Newspaper Page Text
is New York City.?The tasteful breutIfast jacket is oue of those always use ful, always desirable garments that are ever in demand. Tins one is graceful, becoming and simple withal, involves very little labor In the making and is altogether much to be desired. As shown it is made of ohnllie with trimming of banding and little frills of rib boil, but it will be found desirable lor llie many Scotch and French flannels, for cash in ere and all similar materials. The tucks at the shouJders are stitched lo yoke depth and fall in soft and pretty folds below, and the full sleeves tan be gathered into pointed cuffs or LOOSE FITTING ET< THREE PIECE UMBRE: [ ft ull at their lower edges as liked, i At the moment jackets made with skirts to match are well liked for morn?g wear, and the model will be found in excellent one for that use as well as iam n t* tv*it h a/1/1 ol* !i?+o IWl IYCUI TVKU UUV1 OlVli lO. j The jacket is made with fronts and back and is finished at the neck with a ! prettily pointed collar. The fronts arc ' laid in outward turning tucks and the backs in tucks that turn toward the centre. The sleeves are comfortably full. The quantity of material required for the medium size (fourteen years) is four and a quarter yards twenty-seven, four and one-eighth yards thirty-two or two and one-eighth yards forty-four Inches wide, two and three-quarter jrards of edging. Kimono ?]?? ?*. Am exceptional cut is noted in one 3eep-gray raincoat. Otherwise it is much like the rest of these wonderfully attractive,, new garments. The cut demonstrates the beauty and the ufclity of the khnone sleeve, not the kimono sleeve of the ordinary room gown, but tne real Kimono sleeve, cut In one with the, backs and fronts, and Sticking out until it falls about the wearer's form. These big sleeves are caught Into Jaunty little cuffs, aud the entire garment, with its antique silver buttons, is very fascinating. Tlie Woman's Sweater*. The old-time sweater, such as football players drag over their heads nt seeming risk of smothering in the act Rviiilfl noi-pr dn fnr women, and it was not until some genius devised the present jacket style that sweaters became feminine garments at all. The loose* >e!ted Norfolk Is the prime favorite among women's sweaters. This garnent appears again this fnll much shorter than it was last year. A Pictureiiqtie Hut. A picturesque black velvet hat with i wide brim and a cavalier crown was 'rimmed with satin ribbon in a profusion of bows and loops, and with one rery fine black plume, which sweut B>ver the rolled left brim. j A Golden Brim. A gem of an evening hut Is a broad affair with a soft and rather flat crown of richest sable fur. The brim starte out to be of cream lace (Renaissance applique/, hut ends by being bonnd to a depth of nearly two inches with cloth of gold. This is not the intensely yel low shade, Dut is somcwuni suvery m comparison. It is all exquisite and rich, the goklen cloth, the fine lace and the superb fur each serving to make the other more beautiful. Under the brim at the left, well back, there's a I?i France rose, which is backed up by a rosette of white chiffon. For More 8ob?T Efffc ln. Don't imagine that metallic effects are reserved for evening and other gala wear. One lovely dark gray hat shows two folds of silver cloth around the brim. Otherwise there's the drapery of velvet and a coq plume. Discreet little touches of these metals are noted on the cuffs and collars of coat suits, and the^? are buttons of metal. Stock and cuffs for a plum-colored house dress are made of mauve-sllver cloth, half overlaid with narrowest -folds of plum velvet. But, indeed, the possibilities of all these metal effects are well-nigh inexhaustible. Model Hanqne. Perfectly fitting foundations are neueea ror an waisis, no mmier uuw elaborate the outside material may be. The very excellent model shown is carefully shaped, includes all the latest features of fashion and it can be made available in a variety of ways. DESIGN BY MAY MAXTOR. ON JACKET,: ' LLA SKIRT. ' The neck can be high, finished "with a stock collar, cut low, or half low In round or square outline, as may be liked, and the portion below the waist line either can be pointed or rounil, so Hi of t'orr noorlTj nrovr iiaorl -1c nrnv I for. The sleeves are the latest shown, and altogether the model will be found n very generally useful one and a help to home dressmakers as well as a genuine convenience for professionals. In tins instance it is made of taffeta, but all Unings can be used. The lining consists of the fronts, backs, side-backs and under-arm gores, and is cut in extra large sizes, so rendering it available for stout as well as slender figures. The fronts are fitted by means of double bust darts and closed at the centre. The sleeves are two-seamed. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is three and one-half yards twenty-one or two yards thirtysix inches wide. n.tn Lovely picture hats of blnek velvet, trimmed with plumes; small velvet street lints, ribbon trimmed, in every color, and charming dress hats in velvet, are being prepared. The new felts are likewise attractive. Many of them have a satiny lustre, which is very beautiful. Hn!?ber "Anfo" Coat*. Exceedingly smart are the white and colored rubber automobile coats to be worn or carried along with the rest of motor paraphernalia in e^se of sudden showers. Swb coats are brought out in all the fashionable cuts, of ample proportions, to be readily slipped on wlicu occasion demands. 1 HE QULVIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON EY THE REV. HOWARD MELISH. Subject: The Gospel of Lore. Brooklyn, N. Y.?When St. Luke's Church celebrated this year the festival of Itfrpatron saint, the Rev. Howard Melisb, of the Church of the Holy Trinity, preached an instructive sermon. Mr. Melish'e subject was "The Gospel of Love," and the text, St. John xv:12: "This is My commandment, That ye love one another, as 1 have loved you." Mr. Melish said: What impressed the world, when Uiirisiiaiiny was urei yreuciieu, >vjio Christian love. The world had known patriotism, family affection, clan loyalty. But interest in and sacrifices for men outside your family clan, country, were new. The outpouring of money to relieve the distress of Galveston, Martinique, Armenia, is indicative, we say, of our common brotherhood to-day. Think of the effect on a world which had never experienced such deeds of the sacrifices Christian people of Macedonia and Acbaia made to send help to the "poor saints of Jerusalem," at a time, too, when for years the Jew was the most detested of all Mediterranean peoples. The heathen poet Lucian, in his comments on the new religion was especially struck by this. "Their original law giver," he wrote, "bad taught them that they were all brethern, one another. ? ? They become incredibly alert when disaster occurs that affects their common interests. On such occasions no expense is grudged." And one of the ablest of the early Christian apologists, Tertullian, observes: "It is our care for the h'elpless, our practice of loving kindness, that brands us in the eyes of many of our opponents." Professor Harnack has a most inter esting chapter on the gospel of love and charity in his new book, "The Expansion of Christianity." He shows that, during all those years of expansion the Christian people were busy with the support of widows and orphans, the sick, the infirm, and the disabled, the care of prisoners and people languishing in the mines, the care of poor people needing burial, the care of slaves, of those visited by great calamities, of brethren on' a Journey, and of churches in poverty or any peril. The churches also furnished work and insisted on work. It was such love that called forth from the heathen world the exclamation of surprise and deep interest, "Behold how these Christians love one another." The Christian church, as at present organized, no longer impresses the world in- this way. Once the church maintained the hospitals and asylums; to-day the State is the great charitablc agency, as it is the great educator. Compared with Brooklyn's public schools and charities our Church Charity Foundation and schools at Garden City are,mere playthings. The labor unions, not the churches, support their brethren who are thrown out of work. Not only do they contribute heavily to their fellows during strikes, but by means of sick benefits and death payments they maintain their members during sickness, give them decent burial and care for the widows and orphans. The Roman Catholic church still maintains parochial schools, sodalities, asylums, hospitals in a great and useful way, because it has the support of members and concentrates its resources. The Protestant church, though it outnumbers the Catholic church, is divided into eight principal camps. Each is too weak to make much of an impress upon the world,and, so far, they have not learned how to unite in a common service. Members of Protestant churches are leaders in every educational and charitable cause, but they count there as individuals and only In the most indirect way as church people. The Young Men's and Young Women's unrisiian Associations are me oniy great union movements in which the Protestant churches have taken active part. But have those impressed the community as an expression of the love of the Christian church? It is the opinion of some workers in the Young Men's Christian Association, and of many clergymen, that the association has become another church. It does a splendid work for young men, and every cent given to it is well spent, but it does not make the Christian church stronger except as all philanthropic work outside the church plows the field and makes it ready for the sowing. Since it was started there are no more youDg men in the churches than before. On the contrary, from every church, Protestant and Catholic, comes the common cry that the men are leaving the churches for the associations, for lodges, for the