lrn'Srorm-tntlycrd.No fits r narrow HM after first day' use of Dr. Kline's Ortat KarreBes torn. 2 trial bottleand treatise tree Du HH.KxiK'. Ltd.. m Atch St.. Phi la., ? The owl mar have a reputation for wis dom, and yet he never looks on the brigu. side of life.. - -' - , V Allen's Foot-Ks. It is the-only cure for. Swollen, Smarting, Tired Aching. Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns arid Bunions. Ast for Alleys Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Cures while you walk. At ail Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Don't accept anv substitute. Sample sent Fbee. Address.Allen S. Olmsted. LeKcy. N.Y. Capt. Richard Pearson Hobson, of osculatory fame, ha been plnk-teaed and dined lavishly by society in San Francisco. At. one dinner, described by a local paper at length, "exquisite bridesmaid roses formed the centre piece and pink-shaded candelabra, with quantities of pink and white tulle, combined to make a particularly pret ty and pleasing ensemble." Tiso's Cure is the host medicine we ever use! for all affections of throat and lungs. Wat' O. Endslkt, Yauburen; Ind.', Feb. 10, 190U. Tb?- fellows who are adepts at making love don't make the best husbands. iNaHair? "My, hair was I falling out very fast and Ij was greatly alarmed. I then tried Ayer's Hair Vigor and my hair stopped falling at once." Mrs. G. A. McVay, Alexandria, O. g A SER410N FOR SUNDAY A DISCOURSE FOR GIRLS DELIVERED BY REV. DR. W. R. HUNTINGTON. The trouble is your hair does not have life enough. Act promptly. Save your hair. Feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor. If the gray hairs are beginning to show, Ayer's Hair Vigor will restore color every time. $1.00 a bottle. All drc!sts. If your druggist cannot supply you, send us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Be sure and give the name of your nearest express office. Address, . J. C.AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. Grandma is Generally Right Take advantage of her vast experience and ask her what is " best for your Liver, uauey ana liiooa I roubles. We think she will recommend DR. THACHER'S LIVER AND BLOOD SYRUP because she has tried it and knows it cures. Been on market 50 years and is reliable. You trv it 60c and $1 00 at Rood druggists. Dr. Thacher's Liver Medicine (dry), 25 cents. Yes, your druggist, seils it. Be sure it's Dr. Thacher's, though. Write our Consultation Department, explaining symptoms.. and receive free conncential advice. THACHEK MEDICINE COMPANY. Chattanooga. Tnn. I ""w. lm!,-L-.. MMNS Tabules1 Doctors find A good prescription For mankind. tdim Mk I The B-cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle (price 60 cents) contains a supply for a year. viz?. TO Constipated use 8S "It's Reliable"; been in use since 1844. M It's Effervescent M ; just the thing for hot . weather. " Il's.Non-irrUnnf; contains no narcotic or dangerous drug. "It's Pleasant " a nice Remedy for nice people. II Relieve Cnnslipation , Headache, Biliousness Sour Stomach. Iwligestion, in tne most effective, common sense way. At Drugsists. ZOc. and gl.OO, or by mail f.m THE TARRANT CO.. 21 Ja.y Street, New- York. The Preacher Describes Under What Con ditions It Is Possible For a Woman to Becomt In Very Deed and Truth, a Xady Forever Be Gentle and Dignified New York City. The Rev. Dr. Will iam R. Huntington, rector of Grace Church, preached recently a sermon to a fashionable school for girls which has attracted much attention, and by request it is here given. The text was chosen from jsaiah xlvii: 7: "Thou saidst, I shall be a lady forever." Dr." Huntington said: I quote our prophet in this fragmentary way for the sake of vividness. The briefer the text, the more likely it is to be. re membered. But if. under present circum stances, we would do justice, to the man and to his thought." some heed must be given to what has gone before and to what follows. Taken by themselves the words sound as if they must have been, in the first instance, addresed to a woman; but they were not. The aspirant after an everlasting ladyship