The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, July 29, 1908, Image 3
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?&. fv?^
Kew York CiV-?The blouse thai
can be made from bordered material
ia one in great demand just now; for j,
bordered fabrics are many and beau- a
tiful while they trim themselves, so c
reducing the labor of making to the i
minimum. This <tne is very charm- n
ing yet simple in the extreme and s
can be utilized r.o* for the bordered j;
fabrics alone, but for every season- c
able waisting material. As illustrated i r
bordered lawn is used, however, and I v
the borders are joined beneath one of i v
the tucks at the back to give the | a
requisite effect. There also are shoul- s
der straps cut from the border which j
add largely to the effect, while cuffs q
onri mihr arp mnrip to match. The V
waist is finished with hems in place 1
of the usual box pleat, and there are i
spaces between these hems and the 1
tucks which render it peculiarily well i
adapted to the bordered materials.
The waist is made with fronts and <
back. It is tucked on exceptionally 1
becoming lines and the straps over <
the shoulders are smart in the extreme.
The long sleeves are tucked
to lit the arms snugly at tne lower
poitiou and are finished with straight
euffi arid there is the favorite turnover
coiiar at the neck.
The quantity of material required
for the medium size is three and
three-eighth yards of bordered material
twenty-seven or four >ards of
plain materials twenty-four, three
and three-eighth yards twenty-seven ;
or two yards forty-four inches wide. I
pi.,. ..iiv,*!.,.,. j,v;ii
-Much as h::s been said against the
fi ill down front going out of fashion,
it holds its own. There are extremists
who wear an immense jabot of net
or line- muslin edged with colored ribbon
and reaching from brooch to belt. |
The usual frill, however, is about two
or three inches wide and edged with
colored muslin, or ribbon if one prefers.
The colored selvedge is prettier
thr.ii the all-white.
Demi-Season l*cd Costumes.
Cle.ret cclorcd cloth suits are much
in evidence. Straw hats repeat the
same shade, but are relieved with
white wings in profusion, which produce
most becoming results whether
matrons or maids are wearing the
color.
With Light Go\vr:-\
With a white or light colored gown
white shoes and stockings have been
found to give the best effect, and so.
white footwear is to be in fashion
throughout another year, at any rate.
.Newest Hatpins.
Hatpins have grown larger and
arger every day until the smallest
re now the size of a dollar, and who
an tell how big the largest will be?
'hese are made of every conceivable
laterial?silver, gold, gun metal and
emi-precious stones. Every design
3 worn and every shape is com me il
ant.
Skirts Are Narrow.
Narrower skirts are undoubtedly
he rage, and Paris sends word that
ome skirts measure only two yards
round. One skirt was arranged so
hat in front there were two lacers to
e tied round the ankles. This
ounds very ultra; such skimpy garlents
could be becoming only to
raceful and youthful figures.
Shoes With Lingerie.
With lingerie dresses a new butsned
Oxford will be worn. It is not
n the Du Barry order, but rather on
lie style of the strapped slipper, for
lie boot is slit between the buttons
a that the stocking may show
lirough. With these colored stockigs
must be woru to match the gown
r belt.
Over Waists Bordered Material.
Here are two attractive yet absolately
simple over waists which can
e made either from bordered mateial
or from banding, or from the
eautiful ribbons that are treated in
luch the same way. The upper deign
includes narrow sleeves that are
ut in one with it, and as shown is
nade from bordered foulard, but very
.'ide ribbons are treated in this way,
yhile bordered materials are many
nd each and every one suits the deign.
The lower waist is a little similer
in effect and sleeveless, conseluently
showing more of the guimpe
i-orn beneath. As illustrated the ma
Lerial is cretonne trimmed with little
?old buttons. The waists are joined
:o foundation girdles, and over these
;irdles the full ones are arranged.
The upper over waist is made with
centre front and centre back portions,
which are joined to the main
Dues, and is closed invisibly at the
L.oxil* ^ 1 Atrnr n? n ?cf i c mnrlo
i: (i i: iv . xnc J r? i u * u * naioi, jo uiuu^.
with bretelles and with a single connecting
strip at the front and at the
back. The closing is made at the
back, where one side of the strip is
hooked into place and the girdle is
hooked together invisibly.
