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? ?! ?. I I > I I' I ! MM M I I I . New York City.?Simple blouses are those apt to be in demand at this season of the year, and this one is novel and attractive, while it involves very little labor in the making. There is the centre-front, or vest-like portion, which gives a distinctly novel effect, while it also allows of the invisible closing at the left of the front, and there are kimono sleeves which ticoH r\r> nnt o c H lr n rl T n thp illustration lineu i^immed with soutache braid and 7/ith banding of porcelain blue, this use of color on white being one of the notable features of the season. The blouse is made with fronts, centre-front and back. The fronts are tucked for their entire length, the outermost tucks meeting those in the back, and it is beneath these tucks that the kimono sleeves are attached. The centre-front is simply arranged over "the fronts and is hooked into place beneath the left edge, the fronts meeting at the centre beneath. The sleeves are of moderate fulness and gathered into straight cuffs. There is a prettily shaped belt and the stock collar completes the neck edge. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and onefour yards twenty-one, twenty-four or thirty-two, two and three-fourth yards forty-four inches wide, with four yards of banding and soutache, ?rrnrdiri2 to desiern used. Taffetas Mantelots. Evidently repenting of her lack of consideration for the woman who has passed the rubicon of middle age, La ' Mode has issued an imperative command that taffetas mantelots which merely silhouette the figure shall be worn with suede or satin-faced cloth skirts. Such toilets are instinct with artistic merit, the rouleaux trimming on these little wraps being as novel as it is effective. Band of Colored Linen. A novel piece of neckwear consists of a band of colored linen that surrounds the lower part of the white linen collar, meets at the front and falls from there to tne Deit, Deing closed all the way down with white pearl buttons and forming a waistcoat effect when the suit coat is buttoned. Braid Embroidery. A soft peach colored cloth was embroidered with braid of precisely the same tone. The braiding made a pattern across the front in panel shape all the way up to the neck, while the same trimming was used at each side auu IU LUC UI1UUJC U1 LUC UdlA, Craze For Buttons. The craze for buttons has also become almost a mania. They appear in single and double rows on jackets or gowns?the whole length from shoulders to hem?and even on elaborate dresses of silks and satins. .. If ... Imported Coats. Vagueness of outline is perhaps the . most impressive feature of imported coats. Charlotte Corday Ruffle. In millinery the most distinctive 1 fancies for the moment are toward ; the cowboy hat, broad of rim and J raised on the side; the hat built like i a derby, with a rolled brill, and the > picture hat with the Charlotte Corday 1 ruffle. The New Sleeve. Big at the armhole and tight at i the wrist is the latest decree for it. When pleated the sleeve has the ef- I feet of a folding water cup. Very frequently the armhole is so ! wide that its lower edge is even with the waist. Attached Collars. It is quite the fashion now to put j the turnover collar into the neck- j band. This sounds extravagant, but I if the sleeve is long the turnover j cuff, which is always attached, soils J as easily as the collar and necessi- . tates /the shirt waist going to the i u I wash. I Embroidered Waistcoats. One of the most telling features of i dress is the waistcoat, which is a i very gay affair. In Paris they make the little waistcoat of gayly flowered cretonne. The front is entirely of the j cretonne, while the hack is perfectly plain. A tiny row of white buttons i reaches from the smart'eravat to the , belt, i Pointed Tunic With Skirt. The tunic drapery is one of the very latest decrees of fashion and is ! I , J I, I really exceedingly graceful and very generally becoming when cut on such lines as those illustrated. It is generally classic in effect and it drapes the figure with real grace, while it is adapted to every material that will drape successfully. This one is arranged over a closely fitted skirt that is finished with a circular flounce at the lower edge. As illustrated the material is crep de Chine with trimming of applique in self color. The skirt consists of the tunic, the circular flounce and the five gores of the under portion. The gores fit the figure snugly and the circular flounce ! is joined iu meir lower euge. mu tunic Is on one piece and is fitted by j means of darts at the hips, while it is arranged over the skirt and the two are joined to the belt. If walking length is desired, both skirt and tunic can be cut off on indicating lines. The quantity of material required ; for the medium size is eight yards ! twenty-seven, six and one-fourth I yards forty-four or four and five- j eighth yards fifty-two inches wide, ' with nine yards of applique for tunic and flounce; three and one-fourth yards twenty-one, one and five-eighth yards thirty-six Inches wide for the uuDer nortion of the skirt. VThe Pui/o/t 1 A SERMON ' 8/ TAE RE'/[RA-V/kKDEl^o^^^^" Subject: Belh-el. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching on the above theme at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, Hamburg avenue and Wierfield street, the Ptev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, took as his text Oen. 28:19. "And Jacob awaked out of his sleep, and he said, Surely the Lord is in this place; * * * * this is none other but the the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven. * * * * And he called the name of that place Bethel." The scene is as grand as the language is inspiring. And the sublimity of the picture and the elevation of the language are only to be explained upon the assumption that al this time and under the conditions that are described Jacob enjoyed s special and glorious spiritual experi euce. Jacob was journeying from BeerBheba to Haran. He stopped on the way, took stones for a pillow and laj down to rest, the day being spent for the night. "And he dreamed and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached tc heaven: and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it. Anc behold! the Lord stood above it." Is it any wonder that Jacob venerated the place? . Here he found blessing. Here was inspiration. Here was the manifestation of the everlasting God. It was but a stone ir the open, roofed with the arching heavens, walled by the horizon beyond which his vision could not penetrate; but here he had seen God And he called the place Beth-el. No one is so foolish as to imagine that the stone and the surrounding locality were any more sacred in anc of themselves than were a thousand similar stones upon which Jacol might have rested his tired head 01 were a hundred other places in the quietude of which he might have found repose. But upon that ston< his head had rested when the God ol Abraham and of Isaac reiterated t( him the covenant He had made witt the fathers. In that spot he had beer the recipient of the richest joy thai the heart of man may experience ir this life or the mind of man desive: ? vision of the living God. And so he poured oil on the stone and conse crated the place where he had tarriec through a memorable night. What else would any man have done? The event was not common place. The vision was beatific. Th< covenant was tremendous both as t( its authorship and its duration. Con sidered from any point of view the occasion was to be commemoratee and the locality was forever investec with a subduing and soul warming at mosphere that would be effectivi with us to-day were we within the scope of its influence. Jacob woult have been neither courteous nor hu man if he had not set the place as it a sense apart. If we may remembei heroes with monuments and gooc men with statuary, shall lot Jacol commemorate the revelation of Jeho vah with an oil soaked stone? If wi are conscious of a thrill as with baret heads and reminiscent minds we stanc in Independence Hall or about thi graves of the martyr dead shall wi not admit the sacredness of the spo where God showed Himself to th< leader of His people? All of which is not to push sensi over the border line of reason, or t< make the logical become illogical. on 11 oH tho nlono "Rpth-pl_ th< house of God. And so we call ou churches. Every church is a Beth-e or it is nothing better than a club house. A church is nQt simply a col lection of stone and brick and plaste and wood and glass and iron an< nails bound into a building, any mor< than the stone was the sanctuary o the place where Jacob heard th< voice of God the shrine. A church i more than an edifice as the shrini was something more than a geogra phical or geological entity. We con secrate our churches to the benefi cent uses of the religious life of th< people not because we consider tha n^A cirmilv onrf cnlolv withli V7UU auiuco OlUi^/i; v*n? them or that a blessed brick is holie than an unblessed stone. We ente our churches, rather, I should sey wi should enter our churches, becausi in a real way they stand for an exper