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New York City.?No-jiegligee has ever )ecoEnc qaite so popular as tne uiraouu fVliile its accepted form is far fronr )eing a replica of the one worn by oui rapanese cousins, it ?wes its sugges ion to them and suits our Western deas better than the original model. ?his one is made of Oriental crepe with winding of pktfn colored China silk and K L&T? PSS1GK : i s exceedingly attractive, but there are nany other materials equally appropriite. While there is a certain suitabilty and charm found*in the Oriental repee and the like, cashmere, henrietto ind fine flannel are all In use, as well ,s a "variety of washable materials. The kimono is quite simple, made rith the yoke and the full portion, auc an be cut off in sacque length if bettei iked. The sleeves are in Sowing style ;athered at the shoulders, and ar< inished with bands to match those a.' he front and yoke. The quantity of material required foi he medium size is seven and three ourth yards twenty-seven or thirty wo, five and one-fourth yards forty our inches wide, with one and seven 'ighth yards of contrasting materia >r five and one-fourth yards of ribboi or the bands for full length, four yard! wenty-seven, three and one-half yards hirty-two or tw6 yards forty-foui nches wide for ?hor?;er length. A L'Emplre. From Paquin there's a costume ii Smpire style. It is made from moss jreen broadcloth and consists of a coa ind skirt. As one would expect, th< Irirf io vnhtmf nnne Tf ic /-?? + +n>.r. ;eam variety, with a seam down th< ;entre front and back. The fulness ii ihirred in three times just below tin vaist line. The skirt is long, trailinj i little at the back, with a voluminou sffeet. A box pleat is down the bac] >f the coat. It falls over the yoke ef !ect, from which the coat hang itraight and a trifle flaring. The but :oos have been made to match. Directoiro Models. The popularity of Directoire model n even-Tig coats is perhaps accounts 'or bcea'ise of their Ions graceful line lud the amount of fullness thereol S'o one cares to pull and tug at a wra Ku?r? putting it on or off in a theatr )r restaurant. Neither should it fi jlosely enough to crush the gown lx neath. For this reason one rarel sees a snugly fitting evening wrap. For Young Girlfl. Some girls prefer shirt waist suits c powns 011 that order, with white turi over collars and cuffs. The quiet* plaids are allowable for girls up to ii, I teen. Of course, they will be worn by j ) girls and women of all ages, but it is | i maintained tliat bright plaids, except j " for country wear, are more or less out I of taste. A TVslet of Meteor. ! One waist made of meteor shows j alternating rows of baby Irish crochet j and hand-embroidery upon the material. (This embroidery Is done in the color of the waist, by the way. If the waist be white, It is white; if the waist be blue, it is blue). By the way of variety there's an inch of handstitchery, and, to top it ofT, an insertion composed of two rows of narrowest Val. edge. These are stitched together with the edges overlapping. Oversklrt Effect. A lovely evening dress is ol white Irish crochet, and is composed of a bolero and a broadly Vandyked skirt tk/v 1-naoc n,?h if'h pives an IV txic uu\.vo, o- ?. -oversk/rt effect. Flounces of Pompadour lace fill out the lower part of the skirt. The whole is over palest-pink siJk and chiffon. The jacket is held on by a silver braid a half inch in width. The effect is very rich. Mlsiei' Coat Sleeve*. The sleeve marks the garment as no other detail ever can or does. If it bfl * J fKa rro KmATlt fa ft fl curreci uuu up-wumc mc {,ai * a smart effect. If it be out of style the reverse is tlie result., In the illustra^ tion are shown some exceedingly de? sirable models which will be found admirable for the remodeling which is so apt to be necessary aft this season, as well as for the new coat6. They are all new, all in the height of style and all i BY n&Y WAHTOH.: """ ! desirable, -while ail are suited, to the entire range of seasonable materials. No. 1 is full at both shoulders and I wrists and is finished with the roll-over l flare cuff that is very generally becomI ing. No. 2 if full at the shoulders, butj tucked at the wrists, -where it is fin-) > ished with a straight cuff. No. 3 is in) I regulation coat style stitched to simifcj late a cuff, but generously full at the) , shoulders. I i The quantity of material required for t the medium size (fourteen years) is for 1 3 XI ^ iuu fcieeves one nuu luree-iviuiiu jaiua r twenty-seveD or seven-eighth yard for- I '' J i ty-four or fifty-two inches wide; for plain sleeves one and one-half yarda s twenty-seven, three-fourtli yard forty> four or fifty-two inches wide. Hat anil Veil. s There's a fad just now for wearing j a colored veil and hat with an others wise all-white