The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, April 07, 1909, Image 7

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/ - V " ' ' " -t New York City.?The tasteful breakfast jacket is one of the most satisfactory garments any woman can possess. It means comfort as well as daintiness during the morning hours; s It affords relief from the high collar and cuffs of the regulation shirt waist and If well selected is apt to to be extremely becoming. This one can be made as illustrated, with the Vsliaped neck and elbow sleeves, or I hieh with r. Krtllnr collar and lone! sleeves so that it becomes adapted botli to present needs and to the fuA a _ _3 4.. Vl O lure coiaer a&ys. as musuaicu, mc material is Indian linen with the yoke of tucking and trimming of embroidery, but there are a great many similar washable materials that are liked by women who prefer such at all setsons of the year, while there are also innumerable light-weight flannels, albatross, cashmere and the like, that also are well adapted to the design. For the present and for many weeks to come pretty dimities, lawus, wash silks and the like, are perhaps to be preferred to everything else, but the time of cooler weather ie approaching, and when It shall have arrived wools will be in demand. Trimming is always a matter of taste, and any pretti' heavy lace or banding can be substituted, or narrow banding cau be used as shown in the email view. The jacket is made with the full pointed yoke, and a plain back. It can be gathered at the waist line and finished with a belt or can be adiuKtprt hv mparis of ;i IiaU nf rihhnn as in this instance. The sleeves are of moderate fullness. Those of elbow length are finished with straight bauds over which the embroidery is arranged, while the long ones are gathered into deeper, shaped cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium si?.e is three yards: twenty-seven or thirty-two or two yards forty-four inches wide with three-eighth yard of tucking and one and three-quarter yards of embroidery to make as illustrated; three and three-quarter yards twenty-seven or thirty-two or two and one-quarter yards forty-four inches wide to make with sailor collar and long sleeves. Pink Carnation* as Trimming. Spikes of creamy pink carnations, looking so natural that one could almost catch a whiff of their fragrance, were used in the trimming of on;* hat, and a huge mushroom leghorn shown by the same importer had :i ' scarf and back bow of very broad ; light blue ribbon, and at intervals ] around the crown stiff bunches of wood violets, primly encircled bv their foliage, nestled among the soft folds of the scarf. Folds and Tucks. The bias folds and the deep tucks still hold sway, and are seen everywhere on cotton, linen, silk and wool costumes, and while those of graduated widths are often noticed, the tid^ of favor seems (o have turned toward the bauds, folds and lucks of the same width, and either two or three as preferred. I tstitch Finish Preferred. ' Coats bound with braid, though stylish, have become common, the best makers preferring to finish the edges with several rows of stitching. Seen at a Wedding. A gray mousseline de sole gown worn by an elderly woman at an out- I of-town wedding was trimmed with f a sort of drawnwork and fringe, and ? was almost entirely covered by a long 5 coat of gray ehbroidered net. The hat was trimmed with po-pptes. 1; i! Quaint Cnj?es Appear. F It is odd to see these little capes a bobbing up in the fashion world as a serenely as though they had not ap- i peared two years ago. and failed ut? c terlv to make any impression upon us. 1; Somehow, now, though, they seem particularly appropriate as accom- h paniments to the quaint turn of fash* ^ ions generally. ? I'lAirnrt On ITn^c - b In spite of the fad for placing a most of the trifnmiug toward the back o of the hat, many of these aureole t shapes have flowers massed at the 5 front, just behind the backward roll- 5 p ing brim, and. perhaps, though not necessarily spraying backward and ^ sidewise over the crown, while a scarf is twisted softly around the crown. r . o Fancy Blouse Waist. f The fancy blouse is always in de- u mand and is ever taking on fresh and a fascinating forms. This one is distinctly novel and is adapted to all the _ pretty materials of the incoming sea- 3 son. It would bo equally charming u in light-weight silk and wool, and, aB f; we are promised an increased number h of both, it will