J. THE FA9T GUARANTEE THE rUTUttE g THE FACT THAT St. Jacobs Oil 1 Han cured thousands of canes of Rheumatism, Uout, Lumbago, Nuri. Sciatica. SpraiiiH. Bruise, and other bodily aches and pains, is a truarantee that it will cure other cases. It is safe, sure and never lolling. 25c k 5Cc ACTS LIKE MAGIC! CONQUERS P A D N I VT VOTIVE 1 Largest Krowers or fc- wjj Clover. TimothT and V Grasses. Onrnort hern ro-n Clover. I for vigor, frost and drouth resisting properties, has justly become famous. J 1 SOPEBIOI CLOYIR. to. $5.80; 1C0 lbs. $9.80 U Crosse Prims Qorer. fto. $560; 100 Its. $9.20 ' Samples Clover, Timothy and Grasses and treat I cauiof auiiM ym Tor ac postaf e. .TOHN A.5ALZER Zr "5EED CO.tf J ItA CROSSE, wis. CAPSICUM VASELINE ( PUT VP tS COLLAPSIBLE TUBES A irobst'.tute for and superior to mustard or any other piaster, and wiU not blister the must delicate skin. The pa'.n aJlttylnjr and curative qualities of tbisarticle are wonder ful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. We recom mend it as the t-st aud mfest external counter-irritant known, also u un external remedy for pains ia the chest and stomach and all rheumatic, iieuraiitic and iroutv inm- plainis. A trlul will proe what we 'claim for it. and it will be found to be invaluable in the household. Man? people nay ""it is the best of ad of your preparations." " Irice 15 cents, at alldruvtri-tsor other dealers, or by sending this amount tons in poiav stamps we win end you a tube bv mail. No unit-ie s son i.i oe arreptM iiv the public uniess the name carries our luh-l. asot h-rwi-e it is not ecxiuibt- v-neeitKOtciri MFG. CO., i tate street, New voiik CUT. THE CONTENTED FARMER Is the man who never has a failure In crops. eei tienHl Ttniri for fcls labors, and has I best social oixi mu ous advunuure. to- I aether with Kpientiid I climate and excellent I health. These ve give to the w:i.m on the f Wifi!j5la'ads of Western Can I 'C 'i-iJ ' whicb comprises I Jih rmit rrain and TaiM-Ciuy lunus of Manitoba Asnibo. Alherta and Saskatchewan. Exception.' ad vantages and low rates of fare are riven to tbelesir ous of in-iectinif the fall frrant land. The naadsome forty pare Alius of Western Caa adr. sent free to ail applicants. Applv to I"' iedley, Superintendent Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, or to V. V. Bennett. Canadian ov ernment A rent, SOI Itcv York .Life B't'c . Otnaha. Neb. More Salesmen Wanted! Active men cf jroal character and address to sell onr larire line of family end Stock lleineiies. I hvorin Extracts and pure ground Npie-s. A permanent and profitable lusiness. Team and vra gun onlj,-capital Tccitii red. Te r ri tory as.signed. Ei.-lnsive at-ncy piven. A large busine; an le cione Vvith only a (mall investment- Ours rents earn S15 lo550 (K) weekly. AY rite to-day lor terms. THE DS. ELAli f'EDICAL COnPAKY. DEPT. B. FHEEPORT. IX.X. PARTY LINE TELEPHONES THE STRQfJBERG CARLSON TEL. UFQ. CO. CHICAGO, U. S. A. WRITE FOR CATALOG. Vheo icskeriig .dvertime8ts bisflj Mention This Fapet. W. N. U. OMAHA. NO. 4. 1902 I I Beat Couch Myrup. Taattoud. Ml I I I hi ttma. BoSd by dra lata, I I Baa Stlag tin for Rbeamatlaaa. Dr. Terc. a medical man of much repute In Vienna, ac vocates as an ef fective remedy lor rheumatism the saturating of the patient's body with the venom of bees. For the purpose he extracts the venom, treasuring it up in quantity, and applying it arti ficially in the way of punctures. He found this treatment on his discovery that rheumatic patients do not suffer from a bee's sting to anything like the same degree' as other people. He foun J that the tumefaction or swelling that follows the stinging cf a bee does not appear in the rheumatic patient unless he has been stung several times, while in some cases the stinging is hardly felt.. When the patient suffers himself to be stung repeatedly his im munity against the poison of the bee becomes complete and he feels no pain whatsoever. What is more, he gets cured of his rheumatism. Fur the Dumb rtrute'a Sake. The Animal Rescue league of