PRESIDENT FULLER toe FL101,8J^TyEB8B ASSOCIATION * ̂ • ' f " • -0:'- A• TBftafeifti With Loss of Hearing Smell and Sight From the Ravages Catarrh. REMARKABLE LINES ATTRIBUTED TO QREAT POET, ' V- -' fe-rn-na •*»,. Cured Him. •> 'xif * r< * *>/*£' f H\ FUUCK John D. 8waln Recall* Mythical Death* bed Scene of the Famous French man--Beauty in HI* Description of a Wasted Life. A GREAT many remedies to temporarily relieve catarrh have been devised from time to time, such as sprays, snuffs, creams and other local applications, but, as a rule, the medical profession has little or no enthusiasm in the treatment of catarrh. It is generally pronounced by them to be Incurable. It therefore created a great sensation in medical circles when Dr. Hart man an nounced that he had devised a compound which would cure catarrh permanently. The remedy was named Peruna and in a short time became known to thousands of catarrh sufferers north, south, east and west. Letters testifying to the fact that Peruna is a radical cure for catarrh began to pour in from all directions. Thousands of such letters are on file in the office of The Peruna Medicine Co. Rev. E. Stubenvoll, Pella, Wis., writes : "I feel obliged to extend«you my personal thanks for my complete restoration. All through the winter I suffered from throat and lung trouble, but recovered my entire health by the use of your excellent remedy, Peruna." The following letter from a prominent gentleman of Los Angeles, is a case in point: Mr. J. W. Filller. President of the Jewelers' Association of Los Angeles, Cal., Vac been in business in that city for seven teen years out of the forty-five that he has been engaged in business. Concerning his experience with Peruua he says: 441 was troubled with catarrh ot the bead for many years. It affected my sense of swell, hearing and sight. I spent lots of money with doctors and the use of local applications to relieve me but to no purpose, until my atten tion was called to the wonderful effects of Peruna. "f must say that t met with most surprising and satisfactory results. Peruna took hold of the complaint and drove it entirely out of my system. 4,Although well along toward the allotted span of man's life i am pleased as a child over the results, and feel like a young man again."--J. If. Fuller. Such letters as the above are not used for publication except by the written per mission of the writer. A pamphlet filled with such letters will be sent to any address free. This book should be read by all who. doubt the curability of catarrh. If you do not receive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state ment of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dp. Hartman. President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. WEAK WOMEN OONSTIPATION STARTED YOUR 8UFFERINQL CURE IT AND YOUR AFFLICTION WILL VANISH. Mull's Grape Tonic Cures Constipation. ^ When the bowels move irresulariy ina entire bodily system must suffer. Constipation more frequently occurs among women and it mani fests itself in provoking profuse leucorrhea and other Berioua female diseases. Regular bowels will result in a complete cure when you us© Mull's Grape Tonic. Unlike pills and ordinary cathartics, this remedy is a mild, gentle laxative in addition to being a greater flesh-builder, blood-maker and strength-giver than cod liver oil or any other preparation recommended for that purpose. Mull's Grape Tonic will permanently cure the most obstin ate case of constipation, and the numerous afflictions that invariably follow in its wake. No matter it it is piles, liver complaint, kidney disorder, vertigo, palpitation of the heart, diarrhea or the self-poisoning which follows when the undigested food remains in the bowels where it putrefies and empties highly diseased germs into the blood, such as typhoid and malariar Mull's Grape Tonic will positively cure. Large sample bottle will be 6ent free to anjr address on receipt of 10 cents to cover postacre, by the Lightning Medicine Co., Rock Island, Ili. Send name of your druggist. All druggists sell Mull's Grape Tonic at 50 cent? a