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New York City.?Here Is one of ; the latest and prettiest of the over i waists designed for young girls. It I la eminently youthful in effect, it Is eminently graceful in line and it is available for every seasonable material. In this Instance light blue veiling is trimmed with braid and fancy banding and is edged with a rvf iralvnf Ti' Vi f 1 orD \7 * V/4 ?v* f VV WUV1V V ? shaped pieces of embroidered muslin that give extreme daintiness and charm to the whole. The guimpe beneath Is of a simple embroidered net, but as this is entirely separate it can be varied to suit one dress or another Rnd can be made from any suitable material. The over blouse la sufficiently full to be extremely bo? coming to girlish figures and will be found available both for the entire frock and the separate blouse. It 1 I1' t would be very charming in pongee or any one of the lovely cotton veilings that are shown In such pretty checked designs, while it also can be made available for the still thinner materials of the summer such as the flowered mousselines. spider silks, the embroidered batistes, Swiss muslins and the like. The over blouse is made in one piece and is laid in pleats over the shoulders. The'right front is lapped over the left and attached to position, the closing being made invisibly at the back. The fulness at the waist line can be regulated by \ means of a tape inserted in a casing, or tne waist can De gamerea ana stitched to a narrow belt. The Vshaped portions are optional and can be used or omitted as liked. The quantity of material required for the sixteen year size is two and one-half yards twenty-one or twentyseven, one and one-quarter yards thirty-two or forty-four inches wide and three and one-half yards of banding and one-quarter yard any width for the V-shaped portions when these are maae or contrasting material. New Gloves. A new idea in long gloves is to have the hand of kid and arm of silk or lace or vice versa. The effect is rather guaint, especially if the lace on the arm be fine meshed, but when the hand is of silk or lace and the arm of suede or glace kid the ensemble is good and tends to make the hand appear smaller. The demand for black gloves is on the In crease. Black for gown or hat is Increasing all the time. Not to say, of course, that all madame's or mademoiselle's best frocks wih be in black, but a iarge portion of them y Trill bo, or else colored ones generously touchcd with black. Biff Black Bows. Colored straw hats trimmed with huge butterfly bows of black taffeta ribbon which have a profusion of loops are the latest millinery to be launcnea. WII.I1 lucm uavc tume uais '^of burnt or natural straw trimmed y -with immense bows of white ribbon. / Now and thejj the bow Is of the color of the hat, but it Is always of Immense size. ^/oniuvl/ Wane of Tan H090. Fashionables are predicting an ap preaching decrease in the sale o; brown stockings. They say that gui metal, a peculiar shade of dart gray, Is already usurping their place For the Dressy Woman. Heavy elunv or fllet or Irish lao, trims many of the handsomer liner frocks, and, by the "way, the dyer: who cater to the smart trade nov advertise the redyeing or dipping o colored linen frocks which hav< faded or changed color in wearing o: laundering. Bright and Breezy. This is the season par excellent for the woman who takes to strikinj effects as naturally as the sparks g< upward. For her there are the mos vivid colors?flamingo pink, roya blue, bright greens, orange and t host of other noisy /.ones. Bij checks and plaids, spots large af apples and stripes inches wide ar< hers for the price. A Diamond Ribbon. A lovely throat ornament in smal1 diamonds is a ribbon of silver net work so closely studded with th< stones that very little of the setting Is visible; but as it is flexible ii clings as closely to the throat as elastic would do. It is tied at on? side with a bow and short ends which have tassels of still smalle] diamonds. Over Blouse or Juniper. The over blouse that can be closed at the front is a novelty and a wel come one, for no matter how charm lng the bodice may be that closes a the back It involves more or less difficulty to the wearer, whereas thi: one Is simple in the extreme. In th< illustration it is made of one of th< novelty pongees showing lines o green on a natural colored ground and is trimmed with green velvet anc tiny ribbon pleating, but it can b< utilized