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New York City.?The simple shirt j waist made in tailored style is auso- j. luteiy necessary to comfort, and this ! tl one is tucked after an exceptionally : | attractive and becoming manner. In j the illustration it is made of natural , colored pongee stitched with belding j silk, and pongee is much in vogue for I waists of the sort, while it has a I ^ great many practical advantages, but 1 the model is appropriate for all the seasonable waistings. The waist is made with the fronts and the back. There is a regulation h box pleat at the centre front and a P neck-band finishes the neck. The col- w lar is of the turn-over sort and can b be made from striped material as 11- ? lustrated or to match the waist as tl fiJ lli'J liked. There are regulation sleeves | i with straight cuffs. j I The quantity of material required s for the medium size is three and s three-quarter yards twenty-one or j c twenty-four, three and three-eighth a yards thirty-two or two yards forty- j i four inches wide with one-eighth yard any width for the over portion and a collar. j c Sashes of Green. As jade green is such a popular! 1 color for all manner of things this ' a season, it was to lie expected that this j a color would be widely used for sashes, j c These are made broad when worn with white, ecru or pale gray frocks. j The newest way in which they are j used, however, is to form something I of a waistcoat by being lifted quite high, nearly to bust, and to be covered at sides and back by the looso coat. This is a smart touch on afternoon coat suits that have long skirts, j Reign of Tassel. Tassels, tassels everywhere, be it i dangling from the latest neckwear or I hanging from the big drapery seen on so many of the new costumes. ' They hang behind the dainty ear of I the girl who wears her most fetching j tulle hat or they bedeck the skirt of the society matron as she stands in line at reception or tea. Color Mendings. c. The blending of many colors in dc- it licious harmonies is responsible for a large part of the attractiveness of the f( present styles, but it also furnishes ii one of the most difficult problems for o inexperienced milliners and dress-] y makers. . v 1 iu"? Jt) Tunics Fashionable. The rage for tunics threatens to nake a fashionable drawing room ook like the old Roman Forum. The New Sleeve. While the new sleeve is long, it ie etter not to lengthen an elbow sleeve >y adding a long cuff of embroidery r trimmed material. Better leave he sleeve at its original length and nisli with a turnover cuff of emroideiy or lace. These cuffs, by the :ay, when put 011 short sleeves, are ot fastened with link buttons. The .1 ? U jui uvu. Buttons For a Lacc Blouse. A charming set of buttons for a ace blouse may be made of frills of ralonciennes lace, gathered to the outre and stitched to a foundation f net, with a tiny button or flat bead n the centre of each- to hide the :)int. These are, of course, not inended for "working" buttons, but nly serve for decoration. s A Novelty. Very many women like a touch of idividuality about their children's lothes, and some have taken to emroidering German script letters in od mercerized cotton in the cross titchings on the middle of the front c llnnn T?iiccinr> hlrmSPS I lilt; Willie llllCil 'he initial of the child may be used r the initial of the last name, it maters not at all, and sometimes these ?tters are three inches in height. Three or Four Piece Skirt. The skirt which is smooth over the ips and which flares at the lower ortion continues a favorite one for ralking, while it is always the most ecoming and most graceful. Here 3 a model that can be made either in liree or four pieces as the front gore s seamed at the centre or cut in on? 11 the illustration it is made iroir itriped material and the front gore is earned at-the centre to produce the hevron effect. The circular bands ire pretty and novel and are exceedugly effective in the striped fabric. The skirt is made with a front gore iifl c!flr> ami h:ir-lf nrirtirms whir-h arf ireular. The front edges of the side lortious are turned under to form ucks, which are laid over onto the ront gore, so concealing the seams nd allowing effective .use of buttons s trimming. The fulness at the back an be laid in inverted pleats or it an bo cut off and the skirt finished i habit style as liked. The quantity of material required 3r the medium size is eight and onealf yards twenty-four, seven and ne-half yards twenty-snven or five ards forty-four or