44 You Can't Catch the Wind in a Net" Neither can you cure catarrh by local applications. It is a constitutional disease, and is cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla be cause it is a constitutional remedy. It expels from the blood the impurity which causes the disease, and rebuilds and repairs the inflamed membranes. JfoCtfS SoMaJuViiffa #IOO Reward. #IOO. The renders of this paper will'be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has boon able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hull's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in ternally, acting directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the "system, thereby de stroying the foundation < f the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and usslsting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Cure for Consumption. Mrs. FKANK Mount*,:Jio\V.:22d St., New York, Oct. 30.18 W. Austria has one uutomobile paper. Belgium two. Great Britain three and the United States seven or eight. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat Norve Restorer. $2 trial bottlo and treatise free. Dr.K.H.KLiNE,Ltd.U3I Arch St. Phil a. Pa. In Great Britain on certain streets of large cities drunken women are as numerous as intoxicated men. Don't Tobacco Spit nnd Smoke Tour Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forevor, be mag netic, full of life, nervo and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, COc or Si. Cureguaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. It is rumored that the French, after huving taught the world the merits of soup, arc themselves falling off in their love for traditional national dish. Educate Your Bowela Witt* Caacareta, Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c,250. if C.C.C. fail, druggists refund money Among Colorado's relics of cliff dwellers is one building that sheltered probably six thousand people. To Cure Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy G'athartlo. 100 or 25c. U C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. Universal Belief. Professor —"Now, Mr. Doolittle, what have you learned about your topic, the diamond?" Mr. Doolittle —"That every woman believes it harmonizes exactly with her complexion." Jewelers' Weekly. Mkc I'liidiug itlouey. The use of the Endless Chain Starch Hook in the purchase of -"Red Cross" and ''Hubinger's Best" starch, makes it just like finding money. Why, for only 5c you are euabled to get one large 10c packuge of "Red Cross" starch, one large 10c puck uge of "Hubinger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two Hhakespeare pnnel9, priut ed in twelve beautiful colors, or one Twen tieth Century Girl Calendar, embossed in gold. Ask your grooer for this starch and obtain the beuutiful Christmas presents free Ingenuity of ttie Tabltans. The are said to be the peo ple most serviceable to tne traveler. They seem, in fact, to command at all times the principal conveniences of life. Half an hour of daylight is sufficient for building a house of the stems and leaves of the fehi banana, and fire Is produced by rubbing sticks. If the running water is deeply sunk among stones, by working in banana leaves they bring it to the surface. The chase of eels, which in those dripping moun tains become almost amphibious, of fers another instance of their ingen uity. They tear off with their teeth the fibrous bark of "puran" (Hibiscus tiiiaceus) and a moment after apply it (to noosing small fish. If one is sent for fruit he will usually make a basket on the way by plaiting the segments of a cocoanut leaf. A mat will be man ufactured with almost equal ease. Clothing is always at hand, and a ba nana leaf serves for an umbrella. Tumblers and bottles are supplied by single joints.of the bamboo, and casks or buckets by the long stems, and whether you ask for a hatchet, knife, spoon, toothbrush, or washbasin, the guides will never be found at a loss.— San Francisco Chronic =r How Mrs. Pinkham HELPED MRS. GOODEN. [LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO. I A,73J] "I am very grateful to you for your kindness and the interest you have taken in me, and truly believe your medicines and advice are worth more to a woman than all the doctors in the world. For years I had female troubles and did nothing for them. Of course I became no better and finally broke down entirely. My troubles began with inflammation and hemorrhages from the kidneys, then inflammation, congestion and falling of thd womb and inflammation of ovaries. 