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New York City.?Jaunty, hip length coats are always becoming to young girls and are among the prettiest ones that are shown for the coming season. This model has novel pockets that make a feature and Is adapted both to the suiting materials and to the cloths that are used for separate jackets. Also it will be found very satisfactory for immediate wear, as well as for the between seasons time and the early autumn. It can be made either with long or three-quarter sleeves and will be found charming for the light weight broadcloths, that make such satisfactory wraps for cool summer evenings, as well as for the heavier suitings and cloaking materials. In the illustra-' tion, however, it is made of golden-1 brown broadcloth, with collar and cuffs of velvet. The coat is made with fronts, sidefronts, backs aud side-backs, the many seams meaning becoming lines as well as easy fit. The pockets are arranged over the side-fronts and all the edges' are finished with machine stitching. The collar is oddly shaped and can be made either of contrasting material or to match the coat, at; liked. Rolled over cuffs finish the long sleeves, stitched bauds those of the three-quarter Jength. The quantity of material required for a eirl of sixteen vears is four yards twenty-seven, two and fiveeighth yards forty-four, or two yards fifty-two inches wide, with threeeighth yard of velvet. The Ubiquitous Scarf. Many are the large mousseline shawls worn, fringed, tasseled or simply hemmed and tucked on the border, and even then weighted with tassels, but all are unlined unless with mousseline of another cqlor. Ldad color, khaki, dark amethv^t or navy blue are the colors preferred, for these shawls or scarfs are worn with all sorts of light frocks. Facings of Silk. One of the latest fabrics of the year is the facing of silk or mescaline which takes the place of a hem in many of the new skirts of voile and veiling. This facing is from two to two and a half inches wide and is in a tone that harmonizes with that of the skirt. The material is generally that employed in the coat worn with the skirt. Empire Waist Line. Is it possible that the high Empire j waist line has lived its day? Paris has just put out two or three wonderful new models for women of fashion which have the waist line e<actly normal back and front. Skirts Are Longer. The fashion' for extra long skirts oa most of the smart gowns has caused the designerr. to put out a walking skirt that covers the rastcp. n inns!&\ Scarf I)rapc:y. Princess styles hold their own admirably, and scarf drapery for waist, with long ends hanging down the clinging skirt, is to the fore immensely. Fashionable Fabric. Crepe de chine, than which no fabric is more popular, and justly so, will be largely used in both the satin and silk finished weaves. The Parisian modistes are making it up in all sorts of dressy gowns. Elastics in Corsets. Since style demands the flat hip and allows the larger waist, the ordinary corset is not a comfortable affair. There is a new one made which has two bands of silk elastic let in straight up the front to allow relaxation and deep breathing. The New Flat Hat. I Hats are worn more and more flat on the head. The bandeau has been conspicuous for its absence for many months, but the latest chapeaux have crowns that are immense, and consequently, when posed upon the head, sink low over the pompadour. Embroidered Buttons. It seems quite certain that embroidered buttons will be widefly used this season. Therefore the woman who is expert with her needle is covering buttons and touching them up with fancy stitchery. The drawn work "spider" is very popular on all buttons. It is not new, but it is considered good, and it is easy to make. Circular Tunic Skirt. Unquestionably the tunic skirt is a graceful one, and that it already has taken a firm hold upon fashionable It ' fancy is evident. This one is absolutely simple yet draped in a mbst effective and graceful manner, and is adapted to all the soft and clinging materials that are characteristic of present styles. In the illustration a dotted foulard is trimmed with banding and the cost is an extremely trifling one, but the skirt would be pretty made from such wool materials as voile or marquisette, from crepe de Chine, messaline, Liberty satin or an> material of the sort, and also of such simpler things as cashmere and albatross for home wear. The skirt is circular, the right side being extenciea wen over oniu uk left and shaped to form the drapery. There are darts that mean snug fil over the hips