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New York City.?The short, jaunty Jacket that terminates just above the waist line is so generally becoming and ( Bo well liked that nothing ever super- , finished with banding, as illustrated, , A\ 11 ? or with applique or with braiding, cr can be embroidered on the material, i sedes it. This one is novel in many ? of its features and includes a little < vest portion that Is peculiarly chic, ! while it allows the use of effective < contrast. In the illustration pongee Is trimmed with banding and the vest f portions are of the same, but cretonne t is being much used for this last, em- t broidered bandings are always hand- > some and lace is in every way correct; c or again, the material itself could be embroidered or banded with soutache. The jacket is an exceedingly serviceable one that is equally, available for the entire costume and for the sep arate wrap which is so convenient to slip on over tliin gowns. It can be finish of all these various kinds being greatly in vogue. The jacket is made with fronts and back and the fronts are fitted by means of darts at the shoulders. ! The quantity of material required ' for the medium size is two and oneJhalf yards twenty-one, one and threefourth yards twenty-seven or one yard forty-four inches wide, with four and one-half yards of banding. The New Frillings. Various frillings and pleatings in tulle and net, chiffon and mousseline de soie, can be procured now by the yard, ready for jabots or for tacking into the necks and sleeves of the new spring gowns. When these frillings are carefully chosen, and secured to the collar in such a way that they do not show too much white on the outer side, they have a fresh and i | dainty effect which is very delightful, e Triply Yoked. Round triple yokes are the thing just now. Last year we had the t double yoke done to the death. One s seen in a broadcloth gown had the c lowest part in tucked chiffon, the v middle one in lace and ibe stock and f the upper one or net. e 1 Plaids Are Squares. ? Plaids are not called plaids this v season: they are "squares"' regard- fi lt?ss of how much their lines are in- t termingled. 1 I Neck Hows of Ribbon?. Pretty bows for the neck are made | )f ribbon one and a half inches wide, :ied in small bows, the ends mitered, I md a dainty design iu ribbon work; j small roses and forget-me-nots and silk embroidered leaves and stem? iecorate each eud. Filet Mesh Popular. Wide bands of black filet mesfc richly embroidered in peacock colors with touches of bronze, gold or silver. are fast replacing the Japanese "* - * ? ?i ~ !rv/yr. Vl H XTC ana oriental uiiiiiiiih?o ?uivu held sway for so long. Some of the designs shown in tints of orange and burnt -leather strike a particulai happy note in combination with thf warm brown materials so populai this season. Breakfast Jacket. Tasteful breakfast jackets are al ways in demand. In combinatior with skirts to match, they make exceedingly attractive and eminentlj comfortable morning dresses, whil* they also can be utilized with odd I skirts of linen, light weight serge 01 I some similar material. This one has the fitted back that is always becoming combined with loose fronts, and ! allows a choice of the pretty elbow ! sleeves or plain ones of full length A. wide, becoming collar finishes the tieck. Lawn, batiste, dimity, challis ill materials that are used for breakfast jackets, are appropriate. The jacket is made with the fronts backs and side-backs. The elbo\* ?leeves are gathered to form the frills ind are stayed by means of bands aver the shirrings, while the lone sleeves are finished with straighl :uffs. The quantity of material required E^r or the medium size is three and oneialf yards twenty-four, three yards hirty-lwo, or one and seven-eighth ards forty-four inches wide, with >ne and three-fourth yards of band ng, three and one-fourth yards ol 3 IgllJfc'. Must Be Slender. The one effort of the dressmaker is o make her client as slender from | houlder to skirt hem as possible. | Hoping shoulders, sleeves without a j estige of fulness and skirts made to j it the hips without extra cloth ! nough to make a wrinkle are the | fading resources toward this end. j inch :i fashion is. of course, for ihe I koiuaii who is slender by nature, j 'ho stout woman is entirely forgot- I For hor i-tyk-Js must be modi- j i'.d 10 s^isit or she is a caricature. ? ' THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON B\ THE REV. LEWIS