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I New York Ciiy.?Fancy blouses are much affected by youn* girls, and such a one as this is so charming that its favor is quite easily accounted for. In the illustration it is made of one of the pretty checked voiles in blue and white and is trimmed with blue velvet and with a chemisette and sleeve-bands of cream colored lace, but, as it can be made either with or without lining, it becomes adapted to cotton and linen fabrics quite as well as to those of silk and wool, while again it suits both the separate waist and the entire" frock, so that its usefulness is exceptionally extensive. The trimming bands are distinctly novel and chic, as well as becoming, to girlish figures, and the little chemisette gives that air of daintiness and charm that is always found in a finish of the sort. If made of washable material the bands could be of any contrast' ing color or they can be made of the material itself finished with a little soutache braid, while the chemisette > +Viq elnoTro-hanfls mii hp either of r auu ? v ~ ? embroidery or lace. The waist is made with a fitted lining and Itself consists of front and backs. When lined the chemisette is faced onto the foundation, but if the lining is omitted it is cut separately and joined to the waist. The waist is tucked at its upper edge, gathered at the waist line, and the trimming is arranged over it on indicated lines. The pretty sleeves are of moderate fulness and are finished with becoming cuffs below, which are Btraight bands. Thp auantitv of material required for the sixteen-year size is three yards twenty-one, two and threeeighth yards twenty-seven or one and three-fourth yards forty-four inches wide, with one-half yard of all-over lace and three-fourth yard of silk or velvet for trimming. Black Lace Returning. Black lace flounces are again com- I ing into fashion. Black lace was J very much to the fore last season, and many are going to take out the treasured flounces of Chantilly or Spanish lace and get them mounted on trailing skirts of taffetas or soft satin. A Chic Combination. Girdle and bretelles of black velvet upon a gown of white mousseline over green; this is a chic combination that will appeal to some girls with a good deal of style. The Airship Hat. Paris is showing a hat on the toque order, which, because of Its shape, is .known as the airship. It is made up In soft straw braid, and will be one of the season's extreme novelties. j j r j-u " *- >\r ' " V * / .i.. '.' S.- . :/'i..*-L.:?Sk.L?r^a. ' % m&msitw White Lace Gowns. Lovely gowns are made of white lace over silver or gold tissue. Such 1 a toilet was accompanied by a gold- < colored crossover taffeta scarf and a ] hat of the same tone that was a < fluffy mass of crinoline, tulle, straw and feathers. j Tapestry Blue Popular. } It is important to know exactly < what is meant dv tapestry uiue, mi that is the leading color of the season in costumes and house gowns and 1 in millinery. A visit to the establish- ! ments where old tapestries are for . sale will prove helpful. Heirlooms in Vogue. i Opinions may differ as to the beau- I ty of the large brooch of mid-Vic- ! torian days and the long earrings so J intimately associated with side ring- ' lets, but that does not matter. They i are fashionable once more, and those j who possess such treasures among ; their heirlooms may bring them l forth. ? i Blue in Favor. , The women?and there are many < of them?who feel that nothing quite, i takes the place of a blue silk, either '< plain or figured, will be glad to know ' that blues of every description, from J indigo to electric, with a wide range : of blue leaning toward gray, delft , tones, Japanese blue and a rich, t bright navy, called matelot, will be ( among the choicest shades of the i year. ] i Tucked Blouse. The lingerie blouse appears to { grow in popularity from month to t month, with the result that new and j fresh designs are constantly appear- 1 r ^ : f ( ins. Here is one of the prettiest and daintiest that is absolutely simple at the same time. In the illustration it is made of linen lawn with the trimming of German Valenciennes lace, and is consequently exceedingly durable. But it is appropriate for all the pretty cotton fabrics and the thin silks that are made in lingerie style as well as linen, while the trimming can be either lace or embroidery, as liked. Valenciennes and Clunv lace both are being greatly used and both make exceedingly dainty and charming effects. The waist is made with the front ^nd the backs, which are tucked to yoke depth. The trimming is arranged over them on indicated lines and terminates in pointed ends. The sleeves are of moderate size trimmed in harmony with the waist and finished with straight cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and W i three-fourth yards twenty-one, threo , and one-fourth yards twenty-seven or t one and seven-eighth yards forty-four s inche3 .wide, with nine yards of ineer- i tion. I * TThe Pulvit 1 I A SERMON" ? p/Tite RE</~ \^4f ; %MV/HENDmwl^8g&W^ - : L*""" - I ? Subject: The New Note. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, Hamburg avenue and Weirfield street, on the theme, "The Church's New Note," the Rev. I. W. Henderson, pastor, took as his text Mark 12:30: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength." He said: The adaptability of the Gospel is wonderful. In every epoch and in avery age wherever the truth of God is it has been revealed in Jesas Christ lias been preached, it has been found to be a fit guide for the leading of the minds and hearts and souls of men, a true solvent for the evils of the spoch and the age in which it has 1 been declared. Always it has possessed a message that has been pe:uliarly adaptable to the individual ind social iniquities and to the individual and social spiritual yearnings ind necessities of the society lo which t has been p rod airbed. When in ipostolic times the preciousness of judding human life was discounted ind largely unrecognized the vitalizng Gospel of Jesus Christ revealed :he beauty and the value of life itself. When in the ante-Reformation lays the truth was endangered by the regrettable unwisdom of the ecclesixstical authorities of that day and :ime the compelling Gospel of Jesus >pened wide the treasury of written ;ruth that had been preserved in all ts fragrance through the centuries* ind a new era for mankind began. \s in those times so throughout Christendom it has been. Whatever nay have been the sins, the spiritual yearnings, the mode of thought, the rcanner of expression, of any generation. the Gospel has always adapted tself and been found humanly adaptible to the sins, the yearnings, the houchts. the terminology of the jeriod. Every revival in Christian listory, especially in the history of ;be last four hundred years, has hai ts peculiar message, adaptable to ;he sins, the yearnings, the spiritual leeds, the thought and the terminol)gy of the time in which it has been preached. Historians tell us that when in the days of Jonathan Edwards?days in which Christianity svas largely legalistic in thought aEd speech?the fiery prophet of the livng God wished to bring men into an jpen realization and confession of Iheir sinfulness and their accountability to God he preached them eermons on the essential fact and necessity of 'Divine sovereignty; and with burning zeal declared to humanity, as Sod gave him opportunity to sow the seed of His truth, the wisdom of fielding self into the control of the Divine Ruler of the universe. Wesley preached the truth of the freedom of ho twill tn n nntinn tr? tv'hnm frppiinm tvas life. "Whosoeverwill may come" 1 tvas cot all the Gospel then, nor is it 1 ill the Gospel now; but it is the lever Df truth by which men in the days 3f that great revivalist were most auickly turned to love and serve God. rhe Gospel of personal responsibility that Finney proclaimed was as truly fitted to its time and hearers as was Moody's message to his generation. We are face to face with another threat world-wide revival. We are in the midst of it. It may not be recognized in some quarters and it may be blinked in others. Many men refuse to recognize it or they may fail 'o have the insight to perceive it, but it is here none the less. Evidencing itself within the church it is expressing itself more largely perhaps outside of the church than within it. rhe sins of our day are pressing leavy on maiviauai neans ana are j galling upon the social organism of ivhich we ard a part. The world is reaming after truth and righteousless and peace and God. Materialsm is running its race. Individualsm run riot has disgusted its very /otaries. Humanity has to too large in extent for its own welfare gone Gorging ahead with too little regard or the manner or the means or God; md humanity is finding that progress )f that sort is a denial of human in;egrity and of human worth. We are imazed that so many things that in ;hemselves appeared to be so inno:ent could become so perverted as hey have become. We are astounded at the revelations of our own noral purblindness. I am convinced hat we are becoming, if we are not ilready, ashamed. Men are Gospel-hardened to the Messages of yesterday. Not that they lisdain Christ, but because the proclamations of the past have lost, hrough perfunctory familiarity with hem, the power to cut deep into their ;ouls. The edge of the truth has jecome dulled for them. It needs to 3e brought to the tempering fire of a laming truth that shall startle and ittract men. It must be laid hard on he wheel of a compelling Divine verty that shall put an edge on all that las become dulled. The preaching of ? 