Try murine eye remedy For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes and W GRANULATED EYELIDS • I MurineDoesn’tSmart-SoothesEyePain DraarUis SeO Mariae Ere Remedy, Liqaid. 25c, 50c, $1.00 Marine Eye Salve, in Aseptic Tubea, 25c, $1.00 EYE,BOOKS AND ADVICE FREE BY MAIL Murine EyeRemedyCo.,Chicago DITCIITC Watson K.Coleman, Wash. rBItHia Ington, D.C. Books free. High ■ eat references Beat results. WANTED—6,000 men to organize Farmer’s Stores, Kle rotors, Humber-yards. Hood pay. Experience un necessary. Unclose stamp. B.w.i»lb<,m,i-il—m— 2,000 ACRES Irrigable Trio Co., alfalfa, onions, Srteslan vrellB 90 feet, near railway, l-'lne climate, mall tracts $25 acre, tixaahl Walker, baa Aatonio, Texxa MEET IN CONGRESS AT ROME International Gathering of Foes of Tuberculosis to Be Held Late In September. Official announcement of the Sev enth International Congress on Tu berculosis, which will Include repre sentatives from every civilized coun try in the world, has been made by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. The congress will be held in Rome from September 24 to 30, 1911, and will be similar in many respects to that held In Washington in the fall of 1908. The congress, which meets every three years, will be under the direct patronage of the king and queen of Italy. An American committee of 100 will be appointed as the official represen tatives of the United States. Mean while the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis Is acting in that capacity and its office In New York will be the headquarters for the United States delegation. The secretary general of the congress is Prof. Vittorio Ascoll of Rome. As a direct result of the stimulus of the last international congress held in this country, the American committee will be able to report that the number of tuberculosis agencies in this coun try have been tripled In the three years. More than twice as much money is being spent in the fight against tuberculosis by private socie ties and institutions, and the appropri ations of federal, state, municipal and county have Increased nearly four fold. It is estimated that nearly $15, 000,000 will be spent In anti-tuberculo sis work In 1910. She Took No Chances. A happily wedded matron is the principal of an odd incident, which one of her "dear” friends relates. Before the matron’s engagement to her present husband was announced, she met her “dear” friend on the street The new matron was hurrying toward one of the large Jewelry stores of the city. "John gave me an engagement ring,” she explained, without a shadow of embarrassment, “and I am going down to see how much it cost. You see, I got the Jeweler’s name o£T the box,” and she hurried on. The same friend said that another bit of information the matron got was the commercial standing of the pros pective husband, which she secured by paying for a special report from a commercial agency. Someone Might Get Hurt. Pietro had drifted to Florida and was working with a gang at railroad construction. He had been told to beware of rattlesnakes, but assured that they would alw'avs give the warning rattle before striking. One hot day he was eating his noon luncheon on a pine log when he saw a big rattler coiled a few feet in front of him. He eyed the serpent and be gan to lift,-his legs over the log. He had barely got them out of the way when the snake’s fangs hit the bark beneath him. "Son of a guna!” yelled Pietro. "Why you no ringa da bell?”—Every body’s Magazine. A Handicapped Official. "You let some of the swiftest auto scorchers get by without a word?” “I know it,” replied the village con stable. “My glasses don’t suit my eyes like they used to, and I can’t do anything with an auto that ain’t goin' slow enough fur me to read the num ber.” Some men need to be called down about twice a day. f-\ Let Us Cook Your Breakfast! Serve Post Toasties with cream or milk and notice the pleasure ? the family finds in the appetizing crispness and flavour of this delightful « food. “The Memory Lingers” Foe turn Cereal Co., Ltd. Battle Creek, Mick. — WOMAN NOVELIST SAYS SEX HAS NO RESPECT FOR LAW Famous Writer Says the Fern, inine Mind Cannot Grasp the Principles of Legal Statutes. New York—Special: Women have no conscience. If they had they would not smuggle nor steal from stores, nor cheat at bridge, nor prevaricate, as they do upon the steamship docks every day, and swear most solemnly that they have no dutiable goods when at that very instant they are swathed In the richest laces and are wearing dresses and hats that no duty has been paid on. Conscience? A woman doesn’t know what It means." This Is what a prominent customs officer said in trying to explain why women smuggle, but distinctly different views are entertained over In a little street opposite Prospect park, where lives a personage who has created more women than most of us have ever known. It was natural to suppose that If any one could make a blue print of the mind of a woman, It would be Laura Jean Llbbey. Laura Jean’s Idea. ''How Is It that women of the most blameless character will cheat each other at bridge whist and try to steal $6,000 from the United States govern ment?” she was asked. “She Ignored the first part of the question, but nodded brightly as she began: “You mean women who try to bring In jewelry from Europe? Why, It never occurs to them that they are stealing.” "They know that they are doing what Is against the law, or they wouldn’t take such pains to conceal the jewels,” was suggested. "Law!" exclaimed Miss Llbbey. "Why women have no sense of law. The customs regulations are to them a distant Impression, a sort of nuis ance that they are perfectly justified In avoiding if possible. "Men have