t wa1 -- a -Sf PKTHEHSTE JUgfertSaiijnjeut Flew .75 to Guests aod Callers, by an Authority 02? tbe Subject For Choosing Partners. The question of pairing partners for even a dinner party may be made a pretty ceremony by this method: Have two baskets of flowers in the drawing room, with numbered tickets on the stem of each blossom. The men are told to draw from the basket having, say, pink carnations in it, and the ladles take theirs from the rose bas ket When numbers are duplicated partners are found and all proceed to the dining rcom. This relieves the hostess of the re sponsibility for one's vis-a-vis, and if her party has only congenial people it will probably result in a pleasant evening for all. Progressive Initials. This scheme is not entirely new, but it is always interesting and has the advantage cf being easily arranged. Say there are to be 20 guests, that means five tables. Label the first "Cities." the second "Famous Ameri cans." the third "Rivers," the fourth "Flowers" and the fifth may be "Hero ines." In the center of each table place about 20 assorted letters, face down. The guests are given score cards on which in fancy lettering are the subjects of the different tables. After all are seated the bell rings and the game commences. One player turns a letter so that all may see it. The first person who thinks of a city beginning with that letter and says It keeps the letter. For example, if "IV is turned some one says "Boston" and takes the letter. When all the cities arc gone the bell rings. The two players having the most cities progress. A Cupid Luncheon. Cuphl Is a t!nl'T bold; Come. yc maids, attend: Willi liis Hill. pot of Koltl, Cupid in a tinker bold. 1'ares lie forth lo youn and old, CryinR: "Hearts to mend." Cupid Is a. t':i);er bold; Come, ye maids, attend. A young debutante whom no one suspected of having fallen a victim to Cupid's darts recently sent out her invitations with the above lines writ ten on them, giving hour and date. Society was agog with curiosity and awaited the denouement with bated breath. Tea was served, and on each plate was a tiny envelope sealed with gilt hearts, inside of which were the names of the fair hostess and a man from the east who had succeeded in mending the young maiden's heart. The table center pieco on the din-Ing-rcom tab!e was a darling Cupid, his quiver filled with gilt arrows, one of which was given each guest as a souvenir. The cakes were heart-shaped, orna mented with candy Cupids. Ices in the form of hearts, with a candy Cupid on each, a tiny arrow in his hand, were served on dainty lace doilies on pink plates. A Musical Evening. The following scheme originated with a musical girl and she sprung it upon her fellow students who lived in the same house. Thte guests were told that a number of musical Instru ments were concealed in the rooms, to be found as socn as possible. The in struments were represented by ob jects. It tcok clever guessing to di vine that a small ban near a clay pipo was a bagpipe, a battle by the pho tograph of a la';e hotel was violin. a small bey devouring an ear of corn CUSHION - -fJ J jygsglptfrtfyyatfTOi y4 This is a novel and very attractive and embroidery s5Ik upon corded silk, tl'cuch, of ccurse, any other material preferred m?y be used for the grcund. The silk selected is a dull shade of old pink, tie cl ai let is in green ribben and silk, the ribbon and tassels are worked with yo'low silk, outlined with go!d tirsel thread, the tassels and cord also ciosscd by the tinsel. The bee :s worked in shades of brown and ' gold, the little spray below in the same colors with a little green ribbon in troduced. The back of the cushion cover is of furniture satin, the edge being finished with gimp and tassels of all the colors used in the embroidery, with gold tinsel introduced Altering Sleeves. As every one knows, the sleeves of a gown cr wa st will make it either old fashioned or up to date, and therefore many waists cr dresses which have almost been discarded as old fash ioned cm be made to look smart and quite new simply by altering the uleeves. Sieves are be'ng made somewhat smaller than they have been for some seasons, and therefore the old full sleeves lend themselves to remoaelin" readily. 