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I ? !i. ? * I f . 0 New York City. ? The double breaBted coat that extends just below the hips is one of the best liked oi the fashionable world just now, and L is exceedingly jaunty and chic. This one is made of smoke gray broadcloth, with collar and cuffs of velvet, that are edged with white cloth banded with gray, but it will be found appropriate for all the suitings of the season, and also for the separate wrap that is necessary, no matter how many, entire costumes one may possess. For the dressier garment broadcloth is perhaps the handonmoot r\f oil materials hilt fnr rtin OVUiVUW VJ. Ml** *^v.wv. ? ? about suit mannish materials, cheviots, homespuns and tweeds all are greatly in vogue. Collar, cuffs and pocket laps of velvet are well liked this season, but are not obligatory, and the material can be used if* a simpler effect is desired, and plain clotli on mUfed iS*always good style. The coat is made with fronts, back fide-backs and under-arm gorrs, its many beams providing easy and satis factory fit. The neck is'finished witfc the regulation collar and the deei i. ' , I . 1 f i _ ^ ' -'sl revers that mark the season, while the sleeves are in cqat style, finished with becoming roll-over cuffs. The quantity of material required ? Ji ior me rneuium suu i& iuui auu utc eighth yards twenty-seven, two anc one-hali yards forty-four, or two anc k one-fourth yards fifity-two inches wide, with three-eighth yard velvel and one-fourth yard of white clotl for the banding. ' Venetian Trimmings. ' One of the striking features of th< r- moment is the Venetian embroidered **'. bands seen on several Paris models As the word Venetian might imply these trimmings are not in gold anc silver, but the designs of the six taenth century simply copied in silks and wools of neutral shades to suli the taste of the day. A dainty visit ing gown in silver gray crepe d< Chine has an antique pattern of sill roses and foliage resting upon a banc of dark gray velvet. This trimmin? is also used extensively on ball anc dinner dresses. / Mink Forges Ahead. Broadtail and Persian lamb arc rivaled by mink this seasoD. In deed, the revival of so many Victor ian colors brings this favorite of oui grandmothers into tne greatesi vogue. It tones in with them beautifully. These furs will be verj smart for entire garments and foi the muffs and numerous sorts of neck pieces which are so charming a feature of winter wear. j Sleeves to Grow Larger. It is predicted that sleeves will increase in size as the season advances. The sleeves in a magnificent teagown in pale pink crepe de chine are composed of a couple of wide puffe of the crepe over mousseline de sole, with oversleeves of thick Venetian W ' lace, which hang in a point from the shoulders to the ground and are edged with a fringe of gold beads. \ k ' / . . S r' ' Closed Gloves Worn. Suede gloves In natural tone with | closed wrists are popular. 1 Worked Ribbon Holes. Worked buttonholes, through which the ribbon is drawn, last much lnTicop fhnn honrtinp- nriH thfi lone | life of the dainty garment more than pays for the extra work on fine hand-embroidered underwear. Like Hats in Old Pictures. The newest hats in the millinery . emporiums are almost exact reproductions of those seen in the old paintings by Watteau and his contemporaries. There are queer, cumbersome shapes, often of heavy velvet, but undeniably picturesque. In general, hats are not so large as they were, but they are still architectural in construction. - Tucked Blouse With Yoke. Every variation of tho tucked blouse finds its place. It not alone is a favorite for lrngerie materials and for the thin silks that are similarly treated, but for all materials of sufficiently light weight to allow of tucking. This one. includes a yoke of unusual shape and can be treated after a number of ways. In the illustration Persian lawn is combined with yoke of inserted tuteking and trimming of embroidery and fancy stitches. But there are a great many materials that can be used for a contrasting yoke, the various all-overs, silk tucked and inserted and the one from which the waist is made, trimmed in a number of ways, while the band at the lower edge can with propriety be either of lace or ems broidery or in one of the fancy trim1 mings or of the material embroid1 ered, so that there Is every opportun. ity for the exercise of individual taste i and discretion. i The waist is made with a fitted lining, which can be used or omitted , as material renders desirable, and it> self consists of front, backs and yoke. The fronts are tucked and joined to i the yoke, and the closing is made > invisibly at the back. The sleeves ^ t v i HA s are comfortably full, tucked at their I I ,3 ? ? ,3 ... 