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iqwnteres New York City.?Pointed yokes make exceedingly attractive features of many of the most charming of the season's blouses. This one is combined 9 with a shirred lower portion and is eminently graceful and well adapted to Ifplf' the fasliionablo soft and crushable fabrics. As shown it is made of handkerchief linen with trimming of Yaleuciennes lace, but it can be utilized for 1' ' J % such soft silks as radium, Adrea and the like, as well as for cotton aud linen materials. A yoke of plain material, iuset with medallions and insertion, as is this one. is always attractive, but it can be cut from any all-over material if better liked. The waist con si:-, is of the yoke and the blouse portion, tlie blouse portion being shirred and joined to the yoke and the seam concealed by the trimming. The closing is made invisibly at the back. The sleeves can be either in elbow or full length, and the lining can be used or omitted, as material renders desirable. The quantity of material required for Hie medium size is three yards twentyone, two and three-fourth yards twenty-seven or one and one-half yards forty-four inches wide, with six yards of Insertion to make as illustrated, five-eighth yard eighteen inches wide for the yoke when cut from contrasting material, one and one-eigntn yarns 11 yoke and deep cuflfs both are used. A Popular Dress Goods. Some new makes of crepe chiffon i have appeared purposely adapted for i making seasonable dresses; preference is given to rather light colors, particularly to raspberry pinks, pale shades of Parma violet, ash gray and rose shades. Hat tjnills the Knee. Quills and eagle's feathers protrude Mi norsistpntlv from all the new hats [that the never-ending question of howto place and fasten them results. Put them outside of the brim in every case where the hat is shaped so that you can. and conceal the edges from under n large straw buckle or tlat rosette of velvet ribbon. The ribbon is laid on tiny pleats or gathers, the inner end being curved around like a straw I crown, and the quill coming out / through it. I Or, another way: Sew the quills to ttu> side of the upturned briiu, draw your velvet ribbou froui arouiid the crown across them, and lay over this a circle of gathered velvet ribbon, letting it form a buckle holding the other ribbon down. A third way was seen in a narrow. Alpine;shaped hat. in which two quills were pointed backward from each *ide of the crown. A band of red velvet was set over the crown and three circular buckles made of red beads '"ere placed over it along the front, th* rjuills being thrust under the two end ones. ' ''** - - - . , i y 1 . < J , I. i ' r-aoytMNl . r.loufte or Shirt VTaint. A dainty blouse that is prettily # trimmed with lace or other banding tills so many needs that it may fairly n t*? considered a necessity. This one is j u made of Persian lawn with trimming E of Cieruian Valenciennes lace and is j e: unlined. The model is an adaptable one, however, and would be effective in * any of the thin, soft silks or light ? weight wools that are made in lingerie style, as well as washable materials, j q while in addition to the lawn are a a great many other cotton and linen fabrics that will be found available, r When silk or wool is used the lining, which is made soft in blouse style, will be found desirable. The German Va- c lenciennes lace is one of the most fash- ^ ionable as well as the most desirable of all trimmings, but there are a great p many other bandings, and every sort a of lace is fashionable this season, so b that there is every opportunity for the exercise of individual taste and prefer- *! ence. ^ The blouse is made with the front t< and the backs. Fine tucks are laid n at the shoulder edges and tlie trim- I u rning is arranged on indicated lines, tl the closing being made invisibly at the a back. The sleeves allow a choice of ? the popular elbow or full length, and j the lining can be used or omitted as 6 material renders desirable. f The quantity of material required for 5 i1 r Design by May Mantoa, c r a r the medium size is three yards twen- ^ ty-one. two and three-fourth yards -y twenty-seven or one and one-half yards ? forty-four inches wide, with five yards 0 of insertion. t ^ ^ ' J I s Collars mid .Sock*. So practical :uul comfortable a fash- * ion luis the unlined yoke and stock J proved, that it will continue popular for many months to come. Coats are j so often worn thrown open at the ! i throat, or made to he worn open, that 1 this finish of the waist at neck is very i noticeable. To make the fashion prac- ? tical for cool spring days, tl?e liigh I ? standing collar of velvet with loose j ends on tlie faucy fonts lias proved very popular, and the loose ends tie in a graceful bow.?Harper's Bazar. Linen Until