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New York City.?Theslmpleblouse is always the useful one, and this model can be closed with big buttons as illustrated or invisibly as liked, and can be made either high or with square. Dutch neck and with plain long sleeves, or with those of elbow length, so that it really supplies a great many needs. When made as il lustrated it is adapted either to the separate waist for morning wear or to the shirt waist dress of linen and other washable material, while when made as shown in the small view, it becomes much more dressy and adapted to thinner, lighter fabrics, as lawns, batistes, foulards and the like. For the finish of the square neck and elbow sleeves any banding or similar trimming that may be liked can be used, and with the high neck waist can be worn any one of the fashionable collars of the day. The waist is made with frsnts and back. It is tucked over the shoulders in a way to mean both breadth and tapering lines and again at the centre front. The long sleeves can be tucked or gathered at their lower edges and are finished with straight cuffs. The -11 al^^IlT emuw S1CCVCS UlC BlUllJljr sauicicu Into bands. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and threeeight yards twenty-one or twentyfour, three and one-half yards thirty-two or two and one-half yards forty-four inches wide, one and threequarter yards of bandingwhen Dutch neck and elbow sleeves are used. Mohair Petticoats. First it was reported that taffeta might be rubberized; then pongoa took kindly to the process, and now mohair has become water and dirt proof. This last is a great acquisition to enthusiastic motorists, for the material is light and cool, and at the same time it wears like wire. Pongee and silk may hold their places in the esteem of womankind for raincoats to be worn to social functions, but for driving, automobiling and coaching mohair will be found superior. Octopus How Next. The Alsatian bow is making way for the newer octopus bow for millinery. ft@MB5HP| l|rTi>yV"" Good Figure Gone. The "good figure" Is in such dIs- j I favor that one close observer states that within a certain circle it is con- J sidered vulgar to have such a figure. Strap Pocketl?ooks. One of the new strap pocketbooks has its strap buckled on at each end so that it can be removed if desired, but the idea is probably carried out more for ornament than use. Use of Bands. The girl who is tall can shorten her apparent height by putting a band of plain material about the low- j er edge of her figured frock. The { Idea ie to cause an abrupt change. Girl's Tucked Dress. Just such a pretty little dress aq this one is needed for every school girl, and this model can be made from lawn or batiste or from similar washable material, from the thin silks and pongees, that the girls are wearing so much, and, indeed, from every childish material. The skirt is an exceptionally pretty one, with an oddly shaped flounce, while the blouse is made with a yoke shaped in harmony therewith and with double sleeves that are distinctive and novel. As illustrated handkerchief lawn is trimmed with a simple lace banding and combined with a yoke of crossbarred dimity on which a little embroidery is seen. * The dress consists of the blouse and the skirt, which are joined by a belt. The blouse is tucked at Its up per edge and joined to the yoke, while it also is laid in wider tucks above thebelt, which give needed weight to thin materials. The over sleeves are tucked below the shoulders, so that they are prettily and becomingly full while those beneath are of the simple puffed sort gathered into straight bands. The skirt is made in one piece, which is joined to the flounce and the flounce is finished with a hem and tucks. I The quantity of material required for the medium size (twelve years) is j eight and one-quarter yards twenty| four, six and one-half yards thirtytwo or four and three-quarter yards forty-four inches wide, with threeeighth yard any width for the yoke, six yards of handing', two and onej quarter yards of edging. | I Tb& Pui/o/t I A SERMON' &Y TriE RE'/? r[OVv/|l?N DE^ofT^ptf* "Why call ye Mc Lord, Lord, and i _ ^Ui ...UIaK T cnir9" uo not ine uuiiga muLu * oc.j . ? Luke 0:46. Jesus is either a force or a fraud. His word is truth or it is nonsense. His gospel is either the supreme p'niflosophy of life or the quintessence of silliness. He is either to be followed or not to be followed. If He Is to lead we must do His will. He is a captain whose commands are commendable and practicable or an untrustworthy leader to obey whom is the sheerest senselessness. There is no middle ground. Christ is a wise man?the eternal wisdom of God? or a fool; a visioned statesman or a visionary; a religious leader beyond compare, or the most illogical and fantastic enthusiast who ever lived. The church of the