ience, they teem with reminiscence they commemorate individual and so ciai blessings and visions of the sov ereign God. Jacob called the place Beth-el be cause he had a compelling religiou experience. And so we should ven erate our churches. A church tha lacks the spiritual atmosphere, tha is not the expression of a deep spirit ual conviction, that commemorate no visions and that is ineloquent o mighty spiritual exaltations, is not.i church. It is a fraud. A church is a Beth-el. And as sucl it should be revered. Within i should be found blessing and inspira tion, out of it should flow the influ ences that tend toward God and tha militate for the weal of men. Beth-el was notable as the com memoration of a blessing. And wha blessings have we not had within th confines of our churches. When such holy reveries, such glorious in spirations, such lasting joys, sucl revelations through the abiding of I common spirit? Here we have seei the glory of the Lord, here we hav known the power of His love, her we have fed upon His promises an< been augmented in tne ncnes 01 tii grace. Here, as was Jacob at Beth-el have we been inspired, filled wit) larger hopes, urged on to nobler an< to holier achievements, filled with th energy that no man may describe, in effable, intensive and divine. Her we have felt the warmth of the spir itual atmosphere and have claspe< hands with God. The influences that rolled with pre dieted vigor from the simple shrin at Beth-el ought to flow and will from any well appointed church. Th< church is not a pool, it is a stream It is rather a dynamic than a static From the church should well fort! the influential streams of righteous ness and of truth and the healing o the nations. The world owes an in calculable debt, as do we, to thi oimrcti should bv he cuiiiuij, aiiu ? unceasing and compounding influenc for good and for God, and unremit ting service for men, place the worli ever more largely in her due. The churches must be Beth-els o many of them never could withstani the abuses to which they are lent Only upon the assumption that tin spiritual influences that move withii them are born of God can we under stand how many of them survive th< desecrations to which they are sub jectcd. The average fair is enougl to kill any church. The averagi church entertainment. y,.mry ana puerile as it is expressionless, would be a death blow to the social activities of any organization less hardy. What with moving pictures and wax works and spelling bees and turkey suppers and men's smokers and women's gossip, it is wonderful that we have any veneration for churches at to an older triena. sue uau talking about the ugly little town 1 where she lived, and how little money she had to spend, and how there were : no concerts or lectures or chances 5 for culture, how monotonous and nar1 row things were week after week, ' how her health was not strong, and there was no special thing she could do in the world. It did sound rather i hopeless, and the older woman waa r silent a moment. Then she said, , thoughtfully: "No; you cannot change these cons ditions of your life at present. Eut > there is one thing, Marjory, that you I can change, and it will make everyI thing absolutely different." "But what can I change? I don't - understand," cried Marjory. I "You can change your point of i view," returned her friend. "That's - all. But it's everything." i The girl thought it an unsympa; thetic answer. She went home still thinking so. But it stuck in her mind nevertheless; for she was an intelli. gent girl. "It is the only change I can make," > she said to herself, and she tried it. f Her point of view had been from I herself?from what she wanted to do, I and have in the world, but could not. ) She faced round to the point of view r that God had put her where she was, ; had prepared blessings for her if she } would recognize them, and had given i her opportunities for unselfish usefulE ness to others in her daily life. ) From that moment her life was a i study in transformation?from disl content to cheerfulness, from languor t to activity, from a lack of interest in i life to a fullness of loving sacrifice, i "It is all absolutely different," she 3 wrote her friend, a, year later. Only one thing has changed. That was I all. But it was everything.?Forward. > _ ; Wear Your Troubles Inside. j Many a man gets into the habit of - carrying his troubles in his face. The j eyes tell it, the droop of the lip I speaks it, the bowed head declares it. 1 the very grip of the hand reveals it, - and the footfall is full of it. He has 2 run up the flag at half-mast, ana ne ? carries it everywhere, so that his i whole little world is compelled to - know his sorrow. 