to .Match. Lingerie hats of blue or pink linen to match the costume with embroidery in white are prettier than white embroidered in color. While you will, of course, want a hat to match your colored linen costume, 110 one can be without an all white hat this season. Miction Succeed* Rnriluin. Radium silk luis a beautiful successor J in cliiffou mignon, a diaphanous material fit for the handsomest evening j i gowns. i \ THE PULPIT. N ELOQUENT SUNDAY StRMON B'/ BISHOP C. C. M'CA3E. Subject : Tlie Frcaclier'i Commission. Brooklyn. N. Y.?The New York Aveue M. E. Church was crowded to its tmost capacity Sunday morning when iishop McCabe preached the Confernce sermon. Bishop McCabe preached ar Dearly an bour. His sermon was a epical, old-style Methodist oration, ml evidently pleased his hearers imlensely, for his remarks were puncuated from start to finish with cries f "Amen," "Hallelujah!" "Yes, yes," nd frequent laughter. Bishop McCabe's subject was "The 'neacher's Commission," and he took ar his text the passage in Haggai: And the desire of all nations shall ome," He said: Haggai was one of the prophets who rent to the captive Israelites to help 3 rebuild the walls of the ruined ternle and of their destroyed city. Zechriah wa~ the other one. They were oth men of vast hope find mighty nith, and God gave them vision to ead the future, and, because they saw tie future, they were optimistic men. 'hey did not believe that anything was do good to be true. We need such len. We have enough men who tell s how much better tne past -was xuuu Lie present, and -who discourage us, nd we need men who talk hopefully; aen who speak of the future with deight, because they know that the /ord's prayer?that the will of God hall be done on earth as It is in leaven?will some day be fulfilled, 'hese two prophets went to the Israelis, to Jerusalem, and struggled to ebuild the temple, and they were reatly needed. Cyrus, the King of 'ersia, allowed them to go. Cyrus was he conqueror of Babylon, and these ews had fallen into his hands and e treated them finely. Cyrus was a aan who believed in religious liberty, t is strange that 2500 years ago there ?as a man in a high on earth position rho believed that every man had a ight to worship God according to the ictates of his conscience. I know lyrus believed in religious liberty be** V* A ause He was uoi u uew, uuu jti iac llowed these Jews to go and rebuild heir temple and ruined city. I think iod loved Cyrus on thi& account. I mow He did, because He sent him a aessage by Isaiah, "I will go before hee and make thy way straight before hee." Cyrus would have made n reat Czar of Russia; there would be io more massacres of the Jews. And rhat a great Sultan of Turkey he pould have made! There woulu be io more massacres of Armenians sirnly because they were Christians. I rust In God that the time will come rhen a great man like Cyrus will ocupy every throne on earth, and when he idea that one man c$n control the onscience of another shall pass away orever. I have myself seen 5S0 intxuments of torture which were used iy men and devils?for I think the [evil inspired men to use such instruoents of torture?to make all men hink alike. I looked with amazed inerest at the "Maid of Nuremberg." a errible instrument called by that nmA. it consists of creat. wide doors. ti which I counted nine spikes, several aches long. When the victim was sked for the last time "Will you reient?" if he said "No," these doors /ere slammed, and the victim quiverng on these spikes would suffer more nguish than Jesus Christ did on the ross. Men and women to-day would ather die than give up this old Bible, r surrender the right to worship God ccording to the dictates of conscience. Ve enjoy liberty to-day because such aen and women have lived in the rorld. Let us prize the boon which hey purchased with suffering and ilood. These Israelites had been in captivity or seven years; 42,360 of them went to n ? unci me xempie. ouiue ?vwc um oun ome young. The young men shouted or joy, for they did not remember lolomon's Temple, but the old men did. rrd they wept They wept, first, beause of the contrast between the mount of money which David gave iolomon to build the temple with and he sum they had now. Secondly, beause of the contrast between the lumber of men?Solomon had 80,000, ud now there were but 42.3GO. SoloQon had 3G00 overseers to keep the teople at work?walking delegates, if ou please. I wish all walking delerates were for that purpose. I wonler if they ever had a strike among hem. I wonder if 16,000 of these 80,00 said to the other eighty-four per ent.: "Unless you join our society you annot work at all." It would not have >een allowed in Solomon's time. I lad a letter yesterday from a promilent man in this city, asking me if the hurch was the friend of labor. I vant