r Look for this brand on harness, collars, saddles, horse blankets, lap robes, ete. Made by Harpham Bros. Co., Lincoln, Neb. Drcp us a card and will mail yoa a souvenir. THE OPPORTUNITY OF TO-DAY The opportunity for the man with little mean* probubiy better to-day intbe f>ra!rie state* of the » uthwes- than ever before ta tbe hlrtory of the nail n. To be *ure. there is not the vast open cb >ice tif land for tbe h-mestead* that ex* *'ted in the " s. The lands then taken up under G •vernnient lavra are now prosperous farm* and rauthes. There 1* need of more bands to develop tbe country. In tbe Southwest. Indian Territory, Oklahoma and Texas, are vast areas of unim proved land not yet producing the crops of which it is capable. Practically the same thing is true of the towns. Few lines if buslne-s are ad equately repreaaated. There are openings of ail ••'ft* for wide-awake men Are you oneV If yoa are interested, teil ua what you want, h w much you have to Invest, and we win gladly furm,h rhe lat rotation. Write f r a o py of — | «f our paper. "The Coming Country.” It's free. Address GEOBGE MOBTON, G. P.4T. A. BOX 911, ST. LOUIS. MO. )A*™f Antiseptic FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to ' xnetr sex. tuea as a au-acne is marveiousiy suc cessful . Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease genes, Stops discharges, beais ir.'.ani—stioa and luwl soreness, c-res leaccrrtiea and nasal catarrh. Faxtioe is in powder t -ra to be dissolved in pc-e water, and is far m e cleunrinr, hea r.g, gennic.iial ■ economical than liquid ar.naept.i-s for all TOtLET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, t«0 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of instructions Free. T*e ft. Paxton Company Boston, Mass. Nervous Women Their Sufferings Are Usually Due to Uterine Disorder* Perhaps Unsuspected A MEDICINE. TflAT CURES Alrs/rf. f.Jfy/fl wp// i ^ Can we dispute 'the “-ell - known aact that American I women are ner vous ? How often do we hear the expres I sion. * I am so ner jvous. it seems as if 'i should fly; ” or. i “ Don’t speak to me.'1 Little thinjrs ►annoy you and Waite \uu irntaoie; you cant sleep, you are unable to quietly and calmly perform your daily tasks or care for your children. The relation of the nerves and gen erative organs in women is so close that nine-tenths of the nervous pros tration, nervous debility, the blues, sleeplessness and nervous irritability arise from some derangement of the organism which makes her a woman. Fits of depression or restlessness and irritability. Spirits easily affected, so that one minute she laughs, the next minute weeps. Pain in the ovaries and between the shoulders. Loss of voice; nervous dyspepsia. A tendency to cry at the least provocation. All this points to nervous prostration. Nothing will relieve this distressing condition and prevent months of pros tration and suffering so surely as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. M E. Shotwell. of 103F!atbush Avenue. Brooklyn. N. Y., writes: *• I cannot express the wonderful relief I have experien'-ed by taking Lvdia E Pink ham's \ egetable Compound. 1 suffered for a long time with nervous prostration, back ache, heaiiaehe. loss of appetite. I could not sleep and would walk the floor almost everv night. I had three doctors and got no better, and life wi- a burden. I was advised to try Ly lia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it has worked wonder* for me. “ I am a well woman, my nervousness is all gone and my friends say I look ten years younger.” Will not the volumes of letters from women made strong by Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound convince all women of its virtues? Surely you cannot wish to remain sick and weak and discouraged, exhausted each day, when von can be as eao_y cuiea as other women. W. N. U. Omaoa. No. 25—1905. The Secret of Good Coffee Even tiie best housekeepers cannot make a good cup of coffee without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerly ’ blended coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their counters won't do. But take the pure, clean, natural flavored LION COFFEE, the leader of all package coffees— the coffee that for over a quarter of a century has been daily welcomed in millions of homes—and you will make a drink fit for a king in this way: HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE. LION COFFEE, became to gei hes: recalls yon most w the beet coffee. Grind your LION COFFEE rather fine. I -e “a tablespoon ful to each cap, and one extra for the pot” First mix it with a little cold water, enough to make a thick paste, and add white of an egg (if egg is to be used as a settler;, then f ouow one of the fallowing rules: 1st. WITH BOILING WATER- Add boiling water, and let It boil THREE MINETES ONXY. Add a little cold water and set aside five minutes to settle. Serve promptly. ,. . . „ _ 2d. WITH COLO WATER. Add your cold water to the paste and bring It to a bolL Then set aside, add a Little cold water, and la live minutes It’s ready to serve. 