The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, June 02, 1909, Image 7
I New York City.?While the bio
that closes at the back continues
Its favor, there is a growing dem;
among many women for the con
nient one that can be closed at
v 1
1 f
, If?
ill
1
t \M
front, yet which i6 a little m
dressy than the plain shirt wa
This model can be made in eit
way, and is adapted to all ling<
materials, both those that are u
for the entire gown and those t
are suited to the odd waist. In
illustration Persian lawn is embrc
ered by hand, but handkerchief lii
is a great favorite and marquist
and chiffon lawns are popular i
dainty in the extreme, while the <
hrniripred muslins and fancy mj
rials are numberless. The blouse
eludes the new one-piece slee^
which are so cut as to insure
prettiest possible lines for the tu
and the embroidery, and it is a
gether an exceptionally attractive c
The waist can be made with fr
and backs and closed at the cer
back, as in this instance, or with
back cut in one and two fronts
preferred. When made in this lai
way the front edges are finished,
with a box pleat, one with an unc
lap, and the closing can'be made w
buttons and buttonholes at the cer
of the pleat or invisibly by means
buttonholes in a fly as preferi
The tucks are just wide enough
maan becoming fulness, and
sleeves fit the arms exceptionally w
T* lr*r*orf-V? ic HocJrpH t h P V
1L J3L1\JIU%ZX 4V>.U?,bU MVwa* ^
be cut off at the upper edge of
first group of tucks above each wr
The quantity of material requi
for the medium size is four an<
half yards twenty-one or twei
four, three and a half yards thi:
two or two and a quarter yards foi
four inches wide.
Pretty Negligee.
An extremely pretty negligee is
softest, pale pink silk, the low n
outlined by motifs of embroid
worked in pink silk, with an i:
square of Val. lace set into each ]
dallion, the flowing sleeves finis!
to match.
Geranium Blossom Vogue.
The geranium blossom is to h
a good run, owing to the vogue
small flowers in the red shades.
Ik,.
use Shadow Applique.
aJ1 Those who have become fond c
anc* the dainty shadow embroidery wi
wish to try shadow applique, which J
a novelty in embroidery that deserve
to become popular. Shadow appliqu
differs from the original shadow ere
broidery in that the design is applie
in heavier material to the wrong eld
of the work, and is held in place b
stitching on the right side.
Velvet Neckband.
The black velvet neckband, that fo
^ a short time was little seen, is noT
^ again being effectively used to giv
the desired piquant touch of black t
the gulmpe of the one-piece frocfc
The velvet is very narrow, from hal
IIv an inch to a little more in width, an
y is usually placed at the base of th
I lace stock; the ends are then crossei
in the front, and a small brooch o
buckle holds them in place.
New Handkerchief Pattern.
One of the newest handkerchte
o /inrtfchn T? homfitifrhpi
PcttkCIUS lo O UVODVU1 UVW.WMWUW
lawn, showing an embroidered popp:
in one corner. Another is a sheei
plain hemstitched lawn with a but
terfly alighting on a tiny spray o
flowers worked in embroidery in on
corner, while a third is a fine, plat
handkerchief hemstitched and bor
ve- dered in diamond dots with a wid
the border all around.
ore This faucy linen depends largel:
ist. upon the button hole and eyelet fin
her ish for novelty. It's a .trimming tha
?rie
I IIP?
3 a wlf! be used a great deal this seasoi
lty- A distinctive feature in the accon
rtv- pann ing sketch is the plain over skii
rty- lashed together with ribbon, sbowin
flat pleats underneath.
6ilk and Wool Fabrics.
( of Some of the sheerest and most al
eck tractive materials of the hour are th
erv silk and wool fabrics so lustrous a
t>ch to look polished. Most of these ma
me- terials come under the head of sati
bed cloth, and all are to be had in a wid
range of the newest colors.
Picturesque Hats.
ave The hats with long streamers to b
for caught under the face are very pic
turecque.
j..........................
