———————, VS REV. DR. TALMAGE. ‘THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN- DAY BERMON. Bubject: “The Tragedy of Dress.” Text: “Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair and | the wearing of gold or of putting on of ap. arel, but let it be the hidden man of the sart.”—I Peter {ii., 8, 4. with its apparel of dark green. beautifully and gracefully appareled fs proved by the fact that God never made a wave but He gilded it with golden sunbeams, or a tree but He garlanded it with blossoms, or a sky but He studded it with stars, or al. lowed even the smoke of a furnace toasosnd but He columned and turreted and domed and serolled it into outlines of indescribable gracefulness, When I see the apple or chards of the spring and the pageantry of the autumnal forests, I come to the conclu. sion that, if nature does ever join the church, while she may be a Quaker in the silence of her worship, she never will be a Quaker in the style ot her dress, Why the notches of a fern leaf or the stamen of a water lily? Why, when the day departs, does it let the folding doors of heaven stay open so long when it might go in so quickly? One summer morning I saw an army of a million spears, each one adorned with a diamond of the first water—I mean the grass, with the dew on it. When the prodigal came home, his father not only ut a coat on his back, but jewelry on his and. Christ wore a beard, Paul, the bachelor apostle, not afflicted with any sentimentality, admired the arrangement of & woman's hair when he said in his epistle, “I! a woman have long hair, it is a glory unto her.” There will be a fashion in heaven as on earth, but it will be a different kind of fashion, It will decide the color of the dress, and the population of that country, by a beautiful law, will wear white, I say these things as a background to my sermon to show you that I have no prim, precise, prudish or cast iron theories on the subject of human apparel. But the goddess of fashion has set up her throne in this world, and at the sound of the timbrels we are all expected to fall down and worship, The Old and New Testament of her Bible are the fashion plates. Her altars smoke with the sacrifice of the bodies, minds and souls of 10,000 victims, In her temple four people stand in the organ loft, and from them there comes down a cold drizzle of music, freezing on the ears of her worshipers, This goddess of fashion has become a rival of the Lord of heaven and earth, and it is high time that we unlfmbered our batteries against this idolatry When I come to count the victims of fashion, I find as many masculine as feminine, Men make an easy tirade against woman, as though she were the chief worshiper at this idolatrous shrine, and no doubt some men in the more conspicuous part of the pew have already cast glances at the more retired part of the pew, their look a pr yphecy of generous dis- tribution. My sermon shall be asappropriate for one end of the pew as forthe other, Men are as much the idolators of fashion aswomen, but they sacrifice on a different part of the altar, With men the fashion goes to cigars and elubrooms and yachting Jasties and wine suppers, In the United tates the men chew up and smoke $100.- 000,000 worth of tobacco every year, That is their fashion. In London not loog ago a man died who started in life with $750,000, but he ate it all up in gluttonies, sending his agents to all parts of the earth for some rare delicacy for the palate, sometimes one plate of food costing him $300 or $400. Ho ate his whole fortune and had only a guinea ett, With that he bought a woodeock and | had it dressed in the very best style, ate it, gave two hours for digestion, then walked out on Westminster bridgeand threw himself into the Thames and died, doing on a large scale what you and I have often seen done on a small scale, But men do not abstain from millinery and elaboration of skirt through any superiority of humility, Its only because such appendages would bea blockade to business, What would sashes and trains three and a half yards long do in a stock market? And yet men are the dis ciples of fashion just as much as women, Some of them wear boots so tight they can hardly walk in the paths of righteousness, And there are men who buy expensive suits of clothes and never pay tor them, and who Ro through the streets In great stripes of color like animated checkerboards. [say these things because I want to show you that I am impartial in discourse, and that both sexes, in the language of the surro- gates office, shall “share and share alike.” As God may help me, [ shall show you what are the destroying and deathful influences of inordinate fashion The first baneful influence I notice Is in fraud, illimitable and ghastly. Do you know that Arnold of the revolution proposed to sell his country in order to get monsy to support his wife's wardrobe? I declare here before God and