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r i ^ Kew York City.?The over waist With wide sleeves in Japanese style la an unquestioned favorite, and this T leslgn is one of the latest and pret- g tiest that have appeared. It gives an T wceedingly elegant and somewhat ; elaborate effect, yet in reality is very s ^ iltnple, as Is made evident by the smaller sketch. Applique is arranged between the tucks and the front edges ind between the groups, and there Is j a vest portion which is of lace, but ^ the essential portion of the blouse is, as already stated, simple in the extreme. If lace is not liked for the L~ surplice portions they could be made ' of the material trimmed or of em- 1 broidery or of any similar material. 1 Again in place of the applique could < be substituted almost any pretty 1 banding, a design executed in sou- 1 tache or some pretty embroidery 1 worked onto the material. The gir- 1 ^ die allows a choice of the width illus-'1 "?" trated or a narrower one, and the over blouse is equally well adapted to the entire gown and the separate waist. The blouse is made with the tucked portions, the sleeves and the surplice portions, all of which are joined to a foundation girdle, over which the draped one is arranged. The quantity of material required lor the medium size is two and onequarter yards twenty-one, two yards twenty-seven or one jard forty-four inches wide, three-quarter yard of bias velvet, three and one-half yards of applique, seven-eighth yard of lace for surplice portions to make as illustrated. Necklace Fad. The jewelers are showing a new way to wear a necklace. The first circle of it is given to the coiffure instead of the neck. After going once around a loop falls down and under the chin, like nothing so much as Tommy Atkins' nose strap, except . this goes lower, quite below the chin. The second loop falls lower still, and fVilrrt onrt Tact tr? thfi waist. This ujg ? arrangement is a trifle extreme, however, to tempt the conservative dresser. < \ i \ - Chenille Loops. Chenille loops upon tailored suits vould once have seemed almost ablurd, but the tailored suits of the present day are things of beauty as i veil as of service, and really handlome ornamentation is permissible Panel Effects"in Favor. A feature of all the new skirts is he panel effect in the front and back, n many skirts the front panel exends above the waist line and forms 1 i portion of the girdle. These pan- ' sis give a perfectly smooth fit, and tre universally becoming. Blue Chiffon Trimming. Natty blue chiffon velvet trims a :repe de chine gown of the same color | ;hat is designed for wear on the Ri- ! riera. Its front is wrinkled in the j 'ashionable way to a short apron lepth, but the skirt is not as clinging is many French models by the same lesigner, though there will be but me petticoat worn beneath it and ;hat without flounces. Pninrfd Pnll?rs the Mode. By all odds the smartest linen colars are the colored ones. Those in ight blue, pink, gray and ieaf green ire particularly novel. They are usuilly single-fold and not flapped, and ire scalloped and embroidered along ;he upper edge. The lower one, vhere the buttonholes for fastening j ire placed, is plain. The embroidery I s in cotton, usually pure white, and he collars are worn with white wool >r duck, linen or French flannel vaists. Model lJasqoe. No matter what form the blouse or :he waist may take, a perfect fitting ining is the first essential to its suc;ess. Here is one which it would be .veil for every woman to possess, and 1 ivhich can be utilized in a number of ways. It can be made closed at the , 'ront or at the back, it can be made with high neck or low round or \ ; square neck, and it can be cut off at the waist line or finished in either round or pointed outline below the waist. To use it to the greatest ad vantage it snuum ue tut aiiu cAatuj fitted to the figure, then reserved (or future use, as it makes a foundation from which all others can be cut and will render all future dressmaking a comparatively simple matter. There are double darts and both side, back and under-arm gores. The sleeves are of the latest cut and shape and can be cut off in any desired length so that they make a perfect foundation for auy full or draped sort. Silk and cotton linings both are appropriate. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and onehalf yards twenty-one, or two yards thir?.v-six inches wide THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. J. H. JOWETT M. A. Theme: Every Man's Pcrfcctlon In Christ. London, England.?The following brilliant discourse was delivered by the Rev. J. H. Jowett, M. A. Its title is "Every Man's Perfection in Christ." His text was: "Christ * * * whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every nran in all wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus."?Col. 1:28. This is an amazing and inspiring Ideal, and all the more wonderful that it springs from the lips of an old man. If it had come from a company of young crusaders it would have been perfectly natural as the war-cry of young fellows just buckling on their armor and setting out to their earliest conquest. The veteran toiler is often a disillusioned man, for the early vision has proved a dissolving view, the strenuous purpose has become less tense, the gay apocalypse which tinged the horizon at dawn has faded out of the sky, and the earnestness which aimed at achievements far ahead has cooled down to more immediate and accessible ends. But here is an old man of quite another order. He has spent the strength of his days in cutting ?ne roads through rugged and trackless wastes, and everywhere has encountered persecution, resentment, and has often been treated as the offscouring of the earth. His little churches are infested with puerilities, and even men for whom he has travailed are turning out to be enemies of the Cross of Christ. Yet here at the end of the day, in the imperious grip of Rome, is the old man, with the same undaunted purpose, yearning to present every man perfect in Christ. Here is an old age worth coveting, an eventide that is light! "Every man * * * every man every man." It is a threefold blow In the face of a very popular heresy. The very reiteration of the inclusive term reveals to us one of the foes the apostle had to face. There was the colossian heresy, which sought to make spiritual privileges the prerogative of a highly-favored aristocracy. There was also the Jewish heresy, fenced about by the same limitations. Here again the privileges of grace were the perquisites of a class, and not the blood-bought rights of a race. Side by side with that heresy place the words of our text: "Christ, whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus." There is the breadth of the apostle's glorious ideal in the redemption of men. Mark also the height of it?"perfect." Surely in the first place the term suggests the removal of every man's detects and faults. But perfection is more. That is a negative ministry and merely preparatory to a positive ministry. Perfection is more than the removal of excrescences. When your convert is washed he has still to be perfected. The perfection of every man means the evolution of all the powers in a man's life that are common in the life of the race. It means the awakening of a man's primary fundamental senses; the great mysti cal senses of sight and hearing, concerning which there are many exhortations in the Word o? God. "I heard a voice from Heaven;" "In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord;" "0 taste and see that the Lord is good"?what wonderful senses are exercised there! Perfection means not only the evolving of the common endowment of men, but the manifestation of every man's own peculiar significance and individual color,- which is the lamp of the great Creator's hand. "Every man perfect"?the fascinating wonder of it! How is this to be attained? By what means are men to be perfected? [ cannot tell you hew happy I am that my function is to proclaim a Gospel and not to fashion one. My function is that of a herald, to raise the trumpet to my lips and blow no uncertain sound. My task is made clear by the apostle who is so detailed in the exposition of this truth. He tells me the threefold ministry uy iueaiib ui wniuii Lint* ycifecting of men, is to be gained: (1) by preaching Christ, (2) by educating the conscience, (3) by the energies of sacrificial toil. How are we to awaken the sleeper? By preaching Christ. Every man's perfection is attained through the exaltation of every man's Christ. If we set about getting the perfection of men without Christ, we might as well try to make a garden without the sun. There is no other who can reach the sleeper and open his eyes to see a new world. The ways of service and the ways of modern life are littered with the tear-stained confessions of men who have tried to secure the perfection of their fellows without Christ. Leave out Christ, and what is there left for us? Culture and noble ideals will not do. Sonorous words and Emersonian maxims will not wake t.he dead. You may as well string your ngniea tairy-iamps across your garden, and expect the seeds in the earth to germinate, as expect to awake dead Bonis by reiterating Emersonian maxims and high ideals. We cannot do without the Nazarene. It is not enough to do Christian work merely, b\it in the doing of it we have to present Christ and allow Him to work. "I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto Me." That is where the magnetism centres?not in my work which resembles the Lord's, but in the Lord Himself. By our labor we can warm the surface, but we cannot warm through or kindle the flame that shall transfigure the heart. It is beautiful to be used in the service of our fellows; but we are playing with a mighty problem if we think this is sufficient. Men are in need of high ideals, but they arc in greater need of the Saviour. Apart from Him, everything else acts like an opiate, and benumbs tbo sleeper into deeper slumber. If the sleeper is to be aroused, we have got to preach Christ. The second human ministry to he used in the perfecting of men is the education of the conscience, "warning every man and teaching every man in all wisdom." This warning and teaching follow the awakening. We need the Christ to awaken the sleeper, and then we have so to educate him when he is awake that he will havr* an ever-increasing sense of duty and a more exquisite feeling regarding what is right and wrong. According to my interpretation of the teaching of Jesus Christ, the progress of Christian living is always in the direction of a keener discernment of the trifle. We grow bigger men in Christ when things that have never been heeded by us come into view. When our religion comes down to our trifl??, w'hen all the little things are just lika\ lamDs alone the 1 I \ I < ' way?when not only the great crises ? but the tiny commonplaces are beau tified?then we become big. It is in the direction of the discernment oil g the simple, the inclusion of the trifle, that Christian growth proceeds. So vvhen a man is awake we have got to educate his conscience and his moral and spiritual perceptions until he can J hear the .faintest call of duty even along a commonplace road. The third human means whereby men will be perfected is the ministry of sacrificial toil. "Whereunto I labor, striving according to his work- < ing, which Worketh in me mightily." t There is no English word which 1 brings out the meaning of "labor" as < used here. In John 4, where Jesus 1 meets the woman of Samaria, Ho "being wearied with His journey, sat i on the well." This is the word trans- < lated here, as if the apostle said, "I ] labor and share the weariness of i Jesus." It is laboring to the point 1 of fatigue, to the loss of blood. Men < will be perfected through some laboring till they are spent. It is taking < your thought and giving it to the 1 thoughtless, taking your strength and giving it to the strengthless. It is 1 the morally and spiritually healthy I taking their blood to the morally and ] spiritually anaemic. It includes the provision of decent houses, the apportionment of a fair day's labor, ' the removal of every fence and bar- < rier along legitimate roads, the smashing of every padlock which 1 holds the soul in unholy bondage. But to give a man a better house and render him like service in other 1 things is no more giving him Christ 1 than a free library is Mr. Carnegie. ' It may be Christian work, but it is not Christ. It is chivalrous work, but it is no substitute for Him. I would not class such services among things secular. I would keep them within the palace, but would not allow them 1 to have the throne. When you have given a man a better home and have placed a garden round his house, you have cnly prepared the way of the Lord?the King has yet to come. You have got to preach Jesus to awake the dead, to educate the man's conscience when he is awake, to devote your energies in sacrificial toil to the removal of all hindrances to a man's moral and spiritual progress. Let us not forget to see to our- ! selves. Even the reformer needs the Saviour; and the crusader needs the Christ. Even the best worker in this mission will falter and fail un- . less he be sustained. "Be thou faith- ! ful unto death, and I will give thee , a crown of life." The promise applies . now. It is as if the Lord said to us: "Look after thy fidelity and I will look after thy vitality." It is not : when the warfare is over that I shall 1 want my crown; the Lord waits to crown me now. Then preach Jesus, educate and refine the conscience, give your blood. "Every man perfect"?make that your aim. Confront everybody with that purpose in your mind, and see in everybody the possibility of per- . fection in Christ. Live for this; grow old for this; die for this. i Soldiers of Christ, arise. And put your armor on: Strong in the strength which God supplies i Through His eternal Son. ; Caught. A member of the Pittsburg Con* + + lereiice lens au iuiei oimg uwo story on one of his own boys. The incident happened when the lad was quite young, but after he had learned to pray. He had some trouble one day with his older brother. They came