Bos ton has been in existence but three years. The good work it has since done has been thus summarized by Mrs. Huniing Smith, its president: 'Prom the 110 members with which we started we have reached over 1.309. and from being called upon to car? f?r 2.595 animals in the first year of cur work we have cared for 5.0S9 In six ' months." Mrs. Smith said that she hoped for the establishment of a home of rest for horses similar to that which has been successful In Acton. England, where overworked horses can occasionally go to green grass and an outing, and where they can spend their declining years in comfort. a m tli Japs Smoke. The Japanese smoke in a very pe culiar manner. The pipes have very small metal bowls, with bamboi stems and metal mouthpieces and only hold enough tobacco for three or four whiffs. They use a tobacco which is rut extremely fine and looks more line a light blonde hair than anything else. It is a very good quality, however. The Jars take a whiff of smoke and in hale it. letting it pass out through the nostril3. They rarely smoke more than one pipeful at a time. Heavy Dm mi age. i In a West Chicago street railway j damage case a verdict of $36,000 has ! just been rendered for the loss of 'an j arm. The plaintiff was a young sur ! geon with an income of $10,000 and a i growing practice. It has taken five ! years to bring the case to a conclu sion. TALKS ON ADVERTISING. The best v.ay to advertise is just to r-.dverti.5e. Get at it with a view to hav ing ths people know what you most desire to sell, and incidentally letting them know that the specified items do not repres-ent jour full stock. Say in teresting things about Interesting goods and have the goods to talk. Men talk of tbe sevret of successful advertising, but it is all very plain. The tsiential are to offer what' people want, at fair prices, and to offer it in a way that will make readers know they want it. The art in writing an advertisement is to speak as the inter ested and" well-informed merchant would speak to a prospective customer. The mere appearanr of a business man's name and address in every issue of a leading newspaper will do work to increase his trade. Every business man. however, is able to give facts about his establishment which will encourage people to deal with him. To state such facts clearly in a newspaper is the prin cipal secret of successful advertising. The idea that it takes a number of impressions to make the average ad vertisement effective is not new. Forty years ago an English advertiser said to the publisher of the Cornhill Maga zine: "We don"t consider that an ad vertisement seen Tor the first time by a rpader is "worth much. The 'second time it counts for something. The third time the reader's attention is arrested;, the fourth time he reads it through and thinks about It; the fifth makes a pur chaser ttt Mm. It takes time to soak la." WHV IT IS THE BEST Is twcaise made by an entirety cllfferetit proce. Defiance Starch is unlike any other, belicr and one-tliir more lor 1A It were better to sit by the wayside in joyful sunlight, than linger in dark shadows, though they be cast by a paiaee. CrrC PerOTnnrnitT cnren. So Bf or ntrwoiw after ll I O first ly' use or Ir. klllH- Oreat Nerrr Krutor- r. Semi f.r KU1K .:. tr al bottle and tretle. Im. ix. H. lixe. Ltd.. Kn Art-h Ktrvet. l'uiljtaeljaia. I'm. It is easier to bear the aches ,r-f an other man's corns. The iLccln Eye and Ear Infirmary 1 Successfully treats all curable I diseases and in- juries of the EYE, EAR, KOSE and THROAT, . BLINDNlSS, DEAfKsS and CATARRH I Cou'arionsand incurable cases not admit- g ted. iulieu. bourd'sl. nursed ami f-ealcd. g Letter- of iiiQUiry promptly answered. g Vrit- for announcement. j DRS. GARTEN & COOK. Ocu lis ti and Aaricts ia attendance. Lincoln. Neb. For price, write SMITH REFINING CO., CR.OWCHS ? 