Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, February 17, 1898, Image 7

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    THE REALM OF FASHION.
A Drefli Sleeve.
The prevailing sty!«, writes Ma*" 4
Manton, calls for sleeves fairly snug
fitting to a point well above the elbow,
but for slight fulness at the shoulders.
A NEAT DBESS SLEEVE.
The designs shown are one single and
the other two-seamed, and so provide
for all needs. No. 1 is made of woolen
,'oodß, woven in a small check. The
at the shoulders may be ar-
LADIES' HOME GOWN.
ranged either in flat bos pleats or
shirred, and the wrists are faced with
plain goods in contrasting color and j
rolled over to form small cuffs. No. 2 :
is two-seamed. The fulness at the
arm's-eye is also laid in flat box pleats, |
but the wrists are left plain, either
pointed or round, and are finished
with bands of passementerie.
To make these sleeves for a woman
of medium size will require one and ,
one-half yards for No. 1 and one yard j
for No. 2 of forty-four-inch material.
Tasteful Ilomo Gown.
No woman of refinement, according
to May Manton, can afford to be with
out a comfortable and tasteful home
gown. The model given combines all
essentials and is equally suited to
wool stuffs for the present season and
to washable fabrics for summer wear.
As illustrated, the material takes a
medium place and is China silk in a
soft shade of blue with trimmings of
cream-colored lace. The full fronts
are arranged over a fitted lining with
single in place of double bust-darts,
and which reaches a point slightly be
low the waist. The yoke of lace is
faced onto the back, but made separate
at the front as the left side is hooked j
over invisibly into place. The gown '
proper consists of a full back and i
front joined by side-back gores; the
fitting being accomplished by shoulder
seams and under-arm gores. The
back, which is arranged in a Watteau
like plait at centre of yoke, falls in
graceful folds to the floor. The ful
ness of the fronts is collected in
gathers and stitched to the lower edge
of the yoke, the closing being effected
at the left side beneath a jabot-like
fall of lace which completes the frill
that finishes the lower edge of the
square yoke. The sleeves are snug
fitting to the elbow but mousquetaire
above and are finished by small puffs I
at the shoulders which support the :
epaulettes formed by second frills of
lace placed beneath those that edge
the yoke. A collar of ribbon finishes
the neck and a sash, somewhat wider 1
but of the same sort, passes from the j
yoke at the centre-back under the
arms and is bowed at the left side.
To make this gown for a lady in the |
medium size will require six and three- t
fourths yards of forty-four inch ma-!
terial, or twelve and one-fourth yardf
of twenty-two-inch goods.
Spring and Summer Millinery.
In Paris flower-trimmed liats and
bonnets are already seen, and it is
predicted that flowers will have a
great season in the spring and sum
mer. Large, fully open roses, made
of both velvet and satin, are already
much in demand, and are shown in
such artificial colors as lavender,
several shades of green, dark blue, all
shades of yellow, beige and castor.
Felt hats and toques are trimmed
with them, and they are arranged in
half coronets or wreaths without foli
age. A large violet, fanciful in size
and shape, is at present popular in
Paris. The flower is as large as an
overgrown pansy, and two of the
petals are long and pointed and hang
down over the stem. Velvet of all
shades is used in the making, and a
gleam of white is seen at the end of
each petal. It is developed in various
shades of yellow, violet and mauve,
T.OIIC Coat. For a Little (Hrl,
No other coat affords quite the pro
tection against severe weather that
does the long one which completely
covers the gown. The model shown
is of dark green diagonal cloth
trimmed with bauds of narrow black
braid and large smoked pearl buttons.
The back is seamless and is joined to
side-backs, the two being laid in un
derlying plaits below the waist line.
The fronts arehalf -fitting and the
right laps well over the left, where the
closing is effected. Smooth-fitting
under-arm gores connect the back
with the fronts anil render the fitting
easy of accomplishment. The sleeves
are two-seamed, the fulness at the
shoulders being laid in plaits and sup
port oblong epaulettes, which add
greatly to the effect of the coat. At
the neck is a high roll-over collar. The
garment, as illustrated, is silk lined,
but may be made with facings and
sleeve linings only, if preferred.
To make this coat for a girl of ten
C.TRIJ'S IJONG COAT.
years will require two and one-fourth
yards of fifty-four-iuch material, g
Adranoe Noveltle*.
