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\ c H W\'/ry,y" ifl ? New 1Tork City.?The blouse that allows effective use of the fashionable buttons or embroidered discs as trimming is one certain to be in demand just now, and here is a model that is( admirably .veil adapted to the treatment. It can be made with skirt to match or be worn with an odd one, as liked, and the pretty band which trims the neck and front edges can be embroidered, or covered with ap plique, or banded witn soutacne, or treated in any way that fancy may suggest. The yoke also allows of variation and can be made from allover lace, from embroidery, from lingerie material, from tucked net or from any material of the sort. The blouse is made with a fitted lining and consists of the front and the backs. The fronts are tucked to yoke depth and both the front and the backs are arranged in wide tucks over the shoulders, while the lining is faced to form the yoke. The shaped trimming Dana trims tne netK eagcs of the front, and the closing is made invisibly at the back. The moderately full sleeves are gathered into straight cuffs. The quantity of material required for the sixteen year size is three and one-half yards twenty-one or twentyfour, two and one-half yards thirtytwo, or one and three-l'ourth yards forty-four inches wide, with one-half yard eighteen inches wide for the yoke, two and one-half yards of ap' pllque, ten buttons to trim as illustrated. Change in Styles. Although the change will be a gradual one, eventually the extravagantly large hat, the huge pompadour, the frills and the furbelows of the bodice and the full skirt will be a thing of the past. The new tendency is all toward the straight up-and-down type of figure?sloping, slender hips, pulled-back, tight skirts trailing to the ground, plain, fitted waists and sleeves of the old-fashioned tightfitting sort, which cling to the arm from shoulder to wrist. New Hat Kiblions. New hat ribbons show an immense white polka dot on deep colored backgrounds, such as dark red, navy blue, golden brown and green. Three yards will make a generous bow, with some to spare for draping the crown. The net bows, both ple.in and ring dotted, can be bought ready for adding to the hat all wired, and will cost less than $3. These are very pretty and airylooking and just the thing to take the pUice of the velvet bow oa a silk hat. \ionj' New Lace Designs. There are some especially beautiful new laces designed for use with i the natural and colored linens. Shirt Waist uuuonnuii.-a. I The buttonholes in the front of a shirt waist should be cut across. II they are cut up and down it is difli cult to make the waist stay buttoned Tan Shoes Popular. And still it is the tan shoe, dealers declaring that it is more popular thai? ever before. It may be harder tc keep in nice condition, but it is al ways a comfortable shoe and seems so especially suited for street weai and outing purposes generally. Style in the Back. It is the style to pay special attention to the back and the prettiest ol j gowns have backs that exactly match the front and are even more elaborately trimmed. A little embroid ered vest or point is set in the bach of the gown and finished with a flat applique of lace, while a handsomt buckle completes the picture, with big sash ends falling from the bucklc to make a charming finish to the bacli of the gown. . ' Four Gored Skirt. The skirt that allows of effective I treatment for striped material is one much in demand just now, for stripes hcitriit nf stvle and chevroc i effects are much in vogue. This on< j can be so treated with singular success, yet need not be confined tc j striped fabrics, as it is a simple gorec skirt which can be cut from any sea sonable material and either left plair or trimmed, as liked. In this instance the stripes are made to form a succession of chevrons at the front anc? at the sides, but even if striped ma terial is used it can be cut on the straight, if preferred. Indeed, the stripes allowed to take the perpendic | ular line and the skirt trimmed with a bias Dand above the hem make s combination much in vogue and alto gether satisractory. The skirt is cut in four gores and there is consequently a seam at th< f'W'ii centre front and one at the centrt back. The fulness is laid in inverted pleats. The quantity of material required for the medium size is nine yards twenty-four, five and one-fourth yards thirty-two, or four and one-fourth yards forty-four inches wide, if cut from .striped material, as illustrated;", six and one-half yards twenty-four, five and one-fourth yards thirty-two. or three and one-half yards forty-foui inches wide, if cut from plain material, or with perpendicular stripes, if materia! lias neither figure nor nap; if there should be figure or na;: five yards forty-four inches wide will be needed. THE PUT,PIT. IS ?