9 Council Bluffa. Ia. Mate quantity desired. HaH YOUR CHANCE! Are yoa married f If not. wjj otmairj u blmt Wa II I ri vr tar names. KWrniin and dwrn ptlon of iweln ladMa who arin ti marry. Airn from 17 v Tbev bay from SIO.OOO to 77.000 in caah. nmd aealed.ttvr ol llir- n.mn (or I l.t ur 1 1 toelveforr' 00. Band for all and take your choice, fcarlieat offers tb ino-t ta.oretl WHY NOT MAKKY KlfM Ad dreaa. CONF8TOOA CO KB E8POKX)X C2 OZ.17.aL. Drawer 077. l.ancaater. Pa, IX WPICWTTlt WORI! THAW HALF A CEH flit I it. fhr Hwhai, faaallnllia. Chill mm4 Imt. aaa all aa. asataaaalaiata, ail VnajatMa. Frintl M..(o. . WRIGHT'S INDIAN VEGETABLE ?UX Ol.. Nev Yark. nDnDCVttEW DISCOVEhT: tres aaaV W I V9 I quick relief andeures worst moi or wviiniiaiiiM ana is) VAlit" rreanneat BR. H. H. tUUI aoia. Bs . attosta. as, 0KLAHDF1A 500 houesteas CLAIMS for Sal. Cane Seed I "White Deer Scarce. - j W Specimens Now R.ivrely Seen in the Adirondewcka r An albino deer is so rare a sight in the Adirondacks that when one does appear it is regarded with supsrstiti ous feelings by some of the natives. Many of the so-called natives of the Adirondacks are French-Canadians. A white deer is never killed by the French-Canadian and he does not mo lest it. although he believes there is an evil influence about him while the albino deer remains in his neighbor hood. Some white deer havs been killed in the Adirondacks in the last few years. In 1858 a white deer frequent ly visited homes of natives in the Keene valley. It Appeared in the fall and became remarkably tame. It was a beautiful creature, having a neck and tail of pure white, while the upper parts of the body and the back were nearly white. The eyes of this deer were white, although usually the eyes of an albino are pink. By common consent the albino of the Keene valley, a doe, was left un molested, and it was decided to" await a heavy snow, when it could be run down and captured alive. But the dogs got after it and chased it until it passed in an exhausted condition near a traveler, who caught it and cut its throat. The traveler was not aware of the agreement among the Followers of Jakinism San Francisco, having already be come familiar with Theosophy, the mystic religions of Brahma and Bud dha, and with the lofty philosophy of the Vedantan Swamis, it only remained to learn of Jainism, perhaps the sanest and most of all the ideal West Indian religions, says the San Francisco Chronicle. Yesterday, before a large audience in the rooms of the Laurel Hall Club, Jainism made its first bow to thn peorle of California, the lec turer being Prcf. Emlyn Lewys. until recently a resident of London. Prof. Lewys is a scholar of striking person ality and the only Englibh-speaking authority on this most ancient of re ligions. Jainism. as explained by the speak er, is the Protestantism of India, as opposed to the Vedas, Brahmanism and the soul-paralyzing caste rystem. It aims at the perfection of character, not through faith, but through correct conduct and systematic intellectual ac tivity or concentration as opposed to the Yogi system of intellectual vacui ty. The speaker said: 4,If a religion may be known by its fruits what shall we say of this one, which though now numbering 2.000.000 vo:aries and dating its origin long prior to the entrance of the Aryans I Tattooing 2ls a. I Social Fad In the Japanese colony, which is sit uated in the neighborhood of Sixth avenue and Twenty-eighth street, there is a little bright-eyed, courteous man who describes himself as a "puncture needle artist." He is what might be called a boss tattooer. His badness is prosperous and he looks forward to making a fortune from the fashionable people of the .metropolis, says the New York Sunday Telegraph. -Who are" my customers?" he said, aB h rpated the vicstion of the writer. "Th best people of the city. I don't want any others and will not waste my art upon them. It is ridicu lous to expect professional like niy Felf, who has decorated the bodies of the most distinguished people in To kio. to descend to the level of a com mon sailor or a vulgar bartender. Tat tooing varies in popularity from year to year, but is always more or less in A Filipino Graveyard. "I saw a great many peculiar things in my