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New York City.?Young girls are always ready to seize upon any satisfactory novelty in dress, and the Pe- ( ter Pan shirt waists have met with ; hearty approval. This one has the two tucks in each front that provide becoming fulness, and can be made either from thin lawns, batistes and the like or from the slightly heavier l Madras, linen and French pique. In this instance white mercerized ba- < tiste is worn with a pretty blue tie : and belt, but in addition to the plain materials there are many dotted ones that are much liked. Pin dotted I lawn with collar and cuffs of plaiu i color, matching the dots is a favorite < and the coin dotted wash silks are i exceedingly smart. ] The waist is made with the fronts ( and the back. The back is plain but i the fronts are tucked at the shoul- s ders and are finished with hems at their edges. The patch pocket is ar- I ranged over the left one and the col- 1 lar is attached to the neck. The sleeves are comfortably full a?nd can be made either with or without openings. In either case they are gathered into bands to which the cuffs are attached. The quantity of material required or the siiteen year size is three and A half yard'fc twenty-one, three and one-eighth yards twenty-seven or one and seven-eighth yards fortyfour inches wide. Crisp Tulle Bow. Nothing could be more charming than the revival of the crisp little > bow of white cambric or tulle under the chin. This is a fresh, dainty mode of neck dressing, and looks particularly well with the spring tailored suit. The ties, when of cam' brie or lawn, are long enough to go twice around the neck and tie. They must, of course, be immaculately crisp and fresh, or their charm is lost. The dainty, ethereal whisp of tulle, such as girls wore a year or more ago, has again been adopted , by those who find it becoming. . < Vesuvius, the New Color. A London authority states that a ] deep yellow, with a shot of flame red , ( in its lights and shaGes, is the latest ; fashionable color. It is known as j < 'Vesuvius." Latest as to Belts. The most striking thing about the belt display this summer is the prom- . inonrc nf stppl in thr srpn^ral srhpmp Fully three out of five of the hand- j somest .belts are beautified with steel [ and steel beads, or paillettes are used \ ] upon the girdles cf silk as well as j upon these of leather. Wide girdles | of silk elastic which in black andj1 white were shown at Christmas time*] 1 ' are now offered in all the modish j shades. The corded silk elastic has J 1 the effect of highly lustrous corded | 1 ribbon and takes the colors beauti-1; fully. Large, flat buckles hold the 1 girdle to its full width in the back, ' but the front buckle is usually much smaller. i Fancy Suspenders. Sets of suspenders, including the belt, made of* white linen and ornamented with tiny pearl batons, are celling rapidly. i Kid Mitts a Novelty. i Kid mitts are a novelty, but they I' are fceins worn. J i Nice Dress Shields. Covers for dress shields are mada Df fine muslin and lace. These are nice for thin dresses. Plaid Wash Tie. The fancy for brigit plaid wash tie and belt has not yet been very widely adopted here, though it is a pretty idea for younger women especially, the best effect being obtained when the tie is worn over a white stock and the edges of both tie and belt bound with white. Jaunty Bathing Kerchief. There's a way of tying the kerchief worn over the hair while bathing so that it gives a very jaunty rather than grotesque appearance which is < so general when one is really ready for the water. The back cf the hair is covered, but the pompadour is left out and the silk kerchief is tied just back of it in a sort of ascot knot, the short ends falling to the sides. Breakfast Kimono. The simple breakfast jacket possesses a great many advantages and this one can be utilized both for mornings at home and for negligee wear. In the illustration it is made of a pretty dotted challie with bandings of plain washable silk and in addition to being extremely dainty is eminently practical, inasmuch as , the materials can all be washed read I ly and with success. It would, how- i ;ver, be equally attractive in cashnere, in French flannel and all simile materials and also in the cotton )iies that now are being shown and n which so many garments of the , sort are sure to be needed. The kimono is made with the i Tonts and the back and is finished < cvitii the big and becoming collar jvcr the shoulders while the sleeves j are made in one piece each and cut , sn pointed outline. ( The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and one- i quarter yards twenty-seven, three \ ind three-quarters yards thirty-six : ar three yards forty-four inches wide 1 with four yards of banding. 