clubs, for the labor unions. The churches, among the working classes and the socalled upper classes, are attended and supported largely by women. With the extension of the trade union movement among working women, and clubs among other women, the future alone can tell what the falling off here may be. There are nowt)ver a million people in New York City alone outside the churches, while Protestantism has in the last year actually shrunk in numbers. It is easy to see why thousands should be out. All grafters, all -dis honest insurance officials, all gamblers, "all lovers of pleasure, more than lovers of God," all indifferent people, and a hundred classes more, naturally stay away from a place -where every word and- look and sign disturbs the conscience if it is not dead, and bids men live for others. I wish ail these were in the church as I wish all the sick were in the hospitals and the shipwrecked safe on land. But when we have subtracted from one million the thousands who can have nothing in common with the Christian church there remain the many thousands who may and ought to be within the churcb. They are outside the church, but they are interested in the Christian religion. I have been deeply impressed this summer with the desire and eagerness of men to hear the Gospel. When two or three hundred men, working at the navy yard, will stand in the sun at noon during the hottest days of July to hear a man speak about the joy and peace and strength of a religious faith, when you can speak on the corner to as many men as can hear you above the roar of the streets, when a vast crowd, mostly men, will attentively listen to religion for nearly an hour on the sands at Coney Island there is proof that religion is not dead. The Christian religion is not dead, but men I urn. not ?roiii?r to the churches for it. Put it in books. and men will read it; preach it in theatres, and a crowd will flock in; practice it in a social settlement, a labor union, a hospital, asylums. and waiting lists are needed. What is the matter with the Christian church that it docs not impress the world as it once did? Labor leaders will tell you that it is a class affair and belongs to the employers. Socialists answer that it is the bulwark of the modern caDitalistic organization of i society with winch they arc {it -war. Scientific men reply that it has no love of truth for truth's sake. While the great mass of men outside will tell you that they are not interested. This hour, and a half each week of hymns and prayer and sermon does not seem to them to be a vital thing. To hear some speaker who can touch the heart or head they ^111 come, but not for the church as church. If the church Is a class organization its love is not Christian, for Christ's love knows no distinctions. If the church, as socialists claim, is merely poulticing wooden legs in its charity, then it has no love of fundamental Christian brotherhood. If the love oi truth is wanting its love of God is a sham. What the church needs, jf there is much or little in this criticism, is not multiplication of its philanthropies, nor concentration of them into a - * * ? X- uu 4.U ~ I iew mat wouui compete wiui \.uv nunc and stamp their character more firmly on the world, but a filling of the church itself, of you and me who do spend this hour here on Sunday and have assumed membership in the church with the love of Christ. Let me try to tell you what that love is. A man once went to Christ with the question, who is my neighbor? But the Master gave no answer. He was not interested in knowing or showing who our neighbors are. What He showed that man was how he might become a neighbor. He told that man the story of the good Samaritan aud said to him and to us "Go thou and do likewise. Do not stand there asking who is thy neighbors. Be on the lookout for some one to whom thou canst show mercy and goodnessand so become a neighbor." You can put no man outside the field of your mercy. Even though a man may hate you, and be your enemy, Jesus says the great duty for you is to seek him and do him good. If he rejects you and will have none of your mercy and goodness, your efforts _i u ? i oori ot lonat nrnv KUUUili 11UI CltU. jluu vuii ii v .vmu> i??.. for those who despitefully use you and persecute you. A member of a certain parish once told me that while he . -wanted the church to reach the poor, he did not want the poor to attend the same service that he attended or.sit in the same service that he attended or sit in the same seat befcause they were too odoriferous. I suppo.se this person stands in his modern temple and exclaims: "God, I thank Thee that I am not as other men are?unlaundered and uuwashed, even as that poor man yonder. I bathe every morning, I wear two collars a day and use patent preparations for my teeth and face." Such cleanliness is as near godliness as the Pharisee in the Master's story of the publican was near the kingdom of God. Suppose tlut man Is unwashed and his presence is disagreeable, the