travels to the Orient last sum mer," observed Mr. Kahn of California to a Washington Post reporter, as he paused a moment in the House corri dor, "but the most grewsome or all was the Paco cemetery near Manila. "Do you know that they follow the custom of many Spanish communities there in the interment of their dead?" asked the ex-actor. "The poor people, of coiuee. fare worst. Those with wealth can buy a niche in the ceme tery for Sli:8 Mexican, whic h is approx imately $65 in our money. There they may bury their dead permanently. But those who are unable to purchase a niche secure a place temiorarily for something like $39 in Mex, the short word for that kind of silver in the east. At the expiration of five years the skeletons of those poor people are taken out of their resting places and dumped into a black hole, a veritable boneyard. I don't know when I have seen anything that so impressed me with its horrifying phases as this dumping ground for all that remained of the poor Filipinos. I visited the Ponca cemetery on a rainy day, and the ghastly heap in this depression of the earth rises before me in my dreams and haunts me." f Itrlstcninc a Ilaby Zebra. Little Elizabeth Erl, of 1705 North Thirteenth street, is the proudest girl in the city and the reason for this is that she won the privilege of naming the baby zebra, which is the latest arrival at the zoo. says the Philadel phia Record. The baby was born a day or two ago, and Keeper Jager an nounced that the first girl under 12 years of age entering the antelope house on Saturday -should have the honor of christening the infant. Lit tle Miss Erl took no chances, and she was on hand with her mother before the garden opened at 9 o'clock. Ten minutes after the gates had been opened the baby zebra possessed a . . hunters to preserve the doe as long aa possible, and d&eply regretted his act when he was informed of their plans. The guides ct the Adirondacks say that within their memory not more than a dozen white deer have been re ported, and the appearance of one la sufficient to excite ihem greatly. Men of the steadiest nerves under most hunting experiences are sometimes up set at the sight of a white deer or an albino bird. Many visitors to the north woods scout the idea that there is such a thing as a white deer. At the same time the superstitious prefer not to rt-e'ene, rs they believe it indicatas danger. So de:p-eateJ was this su perstition among the r?.tives at Wild Cat pond, In the Cranberry lake region of St. Lawrence county, that they left an albino deer alone when it appeared there three years ago. It was fre quently observed, accompanied by a fawn of the usual color. What be came of it has never been known, but the native there tells the inquirer that he did not shoot it, nor did any of his relatives. They all admired it too much to think of killing it, and, while they don't admit that they were super stitious about shooting it, they will Eay they preferred to take no chances so far as that white deer is concerned. Description of Idea.1 Relig- icn Which Comes from 4 the Mystical Ea.st, I into India, in prehittoric times, has never yet produced a murderer? Though regarding kingship as the greatest injustice still the Jains do two-thirds of all the financial business cf India. Thuy never eat meat, and the monks often carry brooms and sweep the paths to avoid crushing the Insects. They believe in the advance ment of women, in reincarnation and the eternal persistency and progressive evolution of each ego and hold that the atrocities of the soul and intellect, such as sense knowledge, clairvoyance, telepathy, the emotions, the physical constitution and the power to achieve are all under the objuration of Kar ma, which to the Jain is a substance The object of their study and effort is to shake this Karmic clog out and to liberate the soul by vibrating in a cer tain way. This may be done by con centration on such ideals as benevo lence, charity or wisdom, by analyz ing the teachings found in their en ormous and as yet untranslated 11 braries. and then by syntheizlng and immediately acting on these truths Janiism then is the religion of intelli gence, utility and action. The Jains marry at the age of 9 or. 10 and live ideal married lives, all unions be ing regulated through astrological af finity." Ja.pa.nese Makes Money Adorning New Yorkers. 