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? 5 ? W kNew York City?Unquestionably the Eton makes one of the favorite coats of the winter, and here is one that includes a vest and which is so desisted he to mean genuine warimn ana com4 ifort as well as jauntiness Is style. iThe model Is made of broadcloth with brimming of velvet and handsome I m Blouse Coat Sevei buttons and is stitched -with beldlng Bilk, bat it Is adapted to all the season's suitings, while, again, combinations can be used if preferred. The Vfcst of one material and the coat'of another always are effective while the re vers can be faced for their entire length instead of being made with the trtqaming portions, if better liked. The f sleeves are absolutely novel and exceedingly smart, the flare cuffs rendering them exceptionally becoming. The Eton is made with the fronts, the back and the vest. The back is full length and the fronts are cut off above the waist line and the vest is extended slightly below at the front. The fitting is accomplished by means of shoulder and under-arm seams and the closing is made by buttoning the Test over in double breasted style. The i neck is finished with u flat collar and the fronts with the prettily shaped revers. The sleeves are made with the full upper portions and plain deep cuffs, that are finished with U)e rollover ones of contrasting material. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four yards i twenty-one, two yards forty-four or one and five-eighth yards fifty-two inches wide. j Glrdlcw Are Worn, Girdlea are finis d so elegantly that Lthey we a- desirable adjunct to the j suit; and the newest fall and winter 1 gowns Lave wide, beautifully finished belts, stomachers and belt pieces which are works of art from any standpoint Many of them are jewel trimmed; others are embroidered; countless ones are shirred, and others are trimmed with beautiful buckles. Colored Veil*. Colored veils are seen to a great extent, one of the new colors being n deep gray called Maltese gray, an effective sLade. The net veils are very sheer, and some of the new ones have real lace applique, while velvet dots appear to a very great extent, liibbon-trimmed veils are a novelty, the ribbon being either sheered or put 011 flat. A Fine Fac? Clothe There Is a subdued serai ium pink m*. a very fine face-cloth, fashion* 1 tbe most bewitching gowns over col* ceived?the skirt plain aDd flowing, and guiltless of all trimming; the short [ basqued vest opening down the fronl on a fold of black taffeta. Worn with a black hat and handsome black fox fur set, this costume should prove a dream of elegance. Fancy Braide in Hea<lwe?r. Chenille and other fanby braid will certainly be used this winter, but more for making toques than hats, cneniiie tissue is also utilized to cover small hats anil toques and to make soft beret crowns. A very pretty small hat has one of those crowns built of crimson chenille tissue and velvet brim to match and for trimming some large velvet anemones. In other models the chenille tissue is used for the entire shape interwoven with ribbons.?Millinery Trade Keview. Nine Gored Pleated Skirt. The pleated skirt shows variations so many that it would almost seem that no limit to its possibilities is to be found. Illustrated is one of the newest and latest that is graceful and attractive, both In the round and the walking length, and which is exceedingly well liked. The model is made of chiffon broadcloth with trimming of silk bands, the pleats being stitched flat with belding silk, but almost all the materials of the season are sufficiently Jigut in weigm xu w Design By May Manton i Gored Plaited Skirt' quite correct. Broadcloth is always a favorite but Venetian cloth and various other weaves of the material also are much soon, while again the chiffon velvets and moire velours and the long list of silks are equally in vogue. The trimming allows of much variation, and while such bands of silk as.these are fashionable, there are almost numberless bandings and braids which can be purchased by the yard. ** The skirt is made in nine gores and is iaid in a combination of narrow box pleats and backward turning single pleats, two box pleats meeting at the front while single pleats meet at the back, where