University of South Carolina Libraries
New York City.?Whatever Jjesi- 1 tancy women may feel about Empire < styles for gowns of a more formal sort, , they meet with ready acceptance for ( those of home wear. Illustrated is one * of the simplest and best models by 1 May Manton that yet have appeared ' which can be made available for i ! various times and various U3:es. When 1 it is made from simple cashmere or 1 challie it becomes adapted to morning < wear, while if some pretty flowered < silk be used it is quite sufficiently * dressy for the afternoon tea hour. 1 il|7j rill fli Again, there can be a high-or slightly open neck and elbow or Ions sleeves, > so that almost "every possible require- ! f ment is provided for. in the illustra- i t tion a prettily figured challie is i trimmed with banding and is held at i the edge of the short waist with soft ' folds of ribbon, finished with a rosette 1 and long ends. 1 The gown is made with the charac- ! teristic body portion, which is tucked ( at the shoulders, and to which the full skirt is attached. The full sleeves arc < mounted over fitted linings and finished ; with straight bands when elbow length is used, with deep cuffs when full J length is desired. The quantity of material required for the medium size is nine and a 1 half yards twenty-one, eight and a 1 half yards thirty-six or six and a half J yards forty-four inches wide. Prltnroae-Hn*d Raitla. A gown of primrose*hued radia de- i signed for a young gi^J had a circular 1 skirt trimmed with tucks running around. The first group of three tucks re olaced above the knees, while the second headed the knee flounce, also tucked. The width of Ihe tucks was graduated from narrow above to very wide below. The blouse had a fancy voke of ducbesse lace, creamy in tone. Short Jacket*. k " Tne short jackets, which are seen in the newest walking gown?, are very | attractive, and .to slender figures, very becoming. They are loose box coats, or half-fitting jackets, high-waisted, and fitting snugly about the shoulders. The advance models, sold to meet the demands of the Southern exodus, are of pale gray, smoke color, and London gray mixtures. Linen Gowda Are Heavy. The linen gowns are rattier he;vy and are made with circular or tucked skirts and box coats, or with very short, mess jackets and boleros. Charming gowns are being made from linen in skirt widths with colored borders. v" Those borders are printed in rich reds and bines and are embroidered in an over design. The effect is of Russia? embroidery. "* i Tho Latest Trimmings. Velvet ribbons, and hemmed piece velvet cut bias, vary the limp taffeta and soft satin ribbons in the latest trimming and finish of the new head* wear; and gold and silver grenadine ribbons, and gold and silver galloons, have part in the trimming and finish if some very dainty and handsome )f the latest of the new models. Tho Drooping: V?ll. The milliners are making a renewed }ffort to induce their patrons to wear he drooping veil appendage to their lats. The effort failed last year, but the milliners are confident that it will le more successful now that women have grown more or less used to the idea. Tho Princess Gown. The princess gown of 190C is not lecessarily a smoothly fitted, one-piece Iress. It is often made in two pieces, he waist and skirt joined with rows >f insertion, needlework, or Lcavy lace )r embroidery girdles. Hlnei' Blouse Waist. Fashions for young girls are apt to !olk>w closely those of their elders, Uthough a certain simplicity should always be preserved if the best results are to be obtained. Here is a svaist that is made after a quite novel nodel and that is exceedingly chic and iharming, while also it allows a choice )f the high or low neck, so that, it serves a double purpose. In the illus:ration it is made oi white Shantung with the yoke of "heavy lace and frills, of a lighter sort, exceedingly handsome little buttons decoratiHg the front and sleeves. It is, however, equally appropriate for all seasonable materials, inasmuch as anything fashionable is soft and can be made full with perfect success. When the waist is designed for evening wear, the pretty sample Habutal silks and the like are exceedingly charming, while for daytime occasions veiling, cashmere and similar wool fabrics can be utilized as well as silk. The waist is made with a fitted lining on which the yoke and the full front and backs are arranged, and is closed invisibly at the back. The sleeves are made full .and are shirred after a novel fashion at their lower edges, the shirrings being held in place by the fitted foundations. The quantity of material required for the medium size (fourteen years) is three yards twenty-one, two and five-' eighth yards