12 Wonderful I
Z Engineering Feat
i For more than a third of a century
' the United Stateo Government has
\ j been striving to provide a channel in
, the lower Detroit River that would
I prove equal to the constantly increasj
ing demands of marine interests on
! '.he Great Lakes. The conquest of the
'3 j Lime Kiln Crossing, some fourteen
18 miles below Detroit, and the most
e ; troublesome spot on the inland seas, i
l" j has kept Government engineers busy
" t for years, made contractors wealthy, ]
0 I and annually furnished employment 1
7 | for hundreds of skilled drill and ;
dredge men. j
j Were all the collisions, groundings (
and other accidents that have taken ,
r place in the vicinity of the Lime Kiln j
v ' Crossing to be enumerated the show- ]
e ! ing would be impressive. ]
0 Now thiB most perplexing problem {
of removing this hindrance to further I !
f 1 marine development is well along to- j
(j | ward a solution that will, it is confi- j 3
e | dently predicted, eliminate trouble for : 2
3 ! ail time. Using Stony Island, a ]
r ! marshy tract some few acres in ex- j
! tent, as a starting point, the contract- i
! ors began construction of the largest J
( cofferdam ever undertaken. Dredges J
j were used in casting up the walls of j
* j rock and clay, taken from the river ^
4 j bed at various points in the new j
y i channel where excavation in the old i i
'? i way was comparatively easy. An area <
* ' 2800 feet in length and with an j j
t average width of 1600 feet was en- I *
6 closed by a stone wall some forty J 1
a feet through at the base, reaching ten j T
feet above the surface of the river, j ^
O J IV. i I _
w Ctuu clL LUC tup uciug VY1UC ouuufe&x iw , i
j permit the laying of a narrow gauge j t
j railroad track 'if desired. j c
Two twelve inch centrifugal pumps, t
| each with a capacity of 6,000,000 gal
Ions of water every twenty-four hours | c
and a battery of fifty air lifts, with a j t
combined capacity of 50,000,000 gal- j s
Ions daily, were started, and the flood j v
inside the cofferdam began to recede, r
In spite of the magnitude of the job, *
so thorough had been the work of ^
building the dam that no leaks of
consequence developed, and within g
ten days after the first water found ^
its way through the pumps one hun- f
dred and thirty acres of the river bed c
was exposed so completely that it was o
possible to walk dryshod over the en- F
tire area. f
With the water out of the coffer- ^
dam, excavation was undertaken.? a
From "Conquering the Hell Gate of a
the Lakes," in Technical World Mag- ]<
azine. e
d
WORDS OF WISDOM. ?
1
1 ~ n t-< i rr o 1
luan is a uu^cauic aixxiiaui.? [
Southey. t
Error is worse than ignorance.? ^
Bailey. ?
As welcome as the flowers of May. 0
?Spenser. j<
The avaricious man is always in t:
want.?Horace. , t
b
Enjoyment stops where indolence | e
j begins.?Pollock. i]
. Man's chief wisdom consists in ' ||
knowing his follies.?Rochefoucauld, i '
I P
Stone walls do not a prison make, j j]
nor iron bars a cage.?Lovelace. u
'Tis not the whole of life to live, u
nor all of death to die.?Montgomery, j5.
The devil did grin, for his darling i 0
j sin is pride that apes humility.? j si
j Coleridge. I t]
Be not arrogant when fortune i ?
smiles nor dejected when she frowns. ' R
t ?Antonious. d
The blessedness or misery of old tl
age is often but the extract of our i,n
past life.?De Maistre.
There is a proper dignity and pro- s*
nr>rHr>n tn hp nhsprvpfj in the Tier- ; o
|M
formance of every act of life.?Mar- h
cus Aurelius. ! n
j Do not think that your learning . ^
and genius, your wit or sprightliness i g
are welcome everywhere. I was once ! g
told that my company was disagree- | it
able because I appeared so uncom- j ft
monly happy.?Zimmerman. i tl
b
fi
How's This For Mud? tl
Of all the yarns that ever came n
~ down the line, regarding deep mud, | ^
m j the following should be entitled to . ^
I I the blue ribbon. It happened in the ! p
| place where mud originated. j n
A man was walking along the | tl
j roadside one summer day and noticed j ej
j a fairly good looking hat out in the ! ai
road. Reaching out with his cane, 51
I he gave it a cut and was startled to ^
I hear a voice exclaim: "Here, what J
the deuce are you doing?" ^
Then he made the astonishing dis- j 5I
| covery that the owner of the head- ! ai
piece was under the hat, up to hi3 i w
ears in mud. | -1
"Great Heavens!" exclaimed the ! n
man who had hit the hat. "Is that ]
mud as deep as that?" I h(
"Deep!" cried the victim. "Why, j fc
man alive, I'm standing on a load of ij,
hav!"?Lippincott's. 51
fa
Kelpius and His Band. je
At least two historic spots in Gerj
mantown will be marked during the ?
