.--!? 4.f3iGf " 5- ' - " " '-V N -'Xft'v Vj,lv S ' V -ftr ------ . $- 3 - .- -ip Pl 1 J - l. u. - - i. r . . 4 .-.'- - 1 -'. ." . Vivr- . fv-- - 4 . I " " -l. Mt-'iT j I " vW I int jwwMMmmwkr fr nw .x BeWReeeeV '"The majority of men that I know look forward to the time when they are not to take any pleasure in this .life," said old Lira Jucklin, and his neighbors who were standing about the horse-block whereon the old man '- had just taken his seat looked at him In astonishment. "I don't see how that can be," spoke tip Sam Xiles, Roat-whiskered, squint " eyed, and a liar on most occasions, ' but like most liars, the inheritor of a sort of engaging wisdom. Old Lim cleared his throat. "And the reason you can't see it, Sammy, is . .because you are morally blind. The average man looks forward to the time when he won't have to work, and when this time comes he almost al- -ways finds that for him there is no 'more enjoyment. Nejct to the enjoy ment, of work itself, we get the most pleasure out of rest and " "And when we rest we are enjoyin' ourselves." Sam broke in. Old Lim nodded. "Yes. but tfhen we haven't worked we can't rest, for rest means the tuther side of bein ! tired. After climbin' hard to reach the top of the hill we take a long breath and it is as sweet as spring water, and the reason it seems so deep and fdtchin' -is because the breaths comin" up the hill were short. But if we set down on the top of the hill and stay " -there the breaths aiu't so sweet. After -a. while (hey get to be like the breaths ' lown in the valley. To make "em sweet you've got to climb for "em. In .this life all the way ihrough it is al- most impossible to get any real good out of si thing you don't work for. That's the reason the gambler's money don't amount to anything. It hasn't any sweat value. And even if he hadn't done anything to cause him to le driven out, Adam couldn't have stayed much longer in the Garden of Eden. He never had worked, it is 1nie, and be didn't know what it was, hnt the fact that he had nothin' to do "had, accordin' to my notion, begun to make him wish that Sunday was over with. I reckon old Miz Eve could have stood it a little while longer, un ..til the tall of the year, when the leaves, changin' their color, brought " about a- new fashion, and that would have held her a while longer. But Adam would have had something to do if she had given him a leaf and told him to go out and match it for 3ier Every leaf in the gaiden might have been green, all of an exact shade, but-if Adaui bad tried to match one it would have changed color like one of these here lizaids they fetch from . Florida. And I Jay ou the sweetest meal he ever oat in his life was the first bread he earned by the sweat of Jiis brow. It has been writ that man whs made to mourn, but I've noticed that he don't mourn so much when he is at work. He starts out lookin' for ; a place where he can ease his mind. He never finds it. but when at work he seems to feel that he is gettin' there." "But the happiest man I ever saw was the laziest." said Sam. and the old-timers looked at one another and smiled, for no matter in what rev erence a country oracle is held the in grained envy of his neighbors ap plaud the threat of his overthrow. "I'm not here to deny truths, but to bring "em out." replied the old man. "I've known lazy men that appeared to enjoy themselves simply because iliey wan't at work, and 1 can go a lit tle further and say that the happiest feller I ever saw was an idiot. Ail he had to do was to jolt himself and he was tickled mighty nigh to death. The sight of a dog a scratchin' of himself was better to him than the keen joke . of a wise man. But when I spoke of the average man 1 meant tiie man with a mind." : "But one of the smartest men I ever saw was lazy," said Sam. "Yes. that may be a fact, and some of thp plainest truths have been told "by -a 'liar, but the liar aint the man that fills the world with truth. But I still insist that I'm talkin' about the average, man, and I don't think the " average man is lazy. The brightest -.minds have had the most beautiful .ihqughts, enjoyed mebby by the few, but- It is the work of the average mind - "that has built up civilization. If every mind had been as great as Shake-...-speare's. the world would have been a '"whirlwind of ideas, like light'nin' bugs Sa a swamp, and there wouldn't have -been anyJjody to stoop low enough to .--if i k food out or the ground. There i ""wouldn't Jiavc been anything to learn, ' and the universe would have -been a ; 'great mental starvation. There is .'more happiness in bein' able to enjoy .- ".-;7'..jhe. -wisdom of the wisest than to be ; f ' . -the wisest.. "Wisdom is sometimes a .m ''-..':' sort Of savior, crucified for the bene " '.-':; "fit-'of mankind. A man at the top is a 'm- .. ". Tittle too lonesome. I should think, and v-'' .