~ n A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BV DR. CURTIS LEE LAWS. bi G Theme: Men in the Church. th I Brooklyn. N. Y.?Dr. Curtis Lee ni Laws, the new pastor of the Greene Gi Avenue Baptist Church, Sunday night m preached a special sermon to men. ar The service was held under the le auspices of the Men's League of the ar church. In the course of his address th he said some very strong things. The al subject was "Why There Are More ar Women Than Men in the Church." ut He took no text, but at once vigorous- th ly took up his theme. He said: th It is not a fact that our churches hs roaoViino' mon in our dav and Hi in our city. We are reaching men; we are reaching men in large num- fo bers and men from all classes of so- th ciety. But it is a fact that we are not is reaching men in the same proportion th and to the same number as we are Gs reaching women. This is a fact, and sii It is a fact to which we cannot be in- al; nocently indifferent. We must meet th the situation fairly, and if the fault th is in the church we must remove it. cil Here are facts which no one will th dispute. Fully two-thirds of the m :hurch members of our country are au women and more than two-thirds of ga the people in the church congregation cil are women. I doubt very much if we la; aave in Brooklyn a single church with more than thirty-three per cent, of fe men in its membership. This is a ch startling fact when we come to con- cli sider it. and it becomes more start- an ling still if church membership bears wl any relation to the question of salva- ch tion. Few will claim that a man must mi be a member of some church to be se saved, but all will agree that the wl :hurch is the place for saved men, he and that, generally speaking, sav^d men are in the church. in Why, then, is it. that with all our th equipment and zeal, we are not able m to reach men in the same proportion all as we reach women? Why is it that w< only a third of our membership are sii men, and that, relatively speaking, tii we have so few men in our coagrega- N< tinns' Pprsnnallv I love men. I re- Da ioioe in their society and fellowship, to md I do my best to interest them in dc Christianity and the church, and yet, s? broadly speaking, we have the same lit jonditions in our church that prevail w< everywhere else. I come to the study re Df this question with a great deal of th personal interest and after a great w] leal of thought. re It is claimed by specialists who aave studied this question that the co reason why men are not attracted to th :he church in larger numbers is that w] ;he ministry of the modern church is cc aot strong enough intellectually to lii satisfy men of culture and education, wi This is practically the ground taken be dv a "writer in a famous article pub- oe lished in one of our magazines. After ba :alking with hundreds of young men dc :he writer came to the conclusion that et 'The modern pulpit is sluggish and Bi stagnant," and that young men w< sent themselves from church simply of Decause the average minister is dull ex ind heavy and behind the times. th Are the men who do not attend th :hurch brainier, more intelligent or yo more cultured than the men who do as ittend church? I would like to see a ;he men who do not attend church ti{ placed upon the south side of one of ti] Dur streets and the men who do at- ur :end church placed upon the north pu side of the same street. Then I would it: like to drive slowly along the street tis between these two groups that I th might study their faces. On which ec side do you thiak I would find the orains and the culture, and the re finement and the character? Again, when non-churchgoing men prate about the uninteresting preachsrs, I always feel that they are castIng needless insults into the teeth of :heir mothers and daughters and Jr wives and sweethearts. Women read more than men, and except about po- j litical and commercial questions they J? are better