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I I ? 'eSffit; JFp-' ' ' KW#^ New York City.?The blouse that ' is made with a combination of wide I and narrow tnrlrs is a verv rharmine I .. ' ? ? - - W | ut oae and peculiarly well adapted to the fashionable thin materials. This | model produces the best possible lines and includes the new close fitting sleeves together with a fancy yoke, se In the illustration the yoke is made ad of all-over lace and the blouse itself m; is made of fine white lawn, but ready br made yokes can be utilized for the th purpose if preferred, or the yoke he could be made from embroidery, or ne from plain material with some sim- sk pie design embroidered by hand. T1 The waist is made with a fitted lin- wj ing, which can be used or omitted as th liked, and consists of front, backs and ar yoke. The neck is finished with a m high stock collar and the long sleeves as are made in one piece each. ti< The quantity of material required cii for the medium size is five and three- m quarter yards twenty-one or twenty- so four, three and a half yards thirtytwo or two and a quarter yards forty- or four inches wide, with three-quarter fr yard of all-over lace. or le Beaded Stockings. Beaded stockings are very easy to make. An openwork pair may be chosen and the beads sewn on the edge of the design, or a pair with lace inset may have beads to outline the lace and to stud it here and there. It is not advisable when decorating stockings to let the adornment run too far above the ankle, for it merely makes the whole effect ungraceful and unattractive. Finger Trinket, The latest idea in fads and fancies to be sanctioned by Dame Fashion is the tiniest sort of a trinket, to be worn on my lady's fourth finger, which will combine the functions of a timepiece and the beauty of a ring. It is a most minute bit of metal and precious stone work. It will cost eighty English pounds upward, or, in -\fce American market, about $400. j * Embroidery of Gold Braid. The woman who is anxious to give a vivid touch to a gown will do well ya to buy the large spools of gold thread tv which come for embroidery. She can ty use this thread on lace or chiffon to wi great advantage. A little of it goes fr a long way, but it gives a large result fo for a small effort i m, ?MDBFJ 11% Coarse-Meshed Nets. The heavy, coarse-meshed nets ari iwest both for waists and for veils. A New Shade. A new shade of dark green, ver> ipular with young girls, is called Llantic. Brocades in Demand. Brocades and light flowered silks e in great demand as linings foi parate coats and evening wraps. Popular Paris Skirts. Ql/irtc nf hrnken nlaids and checks inconspicuous character worn with coat of plain color, threaten to heme as popular here as they are in tris. Fashionable Neck Dressing. While sheer chemisettes are the ing, the very last word in fashionle neck dressing is this gold or silr mounted tucker, and very effectj it is. Circular Skirt. The skirt that takes straight lines d which is close fitting is the one at is in greatest demand at this ne, and this circular model is grace1 in the extreme, while conforming all the requirements. It can be ide either with or without the seam the front and with or without ams over the hips, so that it is apted both to narrow and to wide aterials. In the illustration chiffon oadcloth is made with the seam at e centre front only and with the ? ino/l Tv'tVi flannel tn e-ivfl Ill liUXl II1JV.U u UII vv o- eded weight, but all suiting and all irting materials are appropriate le seams over the hips are in evers ly desirable for narrow material, as ey do away with unsightly piecing. ia mey aiso can ut; uuuzeu iui auj aterial that has a tendency to sag, the straight edges of the back por)ns prevent stretching, but the plain rcular skirt is a handsome one, and any women prefer it to every other rt. The skirt can be made in one, two four pieces, as the seams at the ont and over the hips are used 01 nitted. It is perforated for walking ngth and for habit back. The quantity of material required r the medium size is six and a hall irds twenty-four, five yards thirty o, three and five-eighth yards for -four or three yards fifty-two inche: ide it made with seam at the centrc r\r*+. onH f >1 crh i h VQrHc rty-four, four yards fifty.two il ade without spam I THE PULPIT. i?du ? mer AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY Scri DR. DAVID J. BURRELL. Oil Theme: The Christian and His Bible. g , ble New York City.?The sermon ?am preached Sunday night in the Marble doei Collegiate Church, Fifth avenue and C0UI Twenty-ninth street, Manhattan, was P?