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' New York City.?The shirred klmom Hways is a favorite, and Is exceedingly becoming to young girls. This one ii eminently simple and is available foi countless materials, but as illustrated is made of pale blue eballie figurec with black and white, the bands bein* of silk. Ribbon, however, is mucl liked for trimming and always make! an easier finish. The kimono consists of fronts am back, -which are shirred at the ehoul ders, and arranged over a plain yok< ' A LAI E DEJ1QN I and finished "with the band -which i: rolled over and forms a collar at th< back. The sleeves are one piece each gathered at their upper edges. The quantity of material required fo the medium size is eight yards twenty one, six and one-half yards twenty seven, or four and three-eighth yard! forty-four inches wide, with one ant five-eicrhth vards of silk or four ant one-half yards of ribbon four inchei wide for bands. Rich Evenin; Effect*. Brilliancy is the keynote. Should th< same color pace that has recently pre vailed continue, we shall outshine th< tropical birds in a short time. At th< balls that have been given since th< holidays, dresses of fairly barbaric gor geousness have dazzled the eyes of th( old-fashioned contingent who best like ?>ft pale grays, when they depart froir white. Though often more becoming all this more or less neutral dressing does not lend beauty to a ball roonc scene. There must be contrasts if tht icene is to be brilliant. And not rnerelj contrasts! Black and white contrast Tet a black-and-white ball would be a mourning ball. There must be con frasts of brilliant colors.?Washington Times. Hat Price* Lower. Hats are reduced to very low prices, and even in the best New York shops beautiful models are sold at the cus tomer's price. For $10 the bandsomeshats are purchasable. Five dollars anc even three buys pretty toques and tur bans for which $1S and $20 were for merly asked. These hat sales are rec ommendfd, for the materials alone *n often worth the price, and many of th< models may be worn far into thi snrme. and even another season. Coiffure Ornaments. Coiffure., ornaments are numerous End as a rule rather expensive Wreaths are very becoming to womei whose features are classic. The re( gold type looks especially well in darl green leaves. There are many jewele< combs and pins, real jewels being oftei used. The imitations are clever and ai they are skilfully set their effect is al that could be desired. ) A Balny D?y Accessory, T A rainy day accessory worth owning 5 is an umbrella to put in a dress suit r case. The handle and the top piece are both hinged, and the umbrella folds into a remarkably small space. Every woman knows what a nuisance an umbrella is when traveling. The suit case is heavy, one's skirts or hat often demand the other band, and the umbrella is usually the last straw that makes a journey a burden to the flesh. Co&tg and Walttroati. In street costumes the coat with a vest is the newest and smartest; even i the blouse coats are showing vests. In separate jackets the covert cloth is the smartest for this season of the year, and these are longer than here- J *" Al?*? ' ?-il? ?? 4 V? i r_ I toiore, TOeir lengm > arming uviu u...- , ty to thirty-four inches, depending on the height of the wearer. Unfortunately, these have many cheap imitations. Tip-Tilted Hntu, I An example in these tip-tilted hats was a charming little sailor in a rough violet colored straw. A thick twist of ribbon in a paler shade of violet encircled the crown, which was dented in sharply where it met the narrow I brim. A little to the left of the back j appeared a mass of violets in several I shades of color. j Tained Skirts Again. For the spring suits we will have the j j gigot sleeve, the trained skirt and shir- j ring. Every skirt has a train except | * the plainest of rainy day suits. I Blouse Waist With Shield Collar. j * tuoiirp waists made full below | ? bt nflT ruunm | PfMBKlltiU s smoothly fitted yokes are among the ? novelties of the season and are promi, ised extended vogue. This one is exceptionally attractive and is made r slightly open at the throat over the - shield collar, but this last can-be omit - ted whenever desirable and the waist 5 left open at the front, forming a tiny 1 V. In the case of the model the maI terial is changeable blue and green 3 chiffon taffeta, simply stkched vrlth : corticelli silk, but all those that are soft enough to render the fulness be coining are equally correct. ? The waist consists of the fitted lin. ing, which can be used or omitted, as ? desired, fronts, back and yoke. The : ? waist is gathered at both upper and ? lower edges and can be made to blouse . at both back and front or at front ? only, as may be preferred. The chemi? sette and collar are arranged under it, i closing at the back. The sleeve6 consist of the full portions, gathered at i both upper and lower edges, and the 1 deep gauntlet cuffs. At the waist is J a shaped belt. I The quantity of material required for i the medium size is four yards twentys one, four yards twenty-seven, or two J and three-eighth yarda forty-four Inches wide. I THE PULPIT. 