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^fl Hi *7 TITTBBJPMMPMKOKflHJJCiai New York City. ? Pointed yo4kes are apt to be becoming, and here is a blouse that includes one of quite nov? ofl sort. In the illustration it is made Of handkerchief lawn with trimming 'of lace insertion and dotted bands, but it not alone suits all the lingerie materials, it also can be used for the soft silks and thin wools tha# arc treated in a similar way. Again, it is adapted both to the separate blouse unci tue gown, ana 11 inveu cue emu* yoke can be cut from all-over lace Dr It can be made of strips of insertion held by beading or by embroidery and the design can be varied in numerous ways. Cotton nets of all sorts are being extensively used for the separate blouse, and promise to be great favorites for the coming season, sc that it may be well to suggest that this model suits them as well as the materials already mentioned. The blouse is made with front and back portions, which are gathered and joined to the yoke, the closing be W 'HM?HI|P||\W ing mack; invisibly at the back. The moderately full sleeves are gathered into band cults and there is a regulation stock collar finishing the neck The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and a quarter yards twenty-seven, two and five-eight yards thirty-two or one and .three-quarter yards forty-four inches wide with six yards of insertion. Automobile Wils. It is nothing less than fine art tc arrange in a giaceful manner the immense chiffon veils now worn with the motor toque. The actual width of the new striped chiffon is three yards by two wide. The veil enfolding the crown of the hat is caught up in loops at the back, and in such manner becomes a species of curtain, while the ends are drawn loosely around to the front and tied in a coquettish bow under the chin. At the back the veil performs similar screen services to the hair in a graceful cascaded arrangement, which shows to advantage the full effect of the broad silk border. _ Graceful Mantilla Wraps. The graceful mantilla-sliaped wraps are being worn over thiu gowns this season. If one is the lucky possessor of a family heirloom in a black J^ce shawl this may be easily draped ( into one of these fashionable wraps. ? It will not have to be cut?only gathered on the shoulders and at the back of the neck, and this makes it hang in points in the back and front. V-Shaped Blouses. Many semi-dressy blouses are open in a V deep enough to evtend to the waist lin?. the opening exposing the elaborate and beautiful underbodicc of mull and lace. Pleated Lingerie in Favor. The pleated Jinen and lingerie frills have returned to favor, and the use of frilled jaboto at the neck is popular and becoming. 1 n > j Blouse Sleeves With Over Sleeves. " That the sleeve often determines ! " the style of the garment is a well es; tablished fact and just now when so ^ ' many of the fancy sorts are being ^ ; seen the statement Is peculiarly true. | Here are three different styles of the ? ! over sleeves that can be utilized either p ' with the blouse sleeves illustrated or t; | with those already in the bodice, and i ^ J which are absolutely up to date, so j : that they can be relied upon to give a b ' fresh touch to any gown that is to be t] 1 remodeled as well as to serve for the p new ones. The blouse Hleeve is ap- b propriate for every thin material, and tl there are three styles of over sleeves, ti Iu the illustration the circular over sleeve is made of plain material trimmed with applique and lace frills n while it is worn over embroidered ^ muslin; the full over sleeve is made of ^ silk with trimming of applique, and is worn over a plain lingerie material, y, while the band sleeve is a bit more c< elaborate and is made of silk and applique with the full sleeve beneath of h a fancy net. But the possibilities of ^ the models are almost limitless. Both the circular and full over sleeve are q adapted to almost every seasonable 0] material, and the band sleeve can be , ^ treated in innumerable ways. It can a be made plaiu or it can be trimmed o with banding of any kind or embroid- b ery can be worked onto the material or lace or embroidered motifs can be f? inset. It can be made to match the n gown itself or of the trimming mate- ^ rial, and is so constructed that it can