fifty-two inchea ide. THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. CUFITIS LEE LAWS. ' Subject: Christianity and Business. Brooklyn, N. Y.?The Rev. Dr. Curtis Lee Laws, in the Greene Avenue Baptist Church, preached on "Christianity and Business." The text was from Deuteronomy 8:18: "Thou shalt remember the Lord thy God, for it is He that giveth thee power to get wealth." Dr. Laws said: When a man becomes a Christian he does not sever his relations to the world in which he lives. He is given to Christ by the Father as a personal | and perpetual possession, but instead j of translating him, Christ sends him I back into the very world from which 1 U ? n ? Kwa*-, r.niTA/1 rhrtef COM ti"l | lie nas uucu oavcu. wuiu w I the Father: "As Thou hast sent Me i into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world." But when Christ sends the saved man back into the world, He sends him back as a new man. "They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world." The Christian is in the world, but in the world with a new motive, a new purpose and a new power. Our Master well knew that it would be difficult for His disciples to be in the world without being of the world, and so He prayed: "I pray not that Thou Bhouldst take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldst keep them from evil." From the beginning, therefore, the relation of the Christian to the affairs of life has been a problem worthy of the most serious T i-U ? btuuy. Ill lue ettiij uiucj iucic ncic fanatics who felt that It was below the dignity of a Christian to enter the secular pursuits in which they had formerly been engaged. They gave up their business and brought discredit upon their profession by the vagaries of their other worldism. The Apostle Paul tried to correct this abuse in his second letter to the Thessalonians. In his first epistle, in view of the second coming of Christ, he had urged the people to separate themselves from the world. Misinterpreting his purpose, they had given up their regular employments, and had gotten into mischief. In the second epistle the apostle says: "For we hear that there are some which walk among you disorderly, working not at all but spending their time as busybodies. Now, them that are such we command and exhort by our Lord Jesus Christ, that with quietness they WAwlf on/1 Aorn Awn Vkf AQH " yyi/ijy auu cai a iucii unu uiv.uu. The greatest problem for the Christian man Is to adjust himself to the callings and pursuits of this life, that he may best serve God, his fellow men and the highest interests of his own soul. Instead of translating us to glory at our conversion, God leaves us here that we may perfect personal holiness, working out our own salvation with fear and trembling, and that we may win the world to our new-found King. These are the two functions of the Christian. It is the will of God for His people to engage in the ordinary vocations of this world, that they may earn an honest living and at the same time show forth to the world the saving and keeping power of Jesus Christ. Though it is the will of God for His neonle to eneage in the business of this world, it can be readily sees that there are certain limitations which arise from our relations to God. But, again, the Christian man can engage in no business" which will harm his fellow men, whom he has been sent to win to Christ. If you are in a business which is honest and legitimate, others will share with you the benefit of that business. If your gain means loss to others, then your business is not the business in which a Christian man can engage. If you cannot conduct this business yourself, you cannot own stock in it and share in the profits of it without bartering your soul for gold. If you can't conduct the business yourself, you cannot rent your property for the conduct of such a business without adding hypocrisy to your other sins. May God have mercy on the hypocrites who will not soil their hands by engaging in a wicked business, but who will stuff their pockets full of the dirty money received as dividends or rent from the conduct of this same wicked business. Note now some of the incentives to business activity. "Thou shalt remember the Lord thy God, for He has given thee power to get wealth." The money-making gift is from God. The apostle urges us to be diligent in business, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord. God has no patience with indolence and sloth. All through the Bible the stamp of God's approval is put upon industry, while His