for almost every seasonabh material. It is very charming ii pongees of all sorts and the materia is eminently fashionable, but it alsc is well suited to the light weigh wools and to all the so-called "sum mer silks," while in addition i would make up most charmingly ii the summer materials of warn weather wear such as embroiderec o?iss> uiudiiii, iiuwciuu uauatc v uuc plain and figured, and the like. The waist is made with front, bad and sleeves. It is cut out at th< shoulders to form open V-shaped por tions, while it is laid in pleats at the shoulders that provide becoming fulness. The sleeves are separate and seamed to the arms' eyes and th< closing can be made either invisibl) or with buttons and button-holes. The quantity of material requirec for the mndinm siip io on* three-quarter yards twenty-seven two yards thlrty-sii or one and three eighth yards forty-four inches wid< with six and one-quarter yards o pleating and six and one-quartei yards of banding. THE TEMPERANCE PROPAGANDA CONCERTED .ATTACK ON PTJTNK WINNING ALL ALONG LINE. i borne strong statistics \tnirn mioiy That the Saloon is the Friend of Crime?Facts Compiled by Eminent Authorities. Under the above heading Dr. Bnrker gives some strong statistics and quotes eminent authorities in his very helpful book, "The Saloon Problem and Social Reform." He says: ? "The officials of prisons and pen:i tentiaries and reform schools all over i c the country unite in testifying that 1 a large proportion of crime is due directly to the liquor traffic. Not long since a general average of testimony gathered from 1017 keepers of county jails in various portions ; of the United States showed that the' j proportion of crime due to drink was i 72 per cent. 1 That the saloon is destructive of 1 social order is abundantly confirmed | by prison statistics. The whole number of cases brought before the Boston municipal criminal , court for the year ending October 1, , 1903, was 23,525; of this number 17,11S were cases of drunks. I ? There were 8525 cases of commit- \ ; ments for jail offenses in Connecticut ( > for 1902; 4617 of these for drunk t enness and 6946 of the total, or about j 82 per cent, by their own confession | pleaded guilty as drinkers of intoxi- j cants. ? In one year there were 82,000 ar3 rests made in Chicago. The cit? ) prosecutor recently said: "It is true that three-fourths of the crime of Chicago are due to liquor." The Superintendent of Bridewell says: "Liquor is the cause of the ' incarceration of 80 per cent, of thoso who are committed to the Bride) well." j The prison warden of Pittsburg I reports: "Of 7579 convicts sent to 5 jail during 1902, nearly every one was treated for alcoholism, while of this number 709 suffered from acute delirium tremens, seven dying." " Mayor A. F. Knotts, of Hammond, , Indiana, says: "Ninety-five per cent, of all crime is caused directly or in- ! directly by drink. The police records , , of our city show that more than ninety per cent, of all the offenses * committed are the results of intern- , perance, and that our police force, t maintained at an expense of $15,000 3 a year, is almost exclusively employed , j in watchine and carine for men. j women and children affected by [ drink." Hon. S. M. Nichols, former mayor of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, with a population of 60,000, and ono '! hundred and twenty-six saloons, testifies thus: "During my seven years' tenure of office I have had about seven thousand cases before me, and I am satisfied that about 90 per cent. ' of them were the result of drunknn^l, ness." Judge Severance says: "During j my nineteen years as judge of the district court I have sentenced nearly four hundred people to the peniten- \ tiary, and I have traced 90 per cent. of this crime to liquor drinking." The report of the Massachusetts 1 Bureau of Statistics on the influence of the liquor traffic in regard to crim- 1 inals, informs us that "82 per cent. 1 were in liquor at the time of offense," 1 and that "in 84 per cent, the intern- 1 perate habits of the offenders led to j a condition which induced the criroo." ; More than this that, "excluding mi- j nors, ninety-six to every one hundred ' were addicted to the use of liquors." 