T. REED. Theme: Suggestive Therapeutics. Brooklyn, N. Y.?In the Flatbusl Congregational Church the pastor the Rev. Lewis T. Reed, preached i sermon on "The Theory and Practici of Suggestive Therapeutics." Th< text was from Matthew 8:13: "Anc Jesus said to the centurion, Go thj way; and as thou hast believed, so b< it done unto thee. And his servam was healed in the selfsame hour.1 Mr. Reed said: In this theme of "The Theory anc Practice of Suggestive Therapeutics,' it is not my purpose to expound nov elties or to satisfy curiosity, but t( assist all of you who worship here t< lay hold of some of the great princi pies within this movement by whicl it will be possible for you to live con inrj invftiiiv 7 should hf glad to make all of you practitioners of the art cf suggestive therapeutics There are a few great principles which it is essential you should honoi and obey. First?the power of sug gestion. We have been wont to In optimistic about everythingthat takei place in our lives, provided nothing evil appears at once on the surface We have proceeded on the faith thai the psychical system could take uj and dispose successfully of every sug gestion made to it. Evil thoughts envy, anger, greed, concupiscence gluttony?all the vices abhorred bj St. Paul might present their vile pic tures to the mind, and as long as w< did not act on their suggestion, w< still preserved our character. We de luded ourselves with a hope that w< were what we appeared to be. Anc now we have had to learn afresh th< truth of that Scripture: "As a mar thinketh in his heart, so is he." ] know of no process in man's life mor< calculated to give him serioui thought than this function of th( subconsciousness of storing up th< suggestions that the outer life brings Day by day as we touch the world and get our own reactions of courag< or cowardice, of self-control or self defeat, of purity or selfishness, o! love or hate, we are continually drop ping, dropping these suggestions intc the reservoir of this subconscious self to come forth some day to bless oi curse. Abraham Lincoln lives day b] day the sacrificial life of the burden bearer of this people. Day by day hour by hour, he gives himself the suggestion of devotion, sacrifice anc faith; and then, when the hour foi utterance has come, ta"kes up his per and writes on a few scattered sheets the supreme English masterpiece o1 half a century. Benedict Arnold was always passionate and revengeful Day after day, year after year, the reaction of life on him resulted in suggesting to his deeper self hate, envy pride, and self-will. When his houi for expression came, he took up his pen to sign his name to the betraya of his trust. There is nothing in the process 01 me soui uiui. ueeus h cause us more of joy and more ol fear than this amenability of the sou! to suggestion. Secondly, you must come to a ne^ realization of the supreme place ol the will. Heredity must have some place in the formation of character although that place is not yet ven clearly determined?but the mosl weighty discovery of the present daj seems to me this rediscovery of the regal power of the will to do right; These psychologists, and hypnotists in their investigations into the unexplored tracts of personality have come across not only a God-like aspiratior after virtue in every soul, but alsc an unlimited power for the attainment of that aspiration. Just as th( Master of Life stooped over the cripple, saying, "Arise and walk;" and knew that within that stricken forn: there was *the ability to rise and walk; so modern psychology stoop? over every sinful soul and repeats tL? -a 4 ocripiure uumiuauu, t>c iuciv. fore perfect," for ye are in the image of your Father in Heaven, who is perfect. This is a tremendous doctrine of individual responsibility. II is an old Scriptural doctrine, but il gains a new force when, by the modern hypnotists' appeal to the soul ol poodness in a man, you see the drunk ard go forth a new man, the spendthrift reformed and the invalid made well. If there are in us those pos sibilities of virtue, there is no escape foi us from the responsibility of attaining thu\ l'or w-hlch we were ere :ted. There has come to us the con lotion that inspired Jeremiah: "Ii :"nose days tliey shall say no more The fathers have eaten sour grapes and the children's teeth are set or edge. But every one shall die for his own iniquity; every man that eateth the sour grapes his teeth shall be sel on edge." There is no more propel incentive to earnest living