3dwards will not do it, the oratory of ? Wesley will not do it, the burning ? nessages of Finney will not do it, the * Jeclaration of God's love in the ? south of Moody will not do it. These i ire our places of departure. The ? ;ruth that these men have declared, c he men-we-are-after know. We i ^,.*.4. + U r. + s? ^ ~ .-V-. rt 4- + Vinr t jjuat, vitalise LiiciL uuiiiiaui u uiu u > v linging a new message into their i >ouls. We must warm the chilled ( ;mbers of their own religious ex- < jeriences with the blaze of a modern i nessage that, having its inspirations s n the historic Christ, shall be in- i Iwelt of His presence and energized i )f His spirit for a special ministry < :o-day. Men know that God is sov- ? jreign; they know that the human c will is free, for are they not exercis- I ng it against God every day? They snow that personal responsibility for t personal sin or decency is inescapa- t )ie: mey unow mat uoa is jove. we lo not need to prove these things to hem most insistently. What we need :o do is to proclaim before them a lew note from the old Anthem of jod's revelation of His truth and rlimself in Jesus Christ that shall Ind a correlative note in their own souls and lead them back into haraaony with the age-long chorus of the edeemed of God. It is the business )f the church of Jesus Christ to strike his note and to assume leadership. Granted that these remarks be ;rue, what then shall be our new icte? What note shall wo strike? Vhat -word of God shall be our watchvord? What text in the Scriptures ;hall enitomize our thought? About vhat idea shall our preaching re- t rolve? In my humble judgment the 1 ext which shall epitomize the mes- t ;age of the new revival is that which 1 s to be found as indicated in the ? ,ex: for thi? eveaing in tbe Gospel ? ? iccording to St. Mark, the 12th c&p;er and the 30th verse: "Thou shalt ove the Lord thy GoJ with all thy leart, and with all thy soul, and with ill thy mind, and with all thy strength." And the idea that shall crystallize our thinking shall be the conception of human love for God. \s the basis of Moody's evangel was he love of God for men, so, I verily lolipvr oro txtp chall do the work for lesus that we desire to perform, we must declare, with insistency and with cumulative force, the dignity, ;he wisdom, the fairness, the efficacy )f human love for God. The trouble with us to-day is not ;hat we do not know that God loves is. The trouble is that men do not ove God. The evil which afflicts lis lan only be cured by the exercise of i controlling and vitalizing love for 3od, such a love as shall mellow and jeautify the souls of men. The inquity which scourges us now and ;orments us would not be if. in the last, men had loved God. A thor jughgoing love for God will make jvil conditions in this world as impossible as they will be in the new Jerusalem hereafter. The golden *ule has failed to accomplish its mission, not because it is not a truth, put because it is only half a truth, is it is popularly used to-day. The second commandment is a safe guide for our rule and practice through life jnly when it is correlated with that primary commandment which our Lord enunciated as at the logical centre of :he moral and spiritual realities. The ;olden rule is not enough of a guide :or us as we travel toward the undiscovered country. We must be more ;han moral if we desire happiness here and hope to enter into joy eternal hereafter. The golden rule must ae vitalized by the living first principle of the kingdom of God . The troujle with the world is that men have peen altogether too well satisfied to lo and be done by, as God never in;ended they should. See for a moaient how this half truth works in practice. You and I are on the Stock Sxcfeange. You are satisfied that if jy trickery or falsification or by the spreading of dangerous reports, true )r untrue, I can ruin you, I may do jo, provided I afford you equal oppor:unity to do the same to me. You utd I are trading horses. It is all right for you to fleece me with my syes open so long as I am permitted ;o fleece you in the same manner. 