44 1 underwent local treatment every day for some time; then after nearly two months the doctor gave me permis sion to go back to work. I went back, but in less than a week was com pelled to give up and go to bed. On breaking down the second time, I de cided to let doctors and their medicine alone and try your remedies. Before the first bottle was gone I felt the ef fects of it. Three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of her Sanative Wash did me more good than all the doctors' treat ments and medicine. 44 The first remark that greets me now is 4 How much better you look!' and you may be sure I never hesitate to tell the cause of my health."—MßS. K. J* WOODEN, ACKLEY, lA. INEWS AND NOTES! I FOR WOMEN. I : J!eK> For Those With Round ShonMers. A womnu afflicted with round shoul ders may benefit herself considerably by sleeping with one small, flat pil low, and being careful to walk as erect as possible, keeping the head lip aud expanding the chest. An exercise said to be efficacious is to walk about the room with a book on the head. If the chin cau be kept up the stoop will gradually disappear. The Pompadour Puff the Vogue. "It is a decree of fashion that the hair shall be dressed in soma form or other of the pompadour puff; for years the tondeuoy has been growing, and now the pretty, becoming style bids fair to be as popular as was the straight parting half a dozen yews ago," writes Emily Wight, of "New est Styles in Hairdressing," in tho Ladies' Home Journal. "From the fashion centres of Europe rumors are reaching us that the 'bang' is to be revived. It is to be hoped that in Amerioa women will not return to the slavery of trimming tho hair and keep ing it in such away as to suit that most troublesome of all fashions." Foarleßß Women of Arizona. Arizona is full of progressive wom en. There are women ranchers, va queros, bank cashiers, stable keepers and butchers. The latest acquisition to tho list is Miss Sarah M. Rurks, twenty-five years old. She carries the United States mail over the star routo from St. Johns to Jimtown, making tho trip twioo a week. Tho distance is fifty-two miles. The road is said to be desolate. What streams there are are poisoned with alkali, aud tho drearinoss of the country is shown by the fact that no vegetation can grow there, aud only tho Indians are ever seen along the trail. Miss Burks makes her trips alone, as a rule, and fears uot, for she is a fatalist, and says that death will not come until its appoint ed hour. She is u crack shot, aud al ways goes armed. She rodo over the perilous route first in 1898, when her father, who was then mail carrier,was ill. Tlie Newett Brooches. Quite a noteworthy increase in size is manifest in some lines of handsome brooches which arcnuck larger than tho prevailing average round brooch. These aro in twists aud coils of gold or enamel with a jewel in the center. Other brooches are not only larger bnt assume the oval shape of the old fashioned brooch. Onyx matrix forms the large central stone of these, nnd is snrrounded with brilliants. The return to old, picturesque and dis j tinctively feminine styles in dress ' makes itself felt not only in the character of the jewolry now worn, bnt also in tli6 amount of it. The sweeping skirts, ornate bodices and I thront garnitures call for correspond j ing elaboration in precious ornaments and a goodly show of gold and gems has become not only permissible, but a recognized and absolutely necessary feature of a fashionable toilette. The cachet of correct style in dress is far from the woman who laoks the taste to employ in an appropriate and pleas ing manner the many and beautiful devices of the jewelers of to-day. A Philosophy of Drenfi. "Did you ever notice," said a wom an, "how one is foreordained to woar a certain stylo of dress, whether she likes it or not? Now, if there's any thing I like to wear it's a hat that tips down well over my eyes, and I know I look well in that sort of headgoar; but let me piok myself out such a I nliape, and every friend I have is up in arms because it doesn't seem just my style, and so they keep me wear ' iug tho same rather meek hat that ever looks like first coiißin to its pre decessor of the season before. One's character depends more than you would thiuk on the style of clothing she wears. It's really the clothing that moulds her, rather than her char acter, showing itself