12 io to AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY tL THE REV. EDWARD NILES.: al be m , Subject: "Kccent Kelijjlons Revltali." Brooklyn, N. Y.?The Rev. Edward lil j J^iles, pastor of the White (Bushwick G | Avenue Reformed) Church, preached 34 | Sunday on "The Recent Religious Re- cc J vivals." The text was from II. Samuel si j v:24: "When thou hearest the sound of m I marching in the tops of the mulberry ca ! trees, then thou shalt bestir thyself; tb j for then is Jehovah gone out before b* | thee to smite the host of the Philistines." Mr. Niles said: ro David and his little kingdom were S< sore beset by the enemy. Former vie- fc tories had only brought them tempo- si rary relief. Many of the troops were tt discouraged. Very likely some advised patching up terms of peace with the to Philistines which would stop the per- G petuai conflict, even if much would p needs be yielded. It was a crisis, and in David did the best thing possible. fc He inquired of Jehovah. The reply 1,1 of the oracle was a strange one. The d< order was not to go openly against the foe, but to equip his forces, and. thor- f? oughly prepared for attack, put them in ambush opposite a grove of mul- c? . berry trees. Then, when the sound of h< ; an angel army was heard rustling over n< j the tops of those branches, to bestir ai himself, and, according to the account tr i .?anirt1np ota allf tn hflttlo PTrtW Si IU VUIVU1V.1CD, &\J vy V4 w *.v i.v. ? thrilling the promise which followed P< the direction, "for then Jehovah is gone out before thee to smite the host D of the Philistines." w He did as he was told. Jehovah led d< the way, the Israelites followed. Both ec 6miting together won the battle. David P* had faith to adopt God's plan of at- hi tack. His faith was manifested by his t* Works. The result was glorious peace, m J Preparation. Expectation. ReaJiza- pi tion. These three words tell the story, si I believe this tale from the Old Book L is full of lessons to us. Certainly we C. are hemmed in by influences threaten- tt ing most dangerously our spiritual in- cl dependence. The work of the churches re in Brooklyn is not going forward as it tt should. Defensive tactics are- too w much in evidence. tt Many in our ranks are seeking after re compromise with evil, the abandonment of our spiritual integrity, accom- ai modation to the demands cf the world. L The times are desperate and earnest le souls have followed the example of the S< Shepherd King, inquiring cf Jehovah pi .what shall be done. 01 The answer has come, in no tfncer- tt tain tones. Equip yourselves with ri shields of faith, swords of the Spirit, breastplates of righteousness, helmets tt of salvation. Omit no preparation, sj Expect great things. When thou hear- tt #>st th*? sound of heavenlv allies march- u< ing, bestir thyself. Strike, "for I, Jehovab, am with you." a] Christians nave been hearing such gi messages for months: Sermons, pray- hi er meeting talks, Sunday-school in- Si struction have laid ever deepening em- fa phasis on the necessity of being alert to the help from heaven which will ^ warrant the command, "Go forward." C. Now I believe it has come. As one of w the captains of the sacramental army se I repeat the order, "Forward, march!" w During the past week my desk was le strewed with clippings from both re- cl ligious and daily papers telling of the er "sound of marching in the tops of the re mulberry tre'es." T "Gypsy Smith!" It is an outlandish m name. But it tells of a man who sue- A ceeded where Rhodes, Kruger, Milner bi and all the other "statesmen" signally ef failed. From London comes the echo of the y< angel's footsteps, forcing back its sin, w shame and poverty that the churches, ti charging shoulder to shoulder, may carry in triumph the cross of Christ to f? the very darkmost heart of that me- ai tropolis of Christendom