939 8NieM 0tsi vogue. It applied to all, from babies up to middle aged people. Four timet I have tattooed twin. This was tc prevent their getting mixed. At the present time there is quite a fad foi a Japanese fashion which is very beautiful and consists in emblazoning a butterfly, a rose, a forget-me-not, or some other delicate design upon the arm. shoulder or chest. "I have more women applicants than men. The latter seem to consider it as effeminate. I do not mind telling you a secret. Many society belles whe have tattooed decorations upon their frames employ the latter to conceal some blemish. One beauty of the tat too is that it can be applied to. scars, birthmarks, moles, moth patches and strawberry marks. In many cases a slight blemish is of great advantage in this respect, because It gives a handsome background." name, Mrs. Erl, Keeper Jager and Little Elizabeth constitnted the chris tening party, and the ceremony was brief, but interesting. Elizabeth was hoisted to within reaching distance of the bars by the good-natured keeper and the baby was coaxed to the front. The little girl patted the zebra on the nose and with much dignity said: "I christen thee Bessie." Bessie switched her little tail and seemed highly pleased. Inside of half an hour there were a dozen excited little maids in the antelope house, and some were led away tearful because they had missed the coveted honor. Choice of Locality for Home. Thoughtful parents are often guided in their choice of a home by the char acter of the school district into which it wil bring them. I have known families to move frorj the edge of one district to the outskirts of an adja cent one simply for the purpose of changing school associations. "The teachers are all right," they will say. "I have no fault to find with the school; but I want my boy and my girl to be thrown with a better class of children." And the feeling that prompts it is to be honored always. One can hardly do better for her children than by giving them the best and most elevating daily associations obtainable. Caroline Abbot Stanley in the Ledger Monthly. A Friendly Tip. "Young man,'' said ber father, "I don't want you to be too attentive tc my daughter." "Why er really," stammered the young man. "I had hoped to marry her some " "Ex actly, and I'd like to have you marry her, but if you're too attentive to her you won't have money enough to dc it." Philadelphia Press. The citizens of Amesbury,- Mass.. are planning to erect nt in honor of the good c -bn G. Whittier, long a, town. Cap4ltloB. itral'.an fag was Before the Au chosen more than carefully examines was originally sU tralasian Review many of the desig notice, the govern ter up and offerei for the best sugg naval experts was ine those sent in, reached on Octobe 33 000 designs were The competition rted byv "The Aus- Reviews." and as is were well worth ncnt took the mat- a reward of 200 stion. A board of ippointed to exam tr.d a decision was 3. Wasn't Sure im to t hat Kind. A visitor to V.' shir.; store where books, perh tionery were displayed ".on entered a dicals and sta in the show winds. To the first ' said: "Do you keep s want some envelopes.' lady" looked puzzled for a moment, then v to the rear of the stort to an assistant: "Sadi stationery eiveloper?" saleslady" h? tationery? I The "sales and uncertain alking rapidly she called out do we keep Looting for an I nf.1 sh Bride. The story about the visit to England of the Grand Duke Michel, brother of the czar, is that he is seeking a bri-i-1 and has the lady pi i:el out in th. person of the Prii-css Margaret, daughter of King Edward's only sur viving brother, the Dul e of Connaught. The grand duke is 2" years eld. These are riali- Words. Marshfield, Mo.. Jai:. 