1 Is this natural? Possibly. Is it r wise? Probably not. Is it fair? 1 Surely not. Is it a sign of weakness? 3 Undoubtedly it is. > Is there a better way? Surely 3 there is. First, a man must make i up his mind to expect his share o/ 1 trouble, and perhaps a little more. & Then he should make up his mind tc 5 bear his trouble manfully, i. e., witb t patience, with courage and with hope s The world tk'.s enough trouble of its own; let us riot add to its burden! It % 1? '1? - *? r'lirloflan e snouia De ine aim ui. c*cijr vu.?u>.u 3 man and woman to become strong, and when strength is won to use that e strength in bearing the burdens ol r others. Every sorrow mastered, ev1 ery burden borne inside instead ol - outside, makes us stronger,and leavs? - the world brighter. r Learn to smile, get the habit of it; J learn to sing, make it*also a habit; 3 and you will be surprised how much r brighter it makes the world, not only e to others, but to yourself. The smile s and the song lesson the burden and 3 light the way.?Christian Guardian. Only a Broken Knife-Point. 3 Once a ship was wrecked on the t | Irish coast. The captain was a care. i fni rmo Nnr had the weather been r of so severe a kind as to explain the r wide distance to which the vessel had s swerved from her proper course The g ship went down, but so much of in. terest attached to the disaster that a !, diving-bell was sunk. Among other - portions of the vessel which were ex* - amined was the compass, which wa9 swung on deck; and inside the com. pass box was detected a bit of steel, s which appeared to be the small point - of a pocket knife blade. t It appeared that the day before the t wreck a sailor had been sent to clean - the compass, had used his knife in s the process, and had unconsciously f broken off the point, and left it rea maining i* the box. That bit of knife-blade exerted its influence on i the compass, and to a degree which t deflected the needle from its propei - bent, and vitiated it as an index of - the 3hip's direction. That bit of t knife-blade wrecked the vessel. Even one trifling sin, as small as a - broken knife-point, as it were, is able t to rob a soul of peace and happiness, e ?London Sunday-School Times. 1 Life Not a Holiday. a Sooner or later we find out that i life is not a holiday, but a discipline. " 1 * 1-i"- /I Jp/?Arat? thof e warner or iuiei wc *>m uiow>? e the world is not a playground. It is ] quite clear that God means it for a s school. The moment we forget that, i, the puzzle of life begins. We try to 1 play in school. The Master does not 3 mind that so much for its own sake, e for He likes to see His children - happy; but in our playing we neglect e our lessons. We do not see how - much there is to learn, and we do not 3 care. But our faster cares. He has a - perfectly overwhelming and inexplie cable solicitude for our education; , and because He loves us He comes e into the school sometimes and speaks . to us. He may speak very softly and gently or very loudly. !i But one thing we may be sure of: - The task He sots us to is never measf ured by our delinquency. It is meas ured by God's solicitude for our proe gress; measured solely by God's love; r measured solely that the scholar may e be better educated when he arrives at - his Father's home.?Henry Drum3 mond. r 3 The Leader of Men. We all know perfectly well what a e true lender is. He is a man of ideas, i a man who advocates a certain line - of action, and he works through the B press and public speech that the peo pie may be convinced of the wisdom i of his course.?The Rev. Dr. Mason, 5 Pittsburg. at all, that we finrl any Diessing, an* inspiration within them, and any in* fluence moving from them. The church should be Beth-el. It should be the house of God. There, too, we should see the ladder stretching down from neaven, mere i the ascending and descending angels, i There we should see God. There we should make covenant with Him. There we should enter into the posi session of His interminable promise. 1 There we should have a glorious, an . exalted spiritual blessing. ; The Change. ! "My life is hemmed in by things I cannot change, you see," said a girl, explaining her depression of spirits ' 1 Koan | THE GREAT DESTROYER SOMK STARTLING PACTS ABOUT Tllli VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. Railroads Forbid Use of Intoxicants ?Baltimore and Ohio Follows Lead of Other Roads in Forbidding Liquor to Rs Employes. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad : put into effect recently a new rule by which men employed in the operation o" the road are prohibited from partaking of intoxicating lio.uors either while they are on or off duty. The ru'.e has been made a general one by the Baltimore and Ohio, and men who indulge in intoxicants will in the future be barred from that road's servtee. This action served to call public attention to a movement among railroad managers, which has been in progress for some time past, looking to the elimination from railroad servj Ice of men who are known to indulge I In intoxicants. j A number of other roads have es | tablished in the recent past regulations in this respect similar to those which are being put into effect by the Baltimore and Ohio. Inquiry made last week among railroad officials re! sealed the fact that, while so far as I Known the General Managers' AssoI Mation, which is made up of the acti ive managers of most of the imporI cant railroads, has taken no formal I action in the matter, they have as c ! result of exchanges of views on this I subject come to the conclusion thai j the course which is now being foli lowed by the Baltimore and Ohio is the best both for the public and for :he railroads themselves. Last year a similar rule was put into effect on the New York Central ; lines. It applies not only to the Cen! iral itself, but to its numerous sub! sidiary roads, including such roads as ihe Lake Sho^ the Michigan Cen! tral. the Big Four, the Nickel Plate the Boston and Albany and others. An official of the New York Central said last week that the policy oi :he road wis to be extremely strict ic the matter of its men refraining from I :he use of intoxicants, xne reguiaiions in force on the New York Cental, it appears, go to the length ol compelling the conductor of a trair to refuse to permit the train to star! ;f he learns that the engineer has iniulged in intoxicants before going tc luty. The rules compel the substitu;ion of another engineer in such i :ase, and similarly an engineer is forbidden to take out a. train should 11 aappen that he knows that the conluctor has taken an intoxicant. Commenting on these regulations :his official said: "We would sooner have a man ir I the road's employ take money thar | ;hat he should indulge in intoxicants I The damage tnat couia result. iron stealing would be trifling compared with the trouble which might resul1 ! from a conductor or an engineer oi jven a brakeman taking too freely o) intoxicants. One or the other woulc be very apt to neglect orders and per haps the neglect might occur undei conditions which would lead to di& ister.'T j The advantage of minimizing th< i use of intoxicants among operatinj employes has been recognized noi only by the railroads, but by larg< Industrial establishments as well While the rules adopted by manufac I turing companies in respect to th< I use of intoxicants by their employe! are not understood to be as strict as those in force on the New York Cen tral, on the Baltimore and Ohio, anc m nfhor rnaHs thp mnvement amonf ! manufacturing companies has beei j gaining ground. Among the compa J nies which have taken steps in th< i direction of forbidding the use of in i toxicants by their employes are th< I International Harvester Company an< l some of the companies controlled b2 i the United States Steel Corporation. This movement on the part of th< railroads and industrial concerns t< establish stricter regulations thai those which have been in force in th< past regarding the use of intoxicant ' by their employes is particularly in | teresting at this time, owing to th< i acknowledgment in brewery trad< [ circles that that trade is being seri ously hurt by the Prohibition move | ment. It happens that the purpos j of the railroads to surround the op I eration of their lines with all possibli ! safeguards has made them a powerfu ally of the Prohibitionists. It is sail : that they recognize this fact, and tha j they are giving all possible encour j agement to the movement among th i railroads to prohibit the use of in J toxicants by their employes. The desire of railroad managers ti : Abolish the use of intoxicants by op j erating employes is in keeping wit] the policy of eliminating as many a possible of the factors which tend t careless service. Despite all the safe i ty devices which have in recent year j been put into use in increasing num ! bers, it remains true that for th 1 safety of its passengers as well as o j its freight service a railroad is large I ly dependent upon the faithful pei i formance of their duties by the mei | who are directly