bottle, WITH NERVES UNSTRUNG AND HEADS THAT ACHE WISE WOMEN BROMO - SELTZER TAKE A TRIAL BOTTLE lO CENTS. JIBAC BSTATl W E S T E R N (• attractlug wore attention than mny other dlatrlct In the world. " The Granary of the World." " The Land of San- lUae." The Natural FMdinf Grounds for Stook. ArMuiider orop is 1901 • • • 1,987,330 aorta. YUU 117,928,764 buahaU. Abundance of Water; Fuel Plentiful; Building Material Cheap; Good Grass for pasture and hay; a fertile soli; a suffi cient rainfall and a climate giving an assured and adequate season of growth. HOMESTEAD LANDS OF 160 ACRES FREE, tho only charge for which Is $10 for making entry. Cloto to Churches, Schools etc. Kaliwaye tap all •ettted district*. Send for Atlas and other literature to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, ortoC. J.Broughton, 430 Qulncy Building, Chicago, J.C.Duncan, Ko-mi 6, big Four Bldg.. indlanapolta, Irid.,or T.O. Currle,Cul'ahau Bldg., Milwaukee, Wis., the authorized Canadian Government Agents, who will supply you with eartlticate giving you reduced railway rates, etc. 60,000Acres f»HOTCE ALFALFA LAND. A nerer falllne «• crop on Platte Klver l>ottora, Nebraska, ,10 tot&) per ai re; also several thousand acres selected graz ing land, well watered. *3 to per acre, on 5 to 10 year*' time, l'rlces will be adraaced March 1st. For raduced rates write to 4SMUS B0YSEM. 172 WASHINGTON. CHICAGO. IU. CDIIIT FARM for stle at a suorlflco; established rnifl I rwillll over 6 years; f>00 acres, on y ,t>,UWJ _ , oisti: worth double. Kor full particulars, address The O A M A Q A Johnson Land Co., £25 Temple tit., Minneapolis.Minn. WHY PAY RENT S3 when yo'i can buy a farm on LIBi-UAL ThKMs, for H to !••> the price of the land you are now farming V LIVINGSTON COITNTV, MO., HAS KEVKK HAD A FAILUUK OK CKOPS and Is ttie best " all around " countrv In tlie world. Write or come and see me. Am always plotted to eliow land or answer Inquiries. II. O. MEEK, Chillicothe, Missouri. innn APRFC Kentucky Lumber, Mineral and ItlUU Hwilkd oji La:nls ta be mven away absolutely free. Send 2-cent stamp for fu II particulars. W. Cramer, Mgr., 1060 Wealey Av., Cincinnati, 0. IAA ( HOICK IOWA FAKMS in Mitchell • W County. 200 ucres 2!# miles from Osage. CO good timber, balance In cultivation, gout! bldxs., $60 per acre, ltio acre prairie farm, cheap, bldi;*-. *5- an acre. 8J acre farm with y-room bouse 4^ miles from town. »5« nu acre. Easy tei ms arranged Above le but a sample of many. Write or call on SAWVEK & WOO DAK L), Osage, Iowa. CALIFORNIA 1 Who has not heard of California, the land of sunshine, fruit and flowers. A lone list of San Luis Obispo County properties; finest couuty In the state, mountain and coast, toot bills and valleys, level plains; cheap lands; prices from 810 to £1(M) per acre. Write to undersigned stating character of property wanted, amount to Invest, and Information will he given you. Liberal terms arranged. Addresg F. 1). FKOST, Faso Rabies, California. (Francois Villon, being about to die, A worthy friar would fain have shrived him, and did earnestly exhort that he should confess him at this time of those acts of his life which he did regret. Villon bade him return yet again, that he might have time to think him of his sins. Upon the good father's return Villon was dead; but by his side were the following verse#, his last, wherein he set forth things which he did regret. Whereat the friar was sore grieved and hid them away among the manuscripts of his abbey, showing them to no man; yet they were found' in some wise. The name of the friar and the very place where stood the abbey are forgot, but the verses have endured unto this day.) I, Francois Villon, ta'en at last To this rude bed where all must list Fain would forget the turbid past And lav me down In peace, to die. "Would I be shrived?" Ah, can I tell? My elns but trifles stem to be. Nor worth the dignity of bell; If not, then 111 avails It me To name them one and all--and yet- There be some things which I regrstl The sack of abbeys, many a brawl, A score of knife-thrusts In the dark. Forced oft, by