twenty-seven or oue and three-quarter yards forty-four inches wide, with half yard of all-over lace and two and three-quarter yards of lace for frills. ???? THE (PULPIT. |j AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON B7 J DR. C. L. COODELL Subject : ' The Carpenter's Son." .New York City.?Calvary Methodist ; Episcopal Church of Harlem, through the effectiveness of the pastor, the Rev. Dr. Charles 1j. GoodeM, is growing in an unparalleled way. Last February, as the result of revival cervices for the month of January, he broke all city church records by admitting 3G5 members. Sunday morn- , ing more than 350 were - ceived into the church, and these, added to the fifty taken in at tl*e January commuuion, make r. total of more than 400 admissions as a result of four weeks of revival services. Dr. Goodell gave this as the reason of the great ingathering: "There is no secret to it; any church can be stirred as ours Las been if it is willing to pay the price. The price? It is consecration, prayer and hard work. All three are nocded in about equal parts. Our magnificent congregation has been moved by prayer and in turn has moved others." The reception of members into this church Sunday was a joyful event for the ministers and metibers, for it ?-> fiinwi, of flip henrl of JM1IVCU vui THI j VUUC.M i. % v,-. ? -Methodism In p~5nt of membership. Calvary now lias a few more than 2400 members on its roll. Since Dr. Goo(le!l has been at Calvary, twentyone months, tber has been a net gain of 1000 members, or about seventyfive ; er cent. Of theso new members more tlnm COO came cn probation. Tlie ctnrcn seats 2200 a :<1 every Sunday *jigbt all seats are filled early. At ' some of tbe special services many ' chairs had to be brought in and the altar space filled, and then scores could not find seats. Snnday there were tif- ! teen denominations represented by those who came by letter. About 1500 persons took communion in the morning-. Bishop L\ G. Audrews, of Brooklyn; the Itev. Dr. Frank Ma son North, of the City Mission, ana Tract Society of New York City, and Mr. Williams, the assistant pastor, and officers of the church assisting. In the ! afternoon about 500 more were communed. In the evening Dr. (ioodell . preached on "The Carpenter's Son." The text was from Matthew xiii:35: "Is this not the carpenter's son?" He , said: Out of the doorways of the poor 1 come the men who make the world rich and God walks oftener in the narrow ' rooms and on the creaking stairs of the little cottages than in the wide, | sounding halls of the rich with armor and pictures looking down. You have ; seen the home of Burns and Slinks- ' pea re; picture to yourself something as much poorer as these are meaner ' than the homes of the newly rich and ' you may call that the home of a carpenter in Nazareth. They will show you the place with votive offerings ; and gewgaws in It, but you will say, 1 "So!" aud walk out. Find a place ; where a carpenter is now making an ox bow or a poor man's table and it will be like what He knew, for the men of Nazareth are like all their kin J" nlinntro nnt In n tllflll- * JU 111C JUUOl , IULJ S.UMUQV ... 6nnd years. I like to think that for ' thirty years Jesus knew the narrow 1 ways of a laborer. His trade He plied, a carpenter, and built i Doors, where folks come and go, unto this I . hour, t ] Not wotting how the hands which wrought .their doors Unbarred Death's gate by Love's high ! sacrifice? Tables whereon folks set their meat, and ' eat, I Heedless of Who was "Bread of Life" and gave Such food thatwhosoeateth hungereth not. j And, in those little lanes of Nazareth. Each morn His holy feet would come and go While He bore planks and beams, whose. back must bear The cruel cross. And, then, at evening's fall, < Resting from labor, with those patient feet j Deep in white wood dust, and the long j curled shreds ? Shorn by His plane?He would turn inno cent eyes Gazing far .past the sunset-to that world He came from, and must go to; nigh to Him? _ { Nigh unto us, albeit we see it not, Whereof Life is the curtain, and mute Death Herald and Doorkeeper. Nazareth was a town In which to ; talk with God. The great plain before it had felt His thunderous foot. There was Carinel, where Elijah talked with God, in plain sight. There was Jezreel ] of Ahab and Jezebel. There was Eu- , dor and Saul and tbe witcb. There was Tabor, lone and majestic, near at hand, and Hermon far to tbe north, cloud-capped and snow-peaked, -while to the East, hidden behind a dozen miles of nill and dale, was tbe sea of Galilee?mother of sermon and of miracles. in Nazareth He found the illustrations which make so large a part of His 6ermons. There was a great day of moil and toil before Him, and here