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mm k j " E RNTR 4KTR FATTTCa CHESAPE^ UNITE? STATE r< ' A Unique Umbrella. Owing to the fact that the handlerod or stick of the ordinary umbrella Is centrally disposed, a single person can occupy only one-half of the space beneath the umbrella, with the result that his outer shoulder is usually axpesed to the drip and rain. To remedy this defect, two inventors of Bridgewater, Va.. have designed an umbrella which when raised will have the handle located to one side of the centre, leaving the central portion of the sheltered space unobstructed. This umbrella when closed has substantially the appearance of Uhe ordinary article. The umbrella stick is provided with the usual runner, but the stretchers instead of being connected to the runner as in the or A Unique Umbrella. dinary umbrella, are attached to a carrier which'is connected to the runner by means of a pair of links. Hence, when the umbrella is closed, the ribs fold closely against the umbrella handle, but when the umbrella is raised they are tilted with respect to the handle, as illustrated in the engraving.?Scientific American. Sprayer For Hose Nozzles. A simple attachment for hose noz- j has rerpntiv been invented, which I will permit the operator to control the form of stream issuing from the nozzle. Thus the water may be permitted to flow either in a solid stream or it may be sprayed to any extent Sprayer For Hose Nozzle. v desired. The device consists of a pan-shaped blade, which is hinged to the nozzle in such manner that it may be rocked toward or from the stream. ine uiaue is lui mcu ?iui a, , handle which by means of a leaf spring bearing on the nozzle is normally pressed upward to keep the blade or deflector clear of the stream. When the operator so desires he may press on the handle, bringing the deflector into engagement with the stream, and thereby spraying the water.?Scientific American. Not One ' WfMrWSm Doctor?"Now let me see if you Tough Boy?"What would I pul ain't done nawthin* to me."?Brook! Meat Broiler. A meat broiler, containing many improved features, has been recently patented by an Ohio man. It comprises a receptacle having means for j ?'l f |M) (<3, j iT / iuN^u.ji. .MI i . UMJ?I i *rl.. ISJVAVAL ACADEMY. lKE BAY?TO BANCROFT HALL, I AVAL ACADEMY. Cooking Cattle Whole. One of the most popular forms ol entertaining guests in the South is to hold a barbecue, as it is called. The host generally employs a skilled white or colored barbecue cook. A trench is dug in the ground and the bottom filled in with kindling and hard wood which will burn to coal. After _ Roasting Carcasses Whole For Barbecue. the fire has been made, carcasses of sheep, fowls, sometimes steers are fastened above the bed of coals and thus roasted to be cut up and served on long tables with vegetables and other viands. One of the features of the barbecue is the roasting of the carcasses in the presence of the guests. This picture shows one of the roasting trenches with cattle being cooked over the live coals. Reversible Type Cabinet. A sectional type cabinet of interest to printers has been devised and patented by a Wisconsin man. With the ordinary printers' type cabinet but i one man can work at the cabinet at I the same time. Three or four compositors may be waiting to use the cabinet to get at some of fee forty or j f f r pi rrr fifty different cases of type. These objections are overcome in the improved cabinet shown here. Instead of all the type cases opening on one side, they are arranged to open on all four sides of the cabinet.?WashingtQn Star. Jo Deride. can put your to~gue out." t me ton-cue out at vou fer? You lyn Life. | holding the meat and a pan to catch j the drippings. The frame for holding the meat is perforated, being circular in form, and is journaled close to the top of the broiler. After the meat is placed on the frame it is held in position by pins, which pierce the meat. In order that the meat can be turned from time to time to expose opposite sides equally to the heat, handles are secured on the outside of the broiler. The latter is placed over the fire, tho heat entering through an opening in the bottom. In the lower part of the broiler is a pan for catching drippings. Vapors produced from