than the realization ot tne iact mat uoa na: intended life to be perfect for even creature; and that if it is otherwise the fault is in ourselves. "Dark is the world to thee; thysell art the reason why." Whoever woalc possess the reality of the Christiai !fe must achieve the victory over hi: oods; and the most heartening ines v:e of this or any age is that hy oui id-given endowment of the will it i: ;ssible for us to give to the deepei i'e of the soul the suggestions o] courage and faith and patience anc strength, which altogether mean: eternal life. In the third place, you will have t( form for yourself very likely a new and very stern, doctrine of 6in anc virtue. The old doctrine of a forensi* V.ofnro fJnrl wqq ;in art mirable thing to look at, but it die not work very well either for th( justified or for his family. Those wh( deemed themselves "saved" verj often failed to possess jLhe homely vir tues of cheerfulness, kindness, cour age and forgiveness; while many whe were obviously "good" were not con scious of salvation. The religion o to-day gives the genuinely "good' man his due, and placards in theii proper place these hateful sins of un kindness, intolerance, moodiness worry and hardness of heart. It is : great service that any sect bestow: when that body of people stands fortl to proclaim that the ills of the flesr have an origin in the ills of the mind and that the thoughts that- issue ir these bodily ills are sins against th< High and Holy One. From whatevei source derived, the conviction of\th< necessity of controlling the outbreak: of our evil moods would be the great est conceivable blessing in so-called Christian homes. This is surely nt new gospel. All this teaching is fron both Christ and the apostles; but ii is nnrlonintViof- tho roppnt TirPSPn tation of it has amounted almost tc a discovery. The fourth principle which musl govern your thought is that of the very great influence that we exercise over one another. If you believe in (he telepathic communication of one subconscious mind with another, yon will believe that the condition of you: Kubtitounal ccnsciousuftss?of irrita t!on, or quiet, of hope or fear?even though you speak no word, will affect those associated with you. In , no hazy way, but very definitely, then, we are our brother's keepers, respon sible for the world's stock of cheer | and faith. The home is the peculiar i fi?ld for the operation of this sub- | conscious power. There the quickest ; of sympathy exists, there influence i3 felt most readily and most deeply, i The atmosphere of a home, although , a hackneyed term, expresses a clearly i defined reality. The atmosphere Is 3 the spirit of the house, emanating a from the deep well of the subcon1 scious mind of the homekeeper. God , has created no more gracious figure j In His great world than that of the t wife and mother, who gives to the * very place of her abode her own quiet, buoyant, soothing spirit. What 1 she is in the unsounded deeps of her ? being will appear in time in the hous? . where she dwells and In the faces of ) I lie lllLit? Ciiuureu mat iuuxv up ov > her. On the other hand, the home of . the card-club woman and the home ! of the gad-about! Who does not . know them and shudder at the > thought? Their atmosphere is that 3 of restlessness and spiritual poverty. Woe betide her children and her husj band; for she cannot give them, after f their day of temptations and vexa. tion, that by which they are renewed, > the spirit of peace and quiet confl3 dence in good. r II. Now, it will sometimes happen ' that, despite our best endeavors, we I shall be overborne in the press. 111j ness comes on, whatever the cause, . and the causes are often complex. What are we to do? Every physician \ would join with me, I believe, in tiay' ing: make the spiritual attitude cor. rect. To use the terminology of the } books, give yourself the auto-sugges? tions of courage, confidence in God, I faith in His willingness and power to > care for and restore you. Make it [ the genuine conviction of your spirit ? that God does provide for all His ^ creatures. Rest in the promises of | [ divine health with which the Scrip; tures abound. If there is anv cause 3 of irritation, remove it, if it be pos-. ? sible, by the right action on your ; part. Nothing is more irritating. * than harboring a vigorous grudge. I j need not remind you how strictly ; scriptural is all this method of creat! ing a correct mental attitude; and I f believe that your own careful obser. vation would come to my : jpport in , the statement that the great majority of the diseases from which our households suffer can be finally traced to r the fret and ambition of our present . life. As the pastor, then, of your souls and the minister of the Lord ! Jesus Christ, who, through faith, re[ stored the body, I would exhort you . to cultivate to the utmost the virtues ! that Christ always insisted upon? . trust in God, humility, self-forgetful? ness fnreiveness. sincerity. 