University of South Carolina Libraries
r New York City.?The popularit; of the Eton jacket appears to in crease week by week and month b; month, and it not alone is a favorit of the moment, but is predicted fo <ihe coming as well as the presen season. This one is exceedingl; charming and attractive and is ap propriate for silk, light weight woo and similar materials, whether use< as a part of a suit or a separate fc I ? .> I ;wrap. Also it can be made fron cashable materials, such as linen pique and the like. In reality it i: quite simple, but the trimming is s< arranged as to give a vest effect. Ir the illustration nut brown taffeta is .trimmed with bands of the materia embroidered in shades of brown witl pouches of gold, but various combi nations might be suggested. Tlx shaped bands can be either of tlx same or contrasting material, anc either embroidered or trimmed ir any way that may be liked. The jacket is made witn rroni! and back, all of which are tuckec and stitched with belding silk. Th< trimming bands are shaped and ar< arranged over the jacket on indi cated lines, leaving the narrov space at the front that suggests th< vest. The sleeves are the prett: ones that extend just below the el bows and are tucked at their lowei edges, where they are completed b; bands that match those upon th< jacket. The quantity of material require* for the medium size is four and i quarter yards twenty-one, three an< a half yards twenty-seven or tw< yards forty-four inches wide, witl seven and three-quarter yards of nar row braid and two and a half yard ? * i %ji lac't" iui xiiii2>. Ribbon Interlacing. r A yoke of open-meshed net inter yiced with dainty-colored ribbon ma: be inserted in the gown of flowerei lawn. Of course the ribbon matche the sprigs in color and the gown i delightfully cool if spaces simulatin insertion are left between the ribbo: rows. Something; New in Leather. "Jack has just sent me the newes thing out in the way of a pocket book," said the latest-to-be-engage member of the Fad and Frill Clul "It's a vanity bag, and it's a wondei for it holds such a lot of things. An then the shape of it is so novel, i looks exactly like a big four-lea clover, and I intend to make it m mascot. It's of lovely green leathei and it's really shaped just like - * ? ? AP A/VII VPA V? Arn'c n ciuver. vi wuioc, luci c ^ a f but that you have to forget. Insid? besides the mirror, powder-puff an little rogue box, there is the cutes pair of gold mounted opera glasse that you can think of, and they fol up so flat that they take up no roor whatever. Then there's a tiny ci glass vinaigrette, a gold pencil and little gold box for holding hairpins coin purse, and a place for callin cards."?Woman's Home Companioi White and Pearl Bolts. White linen tailored belts ar trimmed with white pearl buskh and buttons. i V Trimmings For Sailor Hats. * A chic way of trimming a sailoi ^ hat is to use both the cachepeigne 5 of ribbon loops and the rosette. Take r a little sailor shape, for instance, of pale blue chip. Use for its trimming a delicate gray wing; fasten the wing to che right side of the crown with two flat rosettes of white maline, edged with a narrow little pleating of silver ribbon. The wing should be caught between the rosettes. Now. to give the hat the character it needs, add a beauty touch of many loops of black velvet ribbon at the back. Another smart combination of color to use in a hat of this sort is to have the hat itself cream color, the wing white and the rosette white, edged with a little pleating of gold ribbon. Then instead of using black velvet ribbon for the cachepeigne have th? velvet loops in goldeu brown.?Grace Margaret Gould, ia the Woman's Home Companion. Shirt Waist or Blouse. The comfort of the shirt waist made with elbow sleeves and with the round collar is so apparent that it is very nearly impossible to supply the demand. This one shows two wide tucks in each front, so provid ing becoming fulness and is adapted to Madras, to linen, to lawn, to the soft finished pique, to wash silks and all the waistings of the season. In t the illustration it is made of white y linen lawn, a material that always is - satisfactory, but exceedingly pretty 1 ones are made from dotted lawns' 1 and from the pretty wash silks, the 3 former material being a peculiarly i satisfactory one