this mnrtnr tirV?ir?Vi nQtnrullv hrtrnmoc mifta hot, arise and surround the meat, to be at once absorbed, so that the latter is practically cooked and barbecued by simmering in its own juices, which keep it moist and tender.?Washington Star. When New York City's Catskill aqueauct is compieteu tne city win ; have water enough for a population iof 7,000,000, without any cause for anxiety. i ifliiiihWi ~ THE PULPIT. I i J\ BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY 1 DR. CHARLES EDWARD LOCKE. Theme: Faitli^s Victories. . Brooklyn, N. Y.?The Rev. Dr. \ Charles Edward Locke Sunday closed bis pastorate at the Hanson Place Methodist Episcopal Church. He leaves to assume charge of the great First Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, Cal. Large audiences filled the church at both services. In the morning Dr. Locke's subject was "Faith's Victories." The text was 1 John 5:4: "This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith." Dr. Locke said: Early in the morning after refresh- ( Ing sleep amid the fragrant bowers | of Bethany, on the second day of our j Lord's sad and triumphant Passion 1 *TT TAnun wi + Vk U{o ?Hon{n1oQ TIT Q d ween, ucouo nuu xno u*o?,ip*uw ****** on His way around the graceful 6lopesof Olivet to the great city. All being hungry, and seeing a fig tree, they approached it, confidently expecting to enjoy the luscious fruit, forthe season of the ripening fruit had come, but the.time for the gathering of the harvest was not yet. When they reached the tree they found nothing but leaves. Christ thereupon pronounced a curse upon the unfruitful and use- \ less tree, and immediately it withered away. When the wondering disciples' | saw the fig tree withered away they marveled, |put Jesus said: "If ye have faith and doubt not, ye shall not only do this which is done to the fig tree, but, also, if ye shall say unto this mountain, be thou removed and be thou cast into the sea, it shall be done; and all things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer believing ye shall receive." ' John was the best loved of all the disciples of Jesus. Our introduction to him is when he is a young man, when he and Andrew at the suggestion of John the Baptist, "Behold the Lamb of God!" follow Jesus and inquire, "Where dwellest Thou?" and He replies, "Come and see." Sixty years have passed; he is now an old man standing on the mountain top of , expectancy with the light of immortality agio"*" upon his face. Looking \ forward in' the future he cries, "It doth not yet appear what we shall be!" and looking backward upon the way he has traveled, and upon the great world struggling for mastery, he shouts triumphantly, "This is the victory that overcometh the world, 1 even our faith." "Faith is the substance (assurance) j of thfngs hoped for, the evidence ! (proving)of thi?gs not seen." It has j been truthfully said that faith is a ! higher faculty than reason. Reason I builds laboriously and often fruitlessi ly its towers of Babel, but faith quickj ly soars into the very bosom of the , Infinite. Faith is a grateful arch which spans the chasm between man ( th3 finite and God the Infinite. Faith ( is a gift. '"By grace ye are saved . through faith?it is the gift of God." ( Faith is the subtle force by which man adjusts himself to God. Faith Is pardon, peace?regeneration. "Being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our . Lord Jesus Christ." We are saved from sin, not by evolution, or by revo- : lution, or by works alone,yfcut by 1 faith?"believe on the Lord Jesus J * i A' -V-U I w unrist ana muu buan. ua aavcu. Faith is life?"The just shall live ( by faith" was Luther's/discovery on the staircase in the' Jateran. "The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith oMhe Son of God." ChrlBt is life?He came to interpret and enlarge life for each of us. Faith, also, is character. Faith in Christ is the foundation of character, the inspiration of achievement. Character is what a man is doing all the time. When the disciples asked Jesus wnat they should do to work the works of God, He replied, "Believe on Him whom He hath sent." What we : believe will determine what we do. i Gre?t men are great ideas incarnated. It was said of Abraham, "He believed j God, and it was accounted