year 1909 by the Site and Relic So- j oc
j eiety. A marker has just been completed
for erection in front of the s<
! First Methodist Episcopal Church, tl
j Germantown avenue and High street, 3*
j to indicate the site of the home of
Francis Daniel Pastorius. The soci- "
I ety has also taken steps to place a jI
marker at St. Michael's Protestant
: Episcopal Church on High street to ei
| indicate the burial place of Johannes j la
! Kelpius and his band of pietists, who j ca
j j lived as hermits along the Wissabic- ?r
| kon in the latter part of the seven- ^
^ j leenth century. ? Philadelphia Recg
j ord- Iia
i ^
A Difference. I
"I don't see why that idiotic swell j ye
set should turn down Nurich." j e>v
l- "Well, he's a self-made man, you i m.
e know." In
s j "Yes, but so is Snodgrass, and they ' m
i- j admitted him." !
n j "Ah. yes, but he was made in Eng- or
e I land, don't you know." ? Catholic ! to
| Standard and Times. i th
_ D?
The Weary Medic. a?
' 01
"Going up to hear that lecture on tu
e appendicitis to-day?" of
: "Naw. I'm tired of these organ re- w;
:itals."?Cornell Widow. lu
THE PULPIT.
A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY
DR. JOHN WESLEY HILL
Thome: The Future Life.
New York City.?Sunday morning,
at the Metropolitan Temple, the pastor,
Dr. John Wesley Hill, preached
a eermon on' "The Future Life," taking
for his text: "If a man die, shall
he live again?" Job 14:14. Among
Dther things, he said:
Whether immortality can be
proved or not depends upon the character
of the proof demanded. It cannot
be proven as you prove a problem
in geometry or demonstrate a law in
chemistry. This is true not only of
aur arguments for immortality, but of
3ur reasoning touching all the facts
involving the deepest and highest
life. You cannot by triangulation
prove your mother's love, nor by
chemical analysis discover the secret
5f a tear. You cannot extract music
from an organ with a corkscrew, or
sweep up sunshine with a broom;
neither do you invoke mathematics
md logic to justify your sympathies.
!t is just as impossible to apply these
jrocesses to the problem of immortalty.
"Ye do always err," said Christ
.0 the Sadducees, "not knowing the
Scriptures, neither the power of
3od." Yet our belief in immortality
s more than an emotion, and beyond
;he assurances of God's Word there
ire evidences all about us, in facts
md experiences which enable us to
sxclaim, "This mortal must put on
mmortality." The idea of immortalty
is an intuition, voicing Itself in
iniversal human nature. Hunger
Deans iooa, not in relation iu tuts
>enniless tramp alone, who gazes into
he window where the prosperous
nan sits at his feast, but in relation
o the general order and adjustment
if the universe. But there is somehing
in man related to immortality
iven deeper and more potent than deire?something
working with a preision
beyond the highest efforts of
he intellect, and which from the
tandpoint of reason is simply miractlous.