for the shirt waist , dresses designed for home wear. 3 The waist is made with fronts and ) back, and is finished at the front i edges with wide hems. There is a 5 patch pocket arranged over the left I front and the turn-over collar comi pletes the neck. The sleeves can be . made either with or without open? ings, and are gathered into bands, to ; which the cuffs are attached. y J The quantity of materia! required s for the medium size is three and s Ovae-quarter yards twenty-one, three g : i.::d a half yards twenty-seven or one a | and seven-eighth yards forty-four iuciies wide. I "Peter Pan" Things. t First came the "Peter Pan" hat, a > queer little pleated Scotch affair, with d quills. This was folio.ved by the ) "Peter Pan" blouse, with low, round collar, short sleeves and patch d pocket. Now there's an entire "Petcv t Pan" suit, which youngish girls are f wearing with immenso delight, bey cause of its simplicity and girlishness. It's merely a shirt waist suit, a the blouse whereof is like that de}? scribed above, and the short, round ?, skirt, p'leated or plain. For country ? wear, mornings, picnics, etc., it's a it very pretty sort. So far, that's all 'S the "Peter Pannish" modes, though d possibly those new belts of bright Scotch plaid silk belong to that cateit gory. a _ 5, g Open Work Clock. i. Nothing is more becoming to a well turned ankle iiian a plain lisle or silk stocking with the little "clocks" at e the side. The newest thing is to have is the "clock" cf open work, instead of embroidery. THE <TULrPlT. AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON B DR. R. A. TORREY. Sitbjcct: Resurrection a Fact. New York City.?The Rev. Rcube A. Torrey, D.D., the celebrated evai gelist, preached Sunday morning i the Fifth Avenue Presbyteria Church. There was a large congn gation, consisting almost entirely < strangers, only a very small pe centage being members of the churcl Dr. Torrey's subject was: "Tt Resurrection a Fact, not Fiction and his text was I Cor. xv:20 : "Bi now is Christ risen from the dea* and become the first-fruits of the] that slept." He said: Last Sunday moiling we said thi the resurrection of Jesus was tl most important event in history, ar we said that if it could be prove to be a historic fact that everythir essential to Christianity was prove but that if, on the other hand, could not be proved to be a histor fact, then * everything essential 1 Christianity must go. We startf out, without assuming anything i to by whom, or when, the gospe were written, to decide whether th( were a record of facts, or merely fi tion. First, we discovered that the foi gospels were each an independei I n r.* o *1 ^ wo uroi'Q Hrivon tn tl fl^UUUl, diiVX V? C ? conclusion that they were a recoi of actual occurrences. 'Next, we di covered that each bore the evident? of having been written by an ey witness. It often happens that witness tells his story so artlessl with such an entire absence of ar attempt to color it, that his test mony carries weight. ?Ve have m only one witness, but four, differir apparently in details (showing th; they were not coached) but all agre ing in the essential facts, and ea< one's story bearing marks of artle simplicity, so that we were driv( i to the conclusion that the story i the four gospels vfis a record j actual facts beyond dispute. Som times the details of evidence a more conclusive than the direct e\ dence, because it is not the tes1 , mony of the witness, but of the trul that is sought. We begin here this morning, ai we shall show that the narratives the Gospels prove conclusively th they are not fiction, but fact. Oi Illustration: In St. John's accoui of Thomas' refusal to believe th the Lord had risen, notice what said about the character of Thom and the character of Jesus. Ho characteristic is Thomas' action ai how characteristic is the rebuke Jesus! When the other disciples t< Thomas that they have seen the Lor he refuses to believe, and says, won't beliere it until I see the prin of the nails in His hands." A wei passes and the - disciples, includli Thomas, are gathered together, Jesus suddenly appears again. I bids Thomas put forth his finger ai thrust it into His side, and Thorn cries out, "My Lord and my God And then Jesus introduces the tend rebuke. "Thomas, you ought to ha believed before; but because th< hast