to their father with the matter as he sat at work in his study. The I merits of the case were examined into by the father, and when he was through it was clear that the younger boy was entirely in the fault. The youngster also keenly realized that fact. After giving the boy a kindly admonition, the father turned again to his book. Presently ho heard the little fellow over in the corner of the room praying. Among the petitions which reached the father's ear was this one: "O Good Man, do help me, for I'm caught." It's the old story of the "child being father to the man." There is a supposition current that there are some praying folks in the world who really don't work much at the business except when they get about where the preacher's boy was. His case had this merit in it, that he frankly confessed his unpleasant position; acknowledged that he was "caught." The full-grown man who pleads for help on the same ground j usually shuns a confession of bis motive as long, as possible.?Pittsburg Christian Advocate. ? A Life That Defeats Itself. Self-centred life is everywhere the great disturber of human hapiness. It defeats itself and keeps its victims forever upon the rack. It collides with others' Interests, and God is in its way. It destroys the peace of the home. It leads husbands to be indifferent or unkind to their wives, and wives to regard their husbands only as the chief of their own conveniences. It underlies suits for divorce. It leads children to demand that the whole of the family arrangement shall be managed with reference to their personal pleasure. It breeds social jealousies and neighborhood quarrels; it breaks up church choirs, scrambles for the chief seats in the synagogues, and sets church members to praying, "Lord, grant that we may sit on Thy right a rr*u? 1 fTKv nana ana uu my icn m j.uj uiu&dom." It leads Diotrephes to love the preeminence. It is to the credit of he religion of Christ that selfishness c?nnot live in peace with it.?Rev. D. W. Hunting- , ton, D. D. Beautiful Through Sacrifice. She was sitting upon her mother's lap?a lassie of five?and she was urging an answer to a childlike question. The mother's hands were dark and scarred, and the child had often noted the difference between her mother's hands and those of others. "Tell me, mamma, why are your hands so dark? They are not pretty at all." But there was hesitancy on the mother's part; she did not wish to tell the story. Yet on this occasion she was urged so strongly that she said: "Once, when you were a little girl, we were sitting before the open grate. You rolled from my lap and fell into the fire. I quickly picked you up and put out the flames with my hands; they have been dark and marked ever since." After some moments' silence, the little girl said: "Mamma, they are the most beautiful hands 1 have ever seen." 'Search the Scriptures." "I speak as a man of the world to j men of the world; and I say to you, 'Search the Scripturcs.' The Bible is the Book of all others to be read at all ages and in all conditions of human life; not to be read once or twice through, and then laid aside; but to be read in small portions of one or two chapters a day and never to be omitted unless by some overwhelming necessity."?John Quiney Adams. 1 SITTER WAR ON INTEMPERANCE J she iCLDTEES FIGHTING THIS CURSE GREATLY CHEEKED. Tbi for Wc Irs. Stevens Hopeful ? Prohibition c Sentiment is Gaining Ground?" tha Does Not Believe tho Army Can- 1,01 teen Will Be Restored. That voters and legislators are rj :oming to understand that prohibi.ion is not impracticable, but that, on ;he contrary, it is the best thing, jconomically, Is what Mrs. Lillian M. M. Stevens, president of the National a v Woman's Christian Temperance Un- tioi ion, believes. She is especially en- wh :ouraged by the triumph of the Pro- eve biibitionists in Georgia, which State rec jhe has recently been visiting to at- wai tend the convention of the Woman's Soi Christian Temperance Union. me ? a A? 4.1,?4- A.: i lie couiury useu iu tuiun. mui it tut could not get along without licensing ent the liquor sellers, that the revenue is i was too necessary to be dispensed nec with for merely moral reasons," Mrs. Cm Stevens said to a New York Tribhne the reporter at her home, near Portland, per Me., the other day. "But now the ]ut truth is making itself known ? the truth that it costs far more to take I care of the saloons' annual crop of fon human wrecks than the revenue from un' the liquor business amounts to. That Is what the good people feel more and more, and there are enough of these 3 to carry ths day, once they get rid Go of the idea that the license system is On an economic necessity. 