5 Still, In many cases, the conditions of ill health will continue. What is [ to be done then? Manifestly, if the . trouble be serious, it is the time to employ the physician, who can diag' nose the case and prescribe the reguj lations under which recovery can be I most rapid. I earnestly hope that in ; the excitement of this new discovery \ of the therapeutic power that is in I the mind no one here will believe that I he is privileged to sin against either himself or his brother. All laws of r action are laws of God. The best r^> suits ensue when we learn how to j use all of God's laws in harmony with each other. Quinine is just as much ! a creation of the divine spirit as is . the mifld of man, and we may as well \ acknowledge that infection is a , process likely to take place under prevailing conditions, unless guarded against. ' The employment of mental healing , in cases of physical disorder is the j [ employment of a therapeutic agency. , Ycu may use medicines if you see fit and they produce the results, al; though as a matter of fact medical I practice of the present day makes i less and less of the treatment by ! drugs and more and more of the j I treatment by the natural agencies of i . rest, air and water. On the other J hand, you may employ the mental J I healer, provided your own spirit is so , attuned to the spiritual life that you are able to receive its benefits. My ' own belief is that those who are t wonted to the spiritual life?by which I mean the life of communion with God through prayer, the life of faith c in a controlling power, and of interest in the life of the spirit in its higher manifestations?are best prepared for the reception of these benefits. No one can be benefited who sets himself even secretly against his healer, who prefers his own will and way to the will and way of God, or who cherishes a false self pride in his j own condition. The only way of restoration is the sincere and humble committal of oneself into the hands | of God that He may work His restor, ing will. One must learn the very j Heart or tee meaning or rne si^tn t chapter of Matthew, the core of which , is the insistence upon the necessity of j the genuine union of the life of man ; with God. If there is one place in ' which no deception is possible it is in this relation of life with God. ' Whoever the healer may be, the pre? requisite to success is the sincere dc sire of the patient to be helped, j Greater than the desire of having one's own way. and of cherishing one's own foible, must be the desire to receive that more abundant life that Christ came to bring. Therefore, while, on the one hand, f this is only a system of therapeutics, , on the other, it is a system the suc, cess of which is so intimately related to the attitude of a man's spirit to V* r* infinlf o t Vi o t if Kfjonmoo o W 111 IX LiiO 1U11U1 Lt. vuuv AW U^WWUlViJ u matter of religion. [ Religion of Labor. "Life is such a struggle to the [ average workingman," said some one, 4 "that he can't stop to be religious." He doesn't need to. Christ didn't come to ask men to give up their boats and their nets and spend their | time in singing hymns. He came to " show men how to glorify God in their _ common toil. The man who has to I stop his work before he can be re, ligious isn't eagaged in the right sort of work. When one has taken the image of Christ into his lil'e, the grindstone over which he bends cannot hide Him from his vision, nor can the roar of machinery drown the heavenly music of his voice. When John sough', to turn the hearts of men to the Lord, he did not tell the soldier to leave his soldiering, nor the tax-gatherer his task. He simnly bade them take up the old [i duties in a new way. That is the I ; i message of Jesus to the world now: 5. "Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, ~ i;r whatever ye do. do all to the glory ; if God."