1, ? O f l IUWCI cu^ca, auu tau uc nuiaucu cm, the elbows with straight cuffs or conl tinued to the wrists and finished with - deep ones that match the yoke. I The quantity of material required I for the medium size is three and one; fourth yards twenty-one, two and t three-fourth yai'ds twenty-seven, or i one and three-fourth yards forty-four inches wide, with five-eighth yard eighteen inches wide for the yoke, 1 one afld one-fourth yards if long i sleeves are used and one yard of banding. Taffeta Waists Popular. Taffeta waists with white guimpe bid fair to take the place, in a large . measure, of white tailored waists i for morning and business wear, i Though nothing can be more taste, ful than white, this fashion would , prove a saving in the matter of launi dry bills, while the guimpe provide? ? ~ * Ixne uecuuiiug iuutu ui wmic iuat wo have come to look upon as essential. I <- j- - ' . ? V... / \mi71hj9 fOa t J fn i \ * '' , A SERMON' |?f^ St tAe n.e/~ ^JK^JP [[RA. V /iENDERJoNn^PfF" CHRISTMAS DISCOURSE. theme: The Significance of the Dirtli. of Christ. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching rft the *" -?* 1- ? ?J ? ~ n V? Irving square iresDytenuu \ju.uh-?. on the theme, "The Significance of the Birth of Christ," the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, took as his text Luke 2:11: "For unto you is born this day, in the city of David, a Saviour, which is Christ the Lbrd." He said: The coming of the Christ is the axis of Western chronology and the inspiration of uncounted souls. When, on that starry night amid the fertile fields of Judea, the angel of the Lord stood beside'the watching shepherds and the multitude of the heavenly host sang hosanna to the living God, the sweetest, most entrancing soul among the sons of men began His earthly history. The wise men from afar, who laid at the feet of the manger babe the royal, costly gifts, were but the precursors of a glad, rejoicing host who, in every epoch and every clime, have rendered homage to tfie Christ. The sudden j light that bathed the quiet plain that peaceful unristmas eve oeams iu-ua.j with undimmed radiance into multitudes of hearts. The voices that sang from heaven to earth still sing to listening ears, The angel of the Lord still speaks. The babe whom Mary loved Is with us. The Son of God is here. The birth of Christ is historic. The presence of Christ yesterday and today is a fact. Nothing is more certain than that Christ once lived. The Gospels attest it. Contemporaneous records recognize it. The Christian world around us is a consequential evidence qf His reality and His influence. Men may dispute concerning the exact day and month and year of His coming into the affairs of men; they may speculate concerning the exact place of His birth; *aey may argue, as they will, ove' the manner of His coming; but thp cannot, they have not and they w*ll not deny His actuality. Jesus is a fact; the most momentous fact of history. Let us consider the significance of the birth of Jesus in the light of the ages. The birth of Jesns is significant as we consider it to be the fulfillment of Hebrew prophecy; as we understand it to be the culmination of a divine 3elf revelation; as we study its effect on humanity. The birth of Jesus was the fulfillment of prophecy. Except we glance down the long record of the prophetic hopes of Israel we cannot understand the Christ. Christ, apart from Jewish history, is inexplicable. Jesus is not an isolated, but, rather, a resultant fact The Saviour is the fulfillment of a nation's hope, though so largely unaccepted. He ie the consummation of the efforts of a nation's saintly men to lead their people near to God. The messages of Isaiah are the adumbrations of the Christ. The visions of the prophets are the fore-gleams of the gentle Galilean. Israel looked with expect artcy and with hope unquenchable for Immanuel?the presence of Jehovah in the midst of His people. Having been ltd out of physical and carking bondage they looked forward with eagerness at a later day to a Jesus, a Saviour, who, clothed with divine power and enriched with a divine commission, should lead the sinsick people of God out of the thralldom of spirttual slavery into the freedom and the blessedness of an eternal and. sufficient salvation from their Bins. Jesua was the fulfillment of that hope