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- ?-< I ?Mfc\v Yo*k City.?Over waists arc | so pretty and so attractive and so youthful withal that it is no wonder their popularity seems ever to be in creasing. This one is designed for young girls and is eminently graceful in its lines, while it is simple in the extreme. In the illustration it is made of porcelain blue chiffon voile with trimming of taffetaand applique, fcnt it ;? nnnronriate for all materials that arc used for girls' gowns, while It also is made from taffet?, measa Jine silk and the like and used in conjunction with a guimpe of white to be worn with odd skirts. It in cludes the newer Japanese sleeves, that are much modified in breadth, and which are pretty and attractive without the least sense of bulk be neath the arms. The over-blouse is made in one piece. It is laid in tucks over the shoulders and is joined to a founda tion girdle over which the draped one is arranged. The quantity of material required for the sixteen-year size is one and three-quarter yards twenty-one or twenty-four, seven-eighth yard thirty two or forty-four inches wide with three and one-eighth yards of ap plique and seven-eighth yard of silk for the girdle and trimming. A Butterfly Frock. The most effective frock at a liule "butterfly" dance recently was made of gauze sprinkled all over with paint ed butterflies of all sizes and kinds caught lightly to it. There were also butterflies on the hair and one 011 the hands. The appearance was of 1 an airy dancer mistaken for a flower by myriads of hom-y-seekers. Patasol Newness. The coverings of the new parasols remain about the same, linen, lace, silli and net all being i:i evidence, but the handles have undergone a change. The newest closely resem bles a perfectly plain, highly polished walking stick, with a cap of gold, sil ver or ivory, on which the monogram may be engraved. Boned Collars. The blouses of this season ail have I he collars of about four years ago, which fit tightly and are high under the ears and around the back. These ?...,<?* l,c iirrni'sfplv nrul Rtifflv lintiprl r?r they will lose their smartness, but when perfectly made and properly worn they are attractive. Waists With Guimpt*. Some of the waists that have the appearance of being worn with a guimpe are in reality all in one, that is, with the guimpe part sewed in. They are easier to get into, and are so made that the guimpe is easily detachable foi laundering. Finish of l>ace. Thu edge of even the bottom fionn;e on the lingerie frock of my j lady is finished with lace. Loops of Ribbon. Triple loops of ribbon of three ! shades of the same color, laid one I over the other with the lightest ! shade on top. make a novel and ' dainty bow for the neck. The Color Note. The introduction of a bit of color in lingerie waists is quite worthy j of comment at this writing. Dainty, j delicate colored embroidery edgings j that are nothing but tiny button holed scallops with bandings of tiny j pUIKtl (llllS illC uocu iu ? - most fetching designs. The frill front waists are particularly alluring when embellished with pretty trim ming. Fancy Waist With Deep Girdle. Everything that gives the short waist line and the consequent Empire | I suggestion is greatly in vogue just , now, and this blouse is one of the | prettiest yet to have appeared. It i includes a garniture which can be j made from the filet or from all-over j lace, as in this instance, or from silk j [or from contrasting material embroid ered or braided with soutache, or, Indeed, from almost anything that fancy may dictate. The little trim ming of balls is an effective one and greatly in vogue, but that finish also i Is optional, for the blouse itself is j adapted to an ine minut-i, ia&mvu- , able fabrics which can be tucked and pleated so successfully. The sleeves are novel and distinctive and the j blouse is altogether one of exception- ' al charm. It is made with a lining j and the girdle is attached to it so ( that the entire garment is closed in- j visibly at the back. The waist consists of the founda- j tion lining, the blouse and sleeve i portions, cut in one, and the garni- j Jure. The chemisette is faced onto the lining, and when a transparent j effect is desired this last is cut away | I I I j beneath. The sleeve linings, too, are : i faced to form the cuffs, but the lining ; j can be of chiffon or other transparent ! material when something very dainty ; is desired. The pretty shaped col- . ! lar finishes the neck of the blouse , | and tlie roll-over cuffs complete the j lower edges of the sleeves. The ; draped girdle is arranged over the j lower part of tlie lining. The quantity of material reqsire-1 I | for the medium size is two and three- j ; quarter yards twenty-one, two and i five-eighth yards twenty-seven or one and three-quarter yards forty-four inches wide, with seven-eighth yard any width lor the garniture, half yard j of all-over lace for chemisette and ctiflV, one and three-quarter yards of t silk for girdle and trimming. THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. ROBERT ROGERS. Thome: Overcoming Evil. Brooklyn. N. Y.?In the Church of the Good Shepherd, the rector, the Rev. Dr. Robert Rogeis, preached Sunday morning on "Overcoming Evil." The