Silk nets for sashes and fichus and
cross-striped ribbons for pleatings are
advance novelties in spring garnitures.
a scholarship of
jfcoOOO has been given to Mount Holyoke
College by Miau Helen Gould.
SERMONS OF THE DAY.'
RELIGIOUS TOPICS DISCUSSED BY
PROMINENT AMERICAN MINISTERS.
"The Law of Kindness" Is the Title of
the New York Herald'* Tenth Competi
tive Sermon—Dr. Talmnee Preaches
a Sermon to the Feminine Tollers.
Proverbs xxxl., 26.
There are two superficial and somewhat
firevalent notions of kindness which over
ook the truth of a law of kindness and
hinder the fulfilment of that law. The
first 1s that kindness is a happy accident
of temperament. When Charles Lamb died
Henry Crabh Kobinson went to visit Mary
Lamb, and she said to him: "Now, I call
this very kind of you, not Rood natured,
but very, very kind." Her distinction is
just. Kindness is more than constitutional
good naturedness. It implies discipline
and culture.
The second notion associates kindness
with Christian etiquette and deportment,
with something amiable and desirable,
perhaps, but rather ornamental than essen
tial. Consequently many religious and
devout people are unkind in words and
actions without any feeling of sinfulness
on that account. Put away the notion of
kindness which regards it as merely an
external grace of character or a useful
lubricant wherewith to reducethe frictions
»1 .social Intercourse and conceive it as an
essential element of all goodness, divino or
human, and as comprehended under God's
law of human life. Unkindness, like any
tther transgression of moral law, is wick
edness. Nor is it enough to try and not
be unkind, for unless one tries to be kind
>e not only fails of duty, but will be un
>ble to guard himself from actual unkind-
Aess.
Kindness has its root in kinship. It im
plies relationship and affinity. Men are
ihildren of a common Father, and there
lore brethren. Therein lies the signifi
cance of all that the Scriptures teach con
cerning the essential, exceeding and ever
>istlng loving kindness of God. There is
kinship between Him and men, created in
Hi» image. Therein is grounded our hu
man kinship and the law of brotherly kind
ness for all men, than which no law of
human life has higher authority or sacred
er sanctions.
As no one can be as good as he should
And may bo, so no one can do good as he
should and may without striving to fulfill
this law of the cultivation and manifesta
tion of kindness. There is nothing else so
powerful for good unless it he love, and
love as St. Paul says, is kind. It disarms
prejudice and hatred,'it converts distrust
into confidence, it overcomes all manner of
evil with good. It brings out as nothing
else can the latent and potential good
things in people. Men have come to recog
nize and act upon this principle in their
treatment nnd training of animals. How
much more effective will be the training of
children nnd the treatment of all humau
beings which is based upon kindly sympa
thy! The safest assumption that can be
made in all such matters is that kindness
will meet all such response.
Kindness has insight andean detect signs
of promise in the unpromising, whllo under
its genial influences and delicate ministra
tions these signs become manifest and the
things they promise begin to bo fulfilled.
What else gives so great encouragement to
the many who are struggling with advers
ity or temptation, correcting nnd changing
just those depressed feelings of loneliness
and neglect wherein the power of evil finds
Its most favorable conditions! 1 Wordsworth
speaks of
That portion of a good man's lifo—
Ills little, nameless, unremembered acts of
kindness and of love.
How suggestive that is of what is possi
ble In this way of kindness, which works
with magic power to transmute apparent
trifles into priceless trensures—as St. Zita's
cup of cold water given to a dusty aud
wearv pilgrim proved to be, as he drank it,
a cup of precious wine. Kind words often,
as Dun to says of Beatrice's words, "more
smiled than spoken!" Kiud notions, cost
ing little, but bestowing much! How easily
they might be multiplied to the immeasur
able cheer aud comfort and enrichment of
life! They make the gloomy smile, the
angry grow meek, the suffering to cease
from groaning; they light up hope, sweeten
bitter thoughts, console sorrow, strengthen
the faint and turn from sin; and they reach
and move those whom no other good influ
ences affect and conquer such us have re
sisted all other powers of grace.