costume. It is particu? larly pretty for the country. This p scheme has a double advantage; it is e smart and it makes a hat of almost any color becoming. One pretty girl was seen in a delicately blue hat wreathed y with forget-me-nots. "With it she wore a chiffon veil of light blue. Ashes of Itoeeg. >r A hat with an ashes of roses velvet i- trim has a soft crown in "Tam" effect ;r of soft old blue. There Is a single pink [- rose af, the front. THE <PUL<P1T. AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY SISHOP LEONARD. Subject Giving Freely. Brooklyn, N. Y.?At Holy Trinity Church the Kt. Rev. William A. Leonaril, liisbon of Ohio, preached Suudny., morning on the subject, "Giving Freely." from the text Mnttliew x:8: "Freely ye hare received, freely give." The preacher said: "Our blessed Lord had jnst endowed His apostles with some of His power, lie had cranted them authority to preacii, to Ileal tbe sick, to baptize converts and to hiy the foundation of i His church. .As all power in Leaven ! I and on earth bad been conferred upon J Him. so now He imparts the tre- i I mentions donation to them. This is Tv-hat is meant b.v the divine origin of tbe ministry. But this power and those gifts must be utilized; they cannot be retained or buried; tbey must be dispersed abroad. They are given only for service. 'Freely ye have received. freely give.' In some measure we must generously give to the world. "These words, however, may be taken from their primary place, so that tbey have a general reference and application for every child of the kingdom, and thus we use tbem to-day for our instruction and guidance. This test, 'Freely ye have received, freely give,' is classic in its clear expression and in its world-wide application to literature, science.' music?in the art of centuries; and many races find their X* 1 llift In. JUttti ill mid inci, iva vuiioi, iijct tucnrn?te, is Himself (Jod? Christ is here in oar human nature since the period of His incarnation. You cannot drive Him forth, for He has found room for residence in the very heart of this old world. It Is of this conscious Hberglity of God to us that 1 want to speak, and of the sincere and willing response which we ought to make to Him for His gifts to us: 'Freely ye have received, freely give.' The gosp<$ of our Father has this word 'give' written aH through. Its first jetrer is xse iihiihi 01 nis vwu jmmr. Its first introduction in tbe Garden of Eden and a picture of the Divine Fareot, whose iiand is ever outstretched with loving intention to us, and it is His desire that we should lealize this. The Bible is replete with the story of His giving and our receiving. Rend your Bible this year with this thought in your minds. Recall what God has given to His children, and you will be amassed at the sum; it will be such a great one that at least you will be constrained to sing a benedicite. to praise God for His goodness: you will cordially begw to appreciate how 'freely ye have received.' Is it not well to make some sort of a tally, to run lip our account with God? We who take so much for granted and simply accept tb.'>-blessings He gives us without a word of thanks. We think of them and use tliem as If they were ours and are sometimes angry if we happen to miss or lose them. We have rereived so muc4i and so freely from Him that we have omitted Him and His relationship from our calculations. Wc have credited Him only with our spiritual blessings?our religious privileges. the church and sacrameuts. of course, our salvation. But what about the ordinary things that He never forgets. that He never neglects? He keeps His work going on every day in the year, while we, like the children of our modern time, are satiated with luxury. We are aroused sometimes, ns at Christmas time, to realiEe how good God is. "'Freely ye have rereived. freely give.' Thus He gave out of His gen erous liefrrt the very creation itseit; the -world aud all in it, at the "ver.v hour of its conception, its power of production, teeming life, vegetable? and animal. We take possession of it; we bargain and barter its fields and flocks and herds; we call it ours; -we call the land after our own name. But these things are not ours. They are His. He controls. He directs and permits; <we are but the tenants of His wiU. "Then consider in the next place His providence. That is, the continuous remembrance of our needs?food, raiment. climate, and so cn. The seasons that God only swings round m their course; the sunshine?think of the sunshine, that is God's gift. Suppose He covers over the sun for one day! Man cannot, with all his genius, manufacture another. Suppose it stops shining for twenty-four hours. Such a-chill of ice would result that all life -would go out. Do you ever thank God for the sunshine? No. We take it for granted?it belongs to us?we