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! New York City.?The blouse waist which includes a chemisette is a pretty one and will be much worn this season. Here is a model that can b< utilized both for the gown and foi the separate blouse, and which allows a choice of the new fancy sleeves anc of plain ones. In the illustration it is made of crepe de Chine with trim ming of banding, and Is combined with tucked messaline. It will be found charming for cashmere, however, and also for the silks that promise to be so extensive'y worn, while for the chemsiette, the deep cuffs and the trimming of the sleeves any contrasting amterial is appropriate. If ai elaborate blouse is to be made, all over lace or jetted net would be appropriate, for the simpler one tuckec silk is always pretty. The blouse is made over a fitted lining, and consists of fronts, backf and chemisette portions. The frontE and backs are tucked becomingly and \ the waist is closed invisibly at the back. When the fancy sleeves are used they are arranged over linings, The plain ones can be finished in anj way that may suit the fancy. The quantity of material requirec for the medium size is three yardj twenty-one or twenty-four, two anc three-eighth yards thirty-two or on< and five-eighth yards forty-ioui inches wide, with one and five-eightli yards of tucked silk and five and onehalf yards of banding. Sailor Blouse Hint. For a sailor blouse it is pretty t< introduce a little bit of gold. Thos< which show the embroidery on on< arm, band on the other, and work 01 the shield and stars on the collar o pale blue are very attractive. Yellov or white always makes a pretty sailoi suit. Pink is not, as a rule, s< effective, and green or violet is neve: used. For a young girl nothing ii prettier than these sailor suits. New Dinner Gowns. .Jeweled girdles, suggesting medi eval modes, are in evidence. The: are six inches wide, made of cloth o silver or gold. They start over th< bust and are carried above the wais line. Cabochon and colored stonei of all sort are attached. If care b< I ?? ?i? * 1? snown m seiec-uug me tuiurs, mrcx girdles are very effective on white am black grounds. New Girdles. Elastic girdles seem to have taker m firm stand in fashion, and they ar< a rather becbming adjunct to any cos fume. Formerly they were made ir jnly a few colors, r.nd were mucl beaded, but this year they are callec chiffon elastic, to suit the desires o fashion, and are finished with reall] very handsome buckles. Butterfly Bow on Hat. + V>Qyfiotir* nsfriitfoe in mil VXiC VI cat u? uwviv .Ai*i linery?and an oddity that is prett; should be chronicled?is the butterfl; Dow perched in front, at top of crown These are made of ribbon, of jet, o rainbow gauze and of jet. They an used on a hat that is plainly trirame< with a wrapped scarfband. 1 ; Silk and Lisle Hose. New silk stockings have heels and 1 toes of lisle thn/.ad. Jewelry Craze. 1 Silver jewelry is the craze on the ' other side of the water. ! . Bigger Hats. Hats persist In their biggest shapes, and most of the new models turn rakishly at one side. Huge Aigrettes. The advices as to hats are that they will be very large, with trimmings of huge aigrettes and enormous flowers. Long Gloves Again. Gloves, long and of silk, with fancy embroidered designs on the upper part, are very smart. They are unusually long this season and match * * 11 ?~ Vion/1. i not tbe dress, oiu xne siutnujeo, iiauubang, hat and veil. Plush Revived. There is no do*bt that plush will appear to a certain but not very considerable extent in the new costumes. The new plushes, being especially fine and flexible, will be used chiefly to trim cloth costumes and coats. Embroidered Gowns. On some of the handsomest and finest lingerie gowns appear raised embroidery that is bold and effective I against a background blurred by ins finite detail. The raised embroidery throws up the finer laces with special - effect. 