University of South Carolina Libraries
New lork City.?The shirt -waist is 9V \X garment that appears to admit ol dk VflriatUnn withrvnt Tinmhnr Tllno. V , trated is one of the latest -which Is * ( in every way to be desired and which | can be made from all walsting ma - GIRL'S COS ^ Serials.- As illustrated French flannel ' In American Beauty red is 6imply stitched with belding silk and tinished with handsome buttons, but A iwiile flannel is muct liked for waists of cold weatber, henrietta and veiling V also are to be noted and there are a Hi great many washable waistings that BT are equally correct. The style of the H (waist-is- a very generally satisfactory one, the tucks providing becoming ^^^iines and giving a double box pleated 9|^Krect while there is only moderate nminess. vgBK The waist is made with a fitted linMVing, which can be used or omitted as material rpnriprs rtpsirnhlp jirwl itsrlf consists of the fronts, back, joke 'and the box pleat, which is cut full length and applied over the edge of the right JPf front The sleeves are in regulation | style with the cuffs of the latest width. I The quantity of material required M for the medium size is four yards I twenty-one, three and one-quarter S yards twenty-seven or one raid sevenft# eight yards forty-four inches wide. The Fad of the Muineut. MfiWBAfe w*s expected flowers grow in H&gSHvor an the season advances. A pichat covered with moleskiu-gray with drapery of satin around ^^^^^Hpi-own drawn through a dull silH^gag^Burkle, is trimmed with yellow vel J|ffij^Hch.rys&nthemunis and a gray feabac-ft over the turn-up brim. [Hm^K^Brre hats and toques must still HgHraMBg^Kubered as fashionable shapes. the former, which I particuMUScgHH^Rncied, was covered with pasHnMKV watered silk and lined with RnRslG^klvet folded over the edsre an an inch wide bol der to lite Folds of soft taffeta ribbon tc HHSHTtch the moire encircle the low dome Sffi^Vowi) and are fastened on tbe side Mn>y'n rosette. The liat rests on a bandeau to correspond. In tbe indent of the brim od the rigbt side are fastened PT two black ostrich tjus. [ In toques the three-cornered effects k are less accentuated. I was shown one ior evening wear made 01 a new materia]?fine gray netting threaded With silver spangles This is trimmed wit-h two wings covered with spangles arranged like fishes' scales. Another is composed of folds of gray-green velvet alternating with bands of chenille foraid of the same color.?Millinery JTrade Keview. k > A Sct01?pc<l Gowo, A scalloped gown was of gpcew broadcloth, in combination with heavj black satin. The gown was n princess with a short bolero, one of the mop fashionable models of the season. Tb< skirt was of the usual circular, smooth over the liips and very wide at the hem.- The front of the skirt had twe shaped gores over-sewn, forming a I rvn?>?l Thoco TOoro nnirlinirinrl UUUUIC I'aun. Jiicov nvtv iniiKiuuiv^, but the main body of the skirt had a wide shaped flounce headed by largo scallops, cut in a fancy, pointed shape. In Minx. A minx turban with a brim turned up close 1o the crown had a folded scarf of gold gauze between brim and crown, the ends crossing on one side where a cluster of mink tails were arranged plume fashion. Below these, placed so as to re6t on the hair of the wearer, was an exquisite rose of gold tissue with green satin leaves. The Slipper. A satin 6lipper, which comes in black and colors, is trimmed with a huge Pierrot rosette of tulle edged with a fine line of beads. This slipper in | white satin and gold beads is very attractive. ... " DESIGN BY KAY MAflTCii TUME,) 1 " ~~ _ . "" .Breakfast Jacket. Such a tasteful breakfast jacket a1 this one is sure to find its place, n< matter how many others may already be included in the wardrobe. It is charmingly graceful and can be relied upon to be very generally becoming. It is loose enough for comfort while it is snug enough to be attractive and altogether fulfills every possible requirement. In this case the material is one of the new cashmeres that give n shadow effect, .the color being pnle blue and the trimming ecru lace, but the jacket would be equaily appropriate for almost all the lighter weight wools and also for the simple silks that are used for garments of the sort. The jacket is made with the fronts and back. The back is tucked to give a box pleated effect and there is a fitted girdle arranged over the waist line, which serves to confine the fulness and which makes an important characteristic. At the neck is the big wide collar that gives a cape effect and the sleeves are full, in three-quarter length, finished with prettily poiuted frills. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and threeeighth yards twenty-seven, four yards thirty-two of two and one-eighth yards forty-four inches wide with six and three-quarter yards of bindiug to trim &8 illustrated. 