and prophecy. What the fathers had declared, He was. The chosen people of God yearned for an earthly king, a Messiah anointed of God, set apart to a holy leadership, divinely dedicated to the consummation of a national existence in rights eousness and truth. And in Jesus was this other hope fulfilled, and with a nobler purpose and with a larger scope. Within the spiritual kingdom that H? came to institute lay the secret of a kingdom which buouia ruie xae wona. Jt?ar grainier than any prophecy and hope of Israel was the plan that, in Jesus Christ, God unfolded to His chosen people. What a pity it is that nineteen centuries ago Israel did not see the beauty of the plan of God, that she did not recognize that broader and that grander mission of a worldwide ministration and universal dominion to which God, in Jesus, called her. And how sad it is to-day that the race to whom the principles of Jesus are most easily understandable is so opposed to the system of religious truth that-in our times is termed distinctively Christian. The appropriation by the Jew of those principles of pure and central Christianity that are the glory of the truth as it has been revealed of God in Jesus Christ would be the exceeding story of the coming ages and the fairest ui LUO uuuseu peuyie ui the Lord. The birth of Jesus was the culmination of divine self-revelation. In the personality and the message of the Christ God gave the fullness of the divine self-explication. Jesus is the objectifying of the Godhead before the very eyes of humanity. In Him Jehovah unfolds the personality of divinity. In His message is proclaimed the mind of God for the welfare and sanctifying of the world. Jesus is the declaration of the divinity, the humanity, the fatherhood of God. And in the person of, the Christ is completed the long endeavor of a loving and patient FatHer to impress Himself upon the migds, the hearts, the lives of His wayward, errant children. Throughout all the ages and in the lives of all His people God had been revealing God to man. Here and there, as Israel heard the voice of Jehovah, there arose men of prevision, men of insight, men of intense spiritual discernment to declare to the duller and less spiritually acute multitude the meaning and the import of God's self-revealment. Throughout all the history of the chosen people of God Divinity strove in diverse and incessant fashion to impart to the consciousness of mankind a true understanding of Himself. And as man, from time to time, has understood the truth that God has delivered to him by His Spirit and through the prophets, we have had varied interpretations of the character and of the personality of God. The chaneeless God has con stantly revealed the truth concerning Himself, His plans, His purposes, to men. Men have oftentimes been heedless of the divine instruction, they have oftentimes been ignorant of the full import of the sel'-vevela f /y':"' \ ' ' C lion? of Jehovah, they have oftentimes misinterpreted the messages that God has delivered to their livea But whether or no men have been heedless, ignorant o/ dull, God has always revealed the truth concerning Himself. His has been a constant and cumulative effort to lead men to a satisfying and correct vision of Himself. Jesus is the finality of the divine self-revelation. The work of the Spirit before the days of Christ was preparative, in order to human comprehension of the Christ. And the struggle of the Spirit since the ascension of our Lord has been to lead men to hear, to heed, to understand and to accept the truth which, so richly, Christ communicates from God. Jesus is the consummation of the efTort of the Spirit of the old dispensation; He is the inspiration of the labors of the Holy Spirit of the later covenant between God and men. The photograph of God that Jesus livingly imparts to men is the ripest ? ? alw?(?a ool F_^ r\ a rf of inri pruuuuu UJL U1 V 1UC> liupui buwivui He is the culmination of divine selfrevelation. , But it is in its effect on humanity that the birth of Christ is most sig! niflcant and of widest and most robust influence. The birthday of Jesus is the birthday of the larger liberty of man. The coming of Jesus is the beginning of man's nobler age. The nativity of Jesus is the nativity of the transcendant inspiration of the human soul. Mary's child is the hope of all the children of men. The birth of Christ is effectual for humanity individually, socially, ethically, religiously. The birth of Christ marks the dawitof the most glorious epoch in the history of the human unit. In