1 Simple lint Beautiful Sunshades. Most of the parasols carried in < Newport have been simple in style. Few have had frills or ruffles. But Lhe sunshades are of beautiful tints ' Lhat match the costumes or contrast , with them. The handles make up for j tiio simpncuy 01 me lops, aim suiuu are elaborate and costly. Several seen recently had handles of birdseye maple, with cut glass ends of various shapes, soro of which resemble decanter stoppers. The head of a frog and that of a peacock were reproduced on two handles seen recently. Jewels formed the eyes. Only elderly women carry the small carriage parasols, for though they are couvenicnt, . they are not at all pretty.?New York Press. , Red Haired Girl Revels. The girl with red hair, or brown , hair that borders on the red, will revel this fall in the beautiful brown j suitings that are to be the fashion. | rhe dark reds and coppers, too, she , K'iU deliahf in. 1 :THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. W. S. LEWJS. Subjcct: The Sccrct ctf the Lord. Brooklyn, N. Y.?President W. S. Lewis, D. D., of Morningside College, Sioux City, la., is the vacation preacher in the Hanson Place M. E. Church. He began his services there Sunday morning and had a good audience. He is an excellent preacher. His subject was "The Fear of the Lord." The text was from Psalm xxv. :14: "The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him, and He will show them His covenants." Dr. Lewis said: Words, like men, are affected by the atmosphere in which they live. A word spoken 3000 years ago, but to another people, and in another clime, may fail to represent its highest and best meaning to those born in another age and under other skies. Many years have flown since this word was spoken, and at least one of these in the text needs a word of explanation ?fear. The good Book says: "The f AOf A T A??/? i r? Of A f I JL^ttl VI IUC JJV1U IS LUC UG&lilUUJS VI wisdom," but reference is made in the New Testament to the fact that ' perfect love casteth out fear. Thanks to the cross, the broken tomb, the descent of fire which spoke on cloven tongue, for a changed atmosphere, in which our text may read: "The secret of the Lord is with them that love Him." The problem of knowledge is not that, but how, it is. A few small philosophers have doubted the fact that they knew, but that is carrying doubt to the point of insanity. We know, and we know we know; the how that we know is the problem. That an idea may be passed from one mind to another, may even by crystallized into a word and remain pent up there from century to century, to break forth into another mind, to be reflected on, and on, through the ages. How this is, is more than we know. How that the mind may get a voice from the rocks so that the mountains shall speak and make themselves understood, and from the sky and from the sea. We know they speak, but how? That is the question. Do you think that God, who has expressed His love in flower, in brook, in sky, should have exhausted all His resources to make Himself known as He speaks from nature? God speaks to the heart, the inner world is Hi6 realm. This is His throne, and He leaves His secrets there to become the seed of thought, of inspiration and of action. The great problem of hearing His word And then to translate it through the tongue, the finger tips and footprints, so that it shall become the living word to other folks, is the problem of the hour. To whom will God speak? We raise this question to answer it by asking you to whom do you commit the secrets of your heart? Do you tell those who revile you, who have no faith in you, who speak ill of you? Do you tell these the secrets of your heart? It's a great thing to be a friend, to know how to awaken the spirit of friendship in others. To whom do you commit your secrets? The first quality of friendship is the capacity for faith. You cannot trust those in whom you do not believe. You cannot Inspire in them the first note of friendship. The captious critic has no friends. The teacher who asks his pupil the hardest questions and criticises him because he fails to answer; the preacher who begins his service and ends it with a spirit of criticism, will not awaken in the heart the deepest, the best in spirauons. we must Degin Dy saying: "I believe in you.V We must have the capacity for seeing the best and the truest in people. We are commanded in the good Book that we should love one another, and I trust we do, but I am thankful that that does not fnclude that command