and Satan. With thrilling distinctness I hear the Ci reverberations or tne marcmng in liverpool. Almost incredulous I ask, "Can w it be, in this twentieth century, when th we have been so often assured that re- vj I vivalism is dead, that the greatest com- sa mercial centre of the greatest commer- w cial nation of the world is stirred as sc never before in its history by the story tl] of Jesus?" "Yes," comes the answer from many to witnesses. Policemen have strangely S] few calls to take people to the station- w houses and are bringing them instead ui to gospel meetings, wrestling with a them in prayer, rejoicing with them in i salvation. One hundred and fifty 01 j street car conductors are bound to- m | gether in a praying band. Messenger tr boy9 and brokers in the Stock Ex- h< I change talk with each other of God e? and join together in prayer. "J The very whistling on the streets is "< of gospel hymns. Twelve thousand i neonle nicht after nicht back the Tour- H nament Hall to hear and give their testimonies, led by a recently notorious 0 ! prize fighter and gambler. Nearly 5000 have publicly given their 0 hearts to Christ in that one city and 57,000 in England since our American evangelists, Torrey and Alexander, began their meetings in England. . | The sound of marching on thfe top of a the mulberry trees has been so loud in Wales that even our daily papers this ' side of the Atlantic have heard, and , found place to record it in their col- t umns. In a little Welsh town, eight miles from the nearest railroad, a Christian Endeavor meeting was being . held a few months back. The leader urged upon those present to tell their own spiritual experience, when a fourteen-year-old girl, who had never taken r. any part before, startled every one by .. rising with beaming face. "O, I love r, Jesus with all my heart," were her only words. The effect was electric. ? i One after another testified to the greatness of their sins and the infinitely w err* a a tor r?rnn fnoco r\f Phrlct'e nar/?Ati * The religious contagion spread to other ei ^villages in fast widening circles. or Evan Roberts, once a ringleader in debauchery, had recently given up coal mining to study for the ministry, and came home for a little rest. He was 'n inspired by the changed life of* his w town to proclaim the gospel with a 011 power unheard of in a theological stu- Sc dent. Scores came to him for advice, tli whom he led to the cross. His services i)1 were asked for here, there and another lik I place. Wherever he went the way had an been prepared by faithful effort. No be I halls were large enough to accommo- at date the crowds, and the meetings it were held out of doors in many places, th i Every Sunday-school, every Christian ed Endeavor meeting became a revival Ei meetinsr. The nreachers were dis-es- w< tablisbed. The people conducted tiie at gatherings as they saw tit. Songs. ex- im hortations, prayers followed or mingled in with one another, yet all without such confusion as would mar the one impression of each meeting?the evident presence in power of the Holy Spirit, hu Such a Christmas time has never been fr< known in Wale?e. Instead of drunken- yo ness, hymn singing; tbe theatres de- A. serted their Dlavers stranded, reliclous < conversation the prevailing topic, sa- ba locns with no patrons. tio i Q he revival is distinctively ethical, soi ! cot firmed enemies of years standing thi reconciled in the meetings, old and It forgotten debts remembered and paid, mj the bacef"! effects of the great strike sa< sappearing as master and workman j bor together in bringing to tlie anx- J us hpnoh the unsaved or as they seek gether for light and peace. "It is ie most remarkable spiritual upbeavthis generation has witnessed. I ;lieve it is destined to leave a perma;nt mark on the history of our couny. It seems to be rocking Welsh life ie a great earthquake," says Lloyd eorge, a member of Parliament. Over [,000 people are already enrolled as inverts, and the movement shows no gn of abatement. "Will this revival arching of (iod's army cause Ameriins to bestir themselves? Is it not ie sign from God that we go out to ittle?" Such was the query that came to a inister of the Reformed Church in :henectady. He rallied the Christian irees of that city, and their first onaught was successful beyond what ley had faith to expect. , That city is full of men and women i-rtnv who have made their peace with ' od. of those "who are asking. "What ust 1 do to be saved?" and, equally ' aportant, of those who hare already i und an answer to the question, kVhat can I do for others," .and are )ing it. Practically every church in le place has been stirred as never be- , >re in this generation. From the economically and politicly distracted State of Colorado I 1 ?ar the tramp, tramp of inarching! 1 )t now of deported miners, nor of J med troops quelling riots. It is the j ead of God's messengers, their feet i lod \*ith the preparation-of the Gos- j *1 of Peace. The level-headed business men of enver declared over and over a few eeks back that, whatever might be )ne elsewhere, a revival there was in>nceivable. What did I read in the iper a week ago yesterday? Five i undred business houses closed for | ro hours thatemployersand employed | jght attend prayer meetings! The , ablic schools, the municipal buildings'' lut because of the revival. The State egislature, more interested in Jesus hrist than in deciding who should be te Governor, adjourning to attend lurch in a body cn a Friday! Alady new Christians are numbered by - Al Af nAAnla . le IUUUSUUUS UUU ujiiiuicuo ui ho had kept their church letters in leir trunks have presented them and newed their Christian work. Are not such sounds of marching of igel's footsteps in South Africa, in ondon, in Liverpool, through the ngth and breadth of Wales, in :henectady, in Denver, in many aces,. signals that we should bestir jrselves and go down with them to te attack? I can interpret these gloous facts in no other way. Other places have been freed from le thralldom of indifference to things jiritual. Why should not we? Is lere any reason -why the work should >t commence now, quickening the fro;n, illumining the darkened, lifting J up to a higher plane of thought, ving juster conceptions of responsility, causing us to act with wiser reird for the glory of God and the welire of sculs? The only reason lies in ourselves, fho votes against a revival? The bristian who prays not for it, who orks not for it. When I see a vacant iat in the prayer meeting or church, hen I see a class in Sunday-school ' ft without a teacher, a healthy | lurch member who is not aiso a wors- i , 1 say: "There is a vote against a I tvival." How do you vote? Yes? hen all you need to do is to use the eans. The first is self-examination, m I, as a professed Christian, a *ight and shining example of tlie benits of being a Christian? The second means is prayer. Begin )ur first conscious moment of the day ith a "God, pour out Thy spirit on ie white church." Pray during the day, though your ?t may be walking and your eyes e open. A certain place in the dome of the apitol is called the whispering galry because a word, even though only hispered there, is distinguishable in ie farther corner of the rotunda. The irious meetings for prayer in this inctuary are the whispering galleries here are most quickly heard the lund of the marcning in me tops ui te mulberry trees. The third means Is joy. According i our faith it be done to us. The Holy 3irlt never failed to come where He as confidently expected. The simple, interrupted joy of Evan Roberts is striking phase of his spiritual power. So far as equipment is concerned, ir preparation for the sound of arching in the tops of the mulberry ees is complete. Because we have jard it in so many directions and our ipeotations have become realizations, shall we go out to battleV" iod has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat: e Is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat. be swift, my soul, to answer Him; be jubilant, my feet! ur God is marching on." The Guiding of Providence. Being forbidden to preach tbe Gospel Cape Town, Barnabas Shaw bought yoke of oxen and a cart, and putting 8 goods into the w^gon, be and bis ife seated themselves therein, and >aded the lowing kine toward the inrior of the country, not knowing hither they went. Thus they jour?yed on day after day, till they had aveled 300 miles. On the twentyventh day of their Journey they enmped for the night. They discovered company of Hottentots halting near em. On entering into communica>n with them, they learned to their itonishment that this band of heathis, headed by their chief were jour>ying to Cape Town in search of a issionary to teach them "the great ord," as they expressed it. Had ther party started a half day earlier later they would not have met. Spiritual Life. It is possible for the Christian to live this world and not be contaminated ith it. "In it, but not of it." Some ie tells of a curious little spider in luth America that has a home under e water. It has the power of formg a bubble about itself in which, :e a diving bell, it sinks to the bottom id will remain there for hours, living low, but breathing the air from love. When it comes to the surface is found to be perfectly dry, not e slightest moisture having penetrat. the atmosphere in which it lived, fen so may the believer be in this arid so surrounded by a heavenly mosphere that evil will not contamate him.?The Rev. T. M. Fothergill, Homiletic Review. Pertinent Sayings. rr*#*?