consider it our inherent right. ""UOCi gives us power as wen us ixen| tion to utilize. So lavishly spread that all man has to do is to pluck the fruits of it. We dig mines, sail ships, write books, paint pictures: it is only the exercise of power which God gives. Wealth, competency, wages, all the capacity of power?God grants it all. He gives the brains, the ingenuity. the business, the opportunity for every advancement and all you and I have to do is to utilize all the power He gives us. Some other men use these and prosper: other men waste them and are failures in life: but those wlie are opportunists in the best sense gain rewards. Do you ever realize that God couJd becloud and obscure your faculties of reason so that you would become icsatie in a mordent? He might be excused from so doing because of your ingratitude, your neglect of Him. for all these things you call yours are His. I often wonder how many successful men can retain their self respect, can make their treatment of God agree with their ethics. They never enter His house to thank Him and yet He asks them to do so. They are getting on without Him they believe, but they are as helpless and powerless as the weakest imaginable thing. They are absolutely H^s dependents in whom they have their being. How long suffering and patient He is. His only 1 rebuke seems to be found in His unfailing love. He simply says, 'My ix>n. do not forsake Me utterly; hear My j voice; come to Me; give Me thy heart.j for 1 love thee, I am thy Father. 1 can afford to wait.' "So with our virtues, they nre all; inbrcathings of the Hol.v Spirit; every man, no matter how depraved, will have some spark of good that God put there to be fanned into burning heat. They do not grow there, they were i given and are intended to mold and model us into a nearer semblance to i His image. Your capacity of joy and love are from Him. You conld not iind happiness or gladness or any kind of pleasure in the matevial. intellectual or moral spheres unless u.e Holy Ghost permitted it. You could not love your wife, your child, your parent, your friend, without Him. You Christians, you could not have happiness or love for God unless He grants you the power. Stones and earth have them not. Animals only have as much instinc. as He gives them, but you and I have received more than this. We have received inspirations and aspira (ions that reach from soul to s.nl anil heart to heart. There is a beautiful prayer in the prayer book. I do not cousiilev it in exactly the light in which I ain presenting this truth. 'Oh. God,' it says, 'pour into our hearts suc-h love for Thee that we loving Thee above all things may at last attain Thy gracious promises.' We cannot love God unless the power be given us; we have not the capacity ourselves. "Now. the greatest gift of all; the gift of His dear Son. Creation, providence. power and faculties, can have r. reason or right of operating unless Interpreted by the coming of Jesus Christ to earth for you and m*. This incarnation is the key to unlock the cause of our being. His birth is the solution of each man's existence. He is ill this sense 'The Light of the World.' Now God gave the best that He had, the very best that He was capable of bestowing?His only begotten Son. Nay, more. His Son is GodHe gave Himself. We shall not try to explain Its mysteries; it is unsoiv able. It is an illustration of what we may do in small matters. It means sacrifice and surrender and unselfish 1 : giving, for He came to do God's will. That will was' to save us from our sins. God gave up His best and left the joy and sanctity of Heaven to clothe Himself with our broken humanity that we might see the godhead bodily, touch Him with our hands and go to Him with our sins and knowing Him might accept Him as our Savior. He folded His eternal nature around His person and He led it forth to sacrifice, so tliat His earthly life was a loug series of sacrificial acts. When He lay in the manger this life of sacrifice had begun: when He hung upon the cross it was the continuation of it. In the last moment of agony and shame He was cbntrolling forces that seemed to be mastering Him. He was the priest upon the cross; He was His own victim. His life was not wrung out of Him; He. Himself, pronounced its dismissal. He gave it up to Him whose it was. saying: 'Father, into Thy hands 1 commend my spirit.' All this for our redemption, for our rescue and that we might have peace in believing and serviug and following, for our eternal joy and peace hereafter in tne JJivine comraaesmp. i\utv, wm yc 'freely give!" "This is our practical issue: the question of our life experience. Do we give, and -what, and when? But try and consider the paradox of our lives. What do we give? When do we give? Do we give ourselves? Yes, bnt how? Is it unreservedly? Is it