Fate, against the wall. And years in donjons, cold and stark-- These crimes and pains seem far away Now that I come at length to die; (j 'Tis idle for the past to pray, ('Tls hopeless for the past to sigh): These are a troubled dream--and yet-- For them I hove but scant regret 1 The toll my mother lived to know. What years I lay In gy,ves for debt; A pretty song heard long ago: Where, I know not; when, I forget; The crust I once kept for my one (Though all too scant for my poor us*). The friend I left to die alone, (Pardle! the watchman pressed ps close 0 Trifles, against my crimes to set! Tet these are all which I regret. Captains and cut-throats, not a few, And maidens fair of many a clime Have named me friend In the wild past When as we wallowed In the slime; Gamblers and rogues and clever thieve^ And unfrocked priests, a sorry crew, (How stubbornly the memory cleaves To all who have befriended you!) I drain a cup to them--and yet-- Tls not for such I feel regret! My foundered horse, who died for me (Nor whip nor spur was his, I ween!) That day the hangman looked to see Poor Villon earth and sky between! A mongrel cur who shared my lot Three bitter winters on the list He held the rabble off, God wot. One time I cheated In the dealt 'Twas but an Instant, while I fled Down a vile alley, known to me--• Back In the tavern he lay dead; The gamblers raged--but I went free! v Humble, poor brutes at best; and yet-- They are the friends whom I regret) And eke the lilies were a-blow Through all the sunny fields of France I marked one whiter than the snow And would have gathered It, perchance Had not some trifle I forget (A bishop's loot, a cask of wine Filched from some carbot--a bet--) Distracted this wild head of mlnSk A childish fancy this, and yet-- It Is a thing that I regret! Again. I rode through Plcardy What time the vine was In the Ml A little maiden smiled on tee. I might have kissed her, and I would! I've known a thousand maidens slnoe. And many have been kind to me-- I've never seen one quite so fair As she, that day In PIcardy. Ashes of roses, these, and yet-- They are the things which I regret! One prfect lily grvw for me, And blossomed on another breast; Others have clasped the little hands Whose rosy palms I might have pressed; So. as I die, my wasted youth Mocks my dim eye and fading breath- Still. I have lived! And having lived That much Is mine. I mock at death! I should confess, you say? But yet-- For Ufa alorie I nave regret! Envoy. O bubbles of the vanished wine To which mv lins were never set! O lins that dimpled close to mine. Whose ruddy warmth I never met! Father, but trifles these, and yet-- They are the things which I regret! --John D. Swain, in the Critic. EDISON'S WAY OF WORKING. Never Lays a Book Down Until He Hae Finished It. The play of Thomas A. Edison's mind is as wonderful as the charac teristic way in which he does his read ing. Outside of his technical reading he is said never to read a book unless it is spoken of to him by his wife or some friend. Then he sits down and reads until he has finished it. One evening he happened to be unusually engrossed with some "problems," and was nervously pacing up and down hlB library like a caged lion. To divert his thoughts his wife came in and picked up the first book ehe saw. It happened to be "The Count of Monte Cristo." "Have you ever read this story 7" said Mrs. Edison to her husband. He stopped and looked at the titlfe "No, I never have. Is it good?" Mrs. Edison assured him that it was. "All right. I guess I'll read it now," and within two minutes the "prob lem," whatever it was, had been for gotten, and he was absorbed in Du mas' great story. As he finished the book he noticed the light of day peep ing in, and on looking at his watch found it was 5 o'clock in the morning. No sooner had he laid down the book than the forgotten "problem" Jumped into his mind, and, putting on his hat, he went to his laboratory and worked unceasingly, without food or sleep, for thirty-six hours.--New Yorlr Times. FARM WANTED W A N T A LARGE, well Improved farm In exchange for St. Louis Income property. Addraaa with fall particular! and location. 