and the draped portion is laid in pleats that provide long and graceful lines. The fulness at the back can be laid in inverted pleats or the skirt can be cut off and finished in habit style. It can be made either In the pretty round length or cut tc escape the floor, when it becomes adapted to the street. The quantity of material required Tor the medium size is eight and onehalf yards twenty-four, six and onefourth yards thirty-two, or five and one-half yards l'orty-rour inches wide with five and three-fourth yards o banding. THE PULPIT., A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BV DR. CHARLES EDWARD LOCKE. Theme: Doing the Impossible. ! Brooklyn, N. Y.?The Rev. Dr. Charles Edward Locke, pastor of the f Hanson Place Methodist Episcopal Church, Sunday evening, to a large audience, preached on "Doing What Cannot Be Done." His text was Matthew 17:20: "Nothing shall be impossible unto you." Dr. Locke said in the course of his sermon: > That. Is a most exaulsite moment, when in the midst of rich treasures of the Art Gallery of the Vatican, one I stands for the first time before Raphael's masterpiece of "The Transforation." It was the great artist's last work: and before its pigments were dry it was carried in his funeral pro1 cession. This masterful genius defied a well known canon of art in attempting to portray two distinct themes on the same canvas; but Raphael was a good theologian as well as an unrivaled artist. He causht the double meaning of the Transfiguration and saw in it not only the Glorification of Jesus, but the emanciaption of mankind. When Jesus came down from the radiant mountain summit an anxious father met him with the earnest request. "Lord, have mercy on my son," | humbly exnlairing to Jesus that he had first taken his afflicted boy to the ' disciples, but they could not cure him. Jesus said: "Bring him hither to Me," and the child was cured that ' very hour. In perplexity the disciples asked of Jesus, "Why could not we cast him out?" and .Tesirs replied, "Because of your unbelief; for verily I say unto you if ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed ?nothing shall be impossible unto you." In casting out the world's devils and in alleviating the woes of humanity, nothing shall be impossible?aDd this is the program of Jesus. "Doing what cannot be done" is the program of Jesus. "Faith as a grain of mustard seed." "All things are possible to him that bclieveth." *; Faith langb* nt impossibilities And cries it shall be done. "Jesus ntver despises a little faith." On that late afternoon on the banks of Galilee, when the multitude was hungry and the town was f far away. Jesus, to test Philio, innuired: "Whence shall we buy bread that these may eat?" and mathematical Philip thought that two hundred pennyweight would not be sufficient. Then Andrew forabrief instant had a vision of faith as he suggested that there was a lad there who had Ave barley loaves and two fishes: but Anjrew, too, quickly adopted the arithmetical process and disconsolately added: "But what are they among so many?" Jesus, however* did not disrupt or overlook Andrew's momentary vision and faith; and on the basis of Andrew's "little faith" the miracle of the feeding of the five thousand was performed. It was faith as a grain of mustard seed only, but It accomplished the Impossible. Tertullian once said of an event: 'It is certain because it is Impossible," and Richard Cobden, when told that a certain thing was impossible. I replied: n tnat is an, let us set Ibout it at once." General Armstrong, of HamDton, said: Doing tvhat cannot be done is the glory of living," and his great schools for InJian and negro youth became possible. Carisle impatiently wrote: "Impossible! It is not a lucky word! who is it says there is a lion in the . way? Sluggard, thou must slay the lion; the way must be traveled!" Mrabeau shouted: "Impossible, that blockhead of a word!" And the great Napoleon characteristically declared: 'Impossible! It is not a French word. 3enius is the art of .overcoming the Impossible!" Christianity is the art of overcoming the Impossible. Impossible is not :n the vocabulary of the Christian. This is the program of Jesus. Christianity has already achieved the impossible in the overthrow of ;he vast Roman Empire. To destroy ihe power and glory of Rome as they ippeared two thousand years ago intrenched in impregnable- fortresses md defended by ever victorious Roman legions, seemed an impossible result. Christianity has achieved the impossible in the final eradication of human slavery, a diabolical institution culminated