thing for you to consider is not what he is, but bow you may become neighbors to him. Introduce yourself. Become his friend. Show him the example of cleanliness and godliness, and the time will come when you can make him clean and Godlike. r*n hpfnrp Hp died He laid aside His robes nnd washed the apostles' feet, to show meivthat the greatest is he who serves the most, and that no service, however menial,, is too low for even divinity. Whom do you and I love to honor? The man who serves or the man who rules' Whom do we imitate? Those who lead in business and society or those who serve? Until the men arid women in our churches honor the Christ 'as He who serveth, not by singing hymns and saying creeds, but giving and doing likewise, the church may give money generously and employ costly choirs and pulpit orators, but it will not impress the world. And then for those without there must be goodness of heart. That th Christian church is undergoing the severest fire of criticism since tbo early days is manifest to anyone who reads. Much of the criticism is just but much of it is unfair and onesided. Some requires that the church should "listen 'pil'tfently and acknowledge what is just, and to those w"}Q hate her shpuld she return good foi evil, blessing for cursing, beneficencs and intercession for persecution. No heart that is susceptible to the divine can long withstand the love that seeketh not her own. A picture has been on exhibition in England and has strongly appealed to the imagination of men. It is entitled, "Is it nothing to you, ail ye that pass by?" Christ stands on a pedestal before St. Paul's, as he stood before Pilate's palace, with hands tied over head crowned with thorns. "While the crowd that passes by, absorbed in its work or pleasure, is you, workingman, lawyer, doctor, men of affairs, you women of society, working women and boys, and I, priest of His church, with never a glance to Him who died because He loved, or to the poor mother and her child who have taken refuge from us at His feet. While the motto on the pedestal before His cathedral, His people, His city is, to the unknown God. Ob, men and. women, is.that picture true of you? Spiritual Life. Serve God by doing common actions in a heavenly spirit.?Spurgeon. It is the love and kindness of humar hearts through which the divine real ity comes home to men, wnetner mey name It or not? G. S. Merriam. In our quest for truth we would not attempt to stand alone. We would be quickened by a sense of fellowship with serious and honest lives thai have torched our own.?George Rudolph Freeman. Devotion has its rise in the soul at the first moment in which it is felt that some living power is awakening in us a penitence, an aspiration, a sense of peace, a strange joy, nonf of which are of our devising, which have come upon us, but were not even sought, far less produced, by us ?John Hamilton Thom. Goodnesi and Mcrcy Follow Us. Some people can see providence ir their past lives, and hope for them i$ their future lives, but never crust entirely in their being there in ;ce present. Yet God is as truly working out His plans for His children iu each houi to-day as at any time in their lives Goodness and mercy follow us all the days of our lives if they follow us at all. The present trial, the presenl d/udgery, are put there to work out good for us, and more than goodgrace and glory, too.?J. R. Miller. Terfectlon ot Christianity. Unfailing courtesy, kindness, tenderness find consideration for others are some of the greatest ornaments to the character of the child of Gcd. The world can understand these things, it it cnnn?t understand doctrine. There ! is no religion in rudeness, roughness, bluntness and incivility. The perfection of practical Christianity consists in attending to the little duties of holi uess as well as to tlie great.?J. u. Ryle. "Value of Snrronder. Only in proportion as our own will is surrendered, are we able to discern tlit splendors of God's will.?Presbyteritsa .......I The Modern Way. The Dutch boy In the old story, -who , fouDd a leak one night in a big dike ft and saved the countryside by stopping It with his finger until found shivering with cold next morning, has now a lE rival. A birch-bark canoe carrying di three persons on a Western lake Is re- It ported to have run on a rock and been th pierced below the water line. There- th upon one of the party, a woman, took s? her chewing gum, bravely held it in b] the leak'until shore was reached, and w saved the party. The moral seems th plain.?Springfield Republican. of 1HE3PI mm There is < Genuine-1 S> The Genuine is California The lull name of the con tm printed on the front of The Genuine- Syrup of I nnIn htf |ratna^? wmj J MJ Knowing the above will < tions made by piratical concei .dealers. The imitations are therefore be declined. Buy the genuine" always It cleanses the system gently y when bilious or1 constipated, kidneys, liver, stomach and be by men, women or children, effects from actual use and