unto him for righteousness." "Faith is the substance of things i hoped for." Faith realizes while oth- : oi- mon Hroom nnH rinnh#- and rlphatp. Columbus first bad a vision of a new ; world, and then found it. Morse was a man of faith and prayer, until in 1844 the first telegraph wire between : Washington and Baltimore parried the message, "What God hath i wrought?" So of Eads with his Jet- : ties, Stephenson with his steam en- 1 gine, and Field with his cable. What these heroic men worked out was "substance" to them before their discoveries and inventions were actualities. The same is true of the work and faith of our Pilgrim Fathers and Mothers, the founders of the Wesleyan movement, Francis Xavier, William Taylor, William Butler and Judson. Pioneers of faith have dismally discovered that it is more difficult to overcome the unbelief of men than to master the DrinciDles upon which their deductions and inventions depended. After all, the stronger argument for our Christian faith is not what we say, but what we do. It has been thoughtfully remarked that although the unbeliever may not read the Bible, he does read the life of Christians to see how they live. A truth incarnated in a consistent Christian life is the church's invincible argument for Christianity. , Faith is salvation?salvation from sin and self and sorrow and sickness and adversity. There is no ill of the soul for which faith is not a specific, and many ills of the body flee away like the poisonous fogs before the sunlight . Dear Chaplain McCabe had a brother who, after forty years of thralldom to strong driug. was finally, through the faith and love and perseverance i of his hopeful brother,redeemed irom i the sad slavery. The chaplain used I tn pov "WVior, T trpf- fn hpavpn T am | going to take my brother by the hand i and lead him up to my mother and J say: 'Mother, here's George; I have ] brought him home!'" and nothing I will save a vast multitude of men unj iess their fellows, in love and faith, help them to fight their battles : | through to a victory. 1 Abraham Lincoln wat, a man of | boundless faith in God. He once said: I "It is not particular whether God is I on our side, but it is all important | whether we are on God's side." On one occasion when his pastor desired to make a call, the President fixed the hour at 5 o'clock in the morning. He found Mr. Lincoln reading the Bible, and he learned that it was the great emancipator's custom to spend the early morninc hour each day in Bible 1 reading and prayer. My dear friends, if any substantial < victories bave been won in this dear 1 church during my pastorate, which ends with this sacred Sabbath, they have been faith victories. Nothing we have endeavored to do together during these five happy years has 1 been worth while unless it was what : God wanted done. 1 am thankful for 1 the kindly pi'ovid^nce which brought - J ' <. xMi) , me to this noble church with its multitude of devoted and loyal people. I am deeply grateful to you all for your $ love and patience, for your fidelity and your prayers. I wish I could have served you better. In the arduous, though happy, labors of this - - ? 1 3 B great parisn 1 nave Deen assureu ui , your earnest and sympathetic sup- * port. Without your constant co-oper- 6 ation I should have utterly failed. I 8 thank you tenderly for your generous P sympathy, for during these five years f my greatest sorrows have come to me. * There was a happy tri-unionate of us; f my sainted father, my only brother, j' and myself. My father was a com- ? rade and congenial companion to his 1 boys. All unexpectedly, in the morn- ? ing of his brilliant career, my brother * was stricken, and in a few hours the ? gjniijent yQung lawyer stood before f the Great Judge. It was a deadening blow. My ? father, advancing in years, bent un- * d'er the chastening. Though it whit> ened his locks, it divinely brightened f his faith. It was your distinguished honor to know my father and hear J him preach. His last sermon was t preached in this pulpit, his last public i prayer was offered at these holy altars. He used to sit beside me here, and love me into better service. Occasionally, when I urged him to do so, < he would visit the other churches and 1 4-? VvnllHonf nnnfroroa 4 listen LU 