'The s'eeves may be made after an enM-ely new pattern, or the old sleeve may be cut into strips measuring from two to four inches in length, the strips then being joined in one long piece. One edge of the en tire strip is then hemmed and trimmed with lace and the other edge may be hemmed arid gathered. A sung-fitting foundation sleeve may be made and the ruffles sewed, with the tcp of one just hidden by the lace on the one above It The seam of the foundation sleeve then may be sewed 'up and finished with a cuff. Daintj sleeves fcr fluffy summer garments can bo made in this way. was cornet, a large cucumber pickle lying on a big round "O" was pic colo, a group of good-luck omens indi cated cymbals, an advertisement for ear drums meant drums, and so on. Candy boxes, all in the form of musical instruments, were awarded as prizes, but a tin horn of mammoth pro portions was given to the unfortunate individual who guessed the least num ber of objects correctly. Smelling Contest. Get bottles of a uniform size ant color, number them and place In row on a table. The contestants are to pass around and take one smell out of each vial. Papers are provided with pencils, and then after making this tour of the table the guests are to write down the probable contents. A finger vinaigrette could be given for the head prize and a bottle of lavender salts for the consolation. The fol lowing list Is suggested for the con tents of the bottles: 1. Oil of cloves. 2. Oil of sassafras. 3. Oil of cedar. 4. Oil of anise. 5. Oil of bitter almonds. G. Pennyroyal. 7. Essence of peppermint 8. Vanilla. 9. Cinnamon. 10. Wood alcohol. 11. Valerian. 12. Bay rum. 13. Camphor. 14. Ammonia. 15. Rhubarb. 1C. Arnica. 17. Turpentine. 18. Castor oil. 19. Asafoetida. 20. Creosote. Blind Menu. This menu may be used at a church supper and thus vary the usual monot ony of such affairs: Go-between (sandwiches), 5 cents. Hot berry drink (coffee), 5 cents. Registers (rolls), 2 cents. Predicaments (pickles), 1 cent Rabbits (buns), 2 cents. Perplexities (salad), 3 cents. Pressed curd (cheese), 1 cent. Confused mixtures (jumbles), 1 cent A tight squeeze (lemonade), 5 cents. Buried seeds (berries), 5 cents. Golden spheres (oranges), 3 cents. Solid skimmings (ice cream), 10 cents. MADAME MEHRI. Sashes and neckwear show touches of bright color. Although both tulle and net chemisettes are worn, the fact that the latter is washable makes it the wiser choice. Grecian capes, fashioned from a big circle from which the sides have been cut, are favorite evening wraps. Many of the boas this spring are not boas at all, but close fitting collars, while the larger ones are finished by tassels. A new coat from Paris is long, com ing within a few inches of the bottom cf the sk!rt, and is made of cloth edged with silk braid. ' COVER cushion cover; it is worked with ribbon Oatmeal Beauty Pad. If you have used an oatmeal b?auty pad you know what a delightful and efficacious skin cleanser it is. If you haven't used one do not let another day pass without one. For this little article net only cleanses the face most satisfactorily, thus taking the place of sa-. but it dees away with all roughness. leaving the skin smooth, soft ard white. Buy a package of oats and a yard cf cheesecloth; these will not cost as imch as one of the dainty but ex pensive soaps. Now out of th" cheesecloth make Mttle bags about lour by two and a baJf inches and fill them half full of the cats. Hold one in the water until j milky substance can be seen In the water, then wash the face, arms, and 'eck with It until the skin feels clean and fresh. Soap Is trying to a sensitive skin vnd the catmeal pad will be found a ielirhtful substitute. A delightful rajaance can be imparted to the skin ay the addition of a little orris 'root to the nsisoeal- INWtID f -- -. -. J VNtP T Bw ChapsTOtSttell Y dear young moth er, will yon par don me if I ad dress a few words to you on the sub ject of Theodore? I have noticed for some time how vigilant has been your care for the manly little fellow. You will not let him play with Tommy Perkins in the summer be cause Tommy says "Gosh!" You have forbidden him to associate in the slightest degree with .Eddy Con way because Eddy smokes cigarettes, and you have threatened to have his father chastise him if he has anything to do with Aleck Saunders