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JS&JEHBEgf * i^wkf&< New York City.?The tery late: development of tho big armhote Ide iakes the form of trimming, and hei is a new and attractive waist th? ihows it to advantage. In the lllui Iration it is made of veiling with th bands of taffeta and the yoke of al Dver luce, but everything that is use for indoor gowns and that is soft an Ihin enough to be tucked successful! Is appropriate. Voile, marquisetl *nd the like are to Lavo great vogu< ^ Shiffon taffeta, crepe de Chine and a the soft silks are much worn and th trimming can be of silk of the sam color, as in this case, or of a contrast "ninr nr trlmmlne nortion can be braided with soutache or en riched with lace applique, so tha either a simple or an elaborate wais can be evolved as one treatment o another is decided upon. The waist is made over a fitted lin ing, and is closed invisibly at th back. The yoke of chemisette por tlons are faced onto this lining, am If a transparent effect is desired th foundation beneath can be cut awaj The full portions are tucked at thei upper edges and shaped trimmin straps finish the neck and the arm holes. There are sleeves that extern just below the elbows and that ar trimmed in harmony with the waist, p . The quantity of material require* for the medium size i3 three and one half yards twenty-one, three and one quarter yards twenty-seven or on and three-quarter yards forty-fou inches wide, witn tnree-quarter yar twenty-one inches wide for the trim ming bands and five-eighth yard o all-over lace for the yoke. Hatpins of Feathers. Quite the daintiest, prettiest thing imaginable are the feathered hai pins that have arrived recently fror Paris. They are shown in endles variety. Humming birds offer there scjves as particularly charming an adaptable owing to the varied charac ter of their plumage, and there ar also some dear little peacocks in th realistic colorings, and a distil gulshed note is shown in black crow; ?>o fascinating are these feathery hai pins that they almost amount t trimmings. Short Skirt Popular. The short skirt that has been an still is so universally popular, ha done much toward bringing aboi this generally youthful appearanc whiph fashion has taken on, and a though there are rumors from dres centres of Europe that in the fall w shall be called upon to let out th tucks and become as old as we ar instead of "old as we look," modiste on this side are not giving credenc to any great extent. Soft Light Gray. ^ One of the most beautiful line costumes seen this season is of a sof iight gray worn over a guimpe of es qjiiajtgJy embroidered white muslin. Smocking in Favon Smocking is gradually returning td ? favor, although it iri hot practical foi ^ cashable materials', but for guch fabricss as may be dry cleaned satisfaGj_ torily it is always pretty, j Straw OufFs, y Ctiffi; specially designed for the use o of Woman gardeners have made their 3> j appearance. They are made of woven jj | willow, which is perfectly impervious to thorns, and yet 1b light and not j Uncomfortable to wear. I Purple Season Ahead. To judge by displays in the millinj try and dry goods shops just now the ; coming season is to be a "purple Year." That color lu all its varying j shades is .practically all one sees in the shopping district, and already, ; many of these new hats are to bo j -;oen worn In the streets. The Smart Coat. The coat, which seemed particularly smart, was pleated from the shoul1er down, the pleats being left free, ;nd caught In with a shaped belt. Sach of the pleats showed one of the dark brown linen empiecements put on relatively to tho other, oo that ihey formed a slant line from waist to shoulder. Sleeves in Dift'erent Styles. The coat sleeves of the autumn are t taking several different forms, which i i s better, depending entirely upon the style of the garment and the use to s which it is to be put. For trie tanored suit of the plainer, more severe t 3ort are shown the simple coat sleeves, t but they can be finished either with r stitching or with cuffs, and they are offered both in full and three-quarter length. For the more fancy cose tumes the sliglitly fuller sleeves are - preferred, and the one shown in the d illustration makes a most satisfa9tory e model. In this case it is trimmed with the roil-over cuff that is edged r with soutache applique, but any trimg ming that may be liked can be utili ized. The sleeves are adapted to all 3 seasonable suitings and cloakings. e Nos. 1 and 