was no woman at all, but a city an-ancient city, a city opulent, and superb, Babylon the great. Emboldened like ancient Rome by its military conquests, intoxicated like medi eval Venice by its commercial prosperity, confident like modern London in the pos sesion of resources which seemed measure less, this queen city of Chaldea had come to think of itself as invincible and indes tructible. "House of Eternity" was the name it gave to one of its temples. "Foun dation stone of heaven and earth" ran the vain-glorious appellation of another. Car dens and parks, the city had in abundance. A mighty hridge which crossed and a tun nel which underran the river Euphrates were amonpr its engineering triumphs. The circuit of the waf.s, lofty and broad al most beyond belief, was between fifty and sixty miles. But there was a man in Jerusalem whom none of these things greatly moved in the sense of stupefying or alarming him. The man's name was Isaiah and liis father's name was Amoz. When people came to him with their panic talk about the big ness of Babylon and the littleness of Jerus alem, he betrayed no apprehensions on the contrary, he spoke up and harangued Babylon with much plainness of speech. "Sit thou silent," he cried, "and get thee into darkness, O daughter of the Chal deans, for thou shalt no more be called the lady of kingdoms. Thou saidst 1 shall be a lady forever therefore hear thou, thou that art given to pleasures, that d welles t careless1' these two things shall come to thee in a moment, in one day, the loss of children and widowhood. They shall come upon thee in their perfec tion for the multitude of thy sorceries and for the great abundance of thine en chantments." Thus sternlv, almost, fiercely, Isaiah, son of Amoz. addresses mighty Babylon. He speaks of her as to a woman of rank whose pride and indocility are presently to prove her overthrow and to transform her pleas ant palaces into ruinous heaps. She leans upon her advantage of high station all un aware that the staff is too brittle for the weight. Forgetful of the duties which con dition privilege, she fancies that old time prerogative and the accumulated prestige of many generation will be her safety. God's prophet determines to shake her out of this illusion, to compel her to open' her eyes to the hard fact and he does it, as we have een. With the test thus well in hand, we proceed. Under what conditions is it pos sible, either for a city or for a woman, to become. . in very deed and: truth, a lady forever? This is the question to which I shall ask you to bend your thought to night, and whether v.e nave respect to the week which ended yesterday or to the week which has been entered upon to-day 1 cannot, but account the topic a .timely one. It may seem to be comparing small things with great to name the commencement week of a scaool for girls in the same breath with the commemorative week of a city which has lived through the fourth part of a thousand years, but, perhaps, before we are done, my boldness in ven turing thus to couple the two may be for given me. - Of the sorts of ladyship of which I have made mention., that to which communities and that to which individuals may attain, we will look at civic ladyship first. With I civic -ladvshin we associate those qualities wnicn win ior cities an aaminng love. Physical strength, riches, commercial en terprise will give a city lordship. That is one thing; but ladyship is quite another. For the compelling of respect lordship may suffice a city, for the winning of af fection something of iai.