informed than men. Not- . withstanding their higher culturo and i? their greater refinement, the women f1 do not find the sermons of the average *? preacher dull and inconsequential. Again, it is claimed that the j* :hurches don't seek the mei* nor wel- th some them to the services as they ar aVi/Mi "Mow norcnnq 11 v T r\n nnt ho lieve a word of this. I have been for ^ years very closely identified with the shurch life of a great city, and I have 111 been in close personal relations with a greath many of our ministers, and 1 tell you that the whole Christian ?c church is making a mighty effort to reach the unchurched men of the city. And wanting them as much as we do, it is nonsense to talk about not wel- th coming them. I have heard that in a ag certain section of Maine there is a H church which has out in the vestibule F; a. nickel-in-the-slot machine. All that in a stranger has to do is to walk in and vi Hrnn In hie niolrol nnrl niif frr?rr? fhn fo machine comes a hand to grasp his in be cordial welcome. We do not have dc anything like that here, but we can th beat that in our church, for here in many a stranger gets a hearty hand- er grasp and goes away with his nickel b( in his pocket. in I tell you that men are welcome in. bj our churches; men, irrespective of the dz accident of fine clothing; men, how- si: ever dressed and however wicked; SI they are all welcome in nine-tenths fl< of the churches; and what is more, F: they know quite well they will not only be welcome, but that we are praying that they may come. Let us glance now at some of the real reasons whv men do not come to our churches and into our churches, as ai their sisters do. w Men are driven so hard by the work ai of the week that when Sunday comes many of them are in a state of col- y1 lapse mentally, and so they spend the time in bed, or else they betake themselves to the parks or to the country ^ for recuperation. fr I know many men who are commit- J* ting a slow suicide by the work which te they are attempting to do, and I know ^ that when Sunday comes they snatch st a little rest as their only safety. I W feel that in some way they must get out from under the burden which E they are bearing, some by choice and more by necessity or else while taking care of this life they will by sheer neglect lose the life which is to come.' Now, women, on the other hand, have their work for the most part in the c] house, and they welcome the Sabbath day and the church services as a kind cc of mild entertainment and pleasant (jj diversion. There they see their friends and have a pleasant word, but cc the men have been seeing their ^ friends all the week, and now they ot want simply rest. w Men have many things .in their lives which furnish them with social life, and with a little balm for their H sore consciences. Tens of thousands of men belong to clubs and societies and lodges. Here they spend their leisure time and spare money, and many of them will single out the in charitable features of these organiza- i>( tions, and will say that thoir lodge is, v< their church, inculcating all that is th good and beautiful. When any man th allows any human society to taice the It lace of the church of God in his life, lat society has become to him a posive evil, and he ought at once to rec?nize it as a snare of the devil, hese societies do good in their way, it in comparison with the church of od they are as a rush light to a star ; the first magnitude, as a firefly to if? sun in all his glory and splendor. blame these societies for keeping any men out of the reach of the ospel, for they try to teach men that orals are as acceptable as religion, id many men are giving a blind algiance to these human institutions id at the same time believing that ey are serving Almighty God. Men so have politics to interest them, id during a political contest it seems terly out of the question to interest e ordinary man in anything else an a nniitipal discussion. Women ive few societies, and, thank eaven, they have no part in politics. Men are more enamored of certain rms of overt sin than women, and e devil, through these forms of sin, winning many men away from all e influences of the church of Christ, imbling and drunkenness are the as of men, and while some women so fall into these two classes of sin, ey are the exception rather than e rule. In many of our American ties we have one legalized place for e sale of liquor to every fifty of our en, and we cannot tell, nor do the ithorities seem to care, how many .mbling places there are in our fair iy. But all of these places live rgely upon the patronage of men. Now, iu it strange that we have so w man comparatively in our urches? Men are far more in the l-l ??? 