5fou and I are in business. It is proper for me to steal your trade, provided you have an equal, oppor:unity to steal mine. Of course this meets a modern interpretation of the ?nid#>n rule, which says. "Whatsoever pe are willing that men should do unto you, do ye even so unto them." But how grievously it violates the spirit of Christ's law. The principle 3f the business world too largely is ihis, that it is all right for one dog to eat the other, because they have agreed that it shall be fair to play the industrial and commercial game that way. "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," we are told. But when this law is separated from the correlated truth that Christ declared, and transplanted alone into the lives of multitudes of men to-day, we understand what an awful halftruth it has become. In all seriousness, I do not desire that some men shall love me in the way they love themselves, outside of Christ. I do not care to practice the golden rule as to-day it is promulgated in our social life, outside of Jesus Christ, or to have it so practiced upon aie. ror bU ill C men nave uu wui^iviension of their own value and the ieraands of their own integrity upon their lives; and how, therefore, can ihey appreciate the value of the lives, the minds, the hearts, the souls, the peace and purity and happiness of :heir fellow men? Some men have such a small estimate, seemingly, of themselves, judged by the way they :reat themselves, that we should be untrue to ourselves did we not resent like treatment by them of us. Some men have such a debased idea concerning what is right for men to do anto them that they cannot be expected to know, unless the grace of G!od inform them, what they should lo to their fellows. The message for our own time, the lppeal of to-day, must be based on :he text I have read. Its theme must 3S the love of man for God. Loving 3od, we shall conserve the interests }f our own personalities and gain a livine value of our own worth to God ind to the world. Loving God, we shall know the value of our brethren. L.oving God, we shall be true to the social obligations that are incumbent ipon us in His kingdom. Loving 3od, we shall ask not "Is it lawful?" jut "Is it right?"; i ot "Does man lgree to it?" but "Does God approve ?"; not "Can I do it and not be laught?" but "How can I do such ;reat wrong against God?" Do you suppose for an instant that nen would have the audacity to pubish declarations that they were only vorth a paltry couple of hundred milions if they really loved God as God neans they should? Do you suppose 'or an instant that they would boast ;hat they can buy legislatures and judges and the government, if they oved God as Jesus lovea Him : n .ve loved God as Jesus means we should, do you suppose that we would stand for child labor, with all its hor ors and cruelties; for the saloon is it is, with all its fruitage of vice md crime and misery and poverty ind despair? If we loved God as Testis means we should, have you the slightest suspicion that we would pernit women by the thousands to be sent into the brothel in economic selflefense? If men loved God, would t be thinkable that they would murler and rape, and steep themselves n drunkenness, in bestiality and :rime? Do you think that if we :ould get men to love God, tt?y vould not have again a lively consciousness of His sovereignty as Ed,vards declared it, and of their free vill to do the right as Wesley declared it, and of their personal rennr>ciMUtv AB Finnav declared it. and )f their indebtedness to divine love as VIoody declared it? I think not. The new note of the church will be he love of men for God. For it is he second logical step in the scheme if redemption in Christ. God in Christ hath already loved men, and low loves them. It is for them .0 reciprocate His love. The new nessage must be the central truth of ;he kingdom of God on its manward ?ide. We must lead men to love 3od. Then shall we reach them. Getting men to love God, we shall ransform the individual character; ve shall regenerate society; we shall nake wars to cease and all nations .hroughout all the earth to dwell in ighteous and godly fraternal relaionships.. The task is great. But t is not impossible. The means and he method we shall discuss at anither time. But when we shall have ;otten men to love the living God, hen shall we hear a voice out of leaven saying unto us, "Behold, the abcrnacle of God is with men, .ana ie will dwell with them, and they ihall be His people, and God Himself -hall be with them, their God."; i v-1 . Depth of Great Lakes. Lake Superior's greatest depth is 1003 feet, Michigan's 864, Huron's c 570, Erie's 204, Ontario's 738. The i bottom of Superior is 401 feet below e sea level, of Michigan 283, of Ontario t 491 feet. The bottom of Huron Is i eleven feet above sea level, that of 1 Erie 3G9 feet. Ontario, the smallest 1 of the great lakes, is relatively the i deepest. If these bodies of water i could be drained the basin of Ontario would present striking contours as 1 compared with the basins of the c much larger lakes. I FITS, St. Vitus' Dan ce, Nervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. ?2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H. R. Klme,Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,Pa. It takes the constant labor of 60,000 peoplu to make matches for the world. To improve the general health, take Garfield Tea daily for a time; it purifies the blood, eradicates rheumatism and many chronic ailments^ and keeps the health good! Garfield Tea is made of herbs; it is guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drugs Law. Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. ECZEMA COVERED BABY. Worst Case Doctors Ever Saw?Suffered Untold Misery ? Perfect Cure by Cuticura Remedies. "My son, who is now twenty-two years of age, when four months old began to have eczema on his face, spreading quite rapidly until he was nearly covered. The eczema wss something terrible, and the doctdni said it was the worst case they ever saw. At times his whole body and face were covered, all but his feet. I used many kinds of patent medicines to no avail. At last 1 decided to try Cuti.cura,when my boy was three years and four months old, having had eczema all that time and suffering untold misery. I began to use all three -.r Pamfi/lina TTo \rafl hpffpr U1 I lie \JU11LU1U MV ?.v*w %-w.v.. in two monrhs; in six months he was well. Mrs. R. L. Risley, Piennont, N. H., Oct. 24, 1900." j Starting It Early. Starting with his bride on their honeymoon a man entered a railway office and, as always in the past, bought only one ticket. The bride noticed the oversight at once. N "Why, you bought only one ticket, dear," she said. "That's so, dear," he answered. "I ; forgot all about myself."?Tit Bits. BACKACHE IS KIDNEYACHE. , j Cure the Kidneys and the. Pain Will Never Return. Only one way to cure an aching > back. Cure the cause, the kidneys, i Thousands tell of uBrTj cures made by Doan's , WK S Kidney Pills. John C. Coleman, a prominent dBBBmL i merchant of Swainsboro, Ga., says: "For mmm several years my kidneys were affected, and my back ached day an(* n^ht. I was AebsBjK I languid, nervous and lame in the morning. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right away, and the great relief that followed has been permanent." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Uses of Earthquakes. This is a paragraph from the com- I position of a cynical Eastern school- i boy: "The earthquake and fire In San j Francisco, aitnougn nrst loosea upuu 1 as a calamity, really did a great deal of good. It purified the city of the great curse of underground Chinatown and burned down thirty-nine churches."?Argonaut. Official Kverywhere, $1.25 Each. For Thirty Years Standard of the World. Everything for the athlete. Uniforms and equipment for every athletic span. Six new catalogues Free to any address, free. BOOKS YOU NEED-- 10c. per copy. Postpaid. No. 1. Spa.ding's Official Base Ball Guide. No. 202, How to Play Base BalL No. 223, How to Bat, No. 232, How to Ran BaAQi. No. 230, How to Pitch. No 229, How to Catch. No. 225. How<o Piay First Base. No. 226, How to Play Second Base. No. 227, How to Play Third Base. No. 2&>, How to Play Shortstop. No. 224, How io Play the Outfleld. No. 231, How to Organise a Base Ball League, Manage a Base Ball Club, Train and Captain a Team And Umpire a Game. Send for new Base Ball Catalogue FREE. Base Ball Goods for Boys Especially. Mail Order Dopt. A. G. SPALDING & BROS., 126 Nassau St., New York. A Summer in Your I IC" * r\ i. a:. ft juon i sweuer inis f summer with the temperature at 110. Get a New Perfection . Wick Blue Flame Oil j Stove and have a cool kitchen. The (i NEW PER] Wfrk Rliie Flame H 1 A W? IIS produces 2. working flame instant] IP concentrated heat, no soot, no dirt. level, ensuring a uniform flame. 9 stove warranted. If not ai nearest agency for descriptive Jk "/teyhi L.?_ . jlof brass throughout and b constructed; absolutely saf ? \ power; an ornament to any If not at your dealer's write /S^ STANDARD I ' -< .:. .it gjj? 'wffp.