?Detroit News-Tribune. t Honor. Once a man was sare of his posi, tion in the world if he maintained his honor; now we praise a man till t his head is ready to burst?and then > let it burst. We put a man upon a ; i pedestal ana men kick uowii ine i [: j-edestal.?Rev. J. M. Markley, Con. gregatlonalist, Denver. Life is a perpetual rhoosine: the . i road to ruin branches oil at every step. Peru's lteckless Rubber-Hunters. It is said that the rubber forests of trans-Andean Peru, on the upper 1 Amazon, are being gradually destroyed by the wasteful practices of the native gatherers of the "milk," as the sap is'called. The method of , securing it for the better grades of | rubber is to tap tne trees in iresn spots every other day during the dry i season, from July to January. It is 1 usual, at the first of the month, to start the series of wounds in the | bark ac a point as high as the work- , man can conveniently reach, each subsequent wound being made a little below in the same vertical line, until the ground is reached at the end of the month. Trees tapped at a higher point, in order to work harder, are injuredj if not killed, and the practice is forbidden in some districts. In securing the cheapest grades of rubber the tree is cut down, and vast areas have thus been denuded of rubber trees, except the young ones which have sprung up. Owing to this short-sighted policy, the number of rubber-producing trees is steadily deceasing, and systematic planting and cultivation are advocated by experts.?Leslie's Weekly. Costumes Worth Fortunes. Dresses may not cost anything one likes to spend, but there are in existence certain garments which are easily the "record" in point of price. The Queen of Siam owns what is perhaps the most costly dress in the world. It is a silken robe of state, the fabric being completely concealed by an embroidery of diamonds, emeralds, rubies and sapphires. Its value is estimated at $5,000,000. Another valuable dress is the property of the Grand Duchess Xania, the Czar's sister. Her Highness owns a Russian national costume, which, from cap to slippers, is encrusted with precious stones. The weight of the complete outfit is so heavy that it is almost unbearable. Another Russian princess has a wrap made of silver-fox fur. The collar alone is worth thousands of dollars; while the whole garment's Worth must be estimated at its own weight in gold.?Answers. Fresh Fish in Mid Ocean. Freeh fish, taken directly from the fresh water an hour or so before Rerving, on the big Atlantic liners, is a new and welcome novelty made possible by the installation of huge fresh water tanks on the newest of these great steamships. Every variety of fresh water fish that is served in the most up-to-date hotel is kept in these tanks. They are taken therefrom just before the time for their preparation, and when served on the table have the firm and fresh appearance of fish served in the hunter's camp. This is a most welcome and needed innovation, for often the alleged "fresh" fish served on shipboard has been rendered repugnant to the palate by long keeping. There is no food more subject to decay than fish, and when kept too long out of water it may become not only cis tatseful, but exceedingly dangerous. ?What-To-Eat, the Pure Food Magazine. ALMOST A MIRACLE. Raised Up When Science Said There Was No Hope. G. W. L. Nesbitt, Depot Street, Marion, Ky., writes: "I was a chronic invalid with kidney troubles and 'often &f Jl wished death might i a mm end my awful sufferzlXj ings. The secretions Iww1 were thick with sedlmeat, my limbs swollen and ray right side 1 s0 Dearly paralyzed 1 could not raise my hand above my head. The doctor held out no hope of my recovery and I had given up, but at last started using Doan's Kidney Pills and made a rapid gain. After three months use I was well and at work again." Sold by all dealers. BC cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Lieutenant-General Baden-Powell, speaking at a meeting, in London, in connection with a crusade against cigarette smoking, said that ?15,000,000 ($75,000,000) a year was spent In cigarettes. He thought this could be easily saved. N.Y.?19 SHOES AT ALL VU ^^MPlSyPRICES, FOR EVERY "^MEMBER OFTHEFAMILY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CKII ??