seen Me, thou hast believei blessed are those who believe on si ficient evidence without sight." that made up? Is it a lie? If it made up then the man who drew th picture of Thomas, without a word explanation, and that picture Jesus, is the greatest literary mast of the centyries. It is not made u i it is the record of reality. Another illustration: When Pet said to Jesus (John xxi:21), "Wh shall this man do?" the Lord replies "What, is that to thee? Follow th< Me." The fishers had breakfasted') the shore, and Jesus had told Pet of Peter's coming crucifixion, ai then starts down the shore and saj "Follow Me." And Peter, turnii round as he goes, sees John folio1 ing, and says: "Lord, you have to me what my future is to be.. Wh will this man do?" Now, remembt all though the life of Jesus, as it recorded in the four Gospels, Jes never answered questions of me speculative curiosity. Peter wants know another man's business, ai Jesus says, "What is that to the< You see that you obey." Is that mai up, or it is reality? Is it a lie? A other illustration: In the same cha ter Jesus asks Peter, "Lovest th< Me?" three times, and Peter w grieved because He asked him th question three times. Notice the words: "Peter was grieved becau He said unto him the third tim 'Lovest thou Me?' " Why was Pet - ?J o t?v.? aATa?>c< ma /ivnlon srievcu ; iiuuu uucig nu VSJIIIU. tiou. But the Lord's thought we back to the court of Annas and Cai phas, where three times Peter hi denied Him, and. if the narrative hi been made up, this would have bei explained. Have you ever notio that the four Gospels insist upon tl fact tnat our Lord returned than in the breaking of bread? That something we do three times eve day, but I do not think that any oc in writing our lives, would put it i record. We simply return thanks a matter of form, but when Jesus, the breaking of bread, lifted up H heart and opened His lips, there w such a real drawing into the presen of God that no one at the table ev forgot it. When, after the walk Emmaus, Jesus returned thanks, ? though they had not recognized Hi before, notwithstanding that th( I V. -nri+Viirt thom HQ T I1CUI IS UUIUCU "II..... talked, the disciples knew Him. a moment their eyes wero opene and they said: "It is the Lord; n I body else ever returned thanks th way." Is this a fiction? If one m; wrote the story of the four Gospe why should he put in all of these d tails without explanation? It is i credible; and that four should do is absolutely unbelievable. H( comes it? Because this is what c curred, and they told what they se without realizing the significance what they put down. Still anoth illustration: If a man were inventi the story of the Resurrection, w should he put in the fact that t little napkin "was wrapped togeth in a place by itself?" Who car whether it was in a place by itse.f not? I do not know whether Jo] knew the significance of it or not, b there is a significance in it that fiction would contain. It showed th ? ->...-.on finmnhnnt nvpr rlp,n ad lIUSUO ai UiUUl^UMMV w ? W. and the grave, in the supreme morae of the world's history, there was hurry, no haste, no excitement, b that, with the same majestic coi posure, the same divine sublimil the same majestic calm that mark Him in the storm on the Sea of Gi ilee, He rises from the grave. I does not tear the handkerchief frc His face and fling it across the roo but calmly unbinds His head a face, lays it aside in a place by its< and passes out of the sepulchre, that made up, and put in without word of explanation? Never. \ have read not a picture, but fac with a detail here and another thei of which the writer, apparently, hi rre conception of the meaning but simply wrote what he saw. \Ve have a volume o? evidence on Y the resurrection of that kind. First, the apostles, beyond peradventure, made the resurrection of Jesus the cornerstone of their preaching, and they preached it in the very city where He was crucified and before the court that condemned him. Furthermore, they gave their lives for a , testimony. Men do not do that for " whaft they know to be false. Secondly, the early church, which came out of the Jewish church, changed the I Sabbath observance from the seventh day to the first day of the week, and " anyone who has studied Jewish his* tory knows the hardest thing in the ,, world is