1 The Power of the Church. While a missionary in Montana a j few year3 ago, a man across the table , in true Western style asked me "What is your business?" and my , reply was, "I am a preacher, sir." "What is yours?" and he said, "J am a rum-seller. You preachers are on , the advance, and we rum-sellers are ( on the retreat. I used to sell rum in Iowa, and you preachers came in, ( and we, like grasshoppers, flew over into the Dakotas where we had a \ good time for a while; then you , preachers came in too many for us, , and we were compelled to fly again ( into-Montana, and we have Montana j to-day. But when you get money , and preachers enough you will drive j us out of Montana, and I do not j know where we will go then for you , have Washington already."?Rev. R. ( E. Barrett. 3 Unbiased Testimony. f The writer of an article headed "Allsopp's Brewery," in the Invest- i j ment Review, in trying to account , for the heavy loss of ?65,000, shown ' in the firm's recent annual report, 3 says, amongst other things: 1 "The fact must not be lost sight 1 of, that during the past few years a ) temperance wave has passed over t the country (England), and there is i . no doubt that the taste for beer has, t to a large extent fallen off. . . . The opening of clean, well-managed, and , smartly appointed cafes and tea-shops J has also helped to wean customers 1 from the tavern, and the activity of i ? the Temperance Party has done much to reduce the ranks of those to whom i : the public house wfts a club." } We welcome this unsolicited testimonial to the efficiency of temperance work, and none the less because it is given by one who views the * matter entirely from a business point ' of view.?Wings. ) Local Option Gaining. There is a strong movement on ' foot to sweep the southern part of York County, Ontario, free of barrooms. Already local option laws are in force in the townships of Vaughan and Markham, the village of Richmond Hill, and the towns of North Toronto and Toronto Junction. No Organ Escapes This Subtle Poison. Physiologists are finding by numerous experiments that, while alcohol has a certain food value, this is more than counter-balanced by its effect as a poison. The researches on this subject go more and more to show that there is not an organ in the human body that escapes tins suuue poison, nor a function that is not impaired by its use. The octogenarian who boasts that he has had his daily toddy has reached his fulness of days not because of his habits, bu> in spite of them.?Tribune. Saloons and Jails. The American Issue says: "Stewart, Illinois, Is over thirty years old, and never had a jail until September 5, 1906. It had never needed one y until it licensed two saloons a few months ago. It was argued by li1 cense advocates that licensed saloons ' wnniri he no worse than "blind Dies." but facts prove that argument false. Now two steel cages have been put up in the city hall, and the town now ( 5 has the two ends of the liquor busi- , f ness?two places to curse men, and ( r two places to cage them after they *'*? acpursorl " \ Tbe Puifo/t I 1 ;A^ERM0N' ^ggj| j VA/1ENDEl?j?N Subjcct: Jesus the Teacncr. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the Trving Square Presbyterian Church, Hamburg avenue and Wierfield street, on the theme "Jesus the Teacher," the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, took at; his text Matt. 5:2, "And He opened His mouth and taught them." He said: From the days of His youth when He put the wise men of the temple to fcame to those last hours among His disciples Jesus was a teacher. The teacher is the one who shows us how to do things, how to achieve, how to attain. Mere theorists may tell us what we ought to do and be; con ^ " ? i^n vincins taiKers may ten u? wnat tuo end of true effort is; strong preachers may tell why we should be thus and so; but to the teacher alone is given the task and the power to show us how we may become what theorists, talkers and preachers declare we ought to be. Fundamentally no teacher is of good report save his teaching comes from experience. The man who is to teach us how to do and become must, first of all, have attained. We cannot impart to others what we do not know ourselves. Ignorance cannot enlighten. Jesus nad this rich personal experience in spiritual things, and in the teaching of eternal principles of the spiritual life He is unsurpassed. This we will take for granted in our estimate of Jesus as ei teacher. Let us consider some of the minor qualities which inhered to the preaching rf the Christ. Our Lord taught simply, searchingly, realistically, purposefully, authoritatively. The teaching of Christ was simple. He