curse ever rests upon idleness. It is Godlike to work. Our Lord said, "The Father worketh hitherto and I work." There is no place in God's economy for the idler. He cumbers the ground. Business activity brings wealth, and this is an incentive which ought to appeal to the generation in which we are living. Wealth ought to be desired by every man, because wealth is a mighty factor in the world in which we live. Think of what wealth can do for the individual. It can give opportunity to acquire high and noble tastes. It can give leisure for study and research. These in turn will r-ause the mind to grow stronger and the character to grow nobler. Wealth can purchase length of days, and it can secure to us the atmosphere in which human love can blossom and bear fruit to perfoction. Think of what wealth can do for the family. It can surround our loved ones with books and paintings and statuary. It can provide the highest culture for our children. Ii m am^ViIa nfi /-lienonpfi a o-onnrnnc \-?ll CIJUU1U U O iy U c* hospitality and to make our homes the centre of a delightful and ennobliug religious, social and intellectual circle. Think of what wealth can do for society. It can lift up those shattered and maimed victims of vice and poverty. It can cleanse the augean sables. It can send the brightness of day into the loathsome, fetid haunts of darkness. It can lay out and beautify parks. It can establish and perpetuate universities and libraries. It can support artists and scientists.that they may devote their time to creating the beautiful and the useful. It can set the spindles and wheels of I mcinuiiiuiurt: 111 mouon. it uuu the poor the chance to earn an honest living, that self-respect may not be lost by receiving charity. Oh, the value of wealth to society! Think of what wealth can do for the church. The cause of Christ is languishing all over the world because there is not money sufficient to carry on Christ's work to the glory of rirwl Hnv l?nol 1 VWU. V?I iv^ai v-il III ill C DUUVi ing because of poor equipment and the lack of workers who can devote their whole time to ilio cause. Our Christian colleges, orphanages and hospitals could doublo their efficiency If they had more money. Our nils slonary societies are all poverty- ' stricken. The missionary force in the great cities, on the frontiers and in heathen lands could all be doubled I in twelve months if we had sufficient means. This is true of all Christian denominations. May God prosper the people and then make them willing to ( lay their gold at His feet! Business men, I exhort you in the name of the King to be diligent and self-denying and frugal that success may crown your efforts; for no one can estimate the good that your wealth can do to yourself, to your \ family, to society, and to the kingdom j of God in the world. Let us now consider the perils of ' business success. I have exhorted you to fidelity, nftuplo^AWAtr onA??firir \r\ VA?r hiielnnoa HS.OiBlOUW, <="<=' *" I . life. I have told you of the glory which comes with wealth, but I would ! he false to your highest interests if ! I did not hold up before you some of J the awful perils which confront the man who makes a great success in : business. "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" No man can gain the whole ' , world, or a millionth part of the ' world, but if he gained the whole of ! it at the cost of his soul it would be a 1 calamitous bargain. The text means ' simply that in the effort to gain j wealth many forfeit their own souls. ! The temptation is to neglect the higher for the lower, to give up the spir itual for the temporal, to give up the ' unseen for the seen. How pitiful the thought that men spend a lifetime in J the vain effort to corral the world and find themselves at last without a soul. What does it mean by losing one's . soul? The expression is not eqnlva- 1 lenfr to being condemned, though of J coursS it leads to perdition. The soul here spoken of by Jesus means the faculty in man which apprehends God and goodness. Jesus says that the man who pays too much attention to money getting is apt to lose the fac- ! ulty by which he apprehends God and spiritual things. He loses the faculty J because he refuses to use it. His ear is dull to the voice of God. His eye ' is clouded so that he cannot see the beauty of God, and by and by through ; a process of deterioration death comes \ and the faculty is lost. Oh, men, do not lose your souls! Keep your ear ] i open to the voice of God. Keep your heart attuned to the will of