^ ' by the pastor, the Rev. Dr. David T I. James Burrell. His subject was: vIce "The Christian and His Bible." The fta* text was from II. Timothy 3:14-17: 1 "But continue thou in the things be 1 which thou hast learned and hast i been assured of, knowing of whom ^ni thou hast learned them; and that ab01 from the child thou hast known the Or i Holy Scriptures, which are able to Jus' make thee wise unto salvation ?*e* through faith which is in Christ Blbl Jesus. All Scripture is given by in- ?P'rj spiration of Qod, and Is profitable for a C1 doctrine, for reproof, for correction, as 5 for instruction in Righteousness; that t0 ? the man o? God may be perfect, thor- an? oughlf furnished unto all good ? works." Dr. Burrell said: mat There was trouble in Ephesus. The lon? cflurch there had fallen on "perilous ansi . times." False teachers had crept in 6ay' and were leading away all such as ?oul had "itching ears." ~In Paul, the founder and former pas tor of the church in that city, writes to Timothy, his successor, exhorting J13? him to continue in the truth; and he *rll? suggests as a sure safeguard, for him- ^od self and his people, a profound loy- T altv to the Scriptures as the word of ?le, God. 13 1 He reminds the young pastor that Sets he had learned the Scriptures in his Vse childhood. In his old home at Deroe his mother Eunice and his grand- tQo mother Lois had instructed him. wr? Blessed is the man or woman who 11 can look back to such training as r10 this! The father of John Stewart ^rMill declined to teach religion to his teai son; the father of David Livingstone 3eex required his son to commit the One aue Hundred and Nineteenth Psalm to memory and take the Scriptures to be treE "a lamp unto his path;" and the dif- rajL ference is manifest in the life and ~ character of these men. *na Paul reminds Timothy also that lj0r the Scriptures had made him "wise unto salvation, through faith in t*}ei Christ." No man can search the or c Scriptures without finding two things, namely, Christ and Life; as our Lord 1 said, "Search the Scriptures; for in lir? them ye think ye have eternal life, and those are they which testify of *fU? .Me." This youth had found Christ t0 1 in the pages of the Book and, accept- "na ing Christ, had been saved by faith ,s.cn in Him. liv? Paul assumes, furthermore, that ^ Timothy, as a "man of God," must be a'r. true to the Scriptures. This ought j1 c to go without saying, since "men m ? God," in or out of the ministry, are in covenant bonds to be loyal to it. The question now arises, "What . * shall a Christian do with his Bible?" ?Ie Shall he be satisfied with merely :VS reading it? Is it enough* for him to in? talk about it? Shall he approach it ^ in a critteal spirit, with the purpose 13 1 of finding fault with it? If so, he ^ ? must not expect to find much that is "profitable" in it. hHe In one of Krummacher's fables he ne tells of a cociety of learned men who ?an resolved to make a voyage to investi- . y " gate the properties of the magnetic lmn needle. The ship being ready to sail, W0I they went aboard and, placing a mar- . * iner's compass in their midst, sat ine down to observe and scrutinize it. J?lr Thus they sailed to and fro, watching *nei the needle and each advancing and ];e?f defending his own theory as to the *aK( secret power which moved it. At 'Hf' length there was a violent crash; the w.n? ship had struck upon a rock, and the 0 ] waves rushed in. Then those learned perl men, all seized with terror, leaped ,?? overboard and swam ashore. And, ?,^r sitting there on the barren rocks, v?? they lamented one to another that au* there was no dependence to be placed , h on the magnetic needle! For a like reason there are "bibli- . ? cal experts" who can see no profita- flal bleness in Scripture; but there are Dy ! others who search as for hidden treasure and find in these pages the par unspeakable gift of life. s*ai The man who reads, ponders and ? inwardly digests will find that the ur< Word is profitable, particularly in rea< these four ways: lts_ First, "for doctrine." As a rule of * faith it serves, like the mariner's up chart, to sail by. It tells us what we p + <"? KoHava qo frt cni rH mqI + VH CT C ^ ai C IU UOilC?C Ci J l,V/ cpilituut wu*mqwj Yjip and truth Is the basis of life and character. For "as a man thinketh ~~ in his heart, so is he." One of the singular characteristics rr; of the Bible is this: Of all the so- . called "sacred books" it alone pre- c sents a multiplicity of truths which 1 j can be arranged into a harmonious ^ system. Who ever heard of the Mos- . * lem system of theology? Or of the :?v Buddhist system of doctrine? The other religions make no pretense of presenting a consistent creed, but the ~~ truths of the Scripture are like J pearls, which can be strung upon a necklace, having for its central gem this saying: "God so loved the world 7*?