MOW Don't forget when you order starch to get the best. Get DEFIANCE. No more "yellow looking no more cracking or doesn't stick to the iron. It gives satls faction or you get your money back. The cost is 10 cents for 16 ounces of tne best starch made. Of other starches you get but 12 ounces. Now don't forget. It's at your grocers. ruNLFACTLRED OV THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO., OMAHA. NEB. CHAMPION TRUSS lit? ?g Vh. A.k Vwir -hy-l-1:n- A-It.-. H"KI.KT rKKK. Fbilad.lphi Traw Co.. bl locust St., Fails., Pa. EDUCATIONAL. NOTRR DAME. INDIANA. TI LL COl'KSFS IN Claries, Letters. F.co nnnrici and History. Journulismu Art. Science. Pharmacy, I -aw , Civil. Mechanical and Elec trical t:nxincerinz. Architecture. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Courses. Kimhii Free to sTl students who ha v. cora-plrt-d the su!i reiifl l"t admission into the Sorhomot. Junior or Seiaor Year of any of the Cflleuixte Cohki. kmims to Kent. mrilrrnt rhprze to stnilcnts twir seventeen preparing for Collegiate Courses. A limited number of Can.li'lates for the Kccle iu4tir..l !.-! tiriH r-e received at special rates. St. I;d ward's llall. fur bo under 13 Tears, is onivin' in the rompleteness of its rqnirmrnL 'I he fXXh Year will open September 8. I90J. Catalogues I ree. Address P. O. Hoz 256. KBV. A. MOkklSSKY. C. S. C. President. ST. GARY'S ACADEMY NOTRC DAME, INDIANA One Kile West of Notre Same University. M t leiiiiriili and healthfully l.n-atil. riJiK-ted Ty the tiltem of tlio lluljr 'r. Chartered Kn lylne a national pafronarn. Thorough English, Classical, Bci.ntliio and Commercial Courses, ad vanced Chemistry aad Pharmacy. Regular Col legiate Degrees. Preparatory Department trains pupil for r-cnLir, ? -t-l vr Ci '".egialc Courses. Ph"aai laboratory well en!pp-J. The Conservatory of Music l ci-ndncted An plans cf-the let Cwii.ervntorlr. The Art Department Is riodcli'd afri'r leadline Art Schools. Minim Depart. ment f r rhlMreit jinitrr twelre year, Physical. Culture nnrtrr illrei't .in cf irradiiare of lr. Sar-eut's i .'rnrl ,-hooT fr I UVflrnl 1 rnlnLnjr. The best modern educational advantages for fitting yotintr womcii for llv- vf useful n-. 1 he constant pnxsihvf the Ai-mlruiy has strain nece.ntrated the rrrrll.n of alliiloiuil fne lulidlii with laleft llrxleiitr eqniimients. Moderate cost. New school y-ur rw-Kftt- r-.-ptemrior Sth. Mention thl paper. r or r italotfue and pe-!l in format Ion appi v to Tha Directress of ST. MARY'S ACADEMY, Notre Dime, Indiana. The GouiT0WER3 POMMEL SLICKER HAS BEEN ADVERTISED AND SOLD FOa A QUASTtR OP A CfNTUH UKE ALL v . laSSiWHBHOOF 'K'sas CLOTHING. !t 11 nade of th best nitcritls. m bLc'a.crj'enow. fuf! usranteed. and soli bjr re'tabie deiterj everywhere. MKATO THE 3IGN Of THt f ISU Tpwca enoiAfr co. I. a j towji co. BVL.tr ST" Goofj Things to Eat on the Lawn Petted Ham. Beef sad Tsetse. Ox sserae no. Veal Leaf. Deviled Ban. Brisket Beef, kxa Saoked Barf. All Natural Flavor Foods. Pa:atah!e and wholesome. Your grocer should have them. Head fllo tsmt.for Tdhhr'ablg Atlas of tbe W id. Ilan.Unir bookie "How u Mate Good tbinceto Kat" free. t!!i.y. McAelll &. Ltbby. Cfilcajtt. Cor. I9t ted itre Leaveaworth St. OMUU. MB. Th only positive cure for Drunken nesa. Dresj-rslng; and the Tnhirro Habit. Oor ee.nn1nim strictly con3dentiaL vm. B. BURNS. 2haaa-as When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. W. N. U- Omaha. No. 321903 0 u..'fwnrrtf All Fl.sf FAILS. Beat Counh ayrupt Tastes OxoH. TJi tn time. Pohl rv onimm. THE UNIVERSITY OF HOTRE DAME, ilk (til H 1 clothes breaking. It Mary I'roctor, who writes of "Five Hundred Little Worlds" in the Au gust St. Nicholas, is a daughter of the great Proctor, the astronomer, and Is living at present in New York City She is a small women, exceedingly quiet, almost shy in manner, but has proved a successful lecturer and writ er in the field where her father wot distinction. yon never hear any- one complain about "Defiance Starch." There is none to equal it in quality and quan tity, 16 ounces. 10 cents. Try it now and Eave your money. Write injuries on Ice, but kindness in si one. If you wish ticautiful. clear, white clo.hes use Kt-1 Crosi liml Blue. Large 3 oz. packuge, 5 cents. Of l,C0O locomotives in use in Japan 500 are American made. Try me just once and I am sure to come again. Defiance Starch. Worry is a good friend of the un dertaker. CITC permanently onretl. to flwor nervousness artel 1 Unit day. uk of lr. t une's tireat Nerve Kertor V 2"!? T,r V,tFK -no trial bottle and treatise. Da. R. H kLISE, Ltd.. Ml Arch StnwU l"hiladeluia-- Some men take what is in sight and hustle for more. Defiance Starch 13 guaranteed big gest and best or money refunded. 