to state publicly the creed of the il. E. Church. We are the friends of abor; we are the friends of all labor? >f .every man and woman who has to am a living by the sweat of the face. XTni.n fpion^o nnf nnlv Cif flip rT c UIV liic 111CUUO, 44WV VM.J lixteen per cent., but of the 80,000; of .00 per cent, of labor, and anybody vho is not a friend of 100 per cent, is lot a true friend of labor. That is the rreed- of tlie M. E. Church, aud I state t for them because they do not seem lisposed to state it for themselves. Vnd I believe I state the creed of al! Protestant churches in this country. Then, again, I think the old men vept Localise of the contrast in the )lans of the two temples. "The Desire of All Nations." That is >ne of the names of Christ. He had tver 300 different appellations. Jacob ailed Him "Shiloh;" Job, "Tlie Deliverer;" David, "The Shepherd;" Isaiah, 'Wonderful," ."Counselor," "Mighty 5od," "Everlasting Father" and 'Prince of Peace;" John the Baptist, 'The Lamb of God;" Paul, the "Foreunner;" at the Isle of Patmos, Jesus ;aid: "I am Alpha and Omega, the irst and the last, the bright and mornng star," and John called Him "King ?f Kings and Lord of Lords." But he sweetest name of all is Jesus. 0. vhat a sweet name it is. He is my saviour. It took an nnsel to bring tliat lame. Gabriel said: "His name shall )e called Jesus"?that is the sweetest lame of all?"His name shall be above ill names." "At the name of Jesus very knee shall bow." Jesus, my Saviour, to Ilethlehem came, Born in a manger in sorrow and shame; 0, it is wonderful, blest be His name, Calling for me! Calling for rje! He did come, "and His own received FIim not." The Jews are still looking 'or Hira. That is the most pathetic :l?ing in human history. A great Hebrew scholar has translated the S'ew Testament into Hebrew as a litjrary venture, and a rich man in LonIon ,'s spending a large fortune in cirndaflng it. I hope it will fly around &e earth. Let us get the Jews concerted, for that is the quickest way to convert the world. Do you know that here are 500,000 converted Jews? Let :be giorious work go on. Now, "what think ye of Christ?" Is lie wearer of all these glorious names livino nr luinnjin nr on onrol? S/imo think He was a good man, a typical man. the best man in the world, but say He was not divine. They do not even admit that He was an angelic being. Some think He was God-man, "God manifest in the flesh." .lesus is divine. Peter believed that. Taul believed it. He said: "By Him all things created that are in Heaven and in earth, visible and invisible: al things were made by Him." Sucli things cannot b said about an angel or a human being. I think the epistle to the Hebrews was written by Paul to prove the divinity of Jesus. Some scholars say Apollos wrote it. and no1 Paul, but Paul wrote it. There was not anybody else great enough to write it. We must have a divine Saviour. No angel or human being could dc what we need. He must be an Almighty Saviour, One who is "might? to save and strong to deliver." Oui sorrows are too great for human consolation; our sins are too mighty foi the power of any man or angel. We must have a divine Saviour?and we have Qim. Do you believe Jesus [ Christ can save a. soul in an wstanu I know it: I have seen Him do it o thousand times. He can do it. H? stands ready. Will you have Him' Do you desire Him? Brethren in the ministry, it is youi business to preach Christ's Gospel tc the world. Hurry with the Gospel This is a sad world. There is one re ligion that teaches that sorrow is sc inescapable, that the best thing thai can be done is to be blown out like s candle, and 300,000,000 Buddhists be lieve it. Hurry with the Gospel. Tteac John xiv: "Let not your heart b( troubled: ye believe in God, believ< also in Me." The presence of sorrow affects me strangely. I have never go used to it. It ought <to awaken th< sympathy of every human heart. ] T-otirt n storv nf n Pnllman cnr wheu. ir the night, all was quiet except a baby'i voice. One man called out, angrily "Where is the mother of that child' I wish she would keep it quiet." Tlx father of the child answered: "Th< mother of my babe is in her coffin ir the baggage car. I hope the passen gers will excuse me; I am doing tlx best I can." The other man rushed ou and said: "Sir, forgive me. I did no understand. I would not have said i if I had known. Let me take tba iTabe. I will keep it all night and yot shall rest; you must be tired." Hi! heart was changed and full of sym pathy. Oh. the world is full of sorrow anc sin; but we have the remedy. Le your feet be like the roe's upon tlx mountains. God grant the cominissioi anew to-day to preach the Gospel. The Time In Short. Ah, my dear friends, you who ari letting miserable misunderstanding run on from year to year; you who nr< keeping wretched quarrels