3. V. JKUSXCX, N3 Cheatnat St, St. Xrai* M* Christianity In Japan. The Christians have already given to Japan one cabinet minister, two judges of the Court of Cassation, two speakers of the house of commons (one elected twice), two or three as sistant cabinet ministers, besides a number of chairmen of legislative committees, judges of the appellate court, etc. In the present parliament the speaker and thirteen members are Christians; one of them was elected by a majority of five to one to repre sent a strongly Buddhist district. In the navy the captains of the two larg est men-of-war are Christians. Three of the great daily papers in Toklo are in the hands of Christians, and in sev eral others Christians are at the head of the various editorial departments. The best charitable institutions are under Christian directors. The ma jority of religious persons among the middle classes of Japan are admitted ly Christians. The lower classes still cling to Bu<-dhism, more through su perstitious ignorance than from actual belief in it. The upper classes remala committed to the religious views of the emperor and court TRICK CANDfES FOR "JOKER*." Loaded Sweetmeats Bought by Male Fun-Lovers. "The trick cigar has its counterpart in confectionery," said a candy man ufacturer the other day. "The callow youth who delights in giving explo sive cigars to his men friends de mands something similar for the can dy-consuming sex, and we have to meet the demand. "The possibilities of a cream choco late or a piece of nougat are limited, but we have a few contrivances. We make of a very hard candy an imita tion of a tooth with a gold crown, and hide it in a cream chocolate. You ean imagine the rest--a party of women munching candy, one of them discovering something hard, and find ing a gold-crowned tooth loose in her mouth! "Similarly we imitate a bone collar button in a h'ard white candy," con tinued the candy man, according' to the New York Times, "hide a candy shoe-button in a piece of nougat, put a bit of cork in a caramel or fill a candied cherry with red pepper. So long as the sanity experts don't weed out these alleged jokers the cahdy man has to put up these trick candies for them." He Went West and Prospered. Freeland, Kan., March 9th.--One of the most prosperous farmers in Har per County is Mr. N. H. Mead. Some thirty-four years ago he left his home near Clarence, N. Y., and came to Kan sas. Here he has thrived splendidly, and last year harvested over one hun dred and forty acres of wheat alone. But everything has not gone well with Mr. Mead, for his health has not been good for the last few years. He has suffered a great deal with Kidney and Bladder Trouble and could get nothing to stop it Lately, however, he has Improved a great deal, and he says that he has none of the old symptoms left and is feeling splendid again. He used Dodd's Kidney Pills and this remedy seemed to work won ders in his case. He says himself: "Dodd's Kidney Pills have made me well. They are all right and a reliable remedy for Kidney Trouble. They helped me right from the start, giving me great relief, and finally cured me." TO HOMESEEKERS. GOOD FARMS with productive-soils can be secured on the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry. in Ten nessee, Kentucky, Alabama, Georgia. Prices reasonable. Climate healthful; never very cold or very hot. All mar ketable crops grown and bring better prices than in the North. Rainfall ample and will distributed. Correspondence with real est&te agents in the North invited. For pamphlets write to H. F. SMITH, Traffic Manager, Nashville, Tenn. FARMING IN THE SOUTHWEST. In-Why it is Worth Your While to vestioate. A new monthly paper with many attractive features for farmers seek ing new and profitable fields. Write for a sample copy; it will interest you. Write too for "Texas"--a 144- page book about the Lone Star State. Address» "KATY," S02 Wainwright Bldg., 8t. Louis, Mo. Hundreds of dealers say the extra quantity an] superior quality of Defi ance Starch is fast taking plaice ot all other brands. Others say they cannot sell an* other starch. No hand can make the clock strike the hourr that are paBt.