4-V\ r\ -n nr atv> on UlXIie&j UL UVCll Sill L11 a li num&u, id that fact must be reckoned with isn you count up the men in the urches. God pity the great host of en in our city who have sold themIves bcdy and soul to the devil, and 30 have no care about righteousness re nor felicity hereafter. Society places a premium, upon the religiousness, if not upon the posire unrightcusness, of men by periling the double standard of mor3. Men do with impunity what a sman could not do at all if she de ed to remain respectable in the esnaticn of her family and friends. 3w, so long as society, composed in .rt of Christian people, permits men be libertines and drunkards, and ies not make them smart for their as, these same men will have but tie regard for religion. How can 3 expect the libertine to have any spect for religion when he is made e welcome guest In the house here, if the people lived up to their ligion, he would be loathed? How can we expect sinful men to me into the church and give up eir sins, when the men and women ith whom they associate do not disunt them in the least because of the re3 that t*hey lead? How different ith women. They must be pure to ! respectable; they must not fall ice iato the sin in which their nusnds and brothers riot, for if they i they will be scourged out of sociy. I tell you men and women of ooklyn, the social order in which ; live puts a premium upon the vice men. We are responsible to the tent of our influence. I plead with e fathers and mothers to protect eir daughters. Be ls willing that ur son should marry a fallen woman that your daughter should marry fallen man. I plead with the Chrisin men before me to refuse their innate friendship to impure men, and r\r\ nlrnnmotonma tn ollnw l'm 1UC1 UU \/UV<Uuioiuuuvu VV M?IV I. ire men the privilege of social equally in your homes. Not until Chrisin men take some such stand will e men of our generation realize the lormity of social sin. Every Man by Himself. God beholds thee individually, whoer thou art. "He calls thee by thy ime," He sees thee and understands ee. He knows what is in thee, all y own peculiar feelings and oughts, thy dispositions and likings, y strength and thy weakness. He ews thee in thy day of rejoicing and y day of sorrow. He sympathizes thy hopes and in thy temptations; e Interests Himself in all thy anx ties and thy remembrances, in all e risings and fallings of thy spirit, e compasses thee round, and bears ee in His arms; He takes thee up id sets thee down. Thou dost not love thyself bette? an He loves thee. Thou canst not irink from pain more than He dishes thy bearing it; and if He puts it l thee, it is as thou wilt put it on yself, if thou art wise, for a greater >od afterwards.?J. H. Newman. ? ? Jesus the Door. Jesus calls Himself "the door" rough which the human race can ^ain come near to God. He makes imself a door, an open way to His ather and nitr Father, a door ODen g into the deepest depths of the dine love. . . . How are we to have ith in Christ as the door? Not by >wing down and worshiping the )or, but by rising up and going irough it. How are we to have faith Him as the true vine but by gathing and taking away the fruit He jars? How do we show our faith . Him as tbe living bread? Surely r feeding our souls with it, day by ly. And how do we most sincerely iow our belief in Him as the Good lepherd unless it be by joining His )ck and following Him??James reeman Clarke. To Live We Must Grow. Are there not some of us who have ' ?-- j vtnsiw Jen trying a guuu yvuijc w &cu uu.a i old experience? If we succe.ded e should only be where we were, id if we are only going to get here we were we have abandoned le law of progress and begun the jwnward retrogression. God has Himself withered, by His vn consuming breath, the flower and agrance of your former joys, that e may lead you into something betr. Let your old experience go and ,ke the living, everlasting Chrict inead. 