-ship is essental. j How about the Lady of the Hudson? Has I she any better ground for counting' upon the perpetuity of her ladyship than had the Lady of the Euphrates? Can we trust her any more implicitly .than Isaiah trust ed Babylon when she says confidently VI shall be a lady forever. That depends upon the relative measure of importance which the city, in the 'long run, shall as sign to the treasures of the market as compared Avith the treasures of the soul. I am using the word "soul" in a large and comprehensive sense. Religion and religious interests are of course foremost in my thought, since, without a due re- fard to these no city can permanently ive: but when I speak of the treasures of the soul as essential to the city that would adventure ladyship I have in mind all of those precious tilings- that go to make up the idealistic as contrasted with the ma terialistic side of. human life Righteous ness? Yes. Worship? Yes; but beside these, poetry, letters and whatever else there may be that ministers beauty to the eye of harmony and melody to the ear. These last are what make the treasures of the soul. These, mingled in due propor tion, give to a municipality what suver and gdld and negotiable securities of them- eelves can never give that indescribable quality which I have ventured to call civic ladyship. . The prevailing note during the past week has been the note, of self-congratulation. Whatever fiags and flowers could do to' convince - neonla throueh the eve. or speech and song to persuade. them, through the ear has been attempted. It has been jubilate throuzhont. as was proper enough m connection wun Diruiaay icsiivnies, and yet there is another side to it all. The statistics 01 the city s trade are marvel ous, but what of the inventory of its spiritual possessions and the roster of its great men; liow many poets and now many seers, bow many composers and -now discard it altogether, caref ally , avoiding the use of it m common conversation, is not seldom taken: to be a mark of Rood breeding. All do not go to this extreme and. yet the -number ot those who would prefer to be spoken of and addressed a "women," rather than as "ladies," has been steadily increasing for the past twen ty yeas, and this increase, I think I am Bafe in saying, has been in fixed ratio to our progress as a people in cultivation and refinement. I venture to account this niv unfortunate state of things, since "lady"' is a-word which the language cannot lose without sore impoverishment ftnd one for which the vocabulary of every day inter course has no synonyms. "Lady," be it observed, is a title, not a generic word, necessarily covering all the members of one sex; and as a title it be longs only to those who have a right to claim it. Now, who are they who, in point of fact, have a right to claim it? In monarchial countries there is no difficulty in finding an answer to this question. In England, for ' -example, the Heralds' Of fice, to which such matters -are intrusted, can and will give you a definition in black and -white, clear-cut u.id unmistakable. A "lady," by Eng.ish law, may be the wife "of a man above the rank of knight and below that of duke. The title dso belongs to the daughters oi; noblemen not below the rank of earl and is, given by courtesy to the wives of knights. Let that pass for jungland, but what of ladyship in America, where no such sharp divisional lines Jare drawn by the pencil of authority? Here, thank God, we have a much worthier -definition of the word and more satisfactory interpretation of the thing. Ladyship, under a democracy, means and can mean only one thing, womanhood at its best. ' Not all woman hood is womanhood at its best any more than all manhood is ma; ood at its best would that it! were. And what are the characteristics of womanhood $t its best? What are the i tokens by which it is au thenticated? We cannot greatly differ in opinion upon this point. fcSurely of these characteristics dignity is one, gentleness is another, fortitude is a third and sym pathy completes the cluster. It were un reasonable, of course, to expect the full ness of each one of these tour traits in any singJe personality, no matter how rich ly endowed by;, inheritance or carefully matured by training. And yet it is beyond question that some tincture of each one must be fouad present in a woman before, under democratic conditions, her claim to ladyship can be accounted valid. Dignity-rthereA are a thousand, imita tions of it, counterfeits beyond number, but how wholly admirable is the genuine article, what "an excellent thing in wom an!" Not by aping dignity