-'we'd get mighty tired havin to look '---. .-.down all the time. In my blunderin' ': . .- Xvay. I've read some of the great books, -,:': and it don't seem to me that the '.."".""-. ; writers of them were happy. I can ."-... ".understand that u new and surprisin' ,"- " -.thought sboatin" through a man's mind "--'- .-" woulrj thrill him to his marrow, but '..';'" -after a great light there i always .-".'..darkness; after a great-joy a com--.'; '"s'nondin sorrow. And no matter how ." j ;7. -. many- T)ig words a man may have he :-. . "fees -things that he can't tell about. . " ' - in every drop of our blood there is a h ....- v thought that can't be expressed. 1 . --l;caot explain ihe feelin' that conges . "'" -- over me when 1 see two game roosters : "'. :figh"t." AH" I can do is jest to open my, .-'I,'. '. mouth -and holler." t . '. -v- . .A lout wearing one suspender, a "-hickory shirtimd'a white cotton hat '; Vcameupr grinning, and with an air of i . ;;" confidence and importance such as --"J -V. nothing save "the consciousness of a "".". momentous mission could lend; "blurt- .'". ""ed'out: "Gentlemen, rlicr's goin to ." " be a transaction in feathers over here y V.-"m Atcherson's stable. jt has been J on Rooster ff jm a W J) r w . . 'lowed that a little red rooster from up the creek can put outcn business a black lnnimy from down in the holler, and :' But he had said enough. Old Lim got up and dusted the scat of his l trousers. Out of his mouth he threw his quid of tobacco, as if he had been invited to eat of some delicate dish. His nature, and his reading, taken up long after the children had quit school, told him that to fight chickens was a wanton cruelty. But he argued that they were going to fight anyway, and that the mere fact of his looking on would not. add to their suffering. Man suffered for man and it was called heroism. Man killed chickens and devoured them. He gave them no chance for their lives. To be a conqueror was the greatest joy of the male portion of the animal kingdom. To be killed in a fight did not render the chickens unfit for food, if anyone wanted to cat them. and. besides, it offered an opiwrtunity to die game, and that ought to be looked upon as the crowning glory of any life. Old 'Squire Brizintinc looked at Lim. They belonged to the same church, or at least formed a part of the same con gregation, having married religious women. They both of them had on many an occasion announced their belief in the Book from "eend to eend." And old Brizintine looked at him and said: "Limuel. is it possible you are goin' over there to see them roosters light?" "Well. 'Squire, my goin' won't make "em hit none the harder." "But your presence will lend en couragement." "They don't need no encourage ment. 'Squire. They'll fight quick enough as it is." "I mean that it will lend encourage ment to the young men of the com munity." "Well. I don't think they need any encouragement nuther. And, besides, if 1 don't go myself I won't know which ones of them to lecture for goin:." "Ah." said "Squire0 Brizintinc. "that Is another view of the matter. I'll go with you." While they were arming the war riors with glistening steel. Sam Xiles cried out that he would put his money on the little red. '"Which one would you bet on. Uncle Lim?" inquired Pud Buck. "Pud, you know I never bet." 'But if you did bet, which one?" MMMVVWMWVSWVVMMMMyWWWWWWWWWMWWW V X 1 XT' sr i VN VA-6JWBH - AJA THIXK it was Zangwill who said that. like a poet, a gentleman was born, not made. The same aphor ism can be ap plied to the op posite sex. A true lady is born, not made. Being born a lady she can be improved by edu cation and by refining influen ces, but she will not suddenly be gin to be a lady, she will always have been one; while if she was not born a lady no amount of education or refinement or stimulating environment will make her a true lady. She may educate herself to become a very passable imitntion of a lady by cultivating her sense of her obli gations to her brothers and sisters in this world. She may act the part so often and so well that after a time she will con vince people that she is a lady; but I if she only takes the trouble to be born one. if she will only choose for her ancestors kindly, unselfish peo ple, she will be apt to start her life with the chief requisites, and then, no matter what her education may or may not be, her heart will every day incline her to ladylike actions and people will say when she dies: "She was a true woman if ever there was one." And to be a true woman is to be the best possible kind of lady. o o o E was a coward. Xoman save him self knew it for he had been for tunate enough to keep the knowl edge of it from others. But he knew that he was a coward. He admired bra very in other men. He read tales of heroes with keen pleasure ,and he vr.v'-r.fi that the gcu.