find many uses. In 1 v the illustration chiffon taffeta is j ^ stitched with belding silk, and is combined with lace, while the edges s . n h 1 ft * 0 0 c are piped with very narrow velvet, s the color being one of the new orchids v that are constantly increasing in fa- 1 vor. Marquisette, veiling aDd all j similar materials are, however, quite as appropriate as the silk and either E lace, embroidered net of some pretty c light weight contrasting plain mate- <j rial can be used for the chemisette and under sleeves. t The blouse is made with a fitted * lining on which the yoke, the front_ * and the back are arranged. There t are tucks at the shoulders, and there j are box pleats that extend for full a I . L'u&tli at front att I back, those last terminating i:: ;- ii:Is and being arranged iu ?f.?\ '.-fii-on in combination with str i; . t!i? material. The double sleeve:-. ni:;he a notable feature and are eminently graceful. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and three-quarter yards twenty-one, three and one-quarter yards twentrseven, one and five-eighth yards fortyfour inches wide, with two yards of ail-over lace. ?Wi_.li I win nm, i* ? a eri f be fiui/o/t 1 de % 'tei A SERMON' (Kfcf 3/ TAE RE'/- ?e [RA.V/C/if.NDE^^P'^ ot J,* all W tu Subject: Hypocrisy. gu br wi Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the de rving Square Presbyterian Church, q8 lamburg avenue and Wierfield ^ treet, on the above theme, the Rev. \y ra Wemmell Henderson, pastor, tl% aid: \\t The subject reflects a feature of m, ife that is as real and general as it no 3 unfortunate and reprehensible. 0j( ^or hypocrisy?that is to say, the we ssuniption of that which we are noc, r the uncandor of inconsistency?is gj( prevelant and pernicious factor in ie?" Ife. It is present everywhere. But lo, lowhere is it more pernicious than an ti our own midst. ia, America is beset with the vice of f01 ypocrisy. And it is especially unforunate that it is so. For the position gj( f this country in the front rank of ?Ui he nations and of progress makes io ^e nsistently necessary that we shall :ave candor as we consider ourselves jj( nd that we shall not arrogate to m( urselves any characteristics or vir- cu ues that are not of the bone and ch inew of our national life. For in iucerity is as fatal to a nation as to fr( n individual. He lives best who is jsr enuine. Not otherwise is it with a ation. p0 Generally when we speak of hypoc- i0( isy we conceive the portraits of the jjc aen who lead dual lives, of false- 0f aced friends, of the insincere habit- wc es of an insincere society. They re truly to be condemned. Their exmple is a warning. ie? But they are not the offenders of toj rhom most I would speak to you to- qu ay. For the hypocrisies of individ- gu ale are co-terrainous with death so jnj ar as this world is concerned. The W ypocrisies of nations however, by pe irtue of the constitution of society, er] ave a tendency to perpetuate them- m( elves and to become in a larger m, ense most lasting and pernicious. It is because of the tendency of ce] ational hypocrisies to be, in a way, j0( elf-perpetuating that I would, this up lorning, have you attend to the hy- en ocrisy of America. Because our e0 ational hypocrisies are to some de- jjf ree unconscious they are the less to jjg e excused and they are more to be qc ?ared. do The subject is not pleasant. It is do ot over nice to admit that as a na- Sj? ion we are hypocritical. We may rish the truth were otherwise. But jjf fie truth has a very peculiar fashion qc f remaining fixed and constant re- (j0 ardless of our desires or our W? reams. wj America is hypocritical. And we an re hypocritical socially, government- to lly. intellectually, morally and spir- \y dually. The counts are many but we ?t, hall have to admit their validity. w ind they are true despite the un- th: uestioned supremacy of our people W? a many fields of national endeavor nd success that constitute the great- ho ess of a people. et< America is hypocritical in her so- cu ial relationships. Jack London in a an ecent story tells a weird and grue- se: ome tale of how he witnessed as a sit ramp the flogging in most merciless thi ashion of two unruly gypty boys by ar lie leader of a gypsy camp. The story we 3 horrifying in that it reveals the ex- Tli stence of such cruel inhumanity in tai he midst of a civilized society even ch q a gypsy camp. Our eyes fill with lai ears and our blood runfe" hot with in- m< ignation