that we must like everybody, for there are some folks whom it is hard to like, and of these are the thinvoiced, pinched-faced, hollow-eyed critic. The first quality, then, is that ' of inspiring people with the idea that we believe in them, and if we have ; faith in others, they will have faith in us, for faith in the heart begets faith in one another. It is so with God. If we would know Him , and awaken within Him the power even of committing to us His secrets, . we must believe, for with the heart , the man believeth unto righteousness , ?that righteousness which brings the image of God into the face of clay. And then, too, we must tell j our friends that we believe in them. , [ love flowers much, but pray you do . not reserve them all for the funeral, j Pell vour friends vou believe them: . tell them that you love them. Speak with your lips, speak with your eye, speak with your finger tips. Tell them you love them. And God, too, Is touched by the same testimony. "With the mouth confession is made unto salvation." Another quality absolutely essential to friendship, absolutely essential to true friendship with man and with God?and that ] Is downright, sincere heart honesty. [ heard a man saythe other day: "My religion is to pay my debts." H6 answered the question of how much ( be is worth by a round $50,000, and ( I said: "Of course, you pay your j Jebts. There is one a little less great . than the Almighty who would be af- ( ter you if you did not, for Uncle Sam j sees to that." You will pay your | iebts, but that is not the measure of honesty in the sense i:a which I , 1. :* Tf Jr. Vv o f mrf r\f onlr_ apeclft. It liuw, it is men. ouu \jjl o|ni- ^ itual .honesty -hat would blush deeply to think a falsehood or to harbor , in the heart one moment a shadowy ! thought. It is the kind of honesty ! that is born of a pure heart?a heart touched by the sunlight of His infl- ( nite love, a heart that is made clean , by the power of His spirit. Such sincerity as this, such downright honesty of purpose, is loved of men and God alike. It is the basis of true friendship with man and with Gcc'l. . I read a new text the other day. , [t was as old as the voice of David, ; but it came with a new voice, thus: ' "The Lord made known His ways , unto Moses, and His acts unto the ! ihildren of Israel." This is the dis- ! jinction between Moses and the chi4- Iren of Israel. Moses understood the let of God, but some way he had the \ Joul-reach which recognized the 1 finger of God uniting act to act to tell the sweet story of His love. I retnember once, when the children of ! Israel were hungry, and Moses cried to God. In the morning, on the sand Df the desert, everywhere, were little round, white loaves, and the Israel Ite, standing in the door of his tent, . said: "What is it?" "Manna." He , ate the gift of God and his hunger ' R-as satisfied, and said in_his heart: ' "This is the act of God." But Moses, looking on hungry Israel, satisfying Its appetite, and looking up to the blue, said: "This is the way of God." I Again, the Israelites cried for food. 1 and God at tie woi J of Moup-b aont 1 " ' J . quails, r.nd covered the camp, and the Israelites ate, and were satisfied, satisfied with the act of God, hut th9 spirit of Moses would not rest until he saw through the act to the heartbeat of God. and he saw in quails, in rain, in fire, everywhere, when God. snoke. he saw His wav. And once. when he cliirtted the mountain and stood in the presence of Jehovah for forty days, so catching the heart-beat of the Infinite that his face shone with peculiar glory, and he must needs cover it with a veil ere the children of Israel would look upon him. Would you know the difference between Moses and the children of Israel? Their hones were buried in the wilderness, while he, long after, climbed Nebo's height, and, as the old tradition says, God kissed his spirit from his body and buried the clay with His own hand, and gathered the soul to His bosom. We have heard from him once since, when on the Mountain of Transfiguration with Elijah he talked with the man of sorrows concerning the death which He Bhould accomplish at Jerusalem. Moses lives because he learned the ways of God. And would you know the secret of this in everyday life? Some of you have said: "I am poor; I was born poor, and I have held my own." I saw a poor woman the other day. I was directed through a gate into a pasture, down over a hill, through another gate into a green plot of meadow, and there was a little lonely house. The chairs were poor, the stool was broken? poverty everywhere, save only in the face of the woman. Every joint save one was stiff with