in her ohoiee of raiment. It's a well-known fact that she is influenced by her garments, as far as her ease and grace are con cerned, for never was the womauboru who could be at ease and appear at her best when she knew that her gown was ill-fitting and unbecoming. But my theory is that the dress makes tho woman. You see, most of us have on:- particular styUs thrust upon us, and before we havß arrived at years of independent thought we have gradu ally become adapted to them. Bythe time we do begin to choose our own raiment we are already in the posses sion of a style to which we belong all our lives. Sometimes I think," and here the woman sighed, "that I could be very dashing and brave if only I were to wear those hats that follow the line of the nose. If you do uot believe my theory, just notice some time the difference between your real inward feelings when you wear a red gown and when you wear a sombre gray. I should thiuk it might make a difference with soldiers, too. The English were wise, in my opinion, to clothe the army in red. Blue is all right, for one might absorb the steady virtues of that color, but I should feel hopeless if I had to fight in a gray uniform." —New York Sun. Training; For IJousewivns. A number of thoughtful women of the cities of New York State have or ganized under the name of the House hold Economic Association. This so ciety intends to open schools iuwhioh to train poor women in the prepara tion of food, caring for their homes, and spending their money to the best advantage. Lectures hava been a-iv"" for over a year with gratifying resuu-, so tho work is now to he systematized and regular schools established. Thia is a veiy important undertak- ing. There is altogether too littta &b tention paid to teaching women good methods of doing housework. Th@ misery and ill health of many a worfc* ingman and his family arise from the housewife's ignorance of culinary aud domestic matters. Properly to prepare food, to care for clothing, to keep rooms clean and to see that sinks and waste pipes are in sanitary condition require knowl edge, just as does auy other work. Yet too often these tasks are under taken by a woman who knows abso lutely nothing about them. Naturally she waste;! much and spoils more. Her home is badly kept aud her food improperly cooked, the health of the family suffers, ill-temper, the inevita ble accoifipauiment of dyspepsia, is ever present, and the whole moral tone of the home becomes low. Knowledge on the part of the wife changes all this. She soon learns that the most expensive foods are not necessarily the best. Indeed, a simple diet quite within reach of even meagre means, when well cooked and carefully served, furnishes all that can be desired. It pleases the palate and nourishes the body. The physical condition directly and strongly affects the moral nature. This has beeu frequently aud clearly demonstrated. Therefore, in teach ing the wives of the poor properly and intelligently to care for their homes and their husbands and families, the Household Economic Association is not only increasing the happiuess ol many individuals, but raising the moral tone of whole communities.— New York Journal. Ten women subjects of Queen Vic toria are peeresses in their own right^ Isabel W. Ball has gained admis sion to the press gallery at Washing ton. The bicycle costume has become so popular with Berlin women that a so ciety is being organized to encourage the wearing of "rational" dress in the street. It was a Belgian woman at the In teruational Council of Women, recent ly held in Loudon, who contended for the right ©f women to be judged by juries of women. The Duchess of York has one of the most interesting collections of post cards on record. It has been con tributed to by the sovereigns of every laud where postcards are used. Not only is the mother of the Ger mau Emperor a notable housekeeper and manager, but his grandmother, the late Empress Augusta, was also renowned for her housewifely accom plishments. Mrs. Russell Sage, the wife of the great financier, is a very enthusiastic worker for charity. She has raised $300,000 toward the building of a woman's hospital, and expects to raise SIOO,OOO more this year. Woraeu are to be admitted to the Theological Seminary of Wittenberg College, one of the oldest LutheraG educational institutions in the coun try, and upon completion of the course receive the degree of B. D., the same as the men. Harvard University has