1C ounces, Jf cents. Try it row. The Plaint of the British Fiddler. The annual complaint of English musicians comes from London. It is that an English jnusician has no chance to get work in competition with foreigners. There are 300 orches tral bands in London druing the sea son, and practically all of them are made up of aliens. The one chance an Englishment has of steady employ ment is to disguise himself and pre tend to be a German or a Belgian. One band of sixteen wears foreign uni forms, trims beards in foreign style and speaks only in foreign monosyl lables, but every one is an English man, forced to the subterfuge by thi necessity of making a living. Why Russell Sage Moves. Russell Sage is going to move from the modest little house in Fifth avenue. New York, where he has lived for forty-two years. Ife can no longer "stand for" his neighbors. First some one put a candy store next door tc him. Then another store was estab lished on tho other side. At the rear of the candy store is an immense fan designed to cool the ice cream parlor This fan is right next to three of the windows of his dining room. The noise it makes Is deafening. On the Forty-second street side there is a smoking parlor, and as Mrs. Sage de tests the smell of tobacco she is com pelled to keep her windows closed. So they are going to move to the now de serted mansion of the late Charlea liroadway Rouss. On one side lives Henry Clews, on the other D. Ogdeq Mills. CHANGE Quit Coffee and Get Well. A woman's coffee experience la In teresting. "For two weeks at a time I have taken no food but skim milk, for solid food woul4 ferment and cause such a psessure of gas and such distress that I could hardly breathe at times, also excruciating pain and heart palpitation and all the time I was so nervous and restless. "From chilhood up I had been a coffee and tea drinker and for th past 20 years I have been trying dif ferent physicians but could get only temporary relief. Then I read an ar ticle telling how some one had been cured by leaving off coffee and drink ing Postum. and it seemed so pleasant just to read about good health I de cided to try Postum in place of coffee. "I made the change from coffee to Postum and such a change there is in me that I don't feel like the same, per son. We all found Postum delicious and like it better than coffee. My health now is wonderfully good. "As scon as I made the shift from coffee to Postum I got better and now ail of my troubles are gone. I am fleshy, my food assimilates, the pres sure in the chest and palpitation are all gone, my bowels are regular, have no more stomach trouble and my headaches are gone. Remember I did not use medicines at all just left off coffee and drank Postum steadily." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Send to the Co. for particulars by mail of extension of time on the $7,500 cooks contest for 735 money prizes. 1 god's Thy home In v.-lth the humhlf, Iord, The- almplent are th bt; Thy lodKln n child-like hearts Thou rnakest there thy rvnt. !.ir Onrr.forfr! Krna1 lve! If thou wilt utay with me. Of lowly thought nnd smplt ways, I'll build a, house (or lhe. Who mail thin be-atlnfr heart of mine Hut thou, my heavenly CJutrat? I-t no on- have It, then but thee, And let it be thy reat. Thy fwpptn? hath betrayed thee. Lord! ;reat Sidrlt, Is It thou? re.er and deeper In my heart " I feel thee resting now. II ' Aunt Sarah's Will ii Aunt Sarah Snowden had never married, and furthermore she had al ways been a burden on her relatives. That is to say, she had worked about twice as hard as any paid hand for her board and clothes, and was still at It when she was 50 years old. She was called "Aunt' as a term of derision, and as she was irascible and sour-tempered her life was not over burdened with sunny days. At 50 she was expecting nothing but to drudge along for the rest of her days and be known as a poor relation, when a most unexpected event happened. At 30 years of age Aunt Sarah had almost been engaged to an old bache lor. She Led come so near to it that he had seen her home from church on several occasions and "sat up" with her ia the evening. She had also ac companied him to a circus and a camp meeting, and a marriage might have resulted had they not fallen into a dispute over some trifling matter. Both were "sot" in their opinions, and after some hot words the bachelor withdrew and left the maiden all for lorn. He passed out of her sight to die twenty years later and leave her 530.000 by wiil. The news of Aunt Sarah's windfall threw the hamlet of Rosedale into a flutter that did not quiet down for months. Of course nine-tenths of the people, including her brother Ben and his wife, hoped it wasn't true, but a law