Bitter and ail too frequent are our re
grets and repentauees, as we recall, per
haps too lato for aught but regret and re
pentance, the unkind things said or done
by us, or the kind things we might and
should have said and done, but left unsaid
and undone. In our cups of recollection
overflowing with divine tender mercies
and loving kindnesses there is no bitterer
ingredient than this. But seldom, if ever,
do we recall any error of ours on the part
of kindness or llnd any occasion for regret
ting merciful allowances, favorable inter
pretations or whatever a spirit of kindness
may have plumpted. We have never stood
by a coflln or a grave and repented of any
utmost or even unrequited kindness shown
to the person at rest there.
The Gospel of Christ is precious because
it isa gospel of the "exceeding great kind
ness of God toward us" In Christ, and be
causo it is all the while aiming to touch
and waken the chords of human sympathy
in our hearts; and,in bringing us under the
law and into the spirit of brotherly kind
ness, to make us know and rejoice together
In the loving kindness of our God, Of this
gospel we can all bo ministers, aud the
best and most useful portion of our lives
will be our "little,nameless, unremembered
acts of kindness and of love."
Oh, then, siuco the time is short, "Bo
gwift to love, make haste to be kindl"
EDWIN BOND PARKER,
lastor of the Second Church In Hartford,
Conn.
LEARN PRACTICAL THINGS.
Dr. Talmuge Prencliea Directly For tlie
lieneflt of the Women.
TEXT: "Every wiso woman buildeth her
house."—Prov. xiv., 1.
Woman n mere adjunct toman, an ap
pendix to the masculine volume, an appen
dage, a sort of afterthought, something
thrown into make things even—that is the
heresy entertuined and implied by some
men. This is evident to them, because
Adam was flrst creuted, and then Eve.
They don't read the whole story, or they
would llnd that the porpoise and the bear
and the hawk were created before Adam,
BO that this argument, drawn from priority
of creation, might prove that the sheep and
the dog were greater than man. No.
Woman was an independent creation, and
wusintended, if she choose, to live alone,
to work alone, act alone, think alone, but
never light her battles alone! The Bible
says It is not good for a woman to be alone;
and the simple fact is that many women
who are harnessed for life in the marriage
relation would be a thousand-fold better
oil if they were alone.
A woman standing outside the marriage
relation is several hundred thousand times
better off than a woman badly married.
Many an attractive woman, of good souud
Bense In other things, has married a man
to reform him. What was the result? Like
when a dove, noticing that a vulture was
rapacious and cruel, set about to reform it,
and said; "I have a mild disposition, and
I like peace, and was brought up In the
quiet of a dove-oot, and I will bring the
vulture to the same liking by marrying
him," so, one day, after the vulture de
clared he would give up his carnivorous
bablts and cease longing for blood of flock
and herd, at an altur of roclc covered with
moss and lichen, the twain were married
a bald-headed eagle officiating, the vulture I
Baying; "With all my dominion of earth
L and sky, I the* endow, and promise to !
love and cherish till death do as part."
But one day the dove In her fright saw th«
vulture busy at a carcass, and orled:
"Stop that! Old you not promise me that
you would quit your oarnlvorous and filthy
habits if I married you?" "Yes," said the
vulture, "but If you don't like my way,
you can leave," and with one angry stroke
of the beak, and another fierce clutch, the
vulture left the dove eyeless and wingless
and lifeless.
Many a woman who has had the hand ot
a young Inebriate offered, but declined it,
or who was asked to chain her life to a
man selfish, or of bad temper, and refused
the shackles, will bless God throughout all
eternity that she escaped that earthly pan
demonium.
In addressing those women who have to
battle alone, I congratulate you on your
happy escape. Bejolce forever that you
will not have to nuvlgate the faults of the
other sex, when you have faulty enough of
your own. Think of the bereavements
you avoid, of the risks of unassimllated
temper which you will not have to run, of
the cares you will never have to carry,
and of the opportunity of outside useful
ness from which married life would have
partially debarred you, and that you are
free togo and come as one who has the
responsibilities of a household cau seldom
be. God has not given you a hard lot, as
compared with your sisters. When young
women shall make up their minds at the
start that masculine companionship is not
u necessity in order to happiness, and that
there is a strong probability that they will
have to fight tlu< battle of life alone, they
will be getting tho timber ready for their
own fortune, und their saw and ax and
plane sharpened for its construction,
since "Every wise woman buildeth her
house."
As no boy ought to be brought up with
out learning some business at which he
could earn a livelihood, so no girl ought to
be brought up without learning tho scionce
of self-support. The difficulty is that many
a family goes sailing on the high tide of
success, and the husband und father de
pends on his own health and ucumon for
the welfare of his household, but one day
he gets his feet wet, and in three days
pneumonia has closed his life, and the
daughters are turned out on a cold world
to earn bread, and there is nothing practi
cal that they can do.