as we read of such unphil- sh sophical and unscientific manage- th lent of children. We can understand ioi uch conditions as they exist among fa] mong the chill snows and under the ow enighted civilization of Russia. But hy ere they appeal, even though they th re infrequent. But while our pulses eat faster over the sins of a gypsy sh amp we are strangely unresponsive ini o the piercing wails of the multi- ou udes of our own children?no, not ou ur own?to the wails of the multi- ou udes of our neighbors' children, who, Th ay by day, in a land of freedom and sa: )hristian enlightenment, are crushed Ct a the mechanism of our modern no ommercial system. We have ears ho nd hearts and ready hands to help us he misery of the Chinaman who tu ries out against the greed of "most Ihristian England" as she forces the he curse of opium upon an unwilling ation. But we seem hardly to hear j)r he call of the throngs whose lives ^ n America are wrecked because of f0 he unholy traffic in alcoholic beverges that to-day is permitted to exist y and with the consent and suffrage f the adult membership of the Jhurch of Jesus Christ. And just no o long as we mourn over gypsies ana k*ax indignant over the wickedness of yo he English people, the while we wax 'aj iur ears against the call of our chil- ^ !ren in the homeland for help and jju . chance to live as God meant they wj hould we are, to say the least, soially hypocritical. And no man may leny the count. jS America is hypocritical in her attiude toward government. It is the ashion to declaim about the vices of ar Jabylon, the rottenness of ancient lorne, the sins of Philip the second, Cj, he crimes of modern Russia, the ralacity of European nations. We are gr istounded that the civil corruption w. if any nation could be so totally in- je] lecent as to consign sailors to be sent o death inside of ill-equipped and till more illy handled men of war. iVe thank God that we do not live inder an autocracy that is as con- dl iciencelees and as villainous as that vhich holds the reins of Russian gov- "* ;rnment. And yet, wide-awake as we ch ire to the criminalities of the bureau- a ratic government of the Russian ?zar, we are but half-awake to the ealities of the existing corruption all dl iround us. For the fact is that in the n ace of our history, our inheritance, 1 ?> (I 1 Jill" UpjJUI UUiiUUb, uur V/iniauau inlucnces, we are q sorry spectacle to ar he nations. We glory that we have 10 autocracy of birth. But by our R1 )wn consent we have allowed to reign m >ver us as greedy a set of politica.1 lirates as ever sunk a ship. Their July distinction is that they are able wi o fool most of the people most of th he time. The governmental condi- ar ions existant in nearly every hanilet UE 111(5 oitv ill Hip lTnitpri SfatpS of Amcr ca are so absolutely disgraceful that Il? ve ought to be ashamed. Our polit- da cal dictators, with few, ana they lus- T1 rous, exceptions, do as they please vitii the sublimest self-confidence imiginable. And so long as we are jrieved over the examples of governnental maladministration, ancient th md modern, with which we are fa- isi niliar, and refuse to secure the pnri- ? ication of our own political affairs, ind neglect to procure the political sxecution of our political thugs and hicves and highbinders, whom we lave allowed to reign over us, wo are er ivuocrlticaJ ic our a$suwuiir>n of *ov. w| it perhaps our cniidren snouia oe :d that which they will learu from estionable sources if we do not arantee them timely and proper formation! And just so long as > deplore the moral sins of other oples and neglect to attend proply to the conservatidn of our own )rals, we are hypocritical. And no in may deny the count. America is hypocritical in her conations of things religious. We )k with wonder and astonishment on the inconsistency that is appart between the noblest books of .stern religions and the manner of e among the devotees of those re;ions systems. We do not exalt id by the sharpened scimitar. We not roll under Juggernaut. We not provide money and food at the le of the graves of the departed, e do not let our nails grow for e-time in order to glorify Almighty id. We have more sense than to these. But what do we do? Why, ! proclaim Jesus Prince of Peace lile we proclaim peace a fantasy d exalt the doctrine that the way ensure peace is to go well armed, e magnify the philosophy that says urn to him thy other cheek." But : keep our gloves on. We