in the customs, fortunes, constitutions, conscience and traditions of men. So, indeed, shall the day surely come when nations shall not learn war any more. And, when that prophecy of Isaiah shall have been fulfilled, which commands, "Loose the bonds of wickedness and undo the heavy burdens," then the accursed liquor traffic will be overthrown, and the deadliest thraldom which has ever blighted manhood will be ended. This damnable traffic in strong drink fills the prisons with rriminnlR tti? hnenltnla tuith thn -In. 6ane, and the poorhouses with paupers. Recently a greart brewery company of this country has published in it? paid advertisements a libelous statement that the founder of Methodism favored the manufacture and uale of liquors as a beverage. The statements are mischievous lies. The greatest total abstinence society in Christendom is the Methodist Church. Such demoniacal lies will only hasten the downfall of old Gambrinus in this country. The devil is a liar, and the father of lies, and we would exI j pect him to defraud his infernal busi| ness by lies and misrepresentations, i | Lincoln's great prophecy of February i i 22, 1840, has been partially fulfilled, I and will surely be completely real, ! ized. "When there shall be neithpr slave nor drunkard upon the earth!" Then, too, the brotherhood of the race is to be established. "Whoso hatetli his brother is a murderer." "Whoso hath this world's goods and j seeth his brother hath need, and | shutteth up his bowels of compassion, how dwellsth the love of God in i him?" Some one has recently said: | "No man ought to have anything , until every man has something." If i this savors of anarchy, it is at least true that many of us should have less until many others have more. There is great social and industrial unrest to-day. All these antagonisms and confu?iona are due to the emancipa J tion of mankind through the influ! cnce of Christ. Men are coming to their own. Jesus has commanded, "Loose him and let his go!" as He did at the resurrection of Lazarus, and we, His disciples, who have been set free.aretooslowto obey our Lord's injunctions. Men are striving to get free! A starving baby was found in the East Side of New York recently on the wasted breast of its dead mother, and that same day in the up town stores women were spending $80 for a single night robe. There [ is wasteful extravagance at one end ,t of the social scale, and consequent j dangerous criminality at the other. There is a safe and sane socialism 1 which emanates from the teachings of Jesus, and the socialism of Jesus will some day prevail, and in that day each shall seek his own in his brothers' highest good, and all shall dwell in noble brotherhood. Two men saw a piece of jewelry on the fnr if fllTtliil OlUCVTai&t LULCJ A ?w. ?? ? tnneously, struck their heads violently; each arose to censure the other, when they found they were brothers and had not seen each other for a dozen years. It must not be forgotten that all competitions and rivalries to-day are between brothers, and some day the vast brotherhood will be permanently organized. In the great task of casting out the world's devils nothing Bhall be impossible. Whatever ought to be will be. A moral imperative must have in it a moral possibility. Kant said long ago there is no meaning in an "ought" unless it is followed by a "can." Every moral necessity will some day prevail. It is not an ought unless it is a possibility, and if a possibility it will become a reality. A clear, definite opinion of what oueht to be is the token of what can and will be. Man's foiydest dreams will be fully materialized. When man tbinks God'sthoufcbtsand carries out God's purposes the impossible <* *411 V - nAVlAWA/) 4" V? Q + Q ro win ur auuicvcu. l uiu?,a tuuw ^ impossible with men are possible with God." Men must become partakers of the divine nature, as the Apostle Peter enjoins. The mighty force of the Niaeara Falls power house is "stenped" dowtf" ft> suit the capacity of the machinery to which it is supDlied. So God "steps" Himself down to humble, simple men, and works His wondrous will through obedient human instrumentalities. 'Ye must be born again!" and with Nicodemus in bewilderment we may inquire "How can these things be? , Mathematical men like Philip nevef will calculate until they reach a dem-. onstratlon. while men of vision like Andrew will be working the miracle of the impossible. The burglar vho drops into a mission to while away the early evening hours, until he shall go forth t& ply his vicious trade, falls under the spell of the service, kneels at an altar of prayer, confesses his sin, surrenders his burglar tools, and becomes a new man, honest and honored. You may not be able to explain the mystery, but It is i?