How is this evil to be cured? Start clear
back in the homestead and teach your
daughters that life is an earnest thing, and
that there is a possibility, if not a strong
probability, that they will have to light the
battle of life alone. Let every father and
mother say to their daughters: "Now, what
would you do for a livelihood if what I now
own were swept away by financial disaster,
or old age, or death should end my career?"
My advice to all girls and all unmarried
women, whether in affluent homes or in
homes where most stringent economies are
grinding, is to learn to do somo kind of
work that tho world must have while the
world stands.
O, voung women of America! as many of
you will have to fight your own battles
alone, do not wait until you meet with
disaster and your father is dead, und all
the resources of your family havo been
scattered; but now, while in a good house
and environed bv nil prosperities, learn
how to do some kind of work that the
world must have as long as the world
stands. Turn your attention from the em
broidery of fine slippers, of which there is
a surplus, and make a useful shoo. Ex
pend the time in which you adorn a cigar
case in learning how to make a good,
honest loaf of bread. Turn ycur atten
tion from the making of flimsy nothings to
the manufacturing of important some
things.
"But," you ask, "what would my father
aai mother suy if they saw I was doing
such unfashionable work?" Throw tha
whole responsibility upon us, the pastors,
who are constantly hearing of young wo
men In all these eities, who, uuqualllled by
their previous luxurious surroundings for
the awful struggle of life into which they
have been suddenly hurled, seemed to have
nothing left them but a choice between
starvation and damnation. They go
along the street at 7 o'clock in the wintry
mornings, through the slush and storm,
to the place where they shall earn only
half enough for subsistence, the daugh
ters of onee prosperous merchants, law
yers, clergymen, artists, bankers and
capitalists, who brought up their chil
dren under the infernal delusion that
it was not high tone for a woman to learn a
profitable calling, l'oung woman! take
this alTair in your own baud, and let
there be an insurrection in all prosperous
families 011 the part of the daughters of
this day, demanding knowledge in occu
pation and styles of business by which they
may be their own defence and their own
support if all fatherly and husbandly
and brotherly hands fail them. I have
seen two sad sights, the one a woman in
all the glory of her young life, stricken
by disease, and in a week lifeless in a home
of which siio had been the pride. As her
hands were folded over the still heart and
her eyes closed for the last slumber, and
she was taken out amid the lamentations
of kindred and frionds, I thought that was
a sadness immeasurable. But I have seen
something compared with which that
scene was bright and songful. It was a
young <roman who bad been all her days
amid wealthy surroundings, by the visit
of death and bankruptcy to the household
turned out on a cold world without one
lesson about how to get food or shelter,
and into the awful whirlpool of elty life,
where strong ships have gone down, and
for twenty years not one word has been
heard from her. Vessels went out on the
Atlantic Ocean looking for a shipwrecked
eraft that was left alone aud forsaken on
the sea a few weeks before, with the idea
of bringing it into port. But who shall
ever bring into the harbor of peace and
hope and heaven that lost womanly im
mortal, driven in what tempest, aflame in
what conflagration, sinking Into what
j abyss? O God, helpl O Christ, rescuel
I .My sisters, give not your time to learning
fancy work which the world may dispense
with in hard times, but connect your skill
with the indispensables of life.
Let me say to all women who havo al
ready entered upon the battle of life that
the time is comiug when women shall not
only get as much salary and wages as men
get, but for certain styles of employment
women will have higher salary and more
wages, for the reason that for some styles
of work they have more adaptation. But
this justice will come to women not through
any sentiment of gallantry, not because
woman is physically weaker than men,
and, therefore, ought to have more con
sideration shown her, but because through
her liner natural taste and more grace of
manner and quicker perception, aud more
delicate touch, and more educated adroit
ness she will, in certain callings, bo to her
employer worth ten per cent, more, or
twenty per cent, more than the other sex.
She will not get it by asking for it, but by
earning it, aud It shall be hers by lawful
conquest.
TO CULTIVATE SUCAR BEETS.