'hat thing thou lovest most, thou mak'st its nature thine; arthly, if that be earth?if that be God's, divine. ?R. C. Trench. The True Pole. Dean Farrar tells how an English ergyman visited two fine ships about i sail on their voyage of Arctic disivery, into the land of snow and irkness. He found the brave captain full of infidence, and, raising his eyes to le cabin, he saw there, as almost its lly ornament, an illuminated text hich read, "Have faith in God." "Ah, there," he said, pointing to le text, "there is the true pole.'-? ome Herald. Evolution. Evolution has never been the origating, creating or commanding >wer. Human thought never ad-' inced so far as to get away from at first statement in the Hook, "In o beginning God created."?The e?. W. J?\ Day, Los Angeles. The Curse of America. The curse of America is its lack of scipline. In the family, the school id the college youngsters grow up i do as they please. There is a awkish sentiment which is evidence degeneracy and which prevents the d-fashioned, wholesome enforceent of authority among children and )uth. It is not good for society and 3t good for the individuals. In every family and in every school THE NEW YORK EDITORS. Free-and-Ensy Remarks About Them di From Kentucky. aI to Why, the successor of Charles A. m Dana?Mr. WilliamM.Laffan?would o{ be more at home, and cut a great- 0j er figure, in the office or Figaro, in Paris, than in the office of the Sun, in New York; an artist and a judge of art; exquisitely accomplished in the classic lore of many lands; an au- ^ thority in pictures, poetry and music. r( But what does Mr. Laffon know?we shall not say care?about Hell-for- ^ Sartin and Yuba Dam, not to men- h tion the boys around our own Confederate Crossroads? Nothing, nothing at all, though the Courier-Journal b( has tried in vain these many moons a to teach him! 0j Mr. Charles R.Miller, of the Times, J has drunk too much of the waters of ? the Kennebec and the Penobscot, to ^ ! reck much about the waters of the Tombigbee and the Caloosahatchie? o; to say nothing about those of the Ohio and the Mississippi?whilst Mr. v( Bennett, the younger, Mr. Joseph w Pulitzer and?as we .have been told le ?Mr. Whitelaw Reid, spend most of their time abroad! o) This will account for the failure of ^ newspapers thus controlled and con- ^ ducted to interpret the residue of the country west of Buffalo and south of Jersey; politically not even able to reflect the "inner lights" of Greater r New York. What is Tammany Hall except a rebuke to the daily newspapers of the Great Metropolis? What was the Hearst-Parsons dicker (quite to forget the Murphy-Connors dicker) but another? When did any of them :ontrol a State convention?or come within a thousand miles of forecasting a national convention?or elect a Mayor of New York since Gibbs was hung, or e'en since Greeley died? They are always left at the post, as it 4 urere. Somehow, the event comes out eontrawise from their complacent prediction and boasted influence.? Henry Watterson, in the Louisville Courier-Journal. ~ m OJ T7'?? Cl.on^hsl ti OLIUt'l \ylXL S X' vi uimugiiH/ ? The problem of tram traftc in a Chinese city presents peculiar difficulties, in view of the crowded condition of the streets and the lack of familiarity of the people with time sav- e] ;ng devices generally. The construction of a new tramway system in ^ Shanghai has been practically completed, although the current will be m turned on at first only in sections q where the inexperience of the Chinese drivers and conductors will be less likely to have bad effects. Upward of twenty-three miles of tracks have L been laid, and the tram routes have been divided into eleven sections, I over which the passenger is entitled to travel?the first class fare for one bi section being only two and a half ^ cents. Each car is divided into two compartments, not on a color basis, co but rated according to fares paid. The m cars are lighted by electricity, and ar notices posted in English, French and th Chinese warn passengers against F< smoking, spitting or bringing dogs on board. A notable feature is the en- . tire absence of advertisements on the jjj cars.?Zion's Herald. gc ?? t, A Chinese Objection to Railroads. An Americanized Chinaman, Chin Gee Hee, is the projector, president and engineer-in-chief of a railroad which has recently been opened in tl the Hongkong hinterland. Of the f? six locomotives used four were pur- a: chased in the United States, the oth- p ers coming from Germany. The pres- m ident says his chief difficulty