1 Seven Gored Walking Skirt. The skirt that is plain at its upper J i portion and laid in pleats at the'lower 1 - - ,1 -1 is the very latest to nave appeared, i This one is smart in the extreme, prol vides fulness enough for grace in t walking, yet is narrow and straight in I effect, as the pleats are designed to ? be pressed flat. In the illustration it s is made of the hop sacking that will I be so much worn during the coming > season, but it is appropriate for all ; skirting materials, those of the pres, ent as well as those of the future, and ' it will also be found a most satisfactory model for the entire gown and I for the coat suit. The lines are all 5 desirable ones and the skirt can be 1 relied upon to be smart and satisfac; tory in every way. The skirt is cut in seven gores. , i There is an extension at the back edge of each gore below the scallops, j and these extensions form the pleats. The scallops are designed to be un- j der-faced or finished in any way that | -> mav be nreferred and afford excellent i ; opportunity for the use of the fash- | j lonable buttons. The fulness at the | back is laid in inverted pleats. f The quantity of material required for the medium size is six and onehalf yards twenty-seven, four and three-quarter yards fifty-two inches f wide; width of skirt at lower edge v four and one-half yards. f Novel Neckpieces. s For slim-throated wearers some 1 novel neckpieces show little bows ar- j ranged at the top of the stock. j v ^\MAN3 China For Shirt Waist Sets. *ij New York girls do not a little designing themselves along the line of si ornamentation, and one of the new- CI est ideas sprang from the brain of a bi Burden girl. Miss Burden concluded le that, amid the wealth of precious metals and jewels used for belt iE buckles and shirt waist sets, other P1 materials were being neglected woefully, so she decided to employ china as a relief from the eternal glitter of the too-popular gold and silver pret- w lies. In consequence, china sets promise to be favorites this winter, espe- B cinlly for morning wear. Don't jump s< to the idea, however, that they are in- ^ expensive. On the contrary, tney are w made of the most delicate china, and their cost mounts high. The shirt ^ waiat set includes, of course, cuff buttons, pins for the blouse and a square ** belt buckle of large size. All the patterns are of fairy dimensions, and " most of them in faint tints-. The sets look smart enough with the gowns ? l -sii. +1,? m Ui ruuftll Ml IV W UI JUL 1U IUC iUICHUUU. Miss Burden's favorite frock of .that ' kind is a golden brown, and the china ' set that goes with it is adorned with goldenrod.?New York Press. - 1 hi In Favor of Girls. ,a In the late afternoon they come, in 'a thousands, out of stuffy offices and crowded stores and noisy factories. e: I They've been there all day long, pa- tl tiently taking "dictation" from fret- u ful, perspiring, irritating men, or try- r< ing to satisfy a thousand querulous voices over the telephone, or decipher- 'e ing the wishes of impatient or unde- r< cided women across the counter, or H with twinkling fingers guiding and *1 feeding insatiable machines. a; Their day's work over, they come tc out. Weary they may be, but who b would suspect weariness in these straight, independent, firm stepping "w : ngures: warm mey may De, out one u I { Pish Tarbot.?Make a QD Or ?_ Ol. o \ a tablespoouful of butter i g a. ( when they are blended, p fid S J, skimmed milk. Add a few ?; *2 \ slowly upon the beaten yoll ? o J' pepper and a teaspoonful o: "3 *" stir a pint of cold cooked : ^ -3 j and flaked very fine. Tui "S ( sprinkle with crumbs and S. \ heated through. might marvel at the visions of cool- h ness they look in their clean, well ei fitting gowns of white, and' pink, and g' mauve. Troubled they may be, but Y the sight of them is balm for other [ people's troubles. Subordination may have been their . j place all day, these girls who earn their living. All day they have been under orders and prisoners of rule. < But when they come forth in the late afternoon all that is changed. Then they dominate, and all men are subject to the pleasant influence of their w dominion. They banish discomfort and quiet complaint and make habit- st able the cars they crowd. But for I the presence of these marvelously r? I neat, calm, unobtrusive, unconscious benefactors, the home-going cars in 0j the evening would be as cages of suiI len hyenas these trying