1HE PULPIT. JW4.A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY PASTOR C. T. RUSSELL Subject: Centre of the Divine Revelation in Jesus Christ. Providence, R. I.?Pastor C. T. Russell, of Allegheny, Pa., preached twice here Sunday in Infantry Hall to large audiences. His evening discourse follows: The Bible may be said to be a revelation of Jesus, who in turn is a revelation of the Father. Its opening pages tell us of the fall of the first human eon of God, Adam, point to the death nenaltv unon him. and Indicate the need of a Saviour nnd Redeemer; and, more than this, inferentially promise such a one as the seed of the woman who ultimately shall bruise the serpent's head?crush, subdue all evil. Its intermediate pages are prophecies and types respecting Jesns and the work He would accomplish as a Redeemer, and later as a deliverer of the race. And further on it records His birth. His ministries, Hirs death,'resurrection, glorification, and the massages He gave to all who would become His followers, including His promise to come again and receive them unto Himself. The closing pages of the Bible picture in symbolical language the completion of the present age, the inauguration of the millennial age, the work that it will accomplish in the blessing and uplifting of the human family . ud the ultimate purging of the earth from all sin, imperfection, evil, when every voice in heaven and earth shall be heard praising the Lord. The teachings of higher criticism are *1AHTT AW > ci j luioicauiii^ uii iiJio auujcvi* xucj .would have us consider that all miracles are impossible; that our Lorfl was hot born of a virgin, and by the direct power of God; that He was born as other men; that He happened to be a rather superior type of man; that He never had a prehuman existence. The Scriptures teach to the contrary of this most explicitly, that '"He left the glory which He had with the Father before, the world was;" that "He who was rich for our sakes became poor," taking a human form for a particular, specific purpose ? "for the' suffering of death," that He might be our Redeemer. (John xvii, 5; II. Cor. viii., 9; Heb. ii., 9). The inspired writers go further and declare, "All things were made by Him, and without Him was not one thing made that was made." The context tells us that He was in the beginning with the Father, and was the iWord, or mouthpiece, and personal representative of the Father in all the work of the creation of all the remain <ler of the works of God. We should noft in passing the consistency of the Scriptures in respect to the supremacy of Jehovah God. From first to last with one voice the Scriptures declare that there is but one supreme in the universe. How comes it then that the record is that Jesus, our Master, in Hie prehuman condition, was the logos, a God with the God? Is this testimony out of accord with the remainder of scriptural testimony? We answer, No! The name Jehovah was never permitted to any but the one, the Father supreme; but the title God, which in the Hebrew is Elohim, and sometimes abbreviated El, signifies a mighty one, and might be applied to any mighty one in authority and power, Jehovah Himself being superior to all Elohim. An examination of the scriptural uses of the word Elohim substantiates the foregoing. We find, for instance, that it has not only been applied to the Father and to the special representative and prime minister, the logos, the Son of God manifest in the flesh, but iwe find also that the word is used in respect to angels when they directly represented the Lord as His special messengers, they who are His mighty ones, we una also tnat tins title nioliim was used in respect to angels when they directly represented the Lord as His special messengers, they who are His mighty ones. We find also this title Elohim was used in respect to the first elders of Israel when God recognized them as His representatives in judging their brethren. It will be remembered that the Jews were angry with our Lord Jesus, not "bccause He called Himself Jehovah or intimated any usurpation of the Fath-' cr's place, honors or prerogatives, but simply because He called Himself the Son of God and referred to Jehovah God as His Father. On one occasion when they were about to stone Him Jesus inquired why, and the answer (was that in calling Himself the Son of God He was affecting to be superior to them and to others of mankind," and affecting a relationship with the great Jehovah, which they termed blasphemy, because they said it was affecting an equality with Jehovah; but our Lordcontradicted that thought and pointed out to them that the claim to be the Son of God was not to put Himself on iiu equu'iiijr trim jcuuvau, uui ujai iuc Scriptures fully sanctioned such a title as the Son of God. The Jews never claimed the title Sons of God for themselves, nor would it have been proper for them to have done so.n Not until the great sacrifice for sins was