to change Jewish customs, '. an1 something tremendous must have J j happened to make this change possi' ble, simply by common consent. The third fact is most significant?the t moral transformation of the apostles themselves. They were a pack of wtl(l terly demoralized cowards, and a few >(j days after we see that same company filled with the most indomitable cour age that the world has ever seen, i What had happened? Jesus had risen i ic and they had seen Him. All intellito gent men who deny the resurrection ;(j admit that the apostles thought He ls had risen. Straus says: "We admit ]s that they had seen something; may ,y not this appearance have been visionary?" That is, they saw a vision. lr Our answer is this: Whoever heard j ^ of eleven men having the same vision ie at the same time; and of 500 men >(] having the same vision? An old arc_ gument against the resurrection has Cs been revived within the last five e_ years, and it was that Jesus was not a really dead and was resuscitated, and they appeal to a historic fact that 3 i !y certain Jewish officer was taken down | 1_ from a cross and brought back to life. We have five objections to this: lg First, what preceded the crucifixion at ?tho scourging, etc. Second, the e- Jews and the Romans took special ;h precautions to prevent this. Third, ss remember His broken heart. Fourth, >n if He had been resuscitated He would of have been in a state of absolute physaf ical collapse, as was the case with e- the Jewish officer, who was an inre valid all his life. Fifth, if so, the ri- ones who resuscitated Jesus must ;i- have been the apostles and the Iransth formation in them remains unaccounted for. Finally, if it was not id resurrection, then the whole thing is in a fraud, and a deliberate fraud. Who at can believe that Christianity with its ie lofty precepts of morality and holy nt living rests upon a fraud and that at Jesus was a party to it? No man can is believe it. as Ther* is only one conclusion: The iw resurrection of Jesus Christ from | id the dead is the best proved fact in of history. There is only one really ill strong argument against it, and that d. is that no one else was ever raised ; "I from the dead. The answer to that ts is that the life of Jesus was unique. ik His mission and nature and character lg were all unique and it was only to be id expected that the issue of that life le would be unique. It is impossible id for any man of loyal mind, or who as has had any experience of evidence, ." who wants to know the truth, to sit er down before the four Gospels and ve take them up, point by point, examine ju the statements and thoroughly sift the d; evidence, to come to any other con e 4-V.nn + V.o + Toouc Phriof flrtllfll 11" UlUdlUU tiiuu luu w vj uuuk, VM.cwv Is ly arose from the dead, as recorded is in the four Gospels. What of it? at Everything. If Christ rose again then of Christianity is no longer a system of of abstract divinity, but a gospel of er proven facts, and everything that you p; and I have been taught to believe, and that is dear to the Christian er heart, and the glory of the life to at come, is an absolute certainty, d: ju Seeking to Save. er Christ is in all His redeemed, as id the soul of their soul, the life of :s, their life. He is the pitying heart ig and the helping hand of God with cv- every needy, praying spirit in the Id world. He is the sweet light of the at knowledge of God that breaks in up;r> on every penitent heart. is He is not only with those who bens lieve in Him and love Him, but also re with those who neither believe in to Him nor love Him, that He may be K1 to them also Jesus their Saviour. e? The Christ of God is# in thy heart, waiting and aiming to get the connI sent of thy will, that He may save p. thcc. Wherever man is, there also is Christ, endeavoring to free him as from the law ot sin ana aeatu, uy a't becoming I-Iimself . the law of the se spirit of his life.?John Pulsford. se ie, The Father's Lullaby. er A dear old nurse, who had become a" deaf and nearly blind, said to ono nt who pitied her, "You are mourning a" for me, my dear, and there's no need; I am as happy as a child. I somelimes think I am a child, whom the e? Lord is hush-a-bying to my long e(* sleep. For when I was a nurse-girl he my missus always told me to speak ks very soft and low, to darken the