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FASHION'S AWFLL Crente Confal of the Mode. Nover en 80 bar Freaks and Fanc in the Realm NEW YORK, Oct season of fashion b THE OMAH @@@ - PR - aam——— : red and stroked irregularly with fine, close | coats boast the most magnificent antique set black liaes. A band of wolld red la-| brocads walstcoats. A story fying about dies' cloth berders the ekirt, collar and yoke of walst and forms the belt and this| is sensibly toned down by applications ot narrow black soutache. tios and beautles as this. From Parlv| Cayy ooqume for the older woman 1s a comes the report that there 18 nothing new, | o000 “pyie homespun of delighttully soft that the dresemakers at their ':‘"” quality, the coat and skirt edged with end for frosh ideas, the modistes Without | o 0" jiohiar blue cloth and braided in tnspiration. Worth, Rawduita and VIrojy,,p “upiis the lower half of the body despairingly deciare that the "f ““\"”“"‘i:' and top of the skirt is arranged in blue freaks and fancies of GECBs 16 0 . maybe | 811k that matches the cloth edges. Perhaps the hot ¥ o g "" Some very Interesting striped cashmeres Uy o . l'"'l"“"‘a“‘ " o (he |BAYE been brought out this season. The ever Is the cause, chag " o We have no system, realms of (he mode stripes run the length of tho goods, are half an fnch wide and alternate in black no pattern to gulde us any longer in ouP | 158 White, tabee brown aad yeliow, red cholce of hats or our selections of gowns. ket i A Wear what you please, for what you please | ™ e v 1s as good fashion as anything else, says the cloakmaker, tailor, furrier, contouriere and milliner. Wear green, or brown, or yellow; eut your skirt with a train or with- out, gather and pleat it at the walst, or let it fit tho hips as close ag the bark fits a tree; hang directoire tails to your coat ana walst, or chop off both right under the arms, confuston prevails and bad taste is given. The sight of the show windows ana counters piled with new Iaces and brocades 18 cause for tears. The worst colors are cast together in the most ungraceful and napprop designs. One gorgeous robin's egg blue satin bears hugh boquets of mistletoe, brocade in gold thread, while nobby-looking little nosommys of reddish o purple violets are tossed here and there on the green satin spaces. A pink satin 1s fgured over in a design that resembles an endless chain of mountaln peaks, on which snowflakes as big and as round as quinine pills are falling The prospect is no more pleasing at the rounter where lace robes are displayed, for tnto the mesh of the lace large, frregularly shaped pl of painted panne or silk muslin are let. Not satisfled with so much decoration, the fll-advised manufacturers introduce on the surface of the panne or muslin squares ridiculous roses and tulips and lilies and clusters of wistaria made of pufted tulle of a variety of contrasted tints These tulle flowers, that resemble nothing %0 much as raw, colored meringue, have stalks and leaves of gold brald, and three or four Inches of tinsel tissue glitter at the foot of the Really It 18 childish oy lace Pretty Frocks. and garish in appearance, w0 much so, indeed, that it is a positive relfef Lo turn to the conservative gowne of simple goods, which, while showing no startling features, display both grace and taste. Such a gown, or gowns, rather, aro the group of two evening frocks in the double-column sketch. Theee are espec- fally designed for the fresh and youthful clement in society—for the buds after the debutante dance 1s over. The one to the left 1s a moss rose pink taffeta brilliante. The body s quaintly shirred all about and the threads of the shirring are obscured by bands of baby velvet ribbon In color a robe WALKING GOWN FOR A YOUNG GIRL. green that matches very fresh spring woodland wmows. The shirrings and the stripings of green velvet ribbon continue down upon the skirt to form a long, pointed apron effect. The edges of this apron are aflutter with chiffon frills of opalescent hue, changing through pink to white and tender green. A deep frill of the chiffon borders the skirt all around. Not a bit less pleasiug is the companton gown of pale yellow Pekin crepe, decked with parrow bands of mink's fur. A buckle of filagree gilt and pale blue sapphires holds the points of the short zouave jackets together over the bust and below the furred edges of the zouaves falls & vest of pale liberty tissue, spotted yel- low. A blue silk dancing petticoat is worn under the skirt of yellow crepe. Smart and Simple Street Gow Hardly a word of anything but pra should accompany the two discreet walk- ing gowns that illustrate the best type of and black, ete. They are extensively used in the makeup of smart house skirts, the tops of which have the lighter stripes | tucked out. . This leaves the lower half | of such a skirt very full and the stripes conspleuous. A fancy shirtwaist and a narrow, flexible gold belt completes quite an ideal morning dress. Leather and Twilled Ribbon Belts. Apropos of belts, we are in danger of | doing the flexible gold ribbon to death with overmuch patronage. Black satin | girdles braided in gold are also pretty, but | rapldly hastening to destruction through | too great popularity. A group of really | smart belts accompanies the text and shows | how leather and twilled ribbon are most | tastefully used. The belt of black satin sprinkled with tiny steel beads and clasped in front by a bandsome brass buckle s carefully shaped 1o fit the waist, as a collar band s cut and skilltully adjusted to the neck. This is a French invention. The leather girdle is a straight strap of « white calf's hide, with the fine, bleached halr clinging to the skin. This pliant hide is taken from the body of a stillborn calt and is the only sort of white belt that does not soll, since the fine, close lying hair ac- cepts little grease or dust and that which 1t does take can be easily wiped off with a cloth. The third strap is of white silk dlag- onally. striped with a black velvet line, and, clasped with a gold disk buckle on white, three eaglets are outlined in brilli- ants. Nearly all the good gowns this season are finished with small crush or stitched belts that exploit buckles of in- trinsic artistic value. From Paris they are sending us beautiful buckles in the form of comic and tragic masques, grin- ning satyr faces oor shaped and worked in imitation of Japanese sword guards and mandarin button: Some Chic Novelties. The most du moment idea In collars is the high, stralght satin band, about the buse of which a soft ribbon is drawn and tied in @ bow in front that shows as many as six ends of uneven lengths In front, but no loops. Every end is pinched together and finished with an ornamental golden tag, and the result of this trifiing devico 18 extremely pretty. Sometimes the tags are of true gold, charmingly wrought and set with tiny jewels, so that they can be transferred to every fresh necktie. All shades of brown gloves prevail, from the palest cafe-au-lait glace kid to heavy walking suede in deep tabac brown. Some of the smart walking gloves have stripes of kid lald on the back and tallored on with many stitchings, and a flat, heavy brown pearl button fastened on with a brass shank 1s the proper method of closing them at the wrist. The black tulle toque was epidemic last winter, and it was to hoped that the heat of summer had permanently melted it from the memory of toque wearing womaokind. No euch change of heart has taken place, however, and the tulle toque is evidently a dressmakor's establishment relates the experience of a wealthy woman, who wanted a true old brotade of a speclal Du Barry pink color for her g velvet Louls coatee. Failing to find what she wanted at any of tha dry goods palaces or at the furniture dealers,” she de a round of the ric-a-brac shops and discovered a chalr upholstercd in just the brocade she was searching,for. She paid $1,500 for the chair, ripped off the gorgeous brocade dress it wore, and ordered it into the f ot her cont. The mangled chair did not suft hY emplire drawing room, so that It now remalus In the garret, a monument to extravagance of the rich American when the * Sl Guyrme the perfection of her wardrobe is at stake MARY DEAN. WOMEN AND CORSI What the New Stralght Front L Dy . No woman can afford to be indifferent these days to the sort of corset she wears. On the shape, length and lacing of the stay hangs all her claim to beauty of figure, style and fit of gown. Five years ago nine out of every ten women wore long stays, high in the bust, reaching well up over the shoulder blades and ribbed all around with long slats of steel, which were carefully bent to enforce a curve at the waist, to ad- mit the fullness of the bust and also to allow no pressure on the abdomen. The corset maker's whole aim was to build corset that would conform to every line of Stay when laced at all, pinched her painfully in the pit of the stomach and drove her bust up under her chin. Now in five years the whole system of corset making has undergone a radical change; in consequence tho lines of the teminine figure have been absolutely rev- prepared to weather the rigors of another winter. tulle toques with uprolling velvet brims braided in gold, or overlaid with gold lace. Another epecies of shirred tulle headgear will be a Marquise in shape, the brim trolghted with long, lusclous black plumes, drawn in front through a very long, very narrow Marquise buckle of brilliants. Bridesmaids have already begun to patron- 1ze the tulle Marquise in black because outdoor sult now being made for adults and. juveniles. The young girl's dress Is & wiry-haired