incurable disease, and with the right hand she toiled busily on for the little ones taht gathered about her feet. I thought that I would bring her a word of consolation, but it was I that was consoled, for in the pilence and sorrow of poverty God had talked to her, and her face shone with His beauty, and her eye was bright with His glory. Her words were like ointment poured forth. She lived in the heart of the beatitudes. And once I saw a rich man whose money came easy, and one day he heard the voice of God, and like a brook from the mountain he poured forth bis dollars to sweeten and bless society, as the brook makes beautiful the meadows through which it runs on'its way to the ocean. He had learned the way of God in riches. And this is what I would say whether the-gift be poverty or riches, sickness or health, prosperity or adversity, cloud or shine?they are but the acts of God, and out of these acts He allows us to weave the story of His love, and to learn the beautiful lesson of His ways to the children of men. Could I tell it all in one word, it is this: Can you remember the days when the smoke of the awful war between the North and the South was beginning to drift toward the ocean? Can you remember the last days of the war? One incident lingers in my memory. It was up in the Adirondack Mountains. A boy had gone from the home early in the sixties? goDe to the war. Day.after day a mother had prayed ? prayed with such importunity, prayed with such faith, that the boy might come nome ?but the winter of '65. in March, the snow had fallen so deep that it covered the fence, and then a thaw, and then a frost, and the crust was so thick that a beast could walk over it without breakihg through. In the early days of March a friend walked fourteen miles over the mountains. He came to the home, and brought a paper, and said: "A battle haB been fought, a battle down on the ocean at Fort Fisher, and a stronghold has been taken." And then his voice grew hoarse. He said the battle had cost us much, and then a tear came into his eye, and then he read a long list of the slain, and when his voice spake one word it read: "Charles L , killed in the fort, buried in the trenches. And the woman did not cry out, but went up stairs and 3tayed there all the rest of that day and that night, and until the afternoon of the next day. We thought she might hever come down, for we had learned of Moses ia the presence of God. But in the afternoon she came down, and her face shown like the face of an angel. In the secret of a great sob you may learn the secret of God. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him, and He will show them His covenants. The Chief Duty. There are times when it is a duty to make money; but the man does not live whose chief duty it is to . moira mnnov Tinr whose chief atten Lion can safely be given to mon-^ytnaking. If one gives money-making first place, both his work am', his judgment are undermined and unreliable. If he lets the opportunity to make money be the usual determining factor in his decisions, he is building character on about as stable i foundation as that man who heard Christ's words and did them not. In at least nine cases out of ten there is a better reason for cr against any given course of action than a moneymaking reason. Those who will not believe this soon come to be recognized by their fellows as branded by the dollar mark. And such* a mark is the sign of a slavery which robs life of all its real richness. God's Way. God's promises are ever on the assending scale. One leads up to anDther fuller and more blessed than itself. In Mesopotamia, God said, 'I will show thee the land." In Canaan, "I will give thee all the land, and children innumerable as Lhe grains of sand." It is thus that God allures us to saintliness. Not giving us anything till we have dared to act, that He may test us. Not giving everything it first, that He may overwhelm us, \nd always keeping in hand an infinite raserve of blessing. Oh, the jnexplored remainders of God! Who Dver saw His lafet star??The Rev. F. B. Meyer. Living by Christ's Power. All the spiritual enemies, all the enemies of a man's own house, are to be destroyed by the power of the Lord Jesus Christ, working by His ;race in the heart. And when salva:ion is brought home.to the heart md wrought out there by the Lord, t is to be enjoyed and abode in, and :he soul is not to return back again 'nto captivity; but, being delivered 3ut of the hands of its inward and spiritual enemies, is to serve God in Lhe dominion of His Son's life, in lioliness and righteousness all it? lays here upon the earth.?Isaac Penington. Make a Friend of