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I > t be ?u New York City.?The simple tucket blouse is always a pretty one. Thi: model can be utilized either for th< odd waist or for the gown, and it cai be made from crepe, chiffon, rroire oi other similar material, and also fron the simpler lingerie sort. It can bi trimmed with contrasting bands as il lustrated or with any fancy materia' that may bo jrtferred. Also it can b made either with the sleeves that ar< slightly full and laid in pleats at th< wrists or with plain ones. Tucks an arranged on becoming lines and pro vide just sufficient fulness at th< front. Crepe de Chine with trimminj of messaline and pretty buttons is th material illustrated. The blouse consists of tho lining which is optional, front and backs ! / (i lyyyy , |v? c 4 The tucks can be stitched by machin< or sewed by hand as liked, and jus enough of them extend to yoke deptt only to mean pretty folds and fulness The sleeves illustrated are made ii one piece each, the plain ones witl upper and under portions. The quantity of material requirec for the medium size is three and i half yards twenty-one or twenty-iour two and a quarter yards thirty-two o: two and an eighth yards forty-foui inches wide, with one-half yard o: silk for trimming. 4 The New Kat Pins. The arts and crafts are steadilj making their way into all channel: of decoration. All this work goes es oecially weil with the Byzantine and Moyen age, through which we an passing. Their newest contributior to feminine apparel is the hat pin Tbese are quite popular. They an made with squares or circles, of i greenish bronze, decorated witl quaint symbols. The Knee Drapery. The fashion of tying a voluminous sash around the Itnees, letting th? ends hang, has not returned to favoi among the best dressmakers. The} are using some rather queer draper) above the knees, which gives one the impression of amateur dressing in which odds and ends have been utilized, but it is doubtful if they -will force it upon the public later on. A Smart Color. Emerald green is a smart color for i cape. Green seems to blend with modish evening gowns better thai pink, blue or any ether shade. 1 Long Sashes Worn. ? Long sashes are being worn with 2 coat suits. 1 ______ r i Heavy Serge Popular. 3 There will be a run upon serge this - season. It has always been a stock I material. This year the weave is ut terly unlike anything we have had. There were a few patterns of last year, to be accurate, but this year there are a great number, a bit rougher than before. XVew Flannel itionse. For the girl who suffers with cold there is a new flannel blouse. It is quite good looking. The flannel is exceedingly soft and silky, there are fine stripes, usually in gray and black, and it fastens down the front with silver buttons. With it is worn a turnover collar of white embroidery. Fivc-Gorcd Yoke Skirt. Every form of the yoke skirt is to be much worn this coming season, and this one is graceful and very generally becoming. It can be eithei gathered or tucked, and consequently it suits a variety of materials. In the illustration it is made from one of the new silk and wool crepes with trimming of folds of the material. Almost everything fashionable iB soft, however, and the list of available fabrics is a long one.. The yoke mean? perfectly smooth fit over the hips, 2 while tne SKirc ians 111 grateim imc: s and folds, and this is true whether It e is gathered or tucked. For the long - skirt, which is suited to occasions ol b dress, the many pretty silks and -silk g and wool fabrics are appropriate,' e while for the short skirt can be utilized such r'uipler fabrics as cashmere, voile and the like. i. The skirt Is cut in five gores, and Is J 3, joined to the yoKe. The yoke is fitted t by means of darts over the hips and 1 the closing is made invisibly at the . baclc. l The quantity of material required i for the medium size is seven and a quarter yards twenty-four or twenty1 seven, six and three-quarter yards i thirty-two or forty-four inches wide . when material has figure or nap; four and a half yards forty-four inches wide when material has neither figure nor nap; two yards twenty-seven, one and a half yards thirty-two, one yard i forty-four inches wide for bands; i width of skirt at lower edge four and an eighth yards. : /* :'-V? .; . - . ' WOMAN'S ADVANCE, i I I By Grace Kimball, tDr. Grace M. Kimball is a prominent physician of Poughkeepsie, N. Y. She was a medical missionary | luring the Armenian massacres in the eighties, and was escorted from '.he country by the Turkish Govern- j sient. She is president of the