text was from Romans 12:21: "Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good." Dr. Rogers said: This is the closing verso or a ratner remarkable chapter. The words im mediately preceding my text, "If thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he | thirst, give him drink;" "Bless them which persecute you, bless and curse not," do not sound like the words of a Jew who was trained under the j- maxims, love thy neighbor and hate thine enemy. They have much more the sound of the voice of Jesus, who said, "Love your enemies." It Is very impressive to think how deeply Jesus was able to fasten His peculiar teaching upon a man like Paul, who I had been trained in the religious philosophy of the old schools. Paul has lost his old prejudices; he has separated himself from the nar row tenets of Judaism; he has im bibed the spirit of Christ; he has been born again into a new world of moral philosophy, and he has been regarded as the best interpreter of the Gos pel of Christ among the writers of the New Testament. Luther said the Jipistie to tne Komans is a complete epitome of the Gospel. In our text Paul has something to say about evil and something to say about good. He does not deny the existence of evil, as some moderns are doing; he does not pass it over as merely "good in the making." He says, "Abhor that which is evil;" hate it, fight it, overcome it. But while he thus pre sents the reality of evil and the im portant influence it has in human ex perience, vet he looks upon it as something to be conquered, to be eliminated from life. He looks upon it as only a temporary condition of things. It is not a necessary com plement of character. He says, "Be not overcome of evil;" therefore, a man can be free from it. It is a matter of very great im portance to every man to be sure of this truth, that sin is not a necessity of his being; many a man is in deep discouragement because he has been taught the permanence of "this in eradicable taint of sin," this neces sary weakness and frailty of human nature. Paul has a much finer conception of a man's possibilities. "Be not over come of evil, but overcome evil with good," is his message to every man's soul, and in this he is but following his Master, who said:" Be ye perfect even as your Father in Heaven is per fect." Thus if we follow Paul's teach ing it will be wise for us to know of a rcrtnintv that thpve id pvil in thp world, that we can know it inwardly by conviction, that we can know it outwardly by its consequences. But let us at the-same time know that we have the power to he separate and Tree tl'9m an(* the ability to con quer it Paul has also a philosophy of goodl. Good is the power which overcomes evil. While evil js transient ami ten> pSraryT "good is "permanent and eternal. Good comes from God. Wherever evil is present bring good to meet it. Wherever hatred is pres ent bring love to conquer it. Wher ever ignorance and superstition is present bring truth to enlighten it. Wherever lust and impurity are pres ent bring love and purity. Wherever unbelief and recklessness aie present bring your faith to victory. Wher ever despair or moral rebellion is present bring hope. Wherever strife and enmity are present bring charity. This is Paul's philosophy of good overcoming evil. Once set free the forces of gcod in a man's individual life he will be saved from wrong. Once set free and active the forces of God in a community or city and evil will be destroyed. This is not a mere system of theory or speculation; it has the power of demonstration be hind it. The experiences of life are full of illustrations of this fact, but let me especially tell you something about a wonderful work being done in Emanuel Church, Boston, and which is being taken up by other churches, and will grow more and more widely as it is investigated and its marvelous power comprehended. The whole genius of this great work lies in the power of good over coming evil. The two clergymen in mac cnurcn are curing men ana wom en of such evils as drunkenness, drug habits, gambling, kleptomania, mur derous impulse, despair and morbid ness, leading to riiicidal mania, and mental prostration. A young woman was recently cured of the habit of lying and impudence to parents and teachers, a very grievous affliction which seemed impossible of cure by tbo best skill and advice. These are a type of a hundred other evils which yield to this new method of treat ment. You will notice that each one has its basis in moral disorder of CAmfi Irinrl nrirl T Viavo nn Hnnht wnnt. ever that every moral delinquency is remediable in the same way. The method by which this moral healing is accomplished is plain to every student of psychology, but it is not easy to explain to others. The point of great interest to you and me, ordinary people, is this: There seems to be in every human being what is called a sub-consciousness, or sublimal self. In other words, a substratum of morality?a foundation moral nature. It is to this funda mental moral nature that these heal ers appeal. When the man afflicted with the cursed habit of drunken ness applies for relief, he is put into a hypnotic sleep, which frees him irom tne orainary cares 01 everyuay experience. While in this state of sleep, this moral