yer came on to prove her claim, and finally hand her over the cash; and then nine-tenths of the people made a lightning change. From being the irudge of the family, aunt Sarah was exalted to the post of guest. That $30,000 looked bigger than Taylor's hill to the farmers and vil lagers, and it was an astounding thing that it should come to a little old wo man who wouldn't know what to do with it. In one week everybody who knew the old rraid had called to congratu late and advise, and inside of another at least a score of people who had never spoken a wcrd to her called to borrow or to interest her in plans and schemes. From brother fcen wbo wanted to build a new barn and buy four morfi cows, to Rev. Mr. Johnson, who had been for years hoping to raise enough money to build a Baptist church, there was some one after prrtions of that money day and night. Aunt Sarah did not lose ber head. She bought herself a new alpaca dress and a bonnet of a style not over three years old. and set up housekeeping for herself. She neither gave away cor leaned a dollar, but after a while made an announcement. As the money had come to her by will, it should go to others in the same way. The doctors hed told her that she had a weak heart, and was liable to drop dead any hour, and she did not expect to live over four or five years at most. The Baptist church, brother Een and all the rest muil wait for her demise to benefit. This was looked upon as a sinful trick Ly some, and there were whis pered criticism 1 behind each door, but Expecting nothing but to drudge along for the rest of her days. sunt Sarah was obdurate, and there was nothing to do but wait. Thirty thousand dollars is a sum to bow down to. The people bowed lown. Aunt Sarah was flattered and ;ajoled. Two or three old widowers came "spooking around" to talk marriage. And speculators came from a distance ro offer ground-floor shares in gold mines and oil wells. She had the best pew when she went to church, the politest attention when she called at the postofnee or :he . dry good s store, and everybody made up his or her mind to be men tioned In her last will. The woman lived In clover for five years and then died. The term "clo ver" should be Interpreted to meaa that so many custards, pumpkin pies, glasses of jelly, jars of preserres, freah eggs, baskets of fruit and spring chickens were seat In to her by neigh bors that she lived high withevt buy- ii home:. Ing much, and the women were so kind about dressmaking that her clothes cost her next to nothing. About 50 people were on the tip-toe of expectation regarding the will. It was the largest funeral ever known in Branch county. The woman had made her will and was dead, but it seemed as if some folks hoped to come in for something by attending the funeral. There was weeping at the house something of a rivalry between cer tain women as to who should weep The politest attention. the hardest and there was weeping at the church. The mile-long funeral procession moved at a slow and dig nified pace, and there was no undue haste to get back home. The executors named did not live in Rosedale at all, but they were on hand to let the provisions of the will be known. "Firstly," read the document so long waited for, "I give and bequeath to my brother Benjamin the sum of $1000, but as I drudged for his family eighteen years without pay I direct my executors to put in a claim for $1500 as an offset. "10 Mary Snowden, wife of Ben jamin Snowden, who hardly ever gave me a decent word until I got my money, I give and bequeath my throe best dresses, minus the sleeves and buttons. "To Rev. Mr. Johnson, with which to build a new Baptist church, I leave the sum of $3000, but I direct that be fore coming into possession of it he shall preach ten sermons, during which no one shall fall asleep, and that he shall never attempt to sing in public again." There were fifty bequests in all, and it must have taken Aunt Sarah a year to study them out to her satisfaction. She had about twenty relatives, none of whom had shown her much con sideration during her days of loneli ness and hard work, and while she had left a bequest to each and every one it was under such conditions that none could accept. Every woman in the village who had ever rubbed her the wrong way was duly remembered, but little good did it do them. The only bequest without a proviso read: "To Job Sanderson, the village cooper, who ence helped me over a mudhole without asking me why I never got married, and who didn't recommend a cure for freckles and wrinkles, I bequeath the sum of $2000, and may it do him much good." The residue of her estate, which meant all but the $2000 above named, was bequeathed to a charity and went