of 1 laxative remedy of the weH-in Always buy the Genuin MAN rttiran Louisville. Kp PUTNAM Color more gx> odn brighter and faster color < than any ot can dye any jfnrment without ripping apart, Write for t Sweet Corn B?lt For Bail. Bass, as a rule, are rather particular J about the food they take,-and even the fu most painstaking angler fails usually ec unless he offers them choice live bait, di Down about Chadd's Ford, DeJa- al ware County, however, they are not so aj particular, and, if the fishermen have he been telling the truth, they have de- si: veloped a gre^.t fondness for sweet slj corn, which is used as bait for carp. 01 A few grains are strung on each hook and as a carp lure it has always proved effective. But this year' the Wi fisherman is just as liable to get a ^ boon no n mm ?West Chester Local to News. ffi ac Unfair Golf Hamrdi. Hi Cobras bave begun to exhibit a strong ** interest in the game of golf on the uJl Ridgeway Links in Ceylon. Several of be them have been killed- on the links, bl< and recently a fine specimen entwined ?? itself round the leg of Dr. J. B. Fairlie w< while he was playing. Fortunately fo the doctor was able to kill it before it bit him.?Penang Gazette. i It took fourteen months to drill a . hole 5560 feet deep at Doornloof, South a<; Africa, and three eight-hour shifts _ were worked daily. jg, BABY CAME NEAR DYING G! Si< From an Awful tikln Hnmor? Scratched Till Blood Kan?Wasted to a Skele- ^ tou?Speedily Cured by Cuticura. "When three ninths old my boy broke out with an itching, watery rash all over his body, and he would scratch till the blood ran. We tried nearly everything, but he grew worse, wasting to a skeleton, and we feared he would die. He slept only when in our arras. The first application of Cuticura soothed hira so that he slept in 22 his cradle for the first time in many weeks, cee One set of Cuticura made a complete and rt? permanent cure. (Signed) Mrs. M. 0. "?j Maitland, .Jasper, Ontario." wai w Bishop Brewster's Bridegroom. The Right Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, D.D., Bishop of Connecticut, told ^ the other day of a funny experience j , he had marrying a couple. After the L I ceremony had been performed the bash- ~~ ful bridegroom, who stuttered badly, leaned over and asked "Isn't It k-k lstomary to c-c-cflss the bride?"?Bos- H ton Herald. " TWICE.TOLD TESTIMONY. A Woman Who Han Suffered Tells How t to Find R?llef. L The thousands of 'Oiten who suffer backache, languor, urinary disorders and oth?r kidney j/KRk Ills, will And comjBSh'' fort in -!bo words of Mrs. Jan? Far- Pjj| rell, of POO Ocean ? Tnm J Ave., Jersej City, T jffjS N. J., who says: wj "I reiterate ill 1- bra jTJHR have said before in ? m&Z Kidney Pills. I had P been having heavy backache and my general health vtza affected when frj L UegHU US1IJ? LIieLU. i>Jj i ci nnc ^ swollen, my eyes puffed, and dizzy ? spells were frequent. Kidney action ?* was Irregular and the eecretlons highly colored. To-day, however, I am a / well woman, and I cm confident that Doan's Kidney Pills have made me 1 so, and are keeping me well." f Sold by all denl?rs. SO conts a box. "> Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A Coyote's Bodyguard. ^ Gray wolves are appearing close t ils city, and within the recent pas 0 less than a dozen bave been see 1 this vicinity. Hunters in the pat xj or two have seen quite a numbe irking about the cottonwood trees o ie banks of the Arkansas River and i ie tall cactus north of the city. Whe the wolves are generally precede 7 a coyote, and hunters say th olves are acting as a body guard t ie coyote?Florence Correspondenc ' the Denver Post. (jQQj \ wily One Tup of Fi? Manufactured by 1 P! i* Qvrun Cn k/J M|/ W( ipany, California Fig Syru] f ejvery package of the get Fi^s- is for Sale, in Origi Reliable Druggists Ever> enable one to avoid tbe frauduler ms and sometimes offered by t known.to act injuriously anc if you wish to get its benefice - JLt.^?1L. k CI CilCWUMUy; VUd^AJO WIMJ CUM M prevents fevers and acts best wels, when a laxative remedy i Many millions know of its 1 their own personal knowHgc. formed e- Syrup of Figs rUFACTURED BY THE U fTcS S&i\frMvebco,(?aJ. ma FIFTY CENTS PS, BOTTZZ A W I V tfA V K, L, I her dye. One Hkj paok<i?re olora all flben. The we booklet?How to Dye, Blatottand Mix Color Qnlte a Difference. '-'Whist hands wanted. That's inny sign!" exclaimed the near-sighl 1 devotee of bridge, as 6h? made ish toward the window of a fashioi )Ie dressmaker's shop, where the slg )peared. Closer inspection provec >wever, that waist hands were df red and the amateur printer of th gn had left her capital A very wid en at the top.?New York Press. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured ith T.nrat. applications. &s they canno ach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is i ood or constitutional disease, and in orde care it you. must take internal remedies ill's Catarrh Cure is taken icternally, am ts directly on the blood and mucous surfac ill's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine was prescribed by one of the best physi ins in this country for years, and is a reg ar prescription. It is composed of th st tonics known, combined with the bes ood purifiers, acting directly on the mu us surfaces. The perfect combination o e two ingredients is what produces sue] mderful results in curing catarrh. Sen* r testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, price, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipatioi A Monthly KewarJ. To each shipping compaay whicl lopts the refrigerator system aric larantees to make the voyage fron jenos Ayres to Lisbon or Virgo ii teen and a half days, the Argentin* >vernment will pay a monthly sub ly of $2000. ill sex, used as^Tdoacbe It nurvelons^su& (iful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease genns ips discharges, heals inflammation and local eness, cures lencorrhcea and nasal catarrh. Jntine U In powder form to be dissolved Id pan ter, and is fa* more cleansing, healing, eennicida 1 economical than liquid antiseptics lor all TOILET AND WOMEN'S special usee For nle at druggists, 00 cents a box. 1lW Box and Book ot luatxi'ctioiu Pres. ? . Paxton comkni Boston, mm* EE ELECTRIC 111 SOLES cure (HEUMATISM Simple, Inexpensive, FFECTI VE Write for Descriptive Leaflet and Testimonials. LEE ELECTRilMNSOLE C0,f rk Row Building, New Yorli he Life Saver of Children !b Cronp, Cong-hs, Colds and Pneumonia la Hox h Croup Cure. It prevents Diphtheria and Mem nons Cronp. No opium. No nmiHes. fine. Mailet tpiild A.f. IIOXHIF, nmiaw, N. V. RICE,/F^25 Cta 1 M <T0 CURE THE GRIP A A K KIN ONE DAY ml UTOIRNE??.m IAS HO &IMI. FOR HtADMflE 04,1 ,or 5-01 ?- 'WW\,jy^ F.W.Die Ome oi "William. 0 In searching about the house In ,t which the great William Shakespeare was born the historians observed a D quaint old curtain still hanging over it the window. ' >r "And what is this?" asked one of the n party. n "Possibly the shade of Shakespeare," n replied the legal button, and the joke d seemed so original he sold It to the e London comic papers.?Chicago News. o e The Marquis of Ailsa Is a peer who has trade at his fingers' ends. ' ???a?? SigV flew York. ^^||| LSS DYES v dye la old better than ?ny other dye, Yoa j. itONHDG i)IttJU C').? OnlooTltle? .Ulmaorl, . W. L. Douglas , *3= & *3= SHOES") W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Lino q cannot be equalled at any price. 1 ^ MORE MEN'S $3,110 SHOES THAU AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. cm nnn REWARD to anyone who can , ! ?P I UjUUU disprove this statement , W. L. Douglas $4.50 ihoes have by their excellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing \ qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.80 , shoe in the world. They are lust as good as 1 those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 ?the only i difference Its the price. If I could take you into my factor? at Brockton, Mass., the largest In 1 the world under one. roof making men's fine shoes, and .show vou the care with which everr pair ol Douglas sfraes is made, yo?i woo Id realize why W. L. Douglas $3.80 (hoc* are the best shoes produced in the world. If I could show you the difference between the ? shoes made In my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.80 shoe on the market to-day. r Yf. L Doijgtam Strong hi ado Mom toe Man. $2.BO, 92.OO. Bops'School* Oro*m Shorn*, $2.BO, $2, $1.70,$1.BO CAUTION.?Insist upon having W.L.Doug^ las shoes. Take no substitute, hose genuine without his name and A'ce stamped on bottom. W ANTE D. A shoe dealer I n every town where W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of " samples sent free for Inspection upon request. [ Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog rif Fall Ktylea. I W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mas*. I ? $l_nnoT?BeGirenfor 1 J ^ * Reliable Information We will give One Dollar for a Postal Card giving the first reliable news of I a chance to sell a horizontal steam engine of our styles, within our range of sizes. We do not want inquiries at this time for vertical, traction or gas ATXASj ENGINES AND BOILERS I f hive for years been the atandard for all man plaota. Beat of material aod workmanship. Our big output raablea us to aell on amall prof r Ita. An Atlaa, the beat la the world, coats do i _ more than the other kind. Bj Writ? today tor our tpecial oHtr. U ' ATLAS ENGINE WORKS ^ s?Uini i<eDciM lo all ciu?< INDIANAPOLIS Corllft CngioM Highspeed Engine Water Tub* Boiler* FourVaW? Engine* Compound Engines Tubular Boiler* Automatic Engine* Throttling Latinos Portable BoUer* e Atlai Enginoi in terrlce 8,000,000 B. P. Alia* Boiler* la **rrlco *.000,000 H. P. Thompson's Eye Water TI-GRIPINE i GUARANTEED TO CURE D COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. Lntl-Orlplne to a Jealer who won't Oaarantee It. ir MONEY BACK IF XT DOESN'T CXBE. titer, U.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, JT*