- !:ad given him the quality of courase. But he was nevertheless a coward. When the Span ish war broke out he saw his friends BJ ll UK 1IUUI and he envied them. , They will do brave deeds and be admired of men, he, thought, but I who am a coward must stay at home with the women. -' IV r I 3, It. l'r" or- ej "v-r a By Opie Read "There ain't no possibility of such a thing." "Well, then, in your jedgment and I know it's good which one do you think will whupT' "The black one," said Lira, and on that chicken Pud put his money.. "Limuel." remarked 'Squire Brizin tine, "nothin' could induce us to bet on such wicked contrivances, but I think your jedgment is at fault The little red will be the roaster." "Well," Lim replied, "money shouts louder and can be hearn furder than words but then, we don't bet." "Limuel. that is a truth well ut tered. But I tell you what 111 do: If that black chicken whups the red one" I'll come over and work a day in your corn field. That is, if you agree to work for me if tuther one whups." "I'll agree to that. 'Squire, but T want it understood that we ain't a bettinY "Of course not. Why, if Brother Haney, the preacher, should think we'd bet but we wouldn't. However, we don't mind workin' for each other." "Bein's as we are neighbors and have been for nigh on to 50 year," said Lim. "Exactly, Limuel. I may safely say exactly." The roosters were put into the "pit." Glossy embodiments of des perate valor, their eyes burned like coals. About their necks their feath ers curled in a fringe. And then they struck. Prom Little Red a feather flew, catching a ray or sunlight, a brilliant fancy from an angered mind; and they struck again and Black went down, bleeding from the head. "One, two. three, four " but up he came with a defiant crow. "Git him down, old boy," shouted Lim. "Undercut there and finish him. Love me, love me. Black. Keep me out of the hot sun. Don't let 'em say my judgment was bad. Look out for them sort of swipes. Steady there. Hike, look out. Hold on, hold on. He's dead." Victorious Red flapped his wings. "Limuel." said 'Squire Brizintine, "come over day after to-morrow and see me. You'll find me in the creek bottom field." Old Lim wiped his brow. "Gen tlemen," said he, "I took that chicken simply because Sam Xiles backed tuther one. Many a wise man has done a fool thing simply because a fool got to the smart thing first. 'Squire, I'll see you day after to-morrow." Copyrisht. by Opie Rend.) Thinking ) rles Battell Loomis ft? And he loved a girl and was loved in return by her. And she did not know that he was a coward. But well he knew that he was. And as the weeks went by and much fighting had been done and yet he had not offered up his manhood for the cause his sweetheart grew impatient and asked him what kept him at home. And he could not an swer her. For he would not admit that he was a coward save to him self. Then as she importuned him to go he weighed his chances. If I go, said he, I may not see actual service, but she cannot twit me with cowardice. I will risk it for my soul's peace. And he enlisted. And for many months fortune favored him and he saw no active service. But yet his knees shook daily when he thought of the possibilities of the future. And at last he was ordered into bat tle, and because his moral cowardice outweighed his physical fear and he feared ridicule more than he feared danger he exposed himself to the fire of the enemy. And he was unharmed, but his fellows said, he is a brave man. And his first battle was his last also, for the war ended on that day and he went home. And the papers and his comrades spoke of his bra very, and his sweetheart accepted him at his reputed valuation and they were married. But his life was embittered, for he hated hypocrisy and in his heart of hearts he knew that he was still a coward. (Copyright, by -lames Pott & Co.) Clothes That Come High. Clothes, the kind that are spelled with a capital "C," mount to a price that would seem like fiction if you bad not found it reality. There are shops along Fifth avenue where one buys a gown or hat that is, one would If one had the money as a collector buys a Corot or a Rubens. The ar tiste O dear, no! nothing so plebeian as a dressmaker or a milliner herself wears, say, a costume of lace with a rope of pearls to her knees. She meets her customers in a reception room where oriental rugs hush the footfall and softly shaded lights blend the colorings in the decorations. She looks my lady over. The hired de signers, the fitters, the needle-womeo do the rest. And the bill comes in. $30 to $150 for a hat, $300 to $2,500 for a gown. There are plenty of prices like that in Xew York. Then there are others that gently let you down, down until you strike prevailing rock bottom at about $15 for only the mak ing of a gown and $25 