did not try to mix matters or ths mind of men with complex rtatements. Deeper than the sea, boundless in their extent and scope, the truths which Jesus taught were yet simply told, were couched in the language of childhood, and understandable to all. The simplicity of the teaching of Jesus is charming. The message of Christ does not become silly merely because it is simple. It is not a message for the weak-minded. Rather is it a stay tor those of the finest and the broadest intellect. Strong and sensible in Its simplicity the gospel of Christ reaches the hearts of all men. The teaching of Christ was searching. How He burned through sham and cant and hyprocrisy, and hit at the very vitals of sin. How often He whipped the gates off at the whited sepulchres, and revealed the hidden Iniquity within. No. wolf under sheepskin was safe near Jesus. Jesus didn't take superficial glances; He probed deep and to the bottom to reveal the covered truth or error as the case might be. With the water from the well Christ leadrj us to discern the everlasting springs of eternal life. The good Samaritan is tho example of mercy. The Pharisees and the scribes show us the folly of serving of the letter of the law for Its own sake. The boy who grew faint, homesick, and went back into his father's arms, is the type of us alk What could search out truth more finally than that story of a misspent life? "Lord, lord," ve hear men cry, and we know that the Christ life is not an affair of declaration so much as of doing. Jesus taught realistically. He did not go into metaphysics to explain His points, but out into the world. He didn't pay much attention to philosophic language. He had little time for the impractical. But how realistic He made the truth. Sin is exemplified in the erring son. Selfishness is shown in the elder brother. The blowing wind is the illus tr^tion of the Spirit. The vine reveals the essential union of Christians with Christ. The two praying in the temple mark sharply the difference between self-satisfaction and religious self-sufficiency, and the soul humble in its sense of guilt. Phat fellow who heaped money in his coffers and grain in his barns has a lesson for every one. What difference does it make to you who and bow many are the sinners forgiven, when once you grasp the import of the parable of the paying off of the men who labored in the vineyard? These are enough to show us how realistic was the teaching, of Christ. He forced His points home in the language of the fields, the temple, the streets, the firesides. His Illustrations dealt not with impossible situations but with daily occurrences which might easily be paralleled in the experience of each of His hearers. They knew how self-righteous the leaders of the people were. They had more than once seen a woman sweep her house In search of a coin. It was no new thing to learn that a shepherd would go out into the mountains leaving the flock behind to lend succor to some lost and lonely lamb. There were tare's enough and sufficient mixed ground in Judea to enable the farming element to see the point of the parables of the tares and the sower. They knew as well as we know the pervading principle of yeast. These and a multitude of other realistic illustrations in the teaching of Jesus gave charm to His words and filled His messages with power. And the preaching of men will lose all its freshness and efficiency just so soon as the element of the realistic which holds personal interest is left out. Then, too, Jesus taught with purpose, with an end in view. He didn't talk just to hear Himself talk. He did not engage in vocal gymnastics after the manner of so many speakers of this day and generation. He did not talk because there was "easy money" to be made that way, or in order that He might get notoriety. On the contrary, Jesus talked purposefully. It meant danger for Jesus to take the stand He did. He ran many and great risks in the speaking of the truth. But the Master had a purpose. He wanted men to see what sir is; how defiling it Is; how disintegrating rnd disgusting its ef fects are. He wished humanity to see and to know that sin is disobedience to God; that It stains and soils the souls if men; that it wrecks and destroys all that is best in man; how useless it is. On the other hand, He wanted men to know what is the naiure of God and His character; what is the Kingdom of Heaven, its entrance?conditions and the joys to be attained therein; what