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r New York City. ? Tte up-to-date horsewoman demands a coat which uhall fit perfectly and appear well upon fee saddle, and allow perfect freedom RIDING COAT. of movement at tLe same time This one was designed and ^ut with all tlie requirements in view and is eminently j smart. The original is made of black ! Venetian cloth stitched \yith corticelJi silk, but all materials used for costumes of the kind are appropriate. The coat is made with front?, back. *ide-baeks and under-arm pores. ai;d is finished at the neck with the regulation coat collar and lapels. The fronts are fitt-o.1 h-c mo?n? nf sinsrle darts and the backs are laid oce over the other below I' A LATE DESIGN I ^1 I I the waist line. The .sleeves are in coat ?tyle with moderate fulness at the shoulders in conformity with the season's demand. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four yards twenty-seven, two and seven-eighth yards forty-four or two and an eighth yards fifty-two inches wide. Larer Puff Ka;. A large puff bag mounted in gun metal was of white satin beavily embroidered in gold. A similar bag, mounted in the same manner, was of white satin brocaded in a rich sbade of yellow. Bags in the same sbape, but somewhat smaller, were of wbite, pink and blue suede. These -were very fcubstantiai, and are to be recommend4 *d on that account as well as for tiieir m beauty. Among tbe spangled bags I must not be forgotten one of white J silk witb a wreath and garland design 5n lrridescent beads. In a .Japanese Supporting house were seen some beauties in black satin heavily embroidered in gold. Others of heavy Japanese brocaded silk fastened witb odd little ivory clasps were most attractive. A Sparkling Fashion. Fashion decrees, says the Lady's Pic XiiiXt v> f TMJAM VliVC UJU1C K/\r~ spangle ourselves, for our hair, as it were, with tireflies, wear trimmings and ornaments and embroideries that shine, and carry little shimmering bags and sparkling fans, and set our feet in shoes that are intrusted with golden and metallic beads. It is a good sign that social life, too, will have some Kparkle and glitter, and that for a season, at all events, we are going to toot 011 the brighter side cf everything. I Crepe tie Chine. For the theatre blouse, erepe de Shine is a most dependable fabric and t is combined this year with lace in- ; ets surrounded by French Knots, tiny i J rucfcings of ribbon and a touch of j' panne velvet. If tbe waist is to be i worn very frequently by all means get j 1 white, as it will come from tbe cleaner j looking like new, wbile a delicately | tinted waist fades with each cleaning, j j With a white waist, have a touch of j; color in stock and girdle, such as or- j > ange, i?apphire-blue or mauve. Tbe j < new crepe albatross is the prettiest ma- f? terial imaginable for a simple house | ] dress. If a loose garment is desired, j1 choose the Empire styles and have j softening lace at the throat and on the j j sleeves. j ] A PanHj Crown. j i ~ - V.1-. lnnrn j i une 01 iue auimruuie ami uuiu ( hats, is of b:own velvet. The brim is I 1 doi.e in three overlapping layers of the j velvet, the outer one drooping a bit and i j suggesting a mushroom. The crown I is rather high. Pansy blossoms, the I; small old-fashioned garden sorts, are i 1 scattered thickly around this crown j i from the base to the top. The velvet j 1 flowers are in the golden shades, with I J a good bit of violet intermingled. So I' far this does not sound peculiar, but j the small, flat cluster of dead pink < ( roses fastened at the left front of the j | crown is particularly noticeable and ] Frenchy. ! 1 j 1 Jetted Roben. Jetted robes are very much in evi- h dence Tlie jets are solid as a rule, and 1 j are put in in large paillettes or huge 1 i flower designs. One gown of this tie- ' I scription is made with the inevitable ; J lace yoke, which this time is spangled * with silver. !. . I' All JCiEveiopc n?u r An envelope bat of obincliilla bad tbe top brim trimmed witb many tine frills of gray Valencicnnes lace. A large -I IY MAY MANTON, cluster of shaded pink roses trimmed one side, the trimming, as usual, i running over the upturned brim. | i Riding Skirt. j The riding skirt of the modern woman is a comfortable and satisfactory one of just sufficient, without unnecessary,. length, and it fitted with care. This one complies with all the requirements and is both shapely and smart. As illustrated the material is black broadck>th stitched with corticelli silk, but all those used for skirts of the sort are appropriate. The skirt is made in three pieces, and is shaped by means of darts to allow ample space for the knee and to fit smoothly over the hips, while the closing is made at the left of the front. When worn upon the horse it falls just low enough to cover the feet and can be looped, as illustrated, to render it convenient for walking. RIDING SKIRT. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and a quarter yards forty-four or two and fiveeichth yards fifty-two inches wide. THE <PUL<PIT. \ SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMOfsMBY THE REV. HERBERT H. MOTT. Subject: Can a Man Do as He Uke*? Boston, Mass.? The following sermon war contributed to The Christian Register by the Rev. Herbert H. Mott. It is entitled "Can a Man Do as He Likes?" and the text is: "Choose you Lhis day who you will serve."?Joshua sxiv., 15. Can a man do as he likes? Of course not! you say. All sorts of barriers hedge him round. He would like to fly as the birds fly, but the weight of his flesh and bones keeps plodding along the ground. 1-Ie is born poor or stupid; consequently he can neither buy a steam yacht nor set the Thames on fire, though he would like Nearly to do both. The force of public opinion compels him to don a tall silk bat and a frock coat when he would much prefer to go about in a golf cape and a shooting jacket. The force of public law compels him to run his auto at ten miles an hour when he very much wishes to spin along joyously at tlie rate of thirty. Every man exists under a set of compulsions. He is obliged to submit to many limitations, natural and artificial, and he is com pelled, Dy pusnes ana puus ana pressures he is unable to resist, to do many things he doesn't want to do. Nevertheless, in spite of a man's abject slavery in certain directions, is there not some small space, some little area, in wiiich, instead of being a slave, he is actually and truly free? a department of life and conduct in tvhich he can do as he likes? The old doctrine?the doctrine believed by our fathers, and by nearly the whole of humanity, civilized and uncivilized, in every part pf the world, from the beginning of recorded time? tvas that there is such a department of ,ife and conduct; that in all vital matters, in all matters that have to do svith the moral quality of life, a man :an do as he likes. Our fathers held that, whenever we stand at a point where two roads diverge, we are able to choose, select, determine, which *oad to pursue. In such a situation the casting vote remains with us. Whenever two or-more governments, eaders, employers, elaim our allegiance, tve can "choose whom we will serve." rhis is true, said our fathers, no matter how severe the pressure. The 'nmnh+?r*n nrfronnr fnrpA nf pflY?nm stances, may be so great as to resemble compulsion. It appears as if we were obliged to take one road ratber than the other. This, said our fathers, s appearance only. In reality, whenever two or more alternatives present themselves, whenever two roads >pen before us, the decision remains tvith us. It is with us to say yes or ao, to lift the latch or not to lift it, to :ake the left i>r the right. No matter iow great the pressure brought to jear on us, in the last resort we can ilways choose poverty instead of 'iches, captivity Instead of freedom, suffering instead of ease, and instead )f life, rather than yield, if need be, we can always choose death. This is the old doctrine, and, al:hough it has stood both the test of :ime and the test of experience, there jppears to be, in these days, a widely spread tendency to ignore it. No one lenies that circumstances exercise a >owerful influence over our lives, but he tendency nowadays is to ascribe fverything to circumstances. It is related that the eminent naturilist, Professor Boulton. placed the ?ggs of caterpillars 1n differently eol>red boxes, and left them there to latch out, with the remarkable result iat the eggs in the blue box hatched >ut into blue caterpillars, those in the ed box into red, and those in the yelow box into yellow caterpillars. They vere, you see. the product of tbeir ;urroundings, they were what the tint >f their surroundings made tbem. And ;o, it is declared, are you and I; we ire what our surroundings and those )f our ancestors make us. We are the jlanes of outside conditions, past and jresent. Here is a man who is an enemy of society. He preys upon his kind. His 'areer is divided between debauchery ?nd other crimes. He is the victim, he helplesB victim, of outward circumstances, we are told. His mother was i drunkard, hl9 father was a thief. Ele was reared in the slums. What ;an you expect? True, he has been to i reform school; true, he has been lelped and aided by various philaniropic people whom he has mercilessy deceived. But he. poor fellow! ;ould not help himself. Like Professor Boulton's caierpillars, he