living Christ through near 2000 years has proclaimed Him the incarnate mind of God, the glorious embodiment of the eternal wisdom, the supernal leader, -1- x 'Ja 4-U ~ ine omy true guiue, me iucui.ui ui the mind as the Saviour of the soul of man. Saints have sung of His beauty, philosophers have yielded homage to the purity and profundity of His thought, sages have reveled in His wisdom, martyrs have died for Him. We have declared JJim Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the ultimate both as to inception and finality. And yet we fail to practice His truth, to apply His principles, to obey His mandates, to trust His word, to live the life that He counsels as the only life that eternally is worth the while. We elevate Him upon a pedestal of dominating prominence, and then we laugh at Him. We join His church, and then we misrepresent Him. We swear fealty under His control, and then we desert Him in every hour of the test. And then we wonder why men of the world have no use for eccleciasticism, though they cheer the Christ. We are amazed at the paltriness of the church's grip as an organized institution upon humanity compared with what it ought to be; while the sweep of the influence of Jesus is becoming universal. We are astounded that in an age when the Lord of Life receives greater homage than ever in the reach of years, the church of the Lord?the organized body that bears His name?is being weighed in the balance of intelligent criticism and declared wanting. But it is not strange. Too long have you cried, "Lord, Lord." The world demands performance as well as protestations. It tires of the platitudinous. It expects men who profess to love the good to be something more than pious. For the piousness of the day is almost synnoymous with the most dangerous lmplousness. Bad men have a suspicion that bad men will be bad. They expect good men to be good. They detest pious talk and a pious mien that gets no further than words and loo'cs. And they are right. Laodicean Christianity is as traitorous as it is inefficient. It denies that in which it professes to believe. It betrays its Lord with a kiss. The world has no use for it and we ought to have none. A world that could contemplate it with equanimity wouldn't be worth saving. What Bhall we say of a church which too largely practices it? Too much have we cried, "Lord, Lord." Jesus says, "Ye are My friends if ye do whatsoever I command you." Have we done His will? Jesus says: "Love your enemies; bless them that curse you; him that taketh away thy cloak forbid not to take thy coat also." And Jesurt practiced His proclamations. He was the friend of God. He did the will of the Father. They crucified Him. He besought forgiveness for His persecutors. And yet in a land blessed as is ours with the heritage of twenty centuries of Christian teaching, cultured and controlled under the gospel of Jesus, the best theory of peace that we can practice is that which bids us to be prepared for war. The very church which sing3 the praises pf the hrinoo nf npapo is stranselv silent be r*x ? w-. fore the militarism of our age. Preparedness for war has yet to be proven a guarantee of peace. Indeed it has been quite otherwise. It is neither effective nor necessary. It is purely expedient and never final in theory or in practice. Jesus' way is a better way. If all the armaments of the world were wrecked there would be a surer guarantee of peace than there is to-day and greater prosperity. Jesus' theories have never had an honest opportunity to prove their worth. Those that have been tried. however little, have revealed the wisdom of the Lord. Where nations have ceased to war and have brought their difficulties to the bar of divinely guided counsel there have they found the best results. The individual who follows in the footsteps of his Saviour and forgets injury, forgives injustice, requites good for evil, may seem impractical, but he is the happiest as the most honored among the sons of men. The man who submits to persecution while his trust remains in God may lose his head: he will not lose his soul. External forces cannot steal away that life eternal which is the gift of God. Thft church must either follow Christ or it must cease to be. The reason for its existence is resident in its recognition of His authority. The secret of Its ancient power lay in its willingness to do His will. And as the guiding spirit in a larger era gives her visions of wider ministry and impulse to a service the like of which she has never known she must, move on with fidelity and fervor or be discredited and disow'ned. The church is not the kingdom save as the church labors for the consummation of the kingdom. It is not an end in iiself. It is a means to the attainment of divine conclusions. The trouble has been and is that we have mistaken theology for Christianity. the