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New York City.?There is no eostumc that suits the active young girl better Ihun this one made in the favorite "Peter Thompson" or regulation style. It is martin effect, giriish ami very jemrally becoming, while at the same time it allows pcrfeet freedom and activity. In the illustration the dress is made of dark blue serge with the collar and shield of white and banding of alack ovfr white, but tbe model is a favorite one for linen and similar washable materials as -well as for icrge, flannel and the like, and it is correct in white as well as in color, so f? L/TIE DEJIQN E wl that many variciics ?-an be made. White flanuc? ami white p-.qm- are peoiliarly charming for the real warm weatner, ana >vu 11r? nicy nave uie disadvantage of soiling readily. also can be cleansed easily rund successfully. The dress consists of the blouse and the skirt. The blouse is drawn on over the head, there being only a slight opening at the front, and is finished with a big sailor collar, beneath which the shield is attached. It can be faced to form the yoke or left plain as preferred The sleeves are the favorite >nes that are gathered at the shoulders and tucked at the wrists. The skirt is cut in seven gores and is laid in a pleat at each seam, which is stitched for a portion of its length, pressed into position below. For a girl of fourteen years will be required eight yards of material twenty-seven, six and one-eighth yards thirty-two or four and a half yards forty-four inches wide with seven^glith yard twenty-seven inches wide tor collar and shield. A Simpler. A little simplet was a white linen jown with Irish lace. The skirt had )in tucks over the hips and wus tight itting. Just above the knees were hemstitched tueks. and hplow ,yus a broau stripe of lace quite twelve ticV.es deep. This was not an insertion )ut a wide lace witli r.n edge. Below t were two hemstitched tucks and lemstitched hem, giving the effect cf hree tucks. The short bolero jacket vas practically a cape of loco. Bcleath was a blouse of sheerest Persian awn, trimmed with tine tucks and Vaenciennes insertion. A Froiipli Touch. There are French touches which give i jceat deal of style to one's evening ;own. One of these is the tiny handkerchief with a flower embroidered in in- corner in colors. The bit of linen iliouid be very line and not much largk I I I or than a woman's band. In the corner j J there should he a bine flower, a pink I j of a green to match one's evening j gown. I Linen it Worn. Linen will probably be more worn j during the coming season than it was j In 1 year even, although Ihen it seemed ' as if the apex of popularity had been i attained. A gre;?t many dainty now j coats are already out, made of the va- j rious tints of white linen in very open j I patterns and lined with thin colored I silks, which set off tlie designs. The New PitriMOh, Anything more luxurious tfwn the j new parasols it is impossible to desire. A wealth of imagination lias liven lavisned on tircir designing, and of course tbey are the perfection of style anil construction. A very pretty conceit is j carried ov.t in a white taffeta parasol trimmed with u deep border ol' roses in ribbou work and embroidery. For Trimming. Valenciennes lace is used to trim tbo new organdies, which are very sheer in texture and exquisite in design. The lace is dyed to match tbe dominant color of the floral pattern. Ribbon j of a contrasting hue is combined v/ith the Vni ror trimming. Tnckci) BlonHe or Sliirt Wnlrt. | *The fancy sliirt waist. ov the waist J that takes an intefiuertiate place , between the severely plain model and the elaborate one, is always in de-. mand. It is useful for many occasions, jt is dainty and attractive without overfuss, and makes an altogether, desirable addition to tlie wardrobe. Illustrated is a most charming one that is 5 Y HAY flflNTON. ! . tucked in groups and trimmed -with bands of insertion that are applied between and which gives a dressy effect, while in reality it is so simpie that it can quite easily be made. In the case of the model the material is white lawn, but there are innumerable others which are appropriate, thin sides and light-weight wools being made af! ter tlie same manner as are the washable fabrics. 1 The waist consists of fronts awl back. There is a regulation shirt waist plrat at the front edge ben oath which the closing is made, and the narrow tucks are stitched in graduated lengths at tlio front, from shoulders to belt at back. The sleeves are the accepted ones that consist of fitted cuffs and with full portions above. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four arid a quarter yards twenty-one, tliree and five-eighth yards twenty-seven or two yards forty four Inches wide, with five and tliroc- < eighth yards of insertion to trim as ili lustra ted in tljp milium size & 'SCIENCE > J3 | A new incandescent lamp with a zir- j conium filament is announced in (icr- I many. Professor Weddin, a physicist, ' recently presented a lamp of this kind j to the Electro-Technical Society, of Co- j f Jogne. j 11 I r By means of the Jcprolin serum, a j j temporary cure has been effected in a ! ? number of eases under the eare of the v mission of lepers in India, and the pa- { * tlents are kept in special observation ! u wards. j Silicon, the most abundant metal in j d the world, has been unknown on ae- ; ** count of ttio difficulty of separating it j from oxygen, but tlie electric furnace H l:as now made it obtainable in quanti- t ties to meet any demand. J i a In Paris the Postoffice Department | T Is now using several electric mail ; * wagons which are designed to trans- j . port the mail matter Jn larger quanti- | ^ ties and at a greater ppeed than the i ^ old horse-drawn vehicles. ? e German newspapers speak of a nor,- o typewriting machine, which prints syl- e lables and short words instead of sin- ( pie letters, attains much greater speed j J1 than others, and, it is elaimed, will | revolutionize the art of typewriting. Three rare specimens of male tree g fern, Osmunda regalis. of more than t 1000 years' growth, have been pro- t cured for the Imperial Botanic Gar- s dens of St. Petersburg from the virgin 'J forests on the Black Sea coust, near 11 Adler. V A scientific man in Buffalo proclaims ^ that ho has discovered that -working tl about high voltage clectric apparatus / results in "grave disturbances of the v digestive organs, loss of appetite, dis b tress after eating," and a whole train 3] of dyspeptic symptoms. A report on the German traveling " schools for teaching scientific house- p keeping, cooking and farm work to u the women connectcd witli the agri- a cultural districts of Baden, Bavaria. Thuringen and Hesse declares tbcm to 0 have given great satisfaction. ? a Solar activity showed a great increase during the year ending May 10. n 1903, the sun not being free from spots A: n oinrflA /IoCa e?oi.'u tho Uvificli fl iv/i a oiugiv vict j ?jv oujo v?*\. - astronomer royal in his report. The & group of sun spots seen early this year P was tiie largest ever photographed at ^ the observatory. o Inventors are now turning their at- e tent Jon to the smaller details of the a automobile. One of the most recent ei patents is applied to a wire frame ar- 0 ranged to sweep the rubber tires. ? This, it is claimed, will avoid many ^ punctures, since it will remove tacks ^ and bits of glass as soon as picked up. C( si A NEW METAL. t( a Tantalum, a Bluish-White Sabstnncc, C< Possessing Kemarkable Proportles. p A few weeks ago electrical engineers P: got wind of a new incandescent lamp _ hailing from Germany. Now, as a rule, ' no one even raises an eyebrow at such !jj an announcement, for reputed improvements on incandescent lamps are an li old story, but the newcomer was unu- a Bual in that the light-giving filament ol was a plain metallic wire drawn from tantalum, an element of which most ir people had not even heard the name. Tantalum is an element which has ^ hnon l-nnnit. f/\r mnro limn Imlf fl npll- I v. v^v" ""v"" *"v*v 411 Uiry as a constituent of various rather is uncommon minerals, but nobody knew 01 it for anything more than a black pow- al Jer which could be obtained without I11 freat difficulty, but was of no use after one hud it. It has turned out, how- ? twr, that: when melted, in vacuo, to v' >vercome Its unpleasant trick of all- jJ jorbing nitrogen when hot, this black pi powder becomes a little ingot or real hi netal, which possesses very remark- sj ible properties. Metallic tantalum is a ol bluish-white substance, a little darker tn color than platinum, and about ? Ihree-quarters as heavy for the same :>ulk. It is, for a metal, an unusually rp bad conductor of electricity, and has t in extremely high melting point, both Je >f these properties being invaluable for T the purpose-intended. Besides this, it hi .'an he hammered into sheets and roiled or drawn into fine wire quite easily. * Its melting point is so high that it ^ ran be pushed to vivid, incandescence that makes an