God; but alas, alas! some before me have almost lost their souls. In seeking a 1 good thing they are giving up the 1 best thing. Jesus said: "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a ! needle than for a rich man to enter 1 into the kingdom of God," and, "How hardly shall a rich man enter the kingdom of heaven." There are many 1 perils about the gaining of wealth 1 i it _ * ? Ji rrf _ _11 ; ana me using 01 11. we nave cin seen the influence of wealth upon 1 character. Too often it makes the humble man proud, the generous man ' stingy, the charitable man suspicious, and the honest man dishonest. Some- ( times the man who makes the money ! cscapes the perils, but succeediug gen- 1 orations are almost inevitably cursed by the wealth which they inherited. 1 The Master knew human nature per- ! factly, and so He said, "How hardly 1 shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven." There is one way 1 to escape from these perils, and I commend it to the rich, to those who 1 would be rich, and to all Christian business men alike. Write the words of my text in the front of your ledgers i and on the tablets of your hearts: "Thou shalt remember the Lord thy '> God, for it is He that giveth thee power to get wealth." Unanswered Prayer. An unanswered prayer Is no proof of an unhearing God. There may be 1 reasons in the great purposes of our heavenly Father why a petition may ' fail of a direct answer. The creature may err, not understanding the will 1 of God; but the Creator cannot err. ' As manv a child of God has looked back over his life he has seen where | the goodness and benign wisdom of God has been manifested in with holding the things asked for. But if the direct answer to the petition has been withheld wc believe that in some way there will come a blessing because of it, and that no earnest, faithful prayer is ever lost to the suppliant. "It may not be my way; it may not be thy way; but yet i in His own way the answer will j come. It may be years in coming; it i may be in some wholly unexpected way, through sonie channel we never dreamed of, and which at the time of the prayer wo knew nothing of; i but it will come to us with blessing. Indeed, we in our obtuseness may be living in the very atmosphere of answered prayer and not be aware of it. If the answer does not come in w IaaI, if 11 a Innlr iuu way v?c iuuu ivi n, jci. . ? around and see if the flower wo longed for is not blooming elsewhere, or if our life at some angle does not touch God more intimately than before. We may look for the answer in a tally-ho, but it may conic in the 1 form of .come poor beggar on the street.?United Presbyterian. Kow to Find Our ]?Icssings. If one should give me a dish of sand, and tell mc there were particles i of iron in it, I might look with my J eyes for them, and search for them 1 with my clumsy fingers, mid be unable to find them; but let me take a i * . * 1 i%?,? ;*. i magnet ana sweep u, aim nuw n, would draw to itself the most invisi- < hie particles by the power of attraction! The thankful heart, like my finger in the sand, discovers no mercies; but i < let the thankful heart sweep through 1 the day, and, as the magnet finds the i iron, so it will find in every hour some ; heavenly blessing; enly the iron in i 1 (Jod's sand is gold.?O. W. Jlolmes. ] j i Taking God's Promises lii Vain. ' i "I should no more dare to fret than | | curse and swear," said John Wesley. A writer in commenting on this remark justifies Wesley by saying that to swear is to take God's name in J j viiin, and to fret is to take God's | ] I promises in vain. Read the Bible to j ' : iicd its "fear nots," and see how often | 1 | God uses these words in speaking to | 1 I Sis children, even in tha midst of j danger and sore trouble. Resting on ? the promises is far wiser, far nobler, than fretting: it is living with "God ? o'erhcad."?The Wcllsprir.g. 1 . ? I Profitable Thin?