organization for the life, the membership roll for the test of membership. Quite otherwise is the mind of Christ. The test of membership Is not how warm we make seats, or how loud we sing, or how vehemently we pray. The final testing is the testing of service. Do you work hs you pray? Do you warm hearts as well as benches? Do you make souls to rejoice? Do you regard yourself not as your brother's keeper so much as your brother's brother? A.re you true to Christ? Have you 41 T/Inn') acciiacoa lw vc tut? xvnift . "Why call ye Me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?" The question is as timely and applicable &s it was when it was propounded. For there never has been a time when the church more largely was cognizknt of the Jne?fectu_alness of lip Beryls' - _____ 1 . - _ > 1 .1 * V, ~ fny TO- ! M ice ana cunvmceu ui mc nccu ??- j sultful and helpful labor than she 18 to-day. The Protestant church is in danger g of becoming priest-ridden?the worst | that can befal the organization of the j church; ridden with a priesthood shorii of compulsory authority and ! in whom the authority of the Christ I is too precariously admitted to re- ( side. TTie laity of Protestanism are j too largely guilty of hiring men to j do their work for them?at salaries j on the average that are an insult to : the Lord whose work they send their 1 v employes to do?rather than of call- i a ing leaders whose business it shall j j] v>o tA Hirprt thp pnereies. rebuke the I T sins, vitalize the virtues, clarify the g thought, inspire the minds, intensify i] the spiritual conceptions and percep- 3, tlons of the sons of God who are a members of the church of Christ. Q The church of Christ is full of men ? and women who have their names p upon its rolls for no better reason j R than that it is politic or proper or i ? polite or profitable socially and com- j 5 mercially so to be enlisted. And the J s consequence is that enthusiasm has j [, gone out of the most of the meetings 31 of the church, the gatherings for | .] prayer are generally so dry and cold j a and uninteresting that they are a j R distress to earnest pastors and a re- I flection not only upon the intelligence ! a and spiritual experience, but also 5 upon the gratitude of the church. y The reason for this is not far to 3 seek. The laity, and not infrequent- a ly the clergy, have been so busy seek- Q ing material success that they have 3 had no time to serve the Lord after j p the manner of the Master. The dol- j a lar has supplied so many wants that i , men have ceased to feel the pressing i ? need for spiritual supplies. It has ! u been declared impossible for a nation ! , to believe Christ, disarm and be pre- ! ^ served against the rapacious agres- I 0 sions of the armed. Business men ! 2 have declared it Impossible to follow j ^ Christ and succeed. The best we I have done, till very lately, in the J 3 management of criminals has been u to jail or execute them. The spirit | _ of the lex talionis?the lowest law of j Judaism?is rampant in the settle- 1 ^ ment of disputes between nations and j nations, society ana its memoers, m- | ^ dividuals and their fellows. We have forgotten the God of life in the ex- | cellency of our livings. We have ! prayed for reforms that we have j neither advanced, expected or de- ^ sired. We have thanked God for the ; t, might of His power while fearful to _ trust His sufficiency against the on- ? slaught of Satan. We have talked " brotherhood and practiced an indi- j; vidualism that .has brought sorrow where there is no need for aught but , joy, and strife where co-operation would more thoroughly fulfil the " plans of God, by and with the con- . sent?tacit or active?of the church. * The situation cannot endure. The ? church must reform or relinquish her . claim to primacy and to the privll- j * eges of leadership. Saying "Lord( I ? Lord," will make her acceptable j neither to coming generations nor to j P her bridegroom. Vain repetitions * are valueless to produce results, ac- i ? lion only Is qualified to transmute j ideas into achievements. To do Hig i work we must do His will. Jesus gives us a picture of the end u j of the institution or the man guilty j o i of lip-service or of lukewarm adher- a i c-nce to the propagation of the truth. > a I "Not every one that saith unto Me, ! e i Lord, Lord, shall enter into the king- i t I dom of heaven, but he that doeth the e I will of My Father." He forecasts \ i the fate of those insincere and paltry d Christians who stand before Jehovah t at the great assize. v It is to be hoped that Jesus' pic- e ture will not prove a photograph ol j v us. It is not necessary that it should. ' d We shall be recreant and without ex- j t cuse if it shall so prove to be. No , s man and no church need call upon the ! la Lord in vain. He who hath called us j \ aud upon- whom we call is