taken an other step in the direction of coedu tion. The faculty of the Harvard Law School lias voted to allow women to attend the courses in the Law School, specifying, however, that they be graduate students at Itatcliffe College. The artistic supremacy of women in bookbinding is already assured, Mr. Karislake, agent for the Guild of Women Binders, said at the Interna tional Council of Women. But if they ure to compete with men in tho finest and most profitable class of work, they must servo apprenticeships in the best binders' workshops. The handsomost and most, costly residence in the French capital has just been completed by the wealth and taste of an American girl, the Coun tess de Castellane,forinerly Miss Anna Gould, of New York. It reproduces the famous Grand Trianon built by Louis XVI., the scene of so much festivity of that bHlliaui qpurt. The Duchess St. Albans owns what is probably the most interesting collection ol' Victorian autographs in the world. Besides the royal family and the nobility represented there art words especially contributed by Tenny son, Browning, Gladstone, John Briglil and Chamberlain, and verses written exclusively for the Duchess by all the best-known verse makers of the day. Fad* and Fnnliions. Yokes of lace on which chenille in colors is dotted in the shape of flow ers are pretty. The desire to appear tall has revived high heels, aud they are now found even on the walking boots. Three-quarters ol a yard is enongb for an ordinary stock. The ribbon should bo nbout threo inches wide. Taffeta bows, edged with narrow bands of contrasting satin, make an effective trimming for women's bon nets. Stocks should be drawn tight about the throat. Tho loose, untidy way in which many women wear their ribbons is anything but correct. Rough Rider hats ore a pronounced fashion. They are decorated with soft folds of dull colored material. From the knot at tho left front a quill of ex traordinary length protrudes. Oxford ties should be worn only by women with pretty feet. Notwith standing the present age of broad miudedness and common sense, high heels are worn by the majority for evening dress. Gray in pique is attractive, and it is trimmed very satisfactorily, as is oream, with whi-e. Cut work in cream over white is effeotive, or cream lace over white, and a gray pique with white faoings trimmed with black braid makes a ladylike and stylish gown. I'WA Docs your head ache? Pain back of youreyes? Bad taste in your mouth? it's your liver! Ayer s Pills are liver pills. They cure constipation, headache, dyspepsia, and all liver _complaints. 25c. All druggists. Want your moustache or beard u beautilul I* brown or rich black? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE ivhlsklrs | One of the largest carriage manufac turers in the Northwest, located at Mil waukee. is preparing to go into the au tomobile business. Beaaty In Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Russia could put in the field 155,000 cavalry to the 112,000 of Germany and Austria-Hungary combined. Dow Are Tonr Kldneyi t Dr. Hobbs'Sparapus Pills euro all kidney Ills. Sara* pie frou. Add. Stcrlintf Homedy Co.. Chicago or N. Y. Win© Father. Tommy—Pop, why do people call death the grim reaper? Tommy's Pop—Doesn't the Bible say that all flesh is grass? Run away and play.— San Francisco Bulletin. Save tike Nickels. From saving, comes having. A9k your grocer how you can save 15c by investing sc. Ho can tell you just how you can get one large 10c package of "lted Cross" starch, one large 10c package of "Hubln ger's Best" starch, with the premiums, two beautiful Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful colors, or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar, all for sc. Ask your grocer for this starch and obtain these beautiful Christmas presents fiee. The I*aw or Compensation. From the Argonaut: Richard Cum berland, the playwright, was extremely jealous of his young rival, Richard Sheridan. It is related that he took his children to see one of the first per formances of "The School for Scandal," and when they .screamed with delight their irritable father pinched them, saying: "What are you laughing at? You should not laugh, my angels; there is nothing to laugh at," adding in an undertone: "Keep still, you little dunces." When this was reported to Sheridan, he said: "It was ungrateful in Cumberland to be displeased with his children for laughing at ray come dy, for when I went to see his tragedy I laughed from beginning to end." ACTS GENTLY ON THE KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWF.LS R.EANSES THE I E| .