charged with th i handling of the trains. Automati devices cannot, except to a limitei extent, take the place of intelligen work by all classes of employes whi are engaged in the moving and dis patching of trains and in the guard j ing of the line of road. The present is regarded as a par Lticularly favorable time for puttin more stringent rules into effect. Th demand for railroad employes is, o course, much less than it was whei traffic was so much heavier, and it i vastly easier now than it was a fe^ I months ago to replace men who ar ] disposed to infringe the rules estah I lished by the railroads.?New Yor] | Times. Benbow City, 111., has eighteen vot crs and twenty-three saloons. Temperance Notes. There is something wrong with Ih man who can be satisfied while th saloon remains. The liquor traffic has had from th I days of Noah in which to prove itsel a good thing by actions. It can't hop to do it now by words. In Massachusetts ten per cent, o the licensed liquor dealers have gon out of business, as the prohibitioi law affects six cities, thirty-six town and 210 saloons, barrooms and gro ceries. "Keep the liquor question out o ; politics," being interpreted, simpl; means, "Don't let it interfere witl more important matters.'' The money you get from the drunk ard in whisky taxes?as your Judas i price of his ruin?is less than th< | money you would have had from liin i in property taxes if whisky had beei ! taken from him. j The primate of the Church of Ens land has spoken in support of th I Government licensing bill, which strictly speaking. while no: a tsni perance bill, will clos?. it is stated 30.000 public houses or saicons ii j Eof'5""1 Richest Family in Europe. It is not generally known that the , Imperial family of Russia is the richest royal family in Europe, and 3eri"es its vast wealth from three jourcea?the State treasury, the imperial domains (formerly church ' tands), and the so-called "cabinet 1 properties." A writer in Harper's ' Weekly gives some interesting facts. The State treasury provides for the Czhr as the sovereign; the imperial lomains are the joint property of the members of the House of Romanoff, [ but administered by the head of the , house; and the "cabinet properties" - are the personal property of the i reigning sovereign as such. The State treasury pays out $7,000,000 per annum for the needs : of the imperial house, principally for | the maintenance of the palaces and , the officials and servants attached to ! them. .The reigning empress, for ex? ample, has an allowance of $100,000 nor vonr anrl thp rinwaser emnress I ? r the same. Every child born to the Czar receives from birth to the age ; of twenty-one nearly $20,000 a year, , while the heir to the throne receives , annually, in addition to the maintei nance of palaces, $50,000. Daugh-1 ters receive a dowry of one million roubles when they marry. The figures under this head are comparative' ly modest, and'the total expenditure J charged to the State treasury is less ; than one per cent, of the annual ' budget. ! The King Laughed. ? A curious court story went the [ rounds some little time ago about a . lovely foreigner, one of whose verbal . "Slips gave King Edward occasion for i a hearty laugh. A very lively person age with a delightful accent, she > made such a favorable impression upon the King that he asked her to be his partner at bridge. "But, sir," [ she said, "I really don't knbw how i to play." The King would take no denial, however, and she became rather embarrassed. "I assure you, sir." she said. "I could not think of 1 playing. I don't know the difference between the king and the knave." , There was an awkward silence, and . then she realized what she had said l and was covered with confusion. The King, of course, laughed it off, and t now tells the story with gusto. ? " Dundee Advertiser. SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS i i With Eczema?Her Limb Peeled and Foot Was Raw?Thought Amputai tion Necessary?Believes Her I Life Saved by Cuticura. t "I have been treated by doctors for twenty-five years for a bad case of eczema f on my leg. They did their best, but I failed to cure it. My doctor had advised me to have my leg cut off. At this time : my leg was peeled from the knee, my foot " was like a piece of raw flesh, and 1 had to walk on crutches. 