30C "The two great gains of the year ha; for the White Ribboners are the victories in Georgia and Oklahoma. To set have a great Stato like Oklahoma enter the Union with a prohibition ^ clause in its constitution, with a md- ?] jority of its people voting for temperance?that is certainly fine. The temperance people of Georgia bad to a " fight for the prohibition, law just en- Ba acted there, but they, have it, and ate their struggle will help' the States J which are still controlled by the liq- ?jj uor traffic to break away. "Temperance has won a victory in ? South Carolina, too. That is the abol- ' ishment of the Gothenburg, or dis- 7? pensary, system, which failed utterly v as a temperance measure. The Gothenburg system was the last hope of p the men who thought they could *n stand for license and temperance at "r one and the same time. I think now , that about all possible forms of li- ja cense law have been tried and found wanting as temperance measures. Mj ConSeauently. the path is clear for, te< out and out prohibition. Nearly alj U? the Southern States are ripe for prohibition." a3 "What about the army canteen?, There seems to be a clamor for itq restoration. Do you think this will J?5 be accomplished?" "I do not believe the anti-canteen Uc! law, so called, will be repealed," said Mrs. Stevens. "That law was passed 3 by a large majority vote and aftetf the most careful consideration, and Congress won't undo, its work, I am / confident." "Do you think the hotels will ever be won over to prohibition? Leading hotel proprietors all over the country assert that without bars they cannot make hotelkeeping pay." I "People do not travel to drink,** said Mrs. Stevens emphatically. "The 1 great majority of men, to say nothing of the women and children, are not dependent upon liquor drinking. Even the drinking man, unless he i^ far gone in dissipation, prefers for his family a hotel free from liquor selling. Some of the largest and most prosperous hotels in this country have not attempted to sell liquor. That is true of hotels where I have been in California and other States, ' and I feel sure that The Piedmont j 11 rca on/1 txt a 11 ClilU LUC UI/UU 1U1 MUVL ?. equipped hotels in Georgia will succeed under prohibition and will not break the law. "In the last few months I have traveled in many States, and I have seen less drinking in the dining cars and at hotel tables in license States than in previous years. I have noticed this in Canada also. Total abstinence sentiment is advancing every ~ where. For many years the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, th9 Good Templars, the Prohibition party and other organizations have been working for this end. Now, commercialism is realizing that to protect its interests it must oppose the liquor traffic. And commercialism can accomplish almost anything it wills." What Merchants Know. Recently the Leavenworth Daily Post, a paper opposed to law enforcement, sent a member of its staff to Kansas City to Interview the business _ _ 1 U 4-* -?i?i I men, ana Wits uuxicbl euuu^u iu puulish their statements, and in doing bo quoted the largest real estate dealer and owner in the city as saying that the merchants of that city would ? raise $20,000 in a day to keep the Baloons closed as they now are.?' ? Union Signal. % Educational Work. ? In South Carolina, evidently, the r dispensary system has done a great ^ educational work. It has stripped hi liquor drinking of the many fictitious w; attractions which it possesses else- C where, and by removing temptation ai has inclined the people to sobriety " and even abstinence. Yet this result ? has been accomplished ^Ithsat any "puritanical proscription" or any abhorrent stimulation of "hypocrisy and ? Pharisaism."?New York Tribune. The Next W. T. C. J The next World's Temperance Con- tt? gress will meet in London in 1909. $ Paris anti-alcohol reformers have put $ in a bid for the 1911 Congress. W America sent sixteen representatives JR to the eleventh World Congress just #> held in Stockholm. <{> Temperance Notes. $ License is a failure. $ German iemperance people want $ the Government to set aside special cars for drinking( folks on Saturday and Sunday nights. Cleveland, Ohio, in proportion to population, has more saloons than wh any other city in the United States; abl falling heir to that unenviable distinci eas tion by reason of the San Francisco Dit earthquake. St. Louis and Milwaukee are close competitors for second place. Oklahoma has joined the sisterhood y, of Slates, and as a result 5GO saloon-j * keepers closed their doors and hung up signs?For cale?as the newcomer ' has a prohibition clause in her constitution. In all the States there Is a marked tendency toward higher license fees, ?i reduction in the number of drinking places, and new restrictions on thtl m hours in which, and the persons to t whom, liquor may be sold. The liquor trade is manifestly alarmed by the recent developments, ftnd tho prediction has been made that, there will be some sort of anti- -At liquor planks in the platforms of both the great political parties. j w . \ lie Norwegians are t)>c longest-lived of ropean nations, and the Spaniards the irteot. Only Ono "Hromo Qoinlne" it is Laxative Bronio Quinine. Look the signature of 1S. W. Grove. Used the >rld over to Cure a Cold in Une LJay. "??0C. 