is room, that her little one might go to ry sleep; and now all noises are hushed ie> and still to me, and the bonny earth 3n seems dim and dark, and I know it's as my Father lulling me away to my in long sleep. I am very well content, ris and you mustn't fret for me." as , ce They Ever Guide Us. 61* l0 We may well tliank God, and take ,j_ courage, and inarch on, when we m know that the pillars of cloud by ;jr day and of fire by night are set fast in the divine order, to guide us ou jn our way. Let us be sure that all is |(j well whatever comes, while we trust and stand fast and strive, and only at hopeless, and rightly hopeless, when an we want what wc are in no wise willjs ing to earn. The glory and glow of le^ life come by right living.?Robert n_ Collyer. so """" >w The Way to Succcss. )C" The men whom I have seen sr.cceed best in life have always been of cheerful and hopeful men who went er about their business with u smile or their faces, and look the changes and !*y chances of their normal llfo like men facing rough and smooth alike aa it er came, and so found the truth of the es old proverb, that "good times and ?r bad times and all times pass over."?? Charles Kingsley. no at A Continuous Praying. Avoid diligently those false and dent ceptive thoughts which say, wait a no little, I will pray an hour hence; I ut must perform this or that. For, with IT1" such thoughts a man quits prayer for business, which lays hold of and cd entangles him, so that he comes not ^ to pray the whoie day long.?Martin Luther. >m You can tell how much a man means his prayers by the way he gets "js out and pushes things after the meeta inSVe ts, The best evidence of your own sal:e, ration is ycyr interest in that of ad others. Africa Sinking Into the Sea. Writing to a Johannesburg paper, a correspondent expresses alarm at e the view of a scientist that Africa is t gradually sinking into the ocean. But t his fears were calmed when it was } pointed out to him that, according to t the same scientific authority, the downward progress of the continent l is so slow that it will be many thou- ? sands of years before water sweeps ( the surface. It is anticipated that i long before the disaster arises every t mineral will have been abstracted t from?the soil. COULD NOT KEEP UP. I T).nlratl TlnWIl T,l IfO MflnT AnotllCP. I AVith Kidney Troubles. Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, N. J., says: "1 had kidney trouble in its most painful and severe form, and the ? torture I went through now seems to have been almost unbearable. I had backache, painsinthe side and loins, ^izzy spells and hot, feverish headaches. There were bearing-down pains, and the kidney secretions passed too frequently, and with a burning sensation. They showed sediment. I became discouraged, weak, languid and depressed, so sick and weak that I could not keep up. As doctors did not cure me I decided to try Doan's Kidney Pills, and with such success that my troubles were all gone after using eight boxes, and my strength, ambition and general health is fine." Sold by all dealers. 50 centsabox. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. England's Latest Paper Money. 'Bus ticket have now become so < valuable that we understand, in < order to prevent forgery, they are in < iuture 10 De prinieu wuu uie naun ! of England water-mark.?London j News. * The Berkshires. The land of magnificent estates, picturesque farms and comfortable summer ' homes and camps?the Berkshire Hills! 1 Here in Western Massachusetts?only a ] few hours from all the large cities of the East?is a country that, for years, has attracted to it both the wealthy and the middle classes; the one to spenB t"he summer months upon extensive estates; the other to occupy farmhouse, cottage, or ' tent. 1 The charms of the Berkshires have been ' told in story and poem. Many of our most ( famous autnors have found tnere the rest j and quiet that enabled them to give us 1 | masterpieces that will live as long as the 1 old hills among which they were inspired j and written. The New York Central Lines extend di- ' rectly through the hill country and make < this fascinating region easv of access to tho ( traveler from East or West. There are . few vacation spots in the world more attractive than these beautiful Berkshire 1 Hills on "America's Greatest Railroad." ] The Ludwigs. So Duke Ludwig of Bavaria, now seventy-five years old, wishes to con- I tract a third morganatic marriage. 