2 are made in two pieces, and can be either pleated or d gathered at the upper edge. No. 2 >- is made in one piece and is tucked at its lower edge, whiie it is pleated at e the upper and is finished with a rollr over cuff. 19 The quantity of material required c i lor tne meaium size is, ior i\u. i, iv?u e yards twenty-seven, one and onee quarter yards forty-four, seven-eighth yard fifty-two inches wide; for No. 2, e i one and three-quarter yards twenty' seven, seven-eighth yard forty-four, three-quarter yard fifty-two inches wide; for No. 3, one and one-half , n yards twenty-seven, seven-eighth yard t, forty-four, three-qnarter yard fiftytwo inches wide, with one and threeeighth yards of banding. ^ a flfjM SUNDAWijfflrl SERMON fflUUUll Subject: Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at Hamburg avenue and Wcirfield sli Rev. Ira Weramell Henderson, tool dren." He said: The Bible is a book for the chi }jook. It is written in the language themes are so treated as almost er precepts are for them. Its admoni interest of childhood. Its counsels is fascinating when properly deliver for inspiration to the mind and sou child in years and to the childlike i The greatest single character and is superlatively interested in th He was supremely keen in His a] philosophical in His attitude toward ultimate value. He loved them be our children more than we can eve: whom He took in His arms more It He sees in our children more than v children as we are, dream. Jesus eternal relationship of the being o: Almighty God, far more clearly than plainly than we have, with all our surpassing scholarship and investigs Is not strange that Jesus should I child. It-is not at all wonderful th tion to children. For the child is the most impc numerous element in the human ra< Df the race. He is the field of our reason for the endeavor and activit mate, no man should underestimate tory and in the future of humanity, of our expenditure of effort, time J criminating and assiduous scientific As the result of the ages and tl the child of to-day is entitled to th? ceive. His parentage should be far For the child has largest relations has a claim upon him which no fam tiful that tie may be or just, can nu stitute an integral and important p? will be under compulsion, to them as a matter of self-concern, to pro the world the best birth that can be to be impossible for a mkn to be pe the State so that in a state of maud a soul into the world. That is to sa; possibility for any person who is n for the duties of parentage to entei lock. The State ought, and is undei The field of prenatal influence And yet, under the guidance of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, there is no fruitful or sacred, field for study an the fashioning. Why should we be And shall we be ashamed of the deity? A woman should be ashai ashamed to neglect, the everlasting a child has more influence upon iti mental, moral and spiritual capacit: combined can ever have. Knowing curse our children before we send t trials of this earthly pilgrimage, tri to overbalance and to eradicate thi wisdom, quite ineradicable. Children deserve study and tl spends good money and much of it 1 trolleys and posts and ships. It s] two ears of corn grow where one g to destroy the pests that destroy pi It teaches the horse breeder how to cfMontifim 11 v tn fertilize and nlant tudes of men know more about the the points of a child and how to de of the sense of proportion and of modic, poorly supported scientific child, the best way to breed him, way to improve him. And so we i them with the same mental filling too lazy to understand them. The for the child, the lash. And simply the trouble to. It is not badness i rapacity to know just what else to < of the same parentage are alike, them alike? No man would cataloi spaniel. Why, then, 6hall we class differentiate their scholastic ability gether simply because they happei and girls of diverse tastes in the st either too impotent or lazy to devis Children should not only be sti maintained. Their interests shot should be conserved. No man shou matter how profitable it may imme long run to allow it. No man shot for drink or to gratify it. It is dem to ply a business which will ruin tt expediency and no private or politi permitted to intrude itself between ment of their faculties. If we ca; damned, then let us go without it Kfiinor /iomnod then Ipf* ne, VUUU1 CU UWIU^ uuiiiuvvty clothes except at the expense of tb< then let ua go naked. It were far about our