took on ;he tint of his environment. Born in i black box, he turns out black. His surroundings were evil, therefore he s evil. Or, again, there is the hero who, like Dharles Lamb, gives up all, in order to support some one dependent on him. )r surrenders life itself in order to save the lives of others. We are told [be same story about the hero as about the thief. He is not brave or self-denying of his own accord. He is heroic simply because the conditions in which ae was brought up were favorable to ieroism, and so heroism grew out of tiis soul, just as cabbages grow out of the soil when the soil contains the seeds of cabbages. Goodness and badness, heroism and criminality, it is declared, do not reside in us, but in our surroundings. We are mere passive lumps of clay, on which our surroundings stamp whatever is in them. We are the slaves and victims of the conditions in the midst "if xrhinh TX7o nrA W'non rr& fo rtnxr tco ire doing as we like, going our own way, following our own wills, we are, in reality, merely obeying the pressure )f circumstance. We are under a rigid law of necessity all the time. Even tvhen. we stand where two roads diverge, and think that we ourselves ;hoose to take the left hand or the right hand road, it is not really we ourselves who choose, but a number of l-ircumstances and conditions, working jn us and through us. This doctrine, that we are creatures of circumstance and cannot help what tve do, is a misleading one. It tends to lelf-deeeption. It makes us imagine ourselves better than we are. When ?C UU niuilg, 11JI3 UWJIIlLie uu.t'fb the temptation to us to say: "It svas not my fault. It was the fault of my education and surroundings." And this will lead tolay, as it has always done in the past, to a general laxity with regard to tvrong doing?to a habit of thinking lightly of the exceeding sinfulness of Sin. This evil doctrine is the more difficult to combat because there is an ele aient of truth in it. We are moved md swayed by circumstances. Birth md education do exercise a powerful influence over us. These things must be taken into consideration. Nevertheless, they don't explain everything. Make what allowance you will for circumstances and education, still in jvery transaction we have the last svord. The proof of this is in our 3aily conduct. We cannot help blam,ng men and praising them. Suppose you are on a Boston street I 1 and are accosted by an individual ii shabby garments. You aie touched b; his tale of woe, and with your usua generosity you give him an ampl alms. Five minutes loler (this Inci dent is founded upon fact) in the crus] of a crowded corner, you feel an un wonted hand busy at your pocket, and turning round, discover in the would be thief the very man you have jus helped. What do you think of this fellow Tin t/ivi fool tnwnWl him as if he wer an invalid, a sick soul, a deluded vie tim of circumstance? On the contrary, you regard ? an< justly regard?the robust purloiner o your pocketbook as an ungratefu scoundrel, and, if you are a good clti zen, you promptly and indignantl; hand him over to the police. Sorrov and pity you no doubt experience, bul mingled with sorrow and pity ther will be righteous indignation. Ho-ro ever many excuses your kind hear makes for him, you will still blam the man; for you will be convinced however bad his surroundings and hi bringing up, being a man, he couli have kept straight in spite of all, a many another has done. You know, ii your soul, that, however great the ot stacles, being a man, he was still mas ter of himself. He might have chose: differently. He might have taken th right road instead of the wrong one. i only he had tried hard enough. Yo feel, after all is scia and done, he was in this matter, able to do as he likec Consequently, he is responsible. Then Tore, we Diame mm.. Take the opposite case, that of th hero. We have all read recently hoi the Japanese attempted to block th entrance to Port Arthur by sinkin steamers in the channel. One of thes vessels had reached the appointed spo' Her anchor had been let go. The fus attached to the charge which was t blow a hole in her had been llf htec The officer in command ordered th crew into the lifeboat, he liimse'f b? ing the last to leave the ship. A mc ment he stands on the gunwale, read to cast loose. He counts his men, On is missing. Shall they leave him The officer has but an instant in whic] to make up his mind. There is an ir ward struggle between the rival in pulses of duty and self-regard. The he climbs again upon the shot-swep deck to seek his lost comrade. Alas it is in vain. The next moment he J killed by a Russian shell, and his cre^ push off, only just in time to sav themselves. * Why do we regard