The quantity of material required
for .the medium size is for the upper-over
waist three and one-quarter
yards of bordered material twelve
inches wide: for the lower three and
one-quarter yards nine inches wide;
Am.
X, &c rocon r\l;lif/
or if plain material is used eithe<
over waist will requireone aud seven
eighth yards of material twenty-on<
or twenty-four, one and three-quar
ter yards thirty-two or one .yard for
ty-four i;>:hes wide
I THE PULPIT. ]:
i
AN ELOQUtN I ttUlNUAY strcf/iuiN dt
DR. ROBERT J. KENT
!
:
1 Theme: All Fullness in Christ#
!
Brooklyn, N. Y.?In the Lewis Avei
nue Congregational Church. Sunday
! morning, the pastor, the Rev. Dr.
j Robert. .T. Kent, preached on "All
I Fullness in Christ." The text was
j from Colossians 1:19: "For it pleased
: tlie Father that in Him should all
' fullness dwell." Dr. Kent said: 1
i Jesus Christ is being better under!
stood and better appreciated all the
I time. Paul had a truer and more
j glorious conception of Him thirty-five
j years after the crucifixion than the
| disciples who bad lived in intimate
I fpiinwshin with Him durine: His min
| istry. Under the tuition of the Spirit
the beauty and grandeur of His character,
the magnitude and inestimable
value of His service to God and humanity
grew, upon men. The language
of eulogy is taxed to its uttermost in
describing the glory of His person
and position. In the four verses immediately
preceding the the text
three statements of sublime signifi!
csince are made. He is the image of
I the invisible God! The universe was
I created by Him and for Him! He is
I the head of the church! Therefore
I in all things He has pre-eminence.
That pre-eminence has not been
changed as the centuries have passed.
While doctrines and theologies have
held and lost the attention of men,
their interest has been increasingly
centred on the person of Jesus. Christian
experience is verifying the state
ment of the text that an ruiiness
dwells in Jesus Christ. The word
"fullness" by itself is an empty word;
the "fullness of God" is glorious, but
misty. It is when we take up one by
one the qualities with which Christ
was so richly endowed by the Father
that we begin to appreciate the meaning
of the text.
In Him is the fullness of power.
It was the power of Christ that at
first gained the eager attention of
men. We may not fully understand
the mighty deeds He performed; in
the confusion of thought at the'present
time regarding the miracles of
the Gospels we may feel utterly perplexed.
But that a deep and abiding
impression of power was made by the
Master on the people of His day there
cannot be the slightest doubt. That
impression was voiced by the two sadi
hearted disciples who journeyed to
| Emmaus and when the unrecognized
Jesus asked them what things had
come to pass that so deeply moved
| them replied: "Concerning Jesus of
Nazareth, which was a prophet
I mighty in deed and word before God
and all the people." The story that
Mark has written aims to present
Christ as the mighty worker; and
, John tells us that his purpose in writi
ing was to picture Christ as the Son
of God.
The early Christian church was
conscious of the possession of power,
of power which it derived from its invisible
but ever-present Lord. It saw
it working in the regeneration of
men's hearts, in the reformation of
their lives, in the transformation of
communities. Christianity was not
merely a new philosophy, a new form
of worship; it was the power of God
unto salvation to every one who accepted
it. That power has not waned
during the centuries. Christ has been
the conqueror. He has been the most
magnetic personality in the world's
history. Men of all classes and conditions,
the rich and poor, the prince
and peasant, the learned and illiterate,
the saint and sinner, have been
drawn to tiira. mey nave cuhscurated
heart and life to Him. In spite
of the most determined and malignant*
opposition, the gospel of His
kingdom has been preached throughout
the world. Nothing could stop it.
He has erected His judgment seat
among men, and more and more the
words, thoughts, deeds, the lives and
characters of men and nations are
being brought to judgment before
Christ. There was a time when men
supposed that by violence they could
stamp out Christianity; Herod tried
it and failed; the Jewish rulers tried
it when they crucified Jesus and
failed; Saul of Tarsus tried it and
failed. Who would dream that it
could be done to-day? Surely the
years have demonstrated that the
fullness of power resides in Jesus.
There is in Christ the fullness of
wisdom. We do not class Christ
among the learned men of the world.
He was not a writer of many books.