necks and that we shoul than that by any fault or consent prived of the fulness of life and of There Is nothing more criminf beings that so many children have, path that tends toward vice, many cast upon the rocks of wickedness w to perdition, if a little careful, whc upon the sacred operations of our p many boys fall into evil ways and life that is worse than death when Christian fathers and mothers, are had almost said so criminally, mod( I say that what a boy or glr! fails from a father or mother is gathered ner or in the hard school of unneci Children should be instructed is entitled to the finest results of tt is for us to start the child where simply of historic interest. It is e plary. But it should be only that, make as practical laborers for the will be the progress of humanity 1 But much as our children nee< lectually, still more do they require social order depends upon a clean life of the world is dependent upon the spiritual alertness of every hui than that we should inculcate into proper conception of the moral and shall be indeed childish if we thii fields without experienced and expei x r\9 o nViilH'o fl DV^l fV lUrilJd.ll V t; jcaio \Jk a. wmiu ? ing that we afford our children In tl will endure. Nothing can eradicate guidance, nothing in later life will and spiritual development and cul' dende. It is not sufficient that we sha that we shall take care that they be idle to instruct, the while we propa* that attack the very qualities we hf. raiser who tests the quality of his with the boll-worm. Not otherwise tests the moral and spiritual vigor c shop and the woman of the unclean Children are naturally gratef easiest fitted to His kingdom. The\ Their hearts are tender. Their sou ministrations of the Spirit. They v conceit. They are worthy of imitation, susceptibility to divine impulse?, tl Importunate truth are patterns for of a loving Lord we must be like th Him we must bceome as a little chil High Realities. The search after truth is the mos necessary of all the means to th< inds of life. It is hard to conceive o me as having really lived in this ftorld who has not possessed himsel )f its high realities. This is what th< scriptures say to us in ceaseless itera ion, and this is what men say tc is who have anything to say whict ve care to hear.?Rev. W. J. Tucker 3aDtist. Hanover. N. H, In the Secret. Those who fellowship with His suf'erings are in the secrets cf His will. DVM7i?' RElV~Sjb ! riRA\WCttENDER^<5% ; THE: PAMQUS DiyiME^' i ? 1 Children. , the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, < eet, on the above theme, the pastor, ] - + 10.? "TiHla I ilb U1B icai mau, IU.V, ?? | id. I had almost said it is a children's i of the child for the most part and its itirely to lie intelligiblo to youth. Its J tions to adults are importantly in the 1 are largely to the young. Its history 1 ed to the young. Its stories are fertile 1 1 of the child. Its invitation is to the j n heart alike. j with whom the Bible has to deal was e child. For whatever else Jesus was, ppreciation of children, consummately them, pre-eminently conscious of their tter than their parents did. He loves ' r love them. For He saw in the child ] lan its mother had capacity to discern, ire, scientific students after a fashion of saw the soul value of the child, the C the child to the eternal kingdom of . any man before His time and far more J wisdom and attainments in an age of ition, taken the trouble to see. And it lave placed a high estimate upon the at He should have given special attenirtant and most promising as the most i ;e. He is inescapable. He is the hope I largest expectations. He is the largest ; y of the world. No man can overesti- , ;, the child, as a factor in human his- ( He is worth all our care, worthy of all , md money, worthy of a far more dis- ' study than he has ever been given. ( le progenitor of the future of humanity 1 ! best breeding that possibly he can remore the concern of society than it is. < with the society at large, and society , ily tie, no matter how sacred and beau- j llify or deny. So long as children conirt of the social system, so long society , as a matter of obligation and to itself cure for every child that is born into ( obtained. That is to gay, that it ought ' yrtrot flrnnlr hv the consent of I 1 lin intoxication he may be able to send y, that it ought to be beyond the pale of aentally, morally or physically unfitted into the contractual relations of wed: obligation, to provide Jor the future." is