believe at "righteousness exalteth." But : acknowledge, as practical men, at it is impracticable to be strictly nest and prosper. We acclaim the srnal necessity for an exact conrrence of thought and speech, word d deed, look and action. But we ad our Bibles to China packed bele a hold of beer. We assimilate e Indians by the efficient force of me. We civilize the Philippines by ty of Milwaukee. We sing, "Unlo tee, O God, be liches," but we mainin a large proportion of the urches of the living Christ in this ad by such devious and precarious ;thods as would put a heathen to ame. And so long as we scoff at e inconsistencies of foreign religis systems and are satisfied, with a Ise optimism, to congratulate our 'n with all its incongruities, we are pocritical. And no man may deny e count. And all this is to say that we ould, with no spirit of mere carp S criticism, look over mis iana or rs as patriotic Americans. For upon r candor and our sincerity depend r success, our power, our future, le American nation illumined and nctified by the truth as it is in Jesu9 irist will be invincible. We must t deceive ourselves. We must be nest. Let us be courageous. Let cease to be hypocritical. Let U3 rn on the light. To Find Out God's Will. In his life of Henry Drummond, '. George Adam Smith has inserted e following eight maxims that he und described on the flyleaf of ummond's Bible: First. Pray. Second. Think. Third. Talk to wise people, but do t regard their decision as final. Fourth. Beware of the bias ol ur own will, but do not be too much raid of it. (God never necessarily warts a man's nature and likings, it it is a mistake to think that His 11 is the line of the disagreeable.) Fifth. Meantime do the next thing or doing God's will in small things the best preparation for knowing in great tilingsj. Sixth. When decision and action e necessary go ahead. Seventh. Never consider the desion when it is finally acted upon. Eighth. You will probably not id out till afterwards?long afterirds, perhaps?that you have been i at all.?G. W. S. Herald. A Prayer For Our Nation. Almighty God, who in former times dst lead our fathers forth into a salthy place; give Thy grace, we imbly beseech Thee, to us their ildren, that we may prove ourselves people mindful of Thy favor, and ad to do Thy will. Bless our land with honorable inistry, sound learning and pure man:rs. Defend our liberties, preserve ir unity. Save us from violence, scord and confu??on, from pride and rogance. and from every evil way. ishiou iuto one happy family the ultitudes brought hither out ot any kindreds and tongues. Endue with the spirit of wisdom ose whom we entrust in Tny Name ith the authority of govei'.iance, to e end that there be peace at home, id that we keep a place among the itions of the earth. In the time of prosperity, fill our >arts with thankfulness; and in the ty of trouble, suffer not our trust in lee to fail; all of which we ask for isus unnsi s sane. Amen. Pardon Promised. God hath promised pardon to him at repenteth, but He hath not proraBd repcntan?s to him that slnneth. -St. Auselm. A Striking Thought. Until Christianity shows a stronggrip on Clirj?lians it only play'* tag iba world. amental virtue. And no man may, ny the count. America is hypocritical intellectualWe rejoice in the heritage of inllectual freedom which is ours. We re God praise that a man may think s thoughts after God here without gard to any man. We regret that tina has reverenced the past, that e church in age3 gone refused to low the liberty of private judgment, e pride ourselves upon the oppornity for freedom of thought that is aranteed to every man who eathes our air. But, what do we do th the man who dares to exercise 3 prerogatives? What do we, the scendants of the men who mobbed irrison, who ridiculed the scientific niuses of a scant generation ago? e are as impervious to a new ought as any nation under heaven, e prate about progress and we lintain the status quo. We want new thought until it has become !. With our refinements of cruelty ! attempt to still forever the actiw es of those who would follow the jam oi the truth of God, who would id us ahead and up. And just so lg as we talk freedom of thought, d regret the lack of it in other ids, while we have a scant attention r the prophets of the living God lose minds are illumined by the )ry of His truth, we are intellecally hypocrites. And no man may ny the count. Then, too, we are moral hypocrites. >w shocked