tweed in a warm shade of ALWAYS BRINGS BACK YOUTH or, lite and beauty to " Bd' halr . Produces § né '7“:‘::1:). on bald heads and immediately T o ana. Hioklg Cote1ok "Bks Ner d ilching scelp. e".ul.v SKIN OR CLOTHING A ol Ithful hair dressing for men and wome, hing i[ke it or just as good. l!n-qur:hna h Krower, Large Bot, 500" Unsse A SKIN OF BEAUTY IS A JOY FOREVER R T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ORIFXTAL CKEAM, OR MAGICAL SEAUTIFIER, Removes Tan, Pimples, Freckles, Moth Patches, Rask and Skin dis- ottle it Lol o taste it to be swre it is_properly “made, Accept no counter of similar Dr. L A Sayre sald to & la 4y of the haul-tom of its ineffable soft gracefulness and the charming contrast into which it throws their delicate colored gown: Brocade Walstcoats. Every coat that 1s not as long In the skirts a8 & tea gown is a coatee. The! is the Spanish coatee, the Romney coatee and the Directoire and Louls Quinz coatee. The only difference between any one of them {s that some have tails and some have not. The Directoire and Louls xv This season we are to have black | THREE BELT olutionized and the stout woman and the slim one share equally in the blessed ad- vance of sartorial scieuce. In order to en- Joy a long, slim walst it s no longer necessary to use three-ply silk strings and the bedpost, and the girl who welghs only 106 pounds need not pad herselt like a fencing master in order to look human. Along with the other priceless improve- ments of the new corset s the fact that it holds the wearer's body at the exactly nor- mal center of gravity, prevents drooping shouldors or & swayed back, and places no pressure at all on the stomach, Nature of the Reform, All these inculculable benefits have been achieved by the simple device blades, introducing absolutely tront steels, making no effort to frame the bust, merely having the front A8 you ladies will use trem 1 s ¥ ond GOURAUD'S CREAM' 58 the jeast srmtul of all the Skin preparation ' fo by W1fl Drigisia ndPascy - lers in the and Europe. - o VERD, T. HOPKINS. Prop's, A PALE YELTOW PEKIN CREP COSTUME. UDMIJ!Q- b N. %, MOS8 ROSE PARTY GOWN, A PINK TAFFETA 4 DAILY the figure. They achieved their object, to be sure, and womankind cheerfully con- sented to wear the clumsy casing, which, | of cutting | the corset low about the bust and shoulder straight | stifly BEE TNDAY and top of the stay unusually wide, and by using elastic hose supporters. The hose supporters have solved half the problem of lengthening the walstline, for even the longest, most artfully constructed stay | shows a fatal tendency to ride up from the natural Double straps of elastic, drawn from the front and bottom of the stay and made fast to the top of the stock- ings, prevent this, They hold the corset firmly and define the walst at the base of the ribs, where the pressure can be put on without bending those flexible bones and forcing them around the heart and lungs The wecond great advan e derived from the stralght front of the stay down with a very slight pressure against the abdomen, walst and not only force the wearer to stand with the erectness of a soldjer, but sup- port her body in that poeition. Standing, sitting or lylng down la her twentieth century stay a woman can swing dumbbells, pull oars, sleep as easily as a b 1d declare with perfect truth that the does not know that she has cor- sets on. In one direction only s her lib- (34 curtatled. he cun not go to & repu- lect and purchase table corsetiere and what she wishes without a trylog on. A | corset, the maker will solemnly assure her, | 18 ke a shoe; it must be made after indi- vidual measurements or fitted from a |large stock. No two figures aro exactly |alike aud these new corsets are never |80ld by the number, but by the pame. [The Nell Gwynue, for example, i a short, light, brocaded coutille affair, very deli- cately boned, with but two steels in it and those are in front and a woman with & heavy bust or large hips can mever aspire to wear one, After trying on a dozen sym- metrical Nells the staymaker will socure la perfect fit and for the first time in her life the purchaser will realize the im- portance and the joy of the accurately ad Justed corsel. Tkere is no breaking in nec- essary, no need of holding on to the soft |old pair until the new cnes have taken the body's shape. | Controlling Swell Front. If she Is aMicted with a tendency to | 8toop and a large stomach the corset art- 1st will introduce to Ler the benefits of the | Castellane, shaped with a view to correct- | log her frregulur outline. “Its elongated fronts geatly but firmly overcome the atmormal development by throwing the | weight of the body on other muscles, just NOVELTIES, as the Eylphide is calculated to do away with an unusual hip girth by a good strong pressure put on the cushiony