Poughseepsie Young Women's Christian Association, and was at one time assist- j int physician at Vassar College. Dr. ! Kimball sayr, she is not a suffragette. I but believes thoroughly 1n suffrage j tor women]. The fundamental argument for woman suffrage is based, like many other problems of to-day. on evolulionary principles, and not on considerations of expediency or of conseI juent reforms. Woman has shared with man the evolutionary progress Df the race. Savagery, slavery, the barem, have been left behind. Not :o long ago even a primary education was considered unnecessary for the women of our race; then, as we advanced, a knowledge of the "three Rs" was thought proper. But to-day, without her seeking or desiring, the whole domestic, industrial, educational and legal status of woman has changed. She has not pushed for* * 1?n n /I ward into me worKsuup auu owit Dffice and the professions. The inexDrable advance of the race, the outreach of man's inventive genius, the Jemands of the industrial world, the complexity of the social organism have all forced women out into a broader and a more individualistic life. The woman is no longer the zero by the side of the man, raising his coefficient. She stands for herself and' at her own valuation?not because she consciously and audaciously seeks 30 to do, but because the evolution of th'e race is bringing her to new responsibilities and to new duties in the place of the old ones that have been taken from her. What were their former duties and responsibilities? One hundred years ago each household was an independent entity. Its spinning and weaving and garment making, its foodstuff preparation, its entire conduct and management devolved upon the worn. ? -c TVinco rtntips firavft 611 UL IUC LO.LLi.kX J ?.uvuw ? ? ?. 0 scope for great skill and executive ability. Much of the education of the children also devolved upon the women, especially the education and training of the girls. All this involved the labor, as well as the skill, of the women of th^ family and of the women of dependent families as well. To-day the factories* the Evolutionary results of man's inventive genius and ambitious nature, have taken all these industries from the home. Man's organizing enterprise has taken education and training of the young from the home largely and placed them in the school. Hence we have evolved by the inexorable logic of progress two great classes of women?the parasitic class, or these who are consumers and employers, but non-producers, and the individualistic class, the workers and producers. The first are those who live without productive labor on the money that others have J -- ? ~ """"Inir fnv thorn Thft CSrilCU Ul aic ca; uxu^ aw* second are those "who, usually by necessity, sometimes by choice, are earning the money by which they are supported. In this class come all those women who, without recognized wage-earning capacity, are really wage-earners by virtue of being the housekeepers, the mothers and the caretakers of the family. Now, with the growth of this great class of wage-earning, individualized women, the representative power of men has actually diminished, and is steadily diminishing. The number of women who are industrial, intellectual and political units is enormous, and is steadily and rapidly growing. They are not represented by any male vote or by any effective politcal pow er, and t&ey never win De unui mey represent themselves in exactly the same way that the men represent themselves?by thoir individual franchise. The question is, I take it, purely one of evolution, and as such it is as Inevitably to be decided in the affirmative as has been the question ,of the abolition of slavery, the question of equal education and the question of industrial and professional liberty. No amount of protesting on the part of the anti-suffragists, who are largely of the parasitic class, will hinder the inevitable evolution of the race. But t.he real efficiency of the movement will come to pass when every woman who believes in the equal suffrage, when every woman who believes that taxation without representation is as wrong for the woman as for the man, sees to it that no vote which she can influence is cast for any man wno is not nunesu.v aim actively in favor of equal rights for all the citizens of our free land. When equal suffrage becomes n real factor at the polln, then it -will come to pass. L<et every 'woman who respects her sex see to it that it speedily speaks this language which the politician alone understands. Secretary MacVeagh and Dollar Eills. We question the practicality ot Secretary MacVeagh's scheme to