the face of a faith and of a civilization that too strongly emphasized the Bocial aspect of human society Jesus declared the dignity, the integrity, the {incalculable importance of the individual. He placed the common man on the plane upon which God in His providence intended him to move. But while the Lord dignified the individual and proclaimed the eternal worth of the human unit apart fromthe mass, He in no wise lowered the high position of the social system in the scheme of God ror tne ordering of this world's affairs. Rather did He ennoble society as a whole. Emphasizing the importance of the individual, He insisted on the value of that individual only as, representing an integer in the sum of the social life, he remained true to the finest principles of the kingdom of God and labored unremittingly for the advancement and purifying of society as a whole. Jesus taught the eternal preciousness of the separate personality, with the one desire to indicate to the individual man his personal responsibility to God and society in the face of the limitless and unnumbered opportunities that a loving Father placed within his reach. Profound philosopher as He was, Jesus perceived with unerring vision, that the secret of a redeemed society lay in redeemed individuals. And, although He had a lively interest in the jingle man, He was concerned with him in greatest measure because of his fundamental necessity to and central Importance in a redeemed and sanctified society. Jesus crowned individuality as none other before Him had dared .to do; but He invested individuality with a peculiar and novel dignity in order that with the reaJization of its surpassing consequence individuality should strive hardest to be counted worthy of a place in a social order regenerated and redeemed of God. The birth of Jesus was effective to the betterment of the ethics?that is to say?the laws of conduct?of humanity. Preaching no Gospel of precise and detailed rules and regulations, our Lord yet, with such insiston w tancrht the lareer nrinciples upon which all sound morals and social conduct are based that with two sentences He laid the emphasis where eternally it had belonged in the mind of God and from which It had, by casuistry and the insincerity of moA.1 jugglers, been displaced. 1 Jesus rejuvenated and invigorated the ethical judgments of His day and age. And He not only bettered the moral standards of His own time but He augmented the appeal and the scope of moral law for all time. The blcth of Jesus marks the dawn of a new and surpassing era in the religious career of humanity. Jesus released religion from the bondage of sheer legalism and infused it with a new purpose. He found religion, very largely, a matter of ecclesiasticism and of legal regulation and of formality a&d cant. He left It with the inspiration of an enlarged mission and of an increased opportunity. He found a system. He left a life. Before His coming religion was largely mint, cummin, anise, tithes, phylacteries, burnt offerings, prayer in the market place. After Jesus religion was humility, righteousness, purity, sacrifice?it was a life; a life indwelt, inspired, sanctified of God. If We Fully Realized. f What a blessed and glorious thing human existence would be if we fully 1 * ' nttoA on/1 realized mai cue IUUUHCIJ moc auu infinitely powerful God loves each' one of us with an intensity infinitely beyond what the most fervid human, spirit ever felt toward another, and with a concentration as if He had none else to think of! And His love has brought ua into being, just that we might be taught to enter into full sympathy with Him, receiving His? giving our own?thus entering into the joy of our Lord. This is the hope ?the sure and certain hope?set before us?sure and certain??-for "the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed, but My kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of My peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee."?Thomas Ersklne. Unsatisfied, But Contented. Contentment is a Christian duty; satisfaction is not. Being contented is accepting one's present assigned place of toil and influence as in the ordering of God's providence. Being satisfied is taking it for granted that God has nothing better in store for one in the opening future. It is proper to be contented for the moment, but not to be satisfied for all time to come. As Robertson says, "Man's destiny is not to be dissatisfied, but forever unsatisfied." Let us, therefore, be ever unsatisfied while ever contented.?Henry C. Trumbull. Noblest Exercise of Faith. To live with the invisible and in it, to make our dull common life, and the pictorial snow tnac aotn encompass it, the image of the character of God, the picture of His work in us and on the world?this is forever one of the noblest exercises of Christian faith.?Stopford A. Brooke. Moments That Stand it. You will find as you look back upon your life that the moments that stand out are the moments when you have done things in the spirit of love. ?Henry Drummond. ... -/ . < f ^ Vv ' '"' ' ' : ' ' ' ' \ DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? Profit by the Experience of One Who Has Fonnd Relief. .Tames R. Keeler. retired farmer. of Fenner St., Cazenovia, N. Y:, says: "About fifteen years ago I suffered #with mj back and kidneys. I doctored and used* many remedies without getting relief. Beginning with Doan's Kidney Pills, I found relief from the first box, and -two boxes restored me to good, sound condition. My wife and many of my friends have used Doan's Kidney Pills with good results and I can earnestly recommend them." , Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Flogging in England. About corporal punishment In England two curious facts lie beyond dispute. One is that while the working class and the lower middle class dislike and resent It, and will not In general allow their children to undergo it, the aristocracy tolerate it without complaint. The time is coming, one might assert paradoxically, when it will be impossible to flog anybody but tLe son of a peer. And the other fact is that public-school boys have often felt a Special affection for the masters who have punished them most. % >?' ' In Westminster Abbey stand side by Bide the tombs of a master and his pupil. The master >was' jr. Busby, who was headmaster of Westminster School for so long a Jme as fiftyeight years. Nobody^, ogged so many boys as he. The pup/1 was the theologian, Dr. South. It is told?I am not sure the story is true?that when South came1 as a small boy to Westminster, Busby greeted him with the ominous words; "i see great taients In that sulky little boy, and my rod shall bring them out." If so, he was no doubt as good as his word. But when South lay upon his deathbed it was his last prayer to be burled at his old master's feet; and the master and the pupil-now rest side by% side.?Nineteenth Century. A Quaint Old Bill For Damages. A claim for damages against a railroad company is so often a licens9 for exorbitant charges that a simple bill, such as was received by an Amer-? ican railroad company many years ago, even apart from its humorous aspect, is refreshing. It ran as follows: The and Railroad Company, To John Smith Dr. July 19, 1837 ? To running your Locomotive into my wife; .an per Doctor's bill for curing her .$10.00 To smashing ban box and spilling her hat "3.87 To upsetting my deer born (wagon) and breaking it... 35.00 To hurting me 5.00 x $53.87 There is authority for stating that the claim, was paid immediately.? Scrap Book. Receding Glaciers, j Is Switzerland to lose its glaciers? The subject bears a close resemblance to that as to the exhaustion of the British coal beds. It will scarcely bocome acute in our time; but none l:he less scientific observations of the movement of the glafciers during 1905 shows, as similar observations in previous years have shown, a shrinkage in the surface. Some of the glaciers have shrunk as much as 290 yards since 1900. In no instance has growth been reported. An industry in Nanking, China, which is said to employ 60,000 to 70,000 of the inhabitants is that of paper fan making. The paper for the fans is imported, and is cut, pasted and folded inf Nanking, the result appearing in the export table as "fan papers." All British, officers on the effective list of the army that are elected members of the House of Commons are to be placed on half pay from the date of their election. NO MEDICINE But Change of Food Gave Final Relie.. Most diseases start in the alimentary canal?stomach and bowels. A great deal of our stomach and i 1 x?,? aawaa nnfinor tnn DOWei U'UUUICO tUUJC UUUl ^ay.mb WU much starchy and greasy food. The stomach does not digest any of the starchy food we eat?white bread, pastry, potatoes, oats, etc.?these things are digested in the small intestines, and if we eat too much, as ihost of us do, the organs that should digest this kind of food are overcome by excess of work, so that fermentatign, indigestion, and a long train of ails result. Too much fat also is hard to digest and this is changed into acids, sour