we are at the Moham;dan system of divorce, and the rse of opium to the integrity of linese civilization, and the vicious stoms of English barroom, and the >e-love of a certain sort of Social n! But how shocked are we over e "consecutive" polygamy and lyandry that exists under the )se sanctions of our legal systems? >w shocked are we by the spectacle our boys and girls, our men and men, deadened with drink; forced immorality by the social conditions at we permit? How shocked we are The Old Way and the New. The young lady from Boston was txplaining: "Take an egg," she said, ; "and make a perforation iii the base and a corresponding one 1* the apex. Then you apply the lips to the aper- 1 ture, and by forcibly inhaling the breath the shell is entirely discharged of its contents." An old lady who was listening ex- ; claimed: "It beats all how folks do things nowadays. When I was a gal they made a hole in cach end and sucked." ?Judge's Library. Our Unseen Sun. No one has ever seen the sun. This Is not an epigrammatic pleasantry, but the cheerless scientific truth. A series of concentric shells envelops a nucleus of which we know absolutely nothing, except that it must be almost infinitely hotter than the fiercest furnace, and that it must amount to more than nine-tenths of the total solar mass. That nucleus is the real sun, forever hidden from us.?London Pall Mall Gazette. FURIOUS HUMOR ON CHILD. Itching, Bleeding Sores Covered Body ?Nothing Helped Her?Cuticura Cures Her in Five Days. "After my granddaughter of about 6even years had been cured of the measles, she was attacked about a fortnight, later by a furious itching and painful eruption all over her body, especially the upper part of it, forming watery and bleeding sores, es. pecially under the arms, of considerable Bize. She suffered a great, deal and for ,three weeks we nursed her every night, using all the remedies we could think of. Nothing would help. We tried.the Cuti-i cura Remedies and after. twenty-fou? hours we noted considerable improvement, and,, after using only one complete, set of the Cuticura Remedies, in five consecutive days the little one, much to our joy, had been j entirely cured, and has been weH.for a long time. Mrs. F. Ruefenncht, R. F. D. 3, Bakersfield, Cal., June 25 and July 20, 1906." Ten Thousand For One Experiment. , Burbank's achievements with, the daisy are more fascinating than a fairy tale. From England, Japan, Germany, Australia ? everywhere where daisies grew?he got seeds of the best varieties, cot a few, but hundreds, thousands. These were carefully planted and watched with closest care. They were, all going to be slain, but out of their death was to nr\ m o o noa* r?5??cv J n r trnr mnrP hPAII. tiful, more hardy, and that would . flower in every climate perennially. The result, was bis "Shasta'^daiey, one of the most beautiful, flowers ever seen?of clear brilliant white, great size, the centre of pure yeJlow resting upon slender, yet strong stems. Ten thousand seeAs fVjaiird for this one experiment? Yes, and ( often the ten thousand become fifty thousand, before he gets what he wants, ft is this large deaJing that f hoc rl i fFor t io fort Mr k 'k plans from those of other men. He speedily learned that great results are not to be obtained from inadequate methods.- The ten thousand daisy seeds were only a starter. Millions and millions of daisies were grown from these seeds, and it was only after the experiments were completed,, and the habits of the "Shasta" permanently fixed, that the experimental plants were destroyed. ?From "A Little Visit to the Home of Luther Burbank," by George Wharton James, in the Circle. An Inhuman Wish. It was a clergyman with a care for souls, in one of the poorest parts of London who went down to a provincial town to plead for support for his work. They had a large meeting for him, and he made a most telling appeal, at the dose of which up jumped a good man, promising $250 as a start. The clergyman was overjoyed. "I don't know, your name, sir," he cried, "but I thank you. I thank you. May your business be doubled in the coming year." Then a solemn hush settled down, and the meeting, as it were, looked at itseir. "What's the matter?" the clergyman whispered anxiously to the chairman. "What's thfc matter?" "Er?well?er?that gentleman is an undertaker."