days. p( That telephone manager back East who said that every girl who is bright and nea* and clean is a pretty 1 eirl. is everlastinsly .right.?Kansas City Times. pi Athletic Training. A ^ "Mothers," said Mrs. Agnes A. Botha, of the Philadelphia Children's Home Care Society, in the New York 111 | Telegram, "should have more to say 8,1 about the athletic training of their young boys in our public schools. Many fine boys are being weakened v< physically and neglected mentally through too much athletics between "w I the ages of ten and eighteen. f? "A mother is inclined to let the boy's father decide this matter, but a this, is al"l wrong, because nine men lij out of ten will encourage a boy to I stand at the head of his school ath- a | letics even at the sacrifice-of his oth- a I er studies. cr "Every man likes to stand up with a] his business associates and brag about g( what his boy is doing in the school athletic classes. j "As a matter of fact, no boy should I be allowed to go seriously into atbI letics until he is twelve or fifteen years of age. Ordinary play is enough to keep a boy strong and growing naturally without abnormal muscular development. "The usefulness of public school athletics, in their prevailing extent of development, is more or less open, and there is a considerable difference of opinion as to the best methods of conducting such by-plays of public ! education. But there is no question of the desirability of placing scholarship unreservedly foremost in the adjustment of conditions. "In private schools each institution may fairly decide the question of the 1 importance of athletics at it chooses. Parents who do not approve of athletics have the privilege of sending their children to schools where athlotinc nro nnt Dvaltorl nnrl tboro nrP i some such. The question of athletics j in the public schools, however, is ! quite a different matter. It appears to be the desire of the public, who support the schculs and for whom they are conducted, that athletics shall have a place. But that place 1 must be secondary to the main purpose of popular education." An Arbiter of Manners. "Of all the fcmp'.ex requirements I of modern civilization, the hardest to j live up ;o is an Er.gli*/i bu'.lei !" deI dared an American hosieps recently w/ . , ... af | ill auniuiiM;:- u'.i-r;.::. io.. jjc; gives no ?if.*n of satisfaowtn when one j j.j, dote lulfcl] his demands lor a lady in t-.: t m _^laE gh life; and when one doesn't, there something in his eye?an expreson of remote, respectful, but utterly ushing withdrawal from responsiility for the errors of such a hopess person as yourself?that extinuishes one's last lingering spark of idependence. Under Higgins' disaproval I am reduced to a worm of the ust! n Her guests laughed, and several lelingly assented. But one woman, ho visited much in England, deared that on his native heath the ritish butler developed virtues he ;ldom carries across the Atlantic, he butler at a famous country house here she visited was an aged man, C silver hair and benignant coun?nance, whose many years of loyal ;rvice in the family had earned their ill reward of affection and respect, e felt an almost fatherly degree of jsponsibility for the manners and beavior of the younger members of le family, especially upon cerelonial occasions. At .a large recep on tne American guest overneara [m speaking to the youngest grown aughter, under pretense of bringing er a lace scarf: "Miss Hedith! Miss Hedith! The old gentleman by the 'earth 'asn't rdly been noticed by anybody for .If an hour." Miss Edith not displaying any igerness to hasten to the relief of le neglected one, a fat, bald-headed, attractive little man, he continued, jproachfully: " 'E'8 a person of ^importance if i 1b helderly. I've 'eard 'e's much jspected in the 'ouse. Besides, Miss [e^ith, in the words of the poet, Cind 'earts are more than coronets;' nd I 'aven't a doubt, if 'e'd happened ) minx 01 it, e a ave naaaea ana rainy 'eads than 'air!" The conjunction of bard and butler as sufficient to recall Miss Edith > her duty as a daughter of the white sauce by cooking together md a heaping one of flour, andi ouring over them a pint of unr drops of onion juice; then