He wrote nothing. We do not include
Him among the great philoso
phers of the ages. There is a philosophy
of Christianity, but Christianity
is not a philosophy. We do not find
a wonderful versatility of knowledge
In the discourses of Jesus. He did
not talk of many things, yet the men
of the early days, and the thoughtful
men of subsequent generations, have
been profoundly impressed with His
wisdom. He knew the things of
greatest concern to men; He knew
them with a clear, searching intuition.
He knew God, His character,
His purpose. His plans. The Father
had revealed Himself to His Son. He
knew man, his joys and sorrows, his
aspirations and temptations, his sinfulness
and his glorious possibilities.
He knew the secrets of peace, of joy.
He knew the things that give deepest
and most enduring satisfaction; the
bread of life, and the water of life.
Tpsiis is the world's teacher. One
! of His most precious titles is Master.
1 Not only in the truth He taught, but
i in the way He taught it, He was peerless.
Ev precept and parable and example
He had taught the principles
that lie at the foundation t f human,
ity's progress. Men who want to
know what is best for themselves
! and for the world still sit reverently
at Jesus' feet. In the discussion of
the vital problems of the present age,
men ask, What did Jesus say? For
He dealt with the things that most
concern the heart and life, and, therefore,
He dealt with the questions of
perennial interest.
The fullness of love is in Jesus.
Love divine is a tree tnat nas many
branches. One is compassion, another
pity, another patience, another
pardon, another sacrifice. The infinite
pity and compassion of God
looked out through the eyes of Jesus
upon deformed and unfortunate men.
His heart went out to those who had
lost the spring and joy of life, or who
had never known them. Ho saw the
darkened home, the saddened heart,
and His tears of tender sympathy
flowed. A wise and wise-hearted man
who is constantly dealing with youthful
culprits has said that his own aim
is tr> rail forth what, is best in the
boys; to awaken a sense of honor,
manliness, a noble ambition in them.
This is what Jesus did. Love divine
in Him reached down to sinful, broken
men in order to lift them up aud
r heal them. He awakened hope and
resolute endeavor. He made men
feel that they could be pardoned and
3 begin a new life. I-Ie took them by
' the hand, as He did the girl who the
neighbors said was dead, but Jesus
declared was asleep, and said.
"Arise." And this fullness of Tov?
found its crowning proof and glory in
the cross; so that, when you speak of
great love, you naturally point to
Calvary.
Now all these and many other qualities
were united in Christ. Other
men have been great because of some
one rare quality of personality; Jesus
possessed them all. Therefore, He
has never ceased to interest the world.
From the day He returned after the
soul-struggle in the wilderness to the
banks of Jordan until He died on Calvary,
He lived without seeking it in
the public eye. After His death, instead
of forgetting Him, men became
more interested in Him. The eyes of
the world have never ceased to look
upon . Him. Theologies have come
and gone; the church has had its ups
and downs; but Jesus is always the
centre of interest. There stand on
my library shelf two large volumes
fresh from the press. They are a
dictionary of Jesus, what He said and
did. And they happen to stand alongside
of a volume on "Jesus Christ and
the Social Question." It suggests the
unfailing interest of thoughtful men
in Jesus. They are never satisfied
with what has been said and written
regarding Him. There will be other
dictionaries, other lives of Christ, in
the coming years. And when great
social problems are discussed, the
question of the home, of work and
wages, of capital and labor, of human
brotherhood, men will turn as tney
do now to the Gospels to study afresh
what Jesus said. Let there be discovered
the merest fragment of sorae
ancient manuscript containing in mutilated
form some saying of Jesus and
the news of the discovery is telegraphed
around the world, and the
fragment becomes priceless. How arc
we to explain this undying intererit
in Jesus? Not in any of the outward
circumstances or conditions of His
life. How limited and meager it was!
A life of poverty; a brief life; beginning
in a manger, ending on a crofis.
A life outside the circles of libraries
and great thinkers, outside the circles
of wealth and social position. The
secred of its unique command upon
the interest of men is given in ttie
text: "It pleased the Father that Ir
Him should all fullness dwell."
The hope of the world is in Him,
To Him we bring our burdens and
perplexities. To Him we come foi
comfort and strength. To be in vita]
relation to Him is our highest privilege.