- - + Vi wrn rrro m r\4 TUf ttliU LUat ID tuc pi uiu v* Jesus! Two young men came together? one a clerk in a shoe store, the other a clerk in a bank. Humble men of no notable talents. One can teach and talk a little, and the other can sing with persuasive voice. These two willing souls completely surrendered to God, and consecrated to the service and upbuilding of humanitv, began a career, which increased in power and effectiveness until multitudes were awakened from lethargy and sin by the singing and the preaching of the gospel. Again, the weak things of the world were uhakeh to confound the mighty, and Moody and Sankey became the greatest evangelists since the days of Tohn and* Charles Wesley. And the impossible was achieved. At the dedication of the Bunker Hill monument, when it appeared that an accident was Imminent by the surging crowds against the speakers' platform. Webster reauested the peonle to kindly move back. A man in the crowd answered back: "It is impossible!" Thereupon the great Massachusetts statesman cried out: "Impossible! Impossible! Nothing is Impossible on Bunker Hill!" And so let us keep near the cross. The battle of the ages was fought there, the.freedom of the race was there achieved. Nothing Is Impossible on the Hill of the Cross?on Calvary. With our now sainted Sankey we may sings in the sweet strains of sightless Fanny Crosby's beautiful lines: Some day the silver cord will break And I no more as now shall sing; But. Oh, the jov when I awake Within the palace of the King! And I shall see Him face to face. And tell the story, Saved by Grace. "Then, "I shall be satisfied when I awake in Thy likeness,' and the impossible shall be forever enthroned.' " 4,Lo! It is Nigh Thee." The surprise of life always comes in finding how we have missed the things that have been nearest to us; how we have gone far away to seek that which was close by our side all the time, savs PhilliDS Books. Men who live best and longest are apt to come, as the result of all their living, to the conviction that life is not only richer but simpler than it seemed to them at first. Men go to vast labor seeking after peace and happinesB. It seems to them as if it were far away from them, as if they must go through vast and strange regions to get it. . They must pile up wealth, they must see every possible danger of mishap guarded against, before they can have peace. Upon how many old men has it come with a strange surprise that peace can come to rich or poor only with contentment, and that they might as well have been content at the very beginning as at the very end of life! They have made a long journey for their treasure, and when at last they stoop to pick it up, lo! it is shining close beside the. footprints which they left when they set out to travel in a circle. (supremacy 01 unnsi. , Men who deny the spiritual supremacy of Jesus Christ and reject His claim to their personal allegiance, however much they may admire His character and laud His teachings, are not, in any proper sense of the word, Christians. Moralists, philosophers, even doctors ot divinity, they may be, but they have no right to wear the Name which is above every name, because they do not bow the knee to Christ or confess Him as Lord, to the glory ol God the Father. To call one a Christian who denies tne j_,orasQip of Christ is a contradiction of terms. ?The Examiner. The Part of Wisdom. It is no small wisdom to keep silence in an evil time, and in thy heart to turn thyself to God, and not to be troubled by the judgment ol men. Let not thy peace depend on the tongues of men; for, whether the^ judge well or ill of thee, thou art not on that account other than thyself. Where are true peace and glory? Are they not in God??Isabella Fitz Mayo. When You Lose. General notions about sin and salvation can do you no good in the way of the blessed life. As in a journey you must see milestone after milestone fall into your rear, otherwise you remain stationary, so in the grand march of a nobler life one paltriness after another must disappear, or you have lost your chance.?Professor Blackie. OUR TEMPERANCE COLUMN. REPORTS OF PROGRESS OF THE * BATTLE AGAINST RUM. a ,4A Righteous Hatred," From Latest t Address of Gov. J. F. Hanly, of ci Indiana, Before the Temperance 1 1'eopie at Liiauuiuquit, Personally, I have seen bo much n of the evils of the liquor traffic in H the last four years, so much of its A economic waste, so much of its phys- p ical ruin, so much of its mental d blight, so much of its tears and w heartache, that I have come to re- 1 gard the business as one that must I be held and controlled by strong and d effective laws. i I bear no malice toward those en- i: gaged in the business, but I hate the j traffic. . I hate its every phase. . I hate it for its intolerance. 