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\ I New York City.?The dcinnna ro fancy waists seems ever to increase I This one. designed by May Manton, i equally well adapted to the odd bodici FANCT WAIST. and to the entire gown and to a varie ty of materials, but in the case of tin model makes part of a costume of vio let crepe de Chine, with a tucked yoke full front and cuffs of chiffon in a lighter shade and trimming of ecru lace. The shirrings of waist and sleeves are arranged on continuous lines that give the fashionable breadth of figure and the garniture over the shoulders provides the drooping line without which no waist is quite up tc date. The waist is made over a fitted lining on which the yoke and front and various parts of the waist are arranged. The waist proper and the sleeves are shirred and the closing is made invisibly at the left shoulder seam and beneath the left front. The ? 1* ~ *,,11 Bitrcvco ui tr wiuc uiiu iuii au^*u iut A LATE DEJIQN I r rdeep cuffs but slurred to fit the upper arm snugly. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and seven eighth yards twenty-one inches wide three yards twenty-seven inches wide or one and three-quarter yards forty four inches wide, with one yard ol chiffon, one-halt yard of all-over lac< and four and one-quarter yards of ap plique to make as illustrated. Shirt WaintP Still Worn. As is customary at the beginning ol every season, the positive announce ment is made that sbirt waists arc u< locger iueuiuuaujf, anu iuiii mih must have a waist to match; yet strange to say. tbe shops are fill of tbe most fascinating designs to shirt waists, and seamstresses am dressmakers alike are busy niakinj blouses. Tbe truth of tbe matter ii that tbe shirt waist is an absolute!: essentia] garment, anil can 110 mon be dispensed with thai: a coat or skirt in a handsome costume it is not s< fashionable to have a waist of differen materia! from the skirt, but. none tb< Jess, with the coat and skirt there an many occasions when a cloth waist, it fact, one of any material exceptinj lace or liuen. si?Lc or satin, is most mi couifortaUle to vK\nr under the ooa and when the smart separate \v::isc i: the only correct style.?Harper's Buzai Fancy Trimmings. I Fancy trimmings, as well ns but tons, will be a feature of the earl: <& * A ' <r r spring l'rocks, as well as various em- , broideries. A good many graduated i s bands of taffeta, satin and velvet will ! e also be used. In some eases these ~ bands are very smart, but on the other band they are apt to accentuate any tendency to stoutness. These bands of satin ribbon are most useful wbere renovations are concerned; for in- ! stance, in order to lengthen a frock, j a new flounce may be added beneath a band, and all of us who patronize tue cleaner realize that some things must shrink a little. Newest Materials For Stocks. The newest materials for stocks arfc cross-stitched canvas, mummy canvas and coarse linen, with Russian and Hungarian embroidery effects in the 1 vivid national coiors. A Revolution in Luce. Last yoar one couldn't get lacei coarse enough. The thing was perhaps overdone." which accounts for the rev* olution in favor of more dainty, fragile triinmingr. A Caprice of Fashion. i Only a gathered cap in lieu of a ! sleeve is another of fashion's caprices ! ' for summer dress gowns, reviving an ; 1 old-time mode. ??? > . A Qnaint Effect. i Many evenings gowns have borrowed that quaint old fashion of open. ing over a gay petticoat in front. Circular Skirt. Full skirts, that are confined over I [ the hips, yet take soft and graceful ) folds below, make the latest shown, j > This May Manton one is circular and Is arranged in small tucks at the up- ! 3T n/JT MdNTON. ! I jl I per portion that give a yoke effect, ! but is left plain at the front, so avoid- j i ing unbecoming fullness. The model ;s made of tan-colored foulard fig- ; , ured with brown and white and is j , trimmed with folds of the material j - stitched with silk, but all the fash- ! f ionable clinging materials are adinir- j i able and trimming can be applique of : - any sort. Both skirt and folds are circular and : the latter are shaped to fit smoothly | over the foundation, which can be I r * L tucked at tne upper edge as illustrat- ! ed or arranged in gathers as preferred. I } The Quantity of material required ' s CIRCULAR 8EIRT. for the medium size Is ten yards twen. ty-one inches wide, eight yards twen ty-seven inches wide, or five and oueV half yards forty-four inches wide. \ I A SEEMUN FOR SUNDAY J AN INTERESTING DISCCURSE BY THE i REV. ROBERT MACKENZIE. \ ( Subject: "The Trials and Triumph of Life" 1 ?The Outside ami the Insifle Sources of Strength?The Weakness of This Pres- cut