1X1J UlilliaUb VyVJJill w V^.J, ?. ilv. . I are widely known for their eminence ; and eloquence; and, then, with a parent's fond Indulgence and extravagance, he would say, "My son, none of these men preaches better than you." I smiled at the fiction, but nevertheless my father's opinion was ! more to me than any other's, and his loving presence furnished tonic and inspiration to my work; and when, in that parsonage in the very shadow of the sanctuary, his soul ascended to meet his Lord, the noblest and most exquisite Christian gentleman whom God ever made, ended his earthly pilgrimage. In my great sorrow you sustained me with your tender pray- ? ers and sympathy. But the old world has been pretty lonesome to me since the going away of these two dear men. I I leave you reluctantly, but I turn . my face again to the sunset shore i with happy expectations. Many ( friends await our coming. Nine t years ago this very week I laid the ? cornerstone of that beautiful church; * ~ -"3 n rtf WV VlOQff ITtllfi * ttiiu a VI 1X1J utui V. nv*iv va*v . copper box. i want your prayers that j my ministry there may be faithful and j fruitful. ? A sincere and hearty welcome to i my successor, Dr. Henderson and his i family, will be a token of true love J and" loyalty to me. He is most wor- c thy of your highest confidence and esteem. He has won many trophies, is a man who has been tried and not found wanting. He is a stalwart: rugged in body, vigorous in mind i and large pf heart. He is capable, j resourceful, victorious. God bless | him and you, and make his coming the most notable pastorate in the eventful history of this church. * And, now, once more, I thank you 1 one and all?the trustees, the stew- | ards, the class leaders, the Sunday- ] school, the presiding elders, the dea- ( conesses, the sexton, the Epworth c League, the Men's 2-3-2 Club, the missionary societies, the organists +Vir? UPV cxr-o flick AUU UUVlXDf bug UOUCI Of biiv vuiiui V4? who have loved me, the young people > who have listened to me, the older e people who ha'va prayed foV me; all 8 who have In any way helped In these . 5 five memorable years of my life, I ! v thank you with all my heart and pray : i for you. To the members of other j churches, and those who have attend- , d ed upon my ministry who were not ~ members of this church, I would say. you have gladdened and encouraged my heart by your presence and kindly ' words; and I thank you, one and all, '; again and again. Remember when B you come to California I shall be there to warmly welcome you to my church s and to my home. The Real Cause of Weakness. The decline in numbers among the free churches of Great Britain is a subject for lament. The English pa- ' pers are filled with anxious discus- < sions of the fact. It appears that the passion for souls is lacking and evangelisnAs discredited. The churches are doing little more than the ethical g societies are doing. Seventy-five per ii cent, of the population are reported h as being either indifferent or hostile ^ to the churches. The churches are Sunday clubs, reform societies or benevolent agencies. They are not homes for the F soul. Prayer is not vital but formal. Conviction is not present. They have the ethic of religion without the evangel. This condition M Is a warning to all the world. TT e primary note in all our preaching and work should be evangelistic. ; Stagnation and death stare us in the C face when we cease to seek the lost, s ?Baptist Standard. b I Sealed Order*. "Arise and go into Gaza, which is desert." Not a word is said as to what Philip was to do when he got there for why he was to leave a very s prosnerous field in Samaria for one v which was extremely unpromising, v Yet Philip bad not more than reached g the cross-roads than he fell In with s the Ethiopian chamberlain and com- g missioned him as a preacher of righteousness to the banks of the Nile. So we are often sent out under u sealed orders. We do not know the S final destination. Only the first stop- t ping-place is pointed out to us, and } t that nay seem in the middle of a E wilderness. But if it be the Lord that has sent us, He will find even in the desert a work for us to do which will help to bring the sunlight into some dark corner of the Master's y kingdom.?Detroit