^EFFECTUALLY OVERCOMES \,~T& HABITUAL CONS TIPAT,ON I UU PERMANENTLY ,TSBE HENC,AURF ECTS Buy THE GENUINE - MANT D EY (AI!F?KNI4 |TC TYRVRTS fOft SALC BY AIL ORUGGiJTS PRitl 50c PER UCTTIL BAD BLOOD "CABCARF.TS do all claimed for tliem dud are a truly wonderful medicine. I have often wished tor a medicine pleasant to take and at last bavo found it In Cuscarets. Slnco taklna them, my blood has lxeii purified and my complexion has Im proved wonderfully ui I 1 feel much better In every way." Mus. SALLIE I£. SELLA as. Luttrell. Tenn. $8 CATHARTIC momm TfVADI MA/IN B0lTlO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taßte Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or tirlpe. 10c. 25c. 50c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SUrllag Rcnrd; (oaipun*. flilraco, Montreal, Saw York. 318 VA-TA DAP SoW andjiuaranteod by all drug nil" I U'HAv gists to CURE Tobacco Habit. THE THOUGHTFUL YOUTH. Ho Is thinking, he Is thinking— There are furrows in his brow— From life's problems there's no shrinking, Men must face them, hero and now. There are ineoaclngs of battle; There are deserts to be tilled; Time sweeps by with roar and rattle. Duty's call cannot bo stilled. lie Is thinking, ho is thinking, With his hand upon his head, A* AH gazes without winking At the chaos near him spread; Ami bo sighs, "Oh, for some mascot, Solving questions at commaudl Shall I wear this day nil Ascot, Or a puff or lour-in-hand?" —Washington Star. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Said the little lninb, "The older I grow the more sheepish I feel." "Pa, did you know ma long before you married her?" "No, my boy. I didn't know her until long after." "Why on earth are they encoring this woman?" "Perhaps they sec that she wants practice."—Standard. Men pity him because his look Ho sadly thoughtful is aud pallid; He can digest the biggest book, But not the smallest lobster salad. Ida Nownce—"She talks incessantly about herself." SallieDeWitt—"Yes, but never about other people."— Brooklyn Life. "What did you think of Niagara Falls, Mabel?" asked the small girl's aunt. "Why, it was the wettest thing I ever saw," said Mabel.—Har per's Bazar. "Gracious, Jack! What immense shirt studs you wear." "Well, you know how buttonholes act. I'm going to keep up with them if it takes a dinner plate." "This magazine article," said Mrs. Northside, "says that the kangaroos of Australia are being rapidly exter minated." "On their last legs, as it were," added Mr. Northside. Teacher—"Did any of you ever see an elephant's skin?" Bright Boy— "Please, sir, I have." Teacher— "Where was it, my boy?" Bright Boy—"On the elephant, sir." "Did you hear what Aunt Hetty says?" "No; what now?" "She says she wonders why they don't build cities in the country, where there's more room."—Philadelphia Bulletin. At golf he took a little turn, And said, ore he had done, "By perspiration we must earn Our brend; likewise our fun," —Chicago Times-Herald. "You ought to have heard our preacher's sermon last Sunday. It was a most memorable discourse." "What was the text?" "Well, I'vo forgotton what the text was."—Chi cago Tribune. "Did you notice, she has a white Bilk suit, which she wears to the base ball game?" "Yes; she told me she thought it appropriate. It was made over from an old ball dress."—Phila delphia Bulletin. A young hopeful sat in the window a long time the other night during a thunder-storm and contemplated the scene with a wise look on his face; then he turned aud said, "The angels are scratching matches on the sky."— Household Words. "What are those queer-looking trophies the Filipinos wear around their necks?" asked the raw recruit. "Them's the medals for the century runs they've made during the war," replied the Kausas volunteer.—Phila delphia North American. "This room," said Mrs. Gaswell to the architect who was preparing the plans for the new house under her direction, "I want you to make dif ferent from any of the others. I want to try a unique effect. You may cut off the corners and make a regular octopus of it."