> W. L Douglaa makes and skHs { fr;9fi'a S2.BU, $3.00and$3.BOt _ than any other manufacturer 1 BQT' world, because they hold shape, fit hotter, wear longer aro of greater value than any 1 *WEt? shoes In the tirorld to-day* W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot KJ~ CAUTION. W. 1, Dooglaaname and prla Sold by the t-est shoe dealers freryvrliero, Shoes m trated Catalog free to any address. PUTNAM" Color ;:iore goods brighter and faster colors than any c can dye any carrueut without ripping apart, Wrlto Metals and Metaphors. "It is most amazing, saici a metallurgist, "how the world relies on metals for its metaphors and similes. Thus an orator is silver-tODgued or golden-mouthed. An explorer is bronzed by African suns. A resolute chap has an iron will. A sluggard moves with leaden feet. An ostrich has a copper-lined stomach. A millionaire has tin. A swindler is as slippery as quicksilver. A borrower has brass."?Kansas City Journal. Never Bankrupt. "Have you ever been bankrupt?" asked the counsel. "I have not." "Now, be careful," admonished the lawyer. "Did you ever stop payment?" I vs. "Ah, I thought we fhould get at the truth," observed the counsel, with an unpleasant smile. "When did this suspension of payment oc-! eur?" "When 1 h:id paid all I owed."? i London Opinion. ] FIFTEEN YEARG CP SUFFERING. Burning, Painful Sores on Legs?Tortured Day and Xieht?Tried Many Remedieft to No Avail?Used Cuticura; In Well Again. "After nn utlaclc of rheumatism, running sored broke out on my huisband's legH, from bolow tho Icneca to the ankles. There are no words to tell ail tlio discomfort and ?rcat auttcrinp: Jie lir.rt to endure nigftt anci dny. He u?od every kind of remedy and threo physicians treated him, one after the other, without any good renults wbatover. Ono day I ordered nomo Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Oinlment, and Cuticura Resolvent. lie begun to use them and Id three weeks all the sore-j were dried up. The burning fire stopped, and the pain3 became benrable. After three months he was Quite well. I can prove this testimonial at any timo. Mrs. V. V. Albert, Upper Frenchvine, Me., July 21, 1037." Knew It at Once. The Peoria Herald-Transcript informs us that "when the national anthem was played" at the Washington birthday celebration "the big audience instantly recognized it." You can't fool those Peorians; they're quick as lightning.?Chicago Evening Post. How's Thl9? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo^). We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry j out any obligations made by his firm. Waldino, Kinnan & AIabvin, Wholo- , sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall'sCatarrh Cure is taken internally,actingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussurfaces of the 6ystem. Testimonials sent tree. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Cut Out the Girls. The telephones have been taken out of the naval academy at Annapolis because too many girls called up the middies and took up too much time. GARFIELD Digestive Tablets. From your druggist, or the Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn. NT Y., 25c. per bottle. Samples upon request. Every year there are 500 deaths from destitution in Great Britain. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance, Nervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,Pa. Germany sends 29,000,000 feathers a year to England for millinery uses. Mrs. Winslow'e Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation,allays pain, cures wind colic,25c a bottle Rats are an alarming nuisance in England. t MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A CerUln Oar? for Feverishness, Constipation, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders, aod Destroy n.ii? / ?__ u'nrmi. The, Break ud t olas ?jgaa??: Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un* healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A ^ germicidal, disinfecting and deodorizing toilet requisite oi exceptional ex- mbbb=~s<.va cellence and ccon- | | j ^ I fjB| ^ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, |r'1 il throat and nasal and ^7^25 uterine catarrh. At \ ; fi ?af drug and toilet ; \'fy stores, 50 cents, or *38 by mail postpaid. I g Vw Large Trial Sample WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK SENT FREE THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. ENERGETIC WORKERS, male and female, makeglO ^ to $.'>0 weekly taking orders for large textile manufacturer, making Indispensable, patented household articles, used dally by everybody; exclusive territory, no competition: previous experience unnecessary. Write to-day for full particulars. UNITED MANUFACTURING CO., 10th and Susq.,Philadelphia. SALESMAN?Regular or Ride line?