ordinary lamp look yel- th low. By this same token, the light is produced at a high efficiency, so that ci for the same energy used the tatalum *?i filament gives nearly double the light of a carbon filament. The former, by c' the way, increases its electrical resist unco as it gets hotter, while the latter has its highest resistance when cold The result, is a very curious difference -nof appearance when a tantalum and a in carbon lamp are turned on together so The latter takes a perceptible time tc reach full brilliancy, while the former ,w jumps to whiteness more quickly than . ' the eye can follow it?Harper's _ Weekly. Oi th ltclics of Old Virginia. "( Chree pieces of iron sheathing and ta one gun from the famous Confederate ru ironclad Virginia lie on the Roanoke J,? pier here to-day, having been dug up w, :>ff Lambert's Point by a mud machine. nc The old smooth bore and sheathing, which is several inches thick, are now is. the property of a junk dealer. The sh mud machine which is engaged in (5< deepening tlie harbor scooped up the H: relics, which are famous. The iron |n sheathings, which, it was explained by a marine man, covered the slanting ^ sides of the famous vessel, are about jgj fifteen feet in length. The gun is about in three feet in length, and the water an ' * ' *? ^">'1'* j\n H1 i iias upiJttrtmujr iimut; nu iiujuccowu vn the weapon.?Norfolk Landmark. Its W i The Man In tlio Irnn Musk, ^ A means lias been found lor oji.iI)- <]j| ling the sojourners on the Jersey sea- ca coast to defy mosquitoes. A mosquito pr. mask has been invented by some gen- res ius. It consists of a wire framework, 111 covered with netting, and when slipped over th? head protects that part of sa1 one's anatomy from the pests, giving wj one time to defend the other parts sh, rriore effellivelv. ?o: hi THE TULrPlT. hi b< I SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON B1 J DR. WILLIAM YOUNC CHAPMAN. j, w Knbjcct; Cburchgolng Abolished, ^ 1, Jtirooklyn, N. Y.?Dr. William Young ^ Jhapman, pastor of the Lafayette Aveiuo Presbyterian Church, Buffalo, reached Sunday at both services in ' he Central Presbyterian Church. In he morning he had as his subject Churcbgoing Abolished." The text was from Revelation xxi:22: "And 1 " aw no temple therein." Dr. Chapuan said: , Among many things in this sublime pocalypse of St. .lohn hard to be un[erstood thfre is one thing that stands ? ut with clearness and certainty, and ,. hat is the vision of the perfected . hurch, the ideal society. It is the a me church triumphant and perfect here that is militant and defective ^ lore. The same seuls that struggle f, nd suffer liore arc they that walk in (lr' vhite and wave palms of victory there, fr lore we see as in a glass darkly. , .'here they see face to face. Here we ;now in part, there they know as they f| re known. John had given to him a j ivine horoscope, revealing the consumuation and absolute perfection of the ssentinl characteristics of the kingdom f (Jod concentrated in the imperial " apital of the universe?the city of Jod. By every sort of figure and sjm- B *>1 are its glories set forth. And wo ?arn ;ws much about it by what is said icgatively as by what is said positive- * y. Thus we are told it has streets of old and gates of pearl and a sea of ,' lass and all the most costly and beau- g liui tilings or tnis worm, wnue an . hat is disagreeable ?pain, sickncss, ^ orrow, sin, death?is wanting there. 'here is nothing to hurt or annoy, no ' ight, no more sea, no temple. And it strikes us at first thought *is ery strange that there should be no emple, 110 central place of worship in . city which we are accustomed..Jo tlnk is altogether devoted to religion. . ind yet the text states a great truth rliich I want to treat broadly, and I ' elieve the teit contains easily tli^ sul> ' cct by which I have chosen to entitle ? tiis discourse, "Cburchgoing Abol5hed." The end being attained, the ?, leans are discontinued. Ilence there re no more churches, no times, nor laces, nor forms; no liturgies, nor rit- c< als; no ecclesiastical machinery such J* s we know here. ? Anrl cnr/tltr tliio mutt ne ti wnl- T omc announcement to many a tired <T hurchgoer in (His 'world who finds his y eligious duties more or less irksome, tr ml to many a non-churehgoer. who ^ oes not feel quite comfortable in his P: eglect of formal religious exercises. cJ lany there are who indulge an indif- c| event hope of heaven as a sort of si lohammedan paradise, -where they lay enjoy an eternal holiday, basking 1 