20th. Mr. J. F. King of this place makes the fol lowing statement: "I have suffered ni.told agony for twenty years with l.ame Back and Acute Kidney Disease, and in that time have never beta two days to gether clear of misery, and for some of the time I could nor walk a st'.p or even sit up. "Last spring, after trying many doc tors and every remedy that could be thought of, I began a treatment of Dodd's Kidney Pills. The good re sults were almost immediate and for the last seven months I have seen more comfort and pleasure than I have for twenty years before. "Any one with Kidney Disease or Lame Back that will not try Dcdd's Kidney Pills deserves to suffer." Miss Klumpke Cominc Heme. Miss Dorothea. Klumnke. the Cb;- cago astronomer, who has been assist.-, ant in the Paris, France. obseravto; y j for fifteen years, is rapidly completing arrangements to return to the United ; States, where she wia have special charge of astral-photograpby at Stan ford university, in California. TI1E BEST RESI LTS IX STARCHING ; can be obtained only hy using Defiance Starch. b?siiiei fretting 4 oz. mure tor same money tc cooking; required. Who goeth a borrowing goeth a sor rowing. DON'T SPOIL VOI K CLOTIiFS. Uao Red Cross Ball Blue aud keep tbem white us enow. All grocers. .V. a iackag. . Work makes the man, and want cf it the fellow. Searnexa Caarot He Curea -by local applications u they eanot Tench the fl i seized portion of tae far.- There Is onlv one af to cure deafness. an that in by consti tutional remedies. LeaToeat n caused by as Snttamed cond.tioa or TUe niucu!" Unins or the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed vou have a rumbliasr Round or lm perfect hear ing, and when It ' entirely cloeil deurEess Is the resul. ni unlets; the Inflammation can be taken out a.j ;bix tube nuttored to it normal condition, liearlne will ' destroyed forever; nine nvi out of ten are caused by cuinrrh. which ia nothing but an icfiamed condition of the worn Kiirfaces. We will (riye One Hundred Dollars for any case Of Deafneis (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarra Cure. Send tor circulars, froe. F. J. CHEN'EV & CO.. Toledo, a Soli. ty Drupirists. t.tc. Hall's Family Pills are the best Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul. Itlllea of Potatoes. Everybody knows that the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., are the largest seed potato growers in the world, so when their President, Henry A. Salzer, recently purchased 21.000 seres more of ideal potato land, all vonciered what for. Well, it is for po tatoes miles and miles of potatoes. The fashion wears out more apparel than the man. exnauatlva THE CHILDREN ENJOY Life out of doors and out of the games which they play and the enjoy ment which they receive aud the efforts which they make, cumr the greater part of that healthful development which is so essential to their happiness when groAvn. When a laxative is needed the remedy which ia g-iven to them to cleanse and sweettn and strengthen the internal organ on which it acts, should be Mich as physicians would sanction, because its component parts are known to be wholesome and the remedy it.-e!f free from every objectiouable quality. The one remedy which physicians and parents, well-informed, approve and recommend and which the Iitt otiei enjoy. becatt.se of its pleasant flavor, its gentle action and its beneficial cf:ect. is Sj-rnp of Figs and for the same reason it is the only laxative which sliould be used by fathers and mothers. Syrup of Fis is the only remedy which acts gently, pleasantly and naturally without griping, irritating, or nauseating and which cleanses the sj-stem effectually, without producing that constipated h-bit which results from the use of the old-time cathartics and modern imitations, and againat which the children fchould be so carefully guarded. If you would have them grow to manhood and womanhood, strong, healthy and happy, do not give them medicines, when medicines are not needed, and when nature need assistance in