t( be used with almost any bodice. ^ The blouse sleeve is niad-e in one p > piece, simply full and gathered into a S] ! straight band or cuff. Both the plain w and the full over sleeves are in one n . piece each, but the plain one is with- h i out fulness at the shoulder while the h full one is gathered at that point. The i band sleeve also is in one piece, but * Is arranged over both sleevo and CJ ! waist, whereas the two former are e, joined to the armholes together with h: the blouse sleeve. H m |w I al s The quantity of material required i te [ for the medium size is one and a j quarter yards twenty-one, one yard i U1 . twenty-seven or five-eight yard forty- ai I four inches wide for the blouse sleeves, j ^ i two and <1 quarter yards twenty-one, ! r( I one and three-quarter yards twenty- | Ci [ seven or one and a half yards forty- j n< ; four inches wide for either the eircu- | B lar or full over sleeves, while for the i ki ! tii baiul sleeves one yard any wid'h mi 'a terial will ho needed. To trim as U iustrated the circular sleeves wrtn blouse sleeves will require onr? and w three-quarter yards of banding with , eleven yards of lace, (lie lull over di , sleeves two and three-quarter yards , of handing and the baud sleeves one and three-quarter yards of ai?i'lique. et Buttonhole Decoration. French nainsook can be beautifully decorated with cut-work embroidery, f0 the secret of which Is the quality of et the buttonholing. j tr (Trj77 rhriT (tiln~ 1 ?111/ T UIJ'1 -L . N ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. A. B. SIMPSON. Subject: The Gospel of Tears. New York City.?The famous head f the Christian Alliance, the Rev. A. t. Simpson, on Sunday preached a otable sermon, having for its subject The Gospel of Tears." The texts rere: Jesus wept.?John 11:35. And when He was cotne near He eheld the city, and wept over it.? ,uke 19:41. Who in the days of His flesh, when [e had offered up prayers and supinations with strong crying and :ars unto Him that was able to save fim from death, and was heard in iat He feared.?Heb. 5:7. TXTV*^ I % n t* ?>Af wont 9 XT n CT TL'O vv xiu iiaa nv/c ncpi. *t ttimib ?? egin life as helpless babes and, amid he tears of mourning friends, we ass out to the grave. Tears are the adges of sorrow. How can they be tie expression of the Gospel, the glad dings of great joy and divine love? And yet redemption has transjrmed the curse into a blessing and lade a rainbow of our tears. "Jesus wept." This little phrase, le shortest in the Bible, has more in ; than all the books that man has ritten. A single drop of ink could rite it, but all the world could not Dntain its depths of love. It tells me that my Redeemer is uman. Tears are human and the jars of Jesus proclaim Him my rother ani my Friend. He is the reat heroic Head of our fallen race. >ne has come to us who is "bone of ur bone" and "flesh of our flesh" and as the right to represent us; who is ble to right our wrongs and recover ur lost heritage of happiness and lessing. When God determined to save this illen world, He did not send some lighty angel. He did not come in [is own awful deity; but He stooped ) become a man that He might meet s in a gentle human form of which e should not be afraid. How the :oinan Catholic clings to the tender, rmpathy of the virgin mother, but e do not need even woman's tenderess to introduce us to the Father's oort- fr?r Toeiic P.Viricf nnr Savinur as a heart both of woman and of lan. He has been an infant child ke us. He has traversed every stage E the pilgrimage of man from the adle to the grave. He has been rerywhere that we have been. He as felt everything that we can feel. e knows our nature. He bears our ame. He wears our humanity. And ir evermore the Head of this uni?rse, the King of Kings, the Lord E angels shall be a Man like us, our riend "that sticketh closer than a rother." Oh, what a gospel of comfort we d in the humanity of Christ. You in come to Him to-night as you ould to the gentlest friend, the most itelligent father, the noblest man 3u ever knew; and though we have nned and gone far astray, "He is Dt ashamed to call us brethren." They tell us that He is able to symithize with our sorrows. He wept lose tears for others. He saw vo breaking hearts before Him. He dt their agony! He groaued in spirit ad was troubled and