the uncreated rays, drinking from P; nd bathing in the waters of the foun- P1 lin of life, eating the twelve manner it: f fruits and sailing on the glassy sea, P] lut they would hardly<be attracted to *c place -where this ceaseless round of A cclesiastical duties should go on for- st ver. Imagine such a one enjoying the clights of that glorious city, counting m lo towers thereof, marking well her 111 ulwarks and admiring her foundn- fc ons of jasper and sapphire and chal- b> 2dony and sardius and emerald and m lrdonyx and chrysolyte and beryl and P1 )paz and chrysoprasus and jacinth nd amethyst, when suddenly there 1,1 Dmos a peal from the golden bells and P' nnr ennl ho rr.iisf tnlcn himsolf flff to til rayers. ? Let such a one be comforted, for ohn says he saw 110.temple there, and is re dare to infer from that statement 01 lat there is no synagogue, nor meet- ** tg house, nor Sunday, nor formal re- tc gious exercise, "for the Lord God Al- rf fighty and the Lamb are the temple ^ r it." t0 It becomes us to inquire more closely 01 ito the truth involved -here. And:if -T hat John saw was the church trium- ai hant, If the conditions lie saw were le perfection of what is rudimentary ai ere, if the Holy City, New Jerusalem. ?* continually coming down from God at of heaven, then we ought to be relizing more and more on earth that a' mi verily condition. J11 I believe that condition is illustrated in y the progressive church of Christ on irth. Think for a moment of the ad- m antages wo have oyer the ancient ^ swish worshiper. He had his central w lace of worship. Three times a year J' e must make his pilgrimage to Jeru- fl1 ilcm, from even the remotest corner !U ' the land. Over many a rugged mile m ? must travel with his family and liiu leep and oxen for sacrifice and his ;nt and provision for Ills journey, in ^ der to perform his religious duties. 01 horo of .TovncnJnm wna tlir? tnmnlo. W here he expected to meet God, or at la ast there God would be propitious. P* here was the priest who could offer s'' s sacrifice and present his.confession w > God. There was the holy place "and le most holy place, the locua of the f0 ;wish worship. Even in far off lands, ne hen ho worshiped he turned his face bo ward the temple, as if his heart were {il terc, in any case. . })C Then, too, his daily devotions found 'n :pression in a most elaborate cercino- 1,1 al. There were divers washings, as S'l iere were multifarious causes of uneanness. There were tithings and us anifold offerings. There were sin of- a" rings and peace offerings, all assoated with infinite trouble to the worliper. These minute requirements ^0l ere infinitely multiplied by the Jew 01 the time of Christ and His apostles, i that Peter spoke of it as a yoke < vhich neither our fathers nor wc ere able to bear." T! Now it was immunity from these in lerable burdens tliat was the first ' eat practical boon of Christianity, ur Lord stated the prceious truth to Gr e "woman" at the well. Said she, )ur fathers worshiped in this iuoun- 1 iu (Terezim), and ye say that in Je- Its salem is the place where men ought worship." Jesus saith unto her, f Voman, believe Me, the hour cometh j ben ye shall neither in this mountain, W >r yet at Jerusalem, worship the ither. But the hour cometh and now So wiien tuc irue worsmpers snau worip the Father in spirit and in truth. Ki is a spirit, and they that worship < im must worship Him in spirit and truth." It was one of tbe first mean- ^*,c US of Christ's sacriOce, to abolish the mple. When He bowed His head in A), r*h on Calvary and said "It is finled," "the veil of the temple was rent twain from the top to the bottom," d the whole significance of the tomi service passed away. The temple J elf did not long survive the death of irist, and the ecclesiastical capital s<1" is soon destroyed. Henceforth the aR( lurch of God in the world was on a ten ferent basis. Henceforth Cod beme accessible without offering or iest, w. hout temple or a liar, and ir- ('01 jpeetive f locality. We are enjoying be a measure that rest which Christ ow me to give?rest from ceremoiiial J'01 rdens. We are living in the dispention of the spirit, anil the church is lerever the spirit moves men to wor- P* ip. Wherever the Holy Spirit has car no and planted the gospel of Christ sta the hearts of men. turuine their hea I loughts ami affections to (ioil, thei'C i3 10 euurca. It matters not whether it r> in Greenland's icy mountain" or In? ia's coral strand, it matters not hethor it be in gorgeous cathedral or 1 mountain cave. It matters not hether the worshiper he white or Inek, whether ho worship 011 his knees r on his feet or on his back, so long as e worship in spirit and in truth, hristii liity so far as it consists of a isible performance at all is the most a turn I and spontaneous outgo of the ligious instincts to Clod, and religious rorship is essentially a personnl comliinion with God, and in snch form nd place as is best suited to the woriiiper ami most iu accordance with the 'ill of Hod. Hence, yon will see, one of the prime liaracteristics of the church trinmphnt is perfect liberty. "Get religion," lid Augustine, "and do as you please." iy which ho meant if you truly get region you will always please to do ght. Paul means the same thing rlicn ho says, "If ye be in the spirit e are not under the law." And Jesus leant the same when Hp said, "Make .10 tree good and his fruit will be ood." And hence, the ideal Christian fe is perfectly -pontaneous. Obo ience.is not by compulsion of law, but y impulsion of love. "All-the law is alfilled. iu one word, 'Thou slialt >ve.'" We have hoard not a little about the consent of the governed,'' and wo --* ?MAtiA T'Iia cjf o f a. it: u&cjjr iu iJt'iii inuik:, iut ouuv. tent as it stands in lhat famous doculent wi-H not bear a literal application. ;ut there is good reason to believe iat our fathers knew what they were ilking about. If they bad said, "govrnment derives its potency from the onsent of the governed" they would ave been Tittering the exact truth, tatutes are inoperative until the subjets consent. Perfect society implies erfect acquiescence in the will of the aperior or law making power. The lore society progresses toward unity, ie simpler and more equable will gov;nment become, because the more genral will be the consent or acquiesence i the government. Paul says, "I conjnt unto the law that it is good," and ) the perfect society of John's vision ich man enjoys perfect liberty beiuse the will of the governor and the overned are in perfect correspondtice. Each individual does as he leases and at the same time does as [e pleases. And consequently there is perfect immunity. There is no discord, no attle for individual or sectional rights, 'ach one's right is the other's good, he community is dominated and uided by a common genius. Some sars ago a famous Hungarian orches a visited this country. It was a tusical prodigy. Not only could they lay gx^at quantities of the finest fission 1 music without notes, but )ul<! improvise from some simple mueal theme given them, each man ex>mporizing bis part by a sort" of comlon genius, producing a marvelous iece -of impromptu/.-orchestration as ?rfectly as if tb'ey were reading from the printed page. They bad layed so long together that they came > have a common musical genius, nd yet each man played his own inruraent in bis own way. In some such way tbe perfect comunity is characterized by perfect nity without uniformity. Each perirms bis own duty in his own way, lit is all tbe while in perfect harony with bis neighbor. Again, in tbe jrfected society there is no distincon between tbe religious and tbe secIan Here we have our times and laces of religion. We gather here in lis bouse of prayer, believing that od is present here as He is not in ;her places, as, indeed, He has promed to be. It is God's concession to ir limitations and infirmities. But is far from the ideal. We are apt i identify religion with tho means of 'lijrion. rather than religion itself. re get grace by our religious exercises i keep God's commandments in ali lr walks of life, and that is religion, ho members of the church triuipphit are equally religious every day of to -week and every hour of the day, id henco, church-going in our sense ' the "word, is forever abolished. In lat society, one does not need to say i his brother, "Know the Lord," for I shall know Him from the least to e greatest. There is no more preachg. "no temple therein." Once more; it is obvious that the ore faithful and devoted we are to io means of religion here the sooner e shall be fitted to do without them, our child, learning to play the piano, ids it hard labor to spell out note by )te, conforming to the rules and rudients of practice. By and by she will > beyond the rules. She will acquire e genius of the skilled performer, nrt the more diligently Ave observe ir religious duties here the sooner e shall get beyond them. The more ithful we are now to Hie times and accs of religious worship the sooner * " -' *-? - -.r7? *-Ti n -f cn/ii'nttr