--Byron. Every man is a volume, if yon know how to read him.--Channing. TO WORKING GIRLS rl«y 1 B*ardl«flsBarl« prodigally pre yielding for Mr.J.E. I Orleans Co N. Y., 1*1 bu perl •ere. U9e«we1lev ry wh'rs | 20th Century Oats The oat marvel,produdag I too to Si*) bu*. p<?r acr«. I T tie U.S. A*. Dtuar'mfnt | calls Sal**;-'s Seed Oatntfat] beet. That Pays. A Dictionary Joke. Certainly no one would think of reading a dictionary for pleasure--as the Irishman said, he would lose the thread of the story In the great mass of detail. Nor would one expect to find jokes in such a book, except the one of Mark Twain's about the car buncle. But that learned and other wise staid dictionary, the Century, con tains at least one laugbal^hentry. Under the word "question" is the following: "To pop the question--see pop." Stats or Ohio, Crrr or Toledo, i „ Lucas Countt, Changes on the Northwestern. President Marvin Mighitt of the Chicago and Northwestern recently announced that his company has pur chased and entered into possession of the Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri valley railroad in Nebraska, Wyom ing and South Dakota, and that it will be operated hereafter as the Nebraska and Wyoming division of the North western system. Following this notice announcement was made by General Manager Gard ner of the appointment ot C. A. Cairns as general passenger agent of the Chicago and Northwestern, with headquarters at Chicago Mr. Cairns has been assistant general passenger agent of the Northwestern since 1892, and for several years prior to that was assistant general passen ger agent of the Chicago Great West- e:n. He has been in railway service since 1878, commencing as a messen ger in the president and treasurer's office of the Cleveland, Columbus, Cin cinnati and Indianapolis railroad. G. F. Bid well, who has been the general manager of the Fremont: Elk- horn and Missouri Valley, is appointed manager of the Nebraska and Wyom ing division, including the lino from California Junction to Fremont, with offices at Omaha. J. A. Kuhn, form erly general freight egent of the Elk- horn, Is made assistant general freight and passenger agent of the North western at Omaha. W. H. Jones is made division freight agent, and J. W. Munn division passenger agent at Omaha. Mother Grmy's Sweet Powders for Children. Successfully used by Mother Gray, ourae in the Children's Home in New York, cure Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teethiug Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy VV onus. Over 80,000 tes timonials. At all druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. k FREE MEDICAL ADVICE Every working girl who is not well is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkiiam, Lynn, Mass., for advice; it is freely given, and has restored thousands to health. Jiiss Paine*s Experience. "I want to thank you for what you have done for me, and recommend Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound to all girls whose work keeps them standing on their feet in the store. The doctor said I must stop work ; he did not seem to realize that a girl cannot afford to stop work ing. My back ached, my appetite was poor, I coilld not sleep, and menstrua tion was scanty and very painful. One day when suffering I commenced to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, and found that it helped me. I continued its use, and soon found that my menstrual periods were free from pain and natural; everyone is surprised at the change in me, and I am well, and cannot be too grateful for what you have done for me." -- Miss Jankt Painb, 530 West 125th St., New York City. -- $5000 forfait If original of abool htttr proving fnuinanut CM- mot bt product. Take no substitute, for it if Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound that cures. Colden Cata Corn „ . (Sew)3'>obuth8ir"prrraer»: ' truts-awonrierriUv»ri«tjr. | Macaroni Wheat. Greatest wheat oa earth I f"r arid, drJ, hot toll*--I yields 63 k<i(. per *sre. In-1 troduced by u. 8. Dept. ot | Agriculture It'i awondM. 