*. i I . Tin soor.pr we are impressed that j t'lia present life is uncertain and very short, and thnt the future life is sure ;:nd end Ice?, the belter it will be for ?:s. Also to learn that material \ things cannot satisfy the soul, but t tliat a man must be rich toward God t before that aching void can ever be r filled, and that godliness is pi-ofitable l] unto all things and we may add unto 1 t all lime.?TJ?e tiev. \v. jr. uryau, i c Methodist, Dallas, Texas. ' t IJc a Soui Winner. n It ia easier (o preach publicly to a 13 great congregation than to win one a soul by private means. , a u ' < fHE CRUSADE AGAINST DRINK PROGRESS MADE BY CHAMPIONS FIGHTING THK RUM DEMON. spread of Prohibition?Lenders Declare That County Option Dili; Will Be Adopted in Eleven State: in the Next Two Years. Seven States, nearly 1300 counties ilmost 10,000 towns and township: *nd 13G cities, with a population oi 500 to 150,000. have adopted loca iption or prohibitory laws in sup session of the liquor traffic in th< United States. There are eleven cities, each havini i population of more than 50,000 :hat are dry, aful nineteen whose pop ulation is between 20,000 and 50,000 Many of the States have been swep' ^.lose to prohibitory Jaws by th< spread of local option sentiment; one half of Nebraska is without saloons Df the 241 counties in Texas 152 an 3ry; twenty-nine of the fifty-fiv< counties in West. Virginia have shu Dut the saloons; sixty-six of the 10( counties of Virginia have adoptee local option: seventy-five of the 11; counties of Missouri are in the loca option column; in Ohio three couniiei md 1621 townships and small town: have voted against liquor, while h Minnesota 1611 townships and vi! lages are dry. Georgia's prohibition law went int< effect on January 1 of this year: Ala bama will go under constitutiona prohibition January 1 next; Missis sippi will begin the enforcement o Its prohibitory statute on the Fann date; Kansas has been a prohibitioi State since 1SSO; Maine since 1855 North Dakota since 189 9, and Okln boma came into the Union withcu legalized saloons in 1907. So persistent have the Massachu setts anti-saloon campaigners wagei their war that seventy-six per cent of the territory of the State i3 unde prohibitory law; seventy-five pe cent, of Minnesota is dry, while Ken tucky, the home of moonshine whisk; since the Revolution, now has bu four counties wholly wet. Even tir Mormons have caught the fever, ant It is confidently asserted that Utal will before long swing in with th local option column. Pennsylvania and New Jersey an admitted to be the hardest nuts ti crack in the matter of getting law that will permit the voters to sa; whether or not they wish to keep thi saloon in the townships, counties an< cities of the Commonwealth. It is asserted by the officers of thi National Anti-Saloon League that ii two years eleven more States will en act constitutional prohibitory laws and that in thirteen others simila statues will be debated in the Legisla tures, with every indication of speed: adoption. With the same confidence it is de clared by the leaders in the temper ance movement that county optioi bills will be adopted in eleven State in the next two years, and that no only will Pennsylvania and New .Ter sey be well speckled with dry terri tory by that time, but that great iu vasion of the wet territory west o the Mississippi will be made" by th local option revolution. Arizona California, Oregon, Colorado, Mou tana, Idaho and Washington hav local option laws, and the only State in the West completely under licens rule are New Mexico, Utah, Nevad; and Wyoming. The battle has been delayed in th latter territory, it is stated, becr.us of the comparatively small populatioi in that great section. While the battle of the bottle ha been waged at the ballotbox and ii legislative halls, war has been con ducted with equal vigor in the en forcement of the license laws in man of the large cities, so that Sunda closing of the saloons is in full fore in nearly an or tne large cities or in Union. The chief exceptions are Ne\ York, Chicago, San Francisco an> Milwaukee.?Philadelphia Ledger. The Cost. Secretary Fredericks, of the Ko komo (Ind.) Steel and Iron Com pany, in the Indianapolis News, de clared that the saloons near thei factory cost their company $75,00 a year, "if not more." "Let us hav a law." he declared, "prohibiting un der the severest penalty a saloon i: the factory districts." And as repre sentative of hundreds of other town everywhere, the News corresponden concludes with this statement: "Ko komo has thirty saloons that pa about $7500 into the city treasur annually. The manufacturing inter ests of Kokomo are damaged mor than $75,000 every year by the salooi interests." A Drunkard's Picturc Gallery. Fond du Lac, Wis., has a uniqu ordinance requiring the photograph r\f hohHiiol Hmn / ornt! tn ho nlonui in all the saloons in the city, wit! a notice l'orbiddin^ saloonkeepers ti sell liquor to them on penalty o losing their licenses. This new sor of rogues' galiery is growing rapidl; under the fostering care of the polic courts, but one addition to it wai made voluntarily. In