is the glory of a godly life. Christ wanted to assure men that God is love; He wished them to know that the Kingdom of Heaven is present, as well as future, a kingdom of the Spirit and over-ruling all mateI , I rial life. Jesus had a purpos Therefore He pictured the new bin to flien as the entrance requireme; for the Heavenly Kingdom and tl joys of eternal life with God. Jesi had a purpose to show men God, si redemption, the kingdom. Having deep and fixed purpose, He taug! convincingly from a convicted life. In the last place, Jesus taught i one having authority. Mark tells i that at the synagogue at Capernau the Jews were astonished at tl teaching of Jesus?that is to sa they were almost struck dumb. Co trary to the scribes, Jesus talked wi authority. Speaking from his ov intimate, personal knowledge of tl truth and power of His message Jes asked the aid and witness of no mj to prove His points. The scrib cited precedent as justification f their legalism. Jesus spoke tru under the influence of the Spirit God. The s?ribes rested their ca on external authorities; Jesus hi the witness of the Spirit of. His ov life. The Pharisees made traditlt the test; Christ made the Spirit, is no wonder that they were asto ished. The gulf is wide between tl sanctions, of tradition and the san tion of the Spirit. Traditions chol the truth; the Spirit giveth life. Tl hope and strength of worn-out th ories is tradition and it is the chi ? ? ? ? O C?1M14 \T/\ won r\f OATI eilCU-iy U1 LL1C OpUIl. iiv ixictxx ui ogu will, of course, break with the pa merely through perverseness. C the other hand, no one should alio the fallacies of the past to deaden higher life now. To the past t honor; for the present the things to-day, the hopes and visions of t morrow. v The application is-easy. Our pr mulgation of the truth should 1 simple. The teachings of Jesi should be applied searchingly to t life in this day. Our method of pr sentation should be realistic,-not a struse, that men may feel and grai and hold the truth. There ought be no lack of purpose in our teac ing of the way unto eternal life.' V tell men, or we should, the Gosp story not to amuse them, but to sa' their immortal souls. And lastl and most important of all, we mu teach with authority?not dogmt ically or narrowly?but with tl sureness that comes from spiritu experience. Calm the Imagination. You will tell me that calmne of the imagination does not depei on ourselves. Pardon me, it d pends very much on ourselves. Whi wo cut off all the uneasy though in which the will has a share, i greatly diminish those which are i voluntary. God will watch over yo imagination if you do not keep i the disturbance by your scrupulo reflections. Abide in peace. Do not listen your imagination, which is too li7= and too full of fancies. This e cessive activity consumes, your bod and dries up your inward life. Y< are preying upon yourself useless] It is merely your restlessness whii hinders peace and Interior grac How can you expect God to spei in that gentle and inward voice whi< melts the soul, when you are- ma ing so much voice with your rap reflections. Be silent, and God w speak again.?Fenelon. The Living Hope. ; pa "The risen Christ is the hope the believer?Christ, ? not in t! heavens, but in the heart. Ai this hope we have as an anchor the soul, both sure and steadfai and which entereth into that wit in the veil. There is saving pow in this hope, for it is not a theory dogma or experience, but a Divi: Personality, even Jesus, the Foi runner, who has for us entered t! upper sanctuary, and there ev liveth to make intercession for i and hath begotten us unto a livii hope by His resurrection from t dead."?Pittsburg Christian Adv cate. . . The Spiritual Magnet. That great magnet, with its met frame and its coil of wire, and th strange magnetic power, reaches o and takes hold of those little plec of metal, between which and its* there is an affinity, and it gives tne some of its power through the co tact. Christ is the Great Spiritu Life Magnet, "And I, if I be lift up from the earth, will draw all m< unto Me," and faith in Him puts in spiritual affinity with Himself, ai through it He holds us to Hims< and gives us power of His power, ai purity of His purity, and charact of His character, and life of i ? life. Fulfilling the Plan. The engineer of the Brookl bridge was conilned to his bed wh it was in process of constructic Day after day, looking from his wi dow, he saw its