both will- I f ing and able to perform through us i n effective service for the welfare and | i; the salvation of individuals and the | b race. God summons us in Christ to ! a supreme labor. He provides contem- j i poraneously the power necessary to a t...Wo pnpre-izes and verifies J d j OUttCCU. AAU v. ? . o and inspires and enthuses every soul I \ and every socie.ty that with high de? j f sire and dedicated purpose calls upon ; i: His name. j d Not "Lord, Lord," but "Lord, here J r am I, send me." "What wilt Thou ; t have me to do?" i a Brooklyn, N. Y. j t ^ ! a Prayer. Teach me, God, to walk gently i I amid all the cares and distractions J* that enter my daily life. Let me ! c be filled with the spirit of calm that j I will quiet the pain of disappointment j s and the fever of desire. Let me be? , f lieve that Thou, who has given to c Thy children their longing for love v and life and beauty, wilt not leave d them all unsatisfied in their loneli- . c ness. Thy purposes are greater than i r our purposes, even as Thou art \ strength when we know in ourselves d only weakness. Then let the trust j g myself with serenity to the leadings i t of that purpose which I cannot under- | c stand and, while I wait and work and ! r suffer in my mortal blindness, may a my heart so go out in love and sym- f pathy to those who also wait and r work around me, though I may help t in some real though small measure t to bring the day of Thy kingdom on g earth. Amen. t d Emotion is the Bud. Emotion has no value in the Chris- ! ? tian system save as it stands con- K nected with right conduct as the cause of it. Emotion is the bud, not the ( /lower, and never is it of value until j it expands into a flower. Every re- j ligious sentiment, every act of devo- | ^ tion which does not produce a corre- j j j sponding elevation of life, is worse j f | than useless; it is absolutely per-i j i nicious, because it ministers to self- j j deception and tends to lower the line , of personal morals.?W. H. H. Mur- { ray. The Work of the Spirit. The great work 01' the Holy Spirit, r what is it? To make Christ present ^ with us. Look at the disciples; they loved Him, but they were under the a power of the flesh. The rule of the t flesh had not been broken, and Christ c could not get a lodgment In tneir hearts; but He said, the Holy Spirit . will come, and I will come again to you (in the Spirit) and the Father J and I will take up Our abode with you. The Spirit's work is revealing ? God and Christ in our very hearts.? I Andrew Murray. Our Pilot. J Wo are never without a pilot. When we know not how to steer and s dare not hoist a sail, we can drift. The current knows the way, though we do not. The ship of heaven guides 1 itself, and will not accept a wooden [ rudder.?Emerson. He is All in All. God Is all to theo; if thou be hun- 1 gry, He is bread; if thirsty, He i3 a water; if in darkness, He is light; f if naked, He is a robe of immortal- 1 Jty.?St. Augustine. t r [ HE GREAT DESTROYER| IOME STARTLING FACTS ABOUT j THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. 'he Drink Habit in Canada?An Alarming Increase Both Among l the Men and the "WomenCauses That Contribute to This. Canon Welch rendered a good serice by his straight and rather courgeous words of denunciation touchtig the social habits of not a few of 'oronto's "four hundred," and the j eneral increase not only in drinkag, but also in drunkenness. The | ermon, addressed to a Massey Hall i udience composed largely of the j lilitia forces of Toronto and the An- j ient and Honorable Artillery Comany of Massachusetts, was a timely arning against a growing evil in Canadian life. And it required not nly the prophet's sense of public reponsibility, but also his fearlessness Dr the preacher from St. James' to | trike so direct a blow at one of the aief sins of the social circles to which ot a few of those who heard his rords belong. Canon Welch is quite within the lark in his estimate of the downrade tendencies during the past ten ears. Not only do the police records how an alarming increase in the umber of convictions for drunkeness, but those who know the habits f society as seen at small pleasure arties, at social functions, at private nd semi-private dinne-s and at banuets of various sorts, know right rell that the use of wines and liquors as considerably increased and is now ommon in circles where it was unnown ten years ago. The increase f the drink habit among women is ven more alarming than among men. tot only at private parties, but also n semi-public occasions at leading own-town restaurants and hotels the gly facts are too often forced into rominence. A variety of causes contributes to be present situation. The influx of eople from Britain, where the drink abit is more prevalent, has provided ecruits for the roll of drunkenness, t both ends of the social