nature of which I have been speaking is awake and is appealed to, strengthened and in structed. The drunkard is told of the goodness of God. of His desire to re deem a man from his evil habits. A moral stamina, an appreciation of the beauty and power of God's righteous- , ness is put into this sub-conscicus ! self. And the result itt that this good, implanted, overcomes the evil. The , victim goes out into iife with a new power, his moral self strengthened, and he is cured of bis debauching sin, whatever it may be. A very marvelous and astounding thought in connection with this meth od of influencing men through this J sub-conscious self is that some of the 1 most learned students say that it is . impossible to influence men to do wrong or immoral things while in this ' state. They may be made to do fool- ^ ish or humorous things, but rebellion is encountered if a wrong or evil thing is suggested. ]t is this which leads me to call this state of sub-couscious ness a man's moral nature. What a 1 {wonderful revelation this is, to know t how we are guided and guarded I \kiiiufct evil, i! we will listen to and , { obey the advice which Cod has put within us. It is important for us to note well why this very subtle method of in ducing a hypnotic state is necessary before men can be cured. Why can not the moral nature of persons af flicted be appealed to in the ordinary - r * UJ 1 9 Tlio way ul leaiuiijg nuu aunvc. ^ reason seems to be that in moral de linquents, this substratum of moral nature is so buried in bad habits, is so separate from the ordinary thoughts and acts of life, that it is practically lost, and therefore this hypnotic means is necessary in ordar to drive from the field the ordinary consciousness which is associated with evil. It is very important to see that a person may be so taken up with the physical affairs of life that the moral foundations are based so deep as to be practically non-existent. This is a sad state for a man to arrive at. Now, as you think of this new method it is simple to understand?at least in a general way. It is forcibly building up the moral foundations in a man?God's sovereignty, father hood, goodness; awakening in man the consciousness of the nobility of his own nature; that his purpose in life is to love God, love his neighbor love and respect himself. When this is accomplished in a man's soul he has a new vision of the power and glory of human nature under God. He sees the hideous face of sin and its blighting consequences on life; he understands the power of good over coming evil. Thus it is that in a re ligious and moral clinic the evils and trnmnvolitioe nf 1 i fn TL'VuVVi rrncVi m?\T"1 are overcome by implanting goodness, which drives out the demons of evil from the soul. These men in Boston say that in a year's treatment of about 500 cases there is not one fail ure to be recorded. Now, I hope we are all very much interested in the principle involved in this illustration or demonstration of the truth con tained in my text from St. Paul. It teaches plainly that where evil is present and controlling you in some habit of life which you know to be bad. it is because good is absent, be cause your moral nature is submerged and not allowed to do its work in your life. In order to be free from evil a man must build himself up in the moral foundations of God. Happy will we be if this work was begun in childhood and continued all along the years. I once quoted to you Evangelist Hadley's statement that he had never known of a fallen man or woman to make a complete recovery of himself unless he had been trained in the Scripture truths in childhood. This is only another proof of the need of moral foundations strong enough to be vitalized at critical per iods in order to recover a man from destruction by evil. The unfortunate man who has no such moral establish ment has no power in him to recup erate when the critical time comes. This experience has its counterpart in bodily sickness. The great value of religious training is easily recognized. The value of Bible reading is that a man may see the moral foundations which God has laid for him?the value of the church and the Sunday school, that we may be constantly re minded and stimulated and instructed in these moral obligations; the value of prayer, which keeps us in vital communion with the source of all truih and goodness. Let God's stand; aid of goodness be deeply set in ou7 lives, and evil wilj never find a rest ing place. If a tem'porary lapse in qijt moral standards shall permit evil to take hold of us, the power of recovery will soo^ ^ssert itself and drive ou tiie intruder. The purpose of God toward man is redemption. This is the lesson of Jt)5US [)1 t'seui-'f UlUUUfc US, LUC QUU Ul Man came seek and to save, and cer tainly one of the great messages of His life is to teach the truth of over coming evil with good. Let us have no fear of evil. Many men remain in bondage to their sins and bad habits by being in constant fear of them, paying all their attention to the foes outside and giving little or no atten tion to the divine power within them. To such I would say, stop thinking of your faults and evils for a while and begin an earnest seeking after God, to know His goodness, His will. Search