1 His second wife, now living, is only i thirty-five, but she is too old. The Duke is now in love with a young 1 singer at the Munich Opera-House, 1 and as he is a proper man, like Wer- 1 ther in Thackeray's immortal ballad, ] , there must be a divorce and then a 1 marriage. The Wittelsbach Lud- 1 wigs have not been fortunate with women. Ludwig the Strong, in the fifteenth century, suspecting his '> wife's fidelity, pitched the lady in 1 waiting out of a window and sent 1 the wife to the scaffold. Lola Mon- > tez played the mischief with Ludwig I., and Sophie Charlotte, who as the- ( Duchess tl'Alencon was burned in the 1 bazaar fire at Paris, might have made Ludwig II. reasonably happy if for some reason?several were wide- i spread in Munich?he had cot broken the betrothal. And now the old Duke is hunting trouble. Of course if the young singer does not become Ludwig's wife she will come either to the Metropolitan or the Manhattan Opera House. We see Messrs. Conried and Hammerstein bidding for her. But the New York public may not be so musically easy as the Duke. ?Boston Herald. English Seaside Music. At several favorite summer resorts attempts are beiug made to elevate the character of music during J the season. For the most part the visitor has to be content with the brazen town band, or a third-rate and incomplete orchestra, hired at a figure that is too cheap to make it anything but a sort of terror.?The Orchestral Times. SALLOW FACES. Often Caused by Coffee Drinking. How many persons realize that coffee so disturbs digestion that it produces a muddy, yellow complexion? A ten days' trial of Postum Food Coffee has proven a means, in thousands of cases, of clearing up bad complexions. a \\ asnn. jouug iauj wns uci experience: "All of us?father, mother, sister and brother?had used tea and coffee for many years until finally wo [ all had stomach troubles more or less._ "We were all sallow and troubled with i;imples, breath bad, disagreeable taste in tbe mouth, and all of us simply so mauy bundles of nerves. "We didn't realize that coffee was the cause of the trouble until one day we ran out of coffee and went to borrow some from a neighbor. She gave us some Postum and told us to try that. "Although we started to make it ? ? ? -? * - ,* i we all leic sure we wouia oe sick n we missed our strong coffee, but we were forced to try Postum and were surprised to find it delicious. "We read the statements on the I>kg., got more and in a month and a half you wouldn't have known us. We were all able to digest our food without any trouble, each one's skin became clear, tongues cleaned off and nerves in fine condition. We never use anything now but Postum. There is nothing like it." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville." "There's a reason." Good Colors For Houses. It is not generally known?not sven among painters?why certain ints and colors wear much better han others on houses, and the cnowledge of just what tints are best o use is, therefore, rather hazy. One writer on paint, in a recent jook, says that experiments seem to thow that thosi colors which resist >r turn back the heat rays of the iun will protect a house better than hose which allow these rays to pass hrough the film. Thus red is a good color because t turns back, or reflects, the red ays, and the red rays are the hot ays. In general, therefore, the warm ;ones are good and the cold tones are poor, so far as wear is concerned. In choosing the color of paint for four house, select reds, browns, jrays and olives which,, considering :he various tones these tints will jroduce, will give a wide range from ivhich to choose. Avoid the harsh tints, such as cold fellows (like lemon), cold greens (like grass green, etc.), and the slues. It must be understood that no vir:ue is claimed for tints in themselves, rrespective of the materials used in :he paint. Any color will fade, and ;he paint will scale off, if adulterated white lead or canned paint is used, jut if one is careful to use the best white lead?some well-known brand )f a reliable manufacturer?and genaine linseed oil, the warm tints menoVwnro tuill nntwp.ir tVlP same materials tinted with the cold colors. Maclaren's