scale. The bifting of the emphasis in the temerance crusade from the total abstience of the individual to prohibi(on by the State has allowed the rowth of a generation very largely ntaught and unpledged, so far as ersonal convictions and habits are oncerned. The general prosperity f the country, providing an abunance for the average man and luxry for not a few, has made possible xcessive expenditures in all direclons, and with many excess in eating nd drinking and dressing is the most esirable way of using surplus wealth. Lmong women, especially among a ertain class of young women, the oolish notion that drinking chamagne is "chic," just a little bit ricked, is sufficient reason for acuiring the habit.?Toronto Globe. The Biggest Trust. The biggest saloon keeper and liqor seller in the world is the Czar f the Russias. He is proprietor of 11 the saloons in his vast domain, nd thus owns the biggest trust on arth, with competition totally tarred and with profits increasing normously every year. The Great Vhite Czar's Government encouragea rink to such a degree last year that | he income derived from the sale of odka exceeded $390,000,000. Evry year the Russian peasants and workmen are said to get drunker, lirtier, more miserable and more irutal. The imperial grogshops are mall and unclean, with a counter ,t one end and rows of bottles of arious sizes all around the walls rom floor to ceiling. The people are lot allowed to drink on the premses, so they go to the doorstep, ireak off the neck of their bottle and, fter swallowing its contents, fling t into the street. The bottle holds ibout a wineglassful of the imperial Irug and costs five cents. The daily ?-age of a workman in the fields is rom ten to fifteen cents. Tchelvseff ! s a member of the third duma who leclared drink kills Ruusia, and that leither a constitution nor a revoluion is so much needed as tempernee. He says that the Government .udget is made up of poison.?Chicgo Tribune. Creating nn Appetite. The following from the speech ol me of the officers of the Ohio Statq i Jquor League is ooth a text and a : ermon: "It will appear from these j acts, gentlemen, that the success of i >ur business is dependent largely j ipon the creation of an appetite foi j [rink. Men who drink liquor, like j ithers, will die, and if there is no j tew appetite created our counters vill be empty as will be our money irawers. Our children must go hun;ry or we must change our business lL! Tlifl , 0 someinillg mure icmuuciaufc. XUC ' ipen field for the creation of this ap- I letite is among the boys. After men ! re grown and their appetites are ormed, they rarely change in this egard. It will be needful, therefore, hat missionary work be done among he boys, and I make the suggestion, j ;entlemen. that nickels expended in \ reats now to the boys will return in j ollars to your tills after the appetites ' lave been formed. Above all things, } :reate an appetite."?The Home and itate. ?oni?ressman Johnson on Prohibition Congressman Johnson, of North jaKOta, declares uiai uml lu uiu j ;reat educational endowment of the : Jtate (amounting to about $50,000,100), he considered its prohibition ' aw as the most valuable asset of Corth Dakota, and concludes: "The >eople of the State are more emphatc than ever in favor of prohibition." Temperance Xotcs. In England sometimes dissolute nothers drug their babies to sleep vith gin. Th whisky manufacturers are still it odds with th2 Department of Jusice as to what constitutes whisky, lays the New York Tribune. Minnesota claims that during the ; irst. three weeks of January there vere in that State directly owing to iquor the following: "Fourteen sui ides, nineteen people seriously in ured and twelve actually killed." : How long, O Lord; how long!" K-J4 ~ ryf nAnvlit I uauiLMiuge, iuiioo,, n v.ji? ul iiconj i :00,000 population, has voted the saoons out each year for twenty years, md the city of Chelsea has voted the j laloons out for ten years. Adolphus Busch, the great St. I ^ouis brewer, is reported to have ex* i tressed himself at Kansas City as fol- j ows: "When Oklahoma went dry he act cost me one million dollars." | In Texas not only is the sale of j iquor on dining cars prohibited, but | l traveler may not even taKe a arinn j rom his own flask on the train, un< ess he can show by a physician's cer? I ificate that the liquo- is for meilicin?.! luruosea. ; J&k A Spider's Strength. The strength of some of the spiders which build their webs in trees and other places In Central America is ' astounding. One of them had in captivity in a tree there not long ago a wild canary. ' The ends of the wings, the tail and the feet of the bird were bound together by some sticky substance, to wmcn were auacnea me mreaus ui the spider, which was slowly but surely drawing up the bird by an ingenious arrangement. The bird, says Home