piers rise and t spider's web of cables cunning formed. IUhad all been planned a: held in his mind's eye; and when was finished, being asked how looked, he said, "It is precisely wb I expected it to be." Oh, would th * *- ' ? ?t_t? A? a no* Christ mignt De auie iu saj mo su of us; that our life and charact are according to His plans and pi poses! A Great Prayer. It Is a sublime moment in a: man's career, when, rising to the fi dignity of his manhood, he utte forth his whole personality in coi plete, glorious self-attainment ai self-surrender in the prayer, "T1 will be done;" for in that pray ho dedicates himself wholly to t doing of God's will of righteousnes to a lasting warfare with evil in i its phases and forms, and with all i energy of which he is master, i enforced by the eternal strength.W. W. Fenn. ' Joy a Duty. The Christian life that is joyle is a discredit to God and a disgra to itself. "These things have spoken unto you," said Jesus, "th My joy might remain in you ai that your joy might be full." Stui these words. Believe them. A tempt them. Steadily accompli: them and the joy of the Lord w enter you long before you hear tl word, "Come, ye blessed, enter in the joy of your Lord."?Henry CI; Trumbull. We Belong to God. We may throw ourselves away, 1) God will not throw us away. V belong to Him still, and He "gat ereth up the fragments which r main, that nothing be lost." In c der to become pure, we may nei sharp suffering, and then God w not hesitate to inflict it. It is th that God's love for the soul and i worth appear eminently, in that I will not let ub destroy ourselves.James Freeman Clarke. e. Worse Inside Than Out. ^ Prince Haseba, the distinguished 1 Qt Japanese, referred at a dinner in Spokane to the cleanliness of his nation. n "If you should visit a Japanese 1 >1 V. 1J 1 J a House, ue bctiu, juu wuuiu uc bit obliged to remove your shoes at the doorway. Japanese floors are beauas tifully kept. I know of some houses us where thirty or forty servants have no other duty than the polishing of is ? < yt the floors. nl "A young Japanese student, studyth ing in London, had the misfortune m to live in an apartmeat-hous? where le us in >n 36 3 to 8 h. p. Hopper Jacket Engine on Skids. C- " ?0 gasoline, throw on the switch, tie e.. No pipe to connect, nothing ef to set up, no foundation to CQ gt make, no experience required. )n It is the most practical enIW gine for the farmer, because it ill is always ready, compact, ad?* justed and can be moved anywhere. I , The price is right?the qualKa . ? ity is the standard of the U. ill S. Government, who use it. e- . * b- OLDS GAS I J? * Main Office: 985 Scager *? 11 Boston: 69-73 Washington St., N. Binghamton, N. t EVERY MAN HIS st By J. HAMILTON All it tie This i8 a most Valuable Book for th al easily-distinguished Symptoms of differ* of Preventing such Diseases, and the Si or cure. 598 Pages* Profit! ik tiona, Erplanationa of Botanical Pract cli New Edition, Revised and Enlarged k. " Boot in the Bouse there is no excuse i'c id ergency. HI Don't wait until yon have illness in send at once for thiji valuable vo lume. Send postal notes or postage stamps c 0 cents. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, IS ?' 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You are now pro- }>cE?J It tected by the Dutch Boy trade a* mark which is found op the side of kegs containing only Pure White g? Lead, made by the Old Dutch Process. [r_ v Look for the boy. /w* \ SENDF0R I 1 BOOK \ fTJw\ I "A Talk on Paint," ny Yfc ""V//Ki?es valuable inftr- i ,11 Yrk'SBSt' / ~.r.' tQr motion on the paint 1 "W subject. Sent free ij-g t \y upon request. n; NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY tld in whichever of the followhy tng cities ia nearest you: , New "Sork. Boston. Buffalo, Cleveland, Gf Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, Philadel- I ho phia (John X. Lewis k Bros. Co.] Pittsburgh ' ue (National Lead k Oil Co.] 5S, L? 111 ? he /I W / X c5 Libby's at Corned Beef id 3y is a mild cured and perfectly it- cooked corned Beef, and carefully sh packed in Libby's Great White | ill Kitchens. It is prepared aa carehe fully as you would make it in i to your own kitchen. ay It has the characteristics and 1 delicious flavor of the right kind of corned beef. j L For Quick Servln*.?Libby's Corned / Beef, cut into thin slices, arranged on a Ut I platter and garnished with Libby's Chow ' ^6 V __ Chow makes a tempth ing dish for luncheon, e. ; dinner or supper. T- A?b your rrocei- f?r 1 3d Llbby'? and ln?l?t ' ii^?l upon *cttlue LlbkT'* "9 ! Nfci Llbby. McNeil! & le j JJFJ Llbby. Chicago ; . i * . ? .2%': '*? . . ' -. . ? - a > . the janitor did not keep the hall in good condition. It was a great change to him and he felt it keenly. "On the approach of winter the janitor put up in the entrance the notice! 