Sensible Idea. Lecturing the other night at Liverpool, the Rev. Ian Maclaren said: 'No man is justified in marrying who cannot obtain a first-class life certificate from a really good insurance company." France and Her Sailors. France owes the greater part of ner past glory and her present power to her sailors. There has been no iiscovery of geographical importance to which the name of a Frenchman ias not been attached.?Paris Eclair. A Musical Nation. Whether the English are to be considered a musical nation or not aas long been a much disputed point, rhey may not wax very enthusiastic aver the enormous amount of concerts which every London season brings in its train, but they certainly iccord full appreciation to the Viennese Philharmonic Orchestra, who can, in every way, be gratified and contented with theirsuccess. Through their efforts Austrian music has been placed on the summit of musical [ame.?Die Zeit, Vienna. In Every Leaf That Falls. The Nantes market gardeners, the most expert commercial cultivators In France, owe their success primarily to the use of leaves of trees as a fertilizer. The leaves that fall from the trees in the district are carefully collected each autumn. They are put into heaps with loam and are left to decay. The result is a compost Par more valuable than can be provided ty the aid of loam and manure. Fresbly gathered leaves from trees are also used as a mulch to protect crops from frost during the winter months, with excellent results. They are also dried and used freely for bedding material for horses and cows. The manure thus obtained is far more valuable than that furnished by the aid of straw. In English agricultural circles straw is considered to be of greater fertilizing value than leaves. This is an error. Scientific investigation has disclosed the fact that decayed leaves are of greater fertilizing value than even manure. In pear leaves the contents of nitrogen was 1.86 per cent; in oak leaves 1.18 per cent.; in poplar, 0.75 per cent.; beech, 0.7S per cent.; elm, 0.73 per cent., and in the vine 0.35 per cent. A comparison with leaves and manure in respect to their fertilizing properties disclosed the following facts: forty-four pounds of pear leaves, eighty pounds of poplar, fifty-one pounds of peach, eighty-two pounds of elm and 174 pounds of vine respectively are equal in nitrogen to 100 pounds of manure. A valuable table might be compiled showing the fertilizinz value of the nt on nf thp various Enelish icavco \ji u<* vi. %-w w trees. It is known to some gardeners that the most delicious sea kale forced in this country is obtained by the aid of a thick and closely packed mulching of tree leaves.?London Globe. " XcTMftchinery i-sed.~~ "But," protested Mrs. Newllwed, "I don't see why you ask twenty-five cents a half peck for your beans. The other man only wanted fifteen cents." "Yes'm," replied the huckster, I "but these here beans o' mine is all' hand picked."?Philadelphia Press. ' Chickens Ean If Yott Know How ie Kandli Whether you raise Chickens for do it intelligently and get the best re is i:o profit by the experience of other' all you need to know on the subject? fy? yfc who made his living . ^ ? " Pcultry, and in th* ! co experiment and sper in i ihe best way to condu ^Stanapso small sum of 25 cents i u ?? It tells you how co j iow to Feed "or Eggs, and also for M: ror Breeding Purposes and indeed at :now on the subject co make a success. SENT POSTPAID OS RECEIPT Of- PA BOOK PUBUSHm 134 Lcgna A Bad Case of Vanity, ' ilS Vanity holds general dominion -jB over womankind, and in many casei over those of the other sex; but an.jSj uptown milliner relates a case of th*:*3H most aggravated form that is al- ;H most unparalleled. She was arrang- 'H ing her stock late one afternoon last week, when she was interrupted by the hurried entrance of a wom^ri,, . who eccitedly informed her that she fl wanted the trimming of her new hat jjll changed. She said that it had been .w trimmed on the wrong side. trimming is on the left side?just fl where it ought to be," were theg^H words of the milliner in reply, somewhat puzzled. "It doesn't jq^ke any v/M difference whether it ought to be in JH front or back, or right or left; it'tf-^H got to be on the church side," Not?;~HI ing the gasp of the astonished mil-,.