News-Tribune. v j "Let the Almighty Steer." n God hath a thousand keys to open f a thousand doors for the deliverance ^ of His own T'heii it has come to the greatest extremity. Let us be faithful and care for our own part, which a is to do and suffer for Him. and lay c God's part on Himself, and leave it a there; duties are ours, events are the a Lord's. ( "When our faith goes to meddle g with events, and to hold a court (if I may so speak) upon God's providence, and beginneth to say, "How wilt Thou I do this or that?" we lose ground, we j have nothing to do there; It is our { part to let tne Aimignty exercise ms own office and steer His own helm.? r Samuel Rutherford. Old, But Always Now. . "If I am asked, 'What is the remedy I for the deeper sorrows of the huinau I heart?' I must point to something which in the well-known hymn is called 'the old. old story.' told of an old, old Book and taught with the j old, old teaching which is the greatest and best guide ever given to mankind. "?William E. Gladstone. Great Toils, Great Rewards. Nature is just toward men. It recompenses them for their sufferings; it renders them laborious, because tol I the greatest toik> it attaches the | greatest rewards.?Montesquieu. P ; : . - A CURE AT CITY MISSION. j Lwful Case of Scabies?Body a Mane I of Sores from Scratching?Her I Tortures Yield to Cuticura. "A young -woman came to our city mis- 1 ion in a most awful condition physically. I )ur doctor examined her and told us that I he had scabies (the itch), incipient pare- I is, rheumatism, etc., brought on from exosure. Her poor body was a mass of sores I rom scratching and she was not able to 1 etain solid food. We worked hard over ' ier for seven weeks but we could see little tnprovement. One day I bought a cake of Juticura Soap and a bottle of Cuticura lesoftent, and we bathed our patient well nd gave her a full dose of the Resolvent. - -1 1. 1 i-4 |U no-rf )1JC Biepi UCl'LCr bUUt lUglib UUU UIC lit** lay 1 got a bos of Cuticura Ointment. In ive weeks this young woman was able to aok for a position, and she is now strong nd well. Laura Jane Bates, 85 Fifth Lve., New York, N. Y., Mar. II, 1907." One of the beetles has an eye with 5300 aeets. 5$ rIr8.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children; veething,soften8 the gums, reduces inflamnjnV ion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle V j Gerrymander. Our description of certain county :ouncil tactics as "jerrymandering" las provoked inquiry as to th? derivaion of the word. It celebrates the lame of Dlbridge Gerry, a.--Governor )f Massachusetts, who w;ais an adept n the art of so arranging election c listi lets that his own side had an x mfair proportion of representatives, j The story goes .that Russell, the edl:or of the Continent, had in his office ^ in election map of Massachusetts, in j, which the painter Stuart .thought he e saw a district in the shape of a sala- c cnander, and pointed it out. "A Ger- ^ jTnander," answered Russell, and ;he word became a proverb and soon ] icquired the alternative spelling of g jerrymander."?London Chronicle. ^ , f $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will bepleased to c earn that there is at least one dreaded dis- V tase that science has been able to cure in all ^ ts stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall'sCatarrh J Jure is the only positive cure now known to he medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con* / ititutional disease, requires a constitutional ^ reatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- 1 ially, acting directly upon the blood andrau:ous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ( ng the foundation of the disease, and giving , ;he patient strength by biiitding up the con- * rtitution and assisting nature in doing its S vork. The proprietors have so much faith n its curative powers that they offer One 1. lundred Dollars for any case that it fails to lure. Send for list of testimonials. Address S F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. g Sold by all Druggists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. ^ The Hmhpr mitnnt of Maine last I winter was 900,000,000 feet, and the t ndications are that these figures will s )e about equalled this year. The f