'abbages in Cuba grow to such a size < ,t a single head often weighs twenty mds. CURED HER THREE CHILDREN. is Suffered with Itching Eczema? ' Saby Had a Tender Skin, Too? Relied on Cuticura Remedies. Some years ago my three little girls had ery bad form of eczema. Itching erupte formed on the backs of their heads ich were simply covered. I tried almost rything, but failed. Then my mother ommended the Cuticura Remedies. I shed my children's heads with Cuticura ip and then applied the wonderful oint- $] nt, Cuticura. I did this four or five ies and I can'say that they have been ? irely cured. I have another baby who 30 plump that the folds of skin on his ? k were broken and even bled. I used ticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and > next morning the trouble had disap- y ired. Mme. Napoleon Duceppe, 41 Duh St., Montreal, Que., May 21, 1907." D rour minutes and twenty-nine and one- d irth seconds is man's record for staying v ier water. \ ti Billion Dollar Grass. VIost remarkable grass of the century, ff od for three rousing crops annually, e Iowa farmer on 100 acres sold $3,- Jj 1.00 worth of seed and had 300 tons of ? ir KcaiHoo T+ in immense. Do trv it. tor 10c and this notice a id to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La dsso, Wis., to pay postage, etc.. and ^ ;y -will mail you tne only original seed d :alog published in America with 8am; is of Billion Dollar Grass, Mucaroni heat, the sly miller mixer, Sainfoin the P f soil luxuriator, Victoria Rape, the 20c 11 ton green food producer, Silver King ? rley yielding 173 du. per acre, etc., etc., \^nd if you send 14c we will add a pack2 of new farm seed never before seen I yon. John A. Salzer Seed Co., La a osse, Wis. A. C. L. B This century ivill have twenty-four leap irs, the greatest possible number. fi , "V Brown's Bronchial Troches v ive a world-wide reputation for cur- ti g coughs, sore throats and relieving onchltis and asthma. E tVitli a population of 41,000.000, only 441 panese have fortunes of $250,000 or over, ti st rs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forChildren ;thing,softens thegums.redudesintiammain,allayspain,cures windcoIicj25cabottle. in ;? ? \ good glpve cutter will make as much $100 a week in Paris. Sfou ought lo be satisfied with nothing a than Nature's laxative, Garfield Tea! / ide of Herbs, it overcomes constipation, jfj nilates liver and kidneys, and brings si >od Heahh Ft requires 3200 conductors to keep New w >rk street car passengers stepping lively. ^ NO MORE MUSTARD PL THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EX' ?f"ll[ Capsicum-Vas* IP EXTRACT OF THE < "1 PEPPER PLANT \ ==== DIRECTLY IN VAS ygggg DON'T WAIT TI COMES-KEEP A A QUICK SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS RE -IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PL < DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT A substitute for and superior to mustan blister the most delicate skin. The pain-; article are wonderful. It will stop the tc ache and Sciatiaa. We recommend it as irritant known also as an external remed and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty we claim for it, and it will be found to be children. Once used no family will be the best of all your preparations." Acce the same carries our label, as otherwise ii Send your address and we will mail our preparations which 17statest. CHESE3ROUGI shoes at all prices, for every ""^member ofthe family, men, boys, women, misses and chili *i23=> W. L Douglam makea and aella n men'a $2,BO, $3.OO and $3. BO at _ than any other manufacturer In fig? world, bacauam they hold t mhapo, tit better, wear longer, are of greater value than anyo ohoea (n the world to-day. c W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cl not G tr OAUTIOtV. W. L. Doutfas name anaprice! 