masses of flesh that gather at this reglon. The Sylphide is constructed with an ex- tra long, tight skirt and supplied not only with elastics in front, but at the side and the combined pressure is too much for the pads of avoirdupols. That which was loose and vibrant at every step of the plump owner becomes hard and compact. “Then Wwe trust to exercise to do the rest,” ex- plained a maker of Bylphides, “and we have never had & fat woman groan under the bondage.” The old corset used to take the stout woman right in the wnd. A tight squeeze | with curved steels in front meant pres- sure on the lungs and heart and the figure resulting was very like that of a pillow pinched in the middle. No woman, with her tenderest vitals cramped In such close quarters cculd enjoy great liberty of action, but given & good, up-to-date stay that leaves her organs free, her chest as broad 28 & man's, the door to her lungs wide open, her bust normally placed, her abdo- men pushed out of sight and she will run around golt links, step off five miles a day and trim down her hips with a zest. Not only has the new stay lengthened every womau's walst by the simple device of glving her a deceptively long front line, but it 13 almost a sure cure for indiges- tion and the girl who wore a pink tip to her nose as a consequence of tight lacing has in five years' time almost disappeared. TALK ABOUT WOMEN, Mrs. Jessle Honton Fremont, who s now {n her @th year, is living in Los Angeles, Bhe 18 pormanently cripp ed a8 & result of the accident she met with early In the sum- mer. By the recent death of Mra. R. H. Eddy In Biston & contingent bequest of §0,000 lett by her husband becomos available for the erection of a statue of John Paul Jones In Portsmouth, N. H. Smith coll Northampton, Mass., has an amazing y of altitudinous giris, [n the freshwoman class of 34 voung and lovely women the average height is re- ported as 5 feet 10 inches. Holen Keller, the deaf, dumb and blind young woman who has just entered Rad- glifte college, finds geometry and algebra her hardest ‘studies, but all of the lan- guages she takes to easily, ples o slgnal sta- est peaks of the Mrs. Paul Relcke ocou Flerra Nevada mountains, Her duties are tlon on one of the loft OCTOBER 28 that | to watch with a fleld glass for an might hreak out in the snowsheds that skirt | the raflrond izabeth Allburn of Chicago 18 for recorder of the Degree of i f the Anclent Order of United Workmen. She under her supervision v yna grand lodges and thirty-five e lodges. Sarah Bernhardt's bed in her Parls her_before it was finished the The curtains ars of the fin est damask, the sheets are silk, the bed stead fs o most elaborate plece of furniture and two little gold cupids are polsed di rectly over the sleeper's head One of the delegates, the uvrflNH"“‘lj Mme. home cost sum of $2,000. of Georgla, nt the convention of whale drugglsis at ¢ %0 {8 n woman, Mrs. Far nle Lomar Rankin She 18 the only womal member of the assoclation and s largely in terested (n several big wholesale drug firms in various parts of the country. The only royal lady in Europe to hold the degree of M. D. 1s the consort of the king of Portugal, She was the Princess Ame of Orleans and was born at Orleans house, | Twickenham, near London. Her education was begun in the beautiful Middiesex vil- lage, but in later years sclentific pursuits occupled her mind and before hee marriuge she had obtained the medical degree. It has been stated that Mrs. Louls Botha, the wife of the Boer general, is a de scendant of Robert Emmet, 'the Irlsh patriot. That is a misiake is a de- gcendant of mmet's eld brother, Thomas Addis Emmet, who was one of the Unfted Irish directory 'In 1798 and was pun- fshed by the government mereiy by con- finement In Fort George for three years. The Italia: wve but ono disappointment that she cannot a¢ will Her language ls French more remarked domesticity of to the in their new queen not speak Itallan and her forelgness fs all th by its contrast with the Queen Margherita, who belonged royal house of Savoy by birth as well as by marria, Queen Elena's memories and personal traditions are Russian, the friend and protectress of her youth having been the empress mother of Russia, Miss Hraddon has published over sixty novels since 156 Previous to trying lit- erature, however, Miss Braddon appeared on the stage, There {8 some doubt in the matter, but “An Old Player” writes that the future novellst made her debut at the Brighton Theater Royal in 1857 and that during the five following months she im- per od as many as fifty-efght distinct cha ters, Her gtage name was Mary L ton and, thought now known as Miss' M Eraddon, she Is really Mrs, Maxwell and a widow Fashiton Notes. French batiste In black and _trimmed with luce makes a fashionable corset. Long gold chains are heavier than they