get a congress of nations to adopt a uniform currency. The Britisher, for example, has an undisguised fondness for American dollars, but for their intrinsic value alone. He would part as quickly with his birthright as with his pounds, shillings and pence. Even the absurd guineas, half-crowns and farthings have survived the ravages of reform. So with ths Frenchman and his francs, the German with his marks, and, we suspect, the American with his dollars and halves aim quaricis. wiuieuvti, ;i uc octretary is correct in saying that "a nation is known first by its currency," why rob it of distinctiveness??Harper's Weekly. I An Answer Off Hard. James J. Hill has promised to contribute to a magazine an article entitled: "What Must We Do to Be Fed?" It is plain that we must pay the cook in advance, give her Thursdays and Saturdays off and keep the children out of the kitchen.?Minneapolis Journal. MATTERS II Tomatoes en Ragout. i Plnnfrn fnnr p*nArl cicorl varl ennnrl J I toi toes in boiling water for one i ' mini)'"1, lift them up, skin, cut them j Into quarters; place in a small sauce- j ! pan with half an ounce of butter, three [ saltspoons salt, two saltspoons white j I i pepper, three saltspoons sugar, half i i | teaspoon freshly chopped parsley and j 1 I a half a bean of finely chopped garlic; j 1 lightly mix, place on the fire, cover j I the pan and let cook for ten minutes, ' 1 Remove, pour into a deep dish and I serve.?New York World. English Monkrj. "English Monkey" is a dish simple I ' to make in a chafing dish, and will [ 1 appeal to those ywho are fond of ; ! cheese dainties. A cup of fine bread crumbs from the centre of a stile loaf are put to soak in a cup of milk, in which an egg has been lightly i beaten. A tablespoonful of butter is melted in the chafing dish, and to this is added from three-quarters to a cup of cheese. Stir while melting, add the crumbs and milk, and serve 1 properly seasoned on toast.?New York Times. Biscuit Shortcake. 11 Sift together one quart of flour and two heaping teaspoonfuls of baking powder, also a pinch of Bait,, then * rub in one-half cupful good butter 1 and wet to a soft dough with a pint of j milk; divide the dough, roll out each | half to the size of a large pie pl^te : v and bake separately in greased tins j for .twenty minutes in a hot oven, then ' pull apart with a fork while hot, j 1 butter, and put in a generous layei' | of washed and drained huckleberries, ; * raspberries or blackberries, sprinkle j thickly with powdered sugar and put j on the top layer of dough, which cover in turn with another layer of a berries and sugar, and serve with a c pitcherful of rich cream.-?Boston ? F?Jt. t . ! Collapsible Spxving Basket. t Such a sewing basket as this on9< I will always make an acceptable gift, i 2t is simplo and easily made and it j ian be opened out flat to be packed i 5a a suit case or trunk. In this case I ?lie material is a pretty flowered ere- ^ Collapsible Sewing Basket. . j tonne, and cretonne is always a favor- 4 lte, but any pretty silk or simpler 8 flowered material can be used. The , 2 basket is supplied with convenient pockets and pincushions and is alto* gether attractive and useful. The foundation for the basket la j t cardboard cut in sections. The ma- j c terlal is arranged over this and | 1 Btitched and pasted into place. The ! 1 pockets, cushions, etc., are attached, J < and there are eyelets through which j 3 ribbon is passed which keeps the j 1 basket in shape. ' j The Quantity of material required ' Is three-fourth yard of any width, < with three-fourth yard of ribbon ] three and one-half inches wide for < cushion and pocket, one azd one-half ] yards of cord and two and one-half < jards of ribbon fcr tying. j ??mmmmmam???????e i Biyragj^MMfr KT-nn-. '^"*11 is? household |i| ! 'hints* i aKSaWESS3^5S2S2SS^55^ESB& , A pinch of salt in coffee helps to ; j give a, delicate flavor. ^ A little alum added to the stove 1 polish helps to keep the stove bright and shining. Salt in the oven under baking tins 1 will prevent pastry from scorching ' on the bottom. Pot a pinch of bicarbonate of soda | ! in the water when boiling salmon. ! This makes it a beautiful red color. Two parts of fresh slaked lime, mixed with one part stron-g red pep- ' j>er and sprinkled freely in their run, ways will drive rats away. Just now, when net yokes and I Bleeves are so much worn, it is well I to know .that they can be very successfully dry-cleaned by rubbing gently in pulverized laundry starch. A woman who has had a long ex- , perience in cooking for a family says that she likes milk better than egg 1 . for moistening