Syndicate Wltli 915,000,000 Formed to
Operate In California,
A cablegram from London announces the
success of the mission oC Willard H. Green,
who recently left for Europe In the interest
of the beet sugar syndicate, which has been
negotiating for lands In the Sacramento
valley, California. Satisfactory arrange
ments have been made, and all that remains
is to secure the proper persons to cultivate
the beet.
Contracts have been signed by which
150,000 acres of land nearCbico, Marysvllle
audited Bluff has been secured, and the
work of erecting three Immense sugar fac
tories will be started at once. The syndi
cate has a capital of $15,000,000, and in
tends making the venture a success It
money and experience can do It. The land
secured embodies tracts from the Glenn
ranch, the Bidwell ranch and the Phelan
estate and the Stanford estate, with other
tracts In smaller quantities.
Origin of Oxtail Soup.
Among the Protestants driven from
France by that astute and liberal
minded sovereign Lonis XIV were a
colony of weavers, who, all the world
knows, settled at Spilalfields in Eng
land, where their descendants weave
Bilk to this day. On their arrival in
Great Britain, before the looms could
be set up and a market found for their
industry, the wanderers were reduced
to the last extremities of destitution
and hunger. Looking about them for
anything that could be utilized for
food, they discovered that owners of
English slaughter houses threw away
as worthless the tails of the cattle they
killed. Like all the poor in France,
these worthy weavers were excellent
cooks, and knew that at home such
"caudal appendages" were very highly
valued for the tenderness and flavor of
the meat. To the amazement and dis
gust of the English villagers, the new
arrivals proceeded to collect this "re
fuse" and carry it home for food. As
the first principle of French culinary
art is the "pot au feu," the tails were
mostly converted into soup, on which
the exiles feasted and thrived.
Their poor neighbors, astonished
and envious at seeing the despised
French indulging daily in savory
dishes unknown to English palates,
and tempted like "Jack's" giant by
the smell of "fresh meat," began to in
quire into the matter and slowly real
ized how, in their ignorance, they had
been throwing away the most succul
ent and delicate food. The news of
this discovery gradually spreading
through all classes, oxtail became, and
has remained, the National English
soup.—New York Post.
Tlic Human Nose.
A nose thick and flat is an unfavor
able feature with men as well as wo
men, usually signifying that the char
acter is predominated by material in
stincts, while a turned-up nose with
wide nostrils betokens a vain disposi
tion*.
Especially wide nostrils are signs of
courage, strength and pride; small
nostrils of weakness and timidity.
Noses large in every respect are usually
found among men, and when a woman
possesses a large nose it indicates she
is masculine in character.
The nose, the form of which has so
much to do with the beauty of the face,
is amenable to culture, and we have
it on the authority of a German phy
sician that it is beyond dispute that
during half an ordinary humau life the
nose is capable of receiving more noble
form. The mental training of an in
dividual has a great deal to do with
shaping the nose.
The small, flat nose, found among
women and called the soubrette nose,
when occurring with an otherwise
agreeable cast of countenance, indi
cates a gracious and cheerful naivete,
combined with considerable curiosity.
Such a nose is seldom found among
men, and when a man is unfortunate
enough to possess it he is character
ized by weak and deficient sagacity.
Chalky lied ot the Atlantic.
The bed of the Atlantic from 400 to
2000 fathoms is covered with an ooze,
or very fine chalky deposit, consisting
to a great extent of minute broken
shells.
To Cure A Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund moDej'lf it fails to cure. 250.
The first iron works in Nebraska begun
operations at Uinnha in 1879.
Fits permanently cured. No (Its or nervous
ness after first day's use of IJr. Kline's (treat
Nerve ltestorer. J-trial bottle and treatise free
Da. K. H. KLINE. Ltd..lull Arch St..l'iiila.,Pa.
There are 2'2,000 publications in North
America which print advertisements.
I cotid not pet along without l'iso's Cure
for Consumption. Italwayscures.- Mrs. E.G.
MOULTON, Needham, Mass., October 1894.
The value of the natural gas produced
in Kansas in 1896 amounted to $124,750.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pail), cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle.
During 1897 the furnaces of Alabama
have sent 200,000 tons of iron to Europe.
s 3>
$ Bunch alt the worst pains in i
. a lump like this: $
| RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA,
SCIATICA,
LUMBAGO. |
| ITSK I
I ST. JACOBS OIL. 1
It will cure them alt,
[p Separately, Surely, Qu'ckly. g
MOLER S BARBER SCHOOL,
■"■ Barber trade taught in eight weeks. New system. 1
Positions guaranteed when through. Tools donated.