this people that the effort to keep up expensive establishments in this country is sending more business men to temporal perdition than all other causes combined. What was it that sent Gilman to the penitentiary and Philadelphia Morton to the watering of stock, and the life insuranes presidents to perjured statements about their assets, and has completely upset our American finances? What was it that over. threw the United States secretary at Wash ington, the erash of whose fall shook the continent? But why should I go to these fa- mous defaultings to show what men will do in order to keep up great home style and ex. pensive wardrobe when you and I know scores of men who are put to their wits’ end and are lashed from January to December in the attempt? Our politicians may theot- ize until the expiration of their terms of of- flee as to the best way of improving our monetary condition in this country, It will beof wo use, and things will be no better until we ean learn to put on our heads and backs and feet and hands no more than we ean pay for, There are clerks in stores and banks on limited calaries who, In the vain attempt to keep the wardrobe of thelr family as showy as other folks’ wardrobes, are dying of muffs and diamonds and shawls and high hats, and they have nothing left except what they give to cigars and wine suppers, and they die be fore their time, and they will expect us min. isters to preach about them as though they were the victims of early plety, and after a high class funeral, with A we handles at the side of the coffin of extraordinary bright. ness, it will be found put that the , taker is cheated out of his legitimate ex. mses, Do not send to me to preach the neral sermon of a man who dies like that, I will biart out the whole truth and tell that he was strangled to death by his wife's rib- Our countries are dressed to death, You are not surprised to flad that the put. ting up one public bullding in New York cost millions of dollars more than it ought to have cost when you find that the man who gave out the contracts pald more than 0006 for his danghter's wedding dress, meres of athonsand dollars each are not rare on Broadway, It is estimated that there are 10,000 women in these two ofities my a year, What are men to do In order to keep up such homes wardrobes? Steal? That is the only respestable thing they van do! During the last fifteen years there have been ine numerable fine business shipwrecked on the wardrobe, The temptation comes In this way : A man thinks more of his family than of all the world outside, and If they spend the evening In describing to him the superior wardrobe of the family across the streot that they cannot bear tha sight of the man is thrown on his gallantry and on his of family, nnd without translating his into plain language be goes foto ex | $0 much in personal displey | have nothing for God and th That we should all be clad is proved by | fering humanity, A Christian man cracking the Spening of the first wardrobe In paradise, | That we | should all, as far as our means allow n+, be { | of Iashion or give up heaven, | knalt by th | out their regrits and saying: “0 God! O | wardrobe, never a | Without any ex who have expended on thelr personal array | ory serves me, they diad without hope and tortion and Issuing falsa stock and skillful penmanship in writing someboly else's name at the foot of a promissory note, and they all go down together—the husbanl to the prison, the wife to the sewing machine, the children to be taken cure of by those who were ealled poor relations, Oh, for some now Shakespeare to arise and write the tragedy of human alothes! Will you forgive me if I say in tersest shape possible that some of the men have to forge and to perjure and to swindle to pay for their wives’ drosses, I will say it whether you forgive me or not | Agata, inordinate fashion is the foe of all Christian almsgiviog. Men and women put that they often eo oause of suf his Palais Royal glove across the back by shutting up his hand to hidathe cent he puts into the poorbox, A Christian woman, at the story of the Hottentots, orylng coplous tears into a $25 handkerchief and then giv. | ing a two cent placetothe collection, thrust. | ing it under bills so people will not know but it was a $10 goldpiece, One lars for {noense to fashion ; God. dollar, His Bible belong to Him. hundred two ooents in the Old Testament? Is not God liberal in giving us ninety cents out of a dollar when Heo takes but ten? We do not lke that, We want to have ninety-nine cents for ourselves | and one for God, Now, I would a great deal rather steal ten cents from you than from God. [think one reason why a great many people do not get | | along in worldly scocumulation faster is be- | cause they do not observe this divine rule, God says, “Well, if that man is not satisfied with ninety cents of a dollar, then I will take the whole