at last He roke down altogether and burst into flood of tears. How we thank Him >r those tears. This salvation is not all for the 5arly gates, the streets of gold and le gionous neaven iuai is tumms ye and bye. We need a lot of it )wn here in this broken-hearted orld amid our poverty and pain, our ckness and death,our broken frieudlips, our wrecked homes, our wrongs ad sorrows and, thank God, He has for us. He has experienced it and e has not forgotten it and still in is heavenly home we are told "He able to be touched with the feeling l our infirmities." He was a child and has felt every lildish sorrow. He had the hard ruggle to support His mother at azareth and He knows all about ard work and hard times. He was jspised and scorned and He underands the sense of wrong and sting : insult. He was deceived, betrayed id murdered and there is no wrong * insult can come to us that He has Dt borne and is still ready to bear >r us. Yes, He has felt the awful eight of sin, for there was an hour hen He sank under His Father's rath in punishment for the sins of :en. He knows the cloud of spir/Io *1 apc Uo lrnAtuo flia nrnolr. uai uai anuoo. lib ntivn^ vuw ??vuik sss and agony of death and He is ith us in it all. Blessed Friend, 3\v we thank God for Christ and hat a gospel of love and sympathy id help speaks to us through the :ars of Bethany. The tears of Jesus tell us that He nderstands our danger, our destiny id our estate. He shed those tears ^er the grave of Lazarus. They eant much more than a sense of be:avement. He was not weeping beluse He had lost Lazarus. He was Dt weeping because the sisters at ethany had lost their brother. He new that Lazarus was coming forth ;ain in a little while and that the >rrow would be forgotten in the glad iunion. Oh, no, He saw deeper than tat. He saw in the grave of Lazarus ;ery grave that had been opened id filled through earth's forty cenirioe anrl tha* wrmlrl ho filled In tVio venty centuries that have passed nee then. He saw all the horrors id agonies of the battlefield, the jean wreck, the lingering deathbed, ie scourge of famine and pestilence id the ravages of the king of terrors ith the millions and billions of vlcms that he has smitten in the past x thousand years: and as He saw it 1, realized it all, and the vision omed in lurid horror before His mniscient eye, He realized the feartl curse of sin and His heart broke jwn in agony and sorrow. Nay more, He saw a sadder sight, e saw a deeper grave. He saw the ernal grave boyond all. that we bc)ld in death. He saw the death that jver dies: the fire that never is lenched; the yawning gulf of endss woe into which the sinful snul Tf Ifnc tlin riffle uoi oiiin. iwicvui, n wuo luc oifsui ' that horror that had brought Hiin om Heaven to earth. It was the ought of man perishing in eversting darkness that had made Him ad to live and suffer and die, and ; it all rose before Iliiu as through glass in the tomb of Lazarus "Jesus opt." Oh, that we might realize it as He d. Did Christ o'er sinners weep And shall our tears be dry? Christ never thought or spake of ernal punishment in cold, hard ords. He did it with a breaking ;art. He did it with tenderness and ars, but none the less He did it; r none knew so well as JIc that ernal sin must bring eternal hell id that all we know and fear of!1 death is but a paradise coapared E with that second death? * * * * whose^ pan| ^ Uutlasts tne neeung creamy Oh, what eternal horrors hang Around the second death. The tears of Jesus tell us of His atonement. He did not come down ( to earth to weep in helpless sorrow but to rise in almighty strength against our doom?and rescue us from it. When Hercules came to the pla:e where the helpless virgin lay bound upon the rock and the dragon was . coming to devour her, her parents , and all arouud were frantic with : tears, but Hercules cried, "This is no ? time for tears; this hour is for res- j; cue/' and he slew the dragon and saved the maiden. : So Jesus came, not merely to weep but to help, and by His own tears and r His own agony and His own blood to meet our peril and our penalty and ^ save us from eternal sorrow. . And so we read of another instance1 1 of His tears in Heb. 5:7. These were the tears of Gethsemane and the an- I guish of His passion. These were the ?. tears that we deserved to shed. These ? were the pains that we deserved to suffer. But as our great Substitute * and Sacrifice, He bore our sins in His r own bodv on the tree, and having 1 paid the penalty and satisfied the ^ claims of justice, He comes in the ? glad message of the Gospel to an- J nounce our pardon and salvation. ? 