in the cool of the morning He must store up the reserve that will take Him on to awful noon at'Jerusa Jem. It takes a great soul to bide ills time?to get ready for a great act and be patient with the training and the slow step of tbe years. To live with God aud in Him is the main thing after all. He walked those cliffs with 110 one to look at Him or to wontiter at Him?prayerful, masterful, patient. Was there ever a better example for ordinary people. It is good for the burning fever of life to look at Him. The world is too much with us soou and late. Our home life is low and sordid. We fret under it. There are too many little things to do. Too much of ou tie and too little of outlook. "\\yiat are we saying? Look at Him. Poverty? Yes. Toil? Yes. Did they who saw Him appreciate Him? We shall see; who was it said: "Is not this the arpenter's sou?" and how did they say it? It was a taunt and a sneer. You know now how He came to say, "A prophet is not without honor save in his own country." The very men whose houses He had built were ready to stone Him to death. It has often been so. The men who have built the houses that the world's thought lives in to-day were most of them buried in ignominious graves. Very likely the men you serve may throw stones at you from the vintage ground where you put them, but it will be no new thing, so keep sweet about it. He could afford to wait. His carpenter bench would yet be holy bpi-ause He worked at it, and the tools He handled would be held at vhe price cf a king's ransom. His is the gospel cf the mechanic. 1 He fitted Himself at a carpenter's bench to say, "Come unto Me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and 1 will give you rest." He had no sympathy either with the man who wants more work thLn he pays for or tli? man who wants more pay than he works for. I want you to see Irom this lite that great deeds should go along with common life, making it sublime. Whi n you read of the great economies tlint ha' to be practiccd in the homes of such men as Phelps and Alcotf, Hawthorne and Emerson, ycu realize 1he advantage of plain living and high thinking. There is too much high Ilviag and meagre thinking. Tlie struggle after a more sumptuous life thau we can afford takes tho strength out of us. and if we get IFiC takes the nerve for toil and self-denial, which are only other names for victory, away from us. Our impatience takes away our capacity and love for toil, nnd wejre miserable and useless. Be happy * a humble home. You will never have to live so cheaply as did Jesus. Then make up your mind to work. Jesus the Carpenter taught us the dignity of toil. He made the saw and the plane as truly the ensign of a noble life as the fasces or the toga of the Roman. There is an evangel of toil. The shuttle and the hoe, the saw and the reaper have a message which tho world must hear. The workers make life glorious, the shirkers make it detestable. "My father worketh hitherto and I work" was the challenge of the Christ to every indolent and careless souh Virgil sings of men and arms, but the song of to-day is a song of men and tools. I have a Saviour who wrought the hot day through. I can talk with Him of quivering palm and throbbing limbs and a fainting heart and He will know. You cannot imagine Him as making a poor joint or allowing a bad knot in an important place. To meet your ideal, and that an ideal which He Las founded by His own character, you will , take nothing less than a honest attempt at a perfect product. The <feBire to slight one's work tfill lead to a compromise of character, and teat will lead to the loss of the soul. It is not the work but the spirit you put into it which makes the task ignoble or sublime. I would have every man step to his work to-morrow without dread or envy. I would have him feel that Jesus the Carpenter was the great model, and that if He could tit Himcelf for the conquest <' the world at a carpenter's bench any laborer may feel bimself surrounded with glorious hopes and his dingy little shop become the habitat of angels. Paul stitching tents thought out those wonderful chapters of cpiritual logic which move the world. Carey, the shoemaker, thought out the plan of giving the Bible to the Hindoos. Morrison, the last-maker, gave the gospel to China. Burrett, the blacksmith, became the most learned workman of his day. Daily humble life lived on high levels?this is the happy possibility of common men. VPbat high discourse there must have been in that humble home when the [lay's work was over; what acts of afnrhnt mnlnnl AnnArlannOfi fltlfl LUUliUll, nuab UiUlUUi M..V. holy trust! But He who made lintels for tbe floors of Nazareth set up also the gates of the eternal city of God. He who made humble houses for the common people of His native town was the Artificer of the eternal home of the soul. It was not a figure of His imagination when He pictures the unsafe foundation and the awful ruin of that unsecure house. He had seen tbe torrent rush down the chalk cliffs of Nazareth and sweep away the houses of His fellow craftsmen. Small wondet that He looked upon that ruin from the standpoint of a careful builder. But when they drove the carpenter from. His bench at Nazareth He went Dut to build for eternity. 