* that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlast- t>. ing life." * imr Another singular characteristic of the Bible is, that all its truths are set forth under a divine seal of au- C thorlty. All are not equally "proflta- trui ble," since it iB not so important, for con example, that we should know about enC( thp hirth nf .Tnhn the Ran fist. ns it 1r do that we should know ?hat Jesus Is the Pac only begotten Son of God, but all its ^ay truths are equally authoritative, since Patl all alike were "written by holy men clot I as they were moved by the Spirit of G God." The entire Book is signed and day sealed with a "Thus saith the Lord." Ne,v The quest of truth was set forth by the the ancient Greeks in the story of IeaI Jason and the Argonauts, who set mcn forth in the good ship Argo to find uml the golden fleece. It would have been on 1 a vain quest, despite the fact that T Hercules and Orpheus, with his lyre, day and the twins Castor and Pollux were m01 in that famous crew, had they not wor known, with some degree of cer- trut iainty,, where the golden fleece was to Peri be found. Somewhere among the isl- we ands of the Hesperides? That was tea< all too vague. But Colchis, just han there, and nowhere else, was their destination. Thither they sailed, hav found the fleece, and brought it home. Truth is the principal thing. But q where shall we search for it? There He must be some place of authority Wii] whither we can go with an assurance the of finding it. To wander about Ljf? among the islands of the Hesperides, j3 B guided by nothing more trustworthy ai,j. than opinion and guess work, doubt- i3 \ ing and wondering, with the rocks He and forests as our farthest horizons, jmp this is to pursue a vain and hopeless the quest. And little wonder if we are faj] lost in doubt and perplexity. To our ciiD' cry "Where is truth?" the echoes answer, mockingly, "What is truth?" But .the Christian takes up his Bible, opens it, and lo, from every page there comes a voice, "I am the truth." r'?b If, then, a man would be a believer, lac^ * I not a perpetual doubter; Id rest on authority and n e opinion, let him searct ptures, for is is the judge that ends the a When wit anp wisdom fail, ir guide to everlasting life, Through all the gloomy val* econd. The Scriptures are pi "for reproof." They answe e purpose that the North j when the ship gets out c rse. Only a "dead reckonii lihle without it. he man who follows his ow s and knows no other or 1 idard of truth than can be lis inner consciousness mut surprised if he loses his bet to the great problems of at do you believe about God at Christ? Or about Revelal about the Atonement? Or tification by Faith? Or ,ven and Hell? If you ha le, you are at liberty to say lion is thus and so," but if y( hristian and have taken the 'our rule of faith, you are 1 ay, "I have found it writtec so in the Word of God." ur faith as Christians is ter of hearsay or personal but of authority. "And the wered Job out of the whirl ng, 'Who is it that dark isel by words without knowl 1 up now thy loins like a I will demand of thee, and a i Me!' " So speaks the Inflr man whose breath is in hii i, "Be still and know that hird. The Scriptures are pi "for correction." The sailo: n doubt as to his whereal i his latitude and longitude 1 of his quadrant and steers ai y. So does the Christian ? Scripture, and. on finding hi ng, makes haste io return tc a one of the general assembl Church of Scotland the ven< Erskine sat within the rail "d, impatiently, a discussion ned to him to proceed wi reference to the Scriptures jth he arose, and with a aulous with age, said, "Mode me yon Bible, wull ye?" ipenln? it, he read the prei adding simply, "Thus salt d," sat down. Bat that ugh In a Christian assembl; e .the word of the Lord Is a ontroversy. "To the law ai [mony, if they speak not accc his word, it is because there in them." Ivery man must say for h: ither he will take the Scri] }e his guide or lean on hii erstandlng; but having mat V*a 4a p L UI CS JL1ID ^UUlbC) AD uwu accordingly. ine may go his own gait or It ict him. In the former case a Christian. In the latter ci I know of only these two ki pie in the world, to wit: It ! and men without God. 