the closing is made invisibly. The quantity of -material required for the medium size is twelve yards twenty-seven, seven yards forty-four of fifty-two inches wide wlien material ins figures or nap; ten and one-half yards twenty-seven, six and one-half yards forty-four or five and one-quar* iit v>ii*(is imv-twn ii>ehr>s wide when it has not, witli twelve yards of trimming. "Woman's Achievements. Every season we are asked to do something fresh with our figures, says a writer iu Lady's Pictorial. Either we are made to elongate or compress them, to wear our shoulders square or sloping, to be slim or plump, to have marked hips or to be of the configuration of the deal board. Yet we always manage to look elegant. I THE PULPIT. AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON I THt REV. W. J. THOMPSON. Subject: Wurp and Woof. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Sunday Simpson E. Church celebrated its s>sty-first s niversary. The subject of Pastor 1 J. Thompson's morning sormon w "Faith and Love in the Warp, Paste and Members in the Woof." The te was from I. Tliessatonians i:3. A Thompson said: The warp consists of the threa running lengthwise through the enti fabric. The woof consists of t threads crosswise, and prompted the weaver's fancy, may vary wi each shot of the shuttle. The warp of Simpson Church is th which through these sixty-one yee has remained unchanged and is v changeable. The woof, comprisin nnstnrs mul members bv inexoral necessity and purposeful desi changes and evermore must chanj Faith is a prominent thread in t warp. Conscious of our spiriti growth we reach out after God happily we may find and be aided Him. God is not found out by searc ing. The futility of the quest ad welcome to Jesus who reveals t sought-for God as the Father. T hold forth Jesus the authoritative i vcaler of God and our relation to Hi as the light of the world. Absorbed in His talks and wall we are caught up in His life, and 1 that life conformed to his likenei Thus Jesus saves men by His Hi Also by His death. The obstructio to the tunnel-boring under Manhatti and the rivers, overcome by the enj neers' sacrifice, measure their devotii to their ideal?rapid transit. Christ's sacrifice of His life reveal* His complete love for His ideal, t salvation of man, and makes that si vation complete. We preach Chr) and Him crucified as the all-sufficie saviour of men who receive Hii Philosophers reason men into discip ship. Without violence to reason, ai I invnkin<r it onlv so far as it is a oa of conscience, we command men ever where to repent and .believe. Repe by ceasing to. do evil; believe by t trustful appropriation of the Chrj life and death. Our forerunners this are John the Baptist, Peter a: flaming evangels on to Whitfield ai Moody. Our justification is the w .ness of sins forgiven, and lives brin ing forth the fruits of righteousness. Fear is in the warp. It is ours 1 generous hereditary legacy, and coi passes things, beasts, men and devi "When fear is uppermost it dwar] Neither moral nor religious giants a the product of fear. What pygmi worriment, fear of disaster, mak< Intinjidation from eclipses and comc science shows to be baseless. The fe of beasts, which vanishes before ti prowess of the hunter. Fear of phyi cal man departing with war. Fear speak one's convictions and advocatii measures he disbelieves, thus coui Ufo flion Incr onrl ilccor | illg AUi JCOO lUIUi 1IUIU11J?31 unu uvjva ing expatriation from a democracy these are all unwholesome fears. T sooner banished the'better. Moral fear. Wordsworth calls du the "Stern Daughter of the Voice God." She is a task mistress over i Our superior therefore "we fear. H commands, like a chrysallis, metam( phoses into the pleasures of duty. Fe of the law drives the criminal to oi ward legal acts. The best citizens a moved without fear. William Llo; Garrison, the great moral champic the centennial of whose birth this di is. when dragged through the stree of Boston by a mob, said "his soul w devoid of fear." Fear is the beginning and not t end of morality. Godly fear. Peti nius argued fear made the gods. Sor religions have their devils. We ba ours who goeth about as a devourii lion. The Old and New Testamen have 518 references to fear. It may be needful