the New Testament and know who Christ was. Learn His message; rlrv *] *? U i Y-i rr f. wV?i*r?V? T-T O QC^C T> A Vflll will find power for goodness taking hold of you and evil will have gone. Keeping the Heart Tender. We must keep our hearts tender. Do you ask me how to do this? The answer is very simple?by putting ourselves constantly in helpful rela tion to others, says Dr. L. A. Banks. Do the kind deed on every oppor tunity, and you may be sure that the kind feeling will soon come to be natural to you. The difficulty is that we often curb our kind feelings and restrain them. We shut back the sympathetic word that is on our lips until our tongues become dumb to that kind of speech. Give your heart a chance to show its kindness. Give your lips the opportunity to speak the sympathetic word. Give your hands and feet free will to go on their mission of kindness and cheer, and you will soon see that your heart is growing tender and mellow, so that none rejoices and you are not glad, and none is sorrowful and you are not stricken. The Value of Confession, "Next to not sinning," says some one, "is confessing sin." A very learn ed man has said: "The thiee hardest words in the English language are, 'I was mistaken.' " Frederick the Great wrote to the Senate: "I have just lost a great battle, and it was entirely my own fault." . Goldsmith says: "This confession displayed more greatness than all his victor ies." Such a prompt acknowledge ment of his fault recalls Bacon's course in more trying circumstances. "I do plainly and ingenuously confess that I am guilty of corruption, and so renounce all defense. I beseech your lordships to be merciful to a broken reed." ? Pittsburg Christian Advo cate. Threads of Gold. Little self-denials, little honesties, little passing words of sympathies, little nameless acts of kindness, little silent victories over favorite tempta tions?these are the threads of gold which, when woven together, gleam out so brightly in the pattern of life that God approves.?Canon Farrar. Commercialism. Commercialism presents a good side if it gilds the common experi ence of life with hope and foregleams the better day of the idealist. Mere things help in making more man. Manhood is the supreme test and the ultimate go^l of effort.?Rev. T. E. Potterton. Episcopalian, Brooklyn. An Uncomfortable Time. When a minister begins to drive lome the truth, there are always nose in vuu^iesiinuji wuu wuuiu eel more comfortable if they could ;o lic:r.e, loo. ; ^"Oixir^Oenna j Cleanses the System Effect- ' 1 ualty,Dispels ColasandneaA ( I aches due to Constipation; , Acts naturally, acts Truly as - T J J \ aljaxative. i Best j fbrMenVomen an im\: ren-ybungand Old. ' ^et jts Denejicial Effects -Always duv the Genuine which j has The full name ojthe Com '""'CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co. * by whom it is manufactured. printed on the front of evei^ package. _ SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGG15T5. , one size only, regular price 50* pf bottle. Two hundred designs of cheap toys are I i turned out by London factories weekly. If You Suffer From Asthnm or Bronchitis get immediate relief by using Brown's Bronchial Troches. Contain no harmful drugs. ' Librarians say that peonle read more in November than in any other month. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forChildren ( teething,softens thegums,reducesinilamma | tion,allayspain,cures wind colic,25ca bottle. The earth's atmosphere varies from ]20 to 200 miles in depth. | Ciarfield Tea cannot but commend itself to those desiring a laxative at once simple, pure. mild, potent and health-giving. It is 1 made of Herbs. All drug stores. Lawyers in Kansas. According to the Leavenworth Times, Topeka not only numbers an j attorney for every 800 population, j hut there are a number of lawyers in 1 the lot.?Kansas City Journal. How's This? We offer One Hundred Hollars Reward J for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by JI all's Catarrh Cure. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe j him perfectly honorable in oil business I transactions and financially able to carry ! out any obligations made by his firm, i Wai.ding, Kinnan & Marvin, Whole j sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall'sCatarrhCure is taken internally, act j ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussur i faces of the system. Testimonials sent tree, j Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Iron Eaters. "The first time l ever swallowed a I tack," said a carpet layer, "I jumped | to my feet and tremulously asked the ' way to the hospital. " 'What's the matter?' m'y mate, i an old hand, asked. j " 'I've swallowed a tack,' said I. i 'Good gracious, what will become of ! me?' "The old hand sat back on the car ; pet he was laviug and laughed. " 'Why, kid,' he said, 'it's nothing to swallow a tack. Every profes j slonal carpet layer swallows half a | dozen or so daily. It's a thing that - ? t te :tm causes no inconvenience, n it uiu i u know it. I bet I've swallowed a hundredweight of tacks in my life.' "And I'm sure," the carpet layer continued, "for since then I've swal lowed half a hundredweight myself." He gulped. "Hang it!" he said, "there goes one now."