our dealer's write our / ^ kes the home bright. ?f .j?y*m he safest and best lamp \n h*"^ / I all-round household . Gives a clear, steady JT ^ I lit Fitted with latest A I out and nickel plated. / library, dining room, 0 rrite to nearejt agency, TjjT 9 COMPANY A 3