there, and then the smile on Aunt Sarah's face as she lay dead was ex plained. Before the reading of the will it was whispered that she had been talking with the angels. After the reading it was announced in loud tones that the angels were somebody else some body with tails and hoofs. Cyrus Der ickson in Boston Globe. A Fainting-Room. One of the latest ideas in New York is a room to which ladies can retire if they feel faint and go off in a swoon, amid the most artistic and beautiful surroundings. Several restaurants and tea shops have adopted this idea, and members of the fair sex whose nerve force is run down can find in the fainting-room a soothing resting place. The room is partially darkened and the prevailing color green, whilst it is liberally decorated with various s"weet-smelling flowers. Comfortable sofas and chairs are provided for the "fainters," and a lady doctor is kept on the premises should her services be required. London Tib-Bits. Cause and Effect. Mrs. Nextdoor I saw the doctor stop at your house this morning. Is any one sick? Mrs. Homer Yes; my husband. Mrs. Nextdoor Indeed ! What seems to be the trouble?" Mrs. Homer Dyspepsia. He ate too much health food. CALLER AT THE WHITE HOUSE., He Wanted to Have the Names of All t'ie People Changed. The first crank to maKe his appir ance at the White House since tho re turn of the President, says the Wash ington Star, went to the executive of flee on Monday. Ore of the door keepers quickly came to the conclu sion that the man was "muddy." in se cret service parlance, and turned him ever in an adroit manner to a secret service officer. The officer soon found the man's story. "I want to see the r.resident to have the names of peo ple changed," the man confidentially informed the secret service officer, "and the president must issue an or der to do this at or.ee. I came here all the way from Chicago to see that this thing is done properly. Just look at the way people are named Here are men in the undertaking busi ness bearirg all kinds of names. Ev ery man in that business should be named Coffin. Every man in the wood business should be named Wood. All the grocers ought to be named Butter or Lard or called by the name of the goods sold in their stores. Here are dry goods dealers bearing all kinds of good names, when they ought to bear the names of Thread, Buttons, Cambric, Calico and other things. It is a shame the way this thing is done now. The wrong naming of people leads to trouble and business cou fusion and there is only one safe thing tnat is, to change tho name You see that steam roller standing there in the White House grounds Well, that roller ought to furnish the name of the man that runs it. He ought to be named Roller. The man who is putting down these asphalt pavements in the grounds ougnt to be named Asphalt." By this time the crank had been slowly escorted across the grounds by the secret service man and had re ceived an intimation that the presi dent would prefer that he submit his plans somewhere else at this time. The man was not arrested. YOUNG MEN OF PROMISE. Wealthy Youths Willing to Occupy Subordinate Positions. There are a number of young men of inherited wealth who hold small but generally promising positions in New York. They possess an ambition that will not permit them to lead idle and useless lives, and employers are sometimes ignorant of their financial independence. Here is a case in illus tration: A young clerk in a down-town office where scores of clerks were employed had been reported ill for several days, and the head of the company, wishing to learn his prospects of recovery, looked over the home addresses of the other clerks. Calling in the one, who according to this list, lived nearest to the sick clerk a young man draw ing a salary of $23 a week he asked if he would "stop off and see how Harry was getting along." "Certainly," was the reply; and then, after a little hesitation, he add ed: "I will have to make a special trip to Jersey to do it, as my wife and I are living at the Waldorf-Astoria this winter!" The astonished " employer learned upon inquiry that his twenty-three-dol-lar-a-week clerk wras a millionaire, who was unostentatiously winning his way along with his less fortunate fel low clerks, all of whom were equally in ignorance as to hiz wealth. The Walking Delegate. You wanted a kid real sassy and mean, A pug-nosed rooster, not fat nor lean. But pudgy and short, with good, strong lung3 And a big wide mouth that could stretoS three rungs. Now walk, consarn you, walk! You -wanted a kid, a bold little tot. You wanted a kid that would get real hot If you laid him down. You'd trot hirn some And pedal the floor till kingdom come. Now walk, consarn you, walk! A