stomach, belching gas, and a bloated, heavy feeling. In these conditions a change from indigestible foods to Grape-Nuts will work wonders in not only relieving the -distress, but in building up a strong digestion, clear brain , and steady nerves. A Wash, woman writes: "About five years ago i sunerea with bad stomach?dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation?caused, I know now, from eating starchy and greasy food. "I doctored for two years without any benefit. The doctor told me there was no cure for me. I could not eat anything without suffering severe pain in my back and sides, and I became discouraged. "A friend recommended GrapeNuts and I began to use it. In less than two weeks I began to Jeel better and inside of two months I was a well woman and have been ever since. "I can eat anything I wish with pleasure. We eat Grape-Kuts and cream ror DreaKiasi ana sire ver? fond of it." Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville,'" in pkgs. "There's a reason." *>fZ r~i- '." '*.?:< ?>, Labby at Church. There is at least one church !n London that I never enter without wondering what would happen in case of either fire or panic. And I do not suppose that it IS singular in Viow^rtcr r?A of o /in/1 nf crq 1 _ I leries furthest from the door. The County Council would not permit a theatre to be constructed on such a plan. Why should worshipers be less guarded from being roasted than the audiences at theatre or music hall? ?Henry Labouchere, in London Times. Spanish Olive Crop Promises Well. A report from Vice-Consul Charles Karminski, of Seville, states that the prospects of the coming Spanish olive crop are very bright, and that it will be a good average one as to both quantity and quality. A Kangaroo's Jump. A kangaroo has Jumped ? height of eleven feet. The longest jump salt} ever to have been made by a deer is nine and a half feet DoorsiU Philosophy. A friend of mine had occasion to go often to an "eminent physician," and said to Jeames^ "You will be tirea of opening that door to me." "Not at all, Blr," was the gracious reply; "you &re but a hunlt In the hocean." Another Jeames was accustomed to say, during his master's occasional absences: "You had better try' hopposlte. There's a very respectable man hopposite as we often sends to when Sir Wllllafm is habsent. His name is Jenner."?F. R. C. S? in the Lancet. _________________ i Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the diseiise. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must tike internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts.'directly on i;he blood and mucous surfaces. Hali Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one or the .best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the. mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists", price 75c. Take Hall's Family rills for constipation. * The Facts. The One?"And you say this horse hasn't any faults?" The Other?"Not a single fault." The One?"But he appears to be hlinH in his right eye." The Other?"Well, that's not his fault; it's his misfortune."?Chicago News. N.Y.'?50. To Clean a Carpet On the Floor. Sweep the carpet thoroughly, then sprinkle with corn meal or coarse salt and eweep again. Dissolve a bar of Ivory Soap in three gallons of water, and with a sponge or soft broom, go over the carpet. Rinse in the same way with clear, warm water and let the air pass through the room until the floor "is dir. Eleanor R Parker. Tomatoes are good for a torpid liver, but should be avoided by gout]' people. Mrs. "Winslow'e Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums, reducesinflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle The taste for horseflesh is growing in Paris. Chickens Ear If Yon Know How to Hand Whfether you raise Chickens foa ' do 'it intelligently and get the best j is to profit by the* experience of othe all you need to know on the subjectjy i win yk who made his livin r ^ ? Poultry, and in tl 2|!)C I to experiment and sp< flit I the best way to conc .Ste&mps, f 'gjjjajj sum a- 25 cents It tells you how tc iiow to Feed ?or Eggs, and also for A -lor Breeding Purposes and indeed i tnow on the subject to make a success SENT POSTPAID Off RECEIPT Or onnir oiiPie.Wim ri vvfe9fviu0?? 134 Leon. ***** * ##! ?;a':?0wnTj * IT SHOULD BE IN EVER % BE NEEDED ** A Slight Illness Treated at Oi ? Long Sickness, With Its H< *.