one which is too largely neglected, i wisdom of God, and Mil fidelity to the more wonderful* as there is no more d research, than the life of humanity in so eternally mawkish? God made us! wonderworking, of the handicraft of med not to know, a father should be truth of God that the prenatal life of s character and condition, its physical, ies, than all the influences of after life ; this we shall be more careful not to hem into the face of the hardships and isting to the influences of the after life Dse qualities that are, by our own uniiey amply repay it. The Government . to study crops and cows and sewers and j sends generous appropriations to make . rew before, to eradicate lice on plants, 1 roducts that are valuable commercially, i develop the horse and the farmer how and till and harvest and reap. Multifine points of a dog than they do about | velop them. But with a delightful lack } the propriety of things we give spasexaminations into the nature of the , the best way to develop him, the best J jack them off to the mines or we pack I ; in the schools. We are too busy 01 ! veterinarian for the dog that growls; l r because we do not understand or take f n us so much as confession of total in- j lo. No two children are alike. No two j Why, therefore, should we deal with . I a dachshund in the same class with a our children with nothing save ages tc ? Why group dull boys and bright to- J i to be of an age? Why group boys ( ime category? Why? Because we are ; e a better way. j tidied, but they should have their rights ) ilrl be guarded. Their prerogatives t Id be permitted to steal their youth, no ;diately be. It is a bad bargain in th6 ild be permitted to give them the taste ] oralizing. No man should be permitted ?' ieir bodies and destroy their souls. No < cal consideration whatsoever should be 5 them and the fullest possible develop- s nnot have coal without children being ( If we cannot have windows without ] , go without them. If we cannot have j j soul careers of the youth of America, better that a mill stone should be hung 1 d be drowned in the depths of the sea 1 of ours God's little ones should be de- 1 life eternal. 1 il than the ignorance of their physical Many a boy would be kept from the a girl whose life is wrecked or is being i rould be kept from the way that leadetb i tlesome parental advice had been given t hysical beings. It is no wonder that so , that so many girls are doomed to the so many fathers and mothers, so mans j so unnecessarily and so mistakenly, I TP/-^ T IrT-?ottt ruhoronf T csnpnlr whPTI ^ to learn in a decant and godly manner * I in a wholly vicious and ungodly man- j sssary experience. ? and inspired intellectually. The child le intellectual advances of the ages. It ( we have left off. All that precedes is xplanatory, it is indicative, it is exem- 1 The less the retrogression our children i advancement of the world, the faster :oward the kingdom of Almighty God, 1 3 to be instructed physically and Intel- | i moral and spiritual guiding. For the j manhood and womanhood. The soul ' i the clarity of the spiritual vision and < man soul. Nothing is more important i the minds and souls of our youth a 1 spiritual realities of the universe. We ik they can mature properly in these . t guidance. The moral training of the ! pment will persist; the spiritual train.leir callowest youth is the training that it, and, with proper safeguarding and able to overthrow it. The moral luiifeg of the child pays eternal divlII instruct our children. It Is needful ; not misled or made to stumble. It Is ;ate and foster and palliate temptations ve been culturing. He Is a poor cotton cotton and the resistance of the plant is he a silly preceptor of the child who )f the child with the factory, the dramlife. ul to Almighty God. They may be ' are openminded. They are expectant. Is are responsive to the invitations and velcome knowledge. They are without Their readiness to be informed, their heir simplicity, their inaccessibility to us.. If we would rest upon the bosom em. If we would know God and enjoy Id. Character Day by Day. I Day by day all of us are writing / } our characters upon the thiugs >j f around us. Why should we be sur 3 prised when the Holy Spirit writes f His character upon the house in ' i which we dwell??Rev. J. G. Beau champ. ) I Deadens Hearing. God does not cease to speak, buf- i the noise of tho creatures without ! and of our passions within confuses jus and prevents our hearing.?Fenc < [Ion. 1 ' A Ilorsc