Look at it. The little squirel
carries an alrpanac in its brain,
y which it stores in its nest proision
for the coming winter. The
lee is possessed of such a perfect
ompass that for miles it will fly
traight back to its hive; and these
irds of passage which are once more
llling the treetops with song, at preisely
the right time make their way
ver river 4nd forest, over lake and
ilain, to find here in the North, in
he summer time, food, and yonder
a the South, for the winter time,
ood. Instinct is thus as unerring
s a God inspired prophet, and I have
right to say that if instinct in the
:>wer creation works with such unrring
accuracy, surely God will not
isappoint this inexplicable something
zithin my heart which cries out for
ight and life, and longs for a better
lome beyond the grave. This docrine
of the future life being peculiar
o Christianity, it has been a favorte
object of attack by every school
f infidelity since its announcement,
t has been condemned as false beause
it involves a mystery. The obector
confounds two things essenlally
different, mystery as to fact
nd mystery as to mode. A fact may
e plain while the mode of its existnce
may be mysterious. Take a few
lustrations. The fact of gravitation
; indisputable, but who understands
:s original philosophic and executive
ower? How does it bind all worlds
ito unity, maintaining the architectral
branches of the universe? Who
nderstands the law of organic
rowth and development? What is moion?
How is it communicated from
ne body to another? We may reaDn,
we may advance step by step, but
tie end of these processes are beond
our power of analysis: so that
re are ooii^ea 10 otjneve iauis, uie
lodes of which are beyond our unerstanding.
It is urged again, that
lis doctrine is contrary to the immtable
principles of science. Would
: not be well for the objector to esiblish
some ultimate system of
:ience from which there can be no
ppeal? No science is perfect. It
as been the business of one age to
lodifv and improve the science of the
receding age. A future age will excise
the learned follies of this,
cience has been snail-like in its proress:
With all its boasted ability,
required nearly six thousand years
>r science to discover so simple a
ling as the circulation of the human
lood. With the earth and the sky
ill of electricity, science was five
lousand years in bringing that, imleasurable
force to light. Turn
ack a few pages of history and telejraphy
was not scientific; science
rjghed at the possibility of the tele
one; science jomea wun commerce
i deriding the validity and value of
le Marconi system of wireless tel?raphy.
The fact is, science is still
q infant; it is scarcely out of its
vaddling clothes; it can barely stand
lone. Is it entitled to more cresnce
than the Bible? Must this old
Dlume, hoary with the age of ceniries.
written by the finger of in)iration,
born at Sinai, completed
nid the splendors of the Apocalypse,
hose footprints are seen in the
umbled dust of earth's wrecked and
lined greatness, whose teachings
e Godlike, whose precepts are thuner-given,
whose promises are the
Dpe of the world?fly the track be>re
the gorgeous diction and sacrigious
pretension of a sceptical sciice
or ungodly philosophy? But I
iil to see any relevancy in the obction.
In what department of real
ience are those principles found
tat conflict with the doctrine of iraortality?
I appeal to all the dis>veries
in the wide range of scienfic
investigation for an answer.
Jience is not a textbook of revelaon,
nor is it the essential foundation
' religious faith. Yet we are able
i cite some of its fundamental prinples
as corroborative of the Scripiral
idea of life beyond the grave,
he conservation of force is a princie
recognized by all schools of sciice.
Under the operation of this
w, we are told that the fall of a
tmDric needle upon tne carpet exts
an immeasurable influence, and
iat the lifting of the hand sends vi ations
through the stellar avenues.
) absolute and far reaching is this
w, thru so eminent an authority as !
)hn Fiske says: "The track of
ery car.oe, of every vessel that has
>t disturbed the ocean, remains forrer
registered in the future moveents
of all succeeding particles
hich may occupy its space. In like
anner, the air itself is one vast
nrary, on whose pages are forever
ritten all that man has ever thought
whispered." Thus we are coming
know that in the divine economy
ere is no such thing as waste. Geoljists
tell us That millions of years
:o, sunlight fell upon .a carboniferis
period, and now in these late cenries
we gather those same beams
light to brighten the night and
arm our homes: so that in the black
up of coal there is packed away
and hidden from Bight the light which j
was first created by the fiat of God.
