I V New York City.?The possibilities of *he shirt waist seem literally without limit. Season by season it is found in new and attractive styles and always is novel at the same time that it fills its established place. Here is one that is * among the very latest shown and that is equally well adapted to silk and to wool fabrics and to the many cotton and linen waistings which many worn?n like for the entire year. It is tucked on quite individual lines, the closing being made invisibly at the centre, where there is an effect obtained of two box pleats, while the back gives the tapering lines that are always so becoming. The sleeves follow the favvorite trend and are full at the shoulders and narrower at the wrists and are finished with pointed cuffs that give a distinctive ail-, while the collar also is tucked in harmony with the .waist. The waist consists of the fitted founA LAT? PSSIGK ] * datlon, wnlch can se used or omitted as material renders desirable, fronts and back. The lining is closed at the centre, -while the hems of the waist are lapped beneath the tucks and closed invisibly. \ The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and seveneighth yards twenty-ose. four and onefourth yards twenty-seven or three and one-fourth yards forty-four inches wide. Modes For Children. Tbe general mode for children, especially for children over ten years, does not differ materially from that of grown women. There is considerable latitude allowed in the matter of col ors, little girls being permitted to wear more bright colors than elders For example, the brilliant plaids, which are hardly suitable for ordinary wear for adults, are charming for little girls. This season they are Very fashionable, and numbers of bright red, blue and green tartans are being made up for the first days of school. Trimming* in Parisian Millinery. The choice of trimmings is left almost entirely to the fancy and taste of the milliner. Ostrich, birds, wings, cocks' feathers, quills, palettes, paradise, goura, aigrette and fanciful arrangements of plumage are all as fashionable one as another. At the same time flowers figure rather more prominently than usual at this season, while there is every reason to suppose that a great deal will be done who furs later on.?Millinery Trade Review. Worsteds to Be Used. Worsteds in neat effects wll! be used for th* construstion of the plain tailored suits for practical purposes. Gray will be a leading color in such fabrics. Then there are the shadow plaids, whi^h have already had a good Buccess among the garment manufacturers who have exploited them. I 2*^ggf^ | Loot; GIotcm. While white mousquetaire gloves reign supreme for smart afternoon wear, or wherever the elbow sleeve makes their so/t, wrinkly lengths advisable, there is a future before the new mouse colored suede. This is- a grayish shade of mouse, very pretty nnrl crvff nnflroespri kifl is Dl'eferred to glace for smart occasions. Delicate pastel embroideries are seen on the backs and around the fastenings of some very advanced gloves in the softest white suede or glace kid, but these gloves, which are known as Pompadour, are, of course, not adapted to ordinary occasions.?Washington Times. The Plaid* Revived. In spite of this being a plain color season, though some of the colors are pretty bright, the revival of plaids ie apparent. A fashion writer who has observed modes in mere than one climate warns the American woman against plaids. In England and France they are both appropriate and attractive for autumn wear out of doors, but in this country with our marvelously clear atmosphere, and especially in our city streets, the plaids are entirely too conspicuous. The Slip Interchangeable/ A smart gown was ideal and would be sweet carried out in rose colored voile de soie hemmed with ro6e lace, could well have a separate slip of white glace, which might be utilized for a white broderie anglaise. or a black marquisate inserted with Chantilly and so on. Contrasts In Jewelry. Up-to-date settings are designed to bring out the beauty of the important stones as much as possible. The contrast between a large colored stone and the diamonds or pearls which surround it is one means to tms enci now in much favor. BY tt&Y MAHTOH. jjj j I j fL For Evening Wear. For evening wear white and the pastel shades will be in demand, for afternoou wear both the pastel and medium shades, and for practical purposes the darkerv shades of the fashionable colors. Five Gored Tucked Skirt. There is no skirt better liked and none more graceful than this one. It is absolutely simple, reducing the labor of making to the minimum, while it takes most satisfactory lines and folds The model is made of royal blue mohair, stitched with belding silk, but the skirt is one suited to all seasonable materials and will be a favorite through the entire autumn and winter. The tiny