3 (Don’t boil it too long. . ^ . J Don’t let it stand more than ten minutes before serving. POSTS (Don’t use water that has been boiled before. TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE, let. With Effs. fee part of the while of an egg, mixing it with the ground LION COFFEE before t>oiiir g. , , . •id. wttb CeM Water instead of eggs. After boiling add a dash of cold water, and set aside for eight or ten minutes. then serve through a strainer. Insist on getting a package of genuine LION COFFEE, prepare it according to this recipe and you will only use LION COFFEE in future. (Sold only in 1 lb. sealed packages.) c Lion-head on every pakage.) (Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO.. Toledo, Ohio. Let Libby Serve Your Soup Tomato, Julienne, Consomme. Chicken. MuJIisratawnev. ©r Oxtal will please the coat lait.Oiuu*. Tbejr are quicaiy prepared—deacions to e*t—aiways satisfactory. Libby's fuS^1 Food Products Corned Beef Hash Boneless Chicken Vienna Sausage Ox Tongue* Soups Ham Loaf Tour Grocer.has them Libby. McNeill & Libby, Chicane Mueller Pianos Are Sent. Free to responsible people on trial. If you don't say they are S100.00 better than any piano you have seen, box it up. | send it back at our expense. > Our Prices Are Way Down because we have no agents or travelers Our terms are cash, or $!• 00 down and $5.00 monthly. Write today for cata log and prices. Address the makers, SCHMOLLER& MllELLER Established. 1*59. OMAHA, \EB. I The City in the Sea L/O. oeam nas reared mmsetr a tnrt se In a strange city lying alone Far down within the dim west. Where the rood and the bad ami the I worst and the best Have gone to their eternal rest. Their shrines and palaces and t- wen (Time-eaten towers that tremble not! Resemble nothing that is ours. Around, by lifting wir.ds forgot. Resignedly beneath the sky w The melancholy waters lie. So rays from the holy heaven come down On the long night time of that town; Rut light from out the lurid sea Streams up the turrets silently. Gleams up the pinnacles far and free; I'p domes, up spires, up kingly halls, t'p fanes, up Babylon-like walls. I'P shadowy long-forgotten bowers Of sculptured ivy and stone flowers. I'p many and many a marvelous shrine Whose wreathed frier- -= interwine The viol, the violet, and the vine. Resignedly beneath the sky The melancholy waters lie. So blend the turrets and shadows there That ail seem pendulous in air. nne trom a proud f-wf r in the town Death looks gigantically down. There open fares and gaping graves '.awn level with the luminous waves; Bnt not the riches there that lie In each idol's diamond eye— Not the gayty-jeweled dead. Tempt th‘ waters fr m their bed; For no ripples cirri. alas. Along that wilderness of glass; No swellings tell thfu winds may be Vpon s<>me far-off happier sea; N heavi’-gs Hrt that winds have teen On seas less hideously serene. But lo. a stir is in the air! The wave—there is a movement there*! As if the towers had thiust aside. In siehtly sinking, the dull tide; As if their tops had feebly given A void within the filmy heaven! The waves have now a redder glow. The hours are breathing faint and low; And wh*-n. amid no earthiy moans. Down, down that town shall --trie hence, Hell, rising fr>>m a thousand thrones. Snail do it reverence. — Edgar Allan Poe. Disease and the Microbe I am tempted to ask the reader merely to believe, because I say so, that the destruction of disease germs | is possible. Of course I don’t mean to assert that we are yet in possession of knowledge sufficient for our purpose, j even supposing that mankind had set itself on the extermination of disease microbes, says C. W. Saleeby, M. D., in Harper's Weekly. For absolute success we must know much more than we do. In the case of malaria our knowledge is practically perfect. We know the life history of the mi crobe from the cradle to th* grave, so to speak, and therefore