the way of a laxative, give them only the simple, pleasant and gentle Syrup of Figs. Its quality is due not only to the excellence of the combination of the laxative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic syrups and juices, but also to our original method of manufacture and as you value the health of the little ones, do not accept any of the substitutes which unscrupulous deal era sometimes offer to increase their profits. The genuine article may be bought anywhere of all reliably ;tgyits at fifty cent per bottle. Please to remember, the full name cf the Company t a m v ft 9 3 I Lx-, 1 t"vrai I : . . C"! ; -k the front fpi'V'. V i Y:' f wa-vs necessary to buy C&& C V7 jAk? w Ilk kvriUii & v' SSW v KV-?Vl J i -J . -if -V--V".. V Miss Marion Cunningham, the Popular Young Treasurer of the Young Woman's Club of Emporia, Kans., has This to Say of Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. "Dear Mks. riXKH.ur: Your Vegetable Compound cured rac of womb trouble from which I had been a great sufferer for nccrly three years. During that time I was very irregular and would often have intense pain in the small of my back, and blinding headaches arid severe cramps. For three months I used Lydia TL Finkli;iind Vegetable Compound, and aches, and pains arc as a past i.-cm -ry, while health and happiness is my daily experience now. You cer tainly have one grateful friend in Emporia, and I have pr;t.r-u your Vegetable Compound to a large number of my ivj. Yr u have' rr.y permission to publish my testimonial in connection n ith my picture. Yours sincerely, Miss Marion Cunningham, Kmporia, Kans." ' $oOOO FORFEIT IF TIIK ADO VIS JA7TTr.ll S SOT flnXtlVn. When women are troubled with irrearnlar, SAijrprcssed or painful menstruation, weakness, leueorrhot. displucemo:;! or ulceration of tlm womb, that liearimj-down feeling, infutaimutioiic.f the ovaries. la ka he, bloating (or flat uleiicef, general debility, ind:r .-tion, and nervous pros tration, or are besot with sueh Fyiuptoms as di..uu?FS, faiiitiifss, l.is.sitiide, excitability, irritability, nervousness, plee i-stiess, melancholy, all frone," and want-to-be -left-alone " feelij;-,, blues, and hojiclessiiess, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia 1 I'ink ham's Vegetable Comjound 'at once removes such trouble, ltefu.se to buy any other medicine, for 30U need the liest. .Mrs. IMnkliam invites all sitOL women ti write Iier for adtka. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, 31ass. It 'J m feet ftls arB mrm rwm 1a wmr rr4an. tW fi3M4 mm morm ku ia Aacrici than mow rnutmt. Tmri km rmmmmx ip,aa SAUCER'S CCEOS KEVCR FAIL. VftaUcr hawfw tb mail or frail ih r. Fist'- W4 prune. to Urr-at rrrr mf ff"jr iu1 Paria cf. rkinr mmr m,Mt urn, mm Lmimcm omu u to. i. win; uu pcoc4jt "" j0 Kinds for I Gc, Postpaid. 19 Vnlflwnt crlMt U4m 1GO kSndS 1 mrtM glvriou 7 mtff & frK- Lttavm varlctic TCP Cflly 1 rlcdiU Itwl moriM lift rtvi4 -mhtrrm ?SO art, which wilt fttrnlih o waatMl fet fall f mnift di flow mn4 U atft tta mt rmr vefUktle. tnibr wilH mmv ermM etloc tilln H Mt rrt kiod mt fraiia -d tUwrfl. mmd mrm arljeci vgeibta- mmd tya mnl mil far hmt U ct. la tiftaiyft. CyW tnall ? H&rtfr ErbocBlnr ftmnlm Vn. rttaid. S Hard F'ami, S Ch rrl . Crmam mt.4 ? Apr ittuteimd. bmr&f mm mmk. Um IS p-iMd Ur tiJa. Oar grmmt emtmlomrm. rMltvlr wrtA (ino te my wi4r mwmkm r Iimt -od tmrmT, I m.Md to poa receipt ml 6. tay. mt witM mXm 150 aorta Car hmi itfe. pMUf. JCHR A. SALZER SEED COMPANY, UAL)-'. fill ,n REOUiSES NO COOKING PREPARED FOR .iAtiKi'ni PukKISES ONLY CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.- of ever v nack- order to get its rV 1 iF -J r-Say , It Cro-ts. Wis. Pefir.anc e Starch is rasr o use needs no cooking sim ply mix it with cold water. It is the cheapest. A 10 ounce package for 10 cents that is one-th.rd more than you can get of any othT starch. If yo-ir grocer den s not keep it. send us hi? name and w will send you one trial pack age free. At Wholesale ty Ail Grocery Jotters. printed on CY r'J Reno. 0. !