for a hat that is a hat. Broadway Magazine. New York- Church Attendance. Each Roman Catholic church in Xew York. city averages twice as many attendants in Sunday services as the individual churches of any other d nomination of Christians. THE BOUDOIR Leather and Wicker Work Furnishings Coming . Into Greater Vogue Than Ever- Burnishings, ornaments and really useful things are done this season, for the first time, in a combination of rattan and skin that Is most attrac tive, all colors and shades being shown, so that there will be no dif ficulty in matching the girls' favorite. Among them are the quaintest foot stools, rather low and long, fashioned on colonial lines. They have handles, like rounds, at either end on the top; there are little legs, and the surface on which to rest the feet is done in Russia leather. These stools arc in red, tans, blues, yellows and the like, the leather In all cases matching the rattan. For the girls' parasols and um brellas there are most fascinating stands woven in wicker, with finish of leather. They are about three feet high, and are square rather than round. From the wooden bottom they flare gracefully at the top, and the back is about two inches higher than the front. It is not only useful but extremely smart looking, making the prettiest possible receptacle for dainty parasols. Some collar boxes attract attenti6n because of their new shape. Xeither round nor oval, they come nearer to being oblong, and the outside is beau tifully polished wicker. The cover is removable that is to say, it has no hinge, but a silk cord fastened to the inside of the center at the bottom ends in a similar place on the cover. The inner finish is leather, corre sponding to the outside in color, and a leather piping is visible from with out on the cover edge. Glove boxes are similar except in shape. For the girl who goes away to make visits there are the most fas cinating medicine cases to put in her trunk. In size they vary from eight to 12 inches in length and from five to seven in width. The top turns back like an old-fashioned workbox, to show a soft leather padded in terior. Fastened to the cover are an ivory spoon for medicine, a dropper, a clinical thermometer and scissors, useful for cutting a small bandage or plaster. Within the bottom of the case are a small glass, a tiny serviette, several empty bottles, silver topped, and a couple of small boxes to be used for powder. Anything more lovely and smart looking that the new writing tables done in wicker and leather is not to bo imagined. The table itself Is wicker, most graceful as to line. Across the back is a set of pigeon holes, the whole being severely plain and leather finished, but beautiful be cause of the material, polish and shade. The actual table top is also wicker, but attached to it are two leather flaps,. only sufficiently smaller to give an effect of wicker edging. These open back from the middle to sliow a large blotter mounted in leather. M"MAiwAAoA. A mmtWt&r fit? TEA Xow that the tea table has become an indispensable part of house furnish ings ways and means have to be con sidered, when space is limited, in or der to provide the comforts of the table without installing a separate piece of furniture. Few women want to give up having a regulation tea table, yet in country houses and small apartments a substitute sometimes has to be accepted, one which plays a dou ble role in the household equipment An idea for this kind of a substitute is offered in a combination tea cab inet or table and a buffet, or modern ized console table. It is intended to oc cupy a place in the diningroom, where it will hold the dinner candles when they are not in use, and can be utilized Trimmings in Style. All kinds of embroidery and braid ing show no signs of being set aside because of their long and strenuous reign. Some of the newest and most attractive street toilettes from Europe show elaborate handwork. Both braiding and coarse embroid ery done in self-toned silks continue to be united as frequently as ever. Braid is also being used alone in the capacity of bindings for the seams and edges of tailored coats. And along A-ith fine mohair braids that finish worsted suits, matching them in color, comes the wide use of black braid on shepherd's plaid. A few years back there was a fren zied fashion for this combination, and every woman, whether or not shep herd's plaid was becoming to her, owned a street suit of small or large black and white checks, trimmed with black braid. To Remodel Old Hats. Among a group of handsome spring hats the writer noticed two or three that were of golden straw, which sug gested possibilities as to what might be accomplished with a ten-cent bottle INDUCE SLEEP alue of Hot Bath , for ;Tired Woman Is Some thing Hard to Over-estimate Tonic baths are. decidedly refresh ing when