it is tho pho tograph of one poor fellow whi begged to nave it placed there witi the others, as his only chance o freedom from the tyranny of strous ilrink. Atlantic City in Line. An active campaign against Sun day liquor selling in Atlantic City NT. J., has been inaugurated by tli< ministers and the Reform League Public sentiment in that city is thor jughly aroused to the necessity o having the law enforced. Not onl: lias the linuor been sold on Sundav but it has^ been distributed amon* minors. Nearly fifty offenders agains the statute have been already cited. Sympathy's Power. A gentleman once seeing a pooi nan under the influence 01! liquor stopped, and laying his hand on thi nan's shoulder, spoke to him in kind less and gentleness, "John." It was only a word, but it saved ? >oul from death, and John B. Gougl; jreached temperance for years and saved many a man and woman from c Irunkard's grave. Only a word! Who caniot speal< t? A word in season?how good ii s, and it may bear fruit, even a bunliedfold. New York Shows Fight. Prohibitionists of New York City velcome the news that the liquor inerests are going to enter actively ino the Presidential campaign. Chairuan Gardiner says: "For years we lave uet'ii irking 10 IHUK<? a ri"01Ulition issue and now our opponents orne in and do it for us." About the poorest stroke of busless in the present day is being done y those brewers and distillers who re opposing prohibition, when they re positive it will increase the deland for liquor. [ How to Know a Mad Dog. Hydrophobia is fa reality so rare ; and so terrifying that its symptoms and treatment are little understood. As a matter of fact, the commonly accepted expression of madness in a dog is often misleading. The real ? mad dog does not shun water, as It , is said. On the contrary, mad dogs often rush to the water and drink eagerly, if they are able to swallow. I Tho in o A finer rlnoo "not fnnm at t h P ' mouth. It does not run amuck, snapl ping at everything in its path. What, then, are the indications of ; the mad dog? To those familiar with a given dog the surest symptoms, 5 and the one which should excite tho closest attention is a distinct and unaccountable change in the dog's dis? position?a staid dog becoming ex,\ citable and a frisky one dull. That condition does not necessarily mean ; ! rabies, but it is suspicious, and if, in 2 addition, the dog has trouble in swal5 lowing?as though it seemed to have J a bone in its throat?beware! That , dog should be instantly tied up, be; cause if it be rabies it takes but a day 1 or two for ferocious instincts to de? velop. s ^ The unmistakable evidence, how1 ever, of a, dog with rabies is the sticky, whitish saliva which covers 5 the teeth and shows on the drawn lips. The eyes glare and are red; I the dog has paroxysms of running fury, during which it barks hoarsely, f which alternate with periods of tem3 porary exhaustion. ? Outing Maga* zine. t Puritans Had Fine Shoes. The early settlers came over to J trade and to prosper as well as to seek religious and political liberty, i- History commonly deals with the v compact signed in the cabin of the - Mayflower, the sufferings of the first y settlers, and their struggles against t the savages, both man and beast. But j it is certain that the forefathers, and j their wives and daughters, brought Q over many articles of fine and stylish apparel, and it may be that several e pairs of fine and stylish boots and ^ shoes were in the trunks of these s stern persons who landed in Plymouth Y in 1620. j The early forefathers certainly laid the foundation ^of modern trade, s They certainly brought over love of i fine dress. They established in this - country the foundations of trade, and > the belief that it is a person's duty to v_ dress himself as finely as he possibly y can. From these early foundations, Americans have built up a trade, and - an appreciation of dress that is sec ond to none in the world. It is -bei cause the great majority of Americans s of the present day admire their stylish and well appearing garments " that retail trade flourishes.?New _ England Grocer. ? Red Blood and Blue. Three-year-old Allan had a very e aristocratic grandma, who prided hers | self on her own and her husband's " | blue-blooded ancestry. She told him a i heroic deeds of them and warned o him from ever playing with boys of g low degree. Q One day Allan came screaming up stairs to his mamma and grandma, s holding his hand up covered with n blood, where he had cut his little * finger. They were both greatly alarmed, as he was a child who rare?! ly cried or complained when hurt. e Mamma washed the blood off and, e examining the cut, said: v "Why, dear, it's so very bad. d Does it hurt you so much?" "I'm not cryin* 'cause it hurts," he said, "but 'cause it's only red blood, and grandma said I had blue."