Notes, hung head downward and was so securely bound with little threads that it could not struggle and would 'soon have been a prey to its great, ugly captor if it had not been rescued. The greatest two power development projects in the world are under way in Colorado, where two companies plan to furnish 150,000 electrical horse-power for the industries of the State. ~ There is an average of seven car collisions a day on the steam, subway, elevated and surface railways of Ne : York. N. Y. N. U.?39 PATENTS '25-H1 We pay all expenses except Government fees?No 1 extras. Our book shows saving to you?Write for It V pow. THE INDUSTRIAL LAW LEAGUE, | [nc.? 170 Broadway, New Vork. TOILET ANTISEPTIC I Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth arid body antiseptically clean and free from un* | healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, l which water, soap and tooth preparations j alone cannot do. A | germicidal, disin! fecting and deodor- [ ** . izing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and econ- | | PI m.1!! omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and |jj dtttL MljZg uferine catarrh. At |l j stores, 50 cents, or I Large Trial Sample ^iiS?8gg/^ . WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK SENT FRET | THE PflXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. i 1 Bgaaaaa 1 isg [ It's Up to It's only a question < don't bring back all that tl you hunt in the i I MAINE w Plenty of excellent guides. L $15. Accessibility such that you your office only one week. | ? Cl1#/-W? Send today 2-cent i l^rr^iUirat ^ tiful books telling tl tbe Fish and Game < and Game Laws Wo: C. M. BURT, Address 'MWr \wB Hunting Trips ^ sa^? AT LOW SUPERIOR TO BEST S< The smaN price is made possible by great demand for this Razor. The sr profit on each aggregating as larg< sum as If we sold fewer at a greater pr The benefit is the consumer's. The Blade is of the finest sti AiAoallu mtiila and m rvfrfli bw ?-< ? process--and the blade, of course, is tant part of any Razor. The frame is of silver plated, and "angled" correctl quick and clean shaving. The tough b< finds this Razor a boon; the soft be finds it a delight. These blades can fc Buy one and you will recommend i friends. That is the best test of any a 2 5 cts. " ? Write i BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 15 / AN IMITATION T / PATTERN THE I g There was never an Jmitatlo ? tators always counterfeit the gei what you ask for, because genuine Imitations are not advertised, but < $ ability of the dealer to sell you sor ij> good" when you ask for the genuin $ on the Imitation. Why accept imitt jj> uine by Insisting? t REFUSE IMITAT It is no use ad^ you have the Go< ! having the Goo ?? . ?0 ... - advertise. Syrup rffigs J s^Elixir>fSenna J P.lnnncnc PWof>t? vicuiioco me vyovv in mw v ually, Dispels Colas andlleaA oches Jug to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts truly as a Laxative. BestJ forMenWjmen and Childre n - VburigcmJ Old, To ^et jts Denejicial Ejects Always duv tke Genuine wkick has me jml name o| the Comr pany 1 <J mmA m * TnMMl t( w UAL1KUKN1A Fk> Syrup Co. : by whom it is manufactured.printed on the f front of every package. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS one size only, regular price 50* pv boltle. : w. L. Ponglas ma^ei and Mils more '' men'* *3.00 and S3.BO shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, because they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children Wi.Domglmi $4.00 and $8.00 Gilt Ed*. b* soallad st any pile*. W. I>. Doujlas $1.80 and $3.00 ihOM an ths best In t?? world Vast Color Eyelet* Utod, JExxlttrtvolV y-ToUe So Subntltute. W. L. Dongl*} , "me and price 1b stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Catalogue free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Breckto?. M*u. nDODfiY ITEW DISCOVERY; \J J\. \J W I glTMaalokNllef andourM i?nt cum. Book oft SStlra on!?i $, VP Tree. Dr. H. H- GRSSVfl 80N8.BoxB.AU*nt*,4ffc i Jit ;ll i zoui ? m )f your aim if you tie law allows when *aWi'2 OODS^I 'tam|? ft>r two RAZOR PRICE. wrl| OLD AT ANY PRICE. -J-yj 1MB WK. - I4 V J\W ^dgHKOMA0r ^ ^> i?vi " "in 9 8 ,e" - HEM sel, scien- |l: | r a secret J# the impor- ||L I satin finish; I ItPj y for safe; jPL sarded man ff arded man - !a c/ y ie stropped. ?|: | P.VTRA it to all your * gL^DES rtic,e; Rlbi a* age stamps j h brings it ft 1 GltJ T i by mail in \^yy\ al box. *?SJ -Jlame and full address very plainly. 14 Leonard Street, N. Y. City. AKES FOR ITSV REAL ARTICLE | a made of an imitation, lmi- $ mine article. The genuine is $ articles are the advertised ones. iepend for their business on the nething claimed to be "Just as & e, because he makes more profit $ itlnnq whfln vnn eet the een- * ? $ TA\TC GET WHAT YOU $ lUIllJ"" ASK FORI jj /ertising unless 3ds, and no use ? ds unless you