Day?Life a scene of Compensations Brooklyn, N. Y.?Dr. Robert Mac- 1 kenzie. pastor of the F.utgers Presbyterian J Church. Manhattan, preached Sunday on "The Trials and Triumph of Life." His * text was found in Acts xx: 22-24: _"And < now. behold I go bound in the spirit into 1 Jerusalem, not knowing the things that J shall befall me there. Save that the Holy } Ghost witnesseth in every city, saying ' that bonds and afflictions abide me. But < none of thpse things move me. neither < count my life dear unto myself, so that I < might finish my course with fay. and the j ministry which I have received of the > Lord Jesus, to testifv the gospel of the 1 grace of God." Dr. Mackenzie said: Paul feels himself set to a definite pur- ' pose frn life, something appointed of God and worthy of himself. He is determined to finish his course successfully. Each of ns is called of God to live some definite ' purpose, to add by our lives to the sum of the trood in this world, to do something and , to be something for God. To accomplish j this purpose Paul saw that he had to pass through many trials, temptations, difficulties. He is looking back upon those j through which he has already come and r J X _ Ve% wi ii o f vpf rriPPt. } lorwaru IU lIiu>c ur ???> ?.?- JIIUC.W J J He kne"w that bonds and afflictions await- , ed him if be pursued his present purpose ' further. He saw his life as a very stormy , one. His friends sought to persuade him to chance his course, to compromise a little J with his purpose, to adapt himself more prudently to the wavs of the world in which he found himself, to be less straight- ' forward, and so escape those bonds and j afflictions that threatened. He was not indifferent either to the dangers of the way ^ or to the kindly interes; of his friends; but he answers: "What mean ye to weep ] and to break mine heart? For I am ready ( not to be bound only, but also to die fpr i the name of the Lord Jesus." Then the J calm conclusion of our text: "None of ( these thincs move i e." It is difficult to , . ? x- ,L. 1 1 _c v_ = t 1 fret up to me icvej ui jre:u. nc ja tuc mu^<. Jutermincd, uncompromising straight-on man in this book of great characters. Yet . there are ordinary human steps leading to this level; all who will can rise. ! "These things'' of our text have not ( passed away with Paul. Trials are behind, ( bonds and afflictions are before every man ( that will make a worthy course across this . life. When you build a ..lip for the North Atlantic you must take storms and ice- ( bergs into account and build accordingly. When you would build a boy for business, ' for honor, for goodness, for Christian ser- ( vice in this community, you must take "these things" into account. Last year's , icebergs have melted in summer seas, but new ones have formed and will meet the sailor of- this year. The North Atlantic is- , ever the same?a scene of storm and ice. The particular trials that overlook Paul may not fall on any cf us, but others will come, bearing other names, equally disturb- ! ing to our souls. This world is ever the same?a scene 01 many tnais. uniy a iew are exempt, only a iew are permitted to stand with their hands at their back and their backs to the lire looking out upon the , storm. There are such people. We are glad when old people can do this, but the young people who can do it, or do do it, are not to be envied, but pitied. Most men must go out and meet the storm of "these things'?opposition, competitions, disappointments, temptations?meet them and make their way through them, as best they can, and become men, and all the better men ior meeting them. "These things" move some men mightily; they seek to edge their way out of the storm, they change their course, compromise with their original purpose, choose some less strenuous way through life. Some young men form a purpose to go to college, when the bonds of mathematics and afflictions of Cicero's orations come between them and their purpose "these tilings'' move them out of their course. They compromise with their purpose and : look for an easier way. Some men go further, they linish their preparation, face their p'roiession, meet the difficulties incident to any such beginning, complain, flinch, fall out discouraged, despairing, scarcely living, driftwood on the streets. Some men, like Paui, are unduly moved by these things. These are not spared the storm nor does the storm beat less hard upon them; yet they keep their faces to it, keep to their purpose firmly, often bent like trees, but like trees well rooted, recover themselves; often like William Tell going through a pass of his native Alps on a narrow path cut in the face of the precipice, the mountain wind blowing a gale againsf