Christ. As we must spend time in cultivatng our earthly friendships if we are Lo have their blessings, so wo must spend time in cultivating the companionship of Christ. IJe Kind. _ God has put in our power the hapiDiness of those about us, and that is' argely to be secured by our being tind.?Henry Drummond. / Errors A boat the White House# I To the Editor: I noticed somewhere recently?I would not say positively that it was in your columns?an article on the White House which contained several mis-statements. In the first place it was stated th?e White House was first occupied in 1809, and that its first occupant was President Madison. The fact is, its first occupant was President Adams, who took up his Residence there in 1800. The original mansion was begun in 1792. In 1814 it was burned by the British and rebuilt in 1818. Another of the errors in the article referred to wasthe statement that ready-prepared paint is used on the White House to make it beautifully white. ] noticed this especially because I have used considerable paint myself, and wondered that "canned" paint ahould be used on j^ich an important building, when all painters know that pure white lead and linseed oil make the best paint. It so happened also that I knew white lead and linseed oil ? not ready-mixed paint?were used on the White House, because I had just read a booklet published by a firm of ready-miied paint manufacturers, who also manufacture pure white lead. In that book the manufacturers admitted that for the White House nothing but "the best and purest of paint could be used," and said that their pure white lead had been selected. Above all people those who attempt to write on historical subjects should give us facts, even if it is only a date or a statement about wood, or brick, or paint, or other building material. Yours for truth, L. Sea Cow's Back Marking Pad. People who visited the Zoo on the Fourth greatly annoyed the keeper of the sea cow, a new acquisition, by poking it with canes or pencils. Exhausted by his efforts to stop the practice, he engaged a tramp for fifty cents and told him to keep track of how many people looked at the manatee. At six o'clock the keeper looked up his substitute. "There's been more than five thou-\ sand people here," said the latter. 'I have not time to reckon up the exact number yet, and won't until I audit my books." "Where's the paper you kept your accounts on?" ,asked Stephen, the keeper. "I didn't have any paper," answered the hobo, as if proud of his ingenuity, "but I had a good soft lead pencil and kept tab on the sea cow's back." He pointed to the patient manatee, the back of which resembled a black boa^d in a country school house after tne annual examination.?Cincinnati correspondence of Cleveland Leader. Crabs and Milk. The old prejudices against eating certain combinations of food seems to be rapidly dying out. There was a time when the average Baltimorean would just as lief have taken a large and imposing dose of paris green as crabs and milk together. Not even the person with* the digestion of an ostrich dared risk his life with a menu of crabs and ice cream, or cucumbers, soft crabs, and milk. When some young and innocent ? -V ~ cnna, longing 10 isuow wuy sue wuju not have these goodies at the same time, asked "What happens to people who eat them, auntie?" she was invariably, told no one ever martyred himself to find out. Certainly no victim of such warring elements seems to have lived to tell the tale of his sufferings. But now these prejudices have vanished. The Order given by one young woman in a lunchroom yesterday was "hot rolls, crab salad and a glass of milk."?Baltimore News. Grasshopper Glucior. One of the smaJl glaciers in Montana is of especial interest on account of the fact that in the mass of ice there are imbedded two strata of grasshoppers, each about a foot thick. There are literally tons of grasshoppers in the ice, and the question naturally arises as to where they came from. The most obvious 4? that rontnnpi; a en two Uxpiuuawuu 1Q IUUI, _ ... enormous swarms in course of migration were caught in a snow storm, chilled and buried in the snow, where they have remained till now in a perfect state- of preservation. In the accounts of the early Western explorers a few instances are related of meeting large swarms of locusts on the mountain tops in the Rockies. It is a very fortunate circumstance that the great extension of agriculture in the West has broken up the breeding grounds of these insects. ?Country Lite in America. Eye Flirtation, For .Billy. Winking the right eye?I love you. ' 'inking the left eye?I hate you. icing both eyes?Yes. Winking . i nt once?We are watched. \Vinking right eye twice?I am engaged. Winking left eye twice?I am married. Dropping the eyelid? May I kiss you? Raising the eyebrows?Ki3s me. Closing left eye slowly?Try and love me. Closing right eye slowly?You are beautiful. Placing right forefinger to right eye ?Do you love me? Placing left forefinger to left eye?May I C U home? Placing the right forefinger to left eye?You are handsome, i Filing right little finger to the right eye?Aren't you ashamed. Such signs and grimaces are, however, ext.f.mely vulgar. A Jumping Jack. "I am hurrying, ain't I?" pleaded the old gentleman, who was chi jed j by a London cabby for impeding his I progress. " 'Urryin', oh, yes; yer 'urryin'," said the cabby; "jumpin' abaht like a bit o' stickin' plaster. That's wot you're doin'."?Liverpool Post. Too Smart For Card Sharper*. English card sbarper3 are in a bad way. One of them remarks as t<i . three-card monte: "Even the soldiers are getting too smart for us." On Its Round. "Waiter, do you mean to say this Is the steak I ordered?" "Yes, sir." "Tt innirc Hlrfi the same steak the gentleman across the table refused to eat a few minutes ago." "Yes, sir;, we always try it three times before we give it up, sir."? Tit-Bits, London. Prize For Dirigible Balloon. A new prize of $10,000 is offered In France for the invention of a dirigible balloon. To Increase Iowa's Corn Crop. An appropriation by the Iowa Legislature of $35,000 is to be expended to increase the yield of corn in that State by 5,000,000 bushels. Professor P. G. Holden, of the Iowa 8tate Agricultural College, is to have charge of the matter. Last year there were about 9,000,000 acres of corn in Iowa, and the average yield was thirty-two bushels. Professor Holden believes that by thef proper Selection of the seed corn one-third can be added to the yield of the State and that the proposed increase., of 5,000,000 bushels is a very conservative figure. To accomplish this he has planned to go into every Bee tion of the State and reach practically every farmer until he has the seed corn theories thoroughly inculcated. School Children's Schools. A suggestion has been made by the Utah Board of Education to ask the 18,000,000 school children oT the United States to contribute $1,000,000 for the erection of fifteen school buildings in San Francisco. WILD WITH ITCHING HUMOR. Eruption Brolce Out in Spots All Over w Body ? Cured at Expeuae of Only 81.25?Thank* Cuticura Remedies. "The Cuticura Remedies cured me of my skin dise?> e, and 1 am very thankful to you. My trouble was eruption of the skin, which broke out in sp6ts all over my body, and caused a continual itching, which nearly drove ine wild at times. 1 got medicine of a doctor, but it did not cure me, and when 1 saw in a paper your ad., 1 sent to you for the Cuticura book and i studied my case in it. 1 then went to the drug store ~nd bought one cake of Cuticura Soap, one box of Cuticura Ointment and one vial of Cuticura Pills. From the first application 1 received relief. 1 used tne first feet and two extra cdies of Cuticura Soap, end was completely cured. 1 had suffered for two years, end 1 again thank Cuticura for my cure. Claude IS. Johnson, Maple Grove Farm, R. F. D. 2, Walnut, Jian., June 1905." There's nothing new under the sun?except method^ of distorting the truth. FTTSj St. Vitus'Danoe iNervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve ' Restorer. 13 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld. 031 Arch St., Phila., Pa. For shooting the "is-it-hot-enough-foryou" fiends this is the open season. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums,reducesinliammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle It takes a lucky man to explain t)ie miracles accomplished by pluck. The roan behind the plow makes an im- ! pression in the world. Be One in the 1000 Islands. Yachting, motor-boating, canoeing, swimming. fishing, camping?or just loafing on the broad veranda of a palatial hotel! You can have your choice of any of these and many other attractions at the Thousand Islands. The air is cool, the days arc bright and sunny and the evenings fascinatingly beautiful in a full round moon, if there is one?if there isn't, the powerful searchlights are almost as good. Nowhere in the world is it easier to rest than here oh the blue St. Lawrence. There is languor in the air?you can't help resting? and it's the kind of rest that adds years to your life, too. On your summer vacation you ought to be lazy?the change is what you need. The New York Central Lines, "America's Greatest Railroad," will take you to Clay In life's prize box moet of us get