?Los Angeles Times. Money-Making Farms for Sale in 14 States An endless variety in size, I price and jiuniose : stock and tools included with many. "Strost'i Catalofve I No. 20," ournew 216-page book of J bargains, profusely illustrated, containing Sute Map*, reliable in formation of farming localities and traveling in structions to see properties, mailed FREE, if you mention this iiaoer. U'e pay railroad farts. ! E. A. STROUT CO.. 150 Nassau St.. N.Y.Cit.v. ' ? /' y?aazi&ne> TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body 1 antiseptically clean and free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, 1 ' which water, soap and tooth preparations < j alone cannot do. A ! germicidal, disin | fecting and deodor izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and econ nmv. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet 6tores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WfTH HEALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK 9 E NT FREE THE PflXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mass. nDnpQY Nyw DISCOVERY; " ^ five* quick relief and caret worst oases. Book of testimonials 1 lOdajV trostmf*) free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'B SONS.Box B.AtUnta.Oa. PUTNAM I Color :norc Rood:; brighter am! faster colors man any v< j c&u ilyo any garment without ripping apart. Write i A Valuable Man. "Yes, he hail some rare trouble with his eyes," said the celebrated oculist. "Every time he started to read he would read double." "Poor fellow," remarked the sym pathetic person. "I suppose that in terfered with his holding a good po sition." "Not at all. The gas company gob bled him up and gave him a lucrative jcfb reading gas meters."?London Opinion. South Sea Islander's Claim. T. B. Currant, formerly a member j t-%?1: "qiM n finnfh I oi ruiiiauiciii, sum k , islander, whom a traveler had <i| brought home with him as a servant, Jj in a local tavern was praising up the fl British Constitution when one of his 5 hearers said to him: "What do you fl know about It? You're not an Eng- $ liehman. You haven't a drop of Eng- fl llsb blood in your veins." "Don'v you be so sure about that," replied I <1 the black; "my grandfather helped ! 3 to eat Captain Cook." ? Reynolds' i? Newpaper. " HIS SKIN TROUBLES CURED. I Hnil licliiiifT ll^di?Tlircnlcned ! Later With Ulood-I'oison in Leg? Relied on Cuticura Remedies. "About twelve or fifteen years ngo 1 had 1 breaking-out, and it licked, and stung so jadly that 1 eoulil not have any [)eace be cause of it. Three doctors did not help me. i'hen I used some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Dintmcnt, and Cuticura Jlesolvent and be ;an to get better right away. They cured me and 1 have not been bothered with the itching since, to amount to anything. About two yeara ago 1 had la grippe and pneumonia which left nic with a pain in my side. Treatment ran it into my leg, vhich then swelled and began to break out. The doctor was afraid it would turn to blood-poison. I used his medicine but it did no good, then I used the Cuticura Remedies three times and cured the break ing-out on my leg. J. F. Hennen, Milan, Mo., May 13, 1907." Rents in City of Mexico. "The prices that are asked for rental of houses in the City of Mexico are something appalling to Amer icans," said George T. Lessing, of St. Louis. "I expected to remain there the better part of the year and thought I'd get a house and send for my fam ily. With this idea I went forth in search of a domicile, but was stag gered at the cost. For the common est kind of a two-story dwelling the agents wanted from $150 to $200 a month, and from that up to $2400 i month for those of more pretentious architecture. It is true that these figures are in Mexican money, which is just about one-half the value of our currency, but even with this al lowance the rents are far in excess of those charged in the cities of the United I tates. In many other re spects liv Ing In Mexico is very reason able."?Baltimore American. Horses by the Hundred. The horse is one of the most im portant factors in modern warfare, and his education for this purpose is undertaken at great expense by every nation in the world. In times of peace only two-thirds of the cavalry of the British army is horsed. In times of war?such as during the Boer War?as many as 230,000 horses have been required at short notice. Germany would need about 1,000,000 horses for cavalry and artillery to put her colossal forces in the field, while France could do with 750,000. Britain's bill for army horses is estimated at about $400,000 a year. France spends upward of $500,000 annually, while Germany, it has been calculated, must pay at least $1,500, 000 on this feature of military life.? Answers. FORS N< LUMB YC SCI AT FO What ft Young Lady Stared At.' A number of young women grouped on the pavement on Main street, ibove Schoolhouse lane, Germantown, on Saturday evening, gazing intently at an overhanging sign illuminated brightly by encircling incandescent bulbs, attracted the attention of some pedestrians. The sign, of large proportions, was suspended aver the sidewalk from the old-fash ioned stone building which a century or more ago was known as the King of Prussia Inn, the. building being one of the best known landmarks of that historic suburb. Part cf this structure is now occupied by a tou sorial artist named Hug, of German extraction, and his unusually attrac tive sign reads, "Hug the barber." rhe comma after the word Hug jad been omitted.?Philadelphia Rec ,r,l SHOES AT ALL PRICES, FOR EVERY* MEMBER OFTHEFAMILYTI MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHII I W.L Doug/am makes and sails i men'a $2.BO, $3.00and S3. 