bountifully? Yes, we give something sometimes?some prayer, some wor^ shin some monev. Is it enthusiastic? At the price of sacrifice? Does it really cost us much? We give ourselves to this world?our time and ability, with zeal and zest in business affairs. That is right. Christ does not tell us to be sluggards in business. But He does tell us to give in tbe same measure of earnest interest to Him?some measure of earnest interest to Him. 1 mean no standard of gold. I am not talking about gold to-day. I mean no measure of payment. I mean tbe full and long living surrender of everything to His will. I mean the consecration of each stroke of the laborer's brawny arm, of each device of the inventor's power, the consecration of our whole being and service to the supreme Master of our destiny. Such a consecration makes life beautiful. It sanctifies labor, trade and business; it lifts every project of human ambition ; nn tn n IpvtO nn -whirh nnsrels twad and where we may talk to God Himself. It tires itself out in its arms for the redeeming of the world. It sees Jesus walking up and down in the earth and it must impel every human being to follow Him. It impels men to go forth iuto the world to others. < The saint leaves his closet and goes abroad instead of pondering by himself homeless that he may carry the Gospel, that he may lift the cover off ignorance for some benighted soul; the missionary makes himself homeless that he may carry the Gospel to tho heathen. (Where we do the service and will of Jesus is our free giving in return for what He has given ue. Then, and only then, do we amend the contradiction. There is the soul and spirit of the incarnation. 'Freely give,' is the word. Keally that means fully? fully give. It requires us to say. 'Here Lord ami. I have no reservation, no propect, no duty, no joy that I will place between Thee and me. I yield i myself absolutely to every manifestation of Thy will. I am oil the time eager to know what Thy will is. ^Tbis is my duty; show me what Tbou wouldst have me to do and give.' The saint of old said: 'Master, show me Thyself and then 6how me myself.' Such a prayer should be offered from hour to hour, and then at last there will be the gradual glad consciousness coming to us that we have freely returned to God a thank offering. "Then the giving of our time to His service and to other people will be so natural tbat we shall do it sporitan- i eously. It will be so easy to offer' money and heart and interest to Christ's service that it will be second nature." The Power of Faith. Th- man who accomplishes anything in tnis world is. and must be, a man o.? -faith. <Strong men, forcible men, v!ri;; men, are men of faith. It may bf ji low type of faith?faith tn self? by' is faith. Beaxendale says -Weak faith makes weak men." Z.Ijw much stronger should be the ?t-. /1/x/l 4Iia -r.t ; + ! ? j J.aB WilO L1H5 taiui 1U uuu, imr iaiiu I wh.eli rays- l can do all tilings trough Christ who strengthened; me ' This is faith of the higher type Be done with saying what you 'don't je.reve," and find in your soul the oiviiiesl, truest thing in which you do believe, and work that out. Be Hie noblest man your present faith, poor and weak and imperfect as it is, can make you to be. So, and so only, as vou U?ke the next step forward, as you stand strong where you are now, so only as you think the curtain will Craw back, nnd there will be revealed to you what lies beyond.?Phillips Brooks. Love Lead* to Service. A loving heart and an obedient lire are inseparable. The one cannot exist without the other. As soon as a man loves God. he has th? spirit of consecration, the spirit of obedience, the spirit or service; ana wnue iove continues to dominate the heart, that spirit of service manifests itself in the life. It is true that "love is the fulfilling of the law." Heart religion is the only kind of religion worth having. It is the pure in heart who shall see God.?Methodist Recorder. Narrow %Vuy Kasle?t. it is easier to take the narrow than the broad way. If you go to destruction you must leap over the Bible, over the Church of Christ, over the prayers of parents and friends. 