offered by the Redeemer could the Father so justify any members of the fallen race as to receive them back into the close, the dear relationship represented by the word Son, but, since the redemptive work of Jesus, spiritual Israelites are termed song of God, as the Apostle declares, 'Now are we the sons of God, though it doth not yet appear what we shall be (how great our glory and exaltation in the resurrection change), but we know that when He shall appear (our Lord and Master, the only begotten San) we shall be like Him and see Him as He is." (I. John, iii., 2). The Scriptures clearly show that the followers of Christ were accepted of the Father as sons when begotten of the Spirit at Pentecost and since. (John, 1, 12-13). The divine announcement of our Jjora Jesus Deiore ms uinn whs, "Thou slialt call His name Jesus. He shall be great and shall be called the Son of the Highest; and the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of His father David; and He shall reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of His kingdom there shall be 110 end." In explanation of His miraculous birth ,we read, "The power of the highest shall overshadow .thee (Mary); therefore also that holy tning that shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God." (Luke, i., 31-35). Here we have the title, the Son of God, officially applied to the man Christ Jesus before His birth, and this ititle He continually approved, saying: 4,As the Father hath sent Me, even so cerkl I you." "I came not into the world to do Mine own will, but the will of Him that sent Me." "The Father worketh hitherto and (now) 1 work." (John, xx., 21; John, ivs., 34, ,Y. 17). Let us look back and note the scriptural declaration to the effect that the logos, .who BubseGuently became the man Christ Jesus, was the beginning of the creation of God. These are onr Lord's own words and are in full accord "with the Apostle Panl's statement that our Lord is theJmage of .the invisible God, the first-born of every creature (more literally, the first born of all creation), for by Him -were all things createl that are .'n heaven and that are in earth, visible and invisible. * * * all things were created by' Him and for Him, and He was before all things and by Him all, things consist. And He is the head of the church, which is His body; He is (the beginning, the first born from the dead; that in all things He might have the pre-eminence. For it pleased the Father (the invisible God) that in Him should all fulness dwell. (Col., i., 1519). Our Lord Himself pointed out to us that it is the heavenly Father's will that we should honor the Son as we honor the Father?also that we should rewguiie iiilli an uic i' aiuci o i^icsentative, tbrougli whom He is working all things according to the counsel of His own will. The Apostle explains to us that although our Lord occupied the chief position next to the Father -before He came into the world ito be our Redeemer, yet He now occupies a still higher position. He tells us that He was obedient to the Father and humbled Himself even unto death, even the death of the cross. Although the reformers did valiant service in dispelling much of the gross darkness and in lifting the true light of God's Word, they evidently overlooked the fallacy called the Trinity. But we have in the Bible the standard authority by which the reformers were guided, and it is our duty as. well as our privilege to hear what the Lord hath enokpn unnn this subiect and to conform our faith thereto. The Scriptures dp indeed kteacb, as we have seen, that there 1b an Almighty One,' "The God and Father of our Lord' Jesus Christ." (Romans, xv., 6). They do also teach that the only begotten Son of God, highly exalted by the Father, is *to be reverenced even aB we reverence the Father; aieo .that the Scriptures do teach that there is a Holy Spirit of God, -which, proceeding from the Father and/rom the Son, i& also to be the Spirit of the sanctified church. But some one inquires in astonishment: Is not the doctrine of the Trin ity particularly set lortn in tne jjiDie i We answer, No. Everything as "we have shown is to the contrary; the word Trinity, trinitarian, etc., is not to be found, even in our common version of the Bible, which was made by those who held this as the scriptural position and who would have been glad to thus translate any Hebrew or Greek word if they had found any such word capable of such translation. The few of our day who would stand up in defense of the unreasonable proposition that we have three god8 equal in power and glory, and yet that the three in some incomprehensible manner are one in person, would like to use -the one text of Scripture which has defended this absurdity for centuries, but which all scholars now agree with no part of the. original writings, but was added about the seventeenth centnrv. at the time when this doctrine of the