* EVERY MANHI * By J. HAMILTON * * ' This is a most Valuable Book for m easily-distinguished Symptoms of din * of Preventing such Diseases, and the or cure. C98 Pagos, Prol ? ' ^ tioM, Explanations of Botanical Pri m New Edition, Revised and Enlarged K Book in the house there iis no excuse AVfTOTIAIf a Don't wait until you have illness M send at once for this valuable to lira Send postal notes or postage stamp 6 cents. w* BOOK PUBLISHING HOI m* ?***?* * * On. jlfe&vi '- . ' ^ * Providence Was With the Birds. Nothing can surpass -in delicacy the reply made by an East Indian y-| servant of the late Lord Dufferln, when he was viceroy of India. "Well, what sort of sport has t||| Lord had?" said Lord Dufferlnone day to his servant, who had at" . >$! tended a young English lord on a shooting excursion. "Oh," replied the scrupulously po- <' lite Hindoo, "the young sahib shot divinely, but providence was very merciful to the birds."?London Answers. The First Virtue. ^|? I think the first virtue is to restrain the tongue; he approaches nearest to the god? who knows how to be silent, even though he is in the right.?Cato. A Curious Notice. The following notice is Inscribed on the wall of a house in the Rue de " . ^ j Strasbourg, Saint Denis, France: "In case of fire, ask for help at the cemetery."?London Express. FITS1St.yitnp'Dance:K'?rvons Diseaaeeper- v manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve ' /. V.'ag Restorer. C8 trial bottle and treatise free. . Dr. H.R. Kline, Ld.-931 Arch 8t?Phila^ Pi. Celery is a nerve .tonic; onions also are ?. a tonic for the nerves. TORTURED WITH ECZEMA. Treinendotrs Itching Over Whole Body ?Scratched Until Bled?Wonderful Cure by Cntlcura. . "Last year 1 suffered with a t tendon* itching on my back, which grew .orse and worse until it spread over the whole body, and only my face and bands were free. For four months or go 1 suffers torments, and 1 bad to scratch, scratch, scratch until i bled. At night when I went to bed things got worse, and 1 bad at times to, get up and scratch my body all over until 1 was as sore as could be, and until I suf? , fered excruciating pain. They told me that 1 was suffering from eczema. Then VriCflS I made up my mine that i would pse the Cuticura Remedies. 1 used them according to instructions, and very soon indeed 1 was greatly relieved. 1 continued until well, and uow 1 am ready to recommend the Cuticura Remedies to any one. Mrs. ' Mary Metzger, Sweetwater, Okl&* Jane 28, 1905." -American ugricuicur<u uuuicuiuu* jc?i - the world. You Cannot CURE all inflamed, ulccrated and catarrnal conditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh,uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by'local treatment with ^ < Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals, the . inflammation and soreness. < ' Paxtine represents the most successful (/; local treatment iur kuhuuc u? ?*? VS produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trisfl Box THE It PAXTON CO.. Boston, Thompson's EyeWater n Money! ! *} lie Them Properly,. t J : fun or profit, you want to HKi ' '"Mm results. The way to do this | rs. we oner a DooKtcmng j v ^ -a "book -written by a man t g for 25 years in raising Mfe&j iac iiine necessarily had r^BBrj ;nc much money to learn luct the business?for the jMr) Detect and Cure Disease> iarket, which Fowls to Save I ibouc everything you must V j 25 CENTS H? STAMPS. Blw i Br 1 *********: - *Mk lis Book! > Y HOUSEHOLD AS IT MAY * ii ANY MINUTE, * | nee Will Frequently Prevent * * < javy Expenses cad Anxieties. $ SOWN DOCTOR.' AYERS. A. M? M. D. ^* m 7 (.the Household, teaching as it does the jg :erent Diseases, the Causes and Means i Simplest Remedies which will alleviate wi Tusely Illustrated. f jf | This Book is written in plain jjj every-day English, and is free from jf the technical terms which render, w most doctor books so valueless to ^ the generality of readers. This Book is intended to be of Service . * Jin the Family, and is so worded as *" to be readily understood by all.- * Only * i: ?OCtS-^a.^ J The low price only being made possible by the immense editibn jf> printed. Not only does this Book ^ J contain so much Information Rela- )(, I tive to Diseases, but very properly ^ 1 S gives a Complete Analysis of every- ^ J 'thing pertaining to Courtship, Mai1- * M viaora PrrtHlirtl'hn and Rear* * V ing of Healthy Families; together ? , 1 ' "With Valuable Recipes and Prescrip- * " ictice, Correct Use of Ordinary Herbs. 4 1 with Complete Index. With this * i for not knowing what to do in an em- # in your family before you order, but ^ le. ONLY 60 CENTS POST-PAID. * s oi any denomination not larger than ^ USE 134 8=?oria?d St., NoY. \ ********** *5:* ****** ?v