'ourth. The Scriptures are p "for instruction in righteous a "rule of practice" they ar rudder of the ship. ine *f the great words of the ighteousneBB. It is set foi perfect symbols, namely th imandments and the" Sermi Mount, and one perfect Exei i critic has yet to be founc pick a flaw in the Decalogut common consent Christ is tt laculate man who has lived i Id of ours. tut if we as Christians belli Bible, which presents such i able code of morals, how is i -e are so many inconsisten ors among us? The point i en; we freely acknowledg ;ice of it. But In that cri it a tribute is paid to the mc :he Bible, and to the Chris Cectly exemplifies it! Beho ik, how faultless its Btanda: iteousness! And behold the i world finds "no fault in H tut there is this to be said: : people are Bible ChriJ re is not one among then ms perfection; but, taking and large, good, bad and In we do not shrink from a ison. Let a thousand of id up in line, and a* tho grs who reject or ignore the is in an opposite line, and \ iy to have the exhibit stand merits. tut suppose all Christians dl to the standard of the Bible, pie they would be! One Mi >nce. He "brought the bott life up to the top of His 1 ? Bible was His rule of fait ctiee, and in His walk and ci on He was true to it. And hung upon the cross, the s harge of His execution was i ;ry, "Verily, this was a rigl l!" ' t remains to emphasize the iortant point of all, namely Scriptures are profitable 1 that the man of God m [oroughly furnished unto all ks." t is in the Scriptures tha istian gets his commission ft s. "As the Father has sei > the world," said Jesus, "so ,n As Christians we are to ourselves but others, to do ig to the glory of God. Common Days. >ne of the chief dangers of sting occasions. We think spicuous events, striking e es, exalted moments have m with our character and 01 ity. We are wrong. Co s, monotonous hours, vweai lis, plain old tools an\l eve hes tell the real story. tood habits are not made on s, nor Christian character i v Year. The vision may dream may waken, the hear ) with a new inspiration on jntain top; but the test, tt ph, is at the foot of .the mou the level plain. he workshop of character is life. The uneventful and lplace hour is where the ba 1 or lost. Thank God for i :h, a beautiful idea, a glowii [ence; but remember, that bring it down to the groun :h it to walk with feet, worl ds and stand the strain of , we have worse than lost I e been hurt by it. In God's Gymnasium. loci's proving does not meai stands by watching how His . behave. He helps us to s trial to which He subjec i is all probation; and beca o, it is all a field for the 1 The motive of His provin) ;hat they may be strength puts us into His gymnast rove our physique. If we trial, our faith i; increased; , we learn self-distrust and ging to Him.?A. Maclaren. Faith That Lacks Grip, aith is often as little effectr .teousness as unbelief, beca :s grip. If he Times Had Changed. i^the Several years ago Lord Clonmel brought to this country a string of ^?e race horses, and at the close of the season Phil Dwyer gave a banquet in his honor. Sheriff Tom Dunn, of New York, was called upon for a BPeech!I"star "Faith and this is a wonderful lf jjer country!" said Dunn. "I was a poor ig" is Irish lad and me dear old mother, God rest her soul, hardly had pennies n de- enough to bring me over. And here better j am to-night sitting cheek by jowl found Wjtjj L0rd Clonmel himself! Why, !t??g me friends, back in the old Tipperary life ?ays 1 co-uldn't get near enough to his 1 Or lordship to hit him with a shotgun!" iions? ?Everybody's Magazine. about about ITCHED FOR TWELVE YEARS. ve no ? "My Eczema Made Hands and Feet Swell, >u are Peel and Get Raw?Arms Affected, Bible Too?Gave Up All Hope of Cure bound ?Quickly Cured by Cuticura. l thus ?j 8Uffere(} from eczema on my hands, arms and feet for about twelve years; my n . a hands and feet would swell, sweat and itch, T ^en wou^ become callous and get ve:y *^?r_ dry, then peel off and get raw. I tried n.