pour is of two eggs. Season with salt, C minced parsley. Into this sauce fish that has been freed of bones rn into a greased pudding dish, bake for twenty minutes or until ouse, and she was soon successfully atertaining the bald but distinuisbed member of parliament.? outn b companion. Younger girls still cling to tlie indsor. tie. Crocheted buttons are more in the yle than ever. Black satin revers and cuffs are to imain in style. The all-black hat still retains much | ! its popularity. Zibeline, serge and the chiviots are I jpular for coats. The military cape is much used for riving and motoring. Bronze slippers are quite stylish >r evening housewear. Shimmering silk stuffs in two-tone lects will be seen through the sea>n. Travel hats of the lightest possible iake of felt have made their appear- j ace. Quills are much used to trim walk- j ig hats, They are very long and iry odd. Ottoman cloth?a woolen material ith a slightly raised rib?is very j Lshionable. One of the new shades has at least charming name to recommend it? me blossom. The new raw silks are woven with rough finish" that makes them look t first glance like some new genre of epe de chine. They are beautiful ad will be effective in reception 3wns and theatre dresses. Fashion Note. Crepe ile Chene, or a ?of! riik that drapej :IJ, sho.ild be useo k>r this attractive ternoi js pcmn. A touch cf contrasting lcr i? introduced in the lower sleeve and >o in ti.e veM The ci.fifs and ivaist aro ; ibxcidt;ed in z aainty flower design. How He Kept His Bed. The Rev. Daniel Isaacs once alighted at an inn to stay the night. On asking for a bed he was told he could not have one, as there was to be a ball that evening and all the beds were engaged. "At what time does the ball break up?" asked Mr. Isaacs. "About 3 in the morning, sir." "Well, then, can I have a bed until that time?" "Yes, certainly; but if the bed is asked for you will have to remove." "Very well," replied Mr. Isaacs, and away he went to get between the sheets. About 3 o'clock in the morning he was awakened by loud knocking at his chamber door. "What do you want?" he r.sked. "How many are there of you in there?" inquired a voice. "There's me, and Daniel and Mr. Isaacs and an old Methodist preacher," was the reply. "Then, there's plentjy of you." And the speaker passed on, leaving Mr. Isaacs to enjoy his bed.?Cleveland Leader. MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT YOUR SERVICE FREE. Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest Medical Examination. If you are In doubt as to the cause of your disease mail us a postal requesting a medical examination blank, which you will fill out and return to us. Our doctors will carefully diagnose your case, and if you can be cured you will be told so; if you can not be cured you will be told bo. You are not obligated to us in any way; this advice is absolutely free; you are at liberty to take our advice or not as you see fit. Send to-day for a medical examination blank, fill out and return to us as promptly as possible, and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. The famous ruins of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, England, are being restored as far as the four great arches are concerned, and more excavations are being made around it 1n hope of finding other buildings. I BACKACHE IS KIDNEYACHE. Usually There Are Other Symptoms to Prove It. Pain In the back is pain in the kidneys, in most cases, and it points to the need of a special remedy to relieve and cure the congestion or inflammation of the t kidneys that is interfering with their work and causing that pain that makes ago kidney' disease fastened itself on J )1 fflj //a me. I had awful dIzz? spells, headaches and urinary irregularities. My back was weak and tender. I began using Doan's Kidney Pills and found quick relief. I was soon restored to eomplete good health." Remember the name?Doan's. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A Montgomery (Ala.) Sundaysdiool superintendent has been requested to resign because he expressed the opinion that prohibition in his State is a farce. In case of pain on the lungs Hamlins Wizard Oil acts like a mustard plaster, except that it is more effective and is so much nicer and cleaner to use. A diver's suit is weighted with 160 pounds of lead. Mrs. Winalow'B Soothing Syrup for Children teetning, softens the gums, reduces inflammation , allayspain, cures wind colic.25c. a bottle. 