kid with the colic you thought was bright. He'd be like his dad, staying up all night. Drinking from bottles and making things hum. Yelling like Sioux until morning come. Now walk, consarn you, walk! You once sported round like an easy guy. When you met the gang, you'd always buy. You'd take a cab for a block or so- Now to the office you trod through snow. Now walk, consarn you, walk! The kid needs all of your surplus dough, You have a straight, beaten path to go, "When you meet the boys, just pass them by. You're a daddy now, and can't fly high. Now walk, consarn you. walk! Ohio State Journal. Delights of Tiger Hunting. Capt. Macquoid of the first lancers of the British army, inspector-general of the nizam's forces at Hyder bad, recently had a strange adven ture with a tiger near Bangalore. Ac companied by a native orderly, he had tracked the animal for three days and then lost him. The tiger was wounded, but made good his escape and took refuge in a cave, where he was suddenly discovered by the or derly, who gave a warning shout and bolted. Capt. Macquoid, a few yards away, just had time to drop down be hind a ledge of rock only three feet and a half high when the tiger emerged from the. cave, crawled tight over the ledge without noticing the officer and made for the orderly, who had tripped and fallen. He had seized the native by the leg when Capt. Mac quoid lodged a bullet in his spime and then shot him through the head. Auto Stage Lines in Nevada. Unlike the horse or the less comely mule, the automobile does not need water, save that which is wasted in making it look clean. Hence a field of actual usefulness has been found for the machine in Nevada, where water is scarce. Tonopah, realizing that several hours can be saved in the time required to, make the stage trip between Sodaville and Tonopah, is organizing a strong company to put in operation an automobile stage line, each coach to carry sixteen passen gers. The machines will be of thirty-two horse power and a guarantee of making the trip of sixty miles In six hours. The news of the new en terprise is hailed with satisfaction, owing to the crewded condition oJ the mall stage and its heavy lotds of freieht every night.. Health and beauty an; tho glories of perfect womanhfXKl. Women who suffer constantly with weakness peculiar to their Hex cannot re tain their leauty. Preservation of pretty features and rounded form Li a duty women owe to themselves. When women arc troubled with irregular, ruppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leueorrhxi, displacement or ulceration of tho womb, that lieariii"; down feel ins, inflammation of tho ovaries, back ache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous rostration, or are lie-set with such nympt-oms as dizziness, fainlness, assitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melan choly, "all gone" and " want-to-le-left -alone" feelings, blues, and Iiojkj lessness, they should rememlier there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia 12. IMnkham's Vegetable Compound removes such troubles. Case of this Prominent Chicago Woman Should Give Everyone Confidence in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Dear Mns. Pi.vkiiam : It affords me fjreat pleasure, indeed, to add my testimonial to the great numlier who are today praising Lydia J. IMnk haui's Vegetable Compound. Three years nyo I broke down from ex rreatly 270 Loomis St., Chicago, 111. President of tbe St. Ruth's Court, Order of For resters, Catholic. What is left for the women of America, after reading such letters as we publish, but to believe. Don't some of you who are sick and misery able feel how wicked you are to remain so, making life a burden for yourself ami yur friends, when a cure is easily and iiicx'iensivcly obtained? Don't vou think it would pay to drop some of your old prejudices and "Try Lydia 11. JNnkham's Vegetable Compound, which Is lietter than all the doctors for cures'" Surely the exierie!i-o of hundreds of thousands of women, whom the Coiiioiind has cured, should convince all women. Follow the record of this medicine, and rcmemlier that these cures of thousands of women whose letters an; constantly printed in tbis paper; were not brought about by "something else," but by Lydia K. linkbams Vegetable Compound, the great Woman's JJcmedy for Woman's Ills. Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want a eure. .Moral stick to the medicine that you know is the JJest. Write to .Mrs. Pinkham for advice. $5000 FORFEIT " w run not forthwith prniltfe thn original letter an clsaatura of ubovo testimonial, vLich will pr"vn ifs nllnle ifwnuiii.