do we become dignified. Aloofness is not dignity, hau teur is not dignity, stiffness is not dignity, a pompous manner and a brocaded sty.e of speech these are not aignity. True dig nity is not of ice, it is of flame. A certain delicate and fiery nimbus which circles the sanctuary of personality" to safeguard it ' from intrusion and encroachment. "Their dignity," exclaims an old Hebrew pro phet, giving us the whoe thing in a nut shell, "their dignity shall proceed of them, selves." Dignity, is reconcilable with alf forms of occupation, even the most men tal. It consorts with many qualities, al though with vanity it is reluctant to walk, and with immodesty it will have nothing to do. Immodesty is the sin acainst pro portion, its very iiame so signifying, and as the philosophic emperor remarks in his meditation!.. "There is a proper dignity and proportion to be observed in the per formance of every act of life." Hence to do anything out of measure and'in excess is undignified. f ; Then as to genfioncjs. cir second attri bute oC womanhood at its best, what shall we say of gentleness? Can we sav anv thini better or truer than that it "is the child, the direct offspring oi; dignity. The truly dignified can scarcely be thought of as, the ungentle, for here again that ques tion of proportion comes in, and rough ways and boisterous talk stand self-con-demncdr-Few things indeed can we so ill afford to spare out of the daily intercourse of life as woman's gentleness. And this is only the more true the noisier the world becomes.' With life punctuated for us by the shrieks of steam whistles, the rattle of the chariots of iron, a ad the strokes of all manner of gongs, how restful, how healthful, how reinvigorating are the ac cents of gentleness! Ah, my dear young friends, whatcvert else you forget to be. remember to be gentle. An anxious fear in the hearts of manv thouorhtful npnnV .1 . - . -a .1 r-t -- icar wnicn personally 1 do not share, but of Avhieh it is just as well to take note, is that . out of all this contemporary struggle of woman for a complete independence, this duplication orj her part of as much of man's work as is ijliitab.e, there may come eventually an impairment of the worldV total stock of gentleness. Let us be misers here. The tide of this sweet irraee is npvpr at the flood.. There is no nerii of anv over flow. We need to treasure evrrv drov. there is. As to fortitude, fl chose the word with care, wishing to mark off from courage in general that special form of this virtue which lias found frequent and splendid il lustration in the annals of womanhood. Courage, of the sort which qualifies one "to annic delight or battle," to head storming parties and to volunteer on forlorn hopes is not expected of women, and. for that matter, is not so common amont; men as men would like to have it thought, but of that other and more praiseworthy fearless ness, which, without the excitement of con flict, is able Datientiv to suffer, nersistpnt ly to endure, in this Christlike virtue; it is possinie it has ten thousand times been shown to be possible that women should excel. Writh the aroma of this virtue wholly absent no woman's character even so much as approximates perfection. rut it is not enough to be able uncom- p.aininttiy to suffer have we learned to suffer with? That is what sympathy means . .ff: .it." ' i 1 cuucniig wim lememuer tnac sympa thy won the last of the four blossoms we set out to twine into our wreath. It does not matter how well bred a woman may be in other respects, it does not matter how varied her accomplishments, intellect ual -or artistic, if tender heartedness. the power to enter quickly and deeply into the feeling of others, if this be wholly absent, it 13 idle to talk about "charm, it simply is not there. It is this insistence unon sympathy, as a necessary ingredient of true womanhood that renders the Chris tian type so infinitely superior to the old classic type whether or maid or matron. That a woman can look on composedly at a bull fight is the opprobrium of Spanish civilization, dui mere was a time when not in one corner of the Mediterranean exclusively, but all over the Latin world women called ladies could both tolerate A. P. WOOWEY, f' Tonsorktl Artltt, door to j Port Office. lUzor boning to perootiou. j also repair ahoea and oan guaranty uy work.