w and Interspersed with links of ename), ; 8haded sueds belts studded with steel, gold or emamel nnd fastened with hand: some buckles to match are very much worn. Most superb and co are the velvet gowns and costumes ready for ele- A BLUE HOM SHOPPING SKIRT. gent wear next & luxurious and them. Outside of trimmed ecloth multiplying in N STREET AND season. There s already bewlldering display of the strictly practical sults and lght wool skirts are mbers dally and the liking for them increascs in proportion, for thers are none of the former intricacies' in the ad- justment or arrangement of the decora- tions. Long coats of black satin with fine stitched down tucks, from the Empire yoke to a little way above the hem, are one varioty of winter wrap which is fo be very much worn. They are made effective with yokes of jet and silk applique and lined with whité brocaded silk. A military touch on gowns and separate walsts for vouthful wearers is just now the correct finlsh. This 1s brought out very rettily | 1 of red velvet for he stanc trimming it with rows of v gold braid, put on in tiny cofls or stralght lines. The collar may be all of red if the color of the walst will permit 1t. Reversiblo satins are used extensively on winter hats and for linings, fll“lnfi. draper- fes, choux, tea gowns, accordlon-plaited pefticoats, foundations for lace and velvet opera wraps, ete. Among the two-toned ef- fects aro groen ‘and gold, black and gold violet and old rose color, orange and azurine, petunia and reseda and bright cherry Ted and black. Some of the new winter hats look like the summor models reversed. They come down low and flat over the forchead with a mass of trimmings at the back. Very long, nar- row buckles of gold and stecl, or a mixture of both, are seen everywhere on every kind of shape and some of them are #o long that they are put througn the center of & bow and extend over on the crown at the back. The varlety In neckwear has Increased as- tonishingly with the impetus which gold has given to this speclal branch of tashion, Gold brald and black velvet form some of the mokt serviceable stocks, the velvet blas and finis around the edge with a fine gold braid forming the cravat with a knot in front. Inch-wide gold braid is carried around above this and then there are folds of velvet with more fine brald DON’T 4 argue with your KIDREYS. Careful men an women do not wall until they ure flat on thelr backs befor l| they seek some rellet. Have Jou\a pain or dull ache ia hebackorlead? Have you rheumalisn? Are you parv- ous? Do you got dfzzy? A you frrifuble? Are you Ghliged o pags water often during tho day? All these are danger signals which | you do not heed may resul gerlously and — often Bright's disease. To cure Kidney Trouble s te Klil the germs that cawses (he The only antlseptic sickness p end germ destroyer, coupllag salety to the buman system KIDNEY TABLETS CURES — — VODNEY LIV ER AWD N ¥ prepared with bined w 1o roots and purelyand solely table In time the only remedy o0 the kidney germs Formaldehyde y wondeful natiral ® 1o the germ of Kidvey, Liver aod Rladder d| o8 aud theuniversal testimon: roin_thoss sufferers who have been cure has heen y do kill the microbes h n dlseases. xglsta In two "flom the Dr. jcal Co., Chicago, "Bookles malel tree for th DR, CEO. LEININCER'S For-mal-de-hyd INHALER | strength, and when the strain is over her system has received a FACTS ABOUT MOTHERHOOD. By JOHN L. BRIGGS, —(All Rights Reserved.)- The experience of motherhood 18 a trying one to most women and marke distinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one woman fn a hundred s prepared for motherhood or understands how to take care of herself. Of course nearly every woman nowadays has proper medical treatment at time of chlld-birth, but she approaches the experience with an organism unfitted for the trial of shock from which it rarely fully recovers. Following right upon this comes the nervous strain of earing for the child, and a distinct the mother results, There Is nothing wore charming than a happy and healthy mother of children, and indeed child-birth under right conditions need be no hazard to health or beauty. The unexplainable thing is that, with all the evidences of shattered nerves and broken bealth resulting from an unprepared condition, women will persist in going blindly to the trial without getting ready to stand the etrain. It isn't as though the experience came upon them unawares. They have ample time in which to prepare, but they, for the most part, trust to chance change in | and pay the penalty. When a woman realizes that she Is to become a mother, the surest way to get ready for the experience is (o write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lyuu, Mass., aod tell Ler all about her condition. She will get advice from Mrs, Plukham