0 Christ, what burdens bowed Thy head; Our load was laid on Thee; Thou stoodest in the sinner's stead, Didst bear all sin for me; s Jehovah lifted un His rod, t 0 Christ, it fell on Thee; t Thou wast sore stricken of Thy God, s Thy bruising healeth me. ] Hindu mythology has a strange c tale typical of the atonement, the ^ story of a dove pursued by a hawk l until in desperation it flung itself s into the bosom of Vishnu, one of their i deities. But the hawk demanded .sat- \ isfaction, declaring that the dovo was \ her lawful prey and that Vishnu must i not only be merciful to the dove but j just to Its claims. Thon Vishnu, hold- r ing the trembling do\e in her bosom, c bared her breast and bade th-3 hawk ( devour of her own living flesh as i much as would -compensate for the dove, while all the time the dove lay c fluttering there and knowing the fear- i ful cost of her deliverance. Yes, we ^ are safe within His bosom, but oh, c the cost to Him. "He saved us, Ilim- 5 self He could not save." He wipes 1 away our tears, but in order to do s this He had to weep when there was ? no eye to pity and no arm to save, t Don't you think the least that you f could do would be to thank Him and give Him your heart, your love, your grateful tears? We have yet one more picture, Luke 19:41. He was entering Jerusalem from Olivet. He had just turned that point where the whole city suddenly bursts upon the traveler's view. As He gazed upon it in its singular beauty, there arose behind the scene another vision that a few years later was to fill all that valley: a city besieged, cruel Roman legions around on every hill top, the narrowing cordon of destruction, a breach at last in the walls of defense, the breaking in of the brutal conqueror, the streets running with blood, the Temple rising in smoke and flames, the shrieks of mothers, maidens and little children in the cruel grasp of the conqueror, and then, a long train of captives going forth to distant lands while behind them lay a plowed field of desolation where once their beautiful city li^d been. And as He saw it all and how it might have been prevented if thay had only received Him, He cried. "If thou hadst known even now in this thy day the things that belong to thy ~~~ ~~ oV? M frnm puacc, uui uuw iucj aiv/ vhM j thine eyes." It was too late; but ( even yet He had for them His tears. These tears tell us of Christ's compassion. They tell us how He longs to save. They tell us that He is here to* 1 night with infinite pity and power to 11 wipe away your tears, to wash away 1 your sins and make you happy and 1 holy through His love. But they tell us also that if you re- J fuse and reject Him, there may come j a time, there will come a time, when ' He can do nothing for you but weep. * They tell of a judge before whom 1 was brought for punishment his old- 4 est friend. As he stood up to pro- c nounca the sentence upon him, the 3 memory of their boyhood days to- ( gether came upon the judge's heart 1 with overwhelmiug force and he t J - /a - ~ J - - e ? ~ ~~ UrOKe out III liUUUa U1 weepiug. Uijr friend," he said, "how can I, by a single word, consign you to a felon's cell and a life of banishment from home and friends and all that earth holds dear? But I am a judge and must be just. Why did you force m9 to do this thing?" And they wept together, but it was too late to save him from his fate. From that scene of weeping, he went forth a doomed, ruined man to spend his days in fruitless tears. Oh, sinner, beware! lest some day on the Throne of Judgment you look in the face of a weeping Saviour and hear Him say: "How often would I have gathered you even as hen doth gather her brood under her wings and ye would not. Oh, that thou hadst known the things that belong to thy peace, but now they are hid from thine eyes." I-l I nrlnTM n or riivist. S Speaking at the recent South port 1 convention, Dr. Campbell Morgan em- 1 phasized the mysterious fact that our s Divine Lord was "straitened by the s men by whom He was surrounded, and