that tired feeling overtakes a person. For the matter "of that, a warm bath, nothot enough to be weak ening, but of low enough temperature to relax the nerves, is always bene ficial, and may be indulged in when ever a. woman is fatigued. When to the restfulness of warm water is added soothing properties, the body revives under them and elas ticity of muscles returns with that of the nerves. For instance, a camphor bath is a joy. It is made from an ounce of the tincture mixed with half an ounce of tincture of benzoin and two ounces of cologne or pure alcohol. The whole compound is then poured into a tub of warm water just before one steps into the bath. This is not to be used as a cleansing bath, with soap. Instead, the person should lie at full length for 15 minutes, giving herself np to the soothing and gratifying in fluence of the warmth and tonic. Such a bath as this may be taken without danger of contracting cold, if going out of doors Immediately afterward. Pine baths are highly commended, and for those persons who are suffi ciently fortunate to live in a region where the trees grow this luxury costs almost nothing. For such a bath Nor way pine is an excellent substitute. For the latter "the needles should be gathered fresh from the trees, for those on the ground have little nour ishment left. To make this pine tonic a gallon kettle should be filled, the green being stripped from the twigs and packed down hard. Over this a quart of boil ing water is poured, the kettle is cov ered and placed where the water will simmer, but not boil. It should cook thus for at least six hours, and then stand over night. In the morning the water is strained off and the so lution Is ready to be used. There should be little less than a quart of liquid. This alone may be poured into a hath, but if an ounce of tincture of benzoin is added it will increase its virtues. A herb bath is luxurious without be ing expensive. To have it, mix an ounce each of dried thyme, rosemary, mallows and linden with an ounce and a half of bicarbonate of soda. Over this pour a gallon of water and cover the kettle. It should stand over night. In the morning strain the liquid. A quart of the mixture is sufficient for a bath. Daily immersion in something of this sort will greatly improve the com plexion. If- the temperature is hot. excessive perspiration is induced, and the pores are enabled to throw off im purities that clog them and thicken the complexion. Rubbing afterward with a coarse towel stimulates circu lation to a desirable extent, and a beauty treatment is had at little cost. If taken Before going to bed any of these baths is likely to induce sleep. w -iiJ',yv-nnrru-uTj'unjrirLi TA5LE as a serving table during the dinner. One of its convenient points, really the most important, is the curtained cabinet provided with two shelves un derneath, where cups and saucers may be tucked away to keep them free from dust. A complete tea service can be concealed behind the dainty cur tains ready for use at a moment's no tice. Unless one has perfectly trained servants and a number of them the tea ' table is apt to be neglected. It should be kept fresh and dainty all the time. I If the tea cabinet has a position in the sitting room or library, then it ' may fulfill the office of a book shelf or magazine rack. The top may be piled with handsome volumes, while the cur- I tained interior may be used for the tea things. It makes an excellent place for magazines, keeps them separate from the books, and one always knows where to find them. A part of the curtained section may be converted into a bookcase by hav ing partitions put down the sides, giv ing the space in the center to the tea set and that at either side to small books. In this case the top is left for any use or decoration one likes. It offers a charming stand for flowers and bric-a-brac. Thin silk or cretonne curtains give an effective finish. These should match the furnishings of the room. Where the cabinet stands in a country house or in a woman's sitting room, then cre tonne is more suitable. For a library or living room something darker is more desirable. Exquisite shadings, like old tapestries, are to be found among the newest cretonne and cot ton fabrics for decorations. of gold paint and a shabby or faded hat A little bronze paint might be added if the gold shade is too bright, and ail that is required is to paint the straw. Green velvet and cherries adorned this model (which, by the way, vcould be purchased for $25). Another color that goes well with gold hats is the gray-blue tone. Black, however, is smarter than either, especially when a little fluffy white is added. Washing ton Star. Accessories. For morning wear the trig, well-fitting shirtwaist, with silk tie and im maculate linen collar is 'the correct thing. These are made in heavy linen, pique