for the beginnin and salutary with certain tempei ments, but fear is only the beginnh of wisdom. The almightiness of Jehovah mak us tremble. But Ha^draws near to in the flesh as we become one wi Him. His power is for us. Fear frc the least to the King of Terrors abolished. All power is for our go mirl rva fnn rtrt tnrcor fpnr Fpfll' ?riv place to love and sinks to tue neth side of the warp in remembrance the judgments of the lawgiver. T terrors of the law are replaced by t grace of the gospel. Fear is the t ginning of wisdom, iti. end is Ioa In our necessitated helplessness in : fancy and youth we depended up our fathers. That dependence m< brought forth as the foremost fil: feeling, love. Ail men have this 1 telage, and to them Jesus reveals G as the Father who excels the most t voted father in giving good things. The devotee of many gods may sober until he is intoxicated at t feast, of Dionysius and be righteo throughout all. To the same devot wisdom is a virtue if he is a stat< man and courage if he is a soldi* There are different virtues for dift'cre times and different people. Jesus : vealed Diety as one God and Fathi therefore virtue is one and love the fulfilling of all virtue. To offe: in one point of love is to be guilty all. because righteousness is a unit. The acknowledged master in n craft addresses my ambition wil roil Cilll ue Hll rll USiMI t-lJUill III i and I will aid you." He Las my hear best love. The absolutely perfect G' addresses my loftiest ambition wil "Be ye perfect as I am perfect and A proffered grace, all-sufficient, is you 'ftv the asking." It follows my hear supreme love wells up to God. T most prominent thread in the warp "Love God with all your heart, mir soul and strength." God the Father- of all?then gee raphy, national boundaries, i6 a matt of the head and not of the heart ai merchandise, a commodity in thin and not in men. Accordingly, in t beginning of this era it was pred< tined a William Lloyd Garrison shou toll the death knell of slavery. Bu dhistic love is individualistic and do no mighty deeds; Christian love is s cial and does. It inculcates love to t neighbor and unites to the true reli ion the loftiest morals and inspir the mightiest deeds of man for man Thomas Hobbes set the Englis thinking world agog with, "Self-lo is me oniy jovc; we lujeriiie-, uut cu not Iovo another." This cynic wou view the Samaritan's succor of t wounded man not to mitigate his si ferings, but himself to exhilarate power possessed. Adam Smith h shown with his pen what so mai have with their lives that sympat) is an integral part of our natui Sympathy, to feel with another, is prerequisite of love. The tragic stim lates it. Accordingly, in the Christn religion the death of Jesus is mc prominent. His betrayal, triple deni by Peter, stripped of His robe, mock scourged, carrying the cross, bound it, nailed; His agonizing cries* deat burial?the whole is detailed wl tmnwfcme. Add to this the remei brance of a .young man radiant with, hopes that ate stifled; the long-for Messiah, Son of God. founder of a o ,,, religion, whose life was all for human 0 weal, crucified in the populous capital c of His nation as a malefactor, and the -j tragedy of Calvary becomes pathetic . in the extreme. If the Oberammergau play is so heartrending, the loved dis- ^ ciples of Jesus must have had an ex- T M perience in pathos rarely felt by mor tal. It is a wonder some of them did not die from sheer pity. To-day we observe Passion Week <] as and the forty days of Lent. Art, lit- n ,r? erature and sermons picture the pa- j ! thetic profile of Jesus and melt our hearts. The courageous man of Cal. vary is less viewed, and wisely so. ,tt? We need to be infused with the pas* c ! sion of Jesus to give us the heart to * jj feel. The melted heart first. Darwin ruled sympathy out of order in Uiis world of struggle. A recent 1 reputable sociologist shows how sym- a* pathy evidenced in mutual aid has made possible the life of the animate world and the progress of man. - In the highest form of life the offspring is fewest and weakest. Pity absent, and such would perish. God pitying perishing man brought redemption. I Jesus magnified sympathy. It melts l?' the heart to love. There is false sympathy. A sect, the Jainists, so pity venomons insects as not to kill them. The r" Doukhobor* absurdly pity the puffing ?