dollar, and I will give it to the man or woman who is honest with Me." The greatest obstacle to charity inthe Chris tian church to-day is the fact that men ex- pend so much money on their table, and wo- men 80 much on their dress, they have got nothing left for the work of God and the world’s betterment, In my first settlement at Belleville, N. J., the cause ol missions was being presented one Sabbath, and a plea for the charity of the people was being made, when an old Christian man in the audience lost his balance and said right out in the midst of the serm “Mr. Talmage, how are 10 those grand and Riori- Ous causes when our dross as they do?” I did not answer that question, It was the only time in my life when I nothing to say. Again, inordinate [ashion is public worship. You know are a good many peoples who Just as they go to the races to see wh come out first. What a flatter it makes In church when some woman with extra nary display of fashion comes in! “Wi love of a bonnet |” says foot fright I" says 500, F loss eritios In the w Wo to give liberally families hal listrnotion to YOry we t hero some to ch arch y will yrdie one. “What a per ir the most meral- wid are fashion critien, h souls to be saved § h LES dering where that what store that w ing the hour in got his eraval ¢ patronizes, In many of our churches tha preliminary exercises are taken up with discussion of wardrobes, It is pitiable. Is'lt not won- derful that the Lord not strike the meoting houses with lig ing? What traction of public worship! Dying men and and women, whose bodies are ba turned into dust, yet before three worlds strutting like peacocks, the awful of the soul's destiny submerged by the ques. tion of navy blue velvet and long fan train skirt, long enoug to drag up the ireh aisle, the husaand’s store, offlos, shop, fac tory, fortune and the admiration of half the people in the building! Men and women come late to church to show their clothes, People sitting down {ao a pew or taking up a hymabook, all absorbed at the same time in personal array, to sing : Rise, my soul, and stretoh thy wings, Thy better portion trace from transitory things Toward heaven, thy natives place, I adopt the Episcopalian prayer and say, “Good Lord, deliver ns I” Insatiate fashion also belitties the intel. leet, Our minds are enlasged or they dwin- dls just in proportion to the importance of the subject on which wea constantly dwell, Can vou imagine anything more dwarfing t the human intellect than the stady « fon? 1 see men from their slaboration, hours to arrange their apparel vears of that kind of absorption, whieh one of MeAllister's magnifying giasses will be powerful enough to make the man's charae ter visible? They all land in idioey. I have seen men at the summer watering places, through fashion, the mere wreck of what they ones were, Sallow of cheek Meagre of limb, Hollow at the chest YW. ing no animation save in rushing across a room to pick up a lady's fan. Simpering along the corridors the same compliments they simpered twenty years ago, A New York lawyer at United States Hotel, Sam toga, within our hearing, roshed room to say toa sensible woman, as sweet as peaches ™ The fools of fashion are myriad, Fashion not only destroys the body, but it makes idiotie the intellect, Yet, my friends, | have given vou only the milder phase of this evil, It shuts a great multitude out of heaven, The first peal of thunder that shook Sinai declared, “Thou shalt have no other God before Me,” and you will have to choose bet ween the go dese of fashion and the Christian God, There Are a great many seats in heaven, and they are all easy seats, but not one seat for the devotee of fashion. Heaven is for meek and quiet spirits, Heaven is for those who think more of their souls than of their bodies, Heaven is for those who have more joy In Chgistian charity than in dry goodsreligion, Why, If you, with your idolatry of fashion, should somehow get into heaven, you would be for putting a Freach roof on the "house of many mansions.” Give up this idolatry What would ou do standing vesides the Countess of funtington, whose joy it was to baild chapels for the poor, or with that Christian woman of Boston who fed 1500 children of the street at Faneuil Hall on New Year's day, giving out as a sort of doxology at the end of the meeting a pair of shoes to each one of them, or those Doreases of! modorn society who have consecrated their needles to the Lord, and who will get eternal reward for every stiteh they take? Oh, men and women, give up the idointry of fashion! The rivalries and the competi tions of such a life are a stupendous wreteh- odness. You will wiways find some one with brighter array and with more palatial res! man nan the \ does htn lis soon to question chur nm the street who, ju ATE taken Alter a fow rast i 8h ACTORS A» “You are denos, and with lavender kid gloves that | make a tighter 81, And If you buy this thing | and wear it you will wish you hal hought something else and worn it, And the frets of such a lite will bring the crow's feet to your temples before Hay are due, and when | il on come to die you w ime, fon dis, and I never saw one of them die wall. The trappings off, there they lay on the tumbled pillow, and there were just two things that bothered them-—a wasted life and A coming eternity, 1 could not pacify them, for their body, mind and soul had been ox. haustod in the worship of fashion, and they could not ShRresiate the gospel, When I r bedside, they wera mumbling have a miserable in to be seen them, lon, 80 far as my meme God!