8old by the l>est eboe dealers everywhere. Shoes maJ trated Catalog tree to any address. llCKENS EARN Ml wVictVioT* vnn raise Chickens for fun or pi t the best results. The way to do this is fe offer a book telling all ct?a book written by a mhhbw i years in raising Poultry. [ i5 id to experiment and spend ||i RjS av to conduct the business? Aft HINTS in postage stamps, id Cure Disease, how to [arket, which Fowls to Save ideed about everything you must know on t! OSTPAED ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS ! Book Publishing House, 134 AN IMITATION T PATTERN TIME I There was never an lmltatlo: tators always counterfeit tho ger what you ask for, because genuine i Imitations are not advertised, but c ability of the dealer to sell you son good" when you ask for the genuln on the Imitation. Why accept lmlta ulne by Insisting? REFUSE DUTAT Rabbits, says a naturalist, nave # lite tails so that the young may be J le to distinguish their mother In " ;e of pursuit. The color cvf the rab- J is so like that of the ground that , s would otherwise be difficult, if W( t impossible. N.Y.?10 I ga feere is Only Ono "Brotmo C bat is .axative Bro USED THE WORLD OVER TO Ol waje remember the full name. Loo! this signature on every box. 25c ^ After suffering for seven years* bis woman was restored to health y Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable 'ompound. Bead her letter. /t Mrs. Sallie French, of Paucannla, nd. Ter., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: "I had female troubles for seven ears?was all run-down, and so nerous I could not do anything. The octors treated me for different troubles ut did me no good. 'While in this con- ; ition I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for ad- . - r & ice and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege~ ible Compound, and 1 am now strong ad well." 'ACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For 1-hirty years Lydia E. Pinkara's Vegetable Compound, made ($, rom roots and herbs, nas been the tandard remedy for female ills* nd has positively cured thousands of romenwho have been troubled with , isplacemente, inflammation, ulceraion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, eriodic pains, backacne, tnat Dear- , ig-down feeling, flatulency, indices- o ; /. & ion, dizziness,or nervous prostration, VTiy don't you try it ? Don't hesitate to -write to Mrs. inkham if there is anything bout yonr sickness, you do not mderstand. She will treat your Btter inconfidence and ad vise you ree. No woman ever regrreited '} rriting her, and because of her / ast experience she has helped thousands. Address, Lynn, mass. :ortunes in Real Estate A responsible property owner as local represents.ve wanted In every village and town in the United ates. This Is a straight business proposition withit strings. Positively no money wanted from you? at there is lots for you to make. Young, energetic len with ambition can easily double their present icome. Write today (giving one reference) and beime Branch Manager for your section. HEAL ESTATE OWNERS' ASSOCIATION OP AMERICA, v 25 West 4 2d Street, New York. l GENTS?Improved specialty for automobile ftk v owner*: quick sellers, big profits; illustrated rculars. Write today. JOHN UNSER, l2Parham ' 'tf-j xeet, Carthage, N. Y. ^alonpn's Eyewater . ASTERS TO BLISTER I rERNAL COUNTER-IRRITAtrn^ " 'jj iim. ; CAYENNE TAKEN 'I EUNE *~"^=r:3EilfL ' if LL THE PAIN * TUBE HANDY :ady cure for pain.-price isc. ; - u ire TIN?AT ALL DRUGGISTS and OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. ? A) i or any other plaster and will not allaying and curative qualities of the >othache at once, and relieve Head- t the best and safest external counter- ^ ly for pains in the chest and stomach ; complaints. A trial will prove what invaluable in the household and for without it. Many ptople say " it is pt no preparation of vaseline unless ; Is not genuine. our Vaseline Booklet describing i will Interest you. ] H MFG. CO. New York City a ; jesssra 0 E?uaMAt Any . :' la stamped on bottom. Tak* Wo 8oIhUM?? Jed from factory to any part of the world. Ilia*W. L. UOIJOLA4, Brockton, Ha*. MjrviYou Know Howt? LinC I > Handle Them Properly rofit, you want to do it intelligently and to profit by the experience of others. you need to know on the siXh man who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the beat for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Detect Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and he subject to make a success. SENT IN STAMPS. Leonard St,, N.. Y, City. AKES FOR ITS"*V, REAL ARTICLE | a made ef an Imitation. Imi- <jj mine article. The genuine is ? articles are the advertised ones. $ lepend for their business on the J uethlng claimed to be "Just as o e, because be makes more profit < | .tlons when you can get the gen- < > i rrn that's pobe-?^v t r r 11 ind 9 amm* reliable, write lor na'^ql? irnew Catalogue. It's FREE.. WkkuA J. H. Gusoir & Su. Mmuuub, Mui. Die output of all the vineyards of the >rld is estimated to be 3,?>54,410,000 lions. luinine99 mo Quinine IRE A COLO !M OME DAY. ';<V" " ' 'J' v .. ..