1 want to nolr-trnn co rnur pnTlfrnof fnr nil HOU. jwu I.v sternal mansion to Jesus the Carpenter. As a wise master builder. He asks you to count the cost. Are you ready to build? Are you willing to pay for a good foundation and will the superstructure you rear be a sacred oue? He will not countenance the ornamentations that hide the lack of solid worth. He will have no part in the consummate fraud of a life that is built on the sand. He -will not build with hay and stubble. If it -were a bouse to sell it might be out of your sight, but he r me when I say it Is the house yon are to live in forever. If there is a fhov in ii you will find it out. If when the win'Is blow and the floods come it falls you will go clown in the ruin. Yes.erday a man saspin for breath said "I am almost ashamed to ask God to have mercy on me' when I ignored Him for three score years," and you will feel the same. To leave you in o!d age to the mercy of the wintry .blasts would be cruel, but the man who shirks in the building of his soul's tabernacle does that for himself. Only Jesus knows bow to build for eternity. The old Romans were gr^at builders of roads and bridges, and the old Egyptians were great builders of pyramids, but I want somebody who can build a bouse for the soul that will outlast pyramids and stars. No man save Jesus can have my contract. Th? TriJilormlnt; Power of Xife. The Arabs have a saying about the palm tree, that it stands with its feet in salt water and its head in the sun. They often cannot drink of the blackish water found in the oasis where the palm grows, but they tap the tree and drink the sweet palm sap. The palm tree, by the magic of its inner life, can so change the elements found In the unkindly soil around it that they minister to its growth and strength and fruit-bearing. So we in our earthly life must often have our feet in the mire and bitterness of sin around us; and upon our heads will often beat the fierce heat of temptation. But in spite ?f these things, we shall be able to grow and grow strong, if within us there is the making of a new life through Jesus Christ. ?Bible Advocate. Power of Sacrifice. John Henry, while a divinity student went through a tempest that most daring seamen < not dare face, and brought ashore seven sr.i!ors from p. Wrecked boat. The strain was such that, though he lived to finish his studies, he had scarcely taken up the work of a parish when deutii summmoned him rr ay. The crowds tnat came to his funeral were so large that the window of the chorch was removed and a platform erected where those within the church and the masses of humanity without could hear the words of Lord Chalmers, God'a Greatest (Sift. L/Ove is tne greatest tiling tuat uou can give us, for Himself ij love; anc! it is the greatest thing -we can give to God, for it will also give ourselves, and carry -with it all that is ours. The apostle calls it the bond of perfection; it is the old, and it is the new; it is the great commandment, and it is all the commandments; for it is the fulfilling of the law.?Jeremy Taylor. Kneel in your closet and say. "0 God! I have not known Thee; deign to reveal Thyself to me; teach me to love and obey Thee; by all Thy goodness, oh, forgive my wanderings, and let me feel the tranquillity of a life hid in Thy blessedness." Such petitions will not be unheard, nor fail to bring down answers of growing fulfilment.?William Alger. It takes as much grace to make a saint out of a Pharisee as it does td qyike one out of a publican. The devil is exceedingly solicitiou* lest the church acquire a reputation for undue activity, * \ . . - / 1 THE GREAT DESTROYER SOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Why Drink in Especially Danjjrrout to Women ? Tliftre is No Sadder Sight in the World Than That of a Mother Overcome by Llqnor. The mother is the heart and soul of the home. She can make a home a haven of i?st and peace, or she can make it a place of torment. Hers is the privilege of setting an oxample to husband and chHdren. Children are imitative little crea turcs, and wnatever toe motuer uoes tbcy will consider propel* to do themselves. If she brings them up to think diligence, honesty and sobriety the three most