™™ Thelr garments hung "w in the y went into eternity anprapiced, The most ghastly deathbeds on earth are theone where aman dies of delirium tremens and the other where a woman dies after hav. ng ansrifiood all har faculties of body, mind and soul in the worship of fashion, My , We must appear in judgment to an sweor for what we have worn on our bodies as woll as for what tences we have exer. dol- | for | God gives us ninety centsout of every | The other ten cents by command of | Is not God liberal | according to His tithing system laid down | I have sean men and women of fash. | England got a snuffbox—he, the fop of the ages, particular about everything bu. ni morals, and Aaron Burr without the letters that down to old age he showed in pride to prove his early wicked gaullantrins, und Ab shalom without his hair, and Marchioness Pompadour without her titles, and Mrs, Arnold, the belle of Wall streot, whon that was the center of fashion, without her frip- peries of vesture, And in great haggardness they shall go away into eternal expatriation, while among the queens of heavenly soclety will be found Vasuti, who wore the modest veil before the palatial bacchanalians, and Handah, who aonually made a little coat for Samuel at the temple, and Grandmother Lois, the ances. tress of Timothy, who Imitated her virtue, and Mary, who gave Jesus Christ to the world, and many of you, the wives mothers and sisters and daughters ol present Christian church, who, through groat tribulation, are entering into the kingdom ot God. Christ announced who would Is My brother, My sister, My mother " HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS, PALATAMLE ICED TEA, Mra. Rorer says: palatable, but it certainly not wholesome, The better way to make is it is to flil the glasses partly full of | cracked ice; then make the tea double | strength and ponr it boiling hot over the ice. Then, if you like, add your lemon and sugar. You get less tannic acid in this way than when the tea is allowed to stand and befare -New York Post, cool using. TO IMPROVE Potatoes be H waked water for twelve or more hours being cooked, and will be improved rather than injured, but if they stand in a little ture for ten after the y cooked, the y The potat ) 18 COMP Ose i } The uncooked w POTATOES, may before Mos even Are wotato will be soon as it is baked cooking Is con me dark, he Avy Aan i Louis Star-Say- or boiled, but tinned it will | strong flavored. DELICIOUS SANDWICHES, The riches should al- ways be be should be soft enough to spread with- out crumbling the loaf, and the slice should be spread before it is cut from the loaf. Slices of rye bread battered, spread thinly with mustard and then with cottage cheese are very palata- ble. For egg sandwiches beat your eggs to a paste after they have been hard-boiled. There should be a little cream added” to them to make the mixture smooth, and it must be sea soned to taste, Fish sandwiches may be made from any kind JY fish. Whatever it is— after removing bones and skin—pound itto a smooth paste, mix withits very little chopped pickle and season. If it be a dry fish, mix with it also a little melted butter or salad dressing. The thinly-sliced bread spread with salad Aressing, on which are laid water-cresses or a crisp leaf of lettuce, addition to a bread for sand old at least, and must ono lay m thin. butter sliced ery ne is & most welcome mer Inunch. for are sandwiches le with jellies and jams, These may be spread on slices of cake, wheat, graham or even brown bread. — Detroit Free Press, sain- swoeta there RECIPES, How to Make Jelly and pear all the Making quince jelly be careful to abstract seeds and of both fruits before cooking, as there is a mucilage in them that will make the jelly milky looking and impair the flavor, Veal Salad Bits of meal cut fine make a delicious salad, and a very good way to use up small SCIApS of cold bee! is to ent them fine or thin snd make a layer salad, alternating with cold boiled potatoes, salt and pepper, and cover all with a French dressing. Kidney Toast--Chop fine four veal kidneys with half a pound of ealf's liver; season with pepper and salt. Make a little butter hot in a frying pan and toss them about until cooked, but not overdone, cores und | the | make up the royal family of heaven when He said, | “Whosoever doeth the will of God, the same | | feed tea may be bora : . bn m— Accordion plaitings are still the vogue, Red vests are much worn, and make the girls look very gorgeous, League of American Wheelmen, The Empress of China has her own private silk looms within the royal palace. Newly married girls in Hungary of- fer their kisses for sale on St. Joseph's Day, March 19. The management of Australian fe- male prisons is in the hands of female | religious orders. Fashionable young ladies in Japan when they desire to look very attrac tive, gild their lips. In Persia the women of fashion or- nament their faces by painting upon them figures of bugs and mals, small ani- Fashionable girls are wearing belts of suede leather as narrow as a harness rein and clasped dead-gold buckle, Isigny is a sort of fresh butter color and it is not ‘‘the thing" to say you want a thing a pale yellow now, but of an ““insigny” shade. Miss Alico Moore, of Ohio, is one of the few women who have made a century run bi- eycle. A century run means to ride 100 miles a day. : Miss Lucy M General Booth, tion Army, has been of the dia, with her by a Cleveland, on the wointed come Army in In- headquarters at Bombay. To Queen Natalie the distinction he ad of hair Europe, mander Salvation of Bervia belongs : » 4 they are w night in all the gance, Mme, French President, is an ace Casimir ymplist and charming woman, devoted to her children, of whom she two-—a daughter of fourteen and a boy some- what younger. has One of the fastest stenographers in the country is Miss RB. Maude Wolfe of Boston. She writes fluently in three languages, and her notes are so plainly written that they are readily deciphered by her assistants. Miss Marietta Holley, or, as she is better known, “Josiah Allen's Wife,” talks into a phonograph and her words ! are then copied by her typewriter, who 4. prepares her copy . for the humorous | books and articles which are the de- light of womankind. Miss Samantha King, a pretty school eacher of Inland, Ohio, owns proper- vy in her own na: She was joking- next day she appeared with a wagon and and put in day's work on the roads Afternoon dresses of ecru grass linen in a dark shade of tan are made up into very dressy vet simple gowns, trimmed with bands of insertion and ribbon bows, and with hat, gloves, parasol and canvas shoes to match the lace the effect is very pretty. team a full lace Dr, Julia H. Smith, a well-known physician, of Chicago, formerly Miss Julia Holmes, of New Orleans, has been nominated by the Democratic party as a member of the State Uni. versity Board, an office that has never hitherto been held by a woman, A sister of the late Mr. Spurgeon preached twice recently to crowded congregations at the handsome church in Hampstead road, in connection with the service. Her manner is im- pressive and she bears a personal re- semblance to her eminent brother. Remove from the | fire and stir in the beaten yolk of one | egg sad half a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Spread on toast and serve at once, hot Indian meal muffins go nicely with this excellent dish, Cocoanut Sponge--Thicken one pint of milk in which is dissolved three- quarters of a cup of sugar, with four tablespoonfuls of cornstarch. Cook thoroughly in a double boiler, Stewed or boiled potatoes and | When | cooked and boiling hot, beat this into | the whites of three eggs beaten stiff After standing o few moments, add one cup of grated cocoannt, with vanilla, and turn into mold, with grated cocoanut on top.” Steamed Cabbage- Cabbage, as usu. ally cooked, is too heavy for an ordin- ary stomach to digest. Try steaming it until soft, and then serve by gous ing around it a white sauce. Make the sauce by melting a spoonful of | butter, stirring smoothly into this the same measure of flour. Pour into the mixture one pint of milk and boil un- til thick. Season with salt, This is almost as dainty a dish as eauliflower, Lemon Dumplings--Oune pint flour, one heaping re hoOnfo) baking powder and salt sifted together, Mix with a oupful of milk or water. Mako a syrap of one-half cupful molasses, one and one-half capfuls sugar, two eupfuls water and two lemons sliced fine, Bring to a boil and drop in dumplings and cook fifteen minutes, Tarn them once while cooking, When the dumplings are taken out add a little butter to the syrup and pour over them, no —— evvelatrons London bride ent reduces wder twenty. five cubic yards of Rite Flavor | 45 I » » al | KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly bod. The many, who live bets ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will atest the value to Renith of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the reireshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax: ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical on, because it acts on the