And dare we assign a broader destiny j .
to the material than the spiritual? j
We are;told that these forces of na- |
ture are stern, unbending and Inexor- I
able, sweeping through all space, [
binding all worlds and imperial over j
all creation; but they cannot bind the 3
mind that solves the problems, de- I 1
ciphers the hieroglyphics, utilizes 1 ?
gravitation, harnesses the trade I j
winds, subsidizes the lightning and I *
interprets the literature of the stars, j 1
Herein is the triumph of the soulk j *
that it subordinates matter, plays |
upon the keys of physical power, tri- 1
umphs over the forces of nature, and ?
becomes in a lofty though secondary f
sense a creator. And must heat, ,
light, electricity and gravitation ,
sweep on forever, and the mind, with
its full orbed powers, its God-or- j
dained attributes and boundless capacity,
be shrouded in eternal night? j
If matter is indestructible, is not the
spirit of man of more value than
the gain of sand that defies all disin- a
tegrating agencies? These great
principles of science are not cited
as positive proof, for science cannot I
radically teacl} immortality of the ^
soul, since it is founded upon the }
discoveries of the senses; but we do (
find In these laws of nature some j J
striking and significant analogies, j J
and, studying them, we are comforted *
even by their mute testimony, and ?
our faith is strengthened in the immortality
of man. But again, this
doctrine has been assailed upon the r
ground that it is contrary to the im- t
mutable laws of nature. This argu- ^
ment has no standing in court, since I
immortality is not under the control t
of natural, but spiritual laws. Paul *
said, "Thou fool, knowest thou not a
that which thou soweth is not quick- ?
ened except to die?" Here is an appeal
to nature, yet the Christian's
faith must stand upon the Word of T
God rather than the laws of nature,
notwithstanding nature is full of
analogies to help our minds and if
possible to strengthen the foundation i ?
of faith in the future life. Let us j \
take a few glances at this question I i
from the standpoint of nature. "The ! c
tree, though bare, though covered ! J
with the ice of winter, thougn there j *
is no bursting bud to be seen, yet j B
when the springtime returns the bud
swells, the leaves reappear, the flow- t
ers crown the branches and the tree
brings forth fruit after its kind."
Here is an awakening, a resurrection
to glorious life. And is it not an inti- c
mation that beyond the winter of jj
death there is eternal spring, where g
the soul will unfold in perennial
beauty, and where life shall take on
immortal glory? There is the cater- *
pillar, a loathsome thing .to look
upon.f It falls asleep, weaves itself I ?
a winding sheet, and is sepulchred J
in its chrysalis for weeks. There is I
no sign of life, no indication of ani- j t
mation, yet suddenly the chrysalis J a
bursts open, and instead of the loath- ! i
some worm that fell asleep, there j
comes forth a butterfly, which en- i *
chants us with its beauty. Great is j
the mystery. Who can understand
it? Is it not prophetic? Is it not 1 j
symbolic of another resurrection? j
John exclaims, "It doth not yet ap- I
pear what we shall be." Paul de? !
clares, "Our vile bodies shall be fash-' t
ioned like unto His own glorious | l
body." Though buried in the earth, | j;
though no block or shaft mark the | ^
resting place of the Christian, God's 1 ^
Word for it, he shall rise again, and j e
if such a transformation is possible in j .
the life of a worm, who shall attempt | *!
to limit the possible transformation ; ?
awaiting the human body, which is j '
the temple of the goul immortal? j J
Surely, it shall come forth changed. I a
sublimated and glorified. Nature ; t
does not absolutely prove this, but i 1;
her striking analogies all point in i
that direction, and we are justified in j c
accepting them as the revelations of I j(
God. The final evidence, however, | v
of the doctrine of immortality no less :
than that of the resurrection, rests \
upon the resurrection of Jesus Christ, j
Paul declares Him to be "the first j *,
fruits of them that sleeD," and again, j c
"If Christ be not risen from the dead, j
then there is no resurrection of the j d
dead; but if Christ be risen from the \ V
dead, how say some among you that j h
there be no resurrection?" He was ! e
our Heaven appointed prototype. He j -j
came into the world as our federal ^
representative, and therefore, since
He assumed a human body and re- j!
sumed that body changed and glori- ^
fled after It had been buried for three s
days, is powerful argument that we j
also shall share In His resurrection, i
He met death as our representative, ! 0
suffered Himself to be taken captive C]
that He might "lead captivity cap- |
tive." He met death in his own ter- i
ritory, plucked out his sting, robbed '
him of his crown, devastated his era- j
pire. kindled thei star of immortality
in the night of death, and three davg !
hence, was seen standing upon th8 ;
verge of the sepulchre crowned with
victory.