because Aleck swears like a trooper in Flanders. You have done all these things in order that Theodore's language may be free from the tares that might other wise choke it; but have you been careful in all things? Have you seen to it that the records of the talking machine that you bought for his de lectation are up to your own high standard of grammar and culture? I trow not A phonograph need not be vulgar if its early associates are of the prop er kind, but I notice that many of them are vulgar. One gets the im pression that they have copied the speech of coarse and uncultivated men. Phonographs have absolutely no creative ability, but they are, with in certain limitations, absolute mimics and they have the knack of picking up the phrases of men whom you would never think of admitting to your drawing room. You were horrified the other day at the notion of letting dear Theodore go to one of the most respectable of conUnuous shows, but the new record that came to him that after noon had mimicked word for word a monologue that never would have been allowed upon the boards of that theater. His little friends Aloysius and Van Sutphen and Sal tons tall use an English remarkable for its purity of inflection and intonation, but that M,,,w,",,l,w,,,' An old log distillery, famous through out the country, had just been destroyed by fire, and several men, sitting in the courthouse, were talking about the passing away of this landmark, dating back to British rule, when Limuel Jucklin spoke up: "And I understand that it's not to be rebuilt This shows how sentiment has grown in a certain direction. Why, I can remember tha time when if a stillhouse had burned down they would havo begun to re build it before the ground cooled off. Every man in the community would have been interested. It would have been almost like shutting off the gup ply of milk from a youngster. In those days if a man hollered hello you'd ask him to have a drink before you inquired the nature of his business. That much was naturally to be in ferred. But a good many folks will tell you that there wan't so much drunkenness then as there is now. Well, there wan't as many people. If there had been as many people there would have been more drunkenness. The fact is that a good many men were about full all the time and as no one had ever seen them sober nobody could tell when they were drunk." "Then you don't believe that a dram Is good for a man?" said the county judge. "Well, If he thinks it is, mebby it is as long as he is justified in thinkin7 so. But in these days it requires about all of a man's keenness his freshness, you understand to make a livin' or to push anything to success, and a good-sized horn of liquor nearly always takes off the wire edge. I can recollect when the average lawyer thought he had to be about half drunk before he could make a speech. Whisky gave him a bigger flow of words, and as whisky was the jury, and sometimes the judge as well as the lawyer, liquor appeared to have pretty nigh everything its own way. A trial wan't hardly anything but a talkin contest. The loudest talker was usually regarded as the smartest man. for of all critics in the world, whiskj- is the worst. "Whisky not only furnished the ar gument, but very often supplied the cause for litigation. Most of the trials were of a criminal nature, the cause for an ordinary lawsuit having resulted in a fight. And I could al ways believe the story they told on old Tom Marshall, one of the greatest lawyers of his time, I reckon. One day he was rather hurriedly engaged to defend a feller, but as he was pretty far along in his cvps quart cups at that he got off en his wrong foot and began to prosecute. He tip toed in his wrath. He painted the feller as bein' the worst scoundrel on the earth. Just then somebody pulled his coat tall and says: 'Tom, you're on the wrong side. What did Tom do apologize? No, he just sloshed his liquor over on the other side and there he was. He said: 'Such, gentle phonograph record has a diction un speakably vulgar. It is not alone the thing it says, but the nasty way it says it that makes it a poor com panion for Theodore. Pardon me, my dear young mother, but I can't help laughing at you just a little. You take Theodore to the symphony concerts that he may culti