*; engine. ' Sentimentalists so pity, the "p perpetrators of horrible murder as to ; foil justice; parents their disobedient pe" child as to spare the rod and spoil. False philanthropists feed the lazy and pauperize those who ought not to ^s' eat because they do not work. We must sympathize aright. ir- The woman who cares for the orJ. ' phan; the nurse who ceases not her ? vigils in the epidemic; the neighbor * who grants a loan to a deserving man in a hard place; the friend with his on A*1t. nnAlfAn +A 1J ten thfi liUJ Djn/acu rv Vi u iv weighted heart and gladden the recordjj~ ing angel?these are all illustrations of . sympathizing aright. The highest form * " is the poor sympathizing with the rich l6* in their loneliness, and the rich with the poor In their needs. Wben the ??* highest and lowest feel as one, sym?I pathy has its perfect work. The heart "Jr thus sympathetic will go down in pity, irt out in love to enemies-and up In love to God, and throughout envleth. not. Thus this most blessed faculty of the heart is .pure. We preach "Love one . another with a' pure heart, fervently." Love, the most prominent thread warp, 3(j is more than "mere morality." Knowlr1 edge of the good does not overcome lt" the inertia to its doing. The imperatives of duty must be divinely spoken , aud warmed. It's not the act, but the Dy motive that gives quality.v The love of God to us in Christ Jesbs drawing 's* us into fellowship with the Infinite cs* heart imparts the highest quality to our re deeds. PR ~ - - , + YT~n T*Tt iiaix* is axjuiiiei uiicuu m uic . <n j>. JS" We hare earned advanced university j. degrees in tlfls accomplishment. In?r stance civil wars and religious inquisi. tions. There is an Orientalism in Thugism, whose votaries worship the ? sword as the Greek his Icon. Killing is worship wherein they do the will , " of tbeir goddess. Asceticism could have a patent office all its own for in. 'strumeuts of flagellation devised to scourge monks. into hatred of this beautiful world. Count the number of T^. those you hate. We naturally love ?, friends and hate enemies. From 1S" Christ we learn to hate aright. e,r The Pharisee's Jaw was: "Be holy, as the Lord your God is holy." Jesus ar sat at meat in a Pharisee's house. There were good Pharisees. There 1 j were others whom the Master branded y as "generation of vipers, straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel; with- Q out whited sepulchres, and full of b dead, men's bones wiUri." Not the Pharisees, but their sins, jesus hated, tl . The cross shows God's immeasurable p . hatred of sin. Paul delivered the most ^ ?" drastic philippics against sin, the de- 0 "e stroyer of soul. To describe sin as F * the glory of the imperfect is worse than criminal. We ought to hate sin with all passion. Q Wnvir is ft nrominent thread in the tl 5s warp. Love, hate, fear are emotional. 1 "a* John Wesley, in his experience of o Qg stfving faith, says the heart was i( strangely warmed. The Sermon on the |j Mount is a message to the heart The feelings have reared the great faiths. "Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh." Tonurseour feel- f ings for themselves is irreligious. it They must issue in acts. Hunger leads n us to eat. not for the titillation of the e palate, but to restore lost tissue and ? complete the body. The blessing of v P? hungering and thirsting after right- ^ ? eousness is in leading to the activity that fills us with the fullness of God. ^ .?* Feelings evidencing in action is what * we need. * ? t True character is within. But "no n . j man liveth to himself." "Let your e ? light shine", is the command to ob- a jectify that character. To be seen, it 0 I must be in good works, and those best seen are to men's bodily needs. Eleeb mosynary provision.? must always . characterize Christians. s nt 0 US Why He Studied the Bible. v ee The ReV. Russell Bigelow Pope, of j( the Methodist Episcopal Church, who recently died in his sixtieth year, ac- _ nt complished that which seems almost to :e~ be beyond belief. He read the Bible d 5.r- through 150 times, thirty-eight times o is in one year, and once in one day. He p acl made his own concordance, and could o of give almost any chapter and verse in & any part of the Bible at call. For forty years he read the Greek Testament through carefully once a quarter. His n,e reason for this close and accurate ^ t s searching of the Scriptures is given by Dr. Pope in the Christian Advocate, as "? follows: "Once upon a time I called ^ at a drug store and asked for a certain 3' *'s medicine. The clerk went to the back' si *s of the store and laid his hand on the a !,e unmarked vial. 