in build- R ing the road was in overcoming the ? obstinacy of the natives, who opposed the work on the ground that H the smoke from the locomotives would $ ruin their crops.?Indianapolis News. t? ti Lion and Unicorn. The animosity which was supposea bi i to edst between these beasts, as referred to by Spenser in his "Faerie Queene," is allegorial of the deeprooted ill-will which anciently existed between England and Scotland. Ever since 1603 the royal arms have been supported, as now, by the English lion and the Scottish unicorn, in to- j ken of the fact that St. George and St. Andrew had at last shaken hands and forgotten their old differences. THE FIHST TASTE Learned to Drink Coffee When a Baby If parents realized the fact that coffee contains a drug?caffeine? which is especially harmful to children, they would doubtless hesitate "~ before giving the babies coffee to j drink. "When 1 was a child in my mother's arms and first began to nibble things at the table, mother used to give me sips or conee. as my parents used coffee exclusively at meals 1 never knew there was anything to drink but coffee and water. "And so 1 contracted the coffee habit early. I remember when quite young, the continual use of coffee so affected my parents that they tried roasting wheat and barley, then ground it in tne corcee-min, as a suu- | stitute for coffee. j "But it did not taste right and then went bark to coffee again. That 4 was long before Postum was ever | heard of. I continued to use coffee until 1 was 27, and when I got into office work, 1 began to have nprvous ^ spells. Especially after breakfast I j< was so nervous 1 could scarcely at- 21 tend to my correspondence. ^ "At night, after having coffee for c supper, I could hardly sleep, and on a: rising in the morningwould feel weak ? and nerveus. p "A friend persuaded me to try Postum. My wife and I did not like it at first, but later when boiled good and strong it was fine. Now we would not give up Postum for the best coffee we ever tasted. "I can now get good sleep, am free from nervousness and headaches, f recommend Postum toallcoffee drinkers. "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle .Creek, aiiiSt*. nefco Roaa to "Wellville," in pkgs. Ever rend theabovc letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of humua interest. is desirable to have some stringent filiations, if for no other reason lan having them complied with. The est foundation for character is the abit of submission to authority, and le ume xo acquire mai nauii is ju lildhood and youth. None can ever scome so competent to wisely direct s those who have first learned to Dey. The looseness and instability in merican character has its beginning i the looseness and instability of imily discipline and in the insistence t silly and inefficient parents that te same looseness of discipline shall 3 carried into the schools, from hich it easily extends into the edges. The fledgeling in college will lrn out a much more useful member t society if he is made to behave imself or clear out.?San Francisco hronicle. A KENTUCKY CASE. hat Will Interest All Suffering Women. Mrs. Delia Meanes, 328 E. Front L., Maysville, Ky., says: "Seven t years ago I began to notice sharp pain in the kidneys and a bearing down sensation through the hips, dull headache and dizzy spells. Dropsy appeared and my feet and ankles swelled so I could not get my shoes on. I wa3 in ilsery and had despaired of ever getng cured, when 1 decided to try oan's Kidney Pill's. One box helped ie so much that I kept on until enrely cured." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. oster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Truth' and the Press. The demand made upon the mod n newspaper by its readers is that shall be honest in its treatment of ie news of the day, both as regards s presentation and the comments ade upon it.?New Haven Journalourier. HAD BAD ITCHING HUMOR. Imbs Below the Knees Were RawFeet Swollen?Sleep BrokenCured in 2 Days by Cuticura. "Some two months ago I had a humor eak out on my limbs below my knees, bey came to look like raw beefsteak, all d, and no one knows how they itched id burned. They were so swollen tbat I mid not get my sJioes on for a week or ore. I used five or six different remedies id got no help, only when applying them le burning was worse and the itching >less. jr two or three weeks the suffering was tense and during that time 1 did not eep an hour at a time. Then one morng I tried a bit of Cuticura. From the oment it touched me the itching was >ne and I have not felt a bit of it since, he swelling went down and in two days 1 id my shoes on and was about as usual, eorge B. Farley, 50 South State St., ConV TT Mav U 1907." London and Liverpool are both at ie level of the sea. Glasgow Is thirty set above it, Manchester fifty feet ad Birmingham 300 feet. ITS, St. Vitus' Dance, JNervous Diseases peranently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve estorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. r.H.lt. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Pbila..Pa. The loftiest city is Pasco, in Peru. It is [,275 feet above the sea. Irs. WinsIoWr, Soothing Syrup torChildre'n inMommo. ;eunug,buhciis i,iic^uiiio,*?vi uwoiuua>u.iiuon,allays pain, cures wind colic.25ca bottle Swiss chimney sweeps all wear high its. N. Y.-23 ^^^^^PRicHE?s5roR eve* lyiLMQLK ur i ntrKntiiiTi MKN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CH *caj? W. L Dougtaa makea and eeHt **"& mon'a S2.BO, S3.00and S9.BO than any other manufacturer J&Qr* world, hecauao they hold ehape, tit better, wear lonpe aro of greater value than any ehoea fn the world to-day, W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Canno aST AVTION. W. L. DotjffLu name and pri< Bold bv the best shoe dealers everywhere. Shoes c (rated Catalog free to any address. L j JI , la] FOR M E N. Twohundrec HI bottoms of your uhnea will tire your Sa feet. 8KREEMER shoes are made that's why they always fit. Lool ^ Skreemere readily, write us for dirt I FRED. F. FIELD C< Sickens earn n Whether you raise Chickens for fun or et the best results. The way to do this is /e offer a book telling all >ct?a book written bv a 5 years in raising Poultry, [ . ad to exi)eriment and spend ||4 s ay to conduct the business? Bfi. 1 ENTS in postage stamps. nd Cure Disease, how* to larket, which Fowls to Save ideed about everything vou must know on OSTI'AID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS Book Publishing House, 13 It is no use ad you have the Go having the Goc advertise. ' ^ xrr\ . /. r.Q ^Oixir^r oenna acts genth/j/et promptly onthe bowels, cleanses; me system e||ectuQll^) assists one in overcoming habitual constipation; permanently. To get itsi beneficial ejects.buy tKe genuine. St _ I. A J L +1 rianufaciuruu uy me s CALIFORNIA JigSxrup Co. SOLD Bf LEADING DRUGGISTS- 504 p^BOTTll nr WEATHER EMOLLIENTS For Preserving, Purtfying and Beautifying the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands, fnv Cttnkitrn Upof I>orti 1U1 JUIIUUIU, iicai lvaoii, Chaflngs, and for all the purposes of the Toilet Sold throughout the world. Depots: London,27, Charterhouse Sq.: Paris. 5. RuedelaPalx: Australia, R. Towns 4 Co., Sydney; India, B. K. Pattt Calcutta: China. Hone Komi DrugCo.: Japan. Maruy*. Ltd ., Toklo: South Africa. Lennon, Ltd., Cape Town. etc.; Ruwla. Ferrelo (Apteka). Moscow: U.S.A. Potter Dni? A Chem. Corp.. Sdle Props.. Boston. aa~ Post-tree. Cutlcura Booklet on the Skin. >j Boys and girls "Combo - Comic Post Cards: something entirely new; a regular clr? cus. H. L Schwartz, 1091 Drexel Bldg., Pnlla., Pa. . Beautiful Reversible Ruffs rnaau from your old carpets. Send for circular. American Rug Mfg., 294 Vermont St., Brooklyn, N.^ nPOPSY NEw DISCOVERT; f1?o?aoiokrelief*ndcor** wontoaa??. Book of tMtlmonlnli A 10 dart' trentmcml Free. Dr. E. H. GB?EK8 80N8.BoxB.Mlanu.Q? SisSHf ^ & Pf El ILDREW. ^ Jk. 0 sftaM TMl ff ri'*"'-ss ^Se^^55: t Be Equalled At Anj Pries *"'" "* ee la temped on bottom. Tnkf W? 8nh?tlljrt^ sailed from factory to any part of the world- Ilia* VV. L. DOLGLAM, Brocktou, Mail. w 3 M B "M I pounds, more or less, resting on the HQ * A Al * V.4A .A?. ieei uniess tun uiu? uuuuiu^ hl yuui i correctly from the bottom up, and B t for the laHl. If yon don't find H ictiona how to oacnre them. Kg 3., BrocKton, Mass. ? IDMETVIlf You Kn0W Howto III WIL I I Handle Them Properly profit, you want to do it intelligently 'and i to profit by the experience of others. you need to know on the sub man who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Dctect Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and the subject to make a success. SsENT ? TV STAMPS. 4 Leonard St., N. Y. City? vertising unless >ods, and no use )ds unless you ' . -