scarcity of labor prevented operations 1 o a large degree. N.Y.?43 t PUTNAM Jolor taoro coocL: brighter and faster colors than any otl an dye any carment without ripplpg apart. Write t< i Peanuts From Africa. So many peanuts are eaten In thisountry that the native supply is not ( ufficient for the demand, and about \ 3000 worth of the African nuts rere imported from Marseilles in S06, and over $73,000 worth in 907. The west coast of Africa proluces quantities of peanuts.?New rork World. THREE WEEKS rought About a Remarkable Change. Mrs. A. J. Davis, of Murray, Ky., ays: "When I began using Doan's ? Kidney Pills, kidney disease was slowly poisoning me. Dizzy spells almost made me fall, sharp pains like knife thrusts would catch me in the back, and finally an attack of rip left me with a constant agonizng backache. Doan's Kidney Pills 8 elped me quickly, and in three p reeks' time there was not a symptom s f kidney trouble remaining." 7 Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. 'oster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ^ Another Cromwell Essay. r TVio r?ins<5 was eiven "Oliver Crom- ^ rell" as the subject for a short es- I s ay, and one of the efforts contained q he following sentence: "Oliver j f Iromwell had an iron will, an un- f ightly wart and a large red nose, ut underneath were deep religious f eelings."?London News. Rock of Ages. A beautiful picture 7x8 feet in , ize is on exhibition in one of the " windows of Eisenstein's store. It /as painted by Denny Scott for Au;ust Busch, of St. Louis, and de- _ ign'ed from the sentimental compoition "Rock of Ages." It is that of lady clinging to the cross for refige as her only means of safety. Mr. Icott is becoming quite an artist, and I ui_ oHHc npw laurels I 1113 Ul iruin o his credit.?St. Charles (Mo.) Cosaos. The Kansas Corn Crop. We have noticed several articles in our valuable paper in the last two reeks in regard to the corn crop in Kansas. We think we have the baner stalk of corn. It measures 14 y2 eet high and the first ear of corn 3 eight feet from the ground. There : rill be a good chance for some wide-: wake salesman to dispose of several ' ars of stepladders or a carlaod of xes in this community between now nd corn gathering time.?Quenemo Kan.) Letter to the Kansas City tar. k0|MiJA^UCni. C_J? 6000 Money_ _ -wjf; mror Oaie making Farms '\3m2i hsl&ai'n '4 States. Strout's mimmothillustratedcatalogof bar?jiEBr?igains with State maps mailed free; we Ipay r.r. fare. E. k. STROUT CO., 'orld'i Largest Farm Dealers, ISO Nuua St, New York. JBISDASJh AN UNSURPASSED H 2 jg? REMEDY! 5)9 0/ n Piso's Cure it an unsurpassed re- .y K(1 medy (or coughs, colds. bronchitis, |jk J T Pj asthma. hoarseneu and throat and Hjl y l lung affections. It goe? direct to |^l y |HH the teat of the trouble and generally IrHl fMinrm hwijihv conditions. Mothers 1*1 Uf can give their children Pito's Cure HB Y. wl with perfect confidence in itscurative t!|M KjH powers and freedom from opiate*. \ramoui for half a century. Jjf At all drugiriiU', 25 cts. fiafl vV WWFFFk KMMmummmmm?mmmmmmm?mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN "No other medicine has been s< uccessful in relieving the sufferinj >i women or received so many gen line testimonials as has .Lydia E ?inkham's Vegetable Compound In every community you will fin( romen who have been restored to lealth by Lydia E. Pinkham's Yeg table Compound. Almost ever; ine you meet has either been bene ited by it, or has friends who have In the Pinkham Laboratory a jymijMass., anywomananydayma ee the files containing over one mil ion one hundred thousand letter rom women seeking health, an* lere are the letters in which the; penly state over their own signa ures that they were cured by Lydii 2. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabl Compound has saved many womei rom surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabl Compound is made from roots an< terbs, without drugs, and is whole ome ana narmiess. The reason why Lydia E. Pink iamfs Vegetable Compound is s< uccessful is because it contains in ;redients which act directly upoi he feminine organism, restoring i o a healthy normal condition. Women who are suffering fror hose distressing ills peculiar to thei ex should not lose sight of thes acts or doubt the ability of Lydii 5. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoun( o restore their health. FADELE ber dye. One 10c. package colors all libera. Tt >r freo booklot?How to Dye, Bleacn and Mix C (MB fito , DAI" El I 1 AT LO\ SUPERIOR TO BEST \ ?? The smalJ price is made possible treat demand for this Razor. Th? irofit on each aggregating as ti um as If we sold fewer at a greatei 'he benefit is the consumer's. The Blade is of the finest Ifically made and tempered process--and the blade, of course nt part of any Razor. The frame ii ilver plated, and "angled" corr tuick and clean shaving. The tougl inds this Razor a boon) the soft inds it a delight. These blades ca Buy one and you will recommei riends. That is the best test of ar W0 | 4J CIS. i: Wri BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, IF OK If you want a pair of shoes that yor and wear a week until they cet s buy SKRE human foo iii Tr Mi mak at have the a ||P toltott Sed It is no use a> you have the G | having the G( advertise. f AN IMITATION PATTERN THE There was never an imiti tators always counterfeit the what you ask for, because genul: Imitations are not advertised, bi ability of the dealer to sell you good" when you ask for the gen on the imitation. Why accept in nine by insisting? REFUSE IMITA ' V ' ff W. L. Donrlas make* and Mils moreT\ I men's 3.00 and S3.00 shoes than any I I 1 I other mannfactnrer In the world, lie- I I cauae they hold their ehape, fit better, ' . -?f; and wear longer than any other make. 8hoei at All Prlceijor Every Member of th? Family, Men, Boyt,Women, Mine* 4 Children ' ' W.L.Domlaa *4.00 and $0.00 <JUtEdc?Mw?? cannot b? c^udlid at any prtc*. W. L. Doagiaa 01.00 and fl.00 fhOM an tlM toft la tha world Fait Color Eyelet* TJttd Uttelmrtvlif. of Take No 8ub.il tute. W. L. DoasUu name and price 1b stamped on bottom. Sold ., ' ASM ererywhere. Shoe* mailed from factory to any part of the world. Cataloror free. W. L DOt'QLAS, 157 Spork St., Brodctot, Itoe. I TOILET ANTISEPTIC M Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body ;>Vs I antiseptically clean and free from un- _ 3 healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparation* L alone cannot do. A ^ _ germicidal, disinfecting and deodor* 1 ' izing toilet requisite ga l.if'S t of exceptional exST cellence and econ> | \/W 11" | omy. Invaluable S for inflamed eyes, i throat and nasal and |j JSm. ^ rr uterine catarrh. At Wj g|| > druI and toilet II IVfl m\'M > ? stores, 50 cents, or | 0 Large Trial Sample ?SBBr d WITH "HKAITH AND BCAUTY" IOOK ?CNT PRCC jfrf THE PAXTOH TOILET CO, Boston,Miss. - PATENTS *25 We par all expenses except Government fee*?Ma _ extras. Our book shows saving to yon--Wrlte for ft . ,d ' now. THE INDU8TRIAI.LAWJLEjI.GUE, 1 D Inc., 170 Browwsy, New York. " ICDDC.. the coming new Western .?> 1 DPI t It tl t ""metropoUs. Real Estate j. cheap, safe snre; easy terms. Write for spet clal quotations on choice lots. References, clr- , < culars, etc., CHAS. L. HYDE, Pierre, South Dakota, ; dropsy ,m e STo!^-m a ? 1 DHEI1U ATKEI n<>w curable; thouaanda cured; AO CUnlii 1 Idlu guits speedy;guarante? giTen;prfee low. Write quick. DR. 8. T. WRIGHT. Peru, Ind. /, SS DYE'S iey dyo In cold water better than any other dyA. Yob , uK olora. MONROE URl%) CO., Qulncy TlUnola. r RAZOR v PRICE. SOLD AT ANT PRICE. steel, scfen- Ji J by a secret % (pi i, is the impor- ffe fl tof satin finish, I JwJ ectly for safe, Pi I h bearded man SWJ bearded man !||] Iri extra nd it to all your m Anr?! iy article. blades ostage stamps UvJ sash brings it Jjjjj 1 Wvl said r?y man in |:?wi lecial box. W' J te name and full address very plainly. 134 Leonard Street. N. V. City, I ,y I L ^ # J tretched into the shape of your foot, IEMERS. They, are made to Jit the 1$ dvertising unless oods, and no use >ods unless you ' ; j ! ' . J ' ' 'xi T" iik tro Eixc ^ 1 /AI\L3 rUR 119 lijnREAL ARTICLE J ition made of an imitation. Imi- ? genuine article. The genuine ia O ae articles are the advertised ones. it depend for their business on the <g something claimed to be "just as ^ KnAoneo Ko mal/oe mnrnfit vli UlUtr, uctauoc UQ uiunvw v y* V**v .-|t Ditations when you can get the gen- $ TTAVO GET WHAT YOO 1 IlU-Wo" ASK FOH! j} seee^seeeeeeeeeeeseseew**