?Pearson's Weekly. Refreshing Sleep Comes Alter a Bath with warm water and Glenn's Sulphur Soap. It allays irritation and leaves the skin coo!, soothed and refreshed. Used just before retiring induces quiet and restful sleep. Always insist on Glenn's 1 Sulphur Soap All druggists keep it. mil'* llnlr nod WliLilier Dye rtlac-u or Itroirn, GOc. .. ->I., Mica Mb Grease J R lengthens the life of the Llf r.-ngoii ? saves horse- / '/// M per, Best lubricant in In iI Ithc world?contaius/^I | | hard coaling oa axle, aud I'MII f' v reduccs friction. /W / J r. If you wai:t your outfit hjie / 5 1 to fast and earn money jilj/ J I while it lasts ? grease luttf ji the axles with Mica /*// I Axle Grease. [// j I STANDARD OIL COMPANY 1-corp.r.ted j E? dn BMC V WW ?XBC0VHB*S a& STs Q 0 glrst qnlot relief ."vnC oaiA tTonC CCUCJ. UooL ol tMtlmouliU uod to Den' lr**ttMOt ViOD. On ill li. fiUJHN'S 003$, >02 D, Allctrtb tit. PUTNAM Color more goods b*lgiiter and fosfor color? :'.?*/ . any < (ta dje uuy gannaot niWwut rippta# apRrt. W.-itc To Pronounce Lnsitanla. . The first trip of the Lusltania has aroused no little discussion as to the 1 pronunciation of the ship's name, many well-versed speakers insisting on giving it the souud of Lusitannia, to rhyme with Britannia. Americans, however, should have no difficulty with this fine old Latin word, as its "a" is sounded like the "a" in "fate," and the name rhymes correctly with our own Pennsylvania. Campania, Lucania and all other words with the single "n" are similarly pronounced.?Philadelphia Record. Curious and General Fact. The American is a man of broad interests. There are men inland who never saw the ocean who could hardly sit still until they heard if the Lusii. i - t_ ^ j i i A lanui naa uruK.ua tut: icuuiu.? iraouington Times. At the Foot End. "Alas, I am at my wit's end," exclaimed the monarch, as he was unexpectedly kicked by the court jester.? Bohemian. Perfect Womanhood The greatest menace to woman's permanent happiness in life is the suffering that comcs from some derangement of the feminine organs. Many thousands of women have realized this too late to save their health, barely in time to save their lives. To be a successful wife, to retain - the love and admiration of her hus I baud, should be a woman's constant study. If a woman finds that her energiesare flagging, that she gets easily, tired, dark shadows appear under her eyes, she has backache, headache, bearing-down sensations, nervousness, irregularities or the "blues," she should start at once to build up her system by a tonic with specific powers, such as LydiaE. Pinkham'sV the great woman's remedy for woman It cures Female Complaints, suet Back, Falling and Displacements, Inf Organic Diseases, and Is invaluable 1: anu Expels Tumors at an early 61 Prostration, Exhaustion, and strengt Headache, General Debility, Indig< female sysem. It is an excellent i Kidneys in either sex. Evolution of Cauliflower. The modern spelling of "cauliflower" la artificial, and If we were to write it as we pronounce it, "collyflower," we should be taking a step I*, a ..si J noflirol ^ 1 roof Inn I uatuwaiu iu iuc uavuiai unuwivu. "Coleflorye," as they spelled it in the sixteenth century, brings aut the true meaning of the vegetable's name? "flowered cabbage"?"cole" being an: old word for cabbage and "florye"' representing the French "flori" or "fleuri," flowered. But because in Latin it was called "cauliflora" it be^an to be written "colieflorie," or "coHyflorie" in English, probably by deliberate assimilation of the Latin, and eventually to be written "caull," though still pronounced "colly." Meanwhile the second part of the word got popularly corrupted to "flower." X. Y.?41 y? W. L. DOUC $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES l??=?SH0E6 FOR EVERY MEMBER C r **** THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICE! fifl ft {To any onowhocan 9??ljr(/vv ) Douffias doom not i I i?Aur'iHf# ) more Men'a $3 & $ fflcnarlf (.than any other mat THK REASON \V. L. Douglas shoes are worn in hII walks of life than any other make, is b( excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior wet The selection of the leathers and other materia of the shoe, and every detail of the making is 1 the most completeorganization of superintendeii skilled shoemakers, who receive the highest wa shoe Industry, and whose workmanship cannot If I could take you into my large factories at I? and show you how carefully W.L. Donzlas shoe: would then understand why they holrf their sli wear longer and are of greater value than any < My $4.00 and $S.OO Gift