we can ex \ terminate it whenever the public of | the planet gives the word. On the ! other hand, we have not yet discover l ed the microbes of many diseases. | such as measles and whooping cough and mumps, and even a "cold in the head.” But these are mere matters ; of time. Similarly, we must recog nize that microbes go through mil lions of generations when other crea ; tures go through one. At the end of | twenty-four hours a microbe may nave grandchildren with ''great-great” add i ed on. Therefore they can vary very quickly. And we know that certain conditions may cause innocent mi crobes so to vary, after a few thou sands of generations (taking next to no timet, that they become harmful. AH this question must be investi gated on even a wider scale than at present: so that we may be able to kill ail the microbes that are even po tentially dangerous, or else modify them so that they are nargerous only to creatures which are dangerous to us. An instance of this is already furnished in a sense, by the plague. The microbe of .nis disease—the ba cillus pestis—discovered ten years ago by the great Japanese bacteriolo gist Xitasato. is main'y conveyed from place to place by rats, which die • even more readily than man of this terrible disease. Therefore man has declared war on the unfortunate rat, his co-victim. As disease gradually diminishes upon the earth, with the disappear ance of its chief cause, certain great changes will occur in human life. Its average length will lie greatly in creased—certainly by several decades —for microbes shorten the life of every one of us. even when we die of so-called “old age.” Turnverein in War Time The first Turner societies in the United States were founded in Phila : delphia and Cincinnati in 1841, and j shortly after, the New York Turn verein had its start in Hoboken. Two years later ten societies were flourish ing and these were formed into a Na : tional Turner union, says Outing*. The revolutionary spirit which blazed fiercely in Germany in 1848 was rushed for the time and many 1 patriots of superior education and in I teligence fled to this country as an asylum. They were strangers in a strange land, unable to communicate with the native born and sociability was limited to intercourse with their own countrymen. They had been Turners at home, using this organiza tion as a nursery of patriotism, in which hisrh ideals of political, srcial and religious progress were cherished, together with the training of the body for the hardships of the field and camp. This ideal of classic times, wisely reincarnated in modern Germany to serve a nation's needs, was trans planted to the United Spates by the fortunes of war. The Turner societies aroused some antagonism, .based on the specious claim that they were an attempt to create a stare within a state and to keep the Germans apart from the life around them. This con tention was magnificently shattered a little more than a decade after the first Turners were organized in this country. When the civil war began, these German citizens of the United States volunteered in such numbers that in New York a Turner regiment was enlisted and sent to the front under Col. Max Webber. The Ninth Ohio was another regiment of Turners from Cincinnati, and in Philadelphia and St. Louis Turners filled the ranks of regiments which did not have the distinctive name. Gen. Seigel commanded several thousand Turners in his forces and was their idol, for he had been a leader of the Turnerbund in his own land and was one of the fighting re volutionary commanders who led his army into Switzerland and there dis banded it after the cause was lost. Odd Things About Money Business men throughout Canada are disturbed at the preponderance of American coins in trade circles. Ways and means are being sought to ex clude American silver coins as far as possible from business channels. The Canadian Bankers’ association has proposed to the Canadian government that it reimburse the banks for the j charges of shipping American silver back to the United States, the banks at the same time to take an equiva lent amount of Canadian silver. There has been no disposition to refuse American bills, for the balance of trade is heavily in favor of the Unit- j ed States and the bills are accepted at par by the banks for shipment to correspondents throughout the United States. Chinese mints are literally “coining money’’ on a scheme recently hit up on by which copper coins are minted ; at a comparatively