-! ;. Lydi; 11. I'inlchaiu JVfeilieluu Co., Uynn, Mas. August St. Nicholas. Among the prize offers in the Au gust St. Nicholas departments are two especially intended to train youag readers' powers of observation and discrimination. The editor of Nature and Science asks the girls and boys to send him letters and photographs or drawings of what they find on the beach in August. The Books and Reading Department invites brief ar ticles from its readers on "Some He cent Books for Young People." The object of this contest, aside from the training of the contestants, is to learn what books published in the last two or three years have been enjoyed by young readers. The girls and boys are requested not to name books that every one knows, but those that should be better known. Kindness is the only charm per mitted to the aged, it is the coquetry of white hairs. Feuillet. Some folks are so trifling that when they put on a garment wrong side out ward they leave it that way and try to strike a bargain with Fortune. Stops the Cough and Works Off the Cold fixative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 23c The eye of the master will do more work than both of hi3 hands. Frank lin. A Plea for Good Manners. In delivering the f ounders' day ad dress at the commencement exercises in a school at Lawienceville, N. J., Bishop Potter of New York had this to say among other things: "We are getting to be in such a hurry in Amer ica that the ordinary civilities are dis appearing out of our education and our life. When you have dismissed good manners out of society you have dismissed that beneficent and kindly Instinct toward your fellow man of which good manners ought always to be the expression." There are two things that modest men should never undertake to bor row money or study law. Experience takes dreadfully high school wage3, but he teaches like no other. Carlyle. Do not take too much advice, but rather depend on yourself. Mr. V?nlorn AootTrtnr Xyrnp. For rt'ldren tcethlBK. softens tne truiiw. reduces In. flammstlon. allays paia.curts li:d colic. 25cbotuav Word energy ergy. is seldom work en- "What a man lacks in the back-head he makes up in Jaw aower. Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounce In a package, 10 cents. One-third more starch for the s&me money. Love Is the best lens with which to view another. cessive pnysicai ami inctuai strain. 1 was unaoic to secure proper rest, also lost my apjK-tite, and I became no nervous and Irritable too that my friends trembled, and 1 was unable to attend to my work. Our pbysician pre scribed for me, but as I did not seem to improve, I wait advised to ro away. I could neither hp.uru tin time nor money, and was very much worried when, fortunately, one of my club friends called. She told me how hhc had been cured of ovarian troubles and bow like my Kyino toas were to hers, seven bottles of j'our ine Jicine cured her, and she insisted that 1 take some. " I did so. and am t'lad that I followed her advice. Within six weeks I was a different woman, strong and robust ia health, and h.ivo ;flL been, so ever since. &r A ntimlicr tif intr friend who b.ir been troubled with ailments peculiar to our sex have taken your compound, and have also been benefited." Minx iii.iA jii-.Tii Dai.kv, A barber isn't necessarily a Knoll because he cuts an acquaintance. If you don't get the blgrecj and best It's your own fault. Ueflance Starch is for tale everywhere and there is positively nothing to equal it in quality or quantity. era TOOTH POWDER Th Only Dentifrice of International Reputation." XAHA LMIXUAUUT Standard 52 Years If TOO Want to Lr.r-vcll Kr..i, yz-tU T.... . where o buy ood Un'1 rhe.-.i. write f.jr ou out WHITKEY & WHEELOCh, 23 Broadway. rr0o. N. 0. FREE TO WOEflEfil! i l-"w' ir.e ri'-annif ar.4 CW-aRKiotf pow-r of J'ustluc LT J ""- .nii-pii we will kil rrail a larjre trtnl r.nckai ffl With look Of in ,trurt i.,n. abaolutrly frrw. Thi 1 r,o a t:n7 nu.mxi. but a lart package, enouch to con vine anyone 0 its vaiu. Womf-n all ovfr tho country arc pniiK:r:B Paxtlnc for what it hat, dor.e In lm- trrat- .11 T7IT . ,, 1 J" I'ls, curing cleans nffvasrini.1 douche, for sore throat. naal wiU doiten t3Cth' nd "today i a l'1stkl card J-olrthTdrnrldt, or sent postpaid by o, CO e'ita. lanre tr.,. hat lsf r t Ion ruvrsnl.t,. TUB K. I'AXTON ;o Ho-ton. .Mass. "14 Coluiubus j r- """"''SSSBBBBSSSSSBBBBBSSSSBSSSBBSSBBBBBBBBSBBBBSBBSSSSSBSSMBSaBBSSSBSB Rairji tfto formerly smoteM fCigars now suote lECIS'SlfJGLE BINDER STRAIGHT 3C CIGAR Tour Jobber or d:re t from Factory, Peoria. 111. FA RMERS! We make all kinds of tanks. Red Crprrs or White Pine. Write us for prices and save middle man's profit. WOODEN PACKAGE MFC CO. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. ICS SZE?JfZ FT?, n nn mm mm H7S8SV