this man as hero? Why was a public funeral he! in his honor by his countrymen? Wb; do we praise him? Because we fet the brave action was due to Llm, an to no thing and no one else. Becaus we feel that he stood where two way diverged?the way of duty and the wa; of safety? and that he was master o the situation. He determined whici road to take. Out of his own brav will, out of his own courageous sou' he chose the right way. The decisio: lay not with circumstances, condition! previous training, or ancestry, bu with himself. We feel that he, and h alone, was responsible, and that ther< fore to him, and to him alone, belong the credit and the praise. We cannot help blaming the crin: inal, we cannot help praising th hero, but, if criminal and hero wer simply the victims of circumstance, t do so would be meaningless. We hav no right to condemn the criminal if h cannot help doing what he does. Ther is no sense in honoring the hero if th heroism is due to education or to sui rounding conditions; tnat is, to some thing other than the hero. Yet we d condemn the ont>. and we do give on homage to the other. We cannot hel ourselves. The praise and the blam we bestow are involuntary acknow edgment that, in spite of all the thee ries closet philosophers may spir there is an ineradicable conviction i the human heart that we are able, i the last resoit, to do as we like, an that a9 a conscquence we are respor sible before God and man both for ou deeds and for our thoughts. He Given Grace. "Bounteous is Jehovah in His na ture: to give is His delight. His gift are beyond measure precious, and ar as freely given as the light of the sui He gives grace to His elect because H wills it, to His redeemed because o His covenant, to the called because o His promise, to believers becaus they seek it, to sinners because the; need it. He gives grace abundantls seasonably, constantly, readily, sovei eignly; doubly enhancing the value o the boon by the manner of His b? stowal. Reader, how blessed it is, a the years roll round and the leave begin again to fall, to enjoy such a unfading promise as this: 'The Lor will give grace.' Spurgeon. Two Kinds of Doubting. What is the good of doubts? Som philosophers have taught that it i good for one to have doubted everj thing, as then what one finally hold true he will have reasons for. And great crowd of would-be truth-seeker follow this doctrine. There is a meas ure of truth in it when '"doubting only means the effort of an hone? truth-seeker to make sure of hi foundations, but the doubting whie means unwillingness to believe neve helps a man to stronger faith. There i all the difference in tiie worm Detwee the doubts of such a man as Thoma and the doubts of such men as th Pharisees. How to Win Souls For Christ. Andrew teaches Christians still th first lesson in soul-winning: Go fo your own brother. That is, try to brin to Christ those whom you love, thos nearest to you. It makes no differenc whether the nearness is of blood o sympathy. You will succeed wher you love. Christianity is to win the world b; this process alone?neighbor influent ing neighbor, friend influencing frtenc It is like leaven. One part of yeas will permeate two thousand parts ?"< dough, but only by changing the parr next to it, and so working its ,w?; tbrougli the mass. The Worker's Reward, An English drunkard said to a Salra tion Army lassie, who spoke to hie about his soul: "You must be we] paid for this. I suppose you expee as much as half a crown for gettinj me to sign the pledge." She replied "I'm better paid than that. I expee to get a whole crown, and there'll b stars in it beside." A Powerful Influence. One of the most powerful influence of which Ciod avails Himself for th salvation of men is the influence of th lives and of the prayers and of th testimony of those who have learnei to trust Him, and who long to see Hi will accomplished on earth. Htlpful AdTica. Be not anxious about to-morrow. Di to-day's duty, light to-day's temptatioi and do not weaken and distrust your self by looking forward to things whicl you cannot see and could not under stand if you sew them.?Charles Kings ley. \ I Hamb arc's Enterprise. j Hamburg has left behind in the total 1 amount of its shipping interests every e other city on the globe with the single * exception of London. But Hamburg ^ has done, too, everything which enterf prise and wise foresight couid to bring i! this about. Hamburg has spent more j. mnnar than dnr /vthor twn huvhnrs in I U,v"v; '* J ~ ? the world together during the last ? score of years to perfect her terminal e facilities. Her system of quays and docks and warehouses is the best in j existence, and the $50,000,000 laid out f on these improvements by her