1 bought a set of Cuti3 cura Remedies. After the first two treat? ments the swelling >vent down, and in two t months my leg was cured and the new skin 3 came on. The doctor was surprised and said that he would use Cuticura for his own patients. J have now been cured over seven years, and but for the Cuticura Rem 3 edies 1 might have lost my Me. Mrs. j. d. 3 Renaud, 277 Mentana St., Montreal, Que., m Feb. 20, 1907." j The Ills We Are Heir To. 1 There are three modes of bearing ~ the ills of life?by indifference, which is the most common; by philosophy, > which is the most ostentatious, and I by religion, which is the most effecti ual. N. Y.?27 I Svnip?/FiOs F V-Zt/ | * Li ! ^oixir^fSenna e Cleanses the System Effect* ually;Dispels Colas andneaA i aches due to Constipation; \ Acts natu rally, acts truly as ; a Laxative. Best forMeuVomen and CKild3 ren-youngand ou, - To ^etNits Dene|icial Ejjects s Always ouy the Genuine which ? hasuie jml name oj the Com3 pany CALIFORNIA Jig Syrup Co. n f by whom il is manujaciurea.prinieu uu wr front ofevet> package. I SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS j one .size only, regular price 50* p*--borne, t w for v H A shoe that is too big may not pi e What yon want is a shoe that nu i- M place where your weight rests,?n k I right. 8KREEMERS are shoes li] J the style is there, too. Look fori fl FRED. F. 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Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,l>hila.,fa. With most men the beard is strongest on the right side. Mrs. Winslow'c Soothing Syrup forChildren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle Japan gets 188,000 recruits yearly for her regular army. Ask Your Dealer For Allen'i Foot-Ease A powder. It rests the feet. Cure? Corns, Bunions, Swollep, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen a Foot-Ease makes new or tightshoeseasy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Aecept no substitute. Sample mailed Frek. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LcRoy, N. Y. The cocoa crop of 1906 amounted to 149, 020,695 kilograms. Hen FOR SICK .. ;''3Vw BftlAllPlI wumtH No other medicine has been so successful in relieving the suffering rf of women or received, so many genuine testimonials as has Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound. In every community you will find womeil- who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Almost every one you meet has either been benefited by it, or has friends who have. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,Mass., any womananyday mav see the files containing over one million one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, and , here are the letters in which they openly state over their own signatures that they were cured by lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has saved many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is made from roots and herbs, without drugs, and is wholesome and harmless. The reason why Lydia E. Pink-' ham's Vegetable Compound is so successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upon the feminine organism, restoring it , to a healthy normal condition. Women who are suffering from ' those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose si$ht of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore tneir neaitn. ^ <s> /' TOILET ANTISEPTIC , Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disinfecting and deodor- [ izing toilet requisite of exceotional ex cellencc and econ- | \J?1171 JB omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, ^9 stores, 50 cents, or Large Trial Sample WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK BENT FREE , THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. nPftPfiY WKW DiaCOVEEYf VJf WK\^ 9 ^9 I give* quick relief And care* went owm. Bookof tMtimonlali* 10 dgn'treatment Free. Dr. E. H. OBMS'8 8ON8.B0* B.^tlAoU.6*. WIDOWS'"a*1" N EW LAW obtalnod toy JOHN W, MORRIS* PENSIONS . Washing**, D. a iLk/tiAJLMO MEN ^ neb, but h is a bad fit just the same. K itches the shape of your foot at the Bj ot too large or too small, but exactly H ke that, and ? ? ^ lOnJUABS. Hi in 1 iliHl jnMCVi ' Y?u Kn?w how to rlUliC T Handle Them Properly * profit, you want to do it intelligently '{?d is to profit by the experience of othara. j i ? a. Z.L you neeu to Know ou tiie buuDman 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 fqr for Breeding Purposes, ana i the subject to make a success. ?S IN STAMPS. M Leonard St. , N. Y> City. TAKES FOR ITS*% RFAI ARTIfl F " ' " ' "" ~ " " yp :ion made of an imitation. Ami- $ jenuine article. The genuine is e articles are the advertised ones. j{> t depend for their business on the iomething claimed to be "just as ^ line, because he makes more profit itations when you can get the gen- $ <i> PT/MITC GET what YOU $ llvrlNO? ASK FOR! $