~* most every kind of salve and ointment ? without success. I tried several doctors, eage" but at gave up thinking there was a man? cure for eczema. A friend of mine innswer gig^ on my trying the Cuticura Remedies, lite XO j ^ no{. gjve tjjem a trjaj untjj j got 3Tn5i" so bad I had to do something. I secured a 1 aui set and by the time they were used I could see a vast improvement and ray hands and rofita- feet were healed up in no time. I have had r wno nQ trouble since. Charles T. Bauer, R. F. bouts, D 65( Volant, Pa., Mar. 11, 1908." )y trie Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, ccora- 0? (juticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. learch' [mself Sixtv-four out of every 1.000,000 of the ) God. world s inhabitants are blind. lies of arable Throat Troubles. To allay tbe Irritation s and that induces roughing, use Brown's which Bronchial Troches. A simple remedy, ithout In boxee 26 cents. Samples mailed free. !. At John I. Brown & Son, Boston, Mass. rfltor^ Horue beta in the United Kingdom are ' said to amount to over 142,000,000 annually. script, A Domestic Eye Remedy ;h the Compounded by Experienced Physicians. was Conforms to Pure Food and Drugs Laws, p; -for Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drug,n end P?*8 loT Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine. One-seventh of Great Britain's foreign >rdlng commerce passes through the Suez Canal. is no The Peruna Almanac. [mself The druggists have already been supplied ptures with the Peruna almanac for 1909. In ad3 Own dition to the regular astronomical matter le the usual]y furnished in almanacs, the articles , , on astrology are very attractive to jfhost ma 10 people. The mental characteristics of each sign are given with faithful accuracy. A it God list of lucky and unlucky days will be fur i ne IS nisnea to inose wno nave our aimanacs, ise he free of charge. Address The Peruna Co., nds of Columbus, O. [en of Statistics show that the Englishman is the heaviest eater. rofita- ? -PUTNAM Bible Color-uoro poods brighter and faster colore than any rth In ^ dyC 'Uly ffarment Trtthout ripping apart. Writ e ^en Spectators. on on nplar. ** ls a stunning fact that young 1 who people in general are not being In?; and Btructed in religion and ethics to-day. te one ?The Universalist Leader. n this I . The average potato consumption in New 3ve in 5f0rk<?ity for each day is nearly one pound in ad- for each person. It that t pro- Pile? Cured in 6 to 14 Days. s well Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any e the :aseof Itching,Blind,Bleedingor Protruding ticism ^>^es *n ? t0 1* days or money refunded. 50c. ?.F If you want people to listen to you, don't t Who talk about youraelf. Id the : rds of Itch cured in 30 minutes by \VoolforH'. Man! Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. [im at Emperor Wifliam spends half a million The yea*]y *n trave^n8 around his kingdom. stians. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children 1 who teething, softens thegums, reduces inflammathem tion, allays pain, cures wind cclic,25c a bottle differcom ^ is said that the harbor facilities of th Montreal are almost as good as those of mezn Liverpool, and have cost much less. / usand 1 Scrip- To Break in New Shoes. ve are Always shake in Allen's Foot-Ease, a upon powder. It cures hot, sweating, aching, swollen feet, corns, ingrowing nails and j .i? bunions. All drueeists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Sample mailed i w?at frre. Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. in did om of The Rumanian crown is made of ight." metal from Turkish cannon captured II an<* at Plevna in 1877. It is not covered ?when wlth a tbin Iayer of gold an(* enamel loldier like the Servian crown, but has an moved unadorned circlet of steel. lte0US AWFUL GRAVEL ATTACKS most that Cured by Doan's Kidney Pills After :o the Years of Suffering. ay be [ good F. A. Rippy, Depot Ave., Gallatin, Tenn., says: "Fifteen years ago kidit the ney disease attacked )r ser- me. The pain in my at Me f back was so agonizsend I -gjfl jng I finally had to every! glve up work> Then jgQjftdF came terrible attacks of gravel with acute ffi'A pain and passages of life is blood- ln a11 I ; that passed 25 stones, xperi- some as large as a ost to bean. Nine years of this ran me down ir ca- t0 a state of continual weakness, and mmon