'How do you know ja '*? that this is the medicine I inquired l(J? for?' He replied, 'I know my store.' " "I lion T moHo nn mrr mind +hnt I would know the.entirt' Word like that." 01 er . a\ U(] <Vverwori^nc the Future. r gs Most of us are guilty of overworking he the future. Nearly every man pur- e) iB- noses in his heart to do somethins noble ... Id ?some time; to give his heart to God id- and live for Christ?some time. "To be es always intending to live a better life, ?' so- but never finding time to set about itbe (his is as if a man should put off eating nc ig- and drinking and sleeping from one es day to another, until he is starved and f( destroyed." "Now is the acceptable th- time."?Christian Intelligencer. ve n. We Are in God's Care. ^ Id "It is not by regretting what is irre- , he parable that true work is to be done, a if. but by making the best of what we in are. It is not by complaining that we "1 as have not the right tools, but by using ol ay well the tools we have. What we are Liy and where we are is God's providential e. arrangement?God's doing, though it a may be mai\Ls misdoing; and the manly u- and wise wily is to look your failures m in the face, and see what can be made P* ist out of them."?F. W. Robertson. <n a I ? ~ I Finest Joy. Sj to "Sweet satisfaction comes to those h. who try, no matter how humbly, to ^ th be earthly providences to the poor and ar u- helpless."?Louisa M. Alcott. / * v I ncren*p of CanaOlan Lumber, T>;o out of lumber in tjj<? province t Ontario this year will exceed tliat f-last year by 100,000,000 feet. The ut will total about 400,000,000 feet, rhis increase is due largely to the ligh wages now being paid expert mshmen, resulting in a plentiful supply of lumbermen where formerly unler lower wages they were scarce. A hyacinth can be easily colored a lelicate pink by putting the stem in l bottle of red ink and leaving it there or an hoar. The speed of the electric current in opper wire is 463,500,000 meters per iecocd. The length of the telegraph wires in ^lirnnA in 3 ISrVlOO kilnmp+erH. fSESPi msj* There is Genuine-'S1 The Genuine is VUIIIUI IIICI The lull name of the co Is printed on the front ? The Genuine- Syrup oi Packages Onlyt_b> Knowing the above wil tions made by piratical con< dealers. The imitations ai therefore be declined.. Buy the genuine alwa^ It cleanses the system gently when bilious or constipatec kidneys, liver, stomach and t by men, women or children effects from actual use and oi laxative remedy of the wellAlways buy the . Genu (AUHE Louisville. Kjc Imperfect Consular Service. J An order which has been made by ignor Tittoni, the Italian Foreign Minler, and which comes in operation on ae first day of the New Year, should ossess particular interest for all those rho are concerned as to the efficiency f our consular service. The Italian 'oreign Oflice, like our own, has in its mploy many coasular officers who are uite unfamiliar with the language of ( 36 country which they represent, j 'hey are not, of course, commissioned fficers, they receive do salary or al>wance, and they are nominated only | l places where Italian interests are )0 nominal to justify the nppo'ntment f a commissioned nnd salaried officer. 