"Up from the grave He arose,
A mighty victor o'er His foes;
He arose a victor o'er the dark domain, |
And He lives forever with the saints to
' reign.
Hallelujah! Christ arose!"
Because He lives, we shall live also.
Three Sufficient Proofs.1
once met a thoughtful scholar
who told me that for years he had [
read every book he could which as- i
sanea ine religion oj. jesus vuhbi,
and he said he should have become ;
anjnfidel but for three things:
"First, I am a man. I am going :
somewhere. To-night I am a day i
nearer the grave than I was last I
night. I have read all such books \
can tell me. They shed not one scli- i
tarv ray upon the darkness. They j
shall not take away the only guide, 1
and leave me stone-blind.
"Second, I had a mother. I saw j
her go down into the dark valley j
where I am going, and she leaned i
upon an unseen arm as calmly as a ;
child goes to sleep on the breast of its j _
mother. I know that that was nor
a dream. I I
"Third, I have three motherless j \
daughters [He said it with tears in |
his eyes.]. They have no protector
but myself. I would rather kill them K
than leave them in this sinful world, j
if you blot out from it nil the tearh- i 2;
ings of che Gospel!"?Bishop Whip- h
pie. t*
C
De Not Double Eyed. ^
If there is aught else in your pur- j,
pose but to do the will of God for I-J1 ? P
glory there will be diminution o~
power. Let no fraction of your attention
be given the honors or r~- ;
wards, the praise or blame, the ap-1
preciation or condemnation of your j Jp
work, else there will be a taint of ; j
weakness in all that you attempt to |>
? * .j ? ,) r?j ? ' B
uu."?AU*utaic anu uuaiuuui. j as
Study to Be C?!m. ! ?
Hurry means also worry. and haste ! jfc
is waste. Study to lie habitually i ff
calm. "A meek anil quiet spirit is." I ?
in the sight of God. "of great price.'' j ft
The rush of modern social life is es- j 2
pecially fatal to the prayer habit; for j X
until the spirit is hushed and be-, ! Sf
calmed in His presence, God i 9
reflect His own image in our i
sciousness.?J. Hudson Jaylor.
ECZEMA COVERED HIM.
i
tching Torture Was Beyond WordsSlept
Only from Sheer Exhaustion
?Relieved in 24 Hours and j
Cured in a Month by Cuticura. 1
"I am seventy-seven years old, and some s
reare ago I was taken with eczema from
lead to foot. I was sick for six months j
ind what I suffered tongue could not tell.
! could not sleep day or night because of 1
hat dreadful itching; when I did sleep it '
vas from sheer exhaustion. I was one '
nass of irritation; it was even in my scalp,
rhe doctor's medicine seemed to make me (
vorse and I was almost out of my mind. 1
;ot a set of the Cuticura Soap, Ointment
ind Resolvent. I used them persistently
or twenty-four hours. That night I slept
ike an infant, the first solid night's sleep J
! had had for six months. In a month I
pas cured. W. Harrison Smith, Mt. Kisco,
ff. Y., Feb. 3, 1908."
Potter, Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props,
f Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass.
Berlin has a club with 330 members,
.11 of whom are divorced.
Try Murine Eye Remedy
^or Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes,
Iranulation, Pink Eye and Eye Strain,
klurine Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pain,
s Compounded by Experienced Physicians;
Contains no Injurious or Prohibited Drugs. .
fry Murine For Your Eye Troubles. You I
iVill Like Murine.- Try It in Baby's Eyes
or Scaly Eyelids. Druggists Sell Murine
it 50c. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, "
vill send You Interesting Eye Books Free.
Australian jewelers rent engagement
ings to their customers. g
l?k Year Dealer For Allen's Foot-Ea*e.
!l powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns,
iunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching,
iweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen s
root-Ease makes new or tigbtshoeseasy. At
11 Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Acept
no substitute. Sample mailed Free.