—Chicago Tribune. Trout IN a MOIUHNOH Barrel.' One of tbo queerest experiences in catching trout'tbat any man ever had in Maine was had at Moosehead Lake recently by an Attleboro sportsman named Williams. He was standing on tha apron of the dam at Wilson's fishing in the quick water below and had met with fair success. Near the shore, on the right baud, in a littlo eddy, he noticed a barrel lying on its side in several feet of water. He won dered what it was there for, and was so curious that he left his fishing and went down to examine. He found that it was an old molasses barrel, and it was lying so that he could see the buughole. Of course the barrel was full of water and the man had no idea there was a fish inside of it, but just for curiosity he dropped his hook through the hole, and no sooner had it landed there than the water was boiling, and the fishermau knew he had a trout on the other end. He played him until the fish was tired and when he came to land him he could not get him through the hole. He secured a saw aud sawed a piece out of the top of the barrel near tin* head. The fish came out. It weighed three pounds aud was oue of the hand somest squaretaila caught in that sec tion this year. One of the guides said that the trout must have gone into the barrel when small and bad lived on bugs and worms which had taken up their abode on the inside. —Maine {Sportsman. Italian* Fond of American Shovel*. The Italian laborers have fo uud that they caunot buy a shovel like the oues they use in this country in Italy —that is, for auything like the money. Shrewd son of the soil that he is, the Italian knows that this is a triumph of American manufacture. Hundreds of Italian laborers return every year to their native land and American shovels are now plentiful iu Italy. l'rohnble Cnaite of Brat It. An author recently died of starva tion at the advanced age of seventy years. He was doubtless waiting on a cheek from one of the periodicals that pay on publication,—Atlanta Constitution. There is a "comfortable feeling" that comes after a bath with Ivory Soap which is conducive to a good night's rest. IT FLOATS. COPYRIOHT 1808 BY THE PROCTER II QAMOLE CO. CINCINNATI QUALITY AND NEWS. Fame iinri Excellence Are Determining Factors In Successful Development. ONE OF THE IMPORTANT FUNCTIONS j OF HIGH-CLASS NEWSPAPERS. In presenting interesting phases of seien- ( tiflc nud economic problems, high-class j newspapers frequently give information of j ae greut value in their advertising columns as in those devoted to the publication of the principal events of the day, and when , the fame of a product is extended beyond | its natural limits into foreigu lands, and a large demand created throughout Great Britain and her Colonies and tlie principal sea-ports and cities of Europe, Asia and Africa, it becomes a pleasant duty to note the fact and to tell of the points of excel- < lenceon which so great arsucoess Is based, i We refer to the now world-famed laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, the product of the California Fig Syrup Company. The merits of this well-known excellent laxative were first made known to the world through the medical journals and newspapers of the United Statos; and is one of the distinct achievements of the press. It is now well known that Syrup of Figs Is an ethical proprietary remedy, approvod by the most eminent physicians everywhere, because it is simple and effective, yet pleasant to the taste and acceptable to the system, and i not only prompt in its beneficial effects, but also wholly free from any unpleasant after-effects. It Is frequently referred to as the remedy of the healthy, because tt Is used by people who enjoy good health and who live well and feel well and are well Informed on all subjects generally, includ ing laxatives. In order to get its beneficial effects, it is necessary to get the geuuine Syrup of Figs, which is manufactured by tne California Fig Syrup Co. only. At meetings of the British cabinet no official record of any kind is kept of the proceedings. Parade Changes Route to Please Roys. From the Kansas City Journal: At Belleville there were two sick little toys who were eating their hearts out because they could not see the circus parade. Mr. Sells, the circus proprie tor, came to hear cf these boys, and he asked the mayor of the town to show him where the lads lived. It was not on one of the principal streets, but regaruiess of that Mr. Sells had the whole parade pass along that way, and the two little Invalids sat in a window and viewed it. It wasn't much, but it is calculated to induce uneasiness among tnose who have been cocksure that no circus man can enter the king dom of heaven. An Overworked Woman, A woman died in Atchison a few years ago who had boarded every day of lier married life, and who never got out of bed before 9 o'clock in the morn ing. Still, her folks look reproachfully at the bereaved husband and say that "Poor Susan was worked to death."