1 tut it is an absurdity, on the face of that any official should be perilled to represent a country, in howver humble a capacity, the language f which he can neither speak nor mte, even their reports having to be i-anslated for them. It is to be Binerely hoped, therefore, that the new 'oreign Minister will appreciate, in reard to our consular establishment, the ecessity of following Slgnor Tittoni's sample, as it is estimated that there re quite 200 officers in various parts f the world who could not pass the implest examiintion in English. There is another development in the ame connection which is also worthy f notice. The American consular serice has admittedly always been very, josely conducted, and it is the more oteworthy, therefore, that the State )epartment at Washington has just etermined to enforce the rule that no fficer shall be appointed unless he can ass an examination in the language f the country to which he may be ent.?Loudon Pall Mall Gazette. He Knew tlie Law, A Civil War veteran, several times Representative from his own district > the Now Hampshire Legislature, and t one time Speaker of the House, had jst returned home from a closing sesion of the Legislature, at which, says writer in the Manchester Union, the w pertaining to right of way to pedes ians had been passed. He was crossing the street from his , ffice one day soon after his return 'hen an electric car came bounding long. The motorman," alive to the ' nnger of the veteran, made frantic i [Torts to attract his attention, and ' lion they failed, shouted: "Look out, Major! If you don't get . fT the track I shall run over you." The Major stopped stock still in the liddle of the track. "If you do, young man, you'll hang ( >r it," he said, firmly. Cbcw^U of a (Stowaway. | Young Captain Sealby, of the Medi rranean liner Cretic, was talking ?out stowaways. "Most of those fellows," he said, lave an exci-ssive quantity of cheek ' brass. "Once we discovered n stowaway a ! ?w days out from New York, and put im to work in the galley. ' "A lady on a . tour of inspection iused by the stowaway as he sat peelg potatoes. 1 " 'How soon do ; ou think we'll reach r ap es?' she f aid to hira. i " 'Well, madam,' he plied, 'I'm do- t g ail I can to pet her in by Tuesly. "?Philadelphia Bulletin, j I Americans in Switierlmd, The official statistics recently published show that from May 15 to Oc- | tober ir?, 177,085 strangers stopped at hotels and boarding bouses of Geneva. J In explanation of these figures Consul-General Guenther, of Frankfort, 1 says that of the 177,085 strangers 26,- . 509 were Germans, 9618. Englishmen, j 35,114 SwIsb, 68,513 Frenchmen and 14,177 North Americans. , The vnlue of Europe's imports in ] 1901 is estimated at $12,000,000,000 and , that of the exports at $9,000,000,000. i The Germans give worn out horses a tonic of roasted coffee beans mixed 1 with honey. ] The Horpa Cho Lake In Tibet 1s 16,200 feet above the sea level. I only One n* y rup 01 rig ; Manufactured by th l Fig Syrup Co. mpany, California Fig Syrup ( of every package of the genul f Figs- is for Sale, in Origina ' Reliable Druggists Everyw 1 enable one to avoid the fraudulent t *rns and sometimes offered by unrc e known _ to act injuriously and s rs if you wish to get its beneficial d yet effectually, dispels colds and head 1, prevents fevers and acts best or towels, when a laxative remedy is s . Many millions know of its ben t their own personal knowledge; It i informed ine- Syrup of Figs MTTTirTtTOCTV PV TUT? U1W4 *~k\s A VtM4/ *~f * - ? w PRICE WPTT CHRIS PER BOTTLE PRICE,^=^25 Ct? M Ml ^0 CURt^^P^h A R 1 |KlN ONE DAY n 1 mmmsxi "MAS KO EfllJAL FOMfcTtfttttf; Call 'or jour 3 .F. IF. Die me At Rawlu Pindi, India, the Prince of Wales reviewed 55,000 Britfcb aDd Dative troops, all mobilized and ready to take the field. BOX OF WAFERS FREE-NO DRUCS -CURES BY ABSORPTION. Cures Belching of Ga??Bad Breath and Bad Stomach?Short Breath? v Bloating?Soar Eructations? Irregular Heart, Etc. Take a Mull's Wafer any time of the day or night, and note the immediate good effect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas, disinfects the stomach, kills the poison germs and cures the disease. Catarrh of the head and throat, unwholesome food and overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from taint of some kind. Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will make your stomach healthy by absorbing foul gases which arise from the undigested food and by re-enforcing the lining of the stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix the food with the gastricjuices. This cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching and fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through this process. , Discard drugs, as you know from experience they do not cure stomach trouble. g Try a . copimon-sense (Nature's) method that does cure. A soothing, healing sen- ' sation results instantly. < We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will j do this, and we want you to know it. I Special Offer.?The regular price of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafer" is 50c. a box, but to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt of 7~>c. and this advertisement, or we will send you a free sample for this coupon. 