^H ]\ner, she continued: "Yes, the H church side. I sit right next to the H wall in church, and I'm not going to fl have all that trimming next the walL I want it on tbe other side for the whole congregation to see." The trimming Was promptly placed' on?^B the "church side," of the hat,, and 'S the customer was satisfied.?Phila- H delphia Record. fl As the Librettist Likes It. H I hear that Mr. Erandon Thomas !fe touring with his play "Charley'? Aunt." I remember seeing the work H when it wa3 tried in town for a feW/?U nights in December, 1892. There seems to m ! no reason why this piece*1/! B if provided with additional dialogue^^H by Charles Broolcfleld, Ge?rge Gross- jM smith, Jr., and Cosmo Hamilton, music by Lionel Monckton, Iv&rT;^|flj Caryl], Paul Rubens, and Frank;/^M Tours, and, of course, supplementary lyrics by Adrian Ross, should not, in time, meet with some slight measure' ||fl of popular success.?Pall Mall Ga-*,%jfi| zette. A' Moving Man. H A. E. Kinner, who came back to Fredonia from Niagara Falls some :? months ago, moved his family back B to the Falls yesterday. The moving is of interest, inasmuch as it is the H fifty-fifth time that Kinner has 1 TTradnhl&djlH coangeu uis* i coiu&uv/c. ?- ? , Correspondence Buffalo Times. -jiS| Awful! 9 He?"Neither male nor . femala jB convicts in English prisons are per mitted to see a mirror during the ' period of their "incarceration." 1 She?"Oh, now, that's cariying.;|jH punishment too far!"?Yonkerg"'g? Statesman. B For 'Tis the Mind. I 111 qualities are contagious as wel! as disease, and the mind is at least aa fl much liable to infection as the bodjr.'a For Nervousness. E If you are nervous remember this fl "-"-I J? simple ruie. ^uluihe jb ?< CUVVtl *v. as taking a drink of water every hour - "? or. two. Medical men declare that we should be helped in various ways '*?,? if we were more thoughtful and per- I sistent in this respect. I^is certainly I a simple rule, and one that is within the reach of the busiest among us. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Nervone Diseases per-_ ' J? manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve" Restorer. #2 trial bottle and treatise fre$. B Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phil ft, Pa. Food hastily eaten causes indigestion and a red nose. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething.soi tens thegums,reducesinflamm&- A tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c a bottle >- M Neck movements, if practiced faithfully, ? wil! greatly benefit the eyes. BABY COVERED WITH SORES. I Would Scratcli ana ieur mc i icm v i'O* less Hundi) Were Tied?"Would Have J Died But For C'uticura." "Aly little son, when about a year and a hall old, began to have sores come out .J on his lace. 1 Lad a physician treat him, v but the so:es grew worse, 'l'hen they be-. gan to come on his arms, then on other parts oi bis body, and then ore came on his chest, worse than the others. Then 1 | called another physician. Still he grew worse. At the end of about a year and A s* kalf ot suffering he grew so bad 1 bad to f tie bis hands in cloths nt night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing ' the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton, [ and was hardly able to walk. My aunt ! advised mt t3 try L'uticura Soap and Oint- ment. 1 sent to the drug store and got a cake of the feoap and p box ot the Ojafcr ment, and at the end of about two moritha tbe sores were all well, lie has never^ha^- ^ any sores Oi any kind since. He is n?w strong and nealtby, and J can sincerely say that onh for your most wonderful remedies my precious ctrna svouiu nave died from those terrible sores. Mrs. Egbert Shelr.on, J{. K. 1). -No. 1, Woodville, i.'o&n., April :2, 1905." Even* three years all Chinese domiciled in Siam have to pay a small poll tax. ' ij llflllTmWheat. 60 nnxbcia per Ml IIM F k LJaerr. Cntaloorue and sample* WBIv I LIIFB?E.SnlzerSteilC(?l?* V V I hi 1A> Cm La VV?. Thompson's Eye Water s Money! e TSiens Properly, ^ A I fun or profit; you want to < R suits. The way to do this J flj We offer a book telling mf- M a book written by a man j I for 25 years in raising 1 ic time necessarily had 1 si: much money to iearn ft ? J ict the business?for the ^ D n postage stamps. Detect and Cure Disease, irket, which Fowls to Save I >ou? everything you must B |H^ f.fl