Having Him as our personal
Lord and Master we have life's highest
prize. He is God's richest gift tc
? -? ?J-3 TJT{n + Vin olflorocf inter.
LlltJ WUIIU. nc AO IUC v-uv iuvvt
pretation to humanity of the infinite
wealth of love and wisdom and powei
of God. The divine heart beats in the
bosom of Jesus; the divine voice
speaks through His lips; the divine
help is given through His service; the
divine life is imparted through fellowship
with Him.
The leadership of the world belongs
to Jesus. The fullness of Goti
dwells in Him to accomplish the eternal
purpose of God; the establishment
of the kingdom of love in humar
hearts. He has been equipped for the
service of leadership. To Him has
been given fullness of vision that He
may see the way; fullness of powei
that He may overcome every obstacle;
fullness of love that He may win mer
and make them follow Him. He whc
died on the cross will occupy the
throne: the despised and rejected o]
men Will receive UUKUsai yiaisc am
love. To hasten the day when al
shall know Him, when the eterna
purpose of redeeming love shall b<
fulfilled in the kingdom of Christ if
our supreme duty. To that worl
we should consecrate our lives. I
should kindle our enthusiasm. Jesui
should be supreme in our though
and speech, our affection and devo
tion. May He be our leader! Maj
we gladly, enthusiastically follov
Him!
Our Music Lesson.
My soul, thou art receiving a musii
lesson from thy Father. Thou ar
being educated for the choir invisible
There are parts of the symprony tha
none can take but thee. There an
chords too minor for the angels
There may be heights in the sym
phony which are beyond thy scale?
heights which the angeis aione cai
reach. But there are depths whicl
belong to thee, and can only bi
touched by thee.
Thy Father is training thee for thi
part the angels cannot sing, and thi
school is sorrow. I have heard mei
say that He sends thy sorrow to provi
thee; nay, He sends thy sorrow to ed
ucate thee, to train thee for the choi:
invisible. In the night He is prepar
ing thy song. In the valley He i
tuning thy voice. In the cloud He i
deepening thy chords. In the storn
He is enriching thy pathos. In th<
rain He is sweetening thy melody. Ii
the cold He is molding thine expres
sion. In the transition from hope ti
fear He is perfecting thy lights am
shades.
Despise not thy school of sorrow
oh, my soul! It will give thee'i
unique part in the universal song.?
The Rev. George Matheson.
nmw T\wl +!-.? Ilfnrt- TPn l'Mlfiillv 1
"inc itll'll l/IU II1C itvm a
You cannot set the world right, o
the times, but you can do somethinj
for the truth, and all you can do wil
certainly tell if the work you do i
for the Master, who gives you you
share. And so the burden of respon
sibility is lifted.
This assurance makes peace, satis
faction and repose possible, even ii
the partial work done upon earth. G<
to the man who is carving a stone fo
a building. Ask him where tha
stone is going, to what part of th
temple, and how he is going to get i
into place, and what does he do? H
points you to the builder's plans
This is only one stone of many. So
when men shall ask where and ho\
your little achievement is going inti
God's plan, point them to your Mas
ter, wno Keeps iuc piauo, awn b.
on doing your little service as faith
fully as if the whole temple wer<
yours to build.?Phillips Brooks.
God Watches Us Lovingly.
The thought of God's eye upon u
is usually looked upon as a though
to strain and bridle us in the hour o
temptation and carelessness; and s<
it is. But with our selfish love o
forbidden things we miss what i
meant not merely to restrain us, bu
to be the greatest and most unfailini
of our comforts. The thought tha
God sees us always is His great en
couragement and help to His childrei
in doing right. His eye is not the ey<
-" - " ?3 '"lor nnlv hilt- of !
Ul a J uugc aim 1 mw , ,
shepherd and father, the lover of tin
souls of men, these poor souls of o^<
and of our brethren, not sparing evei
His own Son for them. We are beinj
watched by an eye of tenderness ant
sympathy deeper and truer than evei
that of any man on earth for his suf
l'ering friend.?Church.
Tlie CJood Life.
A good life is impossible until on<
knows that there is ever something
more desirable than living.
1 inhered jor rhe I,
I oyitT HoU^I)
IN THE WOODS.
'Tis sweet to worship God when Love commands
In temples unadorned by human hands?