tucks over the hips give a yoke effect without curtailing apparent height and do away with bulk at thai point. The skirt is cut in five gores that are shaped to give generous fulness to the lower edge. The quantity of material required foi the medium size is eight and one-hall yards twent;r-one, seven and one-hall yards twenty-seven or four and threefourth yards forty-four inches wide THE PULPIT | A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. W. H. BURCWIN. Subject: Sowinjr and Kcaplnj;. Brooklyn. N. Y.?For the last sermon in his series on "The Substance of Christian Doctrine" the Rev. W. H. Burgwin, pastor of the Eighteenth Street M. E. Church, preaciied Sunday morning on "Sowing ami Reaping." His text was chosen from Gallatians xi:7-S: "Be not deceived; Cod is not mocked; for whatsoever a man f soweth, that shall he also reap. For h he that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that i' soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit I reap life everlasting." Mr. Burgwin a said: I Our statement of the substance of p Christian doctrine in the four preced- 1; ing discourses has presented the Crea- t tor of all things as a merciful and r bountifuf Provider for His creatures. S Man, because of unique relationships b to God, is the object of His particu- is lar and peculiar favor. Insisting that a "All have sinned and come short of ci the glory of God." the divine love o finds a way to satisfy infinite justice tl and to redeem for eternity every sin- t< ner who will be saved. The nature of a the sinner, as created, precludes the p idea or the possibility of compulsion, d There is, howtver, a too general ten- tl dency to discount Scriptural teachings v ?to feel that God, having done so f much for man, will do more, that, in p some way, a comfortable and blissful v future is assured us, even though un-. a belief and disobedience mark our con- b duct here. The apostle combats such p a conception. Jesus Himself contra- a diets it: "Ye cannot serve God and p Mammon." The Scriptures uniformly s; oppose it by precept and example. n It is my task this morning to en- ci torce tins tnougnt: ah men are re- s deemed by Christ; but we are net v saved from our guilt and its fixed a: penalty until we are in accord with n Christ and the divine plan. What the a sowing is the harvest will be. This b is the truth as taught us. ii Our text is a warning?an unmistak- o: able danger signal. This warning is w given in view of real dangers appar- ei ent to all observers of human nature, "i It assures us that God does not make a spiritual or moral paupers of men. oi Men cannot be redeemed without God; tl but, in the divine economy, tioa aoes si not save the man without the man 01 himself. The man, in addition to c< God's work, must work out his own ti i salvation. For man there js a sowing si and there is a reaping. There is good si seed for sowing in moral and spirit- N ual soil; there is other seed which de- tc velops degraded human character, b Man selects his own seed and sows it. c< The seed proceeds to follow the law ir of nature. It brings forth after its s< kind^-noisome weeds or golden grain, ci It is an eternal harvest of "corrup- ui tion" or of "everlasting life." Even h: if man be deceived, God is not mocked, ir This Scripture warns us that every m mortal has freedom to direct his own ai career wimin wen Known neias, ior good or evil. Above the human actor pi is the Divine Governor, who will not ri compel human loyalty, but who, rul- hi ing in more extensive fields than the re merely finite and human, invariably ki directs the mortal to the future his ei own freedom has chosen, to the reap- le ing of the harvest his own life has re sown. Thus it is clear that man's tt destiny is in his own control. gi It becomes apparent that this uni- ss versal governor in administering his y( government is not anarchic. He is the p< supreme exponent of 'order and law; n< He, the arch-opponent of contusion, fc All i nv +on/1c? +a nnnfnclnn "in fn UiOUlUCl ICUUO IV tUUIUOlUii, i" It particular as in universal dominion, pi The human sinner is a begettor of so confusion in that he interferes with d< law and order. He thus challenges n( the divine wisdom, power and will, of He is a rebel against the .Creator and q\ Ruler of all things. Were all nature or to follow him, the original chaos and d< anarchy would prevail in ail realms, si: Perfect order in human life would so bring man to the perfect destination so for which he was originally designed, m xnar perieet oracr neermes a rem un:i w for man through Jesus Christ, who is tr the exemplar of that order, "Who His own self bare our sins in His own d? body on the tree, that we, being dead cc to sin, should live nnto righteousness; ci by whose stripes ye were .healed." If tu we encourage sin in our lives, if we "( do not persistently resist the devil, we