5Oa \than any other manufacturer I world, because they hold shape, ftt better, wear longer, ara of greater value than any* ahoea fn the world to-day. W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot 89- l!JI.VTION. W. L. Donprlaa name and price Sold by the beat shoe dealers everywhere. Shoe* mi trated Catalog free to any address. FADfLE: tljoi' dye. Ono.lOc. package ofiiors all fiber*. They < or free booklet?How to l>ye, Bleueli aud illx Colon CHICKENS EARN M Whether you raise Chickens for fun 01 j cot. the best results. The way to do this is \Ve offer a book telling all jeet?a book written by a 25 years in raising Poultry. had to experiment and spend **1 way iu L'unuiu i mc uugiiiwi? ?? CENTS in postage stamps. JHj and Cure Disease, hov/ to Market, wiiieh Fowls to Save indeed about oven thing you must know on POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF '25 CENTS Book Publishing House, 134 /AM IMITATION 1 |f PATTERN THE ji There was never an imitatic jj tators always counterfeit the ge \ what you ask for, because genuine \ Tmltatinne arc nnt nrlvprtis' 1 hut v ability of the dealer to sell . u soi > good" when you ask for the genuir \ on the imitation. Why accept imiti > ulne by insisting? : REFUSE IMITAT A SURGICAL OPERATION If there is any one thing that a woman dreads more than another it is a surgical operation. "We can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hun dreds, y?s, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hos pitals which are entirely unneces sary and many have been avoided by LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following letters. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman, Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " For eight years I suffered from th? most severe form of female troubles and was told that an operation was my only hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable T-froponnd, and it has saved my life and made me a well woman." Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church Road, Moorestowj. N. J., writes: "I feel it is my duty to let people know what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Oomnound has done for me. I suffered from female troubles, and last March my physician decided that an operation was necessary. My husband objected, and urged me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and to-day I am well and strong." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, and backache. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She lias guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. JACOBS OIL CONQUERS PAIN TIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPRAIN OR BRUISE, 3THING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE; AGO'S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE, )UR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE; IC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL, R HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL. There are fourtcn former residents of Missouri in the House of Representatives of Oklahoma. FITS. St. Vi t ua' Dance, Nervous Diseases per manc-ntly cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H.lt. Kline. Ld.,931 Areb St.,Phila.,Pa. M. Metolmikoff for longevity advises soul milk and an absence of worry. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woo) ford'a Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Cyprus raises 30,000 tons of locust beans a year. They all go to Scotland to mafc? whisky. N. Y.?15 MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Certain Cure for FeverUbnPHR, CnnMtipation, Headache, Stomnch Troubles, Teething IiinorderH, i?nd I> e ?t ro? Mother Gray, Worms. They Break up Cglrj Nun. in Chi.2 A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy. N. Y .DREN. homm r$ their , and Be Equalled At Any Price ; is stamped on bottom. T?kf N? 8nb?tltjit?, tiled from fac-torv to any part of tbe world. Ulo? W. JL>. DOlJOLAM, JBiocklou, Ua? . S SDYES dye lu cold wafer better tban anv otber dye. Too 9. MONROE Uttlti CO., Qulucy Illinois. riMtviYou Know H?wt? UliC I > Handle Them Properly iiofit, you want to do it intelligently"anil to profit by the experience of others. you need to know on the sub man who made his living for anil in that time necessarily much money to learn the best for the small sum of 25 It tells you how to Dcteet Feed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes, and the subject to make a success. SKXT IN STAMPS. i Leonard StN? Y. City. AKES FOR ITS% REAL ARTICLE \ in made of an imitation. Imi- X nuine article. The genuine Is * articles are tbe advertised ones. $ j j iu.!. i ;?il) uepenu lur uitu uusiuns vu ?..? .j. mething claimed to be "just as $ ie, because he makes more profit ations when you can get the gen lTA\rC WHAT YOU IV/il O"" ASK FOR!