The grand cathedrals of the solemn woods,
Where no unworthy devotee intrudes;
At mossy altars and in cloister-bowers,
Where prayer is blended with the balm of
flowers;
, Tn leafy corridors and woodland ways,
Where all is resonant with hymns of
praise; .
In shady groves festooned by drooping
vines,
Where bending bough with pendant branch
entwines;
Where babbling brooks with liquid tongues
proclaim
The glory and the greatness of His name,
i ?David Banks Nickels, in N^w York
Tribune.
The Spiritual Magnifying Glass.
Great duties thrust upon a true
man bring him face to face with his
own littleness. Joshua, at the head
i of his nation, following in the steps
of the mighty Moses, could well have
shrunk from hi3 task had not the
Lord said to him, "This day will I
begin to magnify thee in the sight of
all Israel." How came the great
i change abo'ut? Partly through
growth in the man himself and a
strengthening of all his^powers, but
mostly, we believe, through a change
i in the people's view of him. The
, one hated scout of Kadesh-Barnea
was now the trusted commander ol
an army.
| So, too, in modern life does the
Holy SpVrit work to magnify and glorify
the children of God. Glorification
begins here and now as surely
as eternal life. Neglect of this truth
is a source of much discouragement
to young pastors and Christian workers
of sincere and humble spirit
What though you feel unworthy ol
the love and prai3e of your people or
your class, pastor or teacher? God
Knows, ana tie is magnuying yuu iu
[ the sight of others, in order that He
may accomplish the more through
[ you. What though your life seems
. far below your profession? Abide
L in Christ, and He can work wonders
. through the magnified impression ol
, Himself in you. Faith removes
. mountains by first reducing them tc
> mole hills, but love triumphs by flrsl
. casting a halo of glory about its obi
ject. We fieed to pray, "Lord,
( strengthen me this day," but we
, ought also to pray, "Lord magnify
, and glorify Thy servant this day in
the sight of his fellows, to the end
that Christ may be exalted, and His
. alone be the praise and honor."?
[ The Rev. W. F. Turnbull, in The Ez.
aminer.
t A'-'
i Bravely Said.
J If the evils that beset this old
s world are ever righted, the people
i who profess to believe in the everpresent
and over-ruling sovereigntj
; of God must quittheir shilly-shallying
i compromising attitude on all ques)
tions involving moral principles.
5 The supreme law of life is to dc
E ! right because it is right.
I I Under that law there is no "nexl
1 best," but always the best.
1 The oft-repeated "If you can't get a
3 whole loaf, better take a half a loaf,'
3 may be good advice as regards mate
c rial matters, but it is not applicabit
t to morals.
3 The only position that is tenable ij
t to do right because it is right.
The assumption that we cannot gel
r the best thing, or, in other words
r that there are conditions under whict
it is not best to do right, is promptec
by lack of faith.
In the affairs o! life there are thou
sands of things that we can give uj
c ind places where we can make con.
t cessions?but when we enter the do
i. main of morals there is but one pol<
t star?we must do right because it ii
3 right. You can certainly trust Got
i. for the results. ? New Wilmingtor
Globe.
\ Duty.
s The King's work must go forward
There is no stop possible. If it ii
a in my hand, entrusted to me, I mus
g carry it forward. Well for any mai
j or woman who, early in life, worki
g out this formula for the place o
duty which is assigned to him ii
r men's affairs. Duty is no separati
business, no part of my self-culture
s no service for which I am to be pai<
s at the ticket office of heaven. Dut;
I is my part of an infinite service whici
B an infinite number of God's childrei
1 must render before God's kingdon
comes. It is lifted from a little per
3 sonal affair to its own place in closi
j relationship with the movement o
the universe. It seems to me no
hard to make even children under
a' stand this and enter into the enthus
iasm of work thus rendered in th<
common cause for the Father of u
all.?Edward Everett Hale.
Bible Moths.
r John Wesley and Lis lollowers, be
g cause of their devotion to the stud;
1 of the divine word, were called Bibl
s moths. The designation honors then
r and in part explains Wesley's world
wide influence. Wesley, an Oxfon
graduate, a man of action, a rare or
ganizer, a logician, a student of philo
ti sophy as well as of theology, a think
o er and reasoner of power, a terse
? thvillino- coarphinor enpnfcer sflirl ii
1 Uili WVM.VU.UQ W1/V%.?V y
t his latter days: "I will speak for one
e After having sought the truth witl
t some diligence for half a century,
a am, at this day, hardly sure of any
thing but what I learn from the Bi
i, ble." As a result of his life study o
v the divine word he came thus to valu
ci it.
