—— ° ~ ies. busi- of the untry, [OME- teas, 2 to be pound- ssisted doctor. h was apple , made ks. A -made d, the | along ritten, ed. 38 is a whole- begin- r, im- one of 1d take manuy- rtise it e home, over a [OUSE- TOOK [TIFIC f these 1 by the efore it le. Dr. COM- f Men- ribed it )atients. ; last he nd fur- rade. | it many hs, colds, atarrhal NDS OF iD THE 1e in the They lieve in | to rely state au- African some in- 10se ani- season, the ele- are turn- Instead, wild kin $ if con- 1at their eir pres- vild ele- eir scene mals are ble to be K. Kidney €. iller St., ‘ee years ck grew ame and ot stoop L sharp 1s just as tried to 1 a chair. suid and nd had and trou- ns. This gan with helped me >s made a nts a box. NY 14 ut of the s, accord- A Sun- his class -ael out of He again ore point- ed. The and said: hildren of johnny be- >lease, Sir, 1oved here Journal. Oe Ladies! IN THE LAT- 3, LONDON &ND postage frece ; each. all urchase; orkrooms, thus our purchase, y noney which at once Of ex 110N: A cut ‘goods or dereds ¢ surprised at urments. Yow LCL! TSIVALY. ANCIX op the latest and New Yor k, , made to order, BEAU | IFUL BOOK. 1ION CO.» sion, New York City = cs ye Wate: i SE TROON iw FROM A WO The Average Girl. I wonder why every one is so ready to condemn the poor present day girl? Thé average girl of the present day has many’ interests and wastes far less time than -the maiden of the “good old times.”"—Mrs. Neish in M. A. P. 8%. Hostesses’ Union. What is wanted is a hostesses’ trade union, a powerful combination of so- ciety woman pledged to maintain’ their own ~selfrespect, and to extinguish socially any man guilty of the slight- est lapse of the courtesy which every woman has every right to expect, says the Ladies’ “Field. The drawback to the formation of such a society lies in the fact that unfortunately being re- spected neither by men nor each oth- er, most ‘women do not respect them- selves either. Hair, Eyes and Dress. Women with blue eyes may wear any color in the daylight, says a dress- maker of renown who has been letting the public into her secrets. She lays down rules by which women who lack judgment in the matter of colors may be guided. She advises women with brown hair to stick to the wide range of browns, tans and creams, but tells them they may wear the softer shades of gray if their eyes have a glint of hazel. Old women, or those of mid- dle aze whose hair is turning to white, she advises to go in for more white in their costumes. Red is the color she gives most attention, for it is the color most women go wrong on, she says. Highly colored complexions may take a red hat, this authority asserts, if the skin is clear, while .on the same principle those women who lack color in their faces should place the red be- low. If the skin is very good, and she lays stress on the “very,” one may wear yellow, but only in the evening. —New York Press. Remarkable English Woman. Mrs. Josephine XE. Butler, who re- gently passed away in her seventy- ninth year, was one of the most =re- markable English women of her gen- eration. An untiring worker for the cause of woman in many ways, she devoted years of the most strenuous effort to preventing the passage of a law providing for the state regulation of vice in England. She held meetings in almost” every town in England and Scotland, often speaking from the tail of a cart in some market place; visit- ed workhouses, prisons and hospitals, and at last, after seventeen years’ hard work, had the satisfaction of see- ing the bill voted down .in parliament. Later she organized the International Federation for the Abolition of the State Regulation of Vice. Her propa- ganda was carried on at much personal sacrifice, and often at no little per- sonal risk, being denied lodging in cer- tain hotels and turned out of others as soon as her name became known, while often her friends felt obliged to hustle her out of the reach of mobs.— New York Tribune, Encourage His Hobbies. Women would find men much easier tethered to their own firesides if they would encourage their husbands in some peculiar hobby, and forgive the little extra trouble the brushing up af- terward gives them. The encourag- ing of a hoppy certainly implies self- sacrifice on the part of the wife, but, if she is wise, she will give her “man” a corner of the home as his own den, where he can bestow his properties, make as much littler as he chooses and work-out his leisure in the pursuit of his harmless hobby. Perhaps it may take him many hours to turn a soap box into a corner cupboard, but-do not laugh at the work of art when it is finished. Praise it rather. It is better for a man to do such things in his odd hours than at- tend a football match, bet, drink, and lose his situation, says an exchange. His example, too, will lessen the labor in the training of your family, for his eye will be on the young people, and they will in “helping father” learn to find home the most blessed spot on earth.