small cost and made exchangeable at the rate of ninety for a Mexican dollar. At Hang chau 20.000,000 of these copper coins i are being made every month and shipped to Shanghai. The coins axe officially known as the 10-cash coins, corresponding to our American 1-cent pieces. One hundred of these coins weight slightly over twenty-four ounces and a pound and a half cop per costs only 10 to 20 cents. No great amount of power is needed to convert the copper into coin and plenty of labor can be had at from $4 to $8 gold a month. According to Chinese computation, the pound and a half of copper in money is worth abont SI.12 Mexican, or 50 cents in gold. While issued at the mints for 90 cents to one Mexi can dollar, so great is the demand for these copper coins among the Chinese that they pass current among the people for from 95 to 97 cents. A new mint with an output of 2.000,000 of these coins a day will start up in Hangchau this month. The new coins are not only driving gold cash out of circulation, but will have to be reck oned with when a new monetary sys tem is made for the Chinese empire. Was Out of Proportion “During the motor boat races." said an American, “there was a great as semblage of celebrities at Monte Carlo. -Sir Alfred Harmsworth. the Eng lish publisher, lunched one day at Monte Carlo on Russian dishes at the famors Citro's. He had come from Marseilles in a new ninety-horse-power automobile, and Ciro was now explain ing to him his Russian dishes, a nev elty that Monte Carlo had* welcomed heartily. “Sir Alfred helped himself to a Rus sian dish that looked like black velvet. “ ‘This is good,’ he said, ‘but have you any kvass?’ • 'Kvass? Indeed, yes,’ said Ciro. 4 ‘I'll have some kvass, then.' said Sir Alfred. ‘Some kvass, with plenty of Caucasus cabbage in it.* “But when the pale kvass came it was too thick with the aromatic cab bage of the Caucasus. It was neces : sary to send it back for a little more sour soup. “ ‘I remind myself.' said Sir Alfred smiling, ‘of an old man who sat at a table nest to mine in Sweeting's the other day. "This old man ordered ale and lob ster. “ 'And. waiter,’ he said, ‘see that you put a good head on the ale.’ “Yes, sir, a good nead. sir,’ said the waiter, and in a little while he return ed with a mug of ale that foamed like a geyser. "There was too much foam alto gether. With a spoon the old man ladled it off. Thereupon the waiter took the nearly empty glass again to refill it. “ ‘You told me. you know, sir.’ he said, ‘that you wanted a good head on it.’ “ ’But.' said the old man. ‘I didn’t know it would have such a verv short neck.’ ” The Luxury of Friendlessness. “Ob, dear:" exclaimed Miss Forty odd, disconsolately, “it certainly ( seems as if there was nothing for me to live for. I don’t suppose I’ve a friend in the world.” “Nonsense!” came in the cheery tones from The Optimist. “You have a great deal to be thankful for. if, as you say, you have no friend. Just re fleet that in that case there is no one to borrow money of you: no one to call when you are in the middle of an interesting book: no one to tdll v^u , scandalous stories of other neople; no | one, in short, to bore you to your face and abuse you behind your back. And yet you say you have nothing to live Plant Forecasts Weather. An Austrian meteorologist, J. X. Xo wak, who forecasts the weather by means of a plant called “abrus pre catorius,” discovered by him in Mex ico many years ago, wiK erect his first weather stations in Vienna and I on^on. Nowak maintains that his forecasts are obtainable from three to eight days ahead. QUICKER THAN DOCTOR'S TONICS, SAYS TYFHOID PATIENT. roan? Lady Left by F«*v«>r in Vcrv Weak State I’aes Dr. Williams* 1‘iuk Fills with Gratifyinjj Keaults. After a fever, such as typhoid or soar let, has run its full course there remains the recovery < .f strength. The tonic that will most rapidly increase the red cor puscles iu the blood is the one that will most quickly restore color to the pale rheeks, strength to the weak muscles, aud elasticity to the slngghk nerves. So far nothing has ever been produced su perior to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for this purpose. Miss Midendorf had been ill with typhoid fever for fourteen weeks. She had a good physician who curreid her safely throagh the critical stages. When he left, nothing remained to be done ex cept to build up her strength, which was very feeble, and he gave her s :>ine pre scriptions for that purpose. Here, how