him; unable to make progress against it, unable to stand against it, he lay down in the path, but he Jay with his face to his goal and crawled to it. Men knowing their full share of the trials of life are yet able to say, each in his own measure, "None ox these things moved me." Most of ycu here belong to that number. Ycur life in youth was not cast in easy places; your present life is not spent in sheltered places. Most of you were cast as young men into this, or some similar stormy community to make your own way. You have been met repeatedly by the storm of "these things" in business, in home and in your Christian life; yet you are here to-day with your faces to vour purpose, your purpose well in hand, able to say after as well as before the storm, "None of these things move me." How is this explained? Take the life of such men as Job, and Joseph and Daniel and Paul?men who have set before us examples of how much the human heart can bear and not break, what bonds and afflictions it can endure anil not be unduly moved. Take the men and women of your own acquaintance and observation on whom these things have broken with full force and yet tney are cheerful, sunny, sympathetic people, reaching a middle life of high honor and an old age of charity and faith and hope?people whom it is good to know, people who snow into what rich coinage the rough ore of human nature can be minted. How is their triumph accounted for? By the fact that if life has its scenes oi trial, life has also it sources of strength in which to endure and triumph over the trials. After all. if you will think about it, this life is a scene of compensations. On the whole, "these things" are balanced by other things. On the whole, life is not so bad as we were taught to expect it; the i fears of pessimism are not realized by < healthy men; our young fears were larger than the experienced facts. "Oh! Yes," said a colored woman, "I have had a great j many troubles in my life, most of which never happened." When they do happen i we find that there have been compensating preparations in which to meet them. If nature smites the Norway and the Oregon pine trees with its north winds it lays the protecting moss on that side of the tree. If nature allures the mimal to the Arctic it wraps and haps it in furs. Man Ms not neglected in this distribution cf i compensation, no trial has .overtaken vou ! more than is common to man, no trial is < put upon you more than you are able to bear, with the trial there is some way of ' escape, of compensation. Both God and ] nature lay burdens on us, for life is a dis- i u-ipune lor cnaracter 7n ourselves, lor service for others; but neither God nor nature 1 has any pleasure in seeing our shoulders stoop too soon, or our hearts break un- i timely. It is possible for uc to hear these thirtgs and not be moved, for God and na- 1 ture have ordained sufficient sources of < 3trength to enable us to bear them. j There are outside sources: The young < spear of wheat beginning to grow in the 1 bleak winds of November or March finds 1 itself supported by a little barrel of flour ;n the grain out of which it springs. The roung caterpillar waking up to begin its ife finds itself providentially deposited by ts winged motner on some green leaf on vhich it can feed while yet too weak to for- r ige for itself. Take your own children, you ( ?an count up "these things" of trial that j oeset the child to an extent that would ' nake you sigh with pity. They have come } nto a world fraught with pain, privation, * iangers to body and to mind. They are J trrapt in no furs, furnished with no t veapons, provided with no stored up food n themselves. How can thev bear "these ;bings" and not be moved? How can they )f.vr them and be happy? Yet they are M$>py. Scarcely is the tear drv on tiu> ittle fare when the -wreathed smile of atl ? ingel comes there. For the child also Iraws its first strength from outside our res. "God hath set the solitary in amilies." God lets down on the child in ! lormal society the protection and pro- i rision of home This is th? necessity and sanctity of the home; not only that it is ! Christian, law, not only that it is mo*4l I aw. but 6imply that it is natural law. There are inside sources of strength. Neither God nor nature snoils the child. 