> Saving on Their Meals. A French paper tells of a man who >ught to be set down as the meanest nan of his time. His name Is Rapin;au and he is the happy father of hree children. His chief claim to' neanness lies in the fact that he had 1 ately discovered a plan to reduce lis weekly expenditure. Every mornng, when sitting down at table, he nakes the following proposal: "Those vho will go without breakfast shall lave twopence." "Me?me!" ex:laim the youngsters in chorus. Ra- ! )ineau gives them the money and ? Lydla E. Pinkham'sV made from native roots and herbs. N received such widespread and unqua' cine has such a record of cures of fer Miss J. F. Walsh, of 228 W. 36th S E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound restoring my health. I suffered fi dreadful headaches, dizziness, and medicine soon brought about a cha me up and made me perfectly well," Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable C< such as Backache, Falling and Displs tion, and organic diseases. It is invi and during the Change of Life. Itcu General Debility, and invigorates th Mrs. Pinkham's Standir Women suffering from any forn write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lyrm, Mass One of London's West End dealers predicts that walking sticks fortytwo inches long wiH soon be in fash Ion. N.Y.?iSS The largest college of music in the world is the Guildhall in London. It has 110 instructors. To be on good terms with human nature, Be Well! Garfield Tea purifies the blood, eradicates disease, regulates the digestive organs and brings Good Health! Manufactured by Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. Sold by druggists.The population of the earth doubles itself in 260 years. 8SBHA T? convlnco any B ai B n woman that Pax- I VUB Sm Bu tine Antiseptic will I W Improve her health 0 Ba BLa ana do all we claim I a l0T lt< We winl send her absolutely free a large trial box of Paxtine with book of instructions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. DAYTIBIC'^ r AA I Intsji! fectlons, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused by feminine Ills; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its curative power over these troubles la extraordinary and gives Immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and recommending it every day. 60 cents at druggists or by mail. Remember, however, ir'/ vo tc VAVT VATIITKV1 Tft TT? V TT. LA M. WOAO **/W A***. X- ... , THE K. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mui. I EVERY MAN HI! By J. HAMILTON A This is a most Valuable Book for t! easily-distinguished Symptoms of differ of Preventing such Diseases, and the S or cure. 598 Pago*? Profu Howi, Explanations of Botanieal PraH New E>T**ion, Revised and Enlarged Book in ine house there is no excuse f ergency. Don't wait until yon have illness ii end at once for this valuable volume. Send postal notes or postage stamps '6 cents. BOOK PUB?3Hlwe HOit Vacation kitchen fr;\ FECnON^TI Oil Cook-Stove I ly. Blue flame means highly /"VI :? o 11voire it 3 mninraineH ?SS Vyil 13 t4i v> a; ?j ? Made in three sizes. Every Sg i your dealer's write to our |fl circular. ER rt tn t\ ]S (he best lamp for Grcj ftliitfJ all_round house- wfi hold use. Made gH eautifully nickeled. Perfectly ||y e; unexcelled in light-giving; 9 room. Everv lamp warranted, gfl i to our nearest agency. j|3 ML COMPANY, |? PORATED v ? & ' " suppresses the breakfast. In the afternoon, when the children were anxiously awaiting their first meal, Rapineau calls out: "Those who want their dinner must give twopence." And they all pay back what they received in the morning for going without their breakfast, and in that way Rapineau saves a meal a day.?Philadelphia Record. High Finance.* There is always room at the top? If you can push the other fellow off. ?Life. WOMEN SUFFER Many women suffer in silence and ? Irift along from bad to worse, knowng well that they ought to have mmediate assistance. How many women do you know vho are perfectly well and strong? The cause may be easily traced to ome feminine derangement which aanifests itself in depression of pirits, reluctance to go anywhere ?r do anything, backache, dragging ensations, flatulency, nervousness, nu meepictM>uct>9, u These symptoms are but warnings hat there is danger ahead, and uness heecled, a life of suffering or a erious operation is the inevitable esult. The best remedy for all hese symptoms is 'egeitable Compound 0 other medicine in the country has lified endorsement.* No other medioale ilia. it., New York City, writes:?"Lydia has been of inestimable value in om female illness which caused dull pains in my back, but vour nge in my general condition, built V ' . 'Jg ampound cures Female Complaints, icements. Inflammation and Ulceraaluable in preparing for child-birth res Nervous Prostration, Headache, e whole system. ig Invitation to Women 1 of female weakness are invited to . Her advice is free. The Dean of Westminster has re fused to admit a memorial tablet which ws.s dedicated to Herbert Spencer into the abbey on the ground that he was not orthodox in his Christian belief. Boston's Old Home Week | July 28 to Aug. 3 Reduced fare on all railways for trip to Boston and return. 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