6peltz. Greatest cereal food on I earth--80 lr;c grain and « I tong maenlfleen; hay pari aero. Tnat Prtb. Victoria Rape I makes It po9*lMe to grow I boss, sheep and cattle at | a cost of but le a lb. Mar ; | iTelously prolific,doe« « pevery where. That Paya-1 Bromus Inarmia Fthls and BlUlon Dollar I |Qrase are the two moat] •wonderful grasses ot til. I Icenturr. BROMUS pro-1 ' duces 6 tons and Billion S I I Orus I'i tens of bay a&4 lota aaa putarac* j -besides, per acr« Orowal Twherever soil 1s found, f Potatoes. 89. SO and up a barrot. [ 1,000.000'nis. e'ogant SIO.OO for <Oo. vc wish yoci to try oor I •great farm Beads, | 'offer to send 10 farm • rer. Speltz. etc., (worth I ; pet a start) with oar I great c».ui!og/or 100 poatac*. ] a-* i'T'-t MISCKLLA XEO VS. OX RECEIPT OF ONE DOLLAR we srtS mall full lustrui-tlone h.>w to atari a mouey-maldac mall order tmsluess Noitilug like It In tlie I'oImJ States, consequently no competition. CorrespoaS- ence Information Bureiu, 816 Lake tt., Chicago, St. MnNTV FfiHS earn you a home. Imported Bl»* iilUllb I L.UU3 tercup-Leghorns; outlay anytw*! free picture; circular. Has. Loring, Dedhatp. ItMfc WHY HAVE DULL KNIVES? When you can secure an IDEAL SIIARPENn) worth 40c for £5c. If not satisfactory return It MH get your money back. Mall ~5<-to CONVEX SHARPENER CO., 215 TUirty-first SU, CHICAQfe SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS Now is ilie time to secure your Sprlrg garden aa4 flower needs. Any of the toilowinn mai ea on rec of & ceuu per package, or any 10 packets tor 36 ci Mijnonetle Nasturtium Carrott Squash Spicaeh Lone Ka Beet Tomato Xarlj Cabbage Marigold Parsnip UuskmelM Turnip Red Oni Late Cabb* Pansy Sweet Feaa">>'; Watermslo* 1 * Parsley Sweet Corn Yellow Oni* Beans Cucumbers L*ttuc<> To Dispose of London's Smoke. The disposing of Londou's smoke , by electric fans was seriously consid- Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is tns , , senior partner of the tirm of p. J. Cheney&ca, | eied by the sanitary congress recent- tfoinK business In the City of Toledo, County \ ly held at Manchester. Snd State aforesaid, and that said Arm will pay , the sum of ONE HU.VUKKD DOLLARS for each and every caso of Catarrh thatcauaotbd lam surePiso sCur®for Consumption saved Cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. my life three years ago. --Mrs. Thos. R >bhins. FliANK J. CHENEY. 1 Sworn to before me and subscribed in mf presence, tbU 6th day of December, A. D. 188& rClrlri A.W. GLEA30N. (bEAU| Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and •ets directly on the blood and mucous surfauea •f the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. (X Sold by Druggists, 75c. Ball's Fi 'anally Pills are the best Usually the Case. "Do you believe that position affects one's sleep?" asked the man. "Certainly," replied the philosopher. "I never knew a man who had a posi tion on the police force to be troubled with insomnia." Maple Street, Norwich. N. Y., Feb. 17,11100 We are all excited by the love or praise, and it is the noblest spirit* that feel it most.--Broadliurst. Mra. WtnaloMr'a Soothing Syrup. for cbliilrea teething, Kofteuo tne gunm. reduces In- Oaniumuor . allays pain, curea wlud co'lc. a Joule. He that <^&n have patience, can have what he will.--Franklin. «• Short Radish C. F. WHITE * CO., 188 Van lturen Street, - - CHICAGO* GAS ENGINE INSTRUCTION. (Cut this out nud save it.you may need It some dayj I am puiillMiliitf a set of ilrawlu s and Itmtructtone covering the biiiuling. repalrlut; aud operating gaao lino engines. In olx separate p:<ri6, that will beaeat to you once a uio:ith for six mouitis. I Manufac ture GiiHoline Kngiiie*. If you havo or expsel to buy an $!ivlne, you ehould havo this »t i. Send BM «SO oeiitR. stamps or silver, and 1 will send yoa H dozo.u alumnluin pen aud peucll holders. luatrucUMS an,I particulars. Snarttruburg, Minneapolis, Minn., Dept.