- ; Just try mo. : 3 LABOR WORLD. . . .. . There are 750 trades unions In Iowa with a total membership of 75,000. j There are nearly G50.000 j women dressmakers in the United Kingdom, i Kansas needs at least 25,000 men i. id 4000 teams for the, wheat harvest. Massachusetts in 1869 was the first State to establish a bureau of labor statistics. ; I Union iron molders at Dayton, Ohio, have received an increase in, wages of jc per cent. . . r ""arm laborers in Montana have fcujed a union' and demand $2.50 a day of nine hours. i j Telephone linemen at Alexandria. Intl., have received an increase; of twenty-five cents a day. i I Quarrymen at San Francisco. Cnl.. will receive an increase of twenty-five cents' a day on September 1. r i t Carpenters in Austria work ten!, to eleven hours a day for, an average Weekly wage amounting to $4 and $5. Unskilled employes of the packing houses in Omaha, Neb., numbering over 21,000 have been given increased wages. ' ; Harness makers in the Birmingham (Eng.) district have refused to submii their demand for increased pay to arbi tration. i j Strikers in two of the big shoe shop? at Brockton, Mass., won most of tbr demands they made, others being sub mitted to arbitration: ; Iron workers employed on State con tracts in Holland are paid eight cents an hour, about one-fifth of the rate paid in this country. j ! Carpenters at Wheeling, W. Va af ter a six weeks' strike, have been granted their demand for an eigh :-houi day with no increase in pay. The longest strike on record is not yet ended. The 2800 men and boys em- J4r '0 YEAR J EXPERIENCE Trade Marks DestoKS Copyrights &c Anrone sending a kerh and deicrlptlon mi miicklv ancertpin our opinion free whetr.fcr a invention omDMy pjitentjibl. Communicj tioim ltHctlr eonflrtenMaL Handbook on I'Atent bent. free. Oldoat rrency for securiiiMtenM(. Patents taken throub ifunn Sl Co. rccelv tree Mi notice, wltbout cbrre, in the Scientific American. A handsomely U1trated weeklr. T,rvet ?ir oulattou of anv scientific lonrnal. Terms 3 u year: four rnohtlia, fl. Sold by ail -ewdalerf mM& Co 36,Prfiad'KewYoriJ UriTif fi Office fav t' Waslilnarton, D t 8ItnatIon.v USv " CsoX-Kesping, BosInesSi PHONOGRAPHY, e-Writing elegraphj . ddms WILBUR R. SMITH, LEXINGTON, ICY., , JFor circular of his famous and responsible GOUUERGIAL COLLEGE OF KY. UNIVERSE Awmrded Sledml mt World' Exposition. RefeM to thotiBands of gradnatcs in positions. Coat of Fall Bnslnea Conrw, including Toi tion, Books and Board in family, about 90. SurthandtTTpe-Wrianer, and Tilegraphy, Specialties. VThe Kentacky Unirersitr Diploma, under seal, awarded graduates. Literary Course free, if desired. Ma Tmcstlon. Enter now. Graduates successful. la order to have vow le&ert reach , addrtse only, WILBUR R.MITH. LEXINGTON. KV 0E MONEY 'g row iifornia TeXa Via St. Louis WARREN J. LYNCH. W.p DtP!, THE OFFER AGENTS nr FIRMS . . . , nn wire ana Burglar proof Safoa eil t lght.WCltj or Country. ft A BIT A I OUTFIT FREE. NO heeded. ployed In Lord Penrhyn's slate quar- o gmonef WRITE FOR CIRCULARS faJ ilea, in Wales, went out two and a half potoan-lCsltaloeue'freoon application. f Sewing Machines we manufactS ? ALPINE SAFE & CYCLE JCtt yeara aero, ana tne settlement or tee strike is now a question in British party politics. f SPORTING BREVITIES. New York harness Worses won ttie three races at Prospect Park, Balii niorc, Md. ' j Yale and Harvard 'rarsitj- eights have been beaten in practice spurts by freshmen crews. - It' is reported that the race horse r"m Paul has been purchased by 15. V. iichardsoii, of Philadelphia, for fSOOCi. The track to be laid out at Puiiey by Automobile. Club of Great Britain have a circuit of seven miles ind ;i ilf. i The mpmbers of the "Cornell trn-!c .earn have elected Lawrence T. Ketch 11m, '04, of Elmira, N. YM captaiis for next year. ; 