—indianapolis News. How Love Is Lost. Love is lost by thoughtlessness, by inconsideration, and by selfishness more than by any other way. Because one loves you is that any reason you should be inconsiderate of :them? There is a false idea afloat in the ‘stream of life, that when people love us we can be rude to them, that be- cause they know we love them they will forgive every lack of courtesy. This is absolutely untrue. The closer two people are united by the bond of love, the more necessary it is for them to observe every law of politeness. ; Love isn’t so very difficult to gain, but it’s mighty difficult to keep. You .can better afford to be rude to everyone else in the world than to -those who love you. Love is a flower that needs constant attention, and the very minute it is neglected, left too long in the glaring and the” unselfishness that goes to make selfishness, it dies. And love is never resurrected. Give those you love words of affec- *ion, the looks that tell them so much and the unselfishness that goes to NS VIEWPOINT, make love and without which it is a miserable imitation. ~ Beca: hey love you shall they ve the Tas. e thought of? “ And this 6 sent out will —t back, making ‘you better, richer and happier -and your life really worth while—Necw York Register. Reforming Society. ] An enthusiastic motorist must have written the following encomium on the automobile, which is heralded as a sort of saviour of society. Brains “Women who give most of their time and purses to dress ‘have now turned to the motor car. Their ma- chines have taken a newer and great- er interest, and one which gives them no personal trouble or discomfort. Many a woman of wealth and position who some years ago would have had half a dozen morning costumes now does with one skirt and a few simple blouses for morning wear. “Motors are largely responsible, too, for slackness of business on Fridays, Saturdays and Mondays. This is gen- erally felt in the great cities of the world. “They are also the cause of fewer social functions in the evening. A run in the air induces sleep and a desire for rest after the evening meal. Per- sons are unwilling to enter ®he heated theatre or close reception room when overcome with drowsiness. “Decidedly the motor car is revolu- tionizing the world of society, which is bad from the tradespeople’s point of view, but good from that of the world at large.” One of the City’s Throng. Recently a pleasant faced, elderly, gray haired woman was riding in a southbound elevated train. Her at. tention was attracted and her interest excited by a bevy of bright and happy looking young girls who entered the car at one of the uptown stations. They fluttered in and quickly but qui- etly found seats. One of them sat next to the traveler first mentioned. Their glances met, and with the priv- ilege that age confers in such circum- stances, she addressed some pleasant remark to her pretty young neighbor. She was surprised and a little hurt when the girl, without making any re- sponse, turned her head and looked the other way. When the train stopped at 28th street the whole party arose and crowded eagerly toward the door. As this was where the older woman intended to alight, she arose also, and so found herself standing. next to her: seat-mate. She took oc- casion to say: “I have traveled all over the world, and I have never hes- itated to speak a pleasant word to strangers when I have felt attracted by them, and I should otherwise have spent many lonely -hours and missed making many charming friends. I think that this is the first time that my well meant advances have met with a rebuff.” The girl again looked into the woman’s face with an abso- lutely unanswering gaze and then hurried gayly after her companions. This second ignoring of her remarks by the little maiden was a shock to the traveler, when it suddenly occurred to her how strangely silent all those fif- teen or twenty girls had been—going, too, as it now appeared, to the circus. She tried to recall if one of them had spoken a single word—and then, in a flash, she realized that they were a Barnum & Bailey bound delegation from the School for Deaf Mutes. The ticket chopper is probably still won- dering what set that quiet appearing, gray haired woman off into a fit of almost uncontrollable laughter as she stood there on the platform.—New York Tribune. Fashion Notes. Swiss watchmakers are making fin- ger-ring watches. The button pins are used whicre the hair is worn on top of the head. Combs are smarter when made with plain tops, without knobs or other dec- orations. The new hatpins have huge ball heads of platinum thickly studded with jewels. There is nothing prettier than net for the tuckers which are an important. part of tlie fashionble dinner gown. Colored embroidery will be as fash- ionable for lingerie hats the coming summer as it is to be for thin frocks. Stripes are getting wider and wider as the season advances. The newest ones are fully three-quarters of an" ‘inch in width. 47 The plain amber-colored combs and pins for the blond girl, and those in dark shell for the brunette, are entire- ly correct, : Cuffs, collars, buttons and other touches of black linen will be seen on coat and skirt suits of linens in the dainty colors. ' : There is no prettier use for the fine colored embroideries than in making up dainty matinees, dressing jackets, negligees, etc. No ribbons or gauze accompany the feathers, but at the base is a jeweled crescent, which is particularly eiffec- tive in dark hair. The immense hats trimmed solely with great chous and enswathirg folds of tulle have a look of light and airy grace in spite of their almost unwieldy size. 2: PULPIT, A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. JOHN F. CARSON. Subject: Signs of Progress. Brooklyn, N. Y.