fish before rolling it in bread crumbs for frying. She always uses oil for frying. For delicious . cheese balls buy . some cottage cheese, work it smooth , with butter and season well with Parmesan cheese. Season with salt and paprika, make into small balls , and serve with the salad course. Never iron laces; wash them carefully in warm, not hot water, rinse well in the bluing water, then wrap i smoothly around a large glass bottle i : and fill the bottle with hot water. Black lace is best washed in tea. Instead cf starching napkins, doilies, ties, etc., try this way, which ' makes a very little trouble: Dip them for a few minutes in boiling water, then iron them out with a very hot iron. This makes them sti? as ! though they were starched and '.hey look like new. When ironing use a brick or block of wood for an iron stand. You will be surprised at the result, for your Ttrill boon hn( a wnrvl ripnl Innppr XIULJ. "..A - 0_. , and save you many steps. If you need a dress or waist tbat is not starched and you are in a hurry for it, rinse it, dip it in thin, cold starch, wrap in a .towel for a few minutes, then put it through your wringer and iron at once. The result is entirely 1 eFf.isfftctory, k: The Purchase of New York. "When the letter announcing the purchase for sixty guilders ($24) of the 11,000 morgens of land consti.utiner Manhattan Island, was read in the assembly of the States-General, an November 7, lfi2G, it was resolved that "no action is necessary on this information." Had their .high mightinesses possessed prevision, how strenuous might have be<in the resolution passed, that the newly acquired island should be kept forever under their control. Nor was the West India Company, that money making trust which ventured this first speculation in wheat and in lands in the long line of enterprises known to Manhattan, more alive to the excellence of their investment. More than ten times the sum paid aver to the Indians for about 22,000 acres, according to their estimate, has since been paid for a single square foot of New York soil! Probably there Is no other sale on record where the advance in value has been so great.?Putnam's. PU T N A M Color rjoro rroodc briehter and faster colors than any son dye any carmeut without ripping apart. Write It Really Happened. "Jimmy," said the teacher, "what 9 the shape of the earth?" "I dunno, teacher." "Well, what is the shape of the 'tiff buttons your father wears to hurch on Sunday?" "Dey are square, teacher." "How about the ones he wr.ars on veek days?" "Dey are round, teacher.". "Well, then, what is the Nshape of he earth?" "Square on Sundays, and round on ?eek days."?New York Times. Baboons n Plague in Nigeria. In many parts of the protectorate, md especially among the hill regions if the northern provinces, baboons ire one of the greatest plagues to he farmer, and a source of menace o property and even to life. A proectorate officer, while engaged in tuslneEs in a mountain village, was nformed by the local queen that her leople could >not continue their farmng owing to the raids of baboons, during the absence of the men a few reeks previously these beasts had scually come into the heart of the vilage and destroyed the crops. The latives are in constant dread of them md continually fear for the safety of heir children. Sir William Wallace has related to ne that he has seen droves of fifty o a hundred of these animals all in ingle file, and that lately he himself hot two enormous brutes who were grinning at him from the cliffs, rhey utter a nerve-shattering and lorrid bark. They possess a regular ;ystem of defense, and always have signalers out' to watch for the ap)roach of a possible enemy. These ;couts are always the biggest monceys, and they signal by barks to .heir comrades when strangers are ipproaching.?Wide World Maga:ine. Dahlias From Potatoes. By a curious horticultural Irony, he dahlia, which is the popular .idol >f all our early autumn flower shows, lars a dreadfully prosaic parentage. :t has been developed from the Mexican tubers introduced about 120 r'ears ago by the Swedish naturalist. Dr. Dahl, for the purely commercial purpose of supplementing the potato, rhey did not "catch on," and the lahlia dish soon disappeared from British dinner tables; but our garieners at once perceived the great potentialities of the flower, and proceeded to produce the double dahlia, ind other delightful floral fantasies. The tubers of the dahlia, too acrid Tor our insular taste, are still eaten in some parts of France.?Dundee Advertiser. Bells of the Bastile. Comparatively few persons have sver heard of the bells of