vate his musical taste, but I never hear him whistling any movement from Beethoven's, Schubert's or Schu mann's symphonies. Yet that inex pressible street song that emerged from the phonograph last week was his in a half hour, both words and music and vulgarity. I believe that Mrs. Perkins would have spanked Tommy if he had sung it in her pres ence, although she does tolerate his "Gosh!" I really can't blame the talking ma chine. It has no conscience; it has no pride of ancestry to keep it in the right way. It has simply a waxlike re ceptive capacity and absolutely no sense of selection. If it heard good songs and refined speeches it would undoubtedly repeat them, but' as its associates are for the most part vul gar it is small wonder that with its remarkable imitative faculty it should pick up many words, phrases, ideas, and leit motiven that are objection able. The fault is not with the pho nograph; it lies with you, and it is to me inexpressibly droll to see you shielding Theodore from those pesti lent fellows, Tommy, Eddy and Aleck, while you admit to the intimacy of your house those records that success fully imitate the tough whine, the illiterate grammatical construction and the at times disgustingly vulgar witticisms of the cheaper stage. I am not standing up for Tommy Perkins or Eddy Conway or Aleck Saunders, but Theodore might imi tate some of their good points at the same time that he learned to say "Gosh!" or to smoke corn-silk cigar ettes. It is also possible to break up a tendency to swear and one may reason a boy out of the habit of acting as a chimney while incinerating corn silk. But the tougn accent once acquired is almost ineradicable, and I cannot conceive of any good coming from Theodore's association with the un- onm rrir iTisiti tfivp T .tAl-r, -. r gen'l'mun, de udder day I wouldn't have went to de t'eater on'y I chanst ............... .. . men of the jury, is the false argument that will be brought forward against this inoffensive gentleman,' and so forth, and then he proceeded to clear him. The young lawyer had to drink because the old feller set him the ex ample. Why, in those days a man didn't think he was at himself until he had about three drinks. There was hardly any such thing as farm ma chinery. They cut wheat with a cradle and plowed with cast iron thrashed grain with a flail, and " Here old Uncle Ben Weatherby spoke up. "Yes. and folks were a dinged sight better off then than now. There wan't half as much stealin' a goin' on." "Xo," Limuel admitted, "because there wan't half as much to steal nor half as many folks to steal it But when a man thinks as you do, Uncle Ben, there ain't no use to arguy with him. Nobody can successfully arguy with a man that's a livin' in the past. It is of no use to dispute the writin' on a tombstone. But I hap pen to remember that in them -good old days I had to work on a farm and I know what it was. There wan't hardly a book in the whole neighbor hood, and a newspaper was looked on as the agent of old Satan himself. The result was that when a man went a few miles from home he was in a strange land. There wan't a stove anywhere, and in the winter we near ly froze to death. But there's no use in recountin' all of the inconveniences. You won't acknowledge 'em, anyhow." "Well, that's all right," said the judge, "but with all the liquor drinkin' folks lived longer then." "That so? The reports of the life insurance companies don't say it The falter we get cut of the good old days the longer the average cf life. They say it's on account of s:: litation. But there hasn't been much cf a change in that respect in the count y. But here the average length of life is increasin' the same as in the towns. It's liquor, boys; just liquor. The most impor tant truths are the slov-est ones we learn, and it took a long time to find out that even one drink of whisky a day is bad. It builds up the sub stance of trouble and gives merely the shadow of pleasure. Of course, I know there is uo use to talk this way to you old fellers. Your opin ions are formed and your habits are set, but there Is a generation a comln. and the youngsters are the ones I'm after. "So far as liquor makln' a lawyer or a doctor smart, why, there ain't a thought In a whole distillery not ona any more than there is