>01 neces- i sarlly experienced. No samples. Salary and liberal commissions. House established forty years. Address Dept. E. THE GEOItfiE W. LORD COMl'AXV. Philadelphia, Pa. nDOPQY NEW DISCOVERY; give* anlckr*llef and cnroi ?ronet o?M. Book of tMtlraoninlat 10 dan' treatment Free. Or. H. 2. GBEEN'8 8ONB.B01 B.Atlanta, (in. more TgH Q. ? other Be Equalled At Any Price?^^'^9 it stamped on bottom. Tnkf No Substitute. ailed from factory to any part of the world. Ilia* W, L. JJOl-OLAS, ltrocktou, AtOM. FA DELE: ithcr dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers. They tor freo booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Coloi CHICKENS EARN M Whether you raise Chickens for fun Gleet the best results. The way to do this is We offer a book telling all jeet?a book written by a MMBa 25 years in raising Poultry. [ ? had to experiment and spend fl way to conduct the business? A CLNTS in postage stamps. BjSV Jm and Cure Disease, how to yMHj Market, which Fowls to Save ^** indeed about everything you must know on postpaid on Receipt of 23 cents Book Publishing House, 13l g SPEND YOUR OWN MON ^<^S^OES it not seen I Ir who tries to si 8 him for an ad assume that j spending your own none] you are by insisting on g< Substitutes pay him a la would give you what youe Manufacturers of advertis I I iM t<9 Mna nitin4i4iAT ha^rtn fill itaiyt n w can v. , xvm.s ufacture economically anc high-grade goods at the pri ' Substitutes are usually ex ' 7j ' ?1 AND A WOMAN'S WOfif Nature and a woman's work combined have produced the grandest remedy for woman's 111s tnai me world has ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering. The Indians on our Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cure .diseases that baffle the most skilled physicians who have spent years in the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ills, more potent and effica--' ? ? ClUUtt l/LLUII cliiy VJ U ill U 111x1 UiAJix UIUAU^O, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman's ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 516 N.C. St, Louisiana, Mo., writes: " Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am willing to make my troubles public. "For twelve years I bad been suffer* ing with the worst forms of female ills. During that time I had eleven different physicians without help. No tongue can tell what I suffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two years ago 1 wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice. I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com* pound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice re* _ stored health and strength. It ifl worth mountains of gold to suffering women." What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. Muff, it will do for other suffering women. R A RY\ uniii u Fwite Skin Si Warm baths with Cuticura Soap followed, when necessary, by gentle anointings with Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, preserve, purify and beautify the skin, scalp, hair and hands of infants and children, relieve ecze mas, rashes, itchings, irritations and chafings, permit rest and sleep and point to a speedy removal of torturing, disfiguring humours, when all else fails. SFiXffJEZ Sold throughout the r-orld. Depots: Loudon, 27, Charterhouse So.; Parts. 5. Rue do la Palx: Au?(r?> Ita, K. Towns & Co.. Sydney: India, B. K. Pan). Calcutta: China, Hong Kone Dreg Co.: Japan, Maruya. Ltd.. TorIo; Russia, Kerrela, Moscow; 80. / 'srtca. I.cnnoa. Ltd.. Cape Town, ctc.: U.S.A., Potter Drug 4 Chem. Corp.. Sole Props.. Boston. aj-Post Free. Cuttcura Booklet oa the Slla. WIDOWS'undM NEW LAWobtcinttd nirvkviavc by john w. morris. I"E^SIO^?S Washington, D. a D YES dye in cold water better than any other dye. Y3U -s. MONKOE UJ1UU CO.. Qulncy Illinois. mum You Know Howt? IUNL I Handle Them Properly profit, you want to do it intelligently and to profit by tbe experience of others. you need to know on the sub man who made bis living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Dotect Feed for liggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and ~ SWT CUV, OU UJVV.W I \J 1UUUW U dUV.V.VC.'< ? IN STAMPS. i Leonard St., //. Y. City* !EY?YOUR OWN WAY. & i strange that a dealer Y ubstitute," when you ask vertised article, should rou are not capable of f wisely ? Showhimthat itting what you ask for. - ? - - AtUAfis/icr hp !i rHcr fjrwi.v, isk for, without question. ed articles produce them enabled thereby toman. r to supply the public with ice cf inferior substitutes. jjjpensive at any price.