3v 9 o'clock nature withdraw; her morning lews leaving .he growing things to find ' lew sources of strength in which to stand | jnmoved in the sultry or thi stormy noon, i !Cot now the outside dew. but the inside | ap. Nature giving the sprouting grain an j mtside supply for its first few days now j leaves it to send its own roots into the j ?arth, its green leaves into the air. and by i ts own inward activities transmute them j nto life and growth. The first green leaf exhausted the caterpillar must now move | aff to find a new leaf for itself. From the | children of men, too, God withdraws the j early baptism. The youth must ore day j leave home and its protection and provision and by the exercise of his own pow- j ?rs wring a living for himself. If now he j is to meet these thines and not be unduly, moved', if he is to meet them like a true j man with courage and strength and tri* j jmph he must develop the sources of trength within himself. Here exactly is the weakness of this present day. Every age has its own strength md pre-eminence. The strength of our day has heen the discovery and application of the forces of nature, by art and science, to j jur daily living in all its branches. We j have turned the bullock cart into the auto- ! mobile, the tardy sickle into the 6team j harvester, the postman going three miles j in hour with letters into the telegraph and j the telephone. Yet it is always true that j Trom the greatest strength falls a shadow- j ing weakness. Our fathers had but few ! outside forces on which to rely. Not long ! were they allowed to lie in the cradle, not I long to play in the nurserv. Nature was ! rugged and rough with them. The old j farm house stood far from its neighbor, j rlrifts of snow or swollen streams often lay ; between. When the wintry night closed , H in there was no public place of amusement, ] no stirring procession of multitudes under j the electric lights of the streets, but moonlight and shadows on the lonely country road. If the family would pass a genial * jvening they must develop the inside * sources of the home, of the hearthstone in | J the log cabin, and find the comedies and , ? tragedies of life on the stage of their own j J minds and hearts. No newspaper or mag- * *zine allured them out of themselves, j J There, in their own little world, at their , * own fireside, they thought gut Jh?ir poH; I ? ties, their literature ana their theology. In j 4 education the schools were poony fur- j nished. the teacher but poorly trained, the I 4 text books but few and serving the sue- I j cessive members of the family in turn. ! 4 Tf they were to be educated they must find j * their education by the painful development j * of their own powers of memory and reflec- 4 tion. You have seen pictures of the pooi j school house in whicli Daniel Wester or 4 Henry Clay was trained, or, going a. gen I *, oration further back, we may think of tha ; simple school in which George Washington [ or Patrick Henry was educated; yet out 1 ft of such school houses came leaders whe i r founded States, wrote constitutions, built j a republic, grappled with the diplomacy cl ! r' Europe; out of them came orators whose | ir eloquence, though dead on the printed j t, page, still thrill the reading soul. Gather | them out of this primitive school ^house | 0 closet them in the Colonial Congress iii ! si Philadelphia to fashion out of their own \ minds, their own destinies and that cl j , their own nation and what was the re- 1 suit? I | In religion the churches of yesterday j j were bare and cold, no fresco on the wall | I no inward vision of spiritual things; no j j organ rolled its music to lead their praise, ' no gifted voices in a selected choir lifted ! a them out of themselves oji the waxen C( wings of Icarus; no grace of rhetoric made theology easy. They were left to the de j velopment of their own inward sources oi a praise, of prayer and of thought. And , c what Homeric characters they were! Jona | t| than Edwards in bari*en Stockbridee made j himself the first philosopher of his age j 1 It may well be feared that the church oi ; t) to-day is doing for the young people just i what the schools are doing for them, sur ! rounding them with ever increasing outside 1 religious props and stays?societies, rlubs brotherhoods, guilds, and now. to add to this, comes the threatening addition of a ? "scientific pedagogy" for the simplicity ol j 1 the Sunday-school. Some of you were I a brought up in a Sunday-school wnere there i h were just two outside sources to help, the j Bible and a question book without an- ! swers. You learned to know your Bible i you came out of that school into the ) u church and into a Christian service that tl has filled the world with Christian philan . ^ thropy. The Sunday-schools of our ehil ! - _.:?u _ nl ! Tl CJren are iurmsneu whu ? ?unv..,w?... lesson leaves?primary, intermediate, quar- c terly, and the teachers /with a variety of j y helps, ready made expositions, to be famiJ j iarized in the hour between breakfast and j ~j Sunday-school. Ask the average scholar ic * turn to the second chapter of Zephaniah I or of Titu9, ar.d see the