Kid he, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every ble su oe, Byru ix for sale gists in red Co. only, also Many women cyclists are joining the | TE Sa SS PLS Aad eA TL — i et Te Te ol A ev A Marvellous Showing. The U. S. Government, through the Agri- cultural Department, has been investigating the baking powders for the purpose of in- 14 HL LN Jy SA RG we py Ad NPL PE PL or 1 LR 5d po { 4] » “<* iu % forming the public which was the purest, most economical and wholesome. The published report shows the Royal Baking Powder to be a pure, healthful preparation, absolutely free from alum or any adulterant, and that it is greatly stronger in leavening power than any other brand. Consumers should not let this information official and unprejudiced, unheeded. A Py) Diamonds and Diamond.Cutting, In the roug! stone has been wash and broken k mond resen crystal pel each end, t usualls a LY ray of light w { wnishh hue, very heart he East Ir Borne and Yery been and Sumatra; also in Australia, productive dismond-mines have operation in southeast Makes hard water soft ROYAL BAKING POWDER £0 I a ee Within recent years —Pearline what that means t water 1s so dithcult Pearline re use soit water or ‘ 1 tu duces HC valuable 1 r( OV be , 108 WALL 8T., NEWYORK, ht ER Ah SA 1 Fhoroughly Heroic, SAVE DOCTOR'S BILLS by paying attention to properly regulati the bowels thereby preventing a the ws, and one derangements of the system which follew neglect of this precaution Once used for this purpose, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are always in favor. They're purely vegetable and far better, as a liver pill, than blue pilis or calomel. Their secondary effect is to keep the bowels open and regulsr—nos Ww constipate Mise Mary Axoviss, of Glen Easton, Mare shall Ck W. Va. writes “Two years ago was price and ewaciated, food fermented In my stomach A phy- sician pronounced my case ‘Catarrh of ore Stomach,’ but he cou not belp me. 1 Jived . & month without solid food and when | tried eat 1 would vomit, At this time | began taking Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. and in two weeks | was decid edly better 1 am now in good health and * never felt bettey my life I have a Detter Miss ANG eat more, and have no distress after esting ~baving gained thigteen pounds since 1 began taking them, ies color Every woman knows just 3 Wasi x Jue vas hard the results so poor! whether you But use Pearl. ang in lal yor, by peed dieki NA. i ine, and it's just as easy to wash <o\ with hard water as with soft water \ labor, though, rom time to ume Send a lers antl some unscrupul ‘the same as Peariine and the result: We'll Keep your eye on Pearline ‘ ad us 4 od. Pearline save } tell vou of the 1 tell FALSE] rogers w » AAD . i i X ¥ 3 ANG I your grocer sencs Vou saomellin it Back Seneundithur ———————— wh wire to lw educated MAN (OLLEGE, » Bates devoted 10 practical legos © In Me edooation commercial novel and r glad gnorant of the manner rao and other cities WO rE The BANKING, COR. BOOKKEEPING iixvoin i's | FENMANSHIFP, Qc, No other school in Lithis country tenches these subjects by nes tun! wark uns we de, and TYPE-WRIT. STEMOGRAPHY ING thoroaghly tau gmt readily warned, and saras good pay Careful pre; aration (or amanueasis of general reporting We SECURE SITUATIONS Lonter any day with eqanl advants OO! avers alt sO weeke S130 for twenty *. " Tals SCHOO Eveben of Merchandising, Banking and every variety of OMoe Work. N mdacting tas transactions of the great ex f ®tuly Incinde the folio sin for competent students without charge, piled with assistanis, LY [AYE \ TAY il new nos oslao sted iastitgive of BUSINESS d1%ers from oth runing diving actanl daily » sin dent oan ak iangoaol New York, Boston a. nest or experience in this pours a1 41 romaln Chrbe ENGLISH meta od of te wohing ladivid anally proves wosds fully soc aslul wits even tee most ba kK ward pupils. You an only understand wast we do by calling a the Sohool, an i you are cordially inv ded to do so PENN NS for Budness, Drawing : A Ni (raamental wok nh rasaiie Tor teashsra Ane secimens of pea work ani the amaisn brane) those de ileut In proparation and Aswre Weits for eatalo sus and Rasiness mens supe There are ne vacations, Applicants Hoard and tuition lees reassanhle, OL exp apes incindiag bonrd during twelve U0 weeks. ddress tort nitnlagse, CLEMENT C. GAINES, Pres’t, 30 Washington St., POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. 1 — w————— - EASTMAN BUSINESS COLLECE, “ Well Bred, Soon Wed.” Cirls Who Use SAPOLIO Are Quickly Married. “" i" MADR L | HARW COLLARS and CUFFS. | : | i i FOLKS reduced 15 The, awmonth anyone oa make remedy a1 Bb Mise NM, Atndey, Sapply, Ark sars Jost 80 Jom, and Peel spl dd, © Ko care og. No wioiomess. Partie ines teen led) Sa, atl & Oo, BS, Pox soa, 58. Leonie, Ma, Ea nd dbeating cus SU sen W v
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