limited geographically," and he went on to remark that in the Acts Christ was no longer straitened, lim- ? ited, or localized; and the right way t to read that book is to read it al- t ways looking for the Christ. It is i the first record in human history of Christ as He moved out of limited and straitened conditions into those that were unlimited and unstraitened. The Acts is the revelation for all time c of the forces at man's disposal, aud the perils he needs :o avoid. t By way of personal application, Dr. t Campbell Morgan added: Is Christ paralyzed in mc? Is He c unable in my home, my business, my r church, to do anything because of me, ? niUnt T mvt ??> Uf?9 If T nm wrnticr (IIIU ? llttl X U.II1 111 nib A a. x %?M? * w..0 myself, I injure others, and hinder Christ.?London Christian. a Separated, Man Dwindles. Separated from God, man dwln- s dlt^s; he is nothing. He was made to t have magnitude and he in flood, by <] having great inspirations roll under him and through him. Existing in s mere selfhood lie cannot push himself "t out any way to be complete as from v himself. There is nothing, in short, r i-oHtrirm ni' flip 1 ifft ill fiod. that a can be looked to for the completion of a soul.?Horace Bushnell. t \ Ground of Our Exportation. . i The Word of God must, bs the r guide of our desiras, and the ground I) of our expectation in prayer.?Mrft- t thew Henry. e UTTER WAR ON INTEMPERANCE iOLDIERS FIGHTING THIS CURSE GREATLY CHEERED. h crwhelming in Volnmcd Cogcncy is (lie Case Against Strong Diink? If Saloons Disappear, the Country Will Soon Be Evangelised. The case against strong drink is tverwhelming in volumed cogency, t is simply beyond belief that any Christian man can say one word in avor of a beverage that poisons the ilood and ruins the soul. War canlot equal its ravages. Pestilence canxot rival its statistics of desolation. t stands alone as a record of sorow and shams. The argument that should be final vith Christians Is the plea of the Apostle Paul. He said that if drinkng wine should make even the weaksst brother offend he would drink no nore. To that argument there is no inswer.. That is the argument of loing good for the sake of others. Sven If physiological and social ar:uments could be successfully at acked (and in my judgment that is mpossible), this apostolio argument if sacrificing your own tastes and deires, in. order to help others, stands nflnitely beyond the range of any issault that is either local or benefi:ent. The drink traffic is the curse of the ountry. Churches and Sundaychools make but little impression by heir occasional labors, as compared vith the havoc wrought by the incesant pestilence of the public house, low any Christian can be a brewer r distiller passes my comprehension. Vhen the lofty chimney of a distilery was being finished an observer aid, "How many persons would.be tilled if that chimney were to fali?" Vhereupon a bystander replied, with litter truthfulness, "It will kill many nore if it stands!" Was ever such a jaradox seen as that a brewer's chimley should stand within sight of a :hurch spire? That is the battle of Christian countries. God and the Devil are in eternal cpnflict. I warn young men that drink will lestroy them. It muddles the brain; t shakes the nerves; it paralyzes the vill; it stirs and maddens the worst lesires. Not one good word can be poken of drink. I leave persons over Ifty years of age to determine what itimulants they may suppose them elves to require; but, speaking to he young, I would plead with them >n every sacred ground to touch not. aste not, handle- not the unclean hir*?. Death is in the cup. An idder will sting the debauchee. The oung tippler will go from bad to vorse, until he ends by divesting limself of every featrue of dignity ind in qualifying himself for the soliude of outer darkness. I have watched the drink foe in lis fatal advances; I have traced him rom exhilaration to intoxication, rem intoxication to madness, from nadness to Hell. One or two of the inest men I have ever known have )een addicted to secret drinking. >Vho can tell the misery of their louseholds? I have seen it, and ;ladly I draw a thick veil over its jhastly features. I have seen homes )roken up, families scattered, chilIren orphaned, and the fairest social prospects riven and blasted as