important things in life, the chances are they will follow all three. But if the mother is lazy, lax in her seuse of honor, and inclined to drink, the children are bound to show the effect. There is no sadder sight in the world than that of a mother overcome by drink. Where you find that you are bound to find an illrkept . home and neglected husband and children. The first;impression left on the children's plastic little minds is that of squalor and misery. <, . At the time when " they most need a mother's fostering care, the poor mites are forced to look after themselves. And the husband who started on his married career with a heart full of happiness and love for his young wife, finds nothing but disappointment and sorrow. The children do not know the meaning of mother-love. They see other children running to their mothers for comfort in e?very childish pain and sorrow, but they know that nothing but harshness would greet thein if they went to their mother for comfort. Very often a woman contracts the drink habit through taking oomething for every little ache or pain. It seems such an easy way to lull pain, fatigue or low spirits. The longing for it gradually increases, she takes a little more, and a little more, always thinking that she can, stop at any time, until the first thtyg she knows she is held fast by drink's iron grip. Poor woman, she is not happy. She would give anything to free herself, but. both body and will are weakened and the fight is long and hard. The best way to avoid this danger is never.to touch intoxicants, To thousands of women it is do temptation, but to others it is a terrible danger. When a woman becomes the mother of a child she owes jt to the child and to the world in general to give it the benefit of the very best that she can afford. Its attitude toward the world and itself will be guided by her training. A Its ideas of right and wrong will bo"' founded on her teaching. As the young twig Is trained the tree will grow. The responsibility of the guiding of a hum&n soul rests with every mother. And to fitly meet this great responsibilityi she must keep her mind keen and alert, must order her life so as to be above reproach. Least of any human being can a mother afford to drink. For hers is the holiest and most important mission on earth.?Beatrice Fairfax, in the New York Journal. What Matte* Oar Finest City. The Rev. Dr. Purley A. Baker, of Ohio, national superintendent of the League, said recently: "Most men would rather do right than wrong, if they only know that it is just as safe to do right. We endeavor to make it safe for a public official to do right. And we also endeavor to make it decidedly unsafe for a legislator or other official to do wrong." Dr. Baker gave a history of the work of the league in Ohio in the past. For years, he said, it met a succession of humiliating defeats, but it kept at work, and finally succeeded in controlling the Legislature. "We finally got a Legislature which would pass advanced temperance legislation," he said. "But before we did it, we had to put seventy-six Senators and Representatives in their political graves. And the politicians in Ohio have learned their lesson." "I think Minneapolis is the finest city in the United States, and that is because under the law permitting residential local option all but one-twelfth of the area of the city is free of saloons. Many of the business men of St. Paul live in Minneapolis, but no ' !? on/1 one does uusmess in iumueuyuiio oiiu lives in St. Paul. And there is one thing more?it takes five times as many policemen to take care of tliat one-, twelfth of the territory of Minneapolis where there are saloons, as it does to take care of the other eleven-twelfths." ?Ne\V York Evening Post. Booib and Business. We have decided that "booze and business" is a bad mixture and will try just plain business for a short spell. If this doesn't work well we may decide to cut out business and try booze. This decision was reached after a very forcible argument with our devoted spouse, who warned us in no uncertain language that we would bo using some of that hair restorer on our topmost point uuless we wiped it off our list altogether. As it would be a sin to waste the precious fluid in this manner we have cut it out. Boys, be warned and don't tempt us, for we will be compelled to murder in cold blood the first one who flashes a bottle of tincture of conflirtun in our presence.? Coveta (I. T.) Courier. Prosper* Without Saloons. Mayor Johnson, of Fargo, N. D., says: "Fargo lias prospered without a saloon far better than it did with it. Instead of being depopulated it has more than doubled since the saloons left us. Rents have not gone down, but have gone up, where there is