IUJ1 we UK ll.MU.V IU1 WUl hcrp all life is religious. Kaehariah hart that vision affes here John hart it, when he saw ' I-Ioli>ss to the Lo~*d" ioserihert on the Us of the horses and the pots.in e Lord's house, as sacred as tfi<? wis of the attar; yea, and every pot Jerusalem as holy as the vessels of e sanctuary. That was at least a impse of the templcless city of God. And now shall wo not ke?p before that ideal? Let t:s not ho d'seotir;ed hy the great disparity between at far-off perfection and present nlity. The poet well expresses our eiing: i, Land of Promise, from what Pisgab's height 2an I behold thy strctch of peaceful bowers, ly golden harvest flowing out of sight. rhe nestled homes and suq:lllumined towers? izing upon the sunset's higb7heapeS gold, :ts crags of opal and of chrysolite, 5 deeps 011 deeps of glory, that unfold. still brightening abysses, Vnd blazing precipices, hence but a scanty leap it seems to Itp.o ven metimes a glimpse is given 3f tliy gorgeous realm, thy more tinstunted blisses. 3a zing upon that vision. let us be (hful to our temple duties here tint 1 may Do fitted for that cify wlmre >re is no temple, "for the Lord God mighty and the Lamb are the temple j it." Sons of God. j 'Iiillips Brooks once said: "If you II lot Ilini walk with you in your , cots, sit with you in your others. .1 be with you in your homes, and oh you in your churches, nnd abide ill you as the living presence in your irts, you. too, shall know what frcou is, and while you do your duties, above your duties; and while you n yourselves 1 hp sons of men, know i are the sons of God."' Slaii'wiiy to ir??avrrr, :o troubles are so great that Tn<vy inot bp built into tho steps of the irease, by which scuils mount up to iven.?Canon Liduoa. ^ ' - . ._A-. A I'll' ' ' IM f , I . Simple Life of a King, J The habits of no other monarch arc j more simple than those of the Kins of j the Belgians. His majesty ris^s at <5 ! o'clock, and works for a couple of i hours before breakfast, a meal which I consists of coarse, dry bread, tea, and ! an apple. The morning is spent in the i transaction of state business. Luncheon j is of homely fare. The King usually j drinks fdtfrrd water, rarely wine. He I takes outdoor exercises in tbo afterj noon. Dinner if a plain meal, for the I King if. fo:;d of simple joints.?London ! Tit-Bits. I Travol Is Truest Source of Wisdom. The "Four-Track Series" is the title' | of a series of thirty-six books of travel ' and education issued by the passenger ! department of the New York Central ' and Hudson River Railroad. These small books are filled with ini formation regarding the best modes of ! travel, and the education that can best be obtained by travel, the whole world now agreeing with Lord Beaconsfield that "Travel is tbe great source of true wisdom." They relate specifically to the great : resorts of America?to trips to the isl: ands of the sea and around the world? ] giving a mass of useful information re j garaiug ine ume re<]uireu iur a juur| ney, its cost and other particulars not ; ea&jly obtained elsewhere. j They also contain numerous illustra! tions and new and accurate maps of ! the country described. The railway system known as the i "New York Central Lines" is the real I transcontinental route; its trains connect with every line acrosR the contiDent, and through every gateway from ' Montreal on the north to New Orleans j on the sonth. This system now oper! ates more than 32,000 miles of railway I east of Chicago and St. Louis, and ' forms the "Grent Central Railway System of America." In a New York prison the educai tional course for convicts will bo i broadened to include lectures on law. The West Toint class of 1S55 holds Its half-ccntury reunion this year. T.A'li** Can We*r 8hae? One sizo srnallor after using Allen's FootEase, a powdor. It makes tight or new shoe3 oasy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching leet. ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At allaruggists and shoe stores, 26c. Don't ac! eept any substitute. Trial package Fbee by | mall. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LoRoy, N.\. Russia has eighty-six general holidays in a year. Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, soften the gunis,reduces Inflamroa| tion,allays paln.coreswind colic, 25c.a bottle | Winnipeg, Manitoba, is said to be the j fastest growing city in the world. J do not believe Piso's CurbfoJ Consuraotionhasunequal for coughs and colds.?John F.Bovzr,Trinity Spring, Ind., Feb. 15, l'JOJ. The production of quicksilver in 1904 is , estimated at 2391 tons. 1 GUARANTEED CURE fov all bowel trouble blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, 1 pains after eating, liver trouble, callow skin ar regularly you are sick. Constipation mio^noi Ln starts chronic ailments and^qng years of suffe CASCARETS today, fat you vrilf never get w right Sake ouv advicc, 3ta;t ?vlth C as cave t: money refunded. Tho genuino tablet 3taop< booklet free." Address Sterling Remedy Coup ?[) y a ii 53G 'twnhiTTTinr /Facts Are Sfa ja Uniform excellent quality ' I century has steadily increased The leader of ail lion Coffee is now used in millions of homes, popular success speaks for itself. ] j positive proo! that LION COFFEE hi Confidence of the peof I, The uniform quality of LIOIS >' COFFEE survivCs all opposifci V.ION COFFEE keeps lis old friend* makes new ones every day. LION COFFEE lias even i than Its Strength, Flavor and C Ity to commend it. On arrival I I' the plantation, it is carefully r* !: ed at our factories and seen I packed in 1 lb? sealed packs and not opened again until nei for use in the home. This preci the possibility of adulteration / dust, insects or unclean han< 1 LION COFFEE is therefore guai & Sold only in 1 lb. packages, si . Save theso Lion-hwids Libby, McNeill & i^r^rr?fc?n^~i_#w? ^ .? ~v. * "-..V , : v. & ' It Was No C?o. One of the best bookselling utories I know, says a writer, is that of a lady who asked for a volume of Robert V' 'JZl Browning's work. "I haven't 'jot it, madam," replied tlie bookseller: "I make it a rule never to stock any boot I can't understand, and I can't make head or tail of Mr. Browning; can you?" Scarcely knowing whether to be amused or annoyed, but prepared to take another volume, the 'ady ?iid, "Have you I'raed. then?" "Yen, madam," o.noth the bookseller, "I've prayed, hut that don't help me." A WOMAN'S MISERY. Mrs. John i^iRue, of 115 Paterson Avenue. Paterson, N. J.f says: "I was , troubled for about nine years, and what 1 suffered no one safari w 11 1 ever "P^SMlisIL ,43* know. 1 used the house the back ache has been so bad that it brought tears to my eyes. The pain at times was so intense tbat I was compelled to give up ray household duties and lie down. There were headaches, dizziness and blood rushing to my head to cause bleeding at the nose. The first box of Doau's Kidney Pills benefited me so much that I continued the treatment. The stinging pain in the small of ray back, the rushes of 't ^ blood to the head and other symptoms disappeared." ? Doan'; ^..dney Tills are for sale by all dealers. 50 cents per box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Hoar memorial fund is making good progress and already exceeds \ ?20,000. BABY'S TERRIBLE SORE Body Raw With Humor? Can* I Untol& Ao-nnv-.Dnrlnr Did No Good?Mother Discouraged?Cullonra Cured at Once. "My child was a very delicate baby. A terrible sore and humor broke out on bis body, looking like raw flesh, and causing the child untold agony. My physician prescribed various remedies, none'of which helped at all. I became discouraged and took the matter into my own bands, and tried Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment with almost immediate success. Before the second week had passed the soreneaf was gone, not leaving a trace of anything^ Mrs. Jcanncttc H. Block, 281 lioeedale St., Rochester, N. Y." * Yale University has lived within her income the past year and now has more income to live within. ' ' .'ItA a VCATHMTIB >o, appendicitis, biliousness, tad breath, bad I 'oul mouth, headache. indigestion, pimplca, I id dizziness. When your bowela don't move I, , r rc people thanjll other dlseaaeo together. Ifi I ' "* J ring No ftjfltotr vvhoi; ailcyou- start trking ell aad 3tayL,7eIl until you get your bowclo I : :oday uuder absolute guarantee to euro or i )d C CC. Never aold ic bulk. Bcoplc acrt (J OQv% Chicago or New York. 50s fl bborn IMngsl for over a quarter of a I the sales of LION COFFEE, I package coffees. | I or contact with germs, dirt, I Is. The absolute purity o.f I ranteed to the consumer. I Lion-head on every package. gS for valuablo premiums. !& $ EVERYWHERE I* OLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.^M r I Natural I Flavor I )d Products! lon't Be Without Them In Yo*r Home They Are Always Ready to Serve ' jnch Tongues Veal Loaf ( rneless Chicken Dried Beef , isket Beef Soups 1 , llied Hocks Ba.ked Beans AjK yoar Grocer i Tie Booklet "How to MaJce Good Thing a 1 i Hat" sent free. j , Libby, Chicago I