—Sunday the Rev. Dr. John F. Carson, pastor of .the Cen- tral Presbyterian Church, preached a stirring sermon on “Signs of Pro- gress. The text was from 1 Chron- icles 12:32: “Men that had under- standing of the times.” Here, are some of the things he said: Any student of our age will find in existing conditions much that wars against truth and” righteousness’ and honor, -and- that threatens manhood and the social order. In the political world there is corruption. Votes are sold to the highest bidder from the Senate -to the ward ‘caucus; men, whose only creed is greed, whose only patriotism ds pelf, band themselves together to control political situa- tions; certain public officials are growing rich on‘harvests reaped from the black fields of vice and crinrte. In the commercial world there is dis- honesty. For personal gain of wealth or power men sacrifice principle, com- promise conscience, become reckless operators, unscrupulous gamblers, bandits of banking, highwaymen of finance. In the industrial world there is unfairness and injustice. Corpora- tions ignore the interes: of and op- press their workmen, crush competi- tion, defraud the people; working- men band themselves together to force employers to their terms, forbid men to work except on terms fixed by a union, limit apprentices and so dény young men their rights, enforce their demands by violence, p.y homage to eriminal leadership. In the social world there are wrongs. The rich domineer in their swollen pride and flount their extravagances in the face of "the poor; the poor sin and suffer, because herded -in .poverty and squalor. In all our life is the snirit of ‘unrest and discontent. Satiety and languid weariness in parlor and salon, suffering and sighing in work- shop and in tenement. If you ‘tell me that there are un- scrupulous men who operate schemes of high finance, I would remind you that the sentiment of the day is so strong that many of these men find it convenient to seek homes in other lands. If you tell me that there is corporate theft and labor intoleranee, I would remind you that, as never before, there is a demand for the play of justice and equity-in al! relations. If you tell me that the rich are defi- antly extravagant and that the pov- erty of the poor is appalling, I wonld remind you that there never has been a time when the money of the rich was so readily at the services of the people as'it is to-day through schools, colleges, libraries, .homes, hospitals and innumerable agencies and institu- tions; and when you cail my atten- tion to the condition of the sub- merged, I would remind you of .the time when most people were slaves, and I would challenge your thought to the fact that there never has been a time when the middle class was so well-off as it is to-day. If you call my attention to the deplorable hous- ing of the East Side poor, I will call to your mind the report of the Mis- sionary Society for the Poor of New York, issued in 1817, which deplored the existence of small houses, each crowded with from four to twelve families, often two and three families living in a room, and “of all colors.” If you tell me of the =zaloons and brothels that are ruining manhood and ruling in politics, patronized and protected by political influence, I will remind you that when the population of New York was 110,000 there were 1489 licensed retail liquor dealers and not less than 6000 “abandoned females’’ added to the vice and shame. Of course, there is more actual sin and shame in a city of four millions of people than there was in a city of a hundred thousand, but I am per- suaded that an honest study of condi- tions will disclose that New York City is proportionately better to-day than it was a hundred years ago. There are dark, deadly things in our condi- tions, but the moral tone and the eth- ical standard is higher than it ever was, and our black things appear all the blacker because they are viewed in the light of a whiter background. There are gigantic evils in our life, but a gigantic battle is being waged against them. The struggle is bitter, but there are signs that it is not fruit- less. The throes of to-day are the birth pangs of a better to-morrow. The light of that to-morrow begins to dawn. Its sun is piercing the dark- ness. The east is aglow. The gleams of a new radiance begin to illumine the horizon. First, 1 call your attention to the demand for the play of righteousness in all our life—poiitical, social and commercial. There is a new .and wide ethical awakening in all our lan?. Never has the demand béen so insistent that men shall be honest in the administration of sacred trusts committed to them. And the great majority of our financiers are nobly meeting that command. We are liv- ing in a pericd of investigation and criticism. It is well. 1t is a heaith- ful tone, if men are sane enough to discriminate. “ But men -are not al- ways that sane. In- the presence of these investigations suspicion creeps into the mind and men are tempted to think that all men are dishonest because some men have been proved thieves and robbers. It is a fatal mis- take. I am persuaded that there is more honest fiber in the life of to-day than there ever has been. The very investigations which are being con- ducted to-day are evidence of a finer and higher ethical sense than has heretofore