a truth in a deception. There Is still a good deal of whisky mixed up in politics, and there is also a good bit of Old Nick left in the same. But there was a time when the man that could furnish the most whisky was the surest of election. I recollect once teeln' a whisky keg used for a ballot bo, and Loomis to meet a young dame on der street,' etc A man is known by the cylinders he keeps. o o o RE you dowdy? If you are not, don't read this at all, but if you are, take my advice and secure a full length photograph of yourself and study it. What may have escaped your attention in your own small mirror will be brought home to you in a portrait Ask your friends if you are dowdy, and if they hesi tate, even for a moment, in an swering you, you are. Having found out that you are dowdy, the next thing to do Is to stop being dowdy. If you are married, stop it because your husband doesn't like it If you are single, stop it because the young men of your acquaintance don't like it I can't tell the difference between a bolero and a polonaise; I am not an expert in feminine sartorial terminolo gy , but I can tell a dowdy woman a block off and so can every other American man. It is just as much an affront to your family to be a dowdy as it Is to serve uninteresting dinners. Let your food be plain if need be, but let it be something that attracts the attention of the tongue and causes it to tele graph pleasant news to the stomach. So though your clothes be plain and inexpensive, make them interest ing. If you have been married for some time and have always been dow dy, you will be surprised to see how the change in your get-up will affect your husband. He will begin to take notice and will tell you you're growing young again. Get together in this, oh women, and the dowdy will become as extinct as the dodo. (Copyright, by James Pott & Co.) nrr -innnnrnru1 .rLrxi-ru-J- rij-ij-j-u-.r.-Lnj-.n i. .-L y. or, ir o r O 00 f is nOmm M I never knew of anything more appro priate. And say, Uncle Ben, while you are turnin' your eyes back into the rast, see if you can find a statesman that was a drunkard. Some of the most entertainin speakers got drunk occasionally, but they wan't states men. Now, a statesman ought to be able to see the comin' of a great calamity. But not one of those men called statesmen because they were entertainin could foresee the almost never-endin' calamity of o.ir civil war. On both sides they thought it would be a muster, the firin' of a few guns and then a subsidin' of the whole thing. Wine helped to blow the flame, but it never helped to put out the fire. "Yes. I'd like to talk to the young fellers. There ain't no hope for the young man that drinks. He may be just as moral in a general way he may be more moral than hundreds of fellers that don't touch liquor at all but in these days liquor on a young man's breath offsets a thousand let ters as to character. I notice In a newspaper that the emperor of Ger many says that beer is ruinin' thou sands of his people. Temperance folks used to hold up beer as a means cf escapin' whisk'. But when a man's drunk it doesn't make much differ ence what put him there. I've noticed that a right industrious man can get drunk on beer, and when It comes to drinkin' the average man ain't wan tin' in industry. "A good while ago. when I didn't have quite as much jedgment as I've got now, some one told me that I ought to take beer as a tonic. He took it and was the healthiest Iookin' man I ever saw. Well, bavin a littln leanin' that way. anyhow, I took his advice. I started in one day when I'd come into town to get some barbed wire, and the more I drank the more I was convinced that it wouldn't make me drunk. I fell off my horse goin' home and as I couldn't get back, I slept right where I was. And when I woke up nobody could have con vinced me that I hadn't eaten the barbed wire. I haven't touched a drop since, but it took me about tea years to live down that day's report. Folks would say; 'Oh. yes, I know Lim Jucklin gets drunk and falls off his horse.' So, boys, whenever some feller finds a good temperance drink for you, go him a little better and stick to water. I beg your pardon for preachin to you. Uncle Ben. but I believe you needed it." (Copyright, by Opie Read.) Day's Travel for Good Horse. A