alive be cause you cannot quite make up you mind tnnt now is me aay 10 su^um* your pride and kill them; you who an passing men sullenly on the street, no speaking to them out of some sill: spite, and yet knowing that it wouli fill you with shame and remorse if yoi heard that one of those men were dea< to-morrow morning; you who are let ting your neighbor starve till you hea that he is dying of starvation, or lettinj your friend's heart ache for a word o appreciation or sympathy which yoi mean to give some day?if you couli know, and see, and feel all of a suddei that "the time is short," how it woul< break the spell! how you would go in stantly, and do the thing which yoi might never have another chance t do!?Phillips Brooks. Responsibility For Pogsewion*. Do you wish more strength? But i you had more and misused it you condemnation would be greater than 1 your reproach now for work undone Do you wish more money? But if yoi iio/i mora it? rust -would the more sure ly eat your flesh as fire, while the rt sponsibility for its proper use woul burden the soul. Do ycu crave a large field of work and influence? But wha if, when gained, the field were untille and the influence that of an evil star A young minister had few to hear hi best sermons; he complained to Job. Brown, of Haddington, and this wa the reply: "You have as many hearer every time you preach as you will car to answer for at the day of judgment. ?racific Baptist. Motiern Idolatry. Are we idolators, Lord? Is ther aught that we place before Thee? Ar our pleasures, our ease, our gain, ou plan more to us than Thy favor, Th; service, Thine honor, Thy will? Dos Thou behold in us a city vrholly give: to covetousness, which is idolatry We know that we are tempted to sac rifice unto our net, and burn incen? unto our drag; we know that som( times our trust seems more in ma than in God. Do Thou, O Lord, foi give. Help us to keep ourselves fror idols. Amen.?Pacific Baptist. Nearer Heaven. Bless God for the wilderness; than! God for long nights,; be thankful tba you have been in the school of povert; and have undergone the searching an testing of much discipline. Take th right view of your trials. You ar nearer Heaven for the graves you hav dug, if you have accepted bereave ments in the right spirit; you are wise for the losses you have bravely borne but you are nobler for all the sacrifice you have willingly completed.?Di Joseph Tarker. Llvo HollneM. It is better to live a good life than t be talking about it, better to live holi ness than to proclaim that one lives il If the sun makes a noise we do no hear it. The brilliant electric light blaze forth without crackling. Tfc lighthouses flame out their rays ove the perilous seas without the procla mation of bells or the firing of cannon JSo tiie truest, purest ana Desc live simply let their light shine, as til' blessed Saviour commanded. Need of liackbone. A contemporary suggests that oni thing which Christians as well as oth ers need at the present day is back bone. Not a backbone like a ramrod that cannot yield or bend, but a wel articulated spinal column, which i: strong enough to hold a man upright and keep him from being crushed be neath the burdens that press upon him These are days of easy going piety and men are too often ruled by com promise rather than by conscience. Ecjnomjr In the Wvonj Place. Most of us aro wonderful economist when.it conics to making a little good ness go a long way; we hate to wasti it, or to show it when we know it wil not be appreciated. But Marivau: put a large truth into a brief epigrau wlion lio cnirl- "Tn this world it is I1P0 essarjr to be a little too good in orde to be good enough."?Great Thoughts. Led to Chrlftt. I have oftentimes remarked with ad miration that whatever subject I liav< been treating on, after having spen time sufficient to explain and illustrati the truths contained therein, I havi been naturally and easily led to Chris as the substance of every subject.David Brainerd. 1 ConcreM of Cooki. An international Congress of Cooks I has been held in Vienna, under tue patronage of Grand Duchess Maria Jo i sefa, -with the Idea of showing the < people of Austria what improvements , I could be made in their diet with ad- ] 1 vantage to their health and pocket ' Each nationality represented had a | day to itself in which characteristic 1 , dishes were cooked and tested. At the I end prizes were awarded for single > dishes and samples and the recipes : from which they were made given i to all visitors. ' , The White Paint of the "White House, ? The White House at Washington, which has been the "King's Palace" of the American People since it was ' first occupied by President Madison in 3809, has recently undergone a thor' ough course of remodelling, renovation and repair. Every American citizen is owner of an