ever, she met with disappointment. “I took the doctor's tonics,” she says, “for two months after I had recovered from the fever, but they did not do me t he good I looked for. My strength came back so slowly that I scarcely seeine-d to be making any progre>s at all. Just then I read iu a bo k tin-own iu our yard some striking testimonials showing what wonderful blood-builders and strength-givers Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are. I got a box of them soon after this and after I had taken only about half of them I could see a very gr at im provement in my condition. When I hud used up two boxes, I felt that I did not need any more medicine. I have remained strong ever since.’’ Miss E. B. Midendorf lives at No. 1501 Park street, Quin y, El. Dr. Wil liams’ Pink PilL. are the best remedy to use in all cases of weakness, from what ever cause the system may be run down. Ei cases of debility due to overwork tin y minister fresh strength and overcome nervous symptoms. They are a sp-cihc for anaemia or bloodicssness. They are particularly helpful to girls on the verge of w manhood. They meet ail the re quirements of the period known as the change of life. They correct spring languor. They strengthen weak diges tion and rou>e up sluggish organs. No other tonic combines so many virtues. All druggists sell them A thin? Is not right or wrong be cause any religion has made a pro nouncement on it. A thing is wrong which injures anybody, and for no other reason. If a person enjoyed being pounded in the face it would be an agreeable and courteous act to so do. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Search for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 1C oz.—one full pound—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in -pound pack ages, and the price is the same. 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures "16 czs." Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick ing. Defiance never sticks. It is the being that is the preciou5 thing. -Being is the mother of all lit tle doings, as well a the grown-up deeds, and the mighty heroic sacrifice: and these little doings, like the good children of the house, make the bliss of it.—George MacDonald. AGONY OF SORE HANDS. Cracked and Peeied—Water and Heat Caused Intense Pain—Could Do Nc Housework—Grateful to Cuticura. “My hands cracked and peeled, and were so sere it was'impossible for me to do my housework. If I put them in water I was in agony for hours; and if I tried to cook, the heat caused in tense pain. I consulted two doctors, but their prescriptions were utterly useless. And now after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuti cura Ointment my hands are entirely well, and I am very grateful. (Signed) Mrs. Minnie Drew, IS Dana St., Rox bury. Mass." A woman is never so afraid of catch ing cold in the wet when she has on low shoes and openwork stockings as a man is in rubber boots. Opportunities in Cuba. Now 1* tbe time to wurf land in La Gloria the first and !srer*t American Colony in Cuba, F.aar term*. Money In fruit rafelnji. Lanre profit* on email Investment*. Write for free Illustrated booklet. Cuban Land* Steamship Co., 32 Broadway, 9.1. City. Generosity is based on moods and dispositions. Justice is based on prin ciple. “Yes” Churches School Houses and Homes ought to he decorated and made beautiful and healthful by using ,fVVa\> aslVwe A Rock Cenent Sff'&s4Tz not rub or scale. IMtdn vs disease germs and vermin. No washing or walis after once ap plied. Any one can brush it on—mix with cold water. Plain unting an i whitening, and the most elaborate rei-rf, stencil work and frescoing may be done with it. Oth*»r finishes (bearing fanciful name* and mixed with hot water) do not have the cementing property of Ala ba.. tine. They are stuck on with frlne or other animal ma ter, which rots, ceding disease germs, rubbing, scaling and spoiling walla, clothing, etc. Such finishes must be washed off every year—cost ly filthy work. Bay Aiaba«tine only in nye-pound packages, properly labeled. Tint card, pretty wall and ceding design, ‘ Hints on Decorating, and our artists' ser vices in making color plans, free. ALABASTINE COMPANY, Grand Rapids, Mich, or MS Water St, N. Y. DYSPEPTIC MU SINGE An overworked conscience is apt to lose its voice. Seme men want to make hay even when it is raining. Xo man can te thoroughly honest withont constant practice. The fellow who marries for money sometimes buys a g id trick. It