learned that adherence to a certain code of ethics Is best for themselves because It Is best for all. Women believe In making up their In dividual codes as they go along, sub ject to constant revision and amend ment. Will Overdraw at Bank. “A woman has no compunction about overdrawing her account at the bank. Bhe knows the bank has money and she needs It, and as long as she can write checks they have to honor them. They have no conception of the bank ing system and no consideration for Its rules.” "It women were given a share In the government wouldn’t they learn to take an active Interest In public af fairs?" "No,” was the prompt reply. "If women were given the ballot they would vote to please their husbands. They would always be wives first and citizens afterward.” Failure of Color Photography. From Harper’s Weekly. Color photography does not seem to be making the headway that was ex pected of It a while ago. The discov ery of the means to photograph objects In their natural colors created much enthusiasm, but nobody has ever dis covered how to transfer these colors from the negative to the printing pa per. Each photograph, therefore, ne cessitates a separate exposure. As this exposure is longer than for an or dinary photograph, it requires a great deal of time. Finally, when the color negative—after several trials to pro duce a good one—Is finished, there must be a special holder to show the picture off. The true effect of the color pho tograph Is not brought out unless the plate Is held against a strong light, and any holder has to be especially made and Is costly. The men who have worked In color photography say that there Is also a technicality of exposure that Is both ersome. No one as yet seems to have obtained precisely the proper light con ditions for a Btudlo portrait or picture. By good luck some fairly satisfactory results may be reached, but they are not, by any means, what a true artist tn photography would feel contented with. Outdoors it is a different matter. There the conditions are better and the woentage of success is greater. Por ..alts, in the stronger outdoor light, are more satisfactory, and they have the added advantage of an Infinite variety of garden and other backgrounds. Some beautiful work in this line has been done, and even finer results have been secured In landscapes. One of the men who have been specializing In this line goes around among the better class of suburban plaoes, and has no particular trouble In getting |50 for a set of plates with special holders. For Illustration work the color nega tive has found a fixed place, and it will be In Increased demand until the photographer's great final problem, the making of a plate that will print any pumber of Impressions In color, Is solved. At the present Its chief use Is as a key or guide to color printing on the press. Its use In this respect Is even now Important. Suppose, for In stance, a dealer Is laying out a nursery or seed catalog to Issue next Janu ary and wants half a dozen fine color illustrations In It. The old way would have been to pay an artist a big price to paint the flowers in oil or water col ors and then to turn this picture over to the lithographer as a model. The new way Is for the dealer to have a color plate made for a key and also a plain photograph of the same object, at much less expense, and let the maker of the new process color cuts work It all out for him. For the lantern slide the color plate has Its limitations. It cannot be mag nified beyond a certain point with good results. Also there must be a stronger light than usual, to bring out the colors and In getting the stronger light the operator Is apt to crack the glass with the heat. The ordinary lantern slide can be replaced again from the orig inal, but If a color plate Is broken that Is the end of It unless the operator has gone to the pains and expense of mak ing more than one exposure. Sometimes this Is out of the question; for the rea son that the necessary conditions can not be prolonged. A Bright Student. From Llpplncott's. During a recent examination In the theology of the Old Testament the fol lowing question was asked a young clergyman; "What language did Ba laam's ass speak?" After a moment of thought, a smile flashed across hts face, and he wrote his answer. I looked at the paper. He had written: "Assy rian." The French inventor of a drop frame motorcycle, which women may wear skirts to ride, has gtvln It the name of “motosacoche." ome falks 22} B c\y d Wl98fito MAKING MSHESC()¥e TRUE. Since time began mankind, or more correctly speaking, womankind, liaa spent a large part of her time making wishes. Wishes represent the secret dreams and aspirations of her heart. Sometimes they are trivial, sometimes they are noble; but whatever they may be, the woman would be hard to find who hasn’t wished ardently for this, that or the other many times In her life. She has wished on the new moon. She has wished on the breast bone of a chicken. She has wished on four leafed clover, and she has hailed with Joy any new luck emblem Borne one tells her of upon which she may wish. But despite all these time-honored mas oots, she realizes that her efforts are largely futile. If there were only some way, she thinks, to make wishes come true. The ancient philosophers of Iudla and China have a thought In this direction to the effect that If any one wishes hard enough the wish will come true. Much truth lies lUdden in the philoso phy of the orient, and Isn't there a ker nel In this, that If one wishes hard enough one's wish will come true? The genuine, earnest wish becomes in time a part of one's character. The desire to do, or be, or have, contln ally cherished, finally moulds