Ettoa Shoe CAUTION! Tho genuine havo W.L. Dough* No Substitute. Ask your desler for W. L. i>< direct to lactory. Shoes ^eut everywhere by nmi EVERY MAN WS By J. HAMILTON A3 ? - " " n--i- e ii This is a most v aiuaoie book iui iu eaaily-distinguished Symptoms of diffori of Preventing such Diseases, and the Si or cure. ^ ^098 Pagaii ProflM Wops, Explanations of Botanica? Pract New* Edition, Revised and Enlarged Book in the house there is no excuse fc ergency. Don't vrait until you have illn ess in Send at cnce for this valuable volume. Send postal notes or poatage atampa < 5 cents. HOOK I'UllLlSHlNti HOt Tadele >ther dyti. Onn 1(V>. packago colors nil flher*. They for free bookt?t?How to Dye, Weaeti xud Hlx Col<> Examinations For Chauffeurs. A motor car is the most easily controlled means of conveyance which exists, and If handled with only a small regard to moderation will cover many thousands of miles without do- - ' M ing the slightest harm to anyone.'' It' is the human element which Intro- \ duces the risk. The Royal Automobile Club would do a great work were it to introduce a bill to Parliament making it imperative that a man should pass a practical lest before being allowed to dr' on the highway.?Motoring IlIusU. ^d. Hard On the Gun Trade. Shooting Is shunted from the leading position it once held at country houses, and is run hard by motoring, golfing, hunting, fishing and racing as recreative occupation In the country. All this tells hardly upon the gun trade.?County Gentleman. Gadzooks! Although unhorsed, the good knight vowed that he, odds bobs, was still uncowed.?Pittsburg Post. 'fern-. ?_? egetable Compound 'sills, made only of roots and herbs. l as Dragging Sensations, Weak lammatlon and Dlceration, and all a the Change of Life. It dissolves :ttge. Subdues Faintness. Nervous hens and tones the Stomach. Cures jstion, and invigorates the whole .Amn/ltr fr\y ^Ai*an<?aniATiffl f.Vl A ?J ' M TO YOUNG MEN DESIRJNC TO LEARN THE MACHINISTS OR IRON-MOULDER'S TRADE! Our apprenticeship system affords pood _ opportunities for young men mechanic?lly ? : inclined, 16 to 18 years of age, to thoroughly learn the above trades. For fvrtker in- I format ion addreu Box 29, ProTfdeooe, BX" I STATE AGE AND NATIONALITY. Glass made into microscopic objectivea is more costly than gold. FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, NervSus Diseases permanently cured bv Dr. Kline's Great Nerv? Restorer. S2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,Pa. New York absorbs annually about 3,000,000 cases of canned corn. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forChildren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation,allays pain, cures wind colic, 26c a bottle Monkeys are remarkably keen of sight, but deficient in sense of smell. "OUCH" I I IH MY BACK I "I ? . VONDERFUL HOW QUICKLY THE *D STIFFNESS CO WHEN YOU USE ; + JACOBS OIL j I THIS WELL-TRIED, OLD-TIME REMEDY FILLS THE BILL \ 5c.?ALL DRUGGISTS.?50c. CONQUERS PAIN Q IIHRg?1 LAS I ? BEST IN ^_THE WORLD nako ? aell Mtk KA .] 3.SO ahoem w&tL, mgSSk nufacturar. OgBft Vfln ;eauso o?their j^BrM 5 are made, you ^'o, X^ijr , iajpe, fit better, ^ a cannot be equalled at any t*r*ce. is name and price stamped on bottom. 1'uke >tiglas shoes. If he cannot supply yow, sond 1. Catalog free. W.L.Doug!**, Brockton. Maw. I OWN DOCTOR rERS, A. M.? M. D, e Household, teachi'ng as it does tbj ;nt Diseases, the Causes and Means inplest Remedies which will alleviate sely Illustrated, dhia Book is written in plain erery-day English, and is free from the technical terms which render -L n/N t-olnolotja fA XI2U3 b UUL'tUl UUUM OV/ VV the generality of readers. 'Chis Book is intruded to be of Service ! in the Familv, and is so worded as to be readily understood by alt. Only ?O Cts,Pofaia. The low price only being made possible by the immense edition printed. Not only does this Hoot contain so much Information Relative to Diseases, but very properly , gives a Complete Analysis o-t everything pertaining to Courtship, Marriage and the Production and Hearing of Healthy Families; togelhef with Valuable Recipes and Prtscripice. Correct Use of Ordinary Herbs. with Complete Index. With tliitj >r not knowing what to do in an euii vour family before you order, but ONLY 60 CENTS POST-fATl). )i any denomination not larger tbao ST. 134 Leonard Street, N. I'. SS DYES ilje In cold water OctfT than any ofhw dyo. You r?. MUMtO? UltL'O CO., Quiiicy tlliocta, t | - -