very good horse can in ten hours go 60 miles if the vehicle is light and the turnpike good. London's Water Supply. The water supply of London is de rived from the Thames and Lee rivers and from springs and wells. sm Standard far Beauty. Women who are in donbt as tottle!r claims to beauty should consult ths .following figures, that have been de clared correct proportions for both the tall and .short woman:' Short woman Height, 5 feet 4 inches; Beck, 124 inches; bust, 36 Inches; waist, "tl inches; hips, 37 laches; around the. largest' part of the forearm below the elbow, 11 inches, which should gradu ally taper to 6 inches around the wrist. Tall woman Height, 5 feet 8 inch es; weight, 137 pounds; bust, 36 inch es; waist, 25 Inches; hips, 42 Inches; top of arm. 14 inches: wrist, Sinchrs. With a smooth Iron and Defiance Stareb, yon can launder your shirt waist just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will ! he less wear and tear of the goods. and it will be a positive pleasure to use a Starch that does not stick to the Iron. flusiness Amounts to Something. Last year Brazil needed over 20.000. 000 jute bags to hold the year's coffee production. Each bag costs the ship pers a trifle over 18 "ents. The busi ness of making corfee bags thus amounted last year to nearly $4,000, 000. Try Murine Eye Remedy For Red, Weak. Weary, Watery Eyes. Murine Doesn't fcmirt boothea Eye Pain. AH Druggists Sell Murine at 50cta. The 48 -Page Book in each Pkg. is worth Dollars in verv home. Ask your Druggist. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. A Redeeming Trait. "There was one good thing about Adam and Eve." "What was that? "When they were In Eden th-?y did not send out any souvenir postals." It Cures While You Walk. Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package FRUE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Koy, N. Y. Life's Foolish Period. About the time a boy commences to think about smoking, a girl com mences to think about flirting. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar is C9(l quality all the time. Your dealer or wis' Factory. Peoria. 111. A man's enemies anxiously await an opportunity to meet his widow. Mrs. tVtasiow's RoothJnc Sjrap. For children teetQing, often the guru, reduces to flsfiunauon.silyipaln,careswl&dcouu. 3Sc bottle. Race horses and watches should go for all they are worth. IfnHSlBnSaSnBSaBHSBSssni m SICK HEADACHE GARTER'S Positively cored by these Ltlde Pills. They also relieve Dl3 ITTLE IVER PILLS. trc.-.s from Dyspepsia, In digestionsndToo Hearty Eating. A perfect rem edy for Dizziness, Nau sea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Moutti, Coat ed Tong-ae. Pain in the Side, TORPID UVEIl. ' regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simi!e Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. WIDOWS'on,er N EW LAW obtained nMucwwrts by john w. morris, FENbIONS Washington. D. O. HEPPES ThCJ CARTERS VlTTLE WlVER P1U.S. ROOF. sfiiHIPS8PptswcW I .air FMzi&3&&lSk9Jm& 8 Mim hewes eaggp3clSBaBaBf!xK I Voir Biilding Roofed nRMT!ma Wsatatf C9olra . .,' " " l iw iw vuiuu o ,,uu bnildiag or to re-roof any kind of feizilCag, "No-Tar" Roof.xff has a surface as bard as flint-it is flint I Can't ca -h b.e from sparks or cinders. It's asflodoio asrabber end absohrtely water proof. It's toother than leather. Costs le'S an-1 lasts longer thaa shfngles. Iron or stccL Yroa'tnaiathcbottun. Thebuniio4:Uiathasa"No.Tar"Uoof protection wilHastlon-est. Accepted by all Fire Insurance C--ianies, whs clctrge 25 percent less fcr Insuring bttSdiaxs protected by "No-Tar" Kou-g tna Xor baLus witU shia:o roofs. For Store Bnildings and Factories KraSrilSLllifiry3! flat or steep roob than tia or gravel roofing; W21ootrot.rastorru3. Roonrg keeps slock a-d poultry srrsr, safe ad wara la coMcst weather. Quick sod easy to fcy. ExecedisUy popular among farmers, stock raisers and pooltryaen. Foi- BotTr "" Eoofini-w-Tlada tamcnselyto tho appearance cf tout real . vi"' deace. Usekoayorrnt-wbouseorcovcrtheoIJ.lcakyshinsleroof with Tfo-Tar" RooP2 and avo'd d:sas:cc from water or fire. "No-Tar" Roofing U m noa-conductcr of hct or cold. K-eps your bouso warm la tho winter and cool ia the sua zner. TryltonyourporchorkUclica. Write for Onr Free Book Y;,KoSuaT' BvaBPaaflaflflHlBilSaV mAtifiVSmaaawWM aY''lJ'"iTrMaaaaai V waHriMHn SaafraapajTy cBs-naiart UmtzaW BVwmi1llil..li fjjtHU B It. tolto a taajaU wTB jajlSjttjj--jUJjUH M Paa,iainHarr7M "'a'aaaWBaaaaBBBBBBBJ BBBaBamaaalBaB3SSBBBflaal. ISaaflRSaBSBBSBaSBaaMBaaaaalBl Fru f?Aif Rswktr TI,I fc00 tells "How to DoVoar Tee HOOK OOOK Own Roofing." Tells how to taako Valleys. Gutters. Flashings, etc. How to measure a Roof. Ex plains t he whole roofing p ropositfon. Wo send the book FREE, postpaid, on rcorcst. G-t "No-Tar" Roofiae; Cross yew local dealer. Special nails sod cement FREE. Free Samples to Test SsTOSffiS? fog w- win tell yoa tea ways Issf it sad (wave its oneriarky to any other roofing. The Hcppes Co. saj U4 iCKcatt Dealers, AtteatSev Wrtte for FREE PLAN, by -which yott ewera wvuuci i ui "----iH-"nnT tm petition, finality win. - " - aaterfh. rv m m a- m m Mm. -. VKiysflHi After raff erins; for seres yejus, fhlswomnnwas restored tokealtln by LydiB.Pinklia.ms Vegetable Corapowsd. Bead ker letter. Mrs. Sallie French, of FhneaunTs, Ind. Ter, writes to Mrs. Rnkharn: 1 had female troubles for seifea years was all run-down, and so ner vosa I could not do anything: The doctors treated me for different troubles bat did soe no good. While in tbis'cen ditioa I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for aid ,vice and took Lydia E. Pinkhamls Vege table Compound,' and I 'am now strong and welL" FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia EL Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, andhas positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcerja tion, fibroid tumors, irregnlarities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling-, flatnlency,indiges tion,dizziness,ornervousprostrauon. Why don't you try it? Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about your sickness you do aot understand. She will treat your letterinconfldenceandadviseyow free. No woman ever regretted writing her, and because of he vast experience she has helped thousands. Address, Lynn, Mas. ITS If jtm nSer from FH 7!Ita 8IekM' b puma, or hat Caiidiea tbat do m. ay tn tf Tetfcera IwiSili iwlfef, all ;oa ere malted todo ia to wad to a Free fcottleof Br. Umj'm EPILEPTICIDE CURE Ooap1!ewltliFoad andDnuBActotCOBgMa JanoUHhlCK. Complete drertiia.alote. tlmonlaU or CUHJX. otot. KEfc Wnaii. Jhprtts ITtpauL. OiraAtiJEaBdlaUaddxcaa H.i.llI.l.X,W3rrtfwl.fc.ML1 Typical F WESTERN CANADA Some of th choicest lands for prain growtag, took rolHiin? and mixed larmingin the new Ji-l.-iets of Saskatchewan and Alberta havete tently been Opened tot bctUcatat under the foriscd Htmtsfet4 legnUtlm Entry may now be made by proxy (on eerttn condition;, by the father, mother, ton, daugh ter, brother or k!sw.t of an Intending hon Hteader. Tliousaiiil.-i of homesteads of IflO acrta each are tliun now easily available In tliejxi preat Krain-growiu;?, stock-raising and mixed tannin? sections. iticre yon tcill find healthful climate. gooS neijjli do rs, churches for family worship, schools for your children, good laws, splendid OPOpe, and railroadH convenient t market. Entry fen in each caw; is ?f0.00. For pamph let, "Last Be.vt West," particulars as to rates, routes, best time to go and where to locale, apply to W.V.BESHETT. MI Pew York Life BaiKis. ftsaln. Rekruts, PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cletntr sad buntirw. tile halt. Protcuus a laturact crowth. Hever Fmll. to Beatore Gray Cue. Kitlp diana hair tailing, J&comd it-Mat Pmgnat. PILES AN AK ES18 ftirmtnatMN relief. 13 a blMFLECUHE. 81 at dragBists or by mail. Bampte gO.HK. Addxeaa. "ANAKESI&' TrJ'oGO Bide. Hxw YOWL If afflicted with sure eyes, cte ThanpsM's Eye Water W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 26, 1908. NO-TAR Like This iriik Mo-Tar ""nrlatM VffSA TofcBfMa Wealhtr-PrsslGstters To every Iaqnir?r wo end Frxeoer Uattcraa Tatley JSooUet. howin bow to make iwa-proof and water-tiaat Betters a&d vaUeja aS oao third coesottia. No-Tar Cttlfaf For any kind of root er Iron work. Kaloofaa. fhalt. QB4fcirdeostot lead aad oIL Koto (haw ablo. Xlaatio, woatker. proof and pnnl. m. in Bpreodaeaallr a - Druuant aiacx aaiaa. XR33 - wjfcsrJssnBnBnBnBnBnBnBnBsVrIstBnBnBnsfrJ tfis Semite, Shermhm Stock PiwisWtsi aRraHSB ING . Jak.1 ul op"" pnaa . aau ai Jfo-1'ax dealer mUIC