g are sowing accursed seed; we are not fe dead to sins, we do not live unto right- h; eousness; consequently, that perfect re order is not an actuality for us, though to it remains a possibility, because of the ji divine mercy and our ability to sow tt the seed of repentance, by God's help, th if we will. If Evidently, then, the glorious destin- jE ation of man as described in Scripture, bringing the creature back to his lost g] estate, where he is conformed to the hi image of Him who is the express it Image of God's substance, is not au arbitrary goal to which every creature move whether or no. The attainment of that destination is a matter of is choice and decision on the part of the bi creature?that decision and choice in- 01 dicating his accord with the will and p plan of the Creator. Man has a goal, ai a great purpose for living, set before fc him. the "life everlasting" of our text, fc toward which it is his personal responsibility and duty intelligently to tr direct his woy. He is not like the crick- te et. If you have ever noticed this in- fc sect in an open space, bound for some- sc where, you will remember that he h spring a foot or so into the air, turns ]o a somersault or two at each jump, s] his course being zigzag and uncertain, v? 15 Hl.-olv trirminntA 5n one nhipp as r>. another, so far as you can determine. e< Many mortals do resemble the insect, -w with this exception, that the unintel- p ligent, zigzag course cannot possibly bring them to the right destination. That this zigzag course exists indicates that the truth has been perverted, h Men have been deceived. In their con- u fident intellectual self-conceit they i,i have proclaimed various modifications ir of the Christian plan as we possess it. oi In their reasonings and speculations ai they have argued that a loving God tl would not do this, that He would not u do that; that a just God would act a thus and so. and would not act in certain other ways. So they have announced their conclusions that all will eventually be saved, whatever their 0 lives' sowing may have been: or that ^ immortality is conditional, that the in- .. corrigible will not suffer eternal pun- n ishmer.t. but that finally they will be ? annihilated, utterly destroyed; that v there wi.l be a future probation, an op- u portunity beyond the grave to accept a tee alvi 110 mercy, aii ul whs js i- ?; tractive as specnlation. The truth is. tfcere is no adequate warrant in the Holy Scriptures for any such hopes. God says. "J5e not deceived." God in- o sisls Mint the eternal life is a har- I vest following a seed sowing. v In practice, too, there are dangerous s theories, for "as a man thinketli in s his hear:, so is he." If he makes him- t self Lelipve that everything is coming , nit all right, irrespective of his eoit luct, his belief will affect his conduct f a man argues himself to feeling: that f God cannot receive him into heavenly realms, He will put him out of J lis misery, annihilate him, the tenlency will be'for him to throw himself nto the flood of activity, whatever its character, which promises him the full:st and most satisfactory return to his )resent selfish ambition. Such attiudes of mind, with their baneful remits. are all too common. The thought >t the judgment of God in absolute >quity in the eternal existence of the oul is a most admirable and effective heck upon all such human presumpion. Well may we pray with the 5salmist, "Keep back thy servant also rorn presumptuous sins; let them not ,ave dominion over me." a lie oaneini resuns l eicucu iu umc llustrations in every field of endeavor, n no other way can I account for the stonisbing attitude of people whom am meeting often?not had, vicious eople, either?but folks who are uttery careless and indifferent in relation o this duty or that; the moral and eligious instruction of their children, labbatb observance, the payment of ills due, the speaking of the unblemjhed truth, the holding of malice gainst fellow Christians; in perfect Eilmness men will argue iu extenuation f any sin in the catalogue. Then, here is a popular feeling that a man o get along must have a "pull." Obarcter, ability, the whole moral and ractical capacity of the individual, are iscounted. This feeling is so current bat you may hear it expressed anywhere. It has come to me recently rom different sources, in one case exressed by a man, in the other by a 'Oman. In both instances, children re being reared, reared and trained y professed Christians in that atmos nere. Most empnaiicany, i rtstui nd condemn such an attitude on the art of any, especially Christians. It is pecious, vicious, disastrous. "Pull" lay secure place among men. but baracter and ability only bring honor, ome men may be tardy in recognizing rorth. Go<* is not. His judgments re based on character. Again, in busiess it has come to pass that too often ny legal means