and madras, and the newest fad J is to make them, up in the fancy striped shirtings which hitherto have been used entirely for men's attire. The plain fronts gathered into shaped shoulder yokes, and the box-plaited models are the favorite designs. Covers Many Faults. Success has a groat tendency to con ceal and threw a veil over the evil deeds of men. r 'She,. Did Her Duty by Him. .One lipnday morning.vtne,. colored 'Vash lady" did not arriTeat the usual" hour"to do the 'weekly washing of a family residing in a Pennsylvania .to.wn. When she appeared some time later the mistress of the house descended to the kitchen and was greatly edified by the" woman's explanation. r"Xo'mM carefully removing a hat ornamented by a voluminous black veil "I wasn't sick. I had to stay home to receive my diseased brother' remainders that was sent from Pitts burg day before yisterday." Llppln cott's. ' No Occasion for It "My dear," said the old man to his only daughter on the morning of her wedding day, "I don't see how I am going to get along without you." "Xow. don't let that worry you. papa," replied the fair maid, as she ad justed her bridal veil. "George con fessed to ma last night that he hadn't enough money even to buy a second hand stove, so instead of losing me it looks as if we were going to stay right with you." Responsive. The lecturer had announced that among the Athabascans, on the Kos kowine river, the females were su preme. "Pardon me for the interruption." said a resolute looking spinster, "but I must go." "Are you ill?" asked the speaker, with .proper concern. "Never better." responded the de parting, "but I'm hitting the trail for the Koskokwine." Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great er strength than other makes. Thoughtless. "NJhy doesn't Mrs. Flighty wear that pink dress with her red hair?" "She probably bought the dress be fore she changed from a brunette." The more a woman tries to look young the more she doesn't. er - ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AVegctable Preparation for As -similating the Food and Regula ting fheStoiwchs arid Bowels of Promotes Digesfion,Checrful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Xarc otic Prp, sou Drs.iwEimurE fturxplttn Sttd -JbiSttvim tjaafywixt JfidfimattStiU H&rmSertt - Cfanird Sufor tfimkyrriit ffaier Aperfect Remedy forConstipa tion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, and LOSS OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of The Cestaur Company, NEW YORK. 'Guaranteed under the Foodaw Exact Copy of Wrapper BAKING Stands for Qualify . Economy Purity .OUNCES In providing the family's meas,don't be satisfied with anything but the best KCisguaranteed perfec tion at a moderate price. It makes everything better. Try and JESMAHF xrsssE SHOCS AT ALL r PRICKS, roil EVERY MCMBCR Or THK rjUULT. MCft. BOYS, WOMEN. WS8ES AND CMLDREN. W.I-, MeTsVeveV eW rJeV VVerveV V 9mKtOr0 VXtoMitoUtxAtsmUnZkmSmtiUlmMHtaKI erralTIO. r.LDoaaanaaMritoai9pedonbottav T: du'u . iie ia wmw oeairrv rrarwiiSEav auum tMtOKuMManraoiBam HaVituol ; Constipation ftet&Qnal efforts With Hie oss&Ugire toftheane Truly boncjicwl IwTive rcweSrupoKgSoBuWfSNMi rucH enables onetfojerm rcttfr kbit& ctaily SotKJ: assistance M lure mow be graoW) efepcu&tU'iflb Xexi tioloHgnr needed astne Wstef remedies, when Yeaainej, arcto assist nature and net to supplant tVe natatv inactions, htcft must depend ulti mately upon proper5 nourishment, KieintJforfeaAnrfit Initig ftweiJ Toget its beneficial effeds, xgf& hy the genuine . Manufactured by Vie California Fig Sykup Co. inly SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS eae )y rfUr P"c & Hr Bottle SICK HEADACHE Positively cared by tbase Little Mis. CARTERS They aluo relicr ithe IVER PILLS. trensfrom DyppJ,l digest lua and Too da Eating. A perfect i edy for Dlixinen. Na sea, DrowneiJi, Bad Taste In the MouUj. Cow ed Toainie. Pain ia the JBIde, TORPID UV1 They regvlate the Bowels, rarely Vegetable, SHALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL MICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUISTITUTES. I 1 1 I iH iH I IMMMMHMM CARTERS rrriE IVER mi Mwl HAIR BALSAM foHCIftax and Natxtlflc th bale ; rnwxxts s taxsr'SBt growth. IHttf-J, f IWcvw Tails to Bastor. Gray iESSS'iH -Hnir to its YoatbAii Ceior. 3B0f2gHiCcrc tralp dnwwa a hair HUlsa, HOjjSndsiJWatftmajMjB" WIDOWS,,lnder NEW LAW "btalaed nm?-ra:vaTC bT JOHN W. MORRIS. PENSIONS Washington. V. C weSJl2 ThtapsM's Eft Wafer DEFIANCE STARCN for starching llnesi linens. I W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 18. 1906. CUSTOM For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Thirty Years CUSTOM vnm esanraua ssussar. acwvaasaRT. Jaqnes Mfg. Co. Chicago. POWDER see. Perfect or Money Park-. BBmusn uonx immsrw wott ywj i AW flulr ALw ef eeW y For Over W. OTUm ?- .