3 Devil's Pet Weapon.
" False shame is the devil's pe
weapon. He does more work with i
even thaa with false pride; for witl
false pride he only goads evil; bu
with false shame paralyzes good.?
KUSK.1I1.
s
t
f The Men Needed.
J Men Tffco live near to God, and an
r willing to suffer anything for Christ';
s sake without being proud of it, thes;
t are the men we want.?Adoniran
= 'Judson.
t
1 Shock Restores Spcech.
a
I A paralytic stroke, following his
B desperate but fruitless endeavor tc
,j stop his brother, Wood Roberts, fron
, committing suicide, within two days
, completely restored the speech oi
j Howard Roberts, aged twenty-eight
, at Turner, Mo., who had been dumb
. for two years. Howard rushed into a
room just as his brother shot himself.
At the sight the dumb man was
stricken with paralysis, and that
night lay dying, if. was supposed,
i Next morning, without any imperiij
ment in speech, he told to the family
all the circumstances of the suicido.
Hotels For the Poor.
The hotel for the poor in Milan
i was opened seven years ugu, uuu a
! dormitory therefor v/as started four
years ago. The work of the society
I Is officially said to be steadily progressing
and receiving much encouragement.
The society's capital is
$82,955, and provisions, donated
amount to $13,124. The net profit
for 1907 was $5216, although'expenses
for improvements are stated
to have been relatively high. The
daily earnings of the hotel amounted
to $61. The average daily earnings
of the restaurant was $40.
The callings of the 453 daily inmates
of the hotel were as follows:
Lawyers, mathematicians, etc., 18;
students, 8; clergyman, 1; soldier, 1;
painters, sculptors, engravers and
photographers, 19; musicians, singers
and actors, 13; traveling salesmen,
37; office and store clerks, 89; printers
and bookbinders, 11; street ven
aors, J.u; mecnanicF. anu eieciriciaiia,
21; cabinetmakers and carpenters,
16; tailors and shoemakers, 7; bricklayers
and stonecutters, 15; laborers,
73; peasants, 17; cooks and waiters,
20; businfess men, 29; foreigners, 48.
Among the foreigners were Americans,
English, Germans, Russians,
Roumanians, Poles, French, Japanese
and Africans, who had heard of
the Milan hotel called "Albergo Popolare"
prior to their arrival in the
; city.
i The average daily number of in '
mates in the dormitory was 316 men,
; 36 women, and 6 children, making a
total of 358 persons. The average
daily earnings of the dormitory
i amount to $21.19, which is a de^
, crease of about 14 cents per day from
1906. Beds cost from 4 to 6 cents
per night.
: Hotels for the poor similar to that
' in Milan are being built ip. many -of
, the principal cities of Italy.
[ - Oratory.
1 "What am oratory, Brudder Jack!
6on?"
J "Brudder Simmons, I will eluci,
date. If you says black am white,
| dat am foolish. But if you says
! black AM white, an' bellers like a
i buir, an' pounds on a table wif bofe
1 fists, dat am oratory, an' some people
: will believe you."?Washington Herald.
DOCTOR SAID "USE CUTICURA"
i r
i I Pa* nod Pnco nf Pr7pmn nn Child?
I Disease Had Readied a Fearful
State?Order Resulted in
Cure.
"When 1 was small 1 was troubled with
eczema for about three months. It was all
over my face and covered nearly all of my
I head. It reached such a state that it was
, just a large scab all over, and the pain and
[ itching were terrible. I doctored with an
, able physician for some time/and was then
, advised by him to use the Cuticura Rem'
edies, which I did and I was entirely cured,
1 have not been bothered with it since. I
. ased Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment,
but do not know exactly how much was
. used to complete the cure. Miss Anabel
Wilson, North Branch, Mich., Oct. 20, '07."
1 nni>A Dnnmicincr Mflll.
X UC A A VililOiug tfMKiM*
There never lived a promising man
] that was not a fraud. Beware of the
promiser. Drop him on the spot.?