1'ou must leap over the love of the Savior Himself.?Evan Roberts. Yon "Will Get If. Look, expect, watch; look as if yon wanted the blessing, and you will get j it.?Joseph Parker. * Hamper Americana In Tracivnul, American physicians and dentists. notwitfcstandiriK thetr famous skill and professional pre-eminence, now find it impossible to practice their professions in the Transvaal without first obtaining a certificate can not be obtained unless the applicant possesses British qualifications. OW Fartlilnc Brlncii 932. A William and Mary copper farthing, dated 1092. intrinsic value half a cent, was sold the other day at auction in London for $35. STOPS BELCHING BY ABSORPTION -NO DRUGS-A NEW METHOD. A Box of Wafer* Free?Have Yon Acnte Indlcentlon, Stomach Trouble, Irrecutar Heart, Dizzy Spell*, Short Breivth, Gas on 1ho Stomach 1>'" T"- _i. -D..1 T> 4V. Am. I XJItter lftSie uau it i Cam imyau^u , petite?A feeling of fullness, weight and; pain over the stomach and heart, some i times nausea and vomiting, also fever and J sick headache? What causes it? Any one or all of these: Excessive eating and drinking?alni9c of. spirits?anxiety and depression?mental effort?mental worry and physical fatiguebad air?insufficient food?sedentary habits ?absence of teeth?bolting of food. If you suffer from this slow death and; miserable existence, let us send you a sam- > f>le box of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers abso uteiy free. No drugs. Drugs injure the' stomach. It stops belching and cures a diseased; stomach by absorbing the foul odors from 1 undigested food and by imparting activity! to the lining of the 6tomach, enabling it! to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric! juices, which promotes digestion and cures the disease. Special Offkr?'The regular price of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box, but! to introduce it to thousands of sufferers.; we will send two (20 boxes upon receipt of; 75c. and this advertisement, or we will? send you a sample free for this coupon. This Offer Mat Not Appear Agai^. i . jftofl.- TftTTTC miTPON 128 Send this coupon with your name and address and name oi a druggist ' who does not sell it for a free sample box of Mull's Anfli-Belch Wafers to Mull's Grape Tontg Co., 328 Third Ave., Roc/k Island, HI. Oixe Full Address and Write Plainly. Sold by all druggists, 60c. per box, or sent by mail. A Birmingham man named Batchelor has married a woman named Widdow., How'* T7il?? WeoQflr One Huudred Dollars Reward tor any case of (Jatarra taut cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Ouro. 1?. J. Chewet & Co., Toledo, 0. Wa !Vu iinHorolnnpf) hftVA If Tift Ton P. .T I v.? ?i Cheney lor the last It years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions andilnaaoially able to carry oat any obligations made by their firm. Webt & Tbtjax, wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0, . Waijjino, Kiknam A Mabvim, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken laternaily, aatin# directly upon the blood and muooussurfacesof thesystem. Testimonials sent free. Price,75c. per bottle. Soldby all Druggists. Take Hall's Family PlMs for constipation. Dante in All Languages. The largest Dante library in the world is that of Leonidas Leonelli in Udine, Italy.* It comprises more than 3000 publications in all languages re-' lating to the poet. A STRONG STATEMENT By Col. J. M. Guffey, Democratic National Committeeman of Pennsylvania. /-i-t t *.r n.,tenr, nf Piffchurf Dpni V_>UI. ti. 1*1, UUU17, V*. J. *VVWV??0, ocratic leader of Pennsylvania, and one of the greatest producer,s in t^tj | are excellent (Signed) J. M. GUPFEY. Doan's Kidney Pills, a specific for backache, bladder troubles and all kidney disorders, are sold by all dealers. Fifty cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. The Russian alphabet contains thirtyfive letters. Mrs. Wins ow's Soothing-Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums,reduces inflammatlon,alla> s pain,cures wind colic,25c. a bottle The bieeest cannon ball ever made | weighed 2600 pounds. P^o's Cure cannot be too highly spoken oJ seacough cure.?J. W. O'Bbxbn, 822Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1903, A WAIST LINING READY FOR USE. If you are a DRESSMAKER you can use? it to great advantage; if not, you positively need THE MODEL WAIST LINING, all _ boned, fitted, including sleeves, jfhjQ ready for use. They are made in every nize, ifsfjft both medium and long waisted,' lr mtIu ?' ^ne Percaline and Selisia in // \ fast black, white andgrays. The: bust measure is the size required J If your merchant does not sell S~-J thon cnnd ns 50 cents, which is not more than cost of material, and one will be sent to you, postage free. A perfect fit' i9 guaranteed or money refunded, M. KAEMPFEIt, Mfr., 392Iiroadway, New Yoork. Sole asrenc> granted to m?rch?nt?. H. H. Gbeen'8 Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are tbe only successful Dropsy Specialists inthe w orld. See their liberal offer in advertisement in another column of this paper. BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA Facts Like Haw Beef?Thought She Would Luxe Her Ear?Healed Without a Bleuiitih?Mother Thank* Cutlcura. "My little girl had eczema very bad when she was ten months old. 1 thought she woJ>!d lose her right ear. It had turned black, and her face was like a piece of raw meat, and very sore. It would bleed when 1 washed her, and 1 had to keep cloths on. it day and night. There was not a clear spot on her face when 1 began using Cuti* cura Soap and Ointment, and now it is completely healed, without scar or blemish, which is more than 1 had hoped for. /u: ?,1\ M,.? fc'il.a, OQ! J-VMnrH Voigiitu; juia. ~ | St., Brooklyn, >?. Y." A boc, unladen, will fly forty miles an hour. 3 HE ATTENDS TO BUSINE fi who goes straight to work <A to cure I Hurts,Sprains, Brui ? by the u? of . f An Orcan 700 Years. 