us and shapes us and guides us, until we reach out for that one thing and noth ing else. Like attracts like, and this earnest longing not only Impels us to ward cur wish, but attracts out of the great and mysterious Infinite the ele ments of our wish toward us. George McDonald says: "An you grow ready for It, somewhere or other you will And what Is needful for you. In a book, or a friend, or beBt of all, In your own thoughts, the eternal thought speaking In your thought.” And Burroughs says: "I know my own will come to me.” Suppose your wish Is for wealth, not a mere Idle wish, but an earnest ambi tion on your part to be wealthy. What follows? You work. You save. You study how men have made wealth. You study Investments. You put yourself on the road that leads to money mak ing and money saving. Suppose you long to travel. Your eyes and ears are always open for op portunities in the line of your wish. You note things and treasure Incidents' In your memory that others pass un heeded. You know the opportunity when It comes. You are ready for It. You seize It before those less wishful realize there Is such an opening. Suppose you wish for love? You dwell on the thought of love, of what it is, of what It means to life, and un consciously you grow more lovely and lovable, until love comes to you be cause It must come to Its own. Since, then, the earnest wish really in a way shapes ono’s destiny, one should wish earnestly with caution. He may set his heart upbn something which In the end may not give the hap piness lie Imagined It would. Our wish es should have our careful examination before we let them fly away Into the unknown for fulfillment. They may come back to us later with bitter In* stead of sweet fruit. HAVE AN AMBITION. September starts a new year ror many far more truly than does Jan uary. With some It means the begin ning of business life; with others, the start of some special study. With many It Is Just taking up again the thread of work where they dropped It to go off on a holiday. But never theless, even with these. It Is a fresh start. The year Is ahead for all, and whether It Is faced eagerly because of the new experiences waiting, or looked forward to as the same monotonous ?rlnd It has always been, It Is there or all to do with It as they will. The story Is told of Chase, the ar tist, that he keeps hanging In his stu dio a large, untouched canvas, and that when people ask him what he considers his greatest picture he points to this. His greatest picture Is still unpalnted. It Is still ahead of him. He has never yet accomplished his Ideal. It Is well to have a high ambition. It spurs effort. It keeps one up to his best. The girl entering business should have an ambition In regard to her work. She should not go at It list lessly, simply to earn so much a week. Above, beyond and more Important than the salary, should be some ambi tion In regard to It. She should have an ambition to work her way up, or to learn all there Is possible to know about one thing she Is doing, or to no it so thoroughly that she 1* sure ea'-h night no smallest detail has been neglected. She should be ambitious about It In some way, not only to get the most out of It, but to really en joy It. If the one who Is returning to th« same task he has performed for yeare, will put a spirit of ambition Into hie work he will find the year to come more pleasurable and profitable than the one that has gone. The man or woman who does his or her work In a plodding, monotonous spirit, Blmply as a means of earning bread and but ter, throws a gray pall over the most of his life. The work one does con consumes the most of the time of the worker and If there Is no Joy In It, dull Indeed Is that life. The one who Is looking forward to a year of some special study prob ably already has an ambition. It Is this that lias brought him to the edge of the year that now thrills him with delight as the fulfilment of some long desired wish. An ambition puts zest Into life; only choosing an ambition, look ahead to see what Its fulfilment means. Make sure that Its fruition will bring hap piness. Every work offers subjects for worthy ambition. Choose wisely and not only enjoy your present tasks, but lay up a happy fruitage for the years that are to come. THREE WATCH-WORDS OF SUCCESS. A writer of the biography of one of the country’s great men, great In hls business success and great In hls work for hu manity, says that hls first employers gave the following three qualifications as the reason why he so early attracted atten tion In business: “His enthusiasm, hls entire thoroughness, and hls faculty of ap plication.” These are without doubt three of the watchwords of success In the business world. An employer likes enthusiasm, not merely effervescent spirits that mean nothing and accomplish nothing, nor a fussy, overzealousness that Is continually meddling In things that are none of its concern. But he likes the deep, sincere enthusiasm that takes as much interest In the genuine welfare of hls business as he does himself. Enthusiasm Is catching, and the employe who Is enthusiastic about his employer’s business makes others believe In It He arouses a feeling of good will for It wherever he goes. Few things are more valuable In the business world than entire thoroughness. The peace and satisfaction that come to an employer when he finds an employe who Is entirely thorough are beyond words to describe. If an employe wants to make himself valuable, let him cultivate entire thoroughness. He will become more pre cious to the busy man of affairs than the stocks and bonds in the strong box. A man may not have originality, or the qual ities of leadership, executive ability or In itiative, but