any difference. There is not to-day in Fargo, nor has there been, a vacant house fit for a mouse to live in, or a vacant store since the saloons left."' Tcmperanre Note*). New York City receives $7,991,805 from saloons and pays $12,030,300 for the support of its police force. The State law offers a bounty for the scalps of animals which destroy pigs and chickens, but anarchy licenses the saloon which diseases and causes the death of men and boys.?Carrie Nation's Hatchet. , The friends of Mrs. Knjo Yajiina, president of the Japanese W. C. T. U., recently celebrated her seventy-fourth birthday by holding the first ineda! contest ever held in Japan. ^ SAVED BY TAKII Sore Throat Develops Into Eronchiti Mrs. Addie Harding, 121 W. Bnghtc Ave., Syracuse, W. x., writes: "1 hai be<a a user of Peruna for the past tweh years. With me it is a sure preventii of colds and many other ilia. "Two or three times a year 1 ai Mrs. Addle Harding. troubled TTith my throat, a kind of ra feeliug, turning to bronchitis. 1 have hi the services of my physician in each cas k ???? ?'* ? '*?!> * *. .ftl I rtrtm | f J. YTV J caio Q|^U| TT UUU A ?IV ? >*'?<! wiiiu 1 tried Perana to check it, and to n delight .was not troubled with the emot erea and choking feeling and never hai been Aince. i can check it every time wil Pernna." PR2CB,/P=\25 CtM ? A N r*vlNONEDAY wMn. pfflpgs5i TttSKO EQUAL FOR H&n/lBE 0611 for i ry> F.W.Di Brief Honeymoon of Anta. Dwellers on the slopes of the Jui Mountains, in Switzerland, have r Vitr eh/vTWAra nf rlpfl UtTLi uj Duuncu uj i>upuv.w - ? ants.. Innumerable swarms of thes insects choose the same line autnm day for their brief honeymoon voyaf in the air. For a few hours the youn males and females fly in the air, aft< which the males drop dying to eartl while the widows return to the nest There their wings are plucked off b the servant ants, and they remain i domestic seclusion for the remainder c their lives. Spread of Tul?ercalo?l?. It is true that sixty per cent, of th ^deaths among the Sioux and Yankto Indians now are from tuberculosa Tuberculosis was unknown among th Indians, and has fastened upon tbei only since the coming of the white ma to JJU&UU1. How'* Thl* t We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward fc any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured b Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, bay* known F. J Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe hli perfectly honorable In all business transa< tions and financially able to carry out an obligations made by their rirm. West A Tbcax, Wholesale Druggists, Tc ledo, 0. Warding, Kisxak & Martin, Wholesal Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acf ingdirectlyuponthe Wood and mucuoussui faces of the system. Testimonials sent fre< Price, 75c. per bottle. <3old by all Druggist Take Hall's Family Pills for constipatio; Smallest ii all the armies in Europe that of the principality of Monaco. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles. Itching, Elind, Bleeding, Protruding Pile Druggists are authorized to refund money! PazoOintmentfails to cure in 6 to 14 days.50 O'Ccnuor'i Wit Saved Him. Ju6tin A. Jacobs, for many yeai the city clerk of Cambridge, used 1 relate the following as illustrating tl ready wit of an Irishman: In the early years of his service, or of the duties of this office was the pre] aration of the voting lists of the cit and the registration of new voter One of the qualifications of a vot< was the ability to write. Cne evening when his office was fu of men seeking registration, an Irisl man, Patrick O'Connor, asked to t registered, and was given the usui blank, with the request that he sig his name. This he finally did, wit great effort, and in an almost iliegibJ manner. One of the onlookers, seeing ths this was probably the extent of his li erary accomplishments, called ou "Mr. Jacobs, let him write your name. Instantly Pat looked up and repliec " illUUUt?, 1 nUUlUJl L UU1G *ivr iu?k. would be forgery."?Bostou Herald. Bark Salad Palatable Food. When Admiral Sigsbee's squndro was cruising in the Caribbean Sea, i 1904 and tbe spring of 1903, the officei t)f his flagship, the Newark, found tbu bark salad was not only edible, bi was quite palatable. This remarkabl food was made from the bark of a troj ical tree, and much enjoyed by the ni tives along the coast. The rough c outer part is chopped off, and the ii ner portion chopped into fiue slice and made into a salad dressed wit oils, spices, etc. THE EDITOR J?xplulng How to Keep Up Mental an l'liyglcal Vl;;or. A New Jersey editor writes: "A long indulgence in improper iuu brought on a condition of nervous dyi pepsin, nearly three years ago, s severe that I had to quit work