3 TYiMiam G. Carl brought back with i him from Japan a pipe organ of an- i cient make which he believes will < prove a revelation to modern instru- 1 ment builders. * The organ is 700 .years old. but, not- t withstanding this fact, embodies prac- i tically all the improvements which ? present day builders regard as new. ^ The pipes are of bamboo, and the instrument is iu a good state of preservation. Mr. Carl also brought home a t large collection of Japanese music ar- r Tiled, Neivc MaKe Unhappy Homes?T Both Husband and Cfc of Mothers Have Beei Prostration and Made i A nervous, irritable mother, often oil J the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care 1 j for children; it ruins a child's disposi- 1 ; tion and reacts upon herself. The 1 trouble between children and their mothers too often is dufe to tbe fact t that the mother has some female weak- 1 ness, and she is entirely nnfit to bear ? the strain upon her nerves that governing children involves; it is impossible i for her to do anything calmly. i The ills of women act like a firebrand i tipon the nerves, consequently nine- e tenths of the nervous prostration, ner- I vous despondency. " the blues," sleeplessness, and nervous irritability of J women arise from some derangement j of the female organism. Do you experience fits of'depression f with restlessness, alternating with i extreme irritability? Are your spirits 1 easily affected, so that one minute you 1 laugh, and the next minute you feel J like crying ? Do you feel something1 like a ball rising in your throat and threatening to i choke yon; all the senses perverted, 1 morbidly sensitive to light and sound; pain in the ovaries, and especially ] between the shoulders; bearing down 1 pains; nervous dyspepsia, and almost 1 continually cross and snappy ? i If so, your nerves are in a shattered condition, and you are threatened with nervous prostration. i Proof is monumental that nothing in ] the world is better for nervous prostra- 1 tion than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- ; table Compound; thousands and thou- ! sands of women testify to this fact. i Ask Mrs.' Pinkham's Advice?A Woaai PRICE, j?=\25 Cts g g||BJ AO CURE THEWlh M H j Mm ONE DAY m n ? J mmxMaB I HA5N0 EfllMLFOR HEACACflE K va11 ,ur JVUI * 1 r F. IF. Dienit BACK OF THE ATKINS SAW ||?S| ITwr. centuries of patient and conscientious effbrt to produce the best Saws in the woHd. Ten generations of'blood and brains. The largest plant in the world exclusiyely devoted to saw-making, employing many hundred^ of high-class, high-priced craftsmen and equipped with oostly special machinery. A world-wide business aggregating many millions of dollars every yeari A reputation built up through two centuries of steady growth, valued more highly than any other asset of this great institution. ; The guaranty of this Company, which is rwucgtcu cue nutiuvtbti We mjike all types and sizes of saws, bat only one prade?the best. Atkins Saws, Com Knives, Perfection Floor Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware dealers. Catalogue on request. E. C. ATKINS (& CO.." Inc. | Largest Stir Manufacturer* in the World. Factory and Executive Offices, Indiana polk, IndianaBRANCHES: New York, Cnlcago, Minneapolis, (Portland. (Oregon), Seattle. San Francisco, t 1 * Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada). *> 9 R Accept no Subaritute?Intat on tbe Alkie i Brand B ' t""SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYVVffi?~7] LEE ELECTRIC INSOLES j cure niiPlllfllTIAII < nncuMAi ion Simple, Inexpensive, EFFECTIVE. I Writs for Descriptive Leaflet and Testimonials. LEE ELECTfliTlsOLE CO,, ! Park Row Building. Hew York. 1 cessfol. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease gems, s stops discharges, heals inflammation and local ~ soreness, cures leacorrhca and nasal catarrh. ' Paxtine i3 in powder form to be dissolved in per# j vntcr, and is fa- more cleansing, healing, germicidal q and economical than iicpiid antiseptics tor all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES , For sale at druggists, 50 ccnts a box. . | 'Irial Box and Book of ln<Uf.ctlons Free. ' ? Tw* R PlXTOH COMP.'.NT BOSTON. M4S9< i * 88 St. SGS z anged in modern notation. Previous ;o thirty years ago, he says, all the lative inaslc was handed down from >ne generation to another in charac- * ers, but since the establishment of an icademy at Tokio a great impetus hau >een given to all classes of music, and nore than 600 students were in attendince at that institution when Mr. Carl risited it?Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Nearly 10,000 Spanish immigrants en ered Cuba during the first three nonths of the present year. ./||gS ms Mothers p heir Condition Irritates ildren?How Thousands i Saved From Nervous Strong and WelL I m? *! Mrs. Chester Curry, Leader of tha Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 42 Sar*- ; ? ;oga St., East Boston, Mass., writes: | 3 Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? "For eight years I was troubled tritheorems nervousness and hysteria, brought on by rregularitiea. I could neither enioy'Jife no* leep nights; I was very irritable, nervoaa ind despondent. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ra? recommended and proved to be the only vv emedy that helped me. I have daily mproved in health until I am now strong ipa well, and all nervousness has disapreared." Mrs. Charles F. Brown, Vice-Preailent of the Mothers' Club, 21 Cedar rerrace. Hot Springs, Ark., writes: . Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? g? " I dragged through nine years of miserable 3 >xistence; worn out with pain and nerroasio63, until it seemed as though I should fly. i then noticed a statement of a woman troubled as I was, and the wonderful results aha leriyed from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, I decided to try it I did so, and it the end of three months I was a different voman. My nervousness was all gone. I was 10 longer irritable, and my husband fell in ove with me all over again." Women should remember that Lydia E. Pinkham-'s Vegetable Compound is ;he medicine that holds the reoord for ihe greatest number of actual cures of female ills, and take no substitute. Free Advice to Women. Mrs. Pinkhain, Lynn, Mass., invite* . ill sick women to write to her foradrice. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experience with female troubles enables her to tell pou just what is best for you, and she will charge you nothing for her idvice. i Best Understands a Woman's IDs. ri-GRIHNE UARANTEED TO CURE JOLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. [ Grlplne to a dealer who won't Onarantee It. dOXEY BACK IF IT DOESN'T CUBE. \r, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Mm. W. L. Douglas i *3= & 3= SHOESSh W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Lino cannot be equalled atanyprlc?v MAKES AMD WELL* MORE MEM'S S3. BO SHOES WHAM AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. fl nnn REWARD to Myotw who CM $IU)UUU dliprovtthisstatement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by thefr ez> sellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing ;ualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 (hoe In the world. They are just as good as' those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00? tfcc only inference is the price. If I could take yoo Into ny factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In the world under one roof making men's fine (hoes, and show vou the care with which every >air oi Douglas shoes is made, you would realize pvhy W. L Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best thoes produced in tbe world. If I could show you tbe difference between the ihoes made in my factory and those oir other nakes, you would understand why Douglas $3-50 shoes cost more to make, why they bold -heir shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 iboe on the market to-day. W. L Douglas Strong Mmdm Shommfor I Men, $2. BO, S2.00. Boy*' School A " - *9 Kit *9-*1.7K.?1.gO CAUTION. ?Insist upon hayine V.L.Dougas shoes. Take no substitute. None genuin* oithout his name and prico stamped on bottom. WANTE D. A shoe dealer In erery toirn where y. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of araples sent free for inspection upon requeet. Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not weat brassy. Writ? for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Style* W. L. DOUGLAS, Urockton, Mas*. False Teeth elf-adjustable porcelain linin corrects ill-filllnjr o: tul plates, old or new. Adlies.sitlne Dental o., 108 A- 1 lO K. 125th Street. New York nE,MQn^MJoeNW<noi(BiSi Washington, ?.o, ^Successfully Pfosecutes Claims. I Late PHriilttai Kxaa^lner U.S. Pension Bureau I 3j?isLa?ivu war, 10 atlj udxcatinc claims, aitjr sinoa rAn OA* C?MTl_0 Stor* Uuildinfrs K UK dALib"" 'ix Livlr.* Booms ' or exchange tor st -ck .. o.>od*. (Cheap.) In 'ha-itan |ita Co. PETER VN AGNER. l)"nV'r<: N Y. ft S3 fa P Q V NKW DISCOVERY; U ifV Sjf \S sulci r.lhf Md copm worst urs. Book of teatfmoolalf and 10 fiRya' traatmenl fee. Dr R H- GREEK'S 80HB*BjxB, Atlanta. GaJacobs 03 I nd saves time, money and | ets cut ct misery quickly, V Price, 25c. end 50c. ?