Trade. In the Vv'ashington County Court ri. B. Wasson, of Donora, charged Ijy C. \V. Greor, of Moncssen, with misrepresenting a horse which he sold to Greer, was ordered to pay $118.98, the price paid for the horse, with interest from the date of sale. Wasson claimed that the animal would drive either single or double, but Greer claimed that Wasson was the only person who could drive him, the animal haying the habit of lying clown when any other driver took the lines.?Philadelphia-Record. Peculiar Medical Remedy. It was stated at an inquest on a peasant in a Servian village that the man died from swallowing too many bullets, which he was accustomed to take, in common with all the peasants in that district whenever he felt ill. The Task. The hardest thing to win in the world is your own self respect.?St. Louis Globe-Democrat. NOVA SCOTIA AT EXPOSITION. Nova Scotia Day at Jamestown, and Valuable Mineral Display of Province. Many Nova Scotians, residing throughout New England and tbeEast?rn States, are joining their countrymen in a gala reunion at the Jamestown Exposition this week. October 24 wa9 officially set aside by the Exposition as Nova Scotia Day. Some )f the leading officials of the province ire in attendance; the program includes magnificent military and naval reveiws and much speech-making. Nova Scotia has established a record for herself, being the only foreign country to place an exhibit at this Exposition, and it is in appreciation of this fact that the Exposition management proposes to make svery effort to have Nova Scotia Day i grand success. The exhibit made py the province is a most creditable jne. It consists of the precious and economic minerals of the country, with gold, in which the province is so rich, predominating. Goldwae discovered in Nova Scotia at least a half century ago ljy the Micmac Indians, ind one of the principal properties 3f the country retains the name of the tribe to this day, but the discoveries were overlooked by experienced capital urtil within recent years. Even now many of the most valuable properties remain practically undeveloped. With the view of advertising its vast mineral resources the Nova Scotian Government has made ;his exhibit, and all native Nova Sco:ians. wherever they may now reside. ire urged to go down, see Virginia's | beautiful world's fair and participate in the Nova Scotia celebration. A Slight Gap. A genealogist, like a poet, must 5e born, not made. The naive statements offered by persons whose one lesire is to show a lineage which will secure them admittance to some exclusive organization drive the real genealogist to rage or tears. "I don't see why I can't join the Daughters of the Early Founders,' " said an indignant young woman to a friend. "My line is perfectly clear except in one place. It's so absurd!" "What is the troublesome place?" isked the genealogist. "Oh, it's the eighteenth century," said the young woman, with much rritation. "They just failed to keep :he records, of course. Of all foolish :hings! Why, I can remember back :o grandfather, you see, and mother remembers two more generations, ind we're perfectly sure our ances:ors came over from England in the seventeenth century. The name is spelled a little different, but, of 'ourse, it's they, because they must lave come. And just because I iomti'I lioon nhlp tn rnnnpft thpm vith great-great-great-grandfather in he eighteenth century, they won't et me in. It's so?so paltry!"? Youth's Companion. Emigration has benefited the workng classes in Sicily. Labor is scarce low, and in some places where only hirty cents a day was formerly the vage rate seventy-five cents is now laid. The emigrants leaving Palerno for the United States last year lumbered 48,853. $3.00 Per Day? :ash, not promises?(8 hours' ?vork) is the salary I pay my epresentatives. The work is lot hard?you can do it. Or ;ell your best friend, if you .1 _ t lave not tne time. 1 give c.v :lusive territory. For details write ATKINSON. 1024 Race St, Philadelphia. .i..tfUUIllll III Ml II Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar CURES H?arseness3 Coisghs, Coids and Sore Throat, The standard remedy used for generations. 25 Cents. ?0 Cents, $1.00 per bottle; the largest size cheapest. At all druggists. Refuse substitutes. 