if by ightning, by this accursed and all:ursing drink. To me these are not maginations, but facts, and such 'acts are arguments that carry away ill petty and self-regarding opposi;ion. Convert tne young men to toiai ibstlnence, and in one generation England will be evangelized. When he public house disappears, the ;hurch will lift its roof toward a doudless sky.?Joseph Parker, D. D Jails Not Needed. A peculiar problem is being dis :ussed in the Province of Prince Edward Island. The suggestion has jeen made that one jail centrally sitlated is ample to meet all the neeis. The plan heretofore has been a tail in each county, but oftentimes t. has happened that all of them have >een empty, and it never happens hat any of them are full. The Charottetown Guardian points out that he percentage of population that is riminni is the smallest in Prince Sdward Island of any province in Canada, and therefore there is no leed for a prison in each county. Recently the jail in Summerfiido vas burned down. In one of the )ther counties the building is in a lilapidated condition. It is not likey, therefore, that either of these vill be rebuilt, but one prison will serve all the needs of the province. This is a striking tribute to the jenefits of the prohibitory law. If >arroom accommodation is increased irison accommodation must also be ncreased. Where barroom accomodation is reduced prisons become ess necessary. In Prince Edward Island there are 10 barrooms and therefore no prison>rs for the jails. Jolhenberg System For Los Angeles. As the result of a formal proposiion submitted in writing to the city >f Los Angeles there is a possibility hat the "Gothenberg saloon system" nay be installed in that city, supilanting the present private owner;hin of the 2 00 saloons there. The >roposition came from twenty-five of lie leading business men of the city, tmong the number being several posessing personai fortunes of millions. Local Option in Illinois. Illinois has local option in force in ibout 250 towns. Even in Chicago he movement is gaining ground, and wo-thirds of the city has excluded >ar rooms. Temperance Notes. Richmond, Ivy., has voted saloons >ut by a majority of 14S. Florida has county local option in wenty-sevcn out of forty-five counies. Georgia has 110 counties "dry" >ut of 137, and in some of the re nainiug dispensaries are operated, ;reatly reducing the drinking. Nearly all the railways of America equire total abstinence from their tmployes. More than 1,500,000 men ire involved under such regulations. Rear-Admiral Evans recently cenured naval courts for leniency to lien convicted of drunkenness on luty. The German newspapers after a erious discussion as to the cause of he failure of their athletes seem to inite in the opinion thai the explalation is to be found in the beer Irinking habit. The brewing interests of the counry have in operation in the city of Vashington a press bureau which is utended to educate the people to a ealization of the harmlessness oC eer as a beverage, and incidentally o look after legislation in the intersts of the brewers. The Greatest Man. William C. Channing paid high tribute to the common people when ' he said: "The greatest man is he who chooses the right with invincible resolution; who resists the sorest temptations from within and without; who bears the heaviest burdens cheerfully; who is calmest in storms and most fearless under menace and frowns; whose reliance on truth, on virtue, on God, is most unfaltering. I believe this greatness to be most common among the multitude, whose names are never heard." Demand For Scientific Men. There is a wealth of wisdom in the advertisement of a European "teacher of topography," in which he says: "In letterpress printing to-day there is a greater demand than ever for 'scientific men' ? men who know a little more than the ordinary." This is so much a truism the world over there can be no debate on the subject; one's observation of events passing round about him proves the assertion. ?Inland Printer. Women Avoid Operations When a woman suffering1 from female trouble is told that an operation is necessary, it, of course, frightens her. The very thought of the hospital, the operating table and the knife strikes terror to her heart. It is quite true that these troubles may reach a stage where an