is considered justifiale. "According as you put something 1, the greater will be your dividends f salvation," one man of enormous 'ealth and extensive business iutersts is reported to have said. That something" which you put in is not loney, or words, or deeds. These, one r all, may be a symbol of that 'someling." The thing put in must be a ilf-surreuder to God, an acceptance f the Divine will as our standard of jnduct. If Mr. Rockefeller is destilte of this disposition of moral selfjrrender, all his great gifts are not efficient to "win Divine approval, one can buy the gift of God. God is >o rich to sell, and man is too poor to uy. Any man's gifts may Indeed be)ine an obstacle to favor with God i that they may promote a conceit of ilf-rlghteousness such as certain anent Pharisees had. It is worse than seless for a man to hiake the church Is hobby if he gouges his fellow-men i business every chance he gets. "Be at deceived." Remember the harvest nd be heedful of the sowing. There are men active in political life, rofessed Christians, who, according to imor?in some instances the rumor as been proved fact in court?are the scipients of peculiar favors popularly nown as "graft." It's custom. Oth s do it, they say. Yes, and it's ilgal, dishonest; it's perjury, too. Sectary Bonaparte does well to insist lat this species of dishonesty is a ave menace to the nation. The book lys, "Be not deceived." I speak to >ung men. Some of you may hold >Iitical position, as you rcefully, for I know your possible captations. Abhor any moral com omise in politics, in business or in icial life. The man wlio leads a >uble life is a doomed man. He mr.y )t be condemned to prison by a jury ' his peers; his integrity may escape lestion because of prevailing laxity personal shrewdness. But, ."Be not ;ceived; God is not mocked." "Be ire your siu will find you out." All iuls reap, gathering as they have iwn. Thank God, there are men, any of them here and everywhere, ho are above reproach. May their ibe increase. So we deceive ourselves. In. our self?ceiv>d state, we may find a sort of imfort; we are with the crowd; our lances are as good as another's; we'll irn over a new leaf, now or hereafter. 3fod is not mocked." We cannot treat od contemptuously, as we may our allows. As truly as seed brings a like irvest, so truly our derision of God solves itself into despair. The insult ? Deity always reverts to the insulter. [en must not find comfort in the muglit that such willful disorder on leir part can produce order hereafter, the sowing be sin, disorder, the reapig must be confusion. Christianity offers humanity its :eatest conceivable opportunity, but iimonitr must omllMrp tllC ODDOrtUU y. . * A LesRon From the Children. What a vast proportion of our lives spent in anxious and useless foresdings concerning the future ? either ir own or those of our dear ones, resent joys, present blessings slip by id we miss half their flavor, and all r want of faith in Him who provide* >r the tiniest insects in the sunbeam. Oh, when shall we learn the sweet ust in God that our little children II us every day by their confiding lith in us? We. who are so mut?ble. > faulty, sc irritable, so unjust; aiul !e. who is so watchful, so pitiful, so ving, so forgiving? Why can not we, ipning our hand into His each day, alk trustingly over that day's anointed path, thorny or flowery, crook1 or straight, knowing that evening ill bring us sleep, peace and home?? hillips Brooks. Victory. The joy of resisting temptation is the ighest joy men can feel. It is a moient when our little life here grows irger, and we feel ourselves lifted ito a wide sphere; wo have a sense C fellowship with higher beings, and re somehow conscious of their sympaly. All God's creation smiles upon s and appears made for our joy.? . r>. JJil Y1USU1J. The Divine Kule. What is the measure of the love we we to others? It is the measure ol :hat we think is owing to ourselvAs. Love him as thyself" Observe, if I lay use such a word, the equity of this )ivine rule. It makes us tue juuge 01 hat wo ought to do. It imposes upon s 110 duty that we have not already cknowledged for ourselves.?Dean itanlej. A I'ruyer. 