Trinity, by persecution, had forced Itself into the place of full control. < The passage referred to is omitted in the revised version of the Bible, although all the members of the ccrs-i raittee were professedly trinitarians in' their views. They were too conscientious to give further publicity to that which was recognized as a fraudulent interpolation intended to deceive and! to support the trinitarian view. The1 words not in the original, added in the seventh century ? not found in any Scriptures of earlier date than the sev-j enth century?you should note in your, Testament by striking them out, name"} ly, beginning with the words, "in heav-j en, the Father, the Word and the Holy Ghost, and these three are one. And there are three that bear witness in' earth," .If -those fraudulent words be stricken out the passage reads as it did; originally, with beautiful simplicity and clearness, "There are three that bear records, the Spirit, the water and the blood, and these three agree in one (testimony)." The absurdity of ithe passage as It stands in the common version can be seen at a glance. The interpolation would make the passage say that the Father, the Word and the Holy Ghost all three are one, and /that they aro bearing record in heaven that Jesus is the Son of God. How unreasonable to suppose that such a witnessing in heaven should be necessary. Do not the angels know that Jesus is the Sou of God? Why, then, the statement that the Father, the Son and the Holy, Ghost are witnessing in heaven that JesuB is the Son of God? Every inter-; polation, and we are glad -that they are few, marks itself as an absurdity, and cannot be harmonized with the inspired portions of the Word. This is a further evidence to us that the Scriptures as given by God are of divine inspiration, and (that nothing 6hould be added to them nor taken from them. Evidently, however, it is the duty of every child of Sod to erase from his Bible any portion, such as this one, that may be found to be an addition, not the words of the inspired apostles. tThis passage would not suggest to any reasonable mind that the Father and the Son are one in person were it not that this false doctrine has beclouded judgment , on the subject. There are more ways of being one than merely personally one. Our Lord'^ \^ords elsewhere explain His meaning here. Praying to the Father for His followers He said, after praying for His apostles, "Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also who will believe on Me through their word, that they all may be one as Thou, Father, art in Me and I in Thee, that they may be one in "us." (John xvii., 20-21). Here is the sense of oneness between the Father and the Son, oneness of spirit, oneness of purpose?not oneness of person. Joint H?ira With Christ. A dying judge, the day before his de parture to be with Christ, said to his pastor, says Rev. G. W. Plack, in th6 Homiletic Review, "Do you know enonerh about Jaw to understand what is meant by joint tenancy?" "No," was the reply. "I know nothing about law, but I know a little about grace, and that satisfies me." "Well," said the judge, "if you and I were jcfnl tenants on a farm I could not say to you, 'That is your hill of corn, and this is mine: that is your blade oj grass, and this is mine; but we would have share and share alike in everything on the place. I have just been lying here and thinking with unspeak* able joy that Jesus Christ has nothing apart from me; that everything He has is mine, and that we will sharp and share alike through aW eternity." Ob6 Great Difference. 'A little Moslem child accounted for her preference for the Christian religion by saying, "I like your Jesus because He likes little girls. Our Mo? bammed did not love little girls." Withl unerring instinct she had seized upon at least one of the great differences between tire two religions. ------ nnirnlMlh Police Graft in Singapore. Yesterday Ong Quee paid a visit to several itinerant venders In Cliina ( street and made a collection .of 23 g cents?for-the police, he. said. Sikh P. C. 78 saw money passing and made inquiries, arrest following. This morn- M ing he "was charged by P. C. Taylor & with this. He pleaded guilty,, and as be had already done a month In prison Mr. Seth sent him there for two.? P Straits Budget. b b The original phonograph was In- v, .vented by Mr. Tbomas Edison in 1877." a j^^ouilvilie, Ky. Is" ' The genuine / druggists. 