^adress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Flowers are one and a half degrees
varmer than the surrounding air.
The Secret Out. 4
"What made my lovely complexion? 1
Io not like to tell, for it -was a medicine, |
>ut the nicest a woman ever took. It was
wane's Family Medicine that did it." This
9 a pleasant herb tea which acts favorably
m the stomach and bowels,; purifying the
>lood and cleansing the skin like magic,
t cures headache and backache. Druggists
nd dealers sell it, 25c.
Grapes are squeezed six times in the
aaking of champagne.
Rheumatism Cared In a Day.
Dr.Detchon's Relief for Rheumatism radially
cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action is remarkible.
It removes at once the cause and the
lisease immediately disappears. First dose
jeatly benefits. 75c. ana $1. At druggists.
Nearly every Japanese follows the proession
of his father.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
"The Saxon Government has sancioned
a horse insurance. All horses,
isees and their crossbreeds, over six
nonths old, may now be insured.
'MEMOIRS OP DAN RICE," THE
CLOWN OP OUR DADDIES.
)an Rice in His "Memoirs" Tells Inside
Mysteries of Show Life. (
Any bookselfer will tell you that
Via + + nnoef /?f V> 4 c* AlicfnmOPa
s for "a book which will make me
augh." The bookman is compelled
0 reply that the race of American I
lumorists has run out and comic lit- r<
rature is scarcer than funny plays. *1
1 wide sale is therefore predicted for
he "Memoirs of Dan Rice," the 1
Jlown of Our Daddies, written by 1
larla Ward Brown, a book guar- 43
nteed to make you roar with laugh- J*
er. The author presents to the pubic
a volume of the great jester's *J
lost pungent jokes, comic harangues,
austic hits upon men and manners,
ectures, anecdotes, sketches of ad- {
enture, original songs and poetical ?
Ifusions; wise and witty, serious. M
atirical, and sentimental sayings of
he sawdust arena of other days.
>ld Dan Rice, as proprietor of the ?
amous "One Horse Show," was more ie
f a national character than Artemus F(
Vara, and this volume contains the
umor which made the nation laugh
ven while the great Civil War raged. _
'his fascinating book of 500 pages, _
eautifully illustrated, will be sent
ostpaid to you for $1.50. Address
look Publishing House, 134 Leonard
treet, New York City.
As the result of excess of births^
ver deaths Germany's population inreases
at the rate of about 900,000
year. N.Y.?20
irrinc&.iUTinrc '
niLPJ^ninu
c/brYoyir \Summer Outing
/n ike
VACATION LAND.
WRITE TO-DAY r|
for a copy of
New England j
Vacation
Resorts ;
FREE FOR TEX ASKING.
Every VacationUt and Tour lit f
ghould have a copy at once. A
Tell* yon Where to Co,
Wkw to Stay, What to j
See, and give* all detail* as
v if 10 cost* and accommoda,
\ Puiengtr Dapt. J
| -K North Station^* I
I
CHICKENS EARN Ml
Whether you raise Chickens for fun or pr
et the best results. The way to do this is t
Ve offer a book telling all
;ct?a book written bv a
5 vears in raisine Poultry. I
ad" to experiment "and spend j|4 av
to conduct the business?
ENTS in postage stamps,
nd Cure Disease, bow to
larket, which Fowls to Save
ideec] about even-thing vou must know on th
OSTPAID ON fcECErPT OF 25 CENTS I
Book Publishing House, 134
v* A!N IIVilTATIOIN T>
PATTERN THE R
There was never an imitation
tators always counterfeit the genu
what you ask for, because genuine a]
Imitations are not advertised, but de
ability of the dealer to sell you som<
good" when you ask for the genuine,
on the imitation. Why accept imltatl
ulne by insisting?
REFUSE IMITATI
Cvvv wwvvvv vv^-v vvW QOv 53 CW
' . lUfriM
.
According to a German investigator, ?
tmoker senas into the air about four billion
>articles of dust at every puff. .
________________
Those vho keep Hamlins Wizard Oil in
;he house do not have to buy any other
emedy for 6ore throat. No other remedy x
(Till cure this trouble so quickl'-' or so
surely. .Remember this.