ILM-STItA J 111) I'ATAIAKtI K MAILED FIiKE.
1000 COPIES TRt?l ' ufbl.f «S1 I ON,"
426 pages, handsomely hound, brimful of new ideas
on social ethics, political economy, now to be happy, I
•ent free to luuo young men who send parents' cer
tificate of obedience, industry, good habits, cour
tesy to others. C. M. STEBBINrt, Harlsdale. N.Y. I
When You Want to Look on the Bright Side of Things,
Use
SAPOLIO
on CTS. IN STAMPS
# _ I Sent to BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 184 Leonard 81., If. J
Cily, will aeoare for yon by mail, UAPCC P A
prepaid, • copy of a 100-pa*e nVIVOC DUWIV
Ailed with Tilublt information relating to tlie care ot Hur»e>, or I Dnmf
Dnmf teaching yon how to ao care <»r and
vniV TV cm DV#V/l\j handle rowli aa to make their raieing
Ttxofltable. Ohiokene oan be made moneT-earnari. Ift ino kxns-.hav that do*»l4
A Benefactress' Kind Act.
From the Evening NUBS. Detroit, Mich.
Mrs. John Tansey, of 180 Baker Street,
Detroit, Michigan, Is ono of thoso women
who always know just what to do In all
trouble and sickness. One that is a mother
to those in distress. Ton reporter Bhe said:
"I am the mother of ten children and
have raised eight of them. Several years
ago we had a serious time with my daugh
ter, which began when she was about six
teen years old. She did not have any seri
ous illness but seemed to gradually waste
away. Having never had any consumption
In our family, as wo come of good old Irish
and Scotch stock, we did not think it was
that. Our doctor called the disease by an
odd name, which, as I afterward learned,
meant lack of blood.
"It is impossible to describe the feeling
John and I had as wo noticed our daughter
slowly pnsslng away from us. Wo llnally
found, however, a medicine that seemed to
Mos! of the Time She IVan Confined If lied.
help her, and from the first we noticed a
decided change for the hotter, and after
three months' treatment her health was so
greatly Improved you would not have re
cognized her. She Rained in flesh rapidly
and soon was in perfect health. The medi
cine used was Dr. Williams'Tlnk Tills for
Pale People. I have always kept those pills
in the house since and have recommended
them to many people. I have told many
mothers about them and they have effected
some wonderfulcures.
"E very mother in this land should keep
these pills in the house, as thev are good for
many ailments, particularly thoso arising
from impoverished or diseased blood, and
weakened nerve force."
Calcined, seed pearls are considered
a medicine of great potency by the
Chinese, and beautiful artwork iu
mother-of-pearl has long been exe
cuted both in China and Japan. In
the Phillipines windows are made of
mother-of-pearl, and in Cashmere it
is used for inlaying inscriptions on
tombstones.
OPHEt ENJOYS
' Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it ia pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
| only remedy of its kind ever pro
| duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO.
SAM FRANCISCO, CAL
10UISVILLE. nr. HEW YORK, H.t.
ALASKA OUTFITS
Don't make the fatal error of buying a lot ol
worthless stuff and paying heavy freight charges
across the continent and And when you arrive in
Alaska that your supplies are of no value.
Your lilo depend* upon liuving
u proper Alaska outfit.
We are the Pioneers of the Alaska outfitting busi
ness in Seattle and have sold thousands of outfits.
We know EXAI'TLY what is required and how
to pack it.
We mail free of charge to any part of the world
a good map showing the best route and a supply list
showing the cost and weight of articles required
for "one man for one year." Address
COOPER & LEVY,
fOt & 10(1 First Avenue, South,
Dept. N, SEATTLE. WASHINGTON.
Kef.: DEXTER HORTON & Co., Hankers, Seattle.
POTATOES V&°.\
i Largest Heed POTATO growers In America, i
I The "Kural New-Yorker "gives Aulzer'* Knrij 1 (
. WUcoitsln m yield of 78ft busheln per acre. I
Prices dirt cheap. Our great Need Hook* 111 I
1 Farm Seed Sample** worth $lO to get* start, for i 1
I 10c. postage. JuH A. 81LZKKSEKDC0., L*Cro»«e, Wlc. ( l
" i";;:. 1 5? i Thompson's Eye WatM
ADVER I'ISING IMSU2S3