'Please wipe your feet.' "The young Japanese, the first night he observed this notice, took' out a pencil and added to it, "On going out.' "?Philadelphia Bulletin. Overheard on the street: "What did he look like? Why, he looked like a cake of soap that has lain in a bath tub all night."?Detroit News. ^ -vjfi OLDS fl ENGINES "best by evert test" us.govy report This engine is ready to run 'v|l when you get it; fill it with . , turn the wheel?that's all. Write us to tell you about our liberal proposition that . will save you money. ' We guarantee every Olds , Engine to run properly. Youtake no risk in buying It There is an agent near by to see that everything Is all right Send for catalog showing 3 to 50 h. p. engine? and get our Interesting-offer. I VpB POWER CO., ? St., Lansing, Mich. K Y.: 33 Washington St. Pbila.: 1816 Market St JJ />? OWN QQ0T0R rSRS, A. 31., M. D. e Household, teaching as it does the '. ' \'rwH :nt Diseases, the Causes and Means * . mplest Remedies which will alienate soly Illustrated. This Book is written in plain 'iV'ffil tvery-day English, and is free froin the technical terms which render ' s! most doctor books so valueless to, the generality of readers. This . i- Jjja Book is intended to be of Service ! in the'Family, and is so worded as to be readily understood by all, >'*9 60 CtS.^fail The low price only being made ' possible by the immense edition . printed. Not only does this Book contain so much Information Relative to Diseases, but very properly , gives a Complete Analysis of every- ^ S thing pertaining to Courtship, Marriage and the Production and Rearing of Healthy Families; togetheJ vk! with Valuable Recipes and Prescripice, Corrfect Use of Ordinary Herbs. with Complete index. With thia >r not knowing what to do in an emi your family before you order, but ONL1? 60 CENTS POST-PAID. >:$( >1 any denomination not larger than t4 LEONARD STREET, A. S,, Every Vacationistl | 1 Should have the Booklet'*New England Vacation Re?oris"i88uedbythe, Boston 1 "" Maine I Railroad epkiv pnpc sen i rnLt Send your nddretl to CEN. PASS. DEPT. ( Boston A Maine R. R. Boston, Mass. WORMS 1 "I had for rears suffered from what medical men C&iled Dyspepsia and Catarrh of the Stomach. In August l purchased a box of Cascarcts and was snr prised to find that 1 "had "em"?yes?n wiggling, . ~ squirming mass left me. Judge our doctor s sur> Srise when I showed him thirty feet, and in another ay the remainder! about the same lengtli)of a tapeworm that had been sapping my vitality for years. 1 have enjoyed the beet of health ever since. Itrnsl this testimonial will appeal to other snfferers." Chas. Blackstock. 1319 Divinity Place, West Philadelphia. Pa. Best For g m. The Bowels ^ rawcwmii CANDY CATHARTIC Pleaaant, Palatable. Potent. T?*te Good. Do Good, . Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c. 23c. 50c. Never old in bulk. The gennino tablet (tamped CCC.I Guaranteed to cure or your money back. < Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 594 ANNUAL SALE, TEH MILLION BOXES * J CHICKENS EARN MONEV! IS V.h !/???, Ilo.n ?* Ul.JUThom PMR*p1f t II luu nuun uun iu uaouic iui>ui vjiuii|i| Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you ? want to do it intelligently J and get the best results. The / I way to do this is to profit by ft I S the experience of others. We A offer a book telling all you RLgi need to know on the subject ?a book written by a man who made his living for ( years in raising 1'ouitry, ana in that time neces- wBf OC* sarily had to ex- J A, JL>, periment and spent K A mut-ji money to In learn the best way p. to conduct the btampS business?-for the L | small sum of 25 I Lents in postage stamps. H M It tells you how to Detect raL and Cure Disease, how to r ecu iUl *V? Market, which Fowls to Save Br for breeding Purposes, and E indeed about everything you I must know on the subject Lo make a success. R Sent postpaid on receipt of fflnBH 15 cents in stamps. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, Br I 134 Leonard Street, Sv I New York City. g J r iv tfS'jSj J ? :"Js3