undivided eighty or i eighty-five millionth part of the White House, as well as of the ether Public i Buildings and Monuments in the Cap ' I itoi (Jlty. An iiem in xue rcuuvauvu ' of Uie remodeled White House was repainting. Every visitor in Wasbing ton knows vhy the White House is so > called?because is literally a "white house." The exterior paint must therefore be white. Now while the pure > white surfaces and simple lines of the t White House, set in the midst of green i lawns and beautiiul trees, produce a very satisfying effect of dignified I simplicity, white paint from a practical i point of view, is about the most uni satisfactory Lind of paint that could r have been selected by the original det signers. First, because any white i paint is easily discolored by smoke and t dust, and. second, because ordinary i white paint itself graduaHy turns gray ! or brownish yellow from exposure. : But white ihe White House is, and ? white it must remain or it would no i longer be the "White House." So the i renovators, making the best of a dis. I pAnnhf fl.o host 1 I L'UUiUglll^ OllUUUVU, OUU?ub 1VI i-v - I kind of white paint procurable. The i I average citizen if asked to guess what t kind of paint they finally decided on t would probably answer?'white lead t and oil," but he would guess wrongly, t j The paint selected as the best obtaini : able, was . ready-mixed paj t, such as 3 | can be bought in any well-furnished - i village store, such as is used by more [ than half of the eiguty or eighty-five I | million owners cf the White House on t i their own hemes. That one brand of ? j mixed paint was used instead of an1 i other U a mere accidcntal detail? I there are fifty or a hundred brands on the market iuat might have oeen selected in other circumstances, and, in - | fact, a different brand was >sed in 3 j painting the Capitol. e J Every property owner, therefore. " ! who rtt'Hts his house with a high r grade loady-mixed paint is following 2 the example set by the Government 5 Authorities at Washington, who used * ready-mixed paint, because they could ? find nothing else as good. ^ j America owes a lasting debt of grat. | itude to the Swede, John Ericsson, inr j ventor of the "cheese box" Monitor, 5 which saved the Northern navy from f destruction in 1S62 and revolutionized a naval warfare. I a How'n Tilt* ? 3 We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for ! any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by a Hall's Catarrh Cure. 0 F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, hav* known I'. J, Cheney for the last 15 years, and bolievehim I perfectly honorable in all business transac. j tlons and financially able to carry out any I obligations made by their firm. r i West & Tbcax, Wholesale Druggists, ToS j ledo, 0. k j Waldino, Kiunan A Mabvin, Wholesale a Druggists, Toledo, 0. s | Hall's CatarrhCureis takeninternally.aot u ! mgoireciiyupontnedjoou hdumuuuoussurI laces of tbesystem. Testimonials sent free. a| Price, 76c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. c j Take Hall's Family Pills lor constipation. d j The new Vircliow Hospital, in Berlin. ?; will have 800 beds. The total cost of a j construction will reach $5,000,000. The 11 j attending physicians will have salaries a j from about $1400 to $800 a year. 3 ! e | BOX OF WAFERS FREE-NO DRUGS " | -CURES BY ABSORPTION. | Cures Belchinjj of Gas?Bail Breath and Bad Stomach?Short Breath? ? i Bloating?Sour Eructations? 8 I Irregular Heart, Etc. T? j j Take a Mull's Water any time of the day ^ ! or night, and note the immediate good efWJ feet on your stomach. It absorbs the gas, n | disinfects the stomach, kills the poison germs and cures the disease. Catarrh of > 1 cue neaci ana mroai, uuwuuiesume iuuu auu 0 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 gastric juices. This cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion, t sweetens the breath, stops belching anil t fermentation. Heart action becomes strong _ and regular through this process. Discard drugs, as you know from experia ence they do not cure stomach trouble. 6 Try a common-sense (Nature's) method e that does cure. A soothing, healing sensae tion results instantly. j. W<e know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will , do this, and we want you to know it. This k offer may not appear again. ; I 1 5126 GOOD FOR 25c. 142 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist's name 0 and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we [. will supply you a sample free if you . have never used Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send vou a cer' tificate good for 25c. toward the pur8 chase of more Belch Wafers. You will B find them invaluable tor stomach trour I ble; cure* by absorption. Address Mull's Ukape Ionic Co., 328 3d Ave., Hock Island, .Ml. 