that costs nothing and that will surel) It will tell just exanctly what to do and, if followed, will insure exemption from severe shock and cases make the experience ne: The facts and are vouched for by a great many women who have relled upon Mrs. Plnkham at this critical time, nelp her, in many rly painless, ¢ statements absolute are There 1s no woman who Is so healthy that at the approach of this unusual ‘strain thelr reproductive system does not need strengthening in every possible way, and for this purpose there is nothing in the world so effective ns Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. it In.valn, and no woman who has this trial of strength to pass through can afford to neglect any reasonable precaution. Ier duty to herself, to her husband and to her child demands that she prepare herself fn eve In many homes there is the loncliness of No woman ever relied upon wi hildness wedlock, nearly always It In resulting from some derangeient of the generative system in the mother, is not actual barreuness, but it amouuts to that because there is no child. such cases Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will almost always strengthen and help the mother and make sable of bearing children, There 18 nothing mysterfous In this. Mrs. Pinkham's medicine makes women healthy and strong and vigorous and it prepares the organism for natural duties. Letters from women who have been helped through childhood, who have re- cuperated quickly from the strain and from others who have experienced the Joy of motherhood, which they thought was demed them, are constantly being printed in this paper. These results were brought about by Lydia E. Piokham's Vegetable Compound, the surest remedy for all distinetly feminine ills, the med her feminine clne” that thousands of women publicly pralse. AGUINALDO’S SISTER CAPTURED The sister of Aguinaldo has been captured by Butterick fashions, as pictured in THE DELINEATOR, the famous woman’s magazine. This fact was brought to our notice by a number of subscriptions to THE DELINEATOR from Filipino ladies, sent by the largest book and stationery house in Manila. The list includes the name of the sister of Aguinaldo, the Filipino leader, this lady being one of the first to adopt the smart and becoming gowns of her American sisters. THE DELINEATOR for NOVEMBER—just out is adapted in every way to the nceds of the well-dressed woman, who not only wants to know of the incoming styles, but desires to keep fully informed rcgarding 1 every interest of the home. The leading features o this number are: THE WINTER STYLES Fully and beautifully illustrated, showing eighty of the latest designs from Paris, London and New York, several of these being in colors. The dressmaking article on MILITARY SHOULDERS, which will be the prevailing style this Winter in women’s coats, jackets, eté., gives full directions for obtaining this new squarc-shoulder or military effect, This style accentuates the present athletic waist secured by the taper- ing effect at tha waist line, now so popular with well-dressed women. The Fashions of London, by Mrs. Aria Dress and Gossip in Paris, by Mrs. John Van Vorst The Love Story of the Brownings, by Clara E. Laughlin The Enchanted Ring, a poem by Edith M. Thomas illustrated by J. Allen St. Jokn Pastimes for Convalescing Children, by Lina Beard ts of THE DELINEATOR ‘-r:': “sm"""’o?:.’:'i:".".-' ?)omenlc Subjects; Club Women and Club LII‘.Lé llege News; Girl's Inter- ests and Occupations; Lace Making ; Fancy Stitches and Embroideries. Taken as a whole, the November DELINEATOR is the handsomest and most complete woman's publication ever issued. One Dollar for an Entire Year Single Copies, Fifteen Cents. For sale by all Buttsrick Agg:nts'and Newsdealers, Send One Dollar now and begin with the NOVEMBER number. WOMEN CAN EARN MONEY b taking suhscriptions for o A Postal Card will bring fal particulars. Address Department D. THE BUTTERICK PUBLISHING CO., 7 to 17 West 13th St., New York ——— == —— = = blackheads, enlarged pores and | all affections of the skin speedily A monthly publication full of good things and permanently cured at YOur | tersely told. That you may beceme home, Full informationand book | (Ul q “send dime ~coln oF stampe—fep sample copy. If you've already seen it, you mailed ree JOMN H.WOODRURY 8 NTATE STREET, CHMICAGO want 1t; you'll get It for a yoar If you send & dollar to Ad Sease, 83 FIfth Ave., Chicage, Winsiows s P Has been used for over FIFTY YEAILS b) MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHIL REN WH: ‘l"l U 1ILE TEETHING, with PER | E SUCCESS, 11 SOOTHES the CHILD | OFTENS the GUMS ALLAYS il PAT CURES WIND COLIC edy for DIARRHO 1d by Druggist in ‘every rt of orld. o Bure an k for re. Winslow's Soothing Syrup,” nd take no otaer kind, Tweoty-five cents | ® bottle is the best rem: