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wean eee nseaaahahins $34$36040064564544344454b4b44)b5040 043.30525044554 A Circumstance That May Depend on Which T’other First. a SATURDAY SERMON BY TALMAGE, ™"" al} the elements of usefulness an power except one—courage. If you .only under God give them that you sive them everything. “That word “Courage,” {tly spoken dth compressed lips and atnut grip of ;hand and an Intelligent Nash of the M, the nest apples that ever Deautiful basket of silver network keen appetites, could not be more tive. ; Furthermore, a comforting word ftly istoken is a beautiful thing. No one but “could give the inventory of sick da and bereft homes and bro rts. We ought not to let a day pas it avisit or a letter or a message a & ptayer consolatory. You could call five minutes on your to business; you could leave a half ip earlier in the afternoon and fill a You could brighten ‘one chrysanthcenum. could put a postcript to a letter that try sky, but in everlasting B neighboring street. | There are words which, ftly spoken, janight soothe and emancipate und rescue. to those from whose homes Christ staken to himself a loved one, and the word “reunlon"—not under win- in a place no more out forever.” 80, and beautiful Who cu nd) and yet so tremendous, "Co GLIMPSE INTO BOOKLAND. “s°"%%: iB The HE new century ts ushered in by Givers more or Icas astoni features" in the magazines. heralded the Century's * (dn a faint reminiscent now ted tea et entitled nd "A Strip! the handful of Ee Jengths aheail of any other menag: rte Weading matter that ever came down th pike. And now Lippincotr’s Mogaz heels into line with the announcement | of twelve college stories for 191. twelve foremost seats of learning in the mintry are selected and each story ty) to be representative of undergraduate selife'in {ts author's alma mater. Now ee idem ts excellent und the ieee Ho neues Fapeses Iroom, the reader will feel a dia- renash the a ex of tt te Ives should prove Interesttix i ea TUT Sa MN Hee STIN ERE rill aw he reaches the point where Inatructlye to the world Dortraying :)fe in twelve miniature ye Gistinct worlds, most of which are pumtravelled by the averaxe read Mie bea rom a literary standpoint there are | , a Mmitations. In the first place tt te hard |!" tval #0 portray college Ife In a faxhlon inter- |)" leating to the outside wor iN y story cannot be of lo! ees at large than wor mung At eat it la a mawkish fare qorst It means an carly marriage Eewhich dwarfs the hero's career. Again, ihe escapades such ; hover at reunion dinne an r IY Acceptable In seri the threadbare tale Ch ho wins the foot reliable when failure is Imminent hs neo warded by a handkerc: aye from the grand stand js to show the signs of a \everwork. It will be interes: ‘the mode !n whicn the chosen FUL. definition of home - given by Lady Aberdeen |: ta pacers delivered by her be airecent. meeting at Toronto of Iced Apple Sauce, a them In quar- syrup, Counc!l’of Women. “What ters, peel and one ounce of je something that makes}? then stow until tender; add brown |monds and one of citron cut tn long preveals ttself in the books! nugnr enough to sweeten. Put |atrips, and two ounces of candied } dn tie arrangement of the ition for a guest, In ren, in the oxpre of whipped cream. Put ize it,at once | « nding house can be | meaatre of until ready to use, to the cream before it Mt being, turned from SORY’S TIMELY CARTOON Teddy’s Meeting swith the Mountain Lion. FPPHERE are so many men who have d-meee-t-eeeewe--eeeeeeemeess REV. T. DE WITT TALMAGE. cee eee err ae eee oe oe eo not a land where they can be atruck! . bring the joys of heaven to &/ with dpease, but where the oul. You could send your carriage and | never iaiyn, “1 am ai not Hye an afternoon airing to an invalld | that can de followed by mparation, but from which they shall Ko ts a word of Invitation potent drawing power of that word, + antares there maxims and many others In the ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE. 3O0005300900090000000000 | Ume making us feel that our $600-a-year. short cut ta] ffeedom ts worth far more than are the old Jewel-Incrusted fetterm of the sardonic APPLE SAUCE UP TO DATE. Take apples to sone | stewed through a puree steve, add the juice of an orange; when cold add a@ pint Wife? We cannot! packed around with ice and leave If you prefer a Kittle dissolved golatine may be added ‘le will mtiffen it enough to permit A, SONG OF TOIL. take tho little kiss she gives when I go forth at morn, I take the little farewell wish upon the breezes borne; yt take h tle arms’ caress and in the morning Hght (Go out Into the world of toll, the attle for the right. vils, with your clangor! forges, flerce and far! shall bring the world of hom Where love and goodness are! I lean to Uttle Ups she lifts to my igh Hps of love, © mother-hope that shines that gleam above; roaring clty call, and unto IT Bo. laghit-hed for the stress be- causeachtld heart loves me ao. ng. hammers, with your clatter! BODOG 2098000 O00; Whirl, wheels, and shaft and beam! The light of love shall guide me home From out this shroud of steam! I take the task, T face the toll, I ENTIETH CENTURY MYTHS. AS EXPLODED BY T. E. POWERS. Pubttahed by the Pres Publfihing Company, 63 to @ PARK ROW, New Yor. |Z _Entered at the Post-Ofon at New York as Second-Cisss Mall Matter. i S BRING YouR ; WHAT ARE THE PROSPECTS 4 TRUNK AND Twn tay 3 We ” STAY AWEEK Room ¢€ = FOR A “BLOODY REVOLUTION? ' OR MINUTE z sles om 3 Potato Patch Pingreg, retiring Governor of Michigan, says in FS Fad decors thir Pate ‘ THIS SOFA > his farewell addr WILL HOLD q Unless those in charge and In whose hands leg-|? g See-ene-eneneneone- C2 4-00 Pounds I Mit, isciia: ¢ !lative action {8 reposed change the present system]? 3 ON “MLOODY { of ineqaality there will be a bloody revolution in this 3 } great country of ours fn less than a quarter of a 2 century. 4 n't it? Yet when you read it closely you note how this wily Proplhet Pingree has insured himself against failure. If the revolution “comes off” he can say “I told you so.” ree ‘This sounds oininous, di. PPSeS deem It sweet to be Hound to the labor that {s love for love's fine Hberty; From morning unto eventide, re- membering her I go, Under the bending wheel glides forever to and fro. jing, mills, your clattering chorus, Down where the millions sweat! bare my arms and give my strength And Joy in what I gett I I give and take, and give again, and unto dark am bent eneath the burden of the task for which sweet life ts spent; Lsut, aht the wage so dear to heve, that the little lips that walt, ‘The hearts that ring, the arms that cling, when I unlatch the gate! Clang with your mighty re’ Roar, cities, with your strife! And Goa bo prained for strength to toll For wage of love anid lif —Folger McKinsey News. QOOCOSCOOOOCOOOSOO0CCO0CS: Sees in Baltimore > Need of Cournge Among Men and the Power of Kind Words. a short word, but {ts Influence 1s as long ay eternity, Whether calling In wrong direction or j right direction many have found It tr- rewistible, ‘That word has fled all the places of disalpation and dinsolute- ness, It Is responsible for the abomin- ations that curse the earth. Inquire at the door of prisons what brought the offender there, and at the [door of the almshouse what brought the pauper there, and at the door of the j lost world what was the cause of the Hincarceration, and if the inmates «peak the truth they will aay: "The wort “Come! Come ant drink. and gamble Come and sin at dle. Pronounce that kind of inflection and you t the tolling of all the bells pl brought ua here.” me me of that wor! * when uttered aright! ‘The Gospel we belle In Is a Gospel of "Come!" ‘That word speak all the churches, That wort !s now butlding th es for conquerors and burnishing tnhableant|®2Mnets for kings and queens. ‘That wort {sto wound s0 clearly and tm pressively and divinely that the day Ix advancing when all nations shall re- spond, “We come! We come! And while the upper ateeps toward i God and heaven will be thronged with jescribe tne emed woula ascending, there will not s0 small) fe one wolitary traveller on the road of It is sin and death, apringtide; a reunion vm Fads pressed Story Willers maa liaia aia Man Who Teils You How Not to Fail. ylume are Kood; but why call the work Would not “How to Dinastrously !f You Don't Su 4 saner, If ews euphontous, for such priggish tomes? Since such books ax “Three Million Intaliible Rules for Success’? (vy One of Them) SUM leave a great portion of mankind nresat mie ft not perhaps kK for the better If humanity were to F Rood treative on “How to an Utter F e vers of tales which mingle dukes, hlonesses, milllonalres, diamonds wwy table damask and silver tn . Indiserin awe and Joy ty; a Comedy in Coy. y T 1 Who Heard Something (Harper & ra). Sitting in his 4 per week read with ue + sumptuous neered at mirtment in Belgravia ts “a dungeon,” and tte who lolls about in It ts books as this which nerve the doudle purpose of giving us momentary entree into Eldorado and at the same Sordid Rich. A single chapter will pro- uce almost the same effect as would a [inner invitation from peaple who oc- oupy two or more floors Instead of a neven-roomed fat, kein ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE. a Lurgest Hospital. ow has the largest hospital in with 7,000 beds. There are 900 nurses, and about 116,000 patients are cared for annuaily. PEDO DOPOLOOE DIDO T DS Make a quart of apple enough | Frozen Apple Sauce Pudding. pint when | cut} cherries, Let them get cold, then add to the apple sauce. Add also about dt Ina bowl|/a tablespoonful of brandy, {if you SOS If it doesn’t, he can say that “those in charge” have changed the ” Cartainly Pingree could never be pinned down through phrases so vague. We hear a great deal of shrieking and a great deal more mut-|¢ tering about an impending revolution, about growing restlessness of the “unruly classes,” about growing inequalities, &e. The shriek. ing comes from professional agitators and demagogues. The mut- tering comes from reformers, students of social questions and work- ers among the defective classes. Is there anything in it? “system of inequality tocracy, the great and growing anfaithfulness among the servants of D REAMS OF PLENTY the people, the great and growing arrogance of Privilege. The multiplication of opportunities for wealth has multiplied the energy of greed, has multiplied the tempta- tions of weakness. A vast population, the absorption of the people in their private nffairs, the ability of public servants to shift responsibility for their acts, the shrewdness with which politicians complicate issues—all these tend to prevent the people from correcting abuses. You want to stop a wicked, wasteful and senseless war in tho Philippi “TIL stop the war, but Pl inei- dentally upset prosperity at home and try to debase the dollar.” Mr. MeKinley says: “I'll let the prosperity stand, but incidentally I'll go on fighting in the Philippines and protecting the organized raids of Privilege.” And you had to choose between these two men. The illustration is typical of politics, local, State, national, as wo now know polities in this country. But does that prove an impending “bloody revolution ?” Nevor before were the American people so free ver before was the suffrage so universal or! Un Never before were there so many enlight-; seerereeeeneenerenen s Mr. Bryan. sa, 08. “Oh, say! wouldn't I ike de stub!"* IN SIGHT. Re not too modest. If you've worth You should not hide it from men’s sight. The purest dlamonda do not shine eas they're brought unto the Nght. a wult TION, By no means. as they are to-day, re so honestly re jeeeeeeeeeeees ened, capable electors, eager to promote “the} “I don't Ike these campaign coltec- | * ; ons. There's only one thing tn m: ar te greatest good of the greatest number.” Never| juugment properly aseoclated with pass. He nin LEADER before was the newspuper press so alert, vo in-|!& around the hat. She (pensively)—Ah, well! What Is wealth, after all, but the mere difference nd that Is band.” between income and expenditure? He—So ts debt. FASHION IN THE PROCESSION OF THE AGES. LACKING, deere eee eremenene ds dependent, so able and anxious to inform the people upon their public affairs. These things mean freedom. Freedom means no “bloody revolution.” Why, then, this talk of “bloody revolution?” Why this alarm lest a people should decide te try to do by violence that which they could actually do peacefully through the ballot? Bee and Bryans and ‘Tom Watsons and “Bloody-Bridles” Waites, and the like—are even further out of touch with the great mass of the American neople than are the McKinleys and Hannas and Rockefeilers and Car- lisles and Clarks. The American people passionately hate injustice and inequality, So do the sincere among the anti-plutocracy agitators. But the American people have no sympathy with wild and crazy schemes for alleged “reforms.” And these agitators prop clldnge an the ear, ries and remedies as threaten worse evils than those which they : = HARRIET HUBBARD AYER: Wise Coungel to Beauty Seckers. rd & “ sg KK Right Ways and Means to t A Repentant Peroxidian, Dear Mra. Ayer: Kindly publish a recipe for darkening the hair, I hd jet black hatr and turned tt a very light brown. I wish to try and get {t black again, but cannot afford to keep using halr dye. JENNIE, HE way of the peroxid! is ways a troublesome one, Your ex- perience Is that of every other woman who looks too often at the per= oxide bottle. I give you a slmple dye, although 1 do not advise the use of home-made halr dyes, I am constantly getting letters from correspondents who want to per- form miracles by the ald of a simple and use the most active opponents of plutoeraey—the Pingrees has shown such In the future? only sueh quacke- phy We not expect something ike 4 might or might uot cure. The American people are fundamentally devoted to order, sta- bility and common sens The agents of the plutocracy are in touch with this fundamental instinct of the people. And so long as personal freedom and material prosperity are not seriously curtailed by the plu- toeracy you may rest assured that the American people will not go crazy. They will not upset a public administration, however plutoeratie, and install in its place wild men with nothing in their favor but a hatred of that inequality for which they offer no sensible, promising cure. ‘The Bryans and the Pingrees and the other extremists attribute y of the virtue of the people. “Are we not {grow the ha OTHER case Where the he in this hing PLUTOCRACY, Pree e-e-ene eee enene: 3: much, .GRAC Stamford, Conn. HIS is the formula for the liquid hitener: One quart water (pre- viously boiled and strained), alco- their defeat to the dec Sretsin CaBER SRA AT er IGE cheap lotion or formula. : hol, thirty drops: oxide of zine, one friends of the people?” they say. “Don't we lie awake 0” nights to] "Rite are some ample cosmetics that|_ HABRIET HUBBARD AYER. | juice: pichioride of mercury, elght a othe oraey 2 hy. 0 o) ject us? arly glycerine, twenty drops. Take uurse the plutoeraey 4 Why, then, do the people reject us? Clearly are really useful, but a hair dye ts not| four ounces of the w nd heat” WISDOM OF BABES, iG RANDPA, what makes you look in my opinion one of them. You might as well attempt to pur- chase a simple and elegant cheap seal- it to boliing; dissolve the bichloride of mercury In this hot water and add the MIX the zine and glycerine to- becanse the people are decaying !’ Not at all. The best evidence of the sanity, the intelligence, * asked a little three- eres ers is their refusal to regard convulsions as a year-old miss, "Ain't you got| skin coat. If {t can be done I am not ina! utr the lurger portion the virtue of the people ist regi 8 AT io arins in your aware of it. of the quart of water in; atir, then add cure for acold, their refusal to regard fanatics and cranks as an im- : Walnut Dye for the Halr.—Four] all the d snide of mercury “Oh, mammat" exclaimed four-year. old Flossie, as she observed the moon In {te second quarter, “come ani look at the moon; half of It is pushed into the ounces of walnut skins, beaten to a pulp, to which is added pure alcohol 16 ounces, let It stand elght days and strain, Ther apply am any other dye. and nd shake before us th small, soft velvet sponge, net alwaya Maula with a provement upon capable, if corrupt, public officials. ‘The people know that there are evils that can be and must bo corrected. ‘The more educated, the more enlightened and the more] sky and the other half tw sticking out." Mai © of the Scalp, Pe roars = 3 » freedom and democracy-loving they become, Dear Mrs. Are * feeeeer nnn s +]. ommy, aged fe, had teen buny wnit-| "Years pubiigh a recipe for enrentenes {t QUERIES Ax ANSWERS WHAT THE the more clearly they see these evils and the] tling and managed to raise a bilster On| yalaness, The hair falls out in quanti- PEOPLE AI . = R his hand which caused a eight break In{ ties and is very dry, but there 1 preity © 010-0 +0 eneneremenee > ITING Fo more carefully they study them. the skin. Rugning to his mother, he] te" and . areas oe showed It to her and sald: "Mamma, I But they want real remedies—sane, wiege T'ea beginning’ to wear, out esieits They want true leaders—honest, capable, conserva- Please let me know Senator Hanna's full first name. HH. L. and M. OU need scalp ‘acuiee to re- store the circulation. No treatment We Are In the Twenticth Century, for threatencd baldness, in my opinion, compares in beneficial results health-giving. : “Did they sing any pretty songs at tive, Bunday-school?”" asked a mother of her ee A : + litttie foursyoar-ald daughter upon her re. | With proper scalp massage. What century are we Iviig a And they will wait until the true leaders and the true remedies ttle foun po eal w@lilINetlarow: poles SACK. appear. “Only one,” replied the little mins. "It | Dear Mrs. Ayer: No. er was something about Groenland’s ico] 1 am twenty-one years oft and MY! dry Waten got 4 capital? If so, what hair ts only about eight or nine Inches long, and it seema to be getting shorter (it certainly does not grow any), It doca not fall out, and I wash it thoroughly cream mountain: there's un old Ddiack sult of clothes Pea sls xa | about the house I could use that, The poor feller you gaye the cake to yeste: da tts name?) M. A. M., Summit, N, J. Should Serve Other Ladies First. Ata luncheon or dinner should the walt~ 'TRUZ ENOUGIL “Every barver, {t seems to me, tall too much.” Papa—Well, Willle, have you been good boy today? use Hquor, Put into a freezer and freezo for about ten minutes, Then atir Into It a ping of stiMy whipped cream, Pack all, In @ mould) with ice and salt to stand for about two § is whipped. the, mould, +) ber ta shi day was my brother, [= MISCALLED, “To speak of the ‘bonds of marriage’ {s hardly using the right term.” — _ vhat'e wrong. spout I ier fod Sih “Oh, well, you couldn't expect a bar- ye a man unless he has a lit- Smait Willte—Did you ask mamma? Papa—Why should I ask her?) Don't you"know whether you have been wood er not? , Small Willie—Yex, real mamma's idea differs. trom. once a week with castile voap and no. Mttle washing soda to'keep It light (it 4$s.a light brown), I brush it every night ind morning, and I ace no reason why ae "thet nage grow. x baxe Me it singed dressers, but it’ does. not je aniy, wr seals aire, : ress Wait on the hostess tirst or on the Jadles Invited? A SUBSCRIBER. tomary in Most-Co iy Not thst tle chin. ————_ IN MOURNING, Mre,- Houskeep—I suppose you want a Leap pe ake. 100. vf