] New York Press. N.Y.?28
t FITS, St.Vitus' Dance, NervousDiscnses per
, manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
i Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise free.
I Dr.H.H. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,l>a.
There are tropical daisies a foot in cir
:umference.
: Habitual
' Constipation
May to permanently overcome Improper
personal efforts with the assistance
oftheone truly benejicial laxative
? remedy, Syrup effigs and Elixir of Senna,
3 which enables oneto jform regular
a habits daily So that assistance to na
tare may be gradually dispensed
a when no longer needed a$ the best of
,1. )
, remedies,wnen re?june?, mew hbdw
3 mature and hot to supplant the natur.
j ol functions, vhich must depend uifri*
3 mate/y upon proper nourishment,
3 proper efforts,and. rigjKt living generally.
* To get its beneficial effects, always
f buy the genuine
- syrupikgs^eluirfsenna
^ manufactured by the
' California
Fig Syrup Co. only
SOLD EYALL LEADING DRUGCISTS
oaesizeortfy, regular price 50$pet-Bottle
: M
1 Whether you raise Chickens for fun <
t get the best results. The way to do this
We offer a book telling all
ject?a book written by a
25 years in raising Poultry. [
had" to experiment and spend
wav to conduct the business? H,
"i^TTO cHmnc
a L I'j i> lO I LI (JUOUlgC oi>uu?^/w<
and Cure Disease, how to
s Market, which Fowls to Save
- indeed about everything vou must know o
i POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CEN
Book Publishing House, 1
ilt is no use a(
you have the G
having the Go
advertise.
?
Proof is inexhaustible that
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound carries women safely
through the Change of Life.
Read the letter Mrs. E. Hanson,
3U4 Hj. JUOIlg' Ol., vuiuiuuuo, vuiu,
writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
"I was passing' through the Change
of Life, and suffered from nervousness,
headaches, and other annoying r
symptoms. My doctor told me that
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
was good for me, and since taking
it I feel so much better, and I can
again do my own work. I never forget
to tell my friends what Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound did for me
during this trying period."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills.
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulceration,
fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down
feeling, flatulency, indigestion,
dizziness or nervous prostration*
Why don't you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to '
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
nirmnnD
Should be inseparable.
For summer eczemas,
rashes, itchings, irritations,
inflammations, chafings,
sunburn, pimples, blackheads,
red, rough, and s<?re
hands, and-"antiseptic,
cleansing as well as for all
the purposes of the toilet,
bath, and nursery, Cuticura
Soap and Cuticura Oint- -; !
ment are invaluable.
Sold throughout the world. Depots: London. 27,
Charterhouse 8q.; Paris. 5. RuedelaPalx: Australia,
R. Towns <fc CO., Sydney: India. XI. K. Pot)!,
Calcutta; Japan, Maruya, Ltd.. Tckto; So. Africa.
Lennon, Ltd.. Cape Town. etc.. V. S. A., Potter Drug
A Chem. Corp., Sole Props.. Boston.
a7~Post>bee, Cuticura Book on Care ol Skin.
Thompson's Eye Water
WIIM> WS'under N EW LAW obtained
I>^?TWKT7/fnVC ^ JOHN W. MORRIS,
Washington, D- S. ,
H' HHirBBHIMIMMW
v i J ilflfiFf
if the bottom of your H
shoe is different from the 9
bottom of your foot, it pushes the 9
bones out of place, strains the cords, fe
and causes foot-ache and lameness. ?
human feet, and so really do fit.
Look for the label. If you do not B
find these shoes readily, write us
for directions how to secure them. *5
FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. I
MOMCVf You Know Howto
YlUriEI! Handle Them Properly
>r profit, vou want to ilo it intelligently 'and
is to profit by the experience of others.
/\ ImAiif An fl?o cilK
) UU 1iCCVX IV IXH\J it uu v?*v uuv/
Cman who made his living for
and in that time necessarily
much money to learn the best
for the small sum of 25
It >Us you how to '"Detect
Feed for Eggs, and also for
for Breeding Purposes, and
n the subject to make a success. SENT
TS IN STAMPS.
34 Leonard St, 9 No Y. City?
ivertising unless
oods, and no use ;
iods unless you