— Atchison Globe. /DEBUII'SN Cure® nil Throat and Lung Affections. COUGH SYRUP Get the genuiur. Refuse substitutes, Xis SURE/ Dr. Bull s Pills cure Dyspepsia. Trial , 20 for S 10 FOR SI BSESSVS 1 us a imiiU ,Y < . f.tli Si . I'll ila., l'n CARTERS INK Used by millions, sura proof of ►- its quality. FOR ALL^* The first five persons procuring the Rudlcnn Chain sinrcli Rook from their grocer will each obtain one large 10c package of "Kcd B'roan" siarcli, one large 10c package of "Hubinker's Best" Starch, two Shakespeare panels, printed in twelve beautiful colors, as natural as life, or one Twentieth Century Cfiri Calendar, the finest of its kind ever printed, ail absolutely froe. All others procuring the l'.ndlc** I'hnin starch Itooli, will obtain from their grocer the above goods for sc. "Red Cro" l.aaiulrv starch is something entirely new, and is without doubt the great est invention of the Twentieth Century. It has no equal, and surpasses all others. It has won for Itself praise from all parts of the United States. It has superseded every thing heretofore used or known to science in the laundry art. It is made from wheat, rioe and corn, and chemically prepared upon scientific principles by j. c. IB uhiiigcr. Keokuk., lowa, an expert in the laundry profession, who has had twenty-five years' practical experience in fancy laundering, and who was the first successful and original Inventor of all flue grades of starch In the United States. Ask your grocers for this Starch and obtain these beautiful Christmas proseuts free. IF INTERESTED WRITE TO-DAY. President Kliot, of Harvard University, while uddresslng the gnuluutlu? ela-w, in part said: •'There Is a subtle power lying latent in each one of you. which few have developed, but which,when developed, might make a man Irresistible. It is called personal magnet ism or Hypnotism. I advise you to master It." That the power referred to above lies latent in every pirson. and can be easily nud nuickly devel oped. ure facts acknowledged by every student of the subject. Hardly a dav passes but what one reads of some astounding fea. or wonderful cure performed by persons if well-developed Hypnotic or magnetic The New York Institute of Science has recently issued probably the most interesting, most vuluu ble and most Important work on occult sciences ever before published. It Is up to date In every particular. Its ley pages are replete with facts, arguments and opinions of the world's greatest scientists and teachers. It Is profusely illustrated, end should be read by every person nt all inter sted la Hypnotism, Mesmerism, Personal Magnetism and Mind Cult l- IT'S FREE for the asking. Write today. Address NEW YORK INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE. 30 State St., Dept. N.N. 3, Rochester, N. Y. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & 3.50 SHOES jOT) Worth $4 to $6 compared ~lm\. with other makes. /' genuinm have substitute claimed of eather. size, and width, plain or ca P toc * Catalogue C free. * W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE GO., Brockton, Masi. Ehla Dinner Pail. for a 4 dish Pail. AGENTS WANTKP.' a,UI °" ,H F. G. O. I II 1.1. A CO., Itiill alo. N. V. Wellington Visible Typewriter v>" Writing. No. 2 Equal to any tnacliiuo. Superior to all In important features. GUARANTFED. Made by Williams Mfg. Co., Montreal, I'. Q., Can. Second-hand typewri crs and type writer supplies. Send ror catnlogue. I'. A. SAYKK, 237 Fourth Ave, Pittsburg, Fa. MAKE YOUR OWN: Syrup (pure). Vinegar (good). Making Pow der and Shoe Polish Recipes, all for 35c. Agenis wanted. Rig prttii;~: l>e-t luiir 01 year. KKYSTONE sI'KCiALTV CO., llox 24, Mclieesport, Pa. ARNOLD'S DOUGHS COUCH Prevents Uo£Bi kILLFR CONSUMPTION fc* k IV All Druggists. 25c ASTHMA POSITIVtLY CURED.| (HOSII Y'S S\\ ElllSll AST 11.HA CTRL I does this. A trial ia. knge mailt d tree. I Collins Laos. Medicisk C0.,8t. Louis; Mo .l HDADC VNEW DISCOVERY; glvt L> I % D V 9 V quick relief and earns worst cases. Bo, ik of testlmouinls and todays' treatment Free. Dr. H. U. QUEEN 8 SONS, Box B, Atlanta. Qa. If ,S™. c y Jo e th i Thompson's Eye Water P. N. I). 45 "JJ If CURES WHtlit ALL ELSE FAII.S. Gj g Syrup. Tonies Good. Pae I*o