1 I hate it for its arrogance. - j I hate it for its hypocrisy. t I hate it for its cant and craft and t I false pretense. I hate it for its commercialism. I hate it for its greed and avarice. T 4 + Uf. Yava rtf ffoin 6 at any price. I hate it for its corrupting influence in civic affairs. I hate it for its incessant effort to debauch the suffrage of the country; for the cowards it makes of public men. I hate it for its utter disregard of law. I hate it for its ruthless trampling of the solemn compacts of State constitutions. I hate it for the load its straps to labor's back, for the palsied hands it gives to toil, for its wounds to genius, for the tragedies of its might-have-beens. I hate it for the human wrecks it has caused. I hate it for the almshouses it peoples, for the prisons it fills, for the insanity it begets, for its countless graves in potters' fields. I hate it for the mental ruin it t imposes upon its victims, for its spiritual blight, for its moral degredation. I hate it for the crimes it has committed. I hate it for the homes it has destroyed. * E I hate It for the malice it has b planted in the hearts of men?for ^ its poison, for its bitterness?for the ? dead sea fruit with which it starves . their souls. c I hate it for the grief it causes n womanhood?the scalding tears, the c hopes deferred, the strangled aspirations, its burdens of want and car.e. I hate it for its heartless cruelty to the aged, the infirm and the helpless, for the shadow it throws upon 1 the lives of children, for its mon- 1 strous injustice to blameless little ii ones. p I hate it as virtue hates vice, as t truth hates error, as righteousness a hates sin, as justice hates wrong, as liberty hates tyranny, as freedom I hates oppression.' I hate it as Abraham Lincoln hated slavery. And as he sometimes saw in prophetic vision the end of slavery and the coming of the time when the sun should shine and the rain should fall upon no slave in all j { the Republic, so I sometimes seem to see the end of this unholy traffic, the coming of the time when, if it does not wholly cease to be, it shall find no safe habitation anywhere beI noath "Dirl Olnrv's" stainless stars. One Way. jj A young man in company with several other gentlemen called upon a I young lady. Her father was also present to assist in entertaining the ^ guests. He did not share his daugh- j ter's scruples against the use of spir- I Ituous drinks, for he had wine to offer. This was poured out, and would have been drunk, but the ^ young lady asked, "Did you call upon ; me or upon papa?" Gallantry, if nothing else, com pelled them to answer, "We called I upon you " J "Then you will please not drink wine. I have -lemonade for my visitors." The father urged the guests to drink, and they were undecided. The young lady added: "Remember, if you called on me, then you drink lem- , I if nono TT7 Vl V . J n thflt I UlldUC, UUt IL upuu pu|/a, tf uj y am vmm% ^ case, I have nothing to say." The wine glasses were set down | with their contents untasted. After " leaving the house, one of the party exclaimed: "That was the most effectual temperance lecture I have ever heard." The young man from whom these facts were obtained, broke off at once from the use of strong drink, and holds a grateful > Remembrance of the lady who gracefully and resolutely gave him to understand that her guests should not i drink wine.?Home Herald. Raw Materials. There is one particular in which the liquor trade has the .advantage over all others. The paper industry worries over the approaching extinction of American forests, and the consequent failure of the raw material supply. Statisticians some* ?' A" J aii An iVlo av_ I LliilCS lugcuivu^ilj 115UIW uu V.A I 11 haustion of the coal and iron in so I many centuries. But the liquor man can figure on the fact that there are in this land no less than fifteen millions cf young men, to take the places of the drunkards as they are used up in the liquor "industry." Sixteen millions of American homes are busy raising, educating, training, watching, nurturing with tender solicitude, boys?raw material?for the liquor man to use "in his busi' ness." Oh, no, the liquor man has many tcoubles, but the exhaustion of his raw material supply is not one cf them.?The People. Alcohol and the Workhouse. Sir Victor Horsley in a receni I speech in Glasgow made the state- j 1 ment: "No teetotaler has been ad- I mitted into the gigantic workshop at Wandsworth, London." He also said: "All applicants for relief tell a story of alcoholism." Is it not j auuui SU 1U UUi unn iquu Liquor Advertisements Baned. ; The Taunton and Pawtucket street railroad has announced that it will 1 not hereafter allow liquor advertiseI ments to be displayed in its cars. i i Whisky Man's Pet Theory. Even if the damage wrought by drink stopped with the drunkard himself therefore, the whisky man'a J pet theory would hardly hold, and 9 its falsity becomes unquestionable S when we recall that the injury often $ falls most heavily not on the drunk- w ard himself, but on his family, and $ ? ii-i/i i- ,1 i u.0 .1: mat ine state useu is uuuiagcu uj ?/ 1 his action?impoverished because of W his :npfficiency as a worker, injured ^ by his disorder as a resident, men- <?> aced by his weakness as a citizen in j|j time of peace and as a soldier in & sime of war.?Progrcisiv-j Farmer. w V MIS SKIN TROUBLES CURED. j1 'irst Had Itching Rash?Threatened Later With Blood-Poison in LegRelied on Cnticnra Remedies. "About twelve or fifteen years ago I had breaking-out, and it itched, and stung so adly that I could not have any peace befiuse of it. Three doctors did not help me. 'hen I used some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura lintment, and Cuticura Resolvent and bean to get better right away. They cured le and I have not been bothered with the tching since, to amount to anything, ibout two years ago J had la grippe and neumonia which left me with a pain in ly side. Treatment ran it into my leg, rhich then swelled and began to break out. 'he doctor was afraid it would turn to ilood-poison. I used his medicine but it id no good, then I used the Cuticura lemedies three times and cure?! the breakng-out on my leg. J. F. Hennen, Milan, lo., May 13. 1907." The rabbit sees behind as well as in ront. drs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children eething. softens the gums, reduces inflammnion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle Evening Up. At a certain age in the masculine sducatlon cleanliness is the main hing to be inculcated. Vigorous soap ind water practice is about the only pay to succeed. After giving .the boy i chance to better his own condition, larsher methods usually follow. .Theodore had twice been sent to pash his hands, and was now returnng for the second inspection. "My child," said his mother, cornering the two hands critically, "your Ight is just as dirty as your left. Vhat have you been doing all this, ime?" I "Why, mamma," explained the routh, "last time you said that my eft hand was cleaner than my right, o I tried to make them even. I'll ;o again."?Youth's Companion. Deafness Cannot Be Cared vlocal applications as thevcanriot reach the nf fV*a anT Th^rft ia nnl v nr?o ray to cure deafness, and that is by constiutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an aflamed condition of the mucous lining of he Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inLamed you have a rumbling sound or imperect hearing, and when it is entirely closed )eaf ness is the result, and unless the in damnation can be taken out and this tube retored to its normal condition, hearing will ?e destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten re caused bycatarrh, which is nothingbutan aflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollarsior any ase of Deafness (caused bycatarrh) that canot be curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for irculare free. F.J.Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druegists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Next to mining, the greatest induery of South Africa is sugar growing, "he amount of money invested in this 3 $7,300,000. The production of the resent year is estimated at 40,000 ons, with a valuation of about $63 , ton. N.Y.?41 i . ^LOOKING I Jgpf9 AHEAD? ! ^j?T If bo, take advantage of today's oppor^tunities for the merchant, farmer, fruit grower and J^^BjK9'9 business man along the Pacific Coast 4 extension of the Chi I cagO) Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. Descriptive Books Free. W. 8. HOWELL, G. E. A., New York. PATENTS 525_?? We pay all expenses except Government fees?No ttras. Our book shows Ravine to you?Write for lt.'| w. THE INDUSTRIAL LAW LEAGUE* iic., 170 Broadway, New York. PIC n r? r- the coming new Western ICnnCi metropolis. Real Estate cheap, 6afe, sure; easy terms. Write for special quotatlon8 on choice lots. References, clrulars, etc., CHAS. L. HYDE, Pierre, South Dakota. WIIMB WS'under N EW LAW obtains ira^TWSSTT^fc-yw? byJ?t?.^J5LM?Rn18 "kPOPRY NSW DISCOVERT; ^ * f] rN aolek relief and caret ontoa?e?. Bookofteetlmonleli* 10 dwre' treetmgpl Tee. Dr. H. H. QBBKN'8 SONS.Box 9jLUa>U.CL positively" best SAFETY JmU'U'UiUiUH^UiLhlJtUtLI^ Jhail SO "Shrp-Sh< <UJL(Q4JJL hi; j| which gives yoi n r< - ' " :| All razors costing i My s{q\ ft' d value is in th( . I made of the fln( j process and s 5P fl down to the pay 25 cents for Iti tro<Juced. and y? rVTT) A iA1 fancy prices ash DAlIVn. |,W ers. The "SHR Of inrfl in the frame aj DIjAI/JlD iwj suit any face. _ i Vi?' V 25c. so as to c bjCZG* Sri' i| Extra "SHRP SI :7.7- satin finish silv Blades or by mail T^f\ WB^lfl 134 L?( 1B i0P^| Hi the ^Mnfltanv ' tivi It is no use ad you have the Go having the Got advertise. jf AN IMITATION 1 PATTERN THE I There was never an imitatic tators always counterfeit the ge; what you ask for, because genuine Imitations are not advertised, but ability of the dealer to sell you soi good" when you ask for the genuir on the Imitation. Why accept imlti nine bv insisting? REFUSE IMITAT - ?, - ; WOMAN'S TUa Vtn r%Tr in 4-1ia TYioinor^rinflP rtf :.*$8l 11IU uaua IB uug IIUMIIQUHU^ UA woman's organism. It quickly calls attention to trouble by aching. It tells, with other symptoms, such as nervousness, headache, pains in the loins, weight in the lower part of _ the body, that a woman's feminine. organism needs immediate attention.' In such cases the one sure remedy which speedily removes the cause, and restores tne feminine organism p.M to a healthy, normal condition is ' LYDIA EL PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia Ave., Rockland, Me., says: 111 was troubled for a long time with, dreadful backaches and a pain in my side, and was miserable in every way. | I doctored until I was discouraged and v-;^j thought I would never get well. I read what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had done for others and decided to try it; after taking three bottles I can truly say that I never felt } so well in my life." ' Mrs. Augustus lyon, of East Earl, Pa^ writes to Mrs. Pinkham: "I had very severe backaches, and pressing-down pains. I could not sleep, ' ' TM and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured me and made me feel like a new woman." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made . ; ;$! from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, | arid has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcer*. tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,. 'periodic pains, backache, tnat bear- i ''jm mg-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. . < men's*3.00 and 83.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, bocaa?e they hold their shape, fit better, and -wear longer than any other make. Shoes ?t All Prices, for Every Hesnfaer of the Femfly, Men, Boy?|women, Mietee 4 CWdraa - - pr. W.L.D?ii|luJVOOud(MK) OUt Edf* SboweMBot be eqaalltd at aay priea. W. L. Somflaa $2.50 aot 91.00 ihow are the bast In the wodl i JVaJ Color EyelHt U?ed Jamhtitwtf 0(7* Take No Nabatltute. W. L. DonglM . ' )i name and price le stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Catalonne free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spirit St. Broddes, MUts. : ADSULU 1 LLT CHEAPEST RAZOR Save Shaving Honey I Here's a revolution in Safety H Razors, the marvelous jrajj ivr" 25c Safety Razor' i better BLADE VALUE than H !0 times the price. The practical H i BLADE. It Is the best because H sat steel tempered by a special cientiflcRlly grcKind and honed ^8 keenest possible edge. fou H the best practical Razor ever In- H ; /; >u save nlneteen-twe'ntlethsof the Bfl :ed for fancy frames and hold- Dw P SHAVR" RAZOR is so set 3 to be correctly "angled" io H We sell you the whole Razor at reate a market for our blades. W 1AVR" Blades. 5 for 25c. And er-plaied stoppers at 10c. each H e Razor complete, extra - -. -!- MB trie 3iropper( prepwu I on receipt of price {tamps or cash. A X LISHING HOUSE, )NARD rvel Irrespec? of price, ^ vertising unless ( ods, and no use )ds unless you BMBnaMMBHnaannBB|DMMaa AKCS rUK IISX REAL ARTICLE 1 >o made of an Imitation. 1mluuine article. The genuine is $ articles are the advertised ones. J depend for their business on the mething claimed to be "just as J le, because he makes more profit w atlons when you can get the gen- $ I7A1TC GET WP*T YOU I ASK . JR! * I ? ..