vain turning ovei j of unfamiliar pages. What can you expect? How should they cultivate the in- : ward sources of memory and reflection when you have excused them by supplying | them with all conceivable outside supports ; that make memory and reflection super ; v fluous. Do you remember that solemn parable of the seed falling on stony ground, quickly growing on the shallow soil and ai j ouickly withering before the heat and the 1 (nought of the growing day? because hav ! _ ing exhausted the supply of the outside ' source, "it had no root in itself." A? Christian men, let us lean less and less on i a these temporary and childish outside sup j a porta and develop these inward sources I of thought, of reflection, of conscience, of | nigh duty with which God has endowed us, t that amid all "these things" of task and ol J r trial we may rise as the sea gull rises ' ^ against drowning wave, blinding spray, baffling wind, rises into the calm of the { 5 upper air by means of its own well disci* | d plined wings. j e "When Wc Return to God. . ^ S You have seen the heavens gray with ^ rlnli ami W.den colored clouds, you have J seen the earth chilly and comfortless un- ! 5 der its drifts of unmelting snow; but let : b the sun shine, and then how rapidly does j the sky resume its rcdir.nt Dlue, r.nd the j fields laugh with green grass and vernal i Slower. i 0 So will it be even with a withered and | p i wasted life when we return to God and I z suffer Him to 6end His bright beams of j t light upon our heart. I do not mean that j the pain or misery under .. hich we are ^ suffering will necessarily be removed? j h even for Christ it was not so; but peace j will come and strength will come, ana res- I , ignation will come, and hope will come? I and we shall f el able to bear anything | I which God shall send, and though He slay j g us we still shall seek Him, and even if the ] j( hlnrlcMt cloud of anguish s.ems to shroud | His face from us, even on that cloud shall i r the rainbow shine.?F. W. Farrar. I C ' I a Keep the Soul on Top. V We are toid of a little boy who was ^ isked by his mother on returning from ! d Sunday-school what he had learned in his n :lapg. "Well, mamma," said the little fellow, c 'I have learned that it is always best to s keep the soul on top. Teacher said so, j tl ind taught us a verse that means that." J "What was the verse, darling?' said | the wondering mother. ! a "I can't remember it, mamma, but that's ri ivhat it means, anyway." [ tj The mother thought long, and finally | ^ sy dint of i uestioning, found it was .Paul's declaration. "But 1 keep under my body, j si ind bring it into subjection." And tears I n ?ame to her eyes as she thought the lit* j :',e son had gotten the larger meaning of | :he text in his homely interpretation, ^ 'Keep the soul on top." iz C Do Good. g; Do good on the Sabbath. Jesus did not ii nean that people should do a lot of work >n Sunday which could just as well be 0( lone on other days, but that they should ie ready to be helpful always. Which vord shall we say strongest? Do good, b f we do good on Ood's day it will help us rn o do better all the week, and to do our I +i >est all the time. Do all the good you can, /f* ?' To all the people you can, f - CJ In all the ways you can. di ]n all the places you can, ,1, ' -vri i.iat ? In?. a. U 'PE-RU-NA,1"" [ost of the Ailments Peculiar to the ' Female Sex Are Due to Catarrh of the Pelvic Organs. Rachael J. Kemball, M. D., 334 Vir- } ginia St., Buffalo.. X. Y., is a graduate * of the University of Buffalo, class 1884, ? and has been in the practice of medi- ? cine in that city since then. She writes ! as follows: ? ? "My conviction, supported by J ? ?? ?? J? "D AwiiTin o f eiperienue, is uuat x cx ima u u r valuable preparation for all ca- ? tarrhal affections. I have taken ? one bottle of Peruna myself and just feel fine. I shall continue to take it."--Rachael J. Kemball, M.D. J Peruna has cured thousands of cases of :ma!e weakness. As a rule, however, be- ( )re I'eruna is resorted to several other ( 2medit'S have been tried in vain. A great j lany of the patients have taken local j reatment, submitted themselves to surgical perations, and taken all sorts of doctor's ) Luff, without any result. , The reason of so many failures is the , ict that diseases peculiar to the female I?????? sex are not common lv recognized as be- j ing caused by ca- j tarrh. These organs ] re lined by mucous membranes. Any muans membrane is subject to catarrh. . j Catarrh of one organ is exactly the same s catarrh of any other organ. What will ure catarrh of the head will also cure ca- ] nrrh of the pelvic organs. Perur.a cures j hese cases simply because it cures the cairrh. Most of the women afflicted with pelvic < A Parlor Trick. Place a block of some light wood, , erfectly flat and smooth, upon the flat ' nd smooth bottom of a vessel, and I old it there until the vessel is filled , ith water. Then remove the hand j nd the block will remain motionless ntil water insinuates itself beneath brough the pores of the wood. If 1 he wood is made water-proof it will | pmain below permanently. The prin- ' iple is that a body lighter than water ! rill not rise unless the water can -get nder it to press it upward.?New ork Press. France averages forty-two marriages 5 the divorce. . NY19 CNE DOLLAR WHEAT. Teslcm Canada'* IVlieat Fields Produce It? Magnificent Yields?Free Grants of Land to Settler*. The returns of the Interior Departaeiit show that the movement of kinerican farmers northward to Canda is each month affecting larger reas of the United States. Time was, ays the Winnipeg Free Press, when he Dakotas, Minnesota and Iowa furashed the Dominion with the main mlli of its American contingent. Last ear, however, forty-four States and istricts were represented in the offiial statement as to the former resienee of Americans who had hometended in Canada. The Dakotas still iead the list, with 400U entries, MinneDta being a close second with 3887. ut with the exception of Alabama and lississippi and Delaware every Stat^ a the Union supplied settlers who, iu rder to secure farms in the fertile rairie country of Canada, became citi ens of, and took the oath of allegiance 3, the Dominion. Last year no less ban 11,841 Americans entered for omestead lands in Canada. From the Gulf to the boundary, and rorn ocean to ocean, the trek to the dominion goes on. Not only the wheat rowers of the Central .Mississippi Val?y, but the ranchers of Texas and Jew Mexico, and the cultivators of the nmnnrativplv vircrin soil of Oklahoma i re pouring towards the productive acant lands of the Canadian Northrest. It is no tentative, half-hearted eparture for an alien country that is lanifested in this exodus; it has beome almost a rush to secure possesion of land which it is feared, by hose imperfectly acquainted with the ast area of Canada's vacant lands, . lay all be acquired before they ar- i ive. There is no element of speculaon or experiment in the migration, 'he settlers have full information re- . pecting the soil, wealth, the farming lethods, the laws, taxation and sys?m of government of the country to hich they are moving, and they real;e that the opportunities offered in anada are in every respect better and reater than those they have enjoyed; i the land they are leaving. Canada can well afford to welcome mlially every American farmer coming i the Dominion. There is no question ut that these immigrants make the iost desirable settlers obtainable for ie development of the prairie portion f the Dominion. Full information >n be had from any authorized Canaian Government Agent, whose adress will be found elsewhere. 1 t I* rABLE PREPARATION," [TES DR. KEMBALL. diseases have no idea that their trouble is Jue to catarrh. The majority of the people think that catarrh is a disease conined to the head alone. This is not true. Catarrh is liable to attack any organ of the body; throat, bronchial tubes, lungs, s:omach, kidneys and especially the pelvic organs. Many a woman has made this discovery ifter a long siege of useless treatment. She has made the discovery that her disease is catarrh, and that Peruna can be relied upon to cure catarrh wherever located. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use. of Peruna, write* at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Harlman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. feathers and x.?-a<i. The most venerable of gags?which is the heavier, a pound of feathers or a pound of lead??nearly caused a tight between two excellent friends in the lobby of a Forty-second street theatre Tuesday afternoon. Many a laugh have we heard and had over it. In the open nir the substance, of course, balance each other, but in the exhausted bellsrlass of ah air-pump the feathers will outweigh the lead by as much as the bulk of air which they displaced outweighs the bulk of air displaced by the lead?New York Press. f MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Certain Core for FeverSdfanegs* (,'onntlpation, Headache, i Stomach Troubles, Teething - * i>i Doracrs, Mother Gray. Worms. Thcj Break up C olds Nurse in Ghiia- in 24 hours. At all Druggists, 25 ct?. ron'e Home Sample ma.led FREE. Addrets NWcrk C.t,. A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy. N Y. W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50 UNION CUnCC BEST IN MADE OIEULO THE WORLD. W.L. Douglas shoes jS" V are "worn by more m ua men than any other ? make. The reason is, they hold their p# shape,titbetter,wear Py longer, and have?^r^, f greater intrinsic ^-l value than any ^V-;. other shoes. Sold Everywhere. \ ''1i ,* Loiik fur nnme and pricr <> bottom. Douglas uses Corona ColtF.kin, which is everywhere conceded tobethe finest 1'ateiii Leatheryel produced. Fast Co'or Eyelets u&hC Shoes hy mini,21 cents extra. Write for CaVim . W. L. IJOL'GLAS, Brocktor., Mat-mi re riLL9 ''I have suffered with piles for thirty-six years. One year a;o last April 1 began taking Cascarets for constipation. In the coarse of a'vcek 1 noticed the piles began to disappear and at the end of six weeks they did not trouble me at uli. Cascarets have done wonders for me. I nm entirely cured and {eel like a new man." George Kryder, Napoleon, O. ?The Dowels ^ kwKmm candy catmaktjc . Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c.5flc.Ney#r told in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped C C 0, Guaranteed to cure or your monoy back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 593 iNMUAL SALE, TEN M1LU0H BOXES Til CURES WHIRE ALL ELSE FA IIS., ET U Best Cough Byr"p. Tastes Good. Uto j^3j2E^E^33^2EEIC^G3jR3R 5 niiiiiivl i 11U HE UNU Of the Skin and Scalp Speedily Cured by Baths with ! || fftticuty Ysoap* i To cleanse the skin of crusts and scales, and soften the . -J thickened cuticle, gentle ap? t TTT/^T TT5 A plications 01 lu nv^yiva Ointment to instantly allay itching, irritation, and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and mild doses of CUTI- ]M CUR A Pills to cool and cleanse the blood. A single SET, costing bntOne Dollar, is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humors, eczemas, rashes, itching9, and irritations, with loss of hair, from infancy to age, "when all else fails# Sold throughout the world. Cuticnr* Soap, I5c? OinU ment, fJc., Reiolvent, Me. (In form of Chocolate Coaled Pill?, 25c. per vial of 60>. Depot.: London, 27 Charter* house Sq.; Pari), i Hue de la Payi; Bo.ton, 137 Co!umbn? Ave. Potter Drup .V Chun. Corp.. Sole Proprietora. OJT Send for " The Great Humor Cur*." tveaJ&'eycB, use Thompson's Eye Water Colored Umbrella at Last. Are colored umbrellas really to make their appearance? There Is no doubt tliat in its present form the umbrella :? tho lwiipst ami most inartistic dress item we possess, not even excepting man't tall hat. The Japanese iiave shown us what is possible to do with it, but somehow our. fashion mongers have never learned anything from them. However, this spring our hopes are again revived that we are to bfr / ^ emancipated from the tyrany of tha dark paraplule.?London World. FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of in* I structlons absolutely Free and Post* paid, enough to prove the value oI PaxtineToilet Antiseptic ? Pes tine is In powder form to dissolve to water ? coa-poUocous and far superior to liquid antiseptics containing: alcohol which irritates inflamed surfaces, and havtf no clcansingproperties. Tbe contents of every box makes more Antiseptic Solution?lasts longer? f. goes further?bos mora U5cs in the family and does moregoodtb'ui any antiseptic preparation The formula or a noted boston physician, and used with .great success as a Vaf'nal Wash, for Leucorrhoza, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Cctarrh, Sore Throat. Sore- Eyes, Cuts* and all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female ills Paxtine id invaluable. Used as a Vaginal "Wash we challenge the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. It is a revelation in cleansing and healing power; it kills all germs whica j cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price, 50a. i a box ; if yonrsdoesnot, send to usfor it. Cost take a substitute ?there is nothing like Paxtine* Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day. j B. PAXTON CO., ? Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass. 50,000 AMERICANS WERE WELCOMED TO '.EPffll Western WM Canad? DURING LAST YEAR. I They are nettled and settling on theGraln and Grazr ing Lauds, and are prosperous and satisfied. Sir Wilfred Lanrler recently said: "A new star baa risen on the horizon, and it is toward it that every immigrant who leaves the laud of his ancestors to come and seek a home for himself now turns hi& gaze"?Canada. There is Room for Millions. FREE Homestead* Riven nivmy. School*, t'hnrehc*, Kali way*, Market*, Climate, everything to be deaired. For a descriptive Atlas and other information I apply to 31 r. W. 1?. SCOTT, Superintendent of ImmiKratlon, Ottawa, Canada. i nonpqvnewdiscovery; qolck relief tod cart* worst I cm. Bock of UttlmoaUla lad |0 daji' lr?atB<a?t j Frie. Dr. E H. Q&ESS'B ?0V8, Boil, AUtfitft, tfe