? Philadelphia Ledger. I Bunyan's Sharp Answer. 0 John Bunyan wrote "The Pilgrim's e Progress" in Bedford jail, where he was confined for his roliglon. A Qua? ker came to the prison and thus adg dressed him: t "Friend Bunyan, the Lord bath j i* sent me to seek for thee, and I have j U Iiaam 4- V* if* r\ i * rr V* i'/at/M'., 1 n f rirtc in / UCCI1 1111 UU^li CCM.-IUI Willllivro IU j y search of thee, and now I am glad I | have found thee." ? Bunyan replied, "Friend, thou dost not speak truth in saying the Lord sent thee to seek for me, for the Lord well knows that I have been in this jail for some years, and if He had ? sent thee He would have seut thee 3 directly."?Scrap Book. N.Y.?;J0 1 3 FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diseases perf manently curcd bv Dr. Kline's Great Nerve ( Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. J Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch St.. Phila., l\v e The value of dairv products for 1907 was s f800,000,000: of poultry, $600,MO,UOO. ' A find these shoes readily, writ< \ for directions how to secure th FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockti CHICKENS EARN A Whether vou raise Chickens for fun or g-et the best results. The way to do this i; We offer a book telling all ject?a book written by a mhbr 25 years in raising Poultry. [ 1 hail to experiment and spend At 1 I way to conduct the business? J i ($NTS in postage stamps. and Cure -Disease, how to : Market, which Fowls to Save B 3B ' indeed about everything vou must know on ; POSTPAID UN PvKCRlIT OF 23 CENT! Book Publishing House, 13 T4- ?J 11 lb IIU use ctu you have the Go having the Go( advertise. K FOUR GIRLS Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Read What They Say. t M:ML^IHanR4M^630 came irregularities, periodic sufferine, aud Dervous headaches, had failedTo help me, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it" KatharinoCraie.2355 ,<r^Ep^^Col./writes: '"Thanks j^lJBto Lydia E. Pinkham's Yjffl am well, after suffering / ffc a - Jp^y^Jy for months from nerV?Missr(lSeODStolt?. man, of Laurel, la., .J? BW writes: "I was ina runEfl ^^HdownconditionandsufPinkham's Vegetable Compound made me 417 N. East St.^KeB I||?diaE.Pinkham'sVege' me of b??ckache^, side my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me." Vacts for sick women. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made ,/'m (ymm T-nnfo and V>ovVia ho a Kaon fVifl -'- r:3? IIVIU X VUtU U(fl IL/Oj UUQ uwu VUV 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,orneryous prostration. " -:3 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. I a MVmr y ^ * vv? n Products | Libby's ;t3f Vienna Sausage ' You've never tasted the best sausage until you've eaten Libby's Vienna Sausage. It's a sausage product of high food value! Made different Cooked different! Tastes rlifforont anrl ic rlifforonf | VIU1VI VII V IUIV4 ig UUAVI Vll% than other sausage! Libby's Vienna Sausage, like all of the Libby Food Products; is carefully prepared and cooked in Libby's Great White Kitchen. It can be quickly served for any meal at any time! It is pleasing, not over-flavored and has that satisfying taste. Try it Libby, McNeill & Libby. Chicago. ( ni =in A UKNTS WANTED' for 1'atciiu.il Kerosene Mantle ./V. Burner. 70 candle power; used on any lamp; saves Ml per cent. Kerosene. Hearty seller everywhere. Large profits. Exclusive territory. I', o. GOTTSCHAI.K. r, Chambers St., N. Y. City Thompson's Eye Water WIDOWS' uuUcr NEW LAW,?blalne<> PENSIONS ^Washington, 1). 0. FOR MEN I pic crowd their feet into shoes Hi o make their feet fit the shoes. 31 inthatway: wearSKREEMERS. n lr fnr thf? onrl if vntl Rl ' ? " ' H : the makers icm. an, Mass . FH&FREDiI ? ?*11 "?cav"n nriKizrvi,f You Know Howto lUllL I . HandleThem Properly profit, you want to do it intelligently 'and ? to profit by the experience of others. you noed to know on the subOman who made his living for and in that time necessarily much money to learn the be?t tor the small sum of 23 It tells you how to Detect Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and Mie suDjcci 10 niaKe a success. 5 IN STAMPS. 4 Leonard St,3 N. Y. City. vertising unless 'ods, and no use )ds unless you /riVtOj