gold bricks. In Warm Weather use Glenn's Sulphur Soap daily. It cleanr.es and cools the skin, , keeps lie pores healthy and imparts a refreshing sense of personal cleanliness. Always asK for Glenn's Sulphur Soap I_ I Hill's Hnlr nc-J "Whisker Djo Black or Growa, 60c. 60 Bushels Winter Wheat Per Acre ! Phat'a the yield of j>o)rer'i Red Cross Hybrid Winter | IVheat. Send tte lit Htanipw for free .sample of ja.ne.ai ! il&o catalogue of Wlnior Wheats, iij-e.iiarley,Clover*, j l'lmotby, (inifses, bulbs.Treci, etc., for fall planting. ! SALZEUSKKI>C'O..BoxA.C., LttCraMe/.V'it. j ABrief oil Worst Crime ci t*>o Age?Vaccination as ! r aun-of great white plagiK *u-i i-.ntimeiy de*lU ; of Bii"lon?.IOs. C.L.80 ward,/. tty-fc>Law Liberty, uC. ! Chickens Ian if Tom Knew How to Han# Whether you raise Chickens for f do it intelligently and get the best re is io profit by the experience of others all you need to know on the subject?; i ^ i"n pi who made his living ^ 11 Poultry, and in tha ' c0 sxperimenc and spen iim | the best way to condu ^ Stamps, J smau sum cf 25 cents ii It tells you how io I low to Feed ."or Eggs, and also for Ma "or Breeding Purposes and indeed ab inow on the subject io make a success. SENT m?PA:D OH RECEIPT 0? 25 BOOK PUBUsWm 134 L?QNAi "The Balloon Neck." j Before we are all whirled into th? -J ecstasies of the "ballooning eraze^U lpt mp warn readers aeainst the "batrraE loon neck" which, if we may judgt from the fashionable affliction fof;Jj9 those who assist in speeding the partfr.3jM ing guest at aeronautical functIons.sH Probably as the sport grows we may^ cease to crane our necks when oncjffia "they're up."?Vanity Fair. ,1 Manhattan island postoffice affalrr<?H are particularly well administered, 1 and it requires 5212 persons to do 1 tr-jjB BACKACHE IS KIDNEYACHE. :|| Get at the Cause?Cure the Kid IIVVB. * Don't neglect backache. It warnsyou of trouble in the kidneys. AverreM the danger by . curing thekldneyff&S with Doan's Kidney Pills. J. A. Haywood, -J fiL | a well known resident;,^ of Lufkin, Tex., says: | 4|Ak| "I wrenched my 1 B Hi back working In E0 sawmill, v/as laid ml lL six week?., .and from j that time had pain in ' | Hj* I my back whenever ^laM a no?,i fVa. 1 ^ biuupcu \jl ji ii in | jjj urine wcs badly disordered and for fc $g| long time I bad attacks of gravel./$ After I began usiug Doan's Kidney. J Pills the gravel passed out, and m:f ,"^J back got well. I haven't had back- ,1 ache or bladder trouble since." ;.,J| Sold by all dealers. 50 cents. 4539 box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,^ Germany Reviving Shipping. |j? The German Government has W~|M come Actively interested in the reviT-./? ing of the empire's ship-sailing trade,-;,'.!! because of the rapid development' (pfroH its navy and the great need of 8^JrjS R1SHFS j A SlA A ^ j Soothed by Baths'with | And gentle applications of Cuti- i cura, the great Skin Cure, an4 purest and sweetest of emollients. ;J For summer rashes, irritations, > | itchings, chafings, sunDurn, Diies ^ and stings of insects, tired, aching * muscles and joints, as well as for , i preserving, purifying, and beau- M tifying the skin, scalp, hair, and M hands, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura ' Ointment are Priceless. - 1 . "'I Potter Drnrft Cbem. Corp., Sole Propi, Bottom. , ? WIT Milled Frto, "liow tu Ctzt tor Skin, Scilp, * Halt" ?I J The Greatest Boarding Collear* in the World. University of Notre Dame >ii KOTRE DAME, INDIANA. , ? TVe p-uaronieo two poiuta: Our gtadaati ' itudy and our fctuUeuts behave thems?lTM. ' 16 BwilCinjs. 75 Professor's. 800 StaitfiU. I] Courbe* m AEClt-ut, hud MmWn Lan^ua^ei, n English History aad Koouomlss, Chemistry, - 'il iloiogy, Pharmacy, Civil, Kleccrleal aui lb- B rfcanieai Kngiuetrlri^, Architecture, Law. doors- J haod, lJOOk-ieeplug, Typa-wrlttutf. ItvtciAi. i>i^AivrMius r roa hoys ujoxi 1 1 ULti TKKN. ^JJ ITKH.MS: Hoard, Tuition and Lammr,-, | 8400. t?eiid ten ceuia 10 tbe secteiAtr I lor Catalogue. I ~ ?TkP AOQ'V DISCOVERT; ' U 0% I I Irl??? rtJlef atd nn> , Trorit curl. Hjok of tratlnoslaU ?(1 iO Dari'lralaot Free. l>r. II. il. GRKKYS MOSS, Bo- V, AlUata, 0*. fTENSrON^AS^^ rsuccessfuMy Prosecutes Claims Late Principal Kxamluer U.S. Pension Bureao, J vtn uicivU war. 15 atliuiiicaUnsr r.'oima. attv eteOS ) lonsy! f*) i Them Properly, ?* J 'un or profit, you want to RR2r ? j suits. The way to do this We offer a book telling a book written by a man i for 2b years in raising l time necessarily had -i much money to 'earn S > ct the business?for the JL i postage stamps. )etecc and Cure Disease, jr^Mlaif .rket, which Fowls to Save M out everything you must ^