1130 FREE COUPON. 129 Send this coupon with your name and address and name of a druggist who does not sell it for a free sample box of Muli's Anti-Belch Wafers to Mull's Grape Tonic Co.. 328 Third Ave., Rock Island, 111. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. | Sold by all druggists, 50c. per box, or sent by mail. Worcester, England, Las refused to ?ive the Government a site for a cavilry barracks, though one of the city councilmen used a strong argument. German railway porters are to study French and English. DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? 2ure the Kidney* and tho Fain Will Never Keturn. y Only one way tr cur^ an aching ft jack. Cure the cause, the kidneys, i Tlnusriiidct tell of ? cures made hyj #uoan s iv.uney I'liis. v John C. Coleman, a * prominent merchant J! of Swainsboro, Ga? * says: "For several ? years my kidneys were affected, and J my b:..'k ached day J* and night. I was in anguid, nervous and 'ime in the p< norning. Doan's Kidney Pills helped , nt- right away, and the great relief ' hat followed has been permanent." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. . roBter-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N, Y. ' a??? I B Woinan'i Wmy. j^B "Gracious, Mrs. A., but you Lave "Yes, ,Mrs._ B., all the neighbors say vJ8B 3o Is beautiful." H "No wonder! He is just a little sugar sail of sweetness!" ''' "And the neiglilorK say he is the-*"* prettiest baby in the neighborhood." '^ySHj "Er? mine excepted?' ,M "No exceptions." vffil fj "What.' Do you me* to say that aomeJy little brat coulJ compare with my baby when it comes to beauty? SVhy, the nerve!"?Chicago News. \v Hi The longest river in Europe is the~ra^^H Wolga, with a length of 3570 kilometers. 7. ;'.HH| The Christian population of the earth -^^H s estimated at 582,000,000. HH rniu- | bould ' Mm, J n-GRlPINE I UAiCANTEED TO CURE /I OLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. I -Orlplae to a dealer who won't Guruktli H CONEY BACK IF IT SOXSV'T CVQU. 1 r, tt.JO., Manulacturer, Gprina/leld, Mm A. '< , vll 3VU...CMV3 f AUiTl laiTUlCU, f V Dally, exoept Sunday, * > W/ -"- ^W Commencing January 8th, 1908, ' . New York and St. Augustine. .^u ELECl'ElO- LIGHTED. . Four other Fast Trains Dally to the Southwest Washington and SouthvMttrn LimiUd. ' !1 New York Ofllce, 271A11S5 Broadway., . "a Alex. 8. ThwoaM, E. P. Aglf York. S. H. HilRDWiCK, P. T. 5L, _ * - I w. h. taylob, q. p. ^aak: - & IVW 1 *1 9 To bs 6i?en for Reliable Information I We have set aside 9 to be spent for information and will HE I give five dollars for a Postal Card 8 giving the first reliable news of a chance (o seli a horizontal steam engine or not want inquiries at this time for rcrticai. HB . Miction or gas engines. M BclUan of (he mort complete lino of engines and / tbo world H pound and Throttlln* Enpnct. Water Tub^, Tu- H M buiar and Portable Boilers M m Atlaa Enfinn In terries 3,000,000 h. f. ijk i PAY SPOT RASH I I Ml VI V I wnwii Oi IHITtnrv Bmintv l.nml U arrarti iwnod > sold'er* of any war. Write me at one? FKANK i. RK<;KK, w-.ck "I:xvfk.','I|?. 7-ING INFALLIBLE Kl I?XKY CURE? VPromptestt est, ltest. SFc. Kefnr.ded if iinlUs/atiory. On approval. l'os:al hrliiK* booklet. S> ALLIBLK MEDICINE CO, Buffalo, N. Y. II ,?D i. for more. 1 Scarfi-iaami 1 ltri'OCh ,CC UmQAU both lor your name nud i aiami>s OLE. o conditions. Just tlipse irpode and our new catalog iirrvl PANAMA NOVEJ.TV CO., Kliwilictli,NVJ. ?_ r?. 1R f _ 1 . i'Jrri mompsons tye W3rer the Life iavcr of Children itli Croup, Coiiphs, Colds and Pneumonia is IIo*a'a Croup Cure. It prevrnt* Di..fetl:eil? nnn >1em< anous Croup. No opium. No iih.iheii. Wp MaileJ jfatpaid. A. P. HOXrtlE, liiilloJn, N. V. m M. Ml CURES WMUE ALL (LSI FAILS. Bj El Beat Cough Syrup. Tiutea Good. L'm fjl Ct] In time. 8oid hy druggl'H. PI