1 % Fig Syri] JL of every pa< Tht Good Olil-FasUloned Game, Uncle Hiram was bewailing the de- c peneracy of modem sports. "Look at * baseball," lie said. "There ain't half 13 the fun in It there was when I was a roung man. thirty years ago. Nowa- I days the fellers with the bat don't ? seem to be able to do anything with j the ball. There's lots of games when they don't make a run. , ? "I mind the time when I belonged to the Fear naughts of Prairietown. There was a club up in Heddingville 1 that thought they could beat us with- * out half trying. They challenged as. ond we took 'em tip. They come down one morning with a whole car-load ^ of people from Heddingville to see 'em wipe us out. "Well, sir. we begun playing at ten ^ o'clock in the' forenoon. The game y wasn't finished at noon, and we quit ? for dinner. At two o'clock in the af- ? ternoon we went at it again, and mighty nigh the whole town went r out to the pasture where we was playing to see the game. c "First one side would get ahead, and then the other. Batting? You never saw such batting in your life. There was more than two dozen home runs. It -was close on to five o'clock -when the last man was put out. But we heat j, 'em. We took the conceit out of them tl fellers, and they never challenged us e again." "p "But what was the score, Uncle c Hiram?" asked one of the listeners. t: "Ninety-seven to eighty-nine," proud- * ,]y answered Uncle Hiram; "and I made fifteen of them runs myself. Think of that when you hear about n 'one to nuthing' game in fifteen 1nn- r ings! I tell you, we could hit the ball ^ in them days!"?Youth's Companion. b Woman's Ki^hta. D The tra^i car was full and the night t] was wet. The bell rang, the car ^ stopped,* and a lady entered. As she looked tired a nice old gentleman in the corner rose and inquired In a kind b; vnipp "Wrmlfl von like to Kit down. ^ ma'am? Excuse me, -though," he.add- ^ ed, "I think you are Mrs. Sprouter, the ir advocate of woman's rights." ** "I am, sir," replied the lady calmly. "You think that women should be d equal to men?" further queried the m old gentleman. "Certainly," was the firm reply. ^ "You thinlc that they should have ir the same rights and privileges?" was the next question. ^ "Most empb>tically," came from the ci cupporter of oman's rights. "Very well,' said the kind old gentleman sitting down again, "just stand up and enjoy them." And she did.? The Tatler. j Clancj'H Horse In a Race. A noted man in Springfield was Michael Clancy, a contractor, who had p become rich. He bought a string of horses and entered them for the Sara- _ toga meet. He raced his horses for y the fun of it, and rarely bet One day Jf be had a horse entered that seemed to c. have so excellent a chance to win that x? he bet $10 on it. ^ -fhtt hnrcoo ?rr\f nwoT Plun r>T7 IN stood in the grand stand watching ** them through his field glasses. Some cj of his friends, knowing of the ?10 bet, ~ crowded about and began to joke him. i "Where's you horse now?" Clancy / was asked. f Clancy surveyed the field carefully, J 'I can't quite make out" he replied, f "whether he is last in the third race or 1 first in the fourth."?Boston-Herald. / A Hlgb Jnnopine Hojr. A jnmping hog afforded much imusemcnt In the hog yards at fbe tockyards day before yesterday. Alhburgh the animal weighed 180 pounds : would jump board fences five feet igb. The speculator who bought the hog t>und it impossible to 'confine it to a en, so the pen had to be covered with oards. According to men who have een at the hog yard for years this ras the first hog that had ever leaped fence there.?Kansas City Times. j Ko sweeten, Dii o refresh, [ he ko cleanse the 1 bi system, @ sti Effectually I Fc and Gently; \ an tere is only \ i te Genuine w t rap of Figs; V ? get its bene- J s ial effects 1 ' 1 ays bay the genuine?Mt niaRgS S&rv Francisco, Cal. Syrup of Figs is for sale by rhe full name of the companyip Co.?is always printed :kage. Price Fifty Cents The Swiss village of Zofingen, in the anton of Aargau, was decorated with lags recently in honor of a hen which ad laid her thousandth egg. ITS permanently (rared. No fits ornervoasess after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great ferve Restorer, |2triol bottle andtreatisefree >r.K.II.Kline, Ltd., 931 Areh 8t.,Phiia., Pa. In a recent burglary in London the robbers used a new weapon. " To Core a Cold In One Day > 'ake Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Iruggists refund money if it fails to cure. ?. /. Grove's signature on each box. 25c. The natives in China eat very 'little ititchers' meat, except pork. All railway employes In Prussia will, lereafter, be examined once in five ears. For those no longer considered ihysically qualified, pensions will be rovided or other places found. ^GONY OF SORE HANDS tracked and Reeled?Water and Heat Canned Intense Pain?Conld Do Mo Housework?Very Grateful to Cntlcnra. "My hands cracked and peeled, and were o sore it was impossible for me to do my ousework. If I put them in water 1 was a agony for hours, and if 1 tried to cook tie heat caused me intense pain. 1 consultd two doctors, but their prescriptions fere utterly useless. Wow alter using ene aJce of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuicura Ointment my hands are entirely 'ell. 1 am very grateful. (Signed) Mrs. linnie Brew, 18 Dana St., Boxbury, Mass." Fishing In France. Some