entirely I put myself on a strict regimen c Grape-Nuts food, with plenty of ou door exercise and in a few month found my stomach so far restored ths the process of digestion gave me plea ure iustead of distress. "It also built up my strength so th: 1 was able to resume my busines which is onerous, as I uot only edit m own paper, but also do a great dea! < 'outside' writing. "I find that the Grape-Nuts diet ei ables me to write with greater vig< than ever before, and without the fee ing of brain-fag with which I used 1 be troubled. As to bodily vigor?I c.i and do walk miles every day withoi fatigue?a few squares used to weai me before I began to live on Grap Nuts!" Name given by Posturn C< Battle Creek, Mich. There's a rearon. Read the litt book, "The Road to Wellvllle," In pkg ETARBH OF LUWC& > COM MOM IM WINTER ] SG P^U-NA. I Mrs. Virginia Cuvlana. j Chronic Catarrh of Throat and Lungs. ! -flra. Virginia Caviana, room 32, Com* J bridge Block, Portland, Ore., writes: ?j3j "I was a sufferer .nth catarrb ot the ,1 throat and lungs tor a long time befora ^ j w 1'eruna was recommended to me. 1 aw id it a trial, although I thought at tbe e. it would be just like other medicine* and J is "o me no good. I was pleased to find that ,1 ly my improvement began in less than -two | h- weeks and continued &' til I was entirely | ,-e wJl. 1 gained nearly '5 pounds, have a | ;h splendid appetite and am grntefnf for what -JJ* vonr medicine has done for me." I ITl-GRl PINE A m. vrvvrn /^rtn v J 9 VVAXVMl JL MX* Ml* MM A V ID GOLD, HEADACHE AND NEURAL81* | Anti-CHf plee to a <1 etler who wont ftwtw 1> .} j >nr MONEY BACK IF IT BOEMPT CXTK^ Tgl enter, XL.P., Manufacturer. Springjtel&, J Salute Oyer Soldier's flr?w. , a The origin of tie custom of firing * ^ e- volley over a soldier's grave Is een- \ I d nected with the ancient belief that eyil | se spirits were kept away from a^body 1 I n by making a great noise.' Of th'is "we $ ;e bave an example in tbe "passing bett.** . ^ ig After the invention of firearms the but ;|3j ?r salute became emblematical of the sol- ^ h. dier's profession?of his having fallen ^ s. amidst the sounds of battle. . ./>? | n Employers of barbers In the West ? i ,f End of London are combining to dO/lH awav with tips. ' ^laJ W. L. Douglas j l l3J?&*3= SHOES2S c w. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Una>; |9 15 Casual a^omoc ;&|| ^SOimSUmai 1 MMMMiirMnrnrrFTt m THE WORLD. i! fr l fl rinfl REWARD to anyone who c?e J3| ? vlUjUUU disprove this statement It I could take you into my three large factoriesv'f I at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite '""j I ,c care with which every pair of shoes lanyade, ffu Lam - would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 aboea I 10 cost more to make, why they nold their shape,' i ] tit better, wear longer, and are of greater 1 '' intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. '<49 W. L. DougtamStrona Mmd? Shorn* to* I Mon, $2. BO, *2.00. Boy'Soboofk r-jm 10 DrmmaMhooM, $2. BO, $2, $1.73,$1.SO 1 p- CAUTION.?Insist upon hftvlnir W.L.Doug. I las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine | j without his name and price stampe<l on bottom. l| S. Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy, i 'JjM Write for Illustrated Catalog. ? i 1 -r W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Maaa. 1 ; Hale's Honey ; of Horehound i and Tar % i" CURES 'J| lt Hoarseness, Coughs, Colds and Sore Throat. The standard remedy I used for generations. .i s 25 Cents, 50 Cents, $1.00 per bottle; the largest size chtapest. it At all druggists. Refuse substitutes. e ?? > PIKE'S TOOTHACHE DROPS CURE IH OHE MIHIFIB ? That D-'^htful Aid to Health ; ! flaxtme I Toilet Antiseptic ?j Tiru ' ii vv inicuiai ?^uuuw s- I mouth and breath?clires nasal o I catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes, r I and by direct application cures J I all inflamed, ulcerated and I catarrhal conditions caused by H feminine ills. r?' ~j I Paxtine possesses extraordinary 11 cleansing, healing and germi5' cidal qualities unlike anything else. At all druggists. 50 cents ^ 11 | LARGE TRIAL PACKAGF FREE The R. Paxtcn Co., Boston, Mas* * 7 PAY SPOT GASH 1 Q- For Military Bounty T.and Warrants l?ael to soldiers of any war. Write me at once FRANK >r ii. Itl GF.K, 014 17tli St , ?>< NVEK, Colo. attic MC D ^ M JOIETV tV.IUOBRiaL to IlKlilldlUl? Wnsblneton, D.O, 10 Q 3yia waivil war. IS axilnriicauc^claims,Qitvalooe 'J nPAPQY new discoveby; p. * W I W I Urn qalek rtllef and una wont umi. Book ?t IratlmoaUU ?nd to Day*' lmhM> )., IW. Dr. H. H. CRKI.V8 JJOSS, Box B, AlUnU, h. ) le Hoxsie's Cough Disks c Check a cold In one hour. 85 cents at dragyiatair s- mailed. A. P. HOXSIE, Buffalo, N. X. .