1 The crack English polo team will not visit America this year. It is still pos sible, however, that a substitute team may be sent over. ; Alan Keunadny, the title holder, was beaten by M. Olyphant, of Princeton. In the first round for the New .lersey golf championship at Baltusrol. ; Edwin Clanp, 1901. or St. Paul. Minn., has been elected Chairman of the Yale University track team. Cinj)p is the intercollegiate champion hurdler. The annual golf tournament between graduates and undergraduates at Princeton. N. J., was won by the un dergraduates by the score of thirty-tw to fourteen. I I Irish Lad won the P.roadway Staled and Broomstick continued In his'lunv beaten career by his victory in the Great American Stake, at Grav'eseud, New York City. t j E. It. Thomas recent purchase, IIer mis, was beaten in an over-night han dicap at Gravesend. New York City which was won by Dublin in time equaling the track record. f The American Jockey, Charley - Van Dusen, won the Austrian Derby : of 100.000 kronen at Vienna, riding the fa-i vorite Berevoelgy, owned by M. Bias-; kovitz, a wealthy Hungarian. j ; OIKCIKATI.0- prices before you purchase any S THE ntW HOME SOWING UACHUi OKAUGK. M.M """""111! axes. BanFranciMo.CiL i.u.. waa,a- BMW i BOYS and T ? sn GIRLS, EARN A BICYCLE. You can have one of m 'A liARD" Juvenile Hi... fry selling our boubchniii - --I-VVKU- I uen wuiui' wr roanuracturi1- Tpn Y..- .""ja uu we give huh wuevt k.i jnemiuni for sellin-' . , reixam Bwaw oc our goods.. The ,- AitBC" ki rst-ca.ss,npt.. ua.Lt! cuuu n wneei, i( l-Mn.framp 1 .Hnv. i-li- tv'ii Kaa1 K1 A in ...... : . . , '.J. crung turwp-iorgeaj, nicxei-piateu nan ilt hor. rarintr saldlA. snrnokptn a) And fl i'.in . . . - . . . ' . , , . v - . v "'Hf IWl-l nauusomeij rnnmnieu usrs (wen or maroon ana aecoraTiea; 6peual colors to orce m in riM fin in lnorian u n i inrMrrnnntpnnia mm rnar vnn 1 fs yaan ro n&i ava ottmi .a.. tt- . , tbis wheel, guarantee It six months and pay the freight. Our " Automatic CarpttstrSr, fifty tacks per minute. The Colombia Tack Poller and Ryal Dust Ueaterllatiis' gents size, In. frame, 28 la. wheels. Strictly high grade, which we give as a premium or sell direct. Write at once for full par ticulars, as sow Is the time to take orders for the coming season. THE GODDARD & ALLEN CO.8oe State Street, Beloit, Wis, winnnnn mm Dim w!v 9 MfiD ; up. A Farm Library cf unequalled valne Practical, Up-to-date, Concise an Comprehensive-Han, somely Printed and Beautifully Illustrate. By JACOB BIGQLE r4o. 1 BIGQLE HORSE BOOK' AM about Horses a Common-Sense Treatise, with mr 74 K4usiraucas; a standard work. Price, 50 Cents. No. 2 BIGGLE BERRY BOOK All about growing Small Fruitsread and learn bow; contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of all leadinf ' varieties and 100 other iUustrations. Price, 50 Centta, No. 3BIGGLE POULTRY BOOK All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in existence; teljs everything; ; with23 colored life-like reproduction cf aU the principal breeds; with 103 other illustr auaa Price, 50 Cent. No. 4 BIGGLE COW BOOK All about Cows and the Dairy Business ; having IP sale: contains 8 colored life-like reproductions of ead breed, with 13a other illustrations Price, so'Ccsts. No. 6 BIGGLE SWINE BOOK Just out. All about Hogs Breeding. Feedraft, But ery. Diseases, etc. Contains over 60 beautinil ball tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Cents. Thf BIQQLE BOOKS are unique.origlnal.uscfuiotiDfvtf j uung use mem 60 pr actical. sosensiu. aalnjr n enormous sale East. West, Not th "J T SS'r very one who keeps a Horse, Cow, uo? sf X Chicken, or grows Small Trultsught to send ngn -FARM JOURNAl Is your paper, made for mi n4 m . micRt Tt is 21 ;JAUlne ohithe-nail-thbfead,-tuit-after-You-havMjHrtt jtt..ua nnDef)in the Plague of Wolves in Russia, j As in Austria and Hungary, so- in Russia, the past winter will be re membered for the vast quantities! of wolves which came out of the fores ta and mountains and preyed on the vil lages. In one district In Eastern Russia over 16,000 head of cattle were lost. In