*. at. T a?i1 /In ns\i hn in Q * 1 illL UI1 IUC ijuiu, U<; livi, i/\- -a* ? irry; let God guide; do not go 02 in jnt, and try to take the Lord -with u?that is leading the Lord.?Sydney Selwyn. 3pe of the leading Methodist bishops s said that Horace Bushncll's definin of faith, as 'the recumbence of a ul that is a sinner upon another soul it is a Saviour" is "almost inspired." certaiulv is more inspired than Jerer Taylor's definition: "Kaith is the irifico of the understanding to fiod.'! ) Boaveiilra From Nantucket. They were waiting for a fresh deck ; Df cards and some other things and \ one of them felt moved to say: "Those < Nantucket people must find It pretty s tough to'be completely shut off from \ civilization two or three weeks every j winter." "Huh!" grunted a man across | the table, "you don't know the Nan- \ tucketers, do you? At any date, you | miss their point of view. They twist j the situation plum around and figure s that it's pretty tough on what little j civilization there is out of their bloom- j ing Island to be shut off from them. 1 The boot's on the other leg. In their 5 opinion, unless you were born and S brought up in Nantucket you're no J great shakes. They'll tell you that j when they're icebound there's no end ? of excitement on the mainland because I aobody can get to them, but they don't ? want you to suppose for a moment that !; they're anxious to get to other folks, !; and there's no make-believe about it ! either. And it isn't that they haven't ! seen tho rest of the world, for they !; have. Thev're lust satisfied with them- i selves and their surroundings. "What's > more, they're cute In the head, those ? natives. Ever go into that heirloom ? shop cf theirs on the main street of the ^ village? They've sold enough Nantucket warming pans and shirs' clocks and spinning wheels and foreign idols in that store to stuff the British Museum twicc over, but the stock never runs low; it's a high-tide stock summer after summer. There isn't a rich family anywhere that can't boast of a Nantucket relic or souvenir made In New Jersey and stained with age?or stain. If you've a notion that those I mariners and descendants of mariners I on that sand waste allow the joke's on . them when a steamer can't plow her way through to them, you want to talk with them."?Providence Journal. i Mad Fight of Trapped Eagle. Jonas Nester, the phenomenal trap per, or uryviue, naa a nerce comDai ; with an eagle on Tuesday. He had caught the big bird in a trhp, but the imprisoned bird attacked him and sunk < Its talons deep into his flesh. ' The heavy chain attached to the trap was all that prevented the eagle flying j into Nester's face. He finally killed ! the bird, which measured seven feet j two inches from tip to tip.?Kutztown Correspondence Philadelphia Record. i How to Jndge Hlin.' . The man up for larceny had admitted his guilt when apprehended; but at the j trial, the Green Bag says, his youthful j counsel defended him with great ob- | siinacy and unnecessary brilliancy, i "Gentlemen," said the judge, regard- i ing the jury with a benevolent smile, < "the prisoner says he is guilty. His j counsel says he is not. You must de- \ c-ide between them." Then, after an j effective pause, the judge added: ] "There is one thing to remember, gen- j tlemen. The prisoner was there and 1 his counsel wasn't." ] Fresh Air Cure. t n jiesieruuj ttiitrruwu auwaiu kj. Schmidt, of Appleton, and William I Odenbrett, the well-known piano man. i of Milwaukee, went up to their well < equipped summer cottage at Page's ' Point, on the Fox River, to do a little hlaek bass fishing through the ice. j They were very successful, and before retiring for the night they filled the 1 stoves with wood. The fires went < down, however, before morning, when the thermometer registered twentynine degrees below zero. Mr. Oden- ' brett awoke and found that one of his ears was frozen solid.?Chicago InterOcean. 