'IKE S TOOTHACHH DROPS CURE IN OHE WNUTE TO YOUNG MEN DESIRING j TO LEARN THE MACHINIST'S j OR JRON-MOULDER'S TRADE! <Jur apprenticeship system affords good ! opportunities tot young men mechanically ! inclined, 16 to 18 years of ige, to thoroughly Jjtrn the above trades l'^ir further in;oimat ion address Box 2!). I'rnvldeiico. d.l STATS AGE AND NATIONALITY J PUTNAM ,."olor ;:iorc jroods brighter and faster <v;lors than any < :ttii dj-c any Raiment without rli'tOi* apart. Write Social Duty. The idea of social duty dominates our time; we arc impregnated v.-ith it; it is the moat urgent aspiration of the modern conscience, and in tho i midst of our controversies defies all our ironies.?George Touchard, in La Nouvelle Revue, Paris. Rare Indeed. How rarely do these three things meet?a man who wants something, is fitted for it, and any great number of persons who think he ought to have it.?Judge. ' < Training For Character. . As a school of character it is doubtful if any better could be devised than < the routine career of a medical stu- ' dent. It is not claimed that every medical student at the end of his five years' curriculum will be found to have become a saint. But if he has not developed manly qualities of selfrestraint, courage, gentleness and forbearance it is not for want of opportunity of practicing these virtues. ?London Lancet. A^EiiATi5Er^Tc7ioTrs^ c that period of its terrors. Women v regular functions should take imme consequences and be restored to hes Lydia E. Pinkham'sV Miss Adelaide Nichols of 324 T writes:?Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-"If wc upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable quickly alleviated. I feel greatly i which has been brought to me by yc Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable C< such as Falling and Displacements, General Debility, Indigestion, an< system. For the derangements of B. Piakham's Vegetable Compoun Mrs. Pinkham's Standln Women, suffering from any form write Mrs.Pinkham, at Lynn,Mass.Fr may be located and the quickest and German officers say that London could be taken in thirty hours. FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, .Nervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H. R. Kline*, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,Pa. The world uses at least 170,000 million 1 matches yearly. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forChildren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Oldtimc Kite Carriages. The present aeronautical activity i recalls the kite craze of fifty-five i years ago, when kite carriages were i l-.l l-?l? Im.SH on<q I I ueilig CAtCUQiYCIJ UU1U UUU VApv,! 4 mented with. With the aid of two large kites a carriage was pulled twenty-five miles an hour. Natural Fly Paper. [ The pingulcula is a plant which is | a natural fly paper. Its leaves are J constantly covered with a sticky substance that traps all insects alighting thereon. N. Y.?43 ( | 25c.?ALL DHUCC/STS-SOo. I"?l W. L. DOUCI $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES , Ifc^SHOES for every member of. THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICES. $25,000 fSKSSWSfSIW Dniaf oft/ff J more Men's $3 A $3 flCWdm (than any other mam THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoe3 are worn by in all walks ofl ife than any other make is bees excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior weari The selection of the leathers and other materials fi of the shoe and every detail of the makingi sloe the most complete organization of superintendents, ekilledshoiraakere, who receive tho highest wage! shoei ndustry, and who.;e workmanship cannot be If 1 could take you ntomylaree factories at Bro and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes a would then understand why they hold theirshaj wearl onger and are of greater value than anv oth? My $4.00 and $B.OO GILT EDGE Shoes CAUTION 1 The genuine have VV. L. Dougli ]V? Substitute. Ask yourdealerfor W. L. Dot direct to factory. Sboessent everywhere by mail.C The Odor of Metals. Many persons are sensitive to the characteristic odor of metals; others deny that metals possess any odor, and support their opinion with the assertion that no substance can possess an odor which does not give off by volatilization invisible floating particles. Recently a series of experiments has been made by C. Gruhn which is regarded as proving the existence of odors emanating from all metals. At ordinary temperatures these odors are in many cases almost imperceptible. But they become stronger when the metal is heated. Yet if the heating is continued a long time the odor disappears. Gruhn's conclusion is that every metal produces continually a gaseous matter, composed