operation is the only resource, but a Tw\mon Vi a rrn Vipun CUFed k? I ca U luauj IIVIUVU MWfv ? by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after an operation has been decided upon as the only cure. The strongest and most grateful statements possible to make come fr< Lydia E. Pinkham's \ made from native roots and herbs, b evidenced by Miss Rose Moore's case, Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-"Lydia E. I cured me of the very worst form of i to you my deepest gratitude. I suffi I was unable to attend to my duties i doctored and doctored with only temp to an operation which I was advised E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; and I am now in better health than 1 This and other such cases should diaE. 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No Relief Until Cuticura Remedies Prove Perfect Success. "For a year 1 have had what they call eczema. I had an itching all over my body, and when I would retire for the night it would keep me awake half the night, and the more I would scratch, the more it would itch. I tried all kinds of remedies, but could get no relief. I used one cake of Cuticura Soap, one box of Cuticura an? two vials of Cuticura Resolvent Pills? which cost me a dollar and twenty-five cents in all, and am very glad I tried them, for I was completely cured. Walter W. Paglush, 207 N. Robey St., Chicago, 111., Oct. 8 and 16, 1906." The loftiest city in the world is Pasco, in Peru. It is 14,275 feet nbove the sea. Mrs. Winslow's.Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums,reducesinfiamma tion. allays pain,cures wind colic, 25ca bottlft London has 300 clubs, with a membership of 2S0.01XJ. TO YOUNG MEN DESIRING TO LEARN THE MACHINIST'S OR IRON-MOULDER'S TRADE! Our onorpntieeshiD sv&tfm affords eood opportunities (or young men mechanically I inclined, 16 to 18 years of age, to thoroughly learn the above trades. For further information address Bos 29, Pmldence, B.I. STATB AGE AND NATIONALITY. a prilTft wanted to tioll Wireless Burglar A Mr ll I \ Alarm, Just patented; flr-?t Intro|1 U 1^ 11 I W duoed Sept !?; retails at iSl.75. " L. L. WEEKS, aw \V. 1 muii St., New Vork, .V Y. mscoviififr aL0 Ib Q O glfCi gnlch relltf soil cart# CTortl OBiefc Cool oi (MtloouUU nod 10 Da;?' irrstnuat IfSpD* Dr. (L U. eBEBV3 6?Ni But B. itliotc ?<k JSS ' ??f Appearance and Reality. Some people are rusty. Their harsh, ungainly manners eat out what is good in their character, and saw ii the very flesh of those who come near them. Some people are gilt. A very brilliant exterior they present; but the first brush of hard using rubs off - Js the gilting, and reveals the base metal beneath. A third class are polished. The polish, indeed, is on the surface; but it is a polish of solid worth, and in the multifarious crosses of human life, the more it is rubbed the brighter it grows.?Rev. W. Arnot. . The Skim Milk. The skim milk is really the most nourishing portion of the milk. It contains a large per cent, of protein and most of the sugar of milk. Care of Submarine Cables. Fifty fine vessels are constantly employed in laying and repairing the submarine cables of the world. Dr. Wiley says that human life is longer now than formerly. >jn women who by taking 8 Vegetable Compound I iave escaped serious operations, as I of 307 W. 26th St, N. Y. She writes: 'inkham's Vegetable Compound has emale trouble and I wish to express sred intensely for two years so that and was a burden to my family. I orary relief and constantly objecting to undergo. I decided to try Lydia it cured me of the terrible trouble [ have been for many years." encourage.every woman to try Lyd before sne submits to an operation. ig Invitation to Women i of female weakness are invited to nkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the located and the quickest and surest las A 1 _THE WORLD jh prove W. L jSSL nako A aeJI Mgk iU a.so ahoom gm iufacturer. fflwop w KHk tcause o/'their LjSff iring qualities. .flV Is for each part ooked after by ! aro made, you ^ ape, fit hotter, ~or -thermake. " ? cannot be aqm JIod mi anypHem. ,s name and price stamped on bottom. Take )uglas ?boes. If ho cannot supply you, send 1. Catalog free. W.L.Di>ugIa?. Brockton, Mut. OWN DOCTOR | T>a A IV* . 1VT. 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