1 HAD TO GIVE UP. Snflered Agoniei From Kidney Disorders Until Cored by Doan'i Kidney Pills. George W. Renoff, of 1953 North Eleventh street, Philadelphia, Pa., a man of good rep| 1 ing, writes: "Five I | utation>nnd stand| t.JTll I years ago I was ii< SLv?& oSufl suffering so with georgf w. kenoff. swollen," and I had no appetite. When doctors failed to help me I began using Doan's Kidney Pills and improved until my back was strong and my appetite returned? During the four years since I stopped using them I have enjoyed excellent health. The cure was permanent." (Signed) GEORGE W. RENOFF. A TRIAL FREE ?Address FosterMilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. A* the Twig is Bent Little Elizabeth was a scientist's daughter, and when she was taken with measles she heard a good deal about germs and microbes. One evening, some time after her recovery, she heard her mother singing a lullaby to baby Jack. "Oh, mamma! you must not sing that. You sang it to me when I had the measles, and there may be microbes in it."?Harper's Magazine. [Miciori $ ^<1 -a Cheaper than kerosene. All care and damage from lamps avoided. tJOHli 96-HO Cen1 BHnBHBHHMHI L This Pretty [ | ? Girl Saved MISS FLORENCE KE Miss Florence E. Kenah, 434 Maria street, "A few months ago 1 caught a severe and remained (here t>o persistently tha cine without benefit, until my digestive and back bejan to ache severely andfrt "I teas adviacd to try Ferunx, and o sick that I was ready lo try anything, once, and 1 f elt that I had the rl jht mec I was completely restored and have 6nJ "I now have the greatest/aith in JPei ?>, ,? m The cold wind hi B?war? o? and in, f8^8nh th Contracting Catarrh. ftn^ mud ?* ????ter are especially hi conducive to catarrhal derangements. Few uf women escape. Upon the first symptoms of catching cold Peruna should be taken. It fortifies the system against colds and catarrh. n, Pe-m-na for Colds and Catarrh. ^ The following interesting letter gives one le young woman's experience with Peruna: hs Miss Rose Gerking, a popular society re irnmnn nf Prnxun T*nin f Tnn trrit"Pjq "Recently I took a long drive in the a, country, and being too thinly clad' I caught jn i bad cold which settled on my lungs^and ^ which I could not seem to shake off. I U{ had heard a great deal of Peruna for colds and catarrh and I bought a bottle to tiy. ^ I am pleased that I, did. for it brought speedy relief. (It only took about two bot- ? ties, and I consider tnis money well spent. a "You have a firm friend in me, and 1 not only advise its use to my friends, bat d< /. r . At the Ni^ht School. Most pupils at night-school have a purpose which makes them more in:eresting than pnpils who study under w :he usual conditions. In each of the E imbitious men or women who seek b tardily what better circumstances n' would have given them years before is 01 i strong character, the kernel of a pa- a' thetlc story, the dignity of sentiment of T secret hope or shamed emul&tion. tl Pupils at a night-school are indeed the ^ rtinl'A/? atwI rtViAOnn S\T* fhov wmilfl Tint &] JiUttCU OUU V,UVOtU, VI IMVJ II vw?%* MV? be seen there at all.?Youth's Com- s\ ?anion. ^ Knew One of Them. "Of course, Mr. Sophmore, you are familiar with all the great plays,'" re- s< marked Miss Kulcher. "Now, do you a: consider Goldsmith's as clever as Sher- u idan's?" / no "Goldsmith?" replied Sophmore. "He h must belong to some minor college, a Why, there isn't another halfback in ii the country that can touch Sheridan of n )ur varsity."?Philadelphia Press. a T The new Cunarder, Caronia, has a a candy store "for American women." Sf W. L. DOUG tiuinu n* a FA A If* a AA Al I, mi W. L. Doiicloi S3.SO ihoci ure the |rea(fi world because of their excellent style, cwy t rlor wearing qualities. They are Jut as go< cost front S.VOO to Sf.OO. The only dlflerei W. L. Douglas S3.no shoe* cost sore to mi shape better, wear longer, and are of greater other S3. SO shoe on the murket to-day. W.I unices their value by stamping his ue^e ai bottom of euch shoe. LoolNar ft. Take no st OouglLts S3.SO shoes are sold through his owr the principal cities, mid by shiw aexilers every ter where you live, W.l*. Iiougl:; shoes are wit BETTER MAS OTHER HAKES AT AS] "For the last three years I hate uorn W.L Douglas t3J>0s only at good, but letter than ant/ shoe that I ever had. regi Cmu. L. Parrel!, Asst. Cathier The Capital National Bank Bop wear W. 1. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 ahoes better, hold thoir shape, and wear longer thai W.LDOUGLAS $4.00 SHOES CANNOT 3E EQUALLI W. L. Douglas uses Corona Cottskin in his S3.50 thi Colt u eontidered to be the finest patent leathe FAST COLOREYELETS W1LLNOT Wl W. L. Douglas bas the lares st shoe roj.ll order bin Ko trouble to get a fit by mail. 25c. extra prepays delii further information, urite for Illustrated Catalogue W.L.DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASSi I ??best rem v K/ir ^OUARANTEE^CUR^fb^l^owijI troubles, I blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foe I pafas after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and Q regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more I starts chronic ailments and long yeai-c of sufferic | C ASCARETS today, for you will never get .veil I right Take our advice, start with Case arete i I money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped ^bookl^^ree^Addjet^te^ling^RemedyCompar a Acetylene IB THE ABSOLUTELY SAF CLEAN and PERFECTI TO THE CONSUMED? Therefore it is tne one you If you are a bustler We wa Write for catalogue and par IRON PIPE FITTINC Supplies for Steam, Wat< Steam and Hot Watc OT SIM3MC03VS lire Street, W l% i-rum I Catarrh ' of the Lungs by m Pe=ru=na. If AH. ^ i Ottawi, Ont., Writes: ! cold, which settled on my lunjs 11 became alarmed. 1 took rn.ed.L* organs became upset and my head uiuently. it though 'I had little faith I felt so T* hi act or! tr?d>i4fkf fit Heine at Ixnt. WUhln three weeks of/ed. perfect health *lnce. ' runa." Florence E. Kenah. ' ive purchased several bottles to give to lose without the means to buy, and have sticed without exception that it has ought a speedy cure wnerever it has been "'{'>$!& >ed.'?Rose Gerbing. Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics. One reason why Peruna has found peranent use in so many homes is that ifc ?ntains no narcotic of any kind. Peruna perfectly harmless. It can be used any ngjth of time without acquiring a drug ibit. Peruna does not produce temporary suits. It is permanent in its effect. It has no bad effect upon the system, id gradually eliminates catarrh by rempyg the cause ?of catarrh. There are % multude of homes where Peruna has been sed on and off for twenty years. Such a - ./3S ling could not be possible zf Peruna cooined any drugs of a narcotic nature-. ^ Address Dr. Hartman. President of The -jM artman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. $9 All ^correspondence held strictly confi,) . . Colds, Cjracbt. Jodo01%a'.'r. Wc; i "One of the best ways of acquiring a $8 )ugh," remarked the doctor, "Is to mp n tionrr rornn flrnnnd vour throat. nveioped in the folds of a thick silk andkerchief or in a fur ^collar your eck becomes very hot while you are at in the open air and the skin will :tually become wet with perspiratioa hen you go into a room the temperaire of which is many degrees coldef urn is the skin of your heated neck, ad this cold air striking'your skin rellts In your getting a cold Indoors."? ew York Press. Profitable Invention. No one class of inventions has been , * nrrvfittihio tn hath tho manufacturer ad the inventor as musical instrulents and appliances for same. Nu- J| lerous improvements to the piano as been a source of large fortunes, nd various devices are at present belg continuously applied. Radically ew instruments possessing real merit re the inventions needed in this line. he public is always ready to adopt Imost anything new in both wifid and ringed instruments?Inventor. it seller* la the I Ml as those that I t I ^ :.'i. akt, hald?helr I ~ b viilnethun any W I ..Uou(lai(Diir- T!-: 'AkiJfrl M id price on^the > retail stores In wtirce. >'aaat- fm$S$TBM thin your reach. >rdlfu of price." _ Jnaianapons, jna. nltM^4*1 because they fit IflRfflQRQflHHI 1 other makes. w T^-T*zi j JgRffi [DAT ANY PRICE. B&EGEBSSS on. Corona uTTiTnCTji'TrTMl -Vv.j r produced. dak brassy |hnnft||i|mh , jsj ioeu 'in the world, K4 | fl|T|T||i|mCBI rery. ]f you desire of Spring Stylet. gfTlTTOin^raliTmHHnHITW *CHUSETTS wmmmmmBEim 111 BOWELS ^ il month, headache, indigestion, pimplca. w. ?? t^ttMln flAfi'* mftuA I U4iMUCD9? TVU^U /WW* IWWVW mj people than all otjer diseases together. It ft ig, No matter what aile you- start trJrfng Q and 3toy well until you get your bowels II oday uudev absolute guarantee to cure or fJ CCC. Never sold in or Ik. Scxnplo aart K iy, Chicago or New York. 50s . jj * ? ONLY | E, ECONOMICAL, LY SATISFACTORY ON THE MARKET. want 'o sell. | nt you for our Agent. $31 t'culars. 4^9 JS AND VALVES. er, Plumbing, and Gas, 5 ir Heating Boilers. I CO., ^ ^ ; 1