the Bastile, yet they are still in existence. After the destruction of the prison, they found their way to the great foundry in Romilly, but the manager of the works disobeyed the orders he received and did not destroy them. Vnw tlipv are hack in Paris. In a private house in the Avenue d'Eylan. On each bell is engraved: "Made by Louis Cheron for the Royal Bastile, in the year 1761," and they are further ornamented with the royal arms and a huge cross.?The Gentlewoman. CAREFUL DOCTOR Prescribed Change of Food Instead of Drugs. It takes considerable courage for a doctor to deliberately prescribe only food for a despairing patient, instead of resorting to the usual list of medicines. There are some truly scientific physicians among the present generation who recognize and treat conditions as thev are and should be treated re gardte63 of the value to their pockets. Here's an Instance: "Four years ago 1 was taken with I Bevere gastritis and nothing would | stay on my stomach, so that I was on j the verge of starvation. "I heard of a doctor who fiad a \ Bummer cottage near me?a specialist | from N. 7., and as a last hope, sent; for him. I "After he examined me carefully) he advised me to try a small quantity ] of Grape-Nuts at first, then as my! stomach became stronger to eat more.j "I kept at It and gradually got 60 I < could eat and digest three teaspoon-! fuls. Then 1 began to have color In ; my face, memory became clear, where before everything seemed a blank. My limbs got stronger and I could walk. So 1 steadily recovered. "Now after a year on Grape-Nuts I weigh 153 lbs. My people were surprised at the way I grew fleshy and strong on this food." Read the little boot, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new i one appears from time to time. They | are genuine, true, and full of bnman j interest. A S10 Wh 0!y LARKIN Factoi >btaln yonr money's worth, frill retail vain our'home and clothe yonr?elf otit of the nnr rntalnc* illnitrafM and rl r *rtHK#? nv^i Dishes, Carpet*, Furniture, Stoves, etc.; alto Fait it] Coats. Skirt*, etc. If yen do not want your savings them In additional Products. To Illustrate: for I to Products and any $10.00 Premium In our Catalot you can bare $20.00 worth of Larkln Product!. THIRTY DAYS' FREE TRIAL. X, tlon and any $10.00 Premium offered by us on thli then pay us$10.00 If satisfied; otherwise, we will re expense, refund freight-charges, and charge you aotl amount of Products used in trial. Oar Large Catalog Free?Send {0 " SiS"*"' laricia Co. % L Friends Weet-of-th?-Mii?Uaippl River please address: LARK IN CO., PEORIA, ILL. =3 FADELE other dye. One 10a package colors all libers. They lor freo booklet?HoV7 to Dye, aieaou and Hlx Colo Character of Cold. (joicr more terrible tnan tne wnite wolf and Jiear seizes its victims unawares, instantaneously, fatally. This cold purifies the blood, sharpens appetite, favors digestion and the stomach. It soothes to sleep ty bringing death in the midst of beautiful dreams. This intense cold, so dry, so pure, stops putrefaction, sweetens the air by greatly increasing ite density and purifies water. Cold takes the place of croking, for it makes raw meat, raw fish and tallow eatable.?New York Press. The five largest office buildings in New York contain 2300 miles of telephone wire and almost 10,000 telephones. N.Y.?47 THEIR SKIN TROUBLES CURED. Two Little Girls Had Eczema Very Badly?In One Case Child's Hair Came Out and Left Bare Batches ?Cnticura Met with Success. "I have two little girls who have been troubled very badly with eczema. One of them had it on her lower .limbs. I did everything that 1 could hear of for her, but it did not give in until warm weather, when it seemingly subsided. The next winter when it became cold the eczema started again and also in her head, where it would take the hair out and leave bare patches. At the same time her arms were sore the whole length of them. I took her to a physician, but the child grew worse all the time. Her sister's arms were also affected., I began using the Cuticura Remedies, and by the time the second lot was used their skin was soft and smooth. Mrs. Charles Baker, Albion, Me., Sept. 21, 1908." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. Japanese dead are buried in a squatting posture, chin upon knees. i \ ' ' Distemper In all its forms, among all ages of horses and dogs, cured and others it*' the same stable prevented from having the disease with Spohn's Distemper Cure. Every bot? t!c guaranteed. Over 500,000 bottles sold last year. 50c. and $1.00. Good druggists, or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted. Write for free book. Soohn Med. Co.. Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Jnd. Browning's earnings were about $10,000 annually. - , \ Afrs. WinsloVs Soothing Syrup for'Chfldren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pam, cures mna colic, 2Zc. a bottle. Germany has spent more for aviation than any other Government. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'g Sanitary Lotion. .Never fails. At druggists. The Chinese preserve vegetables in salt. ?9SIUU Jl Douglas 8hoe shape, fit betl longer than otl They are mad< of the best lea most skilled wc the latesMashl MAPLEIN When Cold When cold winds blow, bit frost is in the air, and ' ba draughts down the chimney deac the fires, then the PERFECTIO OU Heater (Equipped with Smokeless Devici shows its sure heating power steadilv sunDlvinp1 iust the h J r XT J O J that is needed for comfort. The Perfection Oil Heater is unaffi ed by weather conditions. It never fe Mo smoke?no smell ? just a gen satisfying beat. The new Automatic Smokeless Device prevents tbe wick being turned high. Removed In an instant. Solid brass font holds 4 quarts o lng heat for 9 hours?solid brass wic die?oil Indicator. Heater beautifully finished In nlc Every Dealer Evorywhere. If Not At to tlio .Nearest a *tt\ a t?t\ r\ (In co it ite - Enameled Bed *?! >urs wttnoui cost A handsome new design. All steel parts have three coats of enamel baked on; center - spindles and ornaments are laejtj quered brass and center- and corner-castS ings are decorated in gold bronze. 3s The Bed costs nothing because it reprepK ecnta the expenses and profits of the wholerjl Baler, sales-agent and retailer, saved and |11 given to you with a $10.00 purchase of v jni, Larkin Household-suppliesCoffee, Teas, Spices,Extracts, Baking Powder, Soaps,ete., over 300 such necessities to select from. You get twice as much for your money. ry-to-Family Dealing e, in Products and acaln in a Premium. You can / same money yon spend for Larkin household- iC r KM Premiums to choos; from: Silverware, ries In Women's Fun, Made-to-Order Suits, \ I in the form of a Premium, you can have I | M yon can iiave $10.00 worth of Larkin BJ [. Without the Premium, for $10.00, ss & vjv f will ship you $10.00 worth of Ss 'V' J ;ln Pro<lacta of your eelec- /XiK , 'tis rty day?' free trial. You / , "S-i moT?! the Roods at our / ^o-v> / <i ' i iln? f or a rea*onal>lo / y ?. r yS s ! S"S DYES 1 dye in cold water better than anr other dyn. Too ?. UOHKOE OttUU CO., Qalncy. Ul|n*lfc Poor AnimaL '* ' (' : . "Little boy," asks the well-meaning* ' Jjtf reformer, "is that your mamma oven youder with the beautiful set of' furs?" "Yes, sir," answers the bright lad. "Well, do you know what poor anl mal it is that has had to suffer in or- . der that your mamma might have the * furs wfth which she adorns herself so proudly?" "Yes, sir. My papa." ? Chicago Evening Post. London has 3500 taxlcabs. FOR INFORMATION AS TO LANDS Ml mn Tlic Nation's j | j I Garden Spot-' i! i i i mam THAT SHEAT FRUIT and TBDCK jjifl GROWING SECTION? Hill along the Atlantic Coastline RAILROAD in Virginia', North tnd South Carolina, j w < Georjjia, Alabama and Florida, vrita to WILBUR MeCOY, A j j Agricultural add Immigration Accnf, . j ' , . Atlantic Coast Line. - - JaciswavliJe, Fla. ' ; ^ For Asthma, Bronchitis audi all Throat Troubles Take, rts.ya m iesx mmi ; [The relief vs as quick as it is certain. I Pleasant to take and guaranteed I absolutely free from opiates. ; - / ms3 Paper-Hangers& Painters it on can gr?tir increa? toot wntn? witn mo ?.; .'-''-Xl tra iurertmenfeby selJlim Alfred Pea to PrlM K Wallpaper, we want one pod worker ,'n each .. fr' ncinuj.-ima n iw iuw mnw/ .... ... . , , fox cuatomen to eelect from. We offer Tibenu profits , to oar representative*. Anawer goicklj-<k?i jobhmj' .. ii'v* ; l: ? : ? n P O P & Y TOW DISCOVSBT; * elveaaolckrelief udcmt' MntCMM. Bookof twt!monl*J?? 10 day*'treatmjM - t, Free. Dr. hTh. GKMN'SSOMS.Boj B.Atl*5fcCE, ' Th? Ideal PALATAL A0r?amof | Cathartio r>,I"K v _ CaatorOil - r. 's li nHILMINUCKTMSKX):'!. W?lBl*nc7, CvmH < "p^wirou-tioo. 28p.-?LLt)ucaothTi, ~ lM . r ? Vy'^ {32333 WfIrii5Wiw3 : mm A FLAY OK tnat is nsea tfie same as i?n<* or van ill*. By dissolving grannlated eugar i* La vratorurd ad J ing itapleme, a delicious syrup 1# i" made and a cyrnp belter than maple. Mapleina -- is sold by grocers. Send 2c stamp for sample and recipe book. Crescent Mfe. Co.. flosttlfc Winds Blow f oil?sufficient to give out a glowk carriers?damper top?cool baakel or Japan in a variety of styles.J Vnnwi fn DoCVVpiTltira (Nw T1 l^T* Agency of tho III COMPANY *> rated) 4