0 God, who art the truth, make nic ne with Thee in everlasting love! am often weary of reading, and reary of hearing; in Thee alone is the urn of my desire! Let all teachers be ilent, let the whole creation be dumb lefore Thee, and do Thou only speak into my soul!?Thomas a Kenipis. V JKnrt of Steam Kallronds In Switzerland. The Swiss Government has decided to convert all the railroads in the country to electric traction, and bids for carrying out Mie enterprise are invited. Enormous sources of generating the requisite energy are available from the abundant Swiss waterfalls. The State railroads aggrgeate 1520 miles of track. An Up-to-Date Acl. "Literary man wants to buy or borrow old love letters; no names used." This cold blooded advertisement has appeared in the Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald. ___ Too Much of a Good Thine. They were college graduates, with gray hair, most of them, the rest with no hair worth mentioning, and they were discussing the advantages which almost unlimited wealth bestows. "Did you fellows ever think of the disadvantages of money?" inquired one. "For instance," he continued, ''how many men did you ever know intimately, Peters, who inherited more than they needed? So much that they had no ambition to add to their fortunes?" x Peters thumbed over the pages of his memory. "Perhaps half a dozen," he replied, after the pausq. "Where are they?" "I hope three arc in Heaven, or thereabouts," said Peters, "though to tell the truth, they didu't train for Heaven. They're not on this earth, anyway. Two are with specialists in Europe, trying to call back their health, and one's in a sanatarium up Yonkers way, I believe." "Pretty good record," muttered the first speaker. "xneyre getting a iot out tn mr, ut-1 cording to your score book. Let me tell you another thing: If a man with money and nothing to do doesn't die young or wreck his nerves he's got a job with kinks in it to tind playmates. Ask one of them and listen to him. I mean a good fellow who wants good fellows around him and is only too willing to pay the bills?a man with a yacht or a shooting box. He can't snare companions of his kind with traps. They're all busy. Now and then he can catch two or three of them for Saturday and Sunday, and that ends it. He's a lonesome mortal. There's such a thing as having more money than you can enjoy."?Providence Journal. A 15Ik Rai?ln Crop. There will be no shortage of Christmas pudding raisins this year, the Spanish crop being early and abun dant. As many as 2o,mJU tons are reported to be available from Denia shippers. As a matter of fact, the English markets dominate the raisin trade of the world. The demand, sales, and values which rule here regulate shipments to foreign raisin-importing countries. This fact applies even to the United States. The finest raisins from Valencia generally command a uniform price. Last year they made the same as they have done during the past week, that is, from 50s. to 70s. a hundredweight. The Dehesa muscatels are increasing in popularity, and at the present time are quoted as high as 125s. a hundredweight first handover Is. a pound. Had it not been for an early crop this season, there was every expectation of prices for pudding raisins being forced up by an influential combine. The stocks in bond were larger by 2000 tons in July, 1904, than they were for the corresponding period this year. The unusually early raisin harvest of Denia will render such a movement impossible. Reports from all Spanish raisin-exporting and packing centres show that the quality of the fruit will be above the average.? London Globe. K<*ve French Playwright* Are Protected "In Paris the Society of French Dramatic Authors and Composers is such a domineering and assertive body that the poor managers tremble at its disfavor," says the New York Evening Post. "It disciplines these gentlemen and keeps them in strict order in their dealing with the poor, impractical, and oppressed men of letters. It was Scribe wbo founded this society, which, since its beginning "in 1829 and Its reorganization in 1837, has become so powerful that it is now the ruling factor in the French theatre. Formerly the managers paid for the use of the author's brains whatever pittance they thought sufficient. Scribe brought his colleagues together that they might get their rights. To-day this body looks after its members as well as it ever did, and reaches out into the control of the theatres in its efforts to protect them against any movement in theatrical affairs that may appear to put their welfare for a moment in jeopardy." Peaches in Cold Storage* Peaches from various points in the State are being shipped to Stockton and placed in cold storage. The National Ice Company has found by experimenting that it can freeze peaches and keep them three months easily. Last year the experiment was made successfully, and this year the com pany lias engaged iu storing rruit as a business. Already there are- 5000 boxes of peaches on ice at the local plant. The greater part of them came from the warm regions of Fresno. These peachcs were picked moderately green. By freezing tbem they are kept from ripening. Three months from now they will be placed upon the market, either in California or in the I^ast. Soon after the fruit is taken off the ice it Tipens nicely. By selecting a late variety of peaches it may be possible to preserve them till Christmas. ?San Francisco Call. Can't Use Their Clubs. It took eight London policemen the other day to get an obstreperous sol L1-~ Knt flint wns lie aier