8 Gice Full Address and Write Plainly. e AH druggists, 50c. per b-).":, or by mail upon .Vceiot of price. Stamy? accepted. I Hale's Honey :i of Horehound and Tar CURES e> Hoarseness, Coughs, 1 Colds and Sore Throat. I The standard remedy jsed for generations. r 25 Cents, 50 Cents, $1.00 per bottle; the largest size cheapest. At all druggists. Refuse substitutes. ? PIKE'S TOOTHACHE DROPS CURE IN ONE MINUTE ! P UTNAM Color more good* brighter and faster colors thau any o' dy aiyr murmea t witaout rlppiu# apart. Writ* tot itw Unnymuathetlc Replies. m Archbishop Temple has a ready wit. A fussy curate ouce asked him if an accident which prevented the curate's aunt from taking a ship, -which afterward sank, was an instance of providential interference. Here's the retort: "Can't tell; didn't know your aunt." More unkind is the reply which Talleyrand is reported to have made to a friend who was lying on a sick bed. "I am suffering the tortures of the damned," said the afflicted man. "What, already?" said Talleyrand, with polite incredulity. who si SKETCH OF THE LIFE And a True Story of How Had Its Birth and How it to be Offered for Pu This remarkable woman, whose maiden name was Estes, was born in Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1810, coming from a good old Quaker family. For some years she taught school, and became knowr as a woman of an alert and investigating mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully sympathetic nature. In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. They had four children, three sons and a daughter. In those good old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remediescalling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and experience many of them gained a wonderful knowledge of the curative properties of the various roots and herbs. Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. She maintained that just as nature so bountifully provides in the harvestfields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies expressly designed to cure the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medicines for her own family and friends. Chief of these wa6 a rare combination of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses peculiar to the female sex, and Lydia E.Pinkham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among them. All this so far was done freely, without money and without price, as a labor of love. But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centennial year dawned it found their property swept away. Some other source of income had to be found. At this point Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. The three sons and the daughter, with their mother, combined forces to College athletics claims its victims regularly. Alex Kem, a Pennsylvania University student, has died from a i 1- ;* ?*/! in wract Hue* uruii.cn ucun. ictui tu J^I M 4vwk..^0. Some of the world's greatest musicians have come from the Scandinavian peninsula. Ole Bull, Christine Nilsson, Jenny Lind and Edward Grieg, the great composer. N.Y.?19. FITS, St.Vitus' Dance: Nervous Diseases permanently c red by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 52 trial bottle and treatise l'ree. Dk.11. H. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Dover has become one oi tbe favorites among English health resorts. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums,redncesinflammatlon,alla\s j ain.cures wind colic,2?c.a bottle Manv fail through success, while others succeed through failure. You Cannot all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh,uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mnuth or inflamed eves bv simply dosing tiie stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn I affections by local treatment with Pax tine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. . Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston, Moss, rlC,Wd#^HIJOHWW'MORK*S? 1 l&nidlUro U'a.hInCton, D.C? I "Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late PMrr?;10Rl Ex&aaltier U.S. Pension Bureau, 3jialmmlwor. Jsft4)n?icatinj: claims,oxtyslnca j FADELE ther dye. One luc. package colora aiJ fibres. They dye > booklet?How to CyeTBleacli and Mix Colors, MO * -4. V I A Pennsylvania Lenda ft DalllM. ' There are more daily papers in Peu^|SN sylvania than in any other Statp in Union. The Keystone State totals as against 207 for New York, 171 all New England, 361 for the cntiijfl^H South and 1212 for the whole Illinois had 181, Ohio 172 and Indla^^JB 157. Thror.ghout the United Stalfl^^H and Territories there are 2338 dail and 22.223 periodicals of all kinds. ' ' iw ^8 No Hair, "But Harebrained. Even a bald-headed man can dare-brained.?New Orleans PicayonC^ql 1E WA3 li,vV i%-' OF LYDIA E. PINKHAAll * 'r the Vegetable CotnpoundHj the "Panic of '73" Caused* iblic Sale in Drug Stores^H restore the faifaily fortune. argued that the medicine which so good for their woman friends and 91 neighbors was equally good for women of the whole world. "ijj The Pinkhams had no money, andsa^H little credit. Their first- laboratan^HM was the kitchen, where roots andnl herbs were steeped on the stov*t'.