In Great Britain there are 2,000,000 trade
inionists.
Vlrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
;eething,softens the gums,reduces \nHa::nna?
ion,a]layspam, cures wind colic,25c.a bottle.
There are thirteen recognized qualities
)f meerschaum.
4N0THER I
WOMAN 7 I
CURED
By Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Gardiner, Maine.?" I have been a
preat sufferer from organic troubles
and a severe female
weakness. The
doctor said I would .
have to go to the
hospital for an
operation, but I
J^ could not bear to
think of it. I decided
to try Lydia
E. Pinkham's vegetable.
Compound
and Sanative W ash
?and was entirely
cured after three
nonths' use of them."?Mrs. S. A.
williams, R. F. D. No. 14, Box 8?,
lorhinor \fp
No woman should submit to a suigi.
:al operation, which inky mean death,
intil she has given Lydaa E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made exclusive.
y from roots and herbs, a fair trial.
This famous medicine for women
las for thirty year? proved to be the ' /
nost valuable tonic and renewer of
;he female organism Women resid.
ng in almost every city and town io
be United States bear willing testinony
to the wonderful virtue of Lydia
3. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
:t cures female ills, and creates radiint,
buoyant female health. If vou
tre ill, for your own sake as well as ,.
hose you love, give it a trial.
Mrs. Pink ham, at Lynn, Mass.,
nvites all sick women to write
Ua* oHkHaa is frM.
ICriUl AAV*.
Hid always helpful. y?
mm
NOTHING LIKE IT FOR
Pill" TPCTKI ^azt e excels any dentifrice
I n t I U I n in cleansing, whitening
smoving tartar from the teeth, besides destroying
II germs of decay and disease which ordinary
>oth preparations cannot do.
mr Aim ITU Putine used asamouthI
n t ITIvU I n wash disinfects the mouth
ad throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs ,
hich collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, v
ad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness.
lip fupa when inflamed, tired, acha
! flL LI bD and burn, may be instantly
:lievcd and strengthened by Paxtine.
kATADDU Paxtine will dextrov the germ*
'A IMllliil that cause catarrh, heal the in- />? ';
lmmation and stop the discharge. It is a sum
:medy for uterine cutarrh.
Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful ?g|=j?^_
:rmicide,disinf?2ant and deodorizer.
Ised in bathing it destroys odors and MMNmI
aves the body antiseptically clean. uSQgQrel
no *at r at nonr. srnpcs BOe. I Ak WM
( or postpaid by'mail! I |91 fljS
ARGE SAMPLE FREE! UgU?
HE PAXTON TOILET CO.. BOSTON. MASS.
(J EXTRA -j
^ ^^BL^ES
Since to pay a big price (or a safe'.7-?izor. K
The only part that counts for anything M
a the blade. Bet good blades-even the H|
jest of blades-duct warrant the price D
lsually demanded for the razor. mm
t>ia niirt of what tou pay for H
:he regular safety-razor Is for the frame H|
ind the box-details that don't figure At ?
Ul In the razor's value. SB
Prove this for yourself. 2
In STAMPS brlnRS you
" one of these marvellous
V'B Razors, postpaid, by mall
book pub. house, L34
Leonard Street, New York.
IMCVI " You Know How t0
/DC I Handle Them Property
ofit, you want to do it intelligently 'and
o profit by the experience of others.
you need to know on the subman
who made his living for
W and in that time necessarily
r , v much money to learn the best
for the small sum of 25
^ ^ It telle you how to Dctect
bmm reeu ior r-ggs, auu aito xur
* for Breeding Purposes^ and
e subject to make a success. SENT
X STAMPS.
Leonard St., JV, Y? City,
\kes tor its>^
SEAL ARTICLE |
made of an Imitation. Imi- X
tine article. The genuine Is ?
rticles are the advertised ones. $
ipend for their business on the
jthing claimed to be "Just ae
because he makes more profit j j
Ions when you can get the gen- < j
AVO GET WHAT YOU j|
VJWD"" ASK FOR!
f.'?iZJr
z/'-rV^tS^S