iu iuu 8i?uw?. ""v ? cause London policemen are not allowed to use their clubs to make an arrest easier. They can use them in selfdefense only. Prize For Artistlo Soldiers. At the Simla Fine Arts Show, opened by the Viceroy of India recently. Lord Kitchener offered a prize of $15 for a picture in any style or medium by a non-commissioned officer or soldier. PUTN AlVf Color more (foods brigh tor and fas'er colors tban any con dye any garment without ripping apart, Write to I For German Waterway*. Germany has set aside over $SO,000,000 for waterways, chiefly the canal < which is to connect the Weser with 1 the Rhine. Austria has voted $50,000,- ] 000 for the construction of canals be- < tween the Danube and the Oder, and < thence to the Elbe and the Vistula. 1 I Sued For Use of Water, A Berlin landlord has not only sued a tenant for loss sustained through her excessive use of water for bathing < purposes, but has promulgated the ex- i traordinary theory that "no respectable 1 woman takes a bath every day." < Within the last twenty years 120 3 English peerages have been created. j "Emerald Isle" was first applied to Ireland by Dronigan in a poem called "Erin." N. Y.-40 WORIMINC i ? Their Hard Struggle Made nents by a Younj and One in Ni All women work; some in their ] homes, some in church, and some in i the whirl of society. And in stores, j mills and shops tens of thousands are on the never-ceasing treadmill, earning j theif daily bread. 1 All are subject to the same physical j laws; all 'suffer alike from the same } Dhvsical disturbance, and the nature of ] their duties, in many cases, quickly drifts them into the horrors of all kinds of female complaints, ovarian troubles, ulceration, falling1 and displacements of the womb, leucorrhoea, or perhaps irregularity or suppression of "monthly periods," causing backache, nervousness, irritability and lassitude. Women who stand on their feet all day, are more susceptible to these troubles than others. They especially require an invigorating, sustaining medicine which will strengthen the female organism and enable them to bear easily the fatigues of the day, to sleep well at night, and to rise refreshed and cheerful. How distressing to see a woman struggling to earn a livelihood or perform her household duties when her back and head are aching, she is so tired she can hardly drag about or stand up, and every movement causes pain, the origin of which is due to some derangement of the female organism. Miss F. Orser of 14 Warrenton Street, Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Camp* - i Cause of the Tronbie. , An incident illustrating President Lincoln's ever-present sense of humor is given in "A Biographical Memorial of General Daniel Butterfield. An immense amount of correspondence had been sent to President Lincoln, in which were ninny accusations and counter-accusations, letters and < explanations concerning the failure to j get the pontoons to Fredericksburg in i time for Burnside. . ' Many thought Mr. Lincoln would re- < move or court-martial somebody. He ' indorsed the papers with the following sentence: "In my opinion, Mr. Lee caused this trouble." i Iowa is one of the States whose population has decreased within the last ! live years. ' DON'T MISS THIS. A Cnre For Stomach Trouble?A New Method, by Absorption?No Drugs. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you afflicted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour Eructations, Heart Pains, indigestion, Dyspepsia, Burning Pains and Lead Weightin Pit of Stomach, Acid Stomach, Distended Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic'!1 Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach Torture? Let us send you a box of Mull's AntiBelch Wafers free to convince you that it cures vi-iu:? Ulro ;t- known. It's sure 1>UII1III? CiOW ...-W -- and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. Harmless. No drugs. Stomach Trouble can't be cured otherwise?so says Medical Science. Drugs won't do?they cat up the ( Stomach and make you worse. We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers cure and we want you to know it, hence this offer. Special Offek.?The regu.ar price ot Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box, but to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will send two (2) boxes upon re- c ceipt of 75c. and this advertisement, or we J will send you a sample free for this coupon. t 114 A FREE BOX. 1141 n Send this coupon with your name I * and address and druggist's name who does not sell it for a free box of Mull's i E Anti-Belch Wafers to I a Mull's Grape Toxic Co.. 328 Third | J Ave., Rock Island, 111. I ' j Give Full Address and Write Plainly. | J Sold at all druggists, 50c. per box. j _ g Scots Alwftys Ready. t The Scottish Patriot announced tho other day in big type that in case of war between Norway and Sweden a j: committee was ready to send at once 1000 Scots, fully equippod for the field, v ' * " i to aici rsorw>i.v. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teethinsr.softensthetfums.redueesinCamma- .. tlon,allays pain,euros wind colic,25c. a bottle Sir Isaac iloldcn used to get rccreation J out of compulsory walking. ] amsurePiso's Cure lor Consumption saved my life three years ago.?Mis. Thomas Roberts, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,1900 The native of India has an average life tM'->n|y-fnur vt*ar?. FAD E LE~ otherdye. Ouelitcpaokaracilowall (lb3rs. They dye rfref booklet?How to Dye, BlaioU nad Mi* Colors. .111 > **W- ; ,y^ New Fatt Train*'. / i V<| Among the equipment which the 3reat Nortberiv'purposes to buy with he $2,000,000 or $3,000,000 just appropriated for the purpose will be eight complete trains to be run as the "Oriental Limited." They will run between Minneapolis and St. Paul and Seattle, with close connections. A High Paid Official. The highest paid official in the Gov- 4i srnment service, with the exception of the Viceroy of India, is the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, who receives $100,)00 per annum. FITSpermanently cured. Jfo fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer,?2trlal bottleand treatise free Dr.R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila.,Pa. More than ?000 people earn a living in Paris by fortune-telling. i WOMEN Easier?Interesting State- . | g Lady in Bos'^n ishville, Tenn. Boston, tells women hoW'to avoid such suffering; she writea: .' Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? " I suffered misery for several years with iregular menstruation. My back ached; I rnd bearing down pains, and frequent headlches; I could not sleep and could hardly irag around. I consulted two physicians without relief, and as a last resort, I tried jydiaE. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound, and a mv surorise, every ache and pafn left me. [ gained ten pounds and am in perfect health." Miss Pearl Ackers of 327 North Sumner Street, Nashville, Tenn., writes: Doar Mrs. Pinkham "I suffered with painfjil periods, severe >ackache, bearing-down pains, pains across ;he abdomen; was very nervous and lrrita* 4 )le. and my trouble grew worse every month. " My physician failed to help me and I lecidea to try Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. I soon found it was doing me food. All ray pains and aches disappeared, ind I no longer fear my monthly periods." y ' Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Com>ound is the unfailing cure for all thes? iroubles. It strengthens the proper nuscles, and displacement with all it? lorrors will no more crush you. Backache, dizziness, fainting, bea?o ng down paitas, disordered stomach, noodiness, dislike of friends and society ?all symptoms of the one causc?will )e quickly dispelled, and it will mak? rou strong and well. \< You can tell the story of your suf!erings to a woman, and receive help:'ul advice free of cost. Address Mrs, Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. land Succeeds Where Others Fail. their sex, used as a douche is marveloaaTy ?oo tessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease eenns. rtops discharges, heals inflammation and local joreness, cures leacorrhoea a ad nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved ? water, and is ?a- more cleansing, healing, cenmcwa* ind economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. _ fHC R. PAXTON COMPAMT B08T0H. ?|A30? ? ' W. L. Douglas *3= & *3= S H O ES? W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cflt Edge Line cannot be equalled M^n^prlce* j I IlilEstaoiunea ^ -*5 llil July 6,1878. W.L.DOUGLAS MAKES AND SELLS MORE MEN'S $3.SO SHOES THAI ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. C1D nnn REWARD to anyone who can iplUjUUU disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearlflrf ualitles, achieved the largest sale of any $3.5? hoe In the world. They are Just as good a* hose that cost you $5.00 to $7.00?the only ilference is the price. If I could take you into ly factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In he world under one roof miking men's line hoes, and show vou the care with which every ialr of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize thy W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best hoes produced In the world. If i could show you the difference between tha hoes made in my factory and those of other [lakes, you would understand why Douzlas >3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold heir shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of reater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 hoe on the market to-day. V. L. Douglaa Strong Made Shoes for Men. $2.BO, $2.00. Boy a' School? Dress Shoos,$2.50, $2, $1.76,$1.BO t?AU I ION