If he makes thoroughness his long suit he will not fall so far behind the giants of the business world. Thorough ness Is n necessity. The third quality this great man In ques tion had was the faculty of application. He could stick to a Job until he saw It through. If It wa* a set of books he had to straighten out, no matter what long hours he put In on them nor how many times ha went over those columns of dull, uninteresting figures, he applied himself diligently to the task before him, and never quit until it was satisfactorily fin ished. Many a man has ■'failure" written to his name because of this lack of the faculty of application. He didn’t stick long enough. It was too much of a grind. He couldn't put hi* whole heart and soul Into the work before him, no matter what It Is and see it through. Success Is not easy to win. Down un derneath the glitter and glory of the fin ish Is usually found some such prosaic, dull, colorless work as this. Those who succeed may seem to have accomplished success easily. They may not speak of the hard, gray yeara But they were there. And those who want to go forward to a like success should take for their constant companions, at the beginning anyway, these same prosy follows, appli cation, thoroughness, enthusiasm. THE VALUE OF KEEPING YOUNG. "How old would you say Mrs. Blank Is?" asked one woman of another In a little suburban station, as they both watched a handsome woman pacing up and down the platform. "Well,” said the other somewhat slowly, "her hair Is lightly gray, so I should say she la about 45. But if It were’nt for that, I wouldn't think she Is over 40.” “She Is 65 years old,” the other wo man said triumphantly. “She told me so herself." “That doesn’t seem possible," her companion exclaimed, and she fell to studying the woman pacing the sta tion platform. The woman certainly did not look 65. Her skin was fresh, rosy, with scarce ly a wrinkle In It. Her hair was waved and arranged fashionably, though not In any extreme way. It was just soft, pretty and becoming. She wore a well cut, gray tailored suit with a gray silk waist, and a touch of soft creamy lace at her throat. Her hat was rather a large, black affair, trimmed with plumes. Everything about her was stylish and in excellent taste. Her rlgure was good, a trifle ample, but well proportioned. She would nave passed anywhere for 40. The only sug gestion of age was In the slight gray ness about the temples. How much more enjoyment this wo man gets out of life than she would as a wrinkled, bent old lady of 65, with her hair drawn back tight and twisted Into a hard door-knob, her dress plain and old-fashioned. She was welcomed everywhere. Young folks liked her. She was constantly chaperone for this and that affair. Crowds of young people flocked to her house because they had such a good time there. They never gave a thought to her age. She didn’t seem old. Therefore she wasn't old. She Joined the two women after a little while. They said they had been talking about her, and the one ex pressed her surprise at the news she had heard. "Yes, I was 65 on my last birthday,-’ she replied. "Nobody believes me. But it Is true. You see, I believe In keep- ] lng young. My husband keeps young, .and so I made up my mind I would. I didn't want him to be going around with a woman who looked 20 years older than himself. He Is rather high up among the Masons, you know, and goes about a good deal, and likes a good time. So I made up my mind that I would keep step with him.” Sho glanced rather fondly at a handsome, military-looking man coming down the path. The train drew up and they both got on, as fine looking a couple as one would find In a day's Journey. They hadn't grown old together. They had kept young together. In contrast Is a woman whose hus band Is a prominent business man. He Is up-to-date In every way, a member of a number of clubs, handsome, well dressed, popular. He Is probably the same age as Mr. Blank. But his wife Is centuries older than Mrs. Blank, bhe Is a fat, motherly old soul, a thorough ly fine woman In her way. But her way, under the circumstances, Is not as wise as Mrs. Blank's. She is not in touch with the times In any way. She likes to stay at home. When she does go about, she wears a little bonnet she bought 10 years ago, and which Is "perfectly good.” She abhors automo biles. She Is a dear old soul, but she won't go with her husband anywhere. She leads her life; he, his. He Is good to her. But It is Inevitable that they will drift apart, for It would not pay him in his business to be an old man, even if he were Inclined to be, which he isn't. So as the years go by, her life will grow lonelier and more empty. How much fuller and richer It would be, if she would, like Mrs. Blank, keep young! Out of 2,500 students. Miss Blanche Zurcher, a senior In the College of lib eral Arts and Sciences, has made the best record of any member of the class of 1910 at the University of Kansas. During four years In every course she has taken she has received between 90 and 100 per cent on the scale of 10*. Tnr?rn: i; t ■ ttt i'hth ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT Awtfetable Preparation for As similating the Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of KM Jr Promotes Digestion,Cheerful rj ness and Rest Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral S3 Not Marc otic JUtc/jar ,fOW DrSAMV£lfm/rSR III Puraphitt Stad * III Mx Saanm «* \ !i« *tss?- 1 a felu.. > ft! Urn Snd . 1 Rj> ■ C/ardiaJ Suaar Winkyrat* flavor * iV.O A perfect Remedy for Conslipa lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, NO Worms,Convulsions.Feverish ly ness and Loss OF SLEEP ,M —;— j(Jtl Fac Simite Signature of •Jol W -‘