the governments of Novgo rod, Tver, Olonetsk, Archangel and in Finland it was necessary from1 time to time to call ou the soldiers to round them up and shoot them ddwn. Thousands were disposed of In this way. ( . I: """"vwu KIMHuq AliP OnCAWSr wmiin'" VW worldthe biT. irn;7tVrd State America tuivingoveuicaieada-b my ONE of tbe BIGGLE B00KS4 en the FARM JOURNAL iaydrf'bf. W tad wffl be sent Ifj ww-vwKrw.anaeINtoe8 r SSSEveryDay Can bo easily in ado with oar Well Augers & Drills One man and one horse required. W t i pro uu omy lamers ot im noin weu coring and ilock-Orilliag KacbinA. Many of oar oniloaen maice fvom S80 to S4.0 a dar. Xoo aod Circulars 1'UES. Addreia. - L00R11S MACHINE CO., TIFFIN, OHIO. LULi v.lfttGUT ctniG, A New Vegetable Remedy. r i...vi l uts, rwiuia ana cores. , .WAIiO.NAL CANCER MEDICINE COMPANY, So. 23. many artists, how mauv scholars and di- even ,ficelJ dfJ8ht m the "heddmg ; vines, how many philosophers and states- of innocent biood. , j . ... J 1 . 1 1 f .1. . What has rlLancrpfl air this? flnW -.np answer to that question is possible. Jesus ! Christ has changed all this. - To Him we! GCER men has this community produced in the course of its two hundred. and nity years of oraanized existence: riay. ot those .whom we recall as having come under one ' i " it I J 1 1 or anotner oi mese neaus, now many nave been of first rank, how many even of sec ond rank, wnen the complete census of the great of old is taken into account: These, perhaps, aie humbling reflections, but thev are wholesome. It is by count of heroes, not by count of heads, that a city's place in the final list of honors is to be. determined. Whether this city of mag nificent opportunities is destined to accom- plisn ladyship remains to be seen. The balance trembles. .In what senfec it is open "to you pirl graauates or tins passing year, dreaming your early dreams of what success in life may signify, in what tense is it possible for you to attain ladyship forever? Before attempting to answer the Question, let us icar our minds ns completely as may be of preiuuice ana misappvenension. ' xiiQ v:oru iaoy nas latien ot jti years. (the mores the pity' somewhat into dis- vfput.2 ' Claimed as a riarht by the many. me us,ie nas come 10 ue Jijntiv esteemed as a. juiwicge uy liic lew. in lact, so cheap is it accounted nowadays that to owe it that to-day not on'y disnity aaid fortitude' (stoic virtues as well as Chris tian) not only. dignity and fortitude, but also gentleness and sympathy are recog nized as necessary ' leatures ot all true ladyship. 'jy But who is sufficient for these thinrs? With the standard fset o high, the tests made so severe, who shall pass? J An, my young triends, how glad Iam '. that this is Whitsunday, the feast day of ; the Holy Ghost; for Whitsunday points us -to the secret of Dower, and hands over to f us the talisman . of success. It is by the j strenzth of God that womanhood st.nirrW uwwaru 10 its nenection. - ne ftcpa of cnivlry gave to the Virgin Mary the titie of -our lady." Judged by some standards ' ot jaaysmp nothing could seem more in appropriate, but judged by the true stand- ird nothing could be more just. 4 "And Mary said. Behold tho Y, -irir: or the Jvprd. be it -unto me (pnpi)mn Thy wortl." Catch that -smi-if nA i fin e Granted unto eaeh. nn -if t-o..,- women, to become lady forever' yat forever and ever. -n . I lME8"t"'"ANUOKi;0RH,SHnBRHAWvWHERgpn r5 a, 1 :; I vw raeceaa In tha nait Thu fc - 7J. r;rr? V Qe BUUoa DoUank fZ I ; S n I I I Jp""0 aa we bare a urter of aillUoa utUflMi pi ia u by tkm jt f . fri 1 ,x-w f 6S2H2S5 tin-- " III t ? a. wawKHBUfli,wBieB comet IVC Vsl i 5 ni L?.rtlT&?2.r 1 .J Particulars of theCornh onvi 5 r O Vjf A riB n r AL A l.TT1 ecnrB a Cornish Piaroor Orean fS i U .rW Za ramuus CORNISH PLAN VvW-m CnnBFBS?in' "iUlbl eatalogae b eeaV ... w. n i. . vaajUMS -H Jr. M:r- A prompt reyponso to thfa ndvertlsft. rnent wilt secure a nitfnnwo t m on the list pncea as qnoted in mr isqq uouarr ru ef iastrameau tram u .v ttllUona of ... . uom tola the pan ft sun. . EST i r-W 'hit . lT7 au.dr mwmsm