municiij pal authorities and her ship owners are [. bringing rich fruit. All these improvey ments are made of durable material? v stone and iron and steel?and are 'equipped with hydraulic machinery, ? with cranes, derricks and other hoisting apparatus, that are equal to any e emergency. In fact to-day hydraulic engineers the world over go to Hamg burg to study these triumphs of prort fesslnnnl cMll ak thpv fnrmprlv iispri 3 to go to London and Liverpool. The a water front of Hamburg, with its miles !" of model docks and quays, is a modern marvel of practical genius, and may e stand for a fitting and eloquent type ( of material progress in Germany. u American engineers are particularly 5, struck with the fact on their first visit I* to Hamburg. And another point. y From these harbor improvments Hamburg is drawing a steady and everv increasing revenue, a revenue equal to e a very fine rate of interest on the capig tal invested. ? Wolf von Schierbrand, e <n the Chautauquan. t. e How Insects Make Music. f The katydid has a wing that is very L curious to look at, says Laura Roberts, e in "Four Feet, Two Feet, and No Feet." You have seen this little insect, '* I have no doubt. Its color is light g green, and just where the wing joins 7 the body there Is a thick ridge, and h another on the wing. On this ridge i- there is a thin but strong skin, which i- makes a sort of drumhead. n It is the rubbing of these two ridges ' >r urumneaas logeuier mai mases uie '* queer noise you have heard. There Is ~ no music in it certainly. The insects ^ :ould keep quiet if they wished, but they must enjoy making the noise, a The katydid sometimes makes two d 1 rubs on its drumhead and sometimes y three. You can fancy she says,"Katy J did," "She did," or "She didii't." The ? minute it is very dark they begin. g Soau the whole company are at work, y As they rest after each rubbing, it if seems as if they answered each other, h Did you know that bees hum from e , iinder their wings?? It is not the stir '? of those beautiful light wings that we Q ti^ar. It is the air drawing in and out of the air tubes in the bee's quick e Right. The faster the bee flies, the louder the humming is.?Sabbaths School Visitor. I- Publish a Keal Newspaper. 6 nnririf an nf mnrA than * thirty years in the newspaper business, e writes R. F. Carlton, I have experie mented with and seen others experie ment with hundreds of plans and e ichemes to increase country newspa> per circulation, and in rny opinion no scheme or plan will amount to very ? much unless it has first, last and all _ the time a good, solid foundation in e the way of a first-class newsy newspa|. per, a newspaper whose subscribers >- feel that they get their full money's ?, north. n n Athletic Japanese Women. ^ Advocates of the physical equality of women and men might find arguments 1 to support their theory among the Japanese. The girls and boys wrestle on equal terms, and the women are said to be as strong as the men?supple, t- 'bounding with the vim of life and B graceful in every line." The Japanese 6 (voman seeks abundance of air, drinks ^ pure water and g*es out of doors the tf prst thing in th? morning. Consequentf ty consumption is a rare disease. Ine stead of living in overheated rooms y they merely add extra clothing to what J r? they wear already. "Women always ' Dave come time for recreation.?Chi* eago News. 3 i s Keason and Its Lack. n Cholly?"But?aw?why do you say A you don't like my face?"' Miss Pert?"Because."' Cholly?"Ah! but that's cot a pwoper e answer; there's no reason in that."' s Miss Pert?"Well, there's none in r- your face, either."?Philadelphia Press, s a There is more Catarrh in this section of the s country than all other diseases put together, 5- and until the last few year9 was supposed to " be incurable. For a great many yean? doctors .+ pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to j? cure with local treatment, pronounced it in11 curable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a r constitutional disease and therefore requires 8 constitutional treatment. Hall'9 Catarrh n Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., 8 Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure ' on the market. It is taken internally in doses froinlOdropstoateaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars e and testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney <fc Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. o Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation e e Didn't Need Money. r Dixon?"How is your artist friend e getting along in New York?"' y Tomson?"Oil, splendidly:*' Dixon?'"Have you heard from him?"' , Tomson?"No; that's the reason I it know lie's prospering.''?Detroit Free ' Press. 3 f To Core a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money it it fails to cure. | E. W. Grove's signature is on box. 25c. i- I Ants are the reo.'t brainy of all creatures c. i in proportion to size. | Mrs. Winslow'sSoothing Syrup forehildren teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma? tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c.abottle t The town of Charlottenburg, near Bere lin, has an open-air school. Piso's CureforConsumptionisaninfailible i medicine tor coughs and colds.?N. W. Sakcei-, Ocean Grove, N. J.. Feb. 17, 1900. s j : e The sale ot auiomcDiies in r?u&v.a js e growing rapidly. o A Guaranteed Core For Pile*. s Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Pi lea. Druggists will reiund money ii Pazo ] Ointment tails to cure in 8 to 14 days. 50c. , A pirce of lancewood an inch square will ! 0 ftand a strain of 2000 pounds. iPUTN AM Color more good* brighter and faster colore than any salts. Att dealer or w* will send post paid at Kc a pac) v. f BISHOP OWE! AND I II Ministersof All Denominati Join in Recommending Pe-ru-na to tha People. Public speaktng especially ex\ the throat and bronchial tube catarrhal affections. Breathing the air of crowded a blies, and the necessary exposure to air which many preachers must makes catarrh especially prevalect a their class. Peruna has become justly popular a them. |??????m????4?m???ii?????44 ; The Bishop's St ? L. H. Halsey, Bishop C. M. E. i "I have found Peruna to be a J with this terrible disease for n ? been using Peruna, which has reli< { "I have tried many remedies * for them, but I found, nothing ? great medicine, Peruna. ? '4 7 ??rp that Peruna 1a * but it Is also a blessing to snffe j "Every individual who suffers t a magnificent and sovereign remed Peruna is the most prompt and remedy for catarrh that can be take Many a preacher has been abi meet his engagements only berau: keeps on hand a bottle of Pe-n ready to meet any emergency may arise. How He Got Even. "Yes, I used to be in the insur business. I once got a man to out a $50,000 policy only about a y before be happened to be killed, was a mighty hard chap to land, I had to talk to him for nearly months before I got him." "That was tough on the comp I suppose you regretted, after it all over, that your persuasive po' were so good." "Um?no. I never felt sorry aboi I married the widow."?Chicago ord-Herald. As illustrating a difference in ( acteristics it is officially noted twice as many people in Scotland i Ireland choose to go to prison for n: offenses rather than pay a fine. In land they pay the fine. Three tons of Epsom salts and 1, 000 pills were used in the hospital London last year. FITS permanently cured. Nofltsornen ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's C XerveRestorer,?2trial bottleand treatise Dr.E. H Elike,Ltd., 931ArchSt.,Phila ?r _ _ TLp^ are 12,520 boys and 4059 gir tne industrial schools of Great Britai Mother Gray's Sweet Powders For Chil Successfully used by Mother Gray, nui the Children's Home in New York. Feveriehness, Bad Stomach. Teething orders, move and regulate the Bowels Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimo: At ail druggists. 2oc. Sample mailed P Address Alien S. Olmsted, Le Roy, X. The Swiss authorities are ahout to : khaki for soldiers' uniforms. Golf in Lakewood. Drag hunting or following the houn a cros6-cotmtry chase has long been i lar at Lakewood. All hunts are in cl of experienced authorities, who use < precaution against accident. The coming across a field with a pack of he in full cry affords one of the most pi esque spectacles known to sport. 1 wood, indeed, is an idyllic spot in whi< pass a fall or winter vacation or ev short sojourn of a few days. The golf offers exceptional facilities, and the are among the finest in tne country, petent green-keepers are always at to instruct those unfamiliar with the and keep in repair the implements o: .sport. The Country Club is anothe ganization with a large membership. ! polo has added much to the fame of ] wood. Probably the most perfect course in the country is that at Geo Court, the estate of Mr. George Gould. During tournaments the p eges of the grounds are thrown open t public. Facilities for every kind of i are found and the roads in and ar the town are kept in perfect conditioi riding, driving and cycling. The natu the sand and gravel underlying the so fords the best possible drainage, so there is never any standing surface t f/\ lia mm U11U UClJil piicno UV/CC iiUb liu> v. cv w? ^v... against. A booklet full of informatic interest concerning Lakewood. inch accommodations and rate? at the nu ous hotels am! boarding houses, nia; had free