takes a let of imagination to writs a successful love ktt-.r. The fools are not a'l dead. In fact, a let of them haven't teen hern. Lots of women are u;> to date in everything except their birthdays. It’s a mistake to marry too young, but it's a mistake that kn't repeated. Many an unsuccessful man would rather preserve his dignity than hus tle. It’s the hardest thing in the world to be frank and popular at the same 1 time. It is better to have too little con fidence in yourself than uo much in others. We are told that love levels all i things, but often it seems like an up hill tight. To indulge in the thimrs we can’t afford is the average mans idea of pleasure. Life is like a game of cards, in which a good deal depends upon a good deal. Duty and pleasure are no more | closely related than a wheelbarrow and an automobile. If you are going to burn your bridges, burn -them behind you rather than in front of you. * The fellow who is always under a cloud reminds one of Honing so much as a borrowed umbrella. SAYS THE EACHELOR GIRL. A woman nev r fainrs cnless there is a man around to catch her. The Kansas Sra’*- oil refinery was a bomb of the American variety. Most of us don't care what happens so Ions as it doesn't happen to us. There are men who wouldn't even pay a compliment without taking a ; receipt. A lie will live as long a? a truth if you do it up in an equally neat epi gram. When men pool their resources they sometimes realize That a pool and its money are soon parted. Wabash Special Train for teachers and their friends to As bury Park. N. J., leaving Chicago 2 p. m.. June 29th, going via Detroit, stopping at Niagara Falls. Albany, steamer down the Hud son to New York and Salt Water trip | to Asbury Park. All agents sell via Wabash from Chicago. Harry E Moores. G. A. P. D. Wabash R. R . Omaha, Neb. — Why love is said to be blind when a girl in love can see ten times more in the object of her affections than others can. SADIE flOBINSOf*. Pretty Girt Suffered From Nervous'ess tsd Pe:v.c Catarrh—Found Quick Reiiet in a Few Days. NERVOUSNESS AND WEAKNESS CURED BY PE-RU-NA. Miss Sadie Robinson, 4 Rand street, Malden. Mass., writes: •’IVruna was recommended to me altout a year airoas an excellent remedy for the troubles peculiar to our sex.and as I found that all that was said of this medicine was true, I am pleased to endorse it. “/ began to use it about seven months ago for weakness and nervousness, caused from overw ork and sleepless ness, and found that in a few day s / began to grow strong, my appetite in creased and I began to sieep better, consequently my ner\ ousness passed away and rhe weakness in the pelvic organs soon disappeared and i ha \ e been w ell and strong ever since. ” Address Dr. S. II. Hartman. Is-. - lent of The Hartman Sanitarium. * ambus, O., for free medical advice. All corres pondence strictly confidential. THE DAISY FLY KILLERS’ ‘ ? home—in dtninflr-ronvR. «WN»pivurr<’.o.t p wn> e U jir-* trmifoi** smk * 'l#*1* it n«»tv • i not ^iHortrv. jrirc I ry in-on on. e. yu i »lil nrr*t >>« »ilkoat thfm if not i.«i* by «<■»! «*-*. **-nt i»rrp»;.| for tar. «»4 '••o. I Ifb-kub a>r., KratUfaJk I, $100 Weekly Easily Made writinghealthandaccident insurance experience un necessary. Write Bankers' Accident Co..De» Kctnea.1*. i XVcgetahlePreparationforAs similating theFoodandRegula j ting the Stomachs and Bowels of INFAW TS ft HIL DRKN Promotes Digestion.CheerfuI : ness and Resl.Contcuns neither Opium.Morphine rorMineral. >'ot Narcotic. Tbafi* td Oid QrSAl-a TL PCTCHLR Seui * . Mx Soutm. » 1 HtckmiU SmiM- f l B>X*ri**t**‘Sad* + Mir*» it fid - Cirri-fid 'inn rtmrar Aperfecl Remedy forConslipa fion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. Att> »non 1 h v • ol tl * )) DoslX - J^ClMS 1 EXACT COPY CF WRAPPER For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought ■ Thirty Years CASTORA hlrt l@s©ras5 (D®SDars and Guff laundered with tarch never crack nor become brittle. They last twice as long as those laun dered with other starches and give the wearer much letter satisfaction. If you want your husband, brother ot son to look dressy, to feel comfort able and to be thoroughly happy use DEFIANCE STARCH in the laundry. It is sold by all good grocers at 10c a package—16 ounces. Inferior starches sell at the same price per package but contain only 12 ounces. Note the differ ence. Ask your groeer for DEFIANCE STARCH Insist on getting it and you will nevei use any other brand. mwane® Starch Company Omaha, Hah.