j bought j Bever would be better un ryday 111 1 began using Doan's Kidney Pills. The improvement was rapid, and birth- Bince using four boxes 1 am cured and it the have never had any return of the dawn, trouble." t may gold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. some Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. te tnntain, Trees Purify the Air. every- It js a fact t.bat trees aiong highttle is ways> trees in towns and cities and a new trees in groves amid agricultural reag ex- gions render the atmosphere purer, unless They by their foliage absorb hurtful d and I gases, which would otherwise be i with breathed by the inhabitants of the daily ^nsely populated cities, thereby we modifying diseases, lessening the dangers of epidemics and in many i ways improving the healthfulness of 1 that communities.?New York Farmer. ustain Sometimes Hard to Tell. ts us. George Eliot says that the expresuse it alon on a woman's face when she is Divine sewing tells the story of the woman's I men heart. If she is happy and contented, lened. or possibly slovenly and indifferent, 'stand sbe may smiIe and look t^xe happiness we she either feels or is incapable of feelcloser iQS- If she has many things to worry her and is possibly planning how to make ten cents do a dollar's worth of good, or if she is naturally a vixen, ?e for it will show in her face, so after all use it? 1 tt is not safe to predicate as to what j her sewing face reveals. i * Oud< Qiu "Do you know of benefit from taking I pound ?" If any woman who to her sex will ask he ' surprised at the resu this country where w( restored to health 1 exclusively from a sin During the past 3c of letters from these { by Lydia E. Pinkhan in all that time have 1 the writer's special pei published a testimoni: Here is one just recer that this is a true and ence with Lydia E. P and ask her. 1: t Houston, Texas.?" "W ham's Vegetable Comp sick for three years wi and a liver trouble. I ] nothing did me any go< ** For three years I li never get well, when I ham's Vegetable Compi " My husband got rat me so much good I con and enjoy the best of h "I advise all women Lydia E. Pinkham's V< regret it, for it will su 819 Cleveland St., Hon Any woman who is not to give such a me not do her as much g F ADEI ' other dye. Ono 10c. package colors all o for freo booklet?How to Dye, Bleach i TYPEWRITERS Sold, rented, exchanged everywhere. Ms others equal to new sold at a saving of cent on manufacturers' price. Cash payments. Covered by same guarantee turers give. Write for specimens of wrl prices. TYPEWRITER SALES Cortlaudt St.. Cor. Broadway* N< cri I YOUR PATENT by our newi \p I 1 monstrate It to the Lading ca , Wtfai t manufacturers at Madison Sq New York. WrlteNATIONAL PATENT EXHIBITION C0..10W-5-7 Real Estate Bit PI LPS kfa W Fi'V" Book 8 fre REA CO.. DEPT. B. A MINNEAPO At Yale University there is a prehistoric animal which meaj feet long and six feet broad. Only One "Bromo Qnin That is Laxative Bromo Quini for the signature of E. W. Grove. World over to Cure a Cold in One If a phrenologist is a mind i bumps must be raised letters. The Herb laxative, Garfield Te ture in maintaining the general of the body, it corrects constipt fies the blood, brings health. We Pay For All We C In this world you gene what you pay for. At leas long run. Thousands are not williu the priee of success with th< coin of hard work and patl ing. They are looking f lucky chance to mend their Why should men expect $100 out of $10 by betting 4n't> V*nTen? taiu uv* ov Why should they expec down at a poker game an with a month's salary earn hour or two? Why should they expect a centage on money invested rich-quick concerns? Why do they continually in" by purchasing goods s? up to the mark at a ridiculc figure? The answer is that the) looking for something for And the outcome in most that they get nothing for sc The man who has not a gr of ability to sell should no) much for it. The employe who is co seeking more than he, or worth will never get it?for the other hand, the employ* continually hunting for hel than it is worth gets' the poo of labor?the most unskilled reliable. N f*UIPl/CMC CA UniOf\LllO Ln Whether you rai6e Chickeni get tbe best results. The way We offer a book telling all ject?a book written bv a | ' 25 years in raising Poultry, had to experiment and spend wav to conduct the business? CElNTS in postage stamps, and Cure Disease, how^ to Market, which Fowls to Save indeed about everything you ran POSTPAID ON RECEIPT 01 Book Publishing H It is no 11 you have ti having th( advertise. p -V > ./< - . , | % j,. * . ;5J < , *. ,^JV I 9 S&UDH/ any woman who ever received any ^ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comis suffering with any ailment peculiar r neighbors this question, she will be It. There is hardly a community in )men cannot be found who have been :y this famous old remedy, made lple formula of roots and herbs. ) years we have published thousands grateful women who have been cured l's Vegetable Compound, and never i we published a testimonial without rmission. Never have we knowingly il that was not truthful and genuine, /ed a few days ago. If anyone doubts honest statement of a woman's experiinkham's Vegetable Compound write ' rlien I first begun taking Lydia E. Pink ounci i was a torai wrecn. 4 uaa oeen 1th female troubles, chronic dyspepsia, !iad tried several doctor's medicines, but mL ved on medicines and thought I would read an advertisment of Lydia E. Pink)und, and was advised to try it. 5 one bottle of the Compound, and it did [tinned its use. I am now a well woman ealth. 1 suffering from such troubles to give egetable Compound a trial. They wont irelycure you."?Mrs. Bessie L. Hicks, iston. sick and suffering is foolish surely , :< dicine as this a trial. Why should it ood as it did Mrs. Hicks. Jess dyes fibers. They dye In cold water better than any other dye. VoQ and Mix Colors. MONROE URDU CO., Qiiacr llllnoU. mresf nine The Beason I Make and 8ell More Men'a $3.00 &> $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer U because I give the wearer the benefit of the sort n complete organization of trained rxperU hA skilled tne shoemakers In tlx country. ?p rThe selection of the leathers for each put of the shoe, r i jIl Uld every detail of tlM making In rrery department, is / Used the looked after by the beet shoemakers Is the ihoe fttdmrtry. ])av 25c **1 coQl(1 *aow yon how carefully W. L. Dooglas Am J' are made, yon would then nndersttnd why they hold (Mr ? shape, At better, and wear longer than any other sake. eader, the yy Method of Tanning the Soles makes them M or* Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others. . _ _* Shoes fop Every Member of the Family* a, aids JNa- Men, Hoys, Women,Mlaeea and Children, well-being For sale by shoe dealer* everywhere. Lt,jon Tiuri- PAILTIflM I ^one (rennlne without W. L. Dodrju ixion, pun irAlrl |UN ! nan.e and price stamped on bottom. Pact Color ?yelet? Used Exclusively. Catalog mailed tree. jet W. L DOUGLAS, 167 Spark St, Brockton, Mass. rally get ii " ln the For Sore Throat g to pay B sterling \ Nothing will do more good ent wait- *n 80 8^ort a time with X so little trouble as or some \ ^ fortune. \ IIqIa'c to make mR mJL^C on a cerHHTIOV oIHordroond t to sit and tit d get up / Sold by Druggists ed in an ' When it aches again try ,. Pike's Toothache Drops , Dig per- _ l [ in get- ? ; , * '? P WANTED I ... )usly?low Young men from 16 to 18 years of age as apprentices to the Iron r are all Moulders' Trade. nothing. BROWN A SHARPE MFG. CO.. Provldcnct, R. L cases is imething. srs SEED BARLEY a bT Per Salter's catalog, page 129. HHBK ntinually , . . , Largest growers of seed barley, oat?, wheat. She, is spelts, corn, potatoes, grasses clovers ana ]nri rr On farm seeds In the world. Big catalog free; or. lUiig. uu genj 10C. in stamps and receive samples of H !-r who is | hurley yielding 173 bu. per acre. Billion . , Dollar Grass, Oats, Speltz. etc., etc., easily - -* ' - " ?-? with rtr und p itl icoa h worm ciu.uu wu ????. v., _ roct olacc '14c. and we add a samplefarm need novelty ? iebL tidss never seen by you before. I and un" I SALTER SEED CO.. Box A. C.. La Crowe. Wte. I DM MnMKTVIif You Know Howto llili IVIUIlL I . Handle Them Properly 3 for fun or profit, you wsnt to do it intelligently and ,v to do this is to profit by the experience of othew, you need to know on the sub< MHnHni man who made bis living for and in that time necessarily It ? much money to learn the be9t ' A, for the small sum of 25 M It tells you how to Dctect Feed for Eggs, and also tor for Breeding Purposes, and ist know on the subject to make a success. SENT i1 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. ? >>? v 1 c? ju v ousep jij* htsonuru JU, iT< % se advertising unless ' he Goods, and no use i Goods unless you