-^Hfl gradually filling a gross cf bottle*?| Then came the question cf sellinf it, for always before they bad given. it away freely. They hired a job\jMH printer to run off some pamphutiia^H setting forth the merits of the med!->99 cine, now called Lydia E. I'inkhanftkjHfl Vegetable Compound, and these wer* 91 distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn. The wonderful curative properties oohm| the medicine were, to a great extent,1?! self-advertising, for whoever use^ recommended it to others, and the da?jM|B mand gradually increased. Mj In 1877, by combined efforts the fam? H| ily had saved enough money to com- :M mence newspaper advertising and froiragflS that time the growth and success of'jjHj the enterprise were assured, until towlRfl day Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegc^jSH table Compound have become house* j?j|H hold words everywhere, and: manj^^H MJIia Ul fWW auu UCl UO Cfc&V UO?U flUHM- jMl ally in its manufacture. H Lydia E. Pinkham herself did live to see the great success of thi? work. She passed to her reward year* "W ago, but not till she had provided.;;*< means for continuing her work effectively as she could have done it During her long and eventful ezpe* rience she was ever methodical ill her work and she was always careful topr?> serve a record of every case thatcame to her attention. The case of every sick". woman who applied to her for advice-? and there were thousands?received B careful study, and the details, inelud- ' 1 ing symptoms, treatment and restiltB jg were recorded for future reference, sbiM to-day tnese records, xogetaer wita . gjia hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world'.^^H over, and represent a vast collabora- /JM tion of information regarding the/ii I treatment of woman's ir whk for -zM authenticity and accuracy can hardlyt V;|B be equaled in any lib-iry in the I With Lydia E. Pinkham worked -her daughter - in - law, the prcser t Mr*. Pinkham. She was carefully instructed ygj in all her hard-won knowledge; sod for years she assisted her in her vast VffiW correspondence. To her hands naturally fell the direction of the work when its origins tor passed away. For nearly twenty. five years she has continued it, and -I nothing in the work shows when the . first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham, , 1 now the mother of a large family, took 'I it up. With woman assistants, some as > I capable as herself, the present; Mrs.. fjM Pinkham continues this gTeat work, and probably from the office of no other I person have so many women been ad- '-IP vHsed how to regain health.. Sick women, this advice is ''Yours for Health" freely given if you only write to ask a Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink* * ? Vpopptable Comnound r mada .1 from simple roots and herbs; the on? great medicine for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the noblewoman whose name it bear*. ' : * A destructive earthquake has occurred r-^ in Formosa. : W, L. Douglas' i *3= & *3= shoes m* W? Lr DougSas $4n00 Gilt Edge Una cannot be equaled at any price. ^1 j 1 ^ ^ ! <su mm ; Vif jF* Jl|???| I .^^JSHED^r 'JJuLYVfar^ 1 II CAPtTAL ?2,50qQPQH w. L. DOUGLAS MAKES ? SELLSMORB MEM'S $3. BO SHOES THAN AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLOu (m nnn REWARD to anyone who can ( O f UiUUU disprove this statement Mil could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the inflnit* care with which every palrof shoes Is made, ytHI would realize why W. L. Douglas S3.50 shoe? cost more to make, why they nold their shape* lit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. W L. Douglas Strong Made Shoes fom Men, $2. SO, $2.00. Boy a" School A Droas Shoca, $2.BO, $2, $1.7B,$1.BO CAUTION .-Insist upon having W.L.Doug, ias shoes. Take no substitute. None genuin# without his name and price stamped on bottom. ; Fust Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy Write for Illustrated Catalog. ? W. L, DOUGLAS, Brockton, TVTasfc nPnPQY? DISCOVERY; ^9 glre? qaltk rniff ul ??m wont caifi. Book of (MtlnuUlt aid SO Da;i' imtmtnl Free. flr. II. (H. CRII.VS SONS, Box B, AUtoU, <?. Automobile Bargains. Wearo the I.AIWEST dealers nl SEW ?nd SEC. (?'D HAND AUTOMOBILES in rim WOULD. Send lor OUK banruin list ot Automobile* on baud. Time* Sijuare Auiouiobile Co.. 216-21? \V Wfh St., N.Y. City. SS DYES i la cold water better than any other dye. Yoa eaa NKOh DKLCJ CO., Lniooviile. .fllMMli*.