existed. Second, I call your attention to the demand for the abolition of such prac- tices as war against the common weal. A little while ago that demand was for the abolition of the lottery. A Christian postmaster put the Louis- iana lottery out of business. Just now the demand in New York is for the abolition of race track gambling. Third, I calli your attention to the triumphs of the temperance move- ment. The change of sentiment on the temperance question is one of the most radical that the country has ever known. Twenty years ago the demand for the abolition of the =a- loon awakened a smile or provoked a sneer, To-day that demand is the | fixed purpose of thousands of our fele low citizens and it is being fulfilled. Five States—Maine, Kansas, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Georgia—ars now prohibition, and in one more .(Alabama) prohibition becomes oper- ative on January 1, 1909. Six States of the Union prohibit the sale or man- ufacture of intoxicating drinks. The progress of the temperance movement in the South is one of the most significant and -inspiring signs of our times. Two States, Georgia and Alabama, have enacted prohib:- tion laws.” Ninety-five per cent.” of North Carolina has. declared -against the saloon. Mississippi has-a prohibi- tion Legislature and a prohibition Governor, and ninety per cent. of the State “has barred liquor. Tennessee has voted the saloon out of all but four of its ninety-six counties. Ken- tucky has near'y a hundred of its 119 counties entirely free from- saloons, and seventy- -five per cent, of its-pop- ulation are’ living in.prohibition ter- ritory. Two- thirds of Louisiana has no saloons... In Florida thres-fourths of the -State has voted no license: In Texas 148. of the 246 counties have wiped cut the saloon, while fifty-one other counties are :partially prohibi- tion, s0 that in only forty-seven .coun- ties. of the State is. liquor freely sold. In’ South Carolina .about half the counties have voted no license. In Virginia seventy-two counties out of 118; in ‘West Virginia thirty out of fifty-five, and in Maryland fourteen out of twenty-three prohibit the sale of liquor. Twenty out of twenty- seven milliors of people south of the Mason and Dixon line live in no liquor territory. There are more drinking places, legal and illegal,”in New York than in the whole South. The temperance movement is tak- ing hold on the North. By a majority of 18,000 out of a total vote of a little over 100,000, the new State of Oklahoma declared for prohibition. Maine, Kansas and North Dakota are enforcing their prohibition laws with new vigor. . Two of the three counties of Delaware have prohibited the sa- ‘loon. Fifty-two per cent. of the peo- ple of Ohio and Indiana are living in prohibition territory. Prohibition claims fifty-eight of the seventy-five counties of -.Arkansas. The rapid progress of the movement may be learned from the story of Missouri. On January-1, 1905, there were three counties which prohibited the sale of liquor; to-day sixty-four of the 115 counties of the State prohibit the traffic. In nineteen other States ad- vanced temperance legislation has been enacted, while there has not been a single measure adopted by any State favorable to the liquor traffic. An effort is being made in the present Congress to secure such legislation as will respect the rights and policy of the States which see fit to prohibit the liquor traffic. There is not a single case on rec- ord where a county, or city, or town that closed its saloons has reported: a decrease of business. Much is being said by the liquor interests about -the money which they and allied interests pay.to-the city, State and National Government for taxes and licenses and the Philadelphia Liquor Dealers’ Association recently declared in reso- lution adopted by their convention, “To eliminate the saloon would be to undermine the foundation of the country’s revenues.” This country does not depend upon blood money for its support. The fact is the coun- try would be better off without the traffic and taxation upon every other business would be lessened. Fon every dollar that the liquor interests pay to the country it costs the coun- try $20 to maintain the asylums, homes, almshouses, jails and such in- stitutions as are created by the liquor habit and to maintain the courts and prosecuting machinery. The saloon is a highwayman of the baser sort ang a pirate of the worst type. It has simply been tolerated because it seemed impossible to get rid of it. But now the issue is drawn, the battle is on. The foe is adroit, cunning, re- sourceful, unscrupulous, desperate. It is marshalling its forces for a con- flict, the impact of which will shake the land. Christian men must mee this foe with inflexible and deter- mined purpose. In facing the conflict it should be clearly understood that the warfare is not against a legiti- mate business, a business which men have an inherent right to pursue. The traffic is on a status entirely dif- ferent from any business enterprise. There is no inherent right to sell liquor, The Christian men of America, if they were wise enough, could take America for any moral issue. The manhood of America can rule. But it must put principle above party and conscience above compromise and duty above ease. The manhood of America, united in the effort and in- teiligently