not of the atoms of the metal, but of a product of their chemical transformation. He has even succeeded in isolating and j oori:ning in a vase the odorous I emanation from a metal. J "FA DELE J other <lyo. One 10c. package colors all flher#. They i for tree boofclet?How to Dye, Ble&ca auJ Mix Oolori s;i " Black Potatoes. A lato novelty fn the wev o* a black potato ha3 just reached the vegetable markets. The potato was sent from the Congo, and is said to have an excellent flavor. It ia used for ornamental cookery.?What-toEat. r-;9 Busy Diamond Industry. There is a factory in Amsterdam, Holland, which cuts and polishes 400,000 diamonds annually. About twenty women do most of the actual cutting of the 6tones. .Jtaf Burglar's Pathetic Wail. A burglar arrested in London tha other night remarked regretfully: "I knew the time when I could do twenty houses in two hours. But I am getting old." Hall Caine is an extensive Mar landowner, possessing several large farmo, having successfully reclaimed tracts of bog land in the vicinity of Sulby, which have been brought under profitable cultivation. PERIODS OF PAIN I i .... . While no woman la entirely Tree rom periodic suffering, it does not eem to be the plan of nature that vomen should suffer so severely. Iregularities and pain are positive vidence that something is wronjr vhich should be set right or it will ead to serious derangement of the eminlne organism. ' Thousands of women, have ound relief from all periodic sufering by taking Lyaia E. Pinkiam'8 Vegetable Compound, which s made from native roots and herbs, s it is the most thorough female egulator known to medical science. It cures the condition whioh tauses so much discomfort and robs. vho are troubled with painful or irdiate action to ward off the serious ilth and strength by taking egetable Compound Vest 22nd Street, New York City, imen who suffer would only rely Compound their troubles would be ndebted for the relief and health iur inestimable remedy." impound cures Female Complaints and Organic Diseases. Headache, 1 invigorates the whole feminine the Kidneys of either sex Lydia d is excellent. g Invitation to Women of female weakness are invited to om the symptoms given, tho trouble surest way of recovery advised. ??B? Deep Sea Fish. Fish live in the ocean at a depth of H-,000 feet. SKIN SORE FOR EIGHT~YEARS Spent $300 on Doctors and Remedies, But Got No Relief?Cnticnra Cures in a Week. "Upon the limbs and -between the toes my skin was rough and sore, and also sore under the arms. 1 had to slay at horns several times because of this affection. Up to a week or eo ago 1 had tried many other remedies and Eeveral doctors, and spent about three hundred dollars, without any success, but this is to-da.- the seventh day that 1 have been using the Cuticura Remedies (costing a dollar and a half), which have cured me completely, so that I can again attend to my business. 1 went lo work again to-night. 1 had been suffer* ng for eight years and have now been cured by the Cuticura Remedies within a week. EVitz Hirschlaff, 24 Columbus Ave., New York, N. Y., March 29 and April 0, 1906." The yearly immigration into Canada is )ne-fortieth of her population. JACOBS OH I I lONQUERS nAiu TAIN riFFNES8, SORENESS, SPRAIN OR BRUISE, ITHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE; kGO'S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE, UR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE; C ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL, R HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL. J re made, you >e, fi t belter, * ** trmake. i cannot bo equalled at any prlco. ls name and price stamped on bottom. Take iRlaa shoes. If he cannot supply you, send aialog free. W. L. Douglas, Brockton, Mass. Stielpthe Horsc^m t No article is more useful V;%V\0a V about the stable than Mica \ ? Axle Grease. Tut a little on J i the spindles before you " hoot VSTfe"? up"?it will help the horse, and \fl Jwv t brinff the load home quicker. LI MM AXLE if >: GREASE H 1 to tats well? better than any iFyt/wh h otljcr preasc. Coats the axle y with a iianl, smooth surface of lirrjftfSjl M powdered mica which reduces yPffirfHA S i"ricti;n^._ Ask the dealer for jjfpfffjffi I 3TA?C?10 ou. COtfftUIV ^ M $/MI DROPSY NEW F'scpvpY; gives qittck roller Rail cures ornt cases. Book of testimonials i 10 day*' troatm> n; ! ? ??. Dr. n. H. GRKEX'S SONS.Box lJ.Atlanta.Ga. 5 S DYES (lyo la coM w.it?r better than anv other dya. Yoa i. itlONHOK Ulilti CO., Qalncy.