French anglers use a tiny miror attached to the line near the baited ,00k. The idea is that the fish, seeing tself reflected, hastens to snatch the ait from its supposed rival. Very uccessful results have been obtained tirough the employment of this unique evice. Deafness Cannot Be Cured y local applications as they cannot reach the iscased portion of the ear. There i=> only one ay to euro deafness, and that is by constiitiona! remedies. Deafness is caused by an iflameJ condition of the mucous lining of ie Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inamed you have a rumbling sound or imperict hearing, and when It is entirely closed eafness is the result, and unless the inflamatlon can be taken out and this tube reored to its normal cond tion, hearing will : destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten :o caused by catarrh,which is nothing but an iflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any ise of Deafness(caused by catarrh) that can)t be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for rcnlars free. I'.J.Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c, Take Hali's Family Pills for constipation. A Previous Apology. "So sorry not to have heard your cture last night," said the loquacious dy. "I know I missed a treat; everyxly says it was great!" "How did they find out?" asked Mr. f rockcoa%t "The lecture, you know, as postponed.'?Detroit Free Press. I|l y TCfl Reliable men to represent us,oldunil J JO I EU""new territory^. IVrmaneiit^KifiJtion, | R. BUltiT& CO.. Nurserymen, Hartford, Coun.'" " rING INFALLIBLE IilDNKY CURE^.Promptest, bweetost, Host. 25c. KafundodIfuu:iafactory. On approval. Postal brings booklet. FALLIBLE MEDICINE CO., Buffalo, N. Y. 'r^Tiompson's'Eye'Water R.CE.^25 cts | mmm ^tiCm THE (MP A D M | KIN ONE DAY mlnVZJ mmm lis I^IW^!i^FDRrtaiU?? C*11 tor jour X "yyffSy\$< F, W.Dieme Wbcre tl?a Btlij Vh. ''M When a man cfime rustling at a ter- I rlfic pace to catch a Staten Island ferryboat and arrived just in time to hay? ' v|B the gateman shut the door before his face, a-bystander remarked: I "You didn't run fartenough." I "I ran fast enough," replied the dfsappointed man, "but I didn't start In Pearls that are kept under lock and key will, in the course of years, become dull and lose the sheen which makes them so valuable. I iiuag aBBpiggf spels colds and adaches when lious or conipated; >r men, women id chHdren; JM Vets best on I I he kidneys I JB ind liver, I H itomach and 1 W towels; I ( I ' I^Eu! inqfactured by the I -f ' YRUP(?I I flewYork?/i.Y. | H all first-class' J . ||S -California f on the front . ? per bottle. :||| B | To be Given for Reliable Information K I H We have set aside . .. f I to be spent for information and will '' ? give five dollars for a Postal Card H| gM giving the first reliable newa cf . \ '$M iH rkanr* Ia a*ll m fiafimflfal tf^mn cn^lm fit H our styles, within our range of sizes. We 4o ' '/Si ? Dot want inquiries at this time lot vertical, -t~ l' Si {Taction or gas engines. . > Sin | ATLASI m' engines AND boilers 2h |hj BoUdersof the molt complete line of engiDeaaad SI boileri mad* by any one manufacturing ooncera is 9B Uie world . . ! v Atlas Engine Works ' 1 iM n Selling agencies in all cities INDIA NAPOUS flfl Corllu, Tour Valve, Automatic, High-Speed, Coa-,H ?H pound and Throttling Engine?. Watar Tube, To- , * v QH bular and Portable Boiler* MB 9l Atlai Engines In service J,#00,000 H. P. In Atlas Boilers ia service 4,000,000 H. f. litViMAM tSeir sexTuse<W?s^*doa?che?U maralraa^suc? cessfal. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs. stops discharges, seals inflammation sad local soreness, cures Veucorrhcea and nasal catarrh. Partine is in powder iorm to be dissolved in para water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES i For sale at druggists, 60 cents a bp*. 1 Trial Box and Book of Instructions Prat. ' * The r. Paxton Company ' Borrow, Mas*.' SWT ISfflaBiBBBf I HunnR E1??2H ^IDA, M%r CUBA, NASSAU, JfMEXtCO AND CALIFORNIA. IL 2 Put Trains Bally to Florida Bm& Ttnrlnrr IKo TT<nf?a Cmo/itn SOUTHERN'S PALM LIMITED, Sally, except Sunday, * Commencing; January 8th, 1006, New York and St* Augustine. ?LE< TBJO LIGHTED. Four other Fast drains Dally to the Southweel "Washington and Southwestern Limited. New York Office, 271 & 1185 Broad way.( Alex. 8. Thweatt, E. P. Agt, New York. S. H. Hardwick, P. T. JL, W. H. tayloe, G. P. Ao fhe Life Saver of Children With Croup, Co ugh 8, Colds and Pneumonia is Horde's Croup Cure. It prevents Diphtheria and Meiniranous Croup. No opium. No nausea. uUc. Mailed iostpaid A. P. UOXS1E, BuUalo, N. Y. EJSff ALL* F AILsF^Q^ :h Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ? ri-GRIPINE UARANTEED TO CURE y iOLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. -Or I pine to a dealer who won't 6o?rut?? It. tOMT BACK IF IT DOESN'T CUKE. r.tLD.y Manufacturer, Springfield, Jf?<