directed, can, if.it will, put an end to the greatest economic and moral plague of the age by outlawing the saloon. There are signs of progress—a rad- ical demand for the play of honesty in business life, a new movement for the abolition of gambling (uu all places, a determined purpose to abol- ish the saloon. These movements are in harmony with the Divine econ- omy and purpose. and that is the asd surance of their triumph. God is in His world and God is working. There never was an age in which so many people were working for the better- ment of life. With an all-controlling purpose, begotten of faith in God and nurtured in love of man, multitudes are working to better the conditions of life, and that Christ, in whom God is reconciling the world unto Himself, is drawing men into the circle of His infinite love, into the away of. His beneficent purpose and keeping them there until He shall come to reign in all the world. Getting Better of Commonplace. Steady-going goodness is harder than spectacular heroism. It calls for more endurance and more character to held to the highest standards of life in the-commonplaces of every day routine than to nerve oneself up for a single and exceptional effort. The five-mile run is more exhausting than the 100-yard dash. Yet this pro- longed and severer test of every day living is the only true test, and it is the one which we must all meet. Moreover, the best way to be ready for the emergency test, when it comes, is to live through the common day in the red-letter-day spirit. No day was common to Christ, nor will it be to those who make every day His.—Sunday-School Times. A TRAGIGAL EVENT COMMEMORATED. MONUMENT LATELY ERECTED AT SAN DIEGO, CAL., IN MEMORY OF SIXTY-SEVEN SAILORS WHO LOST THEIR LIVES BY A TERRI- BLE EXPLOSION ON THE GUNBOAT BENNINGTON IN 1905. —H. R. Fiteh Studio, California, in Leslie's Weekly. A Famous Cheyenne Chief. brought fame to many a civilized man, and so it is not surprising that of his fellow-men should gain a cer- tain distinction in a tribe of bar- barians. One of the most conspicuous SPOTTED HAWK A Cheyenne brave who has killed more white men than any other member of his tribe. in Montana is Spotted Hawk, a brave who is said to have kiiled, during his fighting days, more white men than any other member of his tribe. Spotted Hawk is a man of striking appearance, especially when arrayed in his war costume, as he appears in the accompanying photograph. Well formed and athletic, he is an excel- lent marksman and a hunter of re- nown. .His face is full of character and his intelligence is marked. He is looked up to with especial regard by the young men of the tribe, to whom his career appears romantic and inspiring. But the bad old timas of hostility between the two races are now only a memory. Spotted Hawk, as well as the remainder of the tribe, is now at peace with the United States, and therefore it is not likely that he will during the coming years of his life add to his list of pale- faced victims. . Civilizing influences have taken hold upon him, and he no longer desires to wreak vengeance upon thz dominating race.—Leslie's Weekly. Self Control Valuable. He approaches nearest to the gods who knows how to be silent even though he knows he is in the right.— Cato. Herrings are being sold in the streets of Sunderland, England, at twenty for a penny. Success in military operations has one whe has succeeded as a slayer figures among the Cheyenne Indians Bees and Boys. In many of the California apiaries boys are being employed almost alto- gether to take care of the bees. It is only in swarming time that other help is needed. After a little exper- ience a boy can care for many hives, and it is said that they are not stung as often as the men. It has been figured up that a farm- er’s’ boy who is given five hives of bees (0 begin with, and who will work industriously, can make more money in ten years than his father can on a farm of 160 acres. Clover honey brings a good price, and the market is always short of it.—Phila- delphia Telegraph. Brush Holds the Blacking. An entire shoe-blacking outfit con- tained in a single article forms the subject of a recent patent grant. Heretofore it has been necessary to supply oneself with several brushes, one for cleaning the dust from the surfaces of the shoe and a dauber for applying the blacking or polish, a third one for rubbing, and some- times a fourth for giving the final polish. All of these functions are filled in i article shown in the accompanying cut. The daubing apparatus consists | of a kind of fountain arrangement by which it is not necessary to touch it with the danger of soiling the hands. It is only essential to rub it on the Shoe-Cleaning Outfit in One Piece. leather and sufficient quantity is sup- plied for the purpose. : A simple reversal movement brings into action the rubbing and polishing surface. A small bunch of stiff bris- tles at one end provides the means of cleansing the shoe when necessary. A Ticklish Question. : Now, own up, won't you, as a rather conceited man, be bitterly dis- appointed if you fail to receive one | proposal during 1908?—Mexican Herald. Clearing Ship For Action. UNITED STATES STEAMSHIP FOR BATTLE, W HER —W. E DENVER BEING BUT ITH SAND-BAGS PILED MACHINERY N. Devers, Philippine Islands, IN READINESS UP TO PROTECT in Leslie's Weekly. RETO I ARR