8t. Pierre Still Desolate. "There is absolutely no truth in the report printed recently in a number of American newspapers that St. Pierre, Martinique, is being rebuilt," said Chester W. Martin, of the American consular service, stationed at Bridgetown, Barbadoes, to the Washington Herald. "I visited St. Pierre not long ago," said Mr. Martin, "and the only houses that I saw there were two houses whicli were put up by the French Government and are used by the gendarmes. The French Government "has cleared up and excavated the scene of desolation and laid bare the streets, but there is no intention of rebuilding so far as I am aware." Inthe Arctic Ocean With Gen. Greeley's Exploring Party. John Zeun, of Company A, National Soldiers' Home, Va., who served many years in the U. S. Navy and nearly lost hiR life with General Greeley in the Arctic regions, fotfnd himself in his advancing years suffering from Rheumatism and Kidney disease, which continued to grow worse. He tays: "1 was advised to use Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, which gave me ielinf from the first dose. I cannot speak too highly or recommend it too strongly to others suffering from this terrible f.nmolaint." Rheumatism is another name for uric acid poisoning, which is caused primarily bydiseased Kidneys. Cure your Kidneys and rheumatism disappears. For all diseases ot the Kidneys, Liver and Blood, for Rheumatism, dyspepsia and chronic constipation, as well as ills peculiar to women, Dr. David Kennedy'* favorite Remedy is unsurpassed. Sold by 40,000 Druggists. I PUTNAM (V.or-.lore rrood-bricliter and faster color: than any < can <-y- iiuy c=xmeiii without ripping apart. Write Missed His Only Chance. There once lived a woman who sever gave her husband a chance to ! ;ny n ?ord. Vhe moment he opened i lis mouth she closed it with a torrnet j )f v.ovtls. It hapnened that he fell * 11 v,!if.n his wife was out of town, and < 3cf..?:e she could get home death came j :ooh* him away. i i would feel better about it." she ! s &':!! saying between her sobs, "if I < 'ould have been with John v^hen he j lied. There must have been ?ome i ast words he wanted to say to me. ' ' in a Frcrniurn. If yon do rot care for the Proni For example:?For $10.00 you can have $10.0 $10.00 Premium in oar Catalog. Without the I of Product*. Either way, you get double retail ti Wc have been in busineaa thirty-four years. Over A Copy of Oor New Enlaced Catalog Free It Illustrates and describe* all of the 1(M Larfcta Premiuma i ibowi how to fiarnUh your home and clothe yourself out of present cost of living. Send us your name and address today and im will mai i you a copy, postpaid. > Lzrkitx Cxx. Tr Friends Vfest of the Mississippi, sare time by addressRailroad Pronunciation. A conductor and a brakeman on a Montana railroad differ as to the proper pronunciation of the name Eurella. Passengers are often startled upon arrival at this station to hear the conductor yell: "You're a liar! You're a liar!" And then from the brakeman at the dtfcer end of the car: "You really are! You really are! "?San Francisco Argonaut. BABY'S WATERY ECZEMA. Itched and Scratched Until Blood Ran ?$50 Spent on Useless Treatments ?Disease Seemed Incurable? Cured by Cuticura for $1.50. "When my little boy was two and a half months old he broke out on both cheekB with eczema. It was the itchy, watery kind and we had to keep his little hands wrapped up all the time, and if he would happen to get them uncovered he would claw his face till the blood streamed down on his clothing. We.called in a physician at once, but he gave an ointment which was so severe that my babe would scream when it was put on. We changed doctors and medicines until we had spent fifty dollars or more and baby was getting worse. I was so worn out watching and caring for him night and day that I almost felt sure the disease was incurable. But finally reading of the good results of the Cuticura Remedies, I determined to try them. I can truthfully say I was more than surprised, for I bought only a dollar and a half's worth of the Cuticura Remedies (Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills), and they did more good than all my doctors' medicines I had tried, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is perfectly clear of the least spot or p.car of anything. Mrs. W. M. Comerer, Burnt Cabins, Pa., Sept. 15, 1908." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Bostoh, Mass. Ivy growing over the walls of a tirmco l-dnflors thfi structure cool In summer and war,m in winter. It also keeps the walls dry. It is, however, very destructive to woodwork, forcing the joints apart. CONFESSIONS OP A CLOWNAt Last, There Is on Sale a Book Brimful of American Humor. Any bookseller will tell you that the constant quest of his customers is for "a book which will make me laugh." The bookman is compelled to reply that the race of American humorists has run out and comic literature is scarcer than funny plays. A wide sale is therefore predicted for the "Memoirs of Dan RJoe," the Clown of Our Daddies, written by Maria Ward Brown, ai book guaranteed to make you roar with laughter. The author presents to the public a volume of the great jester's most pungent jokes, comic harangues, caustic hits upon men and manners, lectures, anecdotes, sketches of adventure, original songs and poetical effusions; wise and witty, serious, satirical, and sentimental sayings of the sawdust arena of other days. Old Dan Rice, as proprietor of the famous "One Horse Show," was more of a national character than Artemus Ward, and this volume contains the numor which made the nation laugh even while the great Civil War raged. This fascinating book of 500 pages, beautifully illustrated, will be sent you postpaid for $1.50 by Book Pub ' ? r% 4 T - J nsmng jiou3Bi i ji L/t:uLiiiiu Ducct, New York. The piano is improved and its sound increased, according to the claim of J." Cadenbach, a German inventor, by the plan of letting wooden cups into the back of the sounding board. N.Y.?43 FOTDIST] /^/ l \ \ >\ Sure cure and posJtlv [/my/ I M \ 1 Infected or "exposed." J l**IS rQJQfJft (l.ltl Olanda, expels the poison I"" Jn ?I Uj] and Sheep and Cholera Is \ t(Yy t, i//V/ La Grippe among human X-jft /*C/ bottle; to and $10 a dozen \vi\ who will get It for yo ^A^LX^O/ sPeclal omenta wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO. Chicks Do If Not, Learn Why Fi Less Than ttie Value < Wheiner you raise Chickens lor tui or get the best results. The way to do tfc/s is offer a book telling all you need to know < wbo made his living for 25 years in Reusing to experiment and spend much money to lea for the small sum of 25 CENTS in postage st Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for ing Purposes, and indeed about everything ; success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE. MAPLEINE F ADELE ot'acr dya One 30c. package colors all flbcrs. Ttaey lor tree booklet?How to byo, Bleactx anJ Mix Coloi /AIN IMITATDQIN ! f PATTERN THE | There was never an imitatic il> tators always counterfeit the ge what you ask for, because genuine I? Imitations are not advertised, but J\ ability of the dealer to sell you so: i> good" when you ask for the genuii 1/ 4-V?r> TI7U? J m U, vii iuo iiiiitatiuu. yy u/ actcpi iuiui jp uine by insisting? 1 REFUSE IMITAT eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee&e* / Jv-jjfl ? . 'm _ *S$ -' jM on Rocker Without Cost lid-Oak Rocker represents the expenses aolesaler, 3ales-agent and retailer saved 11? you with a $10.00 purchase of Larkin -supplies: Coffee, Teas, Spices, Exlunary and Toilet Soaps, etc. In all, i .W uch necessities of the finest quality. >00 Premiums given with purchases of roducts; all standard merchandise of 1 LARKIN to-Family Dealing Save* For You All and Profits of Middlemen?Doubles the g-Power of Your Money. i bay direct from us, the manufacturers, yon set 's worth, full retail value, in Products and again urn, you can have your savings in extra Products. 0 worth of Product! of your (election and any *remium, for $10.00, yon can have $20.00 worth due. two million families save money by dealing with us. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY Larkia Co, Please mail Catalog No. m and explain how the Larkin Idea saves money. Street sod No. or B. JL>. ? ! : M State The fog banks of the North Atlantic average thirty miles in diameter. '* Rough on Rats fools the rata and mice, I but never fools the buyer. The secret is, you (not the maker) do the mixing. Ta!:e a hint, do yonr own mixing; pay tor poison only, then you get results. It's the un- - Zffi beatable exterminator. Don't die in the ' house. 15c., 25c.. 75c. The electric post is to be tried in ' Y Italy. BadBLOOD ; : . "Before I began using Casctoetsi had f bad complexion, pimples on my face, and my food was not digested as it should have been. Now I am entirely well, and V: 'the pimples have all disappeared from my face. I can truthfully say that Cascarqts ' .' J are just as advertised; I have taken .only ,"\? two boxes of them." Clarence R. Griffin, Sheridan, lad. Pleasant Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, v Do Good. Never Sicken,Weaken or Grip*. '> < 10c, 25c, 30c. Never sold In btflk. The gem- f --i-'d ine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to care or yoar money back. 927 FOR INFORMATION AS TO LANDS 1W ;? ":'J&j |i me nauuii s ii n > j Garden SpoH .* ,,.1| | y THAT GREAT FKCIT d TBCCK I "Ai mi aomw secttoh- lilt along the ^ Atlantic Coast Line RAILROA0' in Virginia, North and Sooth Carolina, , >' Af Georgia, Alabama and Florida, write to < WILBUR MeCOY, " Agricultural and Immigration Agent, Atlantic Coast Line, - JacJawrrllJe, FIa. / SSSS& PALATAL ?S8Vif H{3?? CHILDREN LICK THE SPOOK. FI?hil?Dey, CorTMdr - . ->A- \< ?riplnf, Aid" Dlf*?tlon. 25c. *u'DWJQOUST*. YOU CAN PAY MORE MONEYHe?***' ?BUT? ? Vfi8 Yon Can't Get a Better THAN BY USING OUB An SAFETY RAZOR. %[ 1 COSTING ONLY ! am It's nothing more or less than extrava- B gance to pay aT>lg price for a safety.r&zor. The only part that counts for anything H la the blade. But good blades-even the ] / best of blades-don't -warrant the price H| usually demanded for the r*z6r. The biggest part of what you pay for H the regular safety-razor is for the frame R] and the box-detiuls that dont figure at all In the razor's value. B8j ( Prove this for yourself. 0$ /> r- ^ In STAMPS brinRS yotf one of these marvellous mmRazors,postpaid,by mall BOOK PUB. HOUSE, ' 134- Leonard Street* Ke?* Toife, ^ w nnrxxr msnAVEBVi UKuraT give* quick relief and cum* fontuHW. Book of tertimonliils* 10 dan'tnatn?al ?_ (free. Dr. H. H. GRZIN'8 8ON8.B01 B.Xtlmntu.Ga. EMPER^^C WXTA* -""S Catarrhal Fever. . e preventive, no matter now horam at any age tn Jquld, given on Uie tongue; act* on the Blood and ioua germs from the body. Cures Din temper In Duk* 1 Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy. Curt* beings and is a tine Kidney remedy, tfc. and (X a . Cut this out. Keep it. Show to yoor drueHstu. Free booklet. "Distemper. Causes and Core*. 1 Bacteriologists. GOSHEN, JD,ILU ?ing Weil ? "om a Book Costing f., of One Chicken. probe, you want 10 do 11 intelligently uud to protit by the experience oi otbera. \V? jn the subject^-a book written by a oiav Poultry, and m that time necessarily h&4 irn the best way to condo'ct the businessamps. It tells you how to Detect and Cure Market, whico Fowls to Save, for Breedyou must know on the subject to make a OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. 134 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. u JL, x JUA. T UA uist 18 OBCU loe suite on jriLiuu or vanilla. By dis.??i Ting granulated Bogar It water aadaduingMapleic, ftdeiicoup svrnp i? made and a syrup better than maple, Mapleifce _ is sold by grocers. Send 2o stamp far aanipl* and recipe book. Creacent Mfg. Co.. Seattle. SS DYES dyo la cold water better than an v ?thi*r dye. xou s. MO SHOE uU'Jli CO.. <i|uiiicv Uiinojj, rAKES FOR ITS REAL ARTICLE | >u made of an imitation. 1ml- $ nuine article. The genuine is <0 articles are the advertised ones. depend for their business on the <0 mothing claimed to be "just as & le, because he make3 more profit * ations when you can get the gen- $ 'TAlfC GET WHAT jfOO k' IV/lflO"" ASK FOR! J r5-:6666 66 : e i i ^6e 6 6Sy