on application to C. M. iiur P. A.. New Jersey Central R. R., 143 erty Street, New York City. There are 2,500,000 acres of cork fo in Algeria. I The Great N | ST. I iA rnn t J* I OIL FADEL other dye. One 10c package colore alii, wool a Itage. Writ* for free booklet?How to Dye, Ble ~ v ' M 'C-'f? I S HEALTH 1 EC Tn DP.DII.NA ^ "1 1 The Friend s of Pe-ru-na. Ij Despite the prejudices of the medical, HB profession against proprietary medicines. rS? (.the clergy have always maintained strong confidence and friendship for Pe- &S f Tirana. They have discovered by personal e? perience that Peruna does all that if claimed for it. long Tribute to Pe-ru-na. f , Church, Atlanta, Ga., writes: I great remedy for catarrh. 1 have 8Uffered* tore than twenty years, until since I have J :ved me of the trouble. r , and spent a great deal of hard-earned money ? ' >Js so effectual in the cure of catarrh as the ? | 3 not only a triumph of medical science, J ^ ;f| ring humanity. *" ? I i -with respiratory diseases will , find Peruna * y."?L. H. Halsey, Bp. C. & Church. ? sure We have on file many letters of recom a. mendation like the one given above. - We le to can give our readers Only a slight glimpse se/ie of tne vast number of: grateful letterj una, Dr. Hartman is constantly' receiving, ia that praise of his famous catarrh remedy, Pe' runa. A Highly Proper Perioa. p.nce ^ remarkable admission was madfc \ at an Inquest yesterday <at Llanelly on. veek DOay 01 a railway servaui uarngix .xje Sutton, -who died during Monday night too. witbout receiving medical attention. gix The widow said her husband was unconscious for some hours, but she did anj. not fetch a doctor, because it-was not . 4a waj proper for a young woman to be seen out at 10 o'clock at night. She could not do it even to save her husband's % lt life, neither could she fetch his parents, p ' who lived in the next street?London Telegraph. * ;har[10,000Plants for I6C. J 11 n Ar More garden! and farms ore planted to 11 nor ^k^^SaJxer's 8eeds than any other in T?n IVv America. There is reason for this, ^ 19 ? /vw thA nrOi ***- HI 1 WO OWU UTCr i?,ww w.b r. ductlon of oar warranted ?e?<u. ^ntVJQla order to Induce yoa to try them, we make you the following unpro- gKV 000," fcr-xni Fo*1B 0**t9 PomfpmM 2S I . 17""TS\ \1000E*H7, l?4Ja?udUleUtkfH, flnO IS Of Wtf I f I2000 Flat Jaley Tantp*, V"XjSij ml If / MOO niuMkUc oiM7, / JJt / 2000 ItlchJIuUjLeUse*, flD i / ) 1000 Bars LomIou Kadbktt, ?!H '0US- L>/y 1000 (Uerlsmdj Brilliant riow?n. treat H A Above seven packages contain roffl- 3* . . A dent seed to grow 10,000 plants, fnr- luf )iree niching baiheU of brilliant /2R ., Pa B flower* and lotsand lotsof choice mtB vegetables, together with ourgreat lmR , H catalog, telling all about Flowers, WP iS in Boses, Small Fruits, etc., all for n K n J Wo In stamp* and this notice, uRJk^ Big 110-page catalog alone, 4c. ?ir*n Tfmlnxh a. SALZER SEED CO, IVull I jy/iJ A-c-L- Croaae, Wis. LAZY LIVER ,doPl "I find Casearets so good tlat I would ait be without them. I was troubled great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascarcts Candy Cathartic 1 fetl very much better ;n I shall certainly recommend them to my frieMs as the beat medicine I have ever seen." jopu- Anna Bszinet, Osborn Mill No. 2, Fall River, Mais. large -very hu5l wW% Best For Kir- M Tte Bowels ^ . | lim n/i/iti nlh ch to m MJIl"afia mVwIrWWvVVlr links CANDY CATHARDC : the Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, Do Good, r or- Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, Uc. 25c, 60c. Here! p . sold In balk. Tho genuine tablet stamped COC. f Y'.' Guaranteed to care or your money back. -A^e" Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 6of rgian ANNUAL SALE. TEN MILLI04 BOXES Jay ? riviln *>.? RIPA58TABULES are the best dy? u ue pop*la medicine ever made. A luasport k dred millions of them have been sold ound n for breath, sore throat and every Ulaer* TP nf arliln? (mm a dijordered irtociaoli . . are relieved or cured bj Rlpani Tab lj at- 1?1 HJ??. One win generally kitv nun thif iritilD twenty minutes. Theflve-cent packa>olseaou^U , for an ordinary occasion. AU druggiat? sell thaxz. . i-ater . rded 34 Thompson's Eye Water mer- ? V be ? Li": L1D Tfl CORES WHERE Ml ELSE FAILS. KW mm Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good- CflC VI . rvj In time. Sold by druggists. nil . res-s | ^g^MM^jforjnnsHWfijp onesuch Remedy f The old ir.onk cure, strong, x straight, sure, has for a large ? part of a century battled with anH rnnanered ? AchesandPains 1 the world ever. Price 25c. $ and 50c. X I, i ESS DYES , nd cotton ?qojJlv well ana Is gn*mnt0eU to stIt* i?rtect r?ftcb and Mix Colors. MOW HOE DRUG CO. UnloarUl*. Mo.