^ WEEK Straight nalsry sod •» V<t"peiuei to nmn witb rlK to introdao* our Poaltry Mixture In country: year's cue* tract; weekly pay. AildreM with ttainjh Slouarcti life. Co. Box 1 lii3.Spriut;Hold,III, nDHDQY NEW DISCOVERY: glFBB It Wv 1 quick relief Hii.loires worn en*eH. Hook of te»tlmOQlal«aod 10DAYB traatmeal F&KE. Dr. H.H. OBE£ji 8 SOWS.Box ii.Atlanta, [ Thompson's Eye Wafw W. N. U. CHICAGO, NO. 11, 1903« p V J" Tonsiline Cures Sore Throat. When Answering Advertisement^' v Kindly Mention This Paper. A, J Germany's annually. uavy costs $42,000,000 Ask Yonr Dealer For Allra'i Foot-Bsw. A powder. It rests the foet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen,Sore, Hot,Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight hhoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe 6tores, 25 cents. Ac cept no substitute Sample mailed Fubb. Address Alien S. Oimst«<l, LeRoy, N. Y. Some of Them, Certainly. The so-called witty remarks attrib uted to great men after their demise are enough to make them do flipflops in their graves. - WHEN VOIIK, UROCE8 SATS he does not have Defiance Starch, you may be sure he is afraid to keep It until his stock of 12 oz. packages are sold. De fiance Starch Is not onlv better than any Other Cold Water Starch, but contains 16 os. to the packaee and : ells for muse money as 12 oz. brands 6 wed en's "Famine Bread." The "famine bread" upon which 70,- 000 persons in northern Sweden are now subsisting is made from ground pine bark and iceland moss. Tou never hear any one complain about "Defiance Starch." There is none to equal it in quality and quan tity. 16 ounces, 10 cents. Try It now and save your money. Hail! ye small sweet courtesies of life, for smooth do ye make the road of it, like grace and beauty which be gets inclinations to love at first sight; 'tis ye who open the aoor and let the stranger in.-r-- Sterne. The well earned reputation and Increas ing popularity of the Lewis' "Single Binder," straight So cigar, is due to the maintained high quality aud appreciation of the smoker. Some reserve is a debt to prudence, as freedom and simplicity of conver sation is a debt to good nature.-- Shenstone. WHY IT 18 TIJK HKST Is because made by an entirely different process. Delia nee Starch Is unlike any other, better and one-thin- more for 10 cents. A man's own good breeatng is the best security against other people's ill-manners.--Chesterfield. HOUSEWIVES HEADACHES You don't know why you suffer from headache and you are apt to believe you have some dire female trouble, but its dollars to doughnuts that you are wrong. Women are prone to put off the duties of Nature to attend to the duties of the home and when they do get time to go, the feeling has passed. Constipation results and then the awful racking headache. Take a spoonful of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin every night before going to bed. Keep it up for a few w£fcks«-- A. P. Klopf, of Troy, Ohio, miller at Hay- ner's Distillery, writes under date of June 10, 1901: "My wife and self suffered off and on for three or four years with Constipation and Sick Headache, and we received almost Instant relief by taking Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. The use of several bottles restored our digos- tife organs to normal condition, and although we are free from any trastric trouble, we do not owiuider being without a bottle for a minute." Your Money Bach If It Oon't Benefit Yoa KPSI1 SYRUP CO., Montlcrilo, IK. Defiance Starch is guaranteed biggest and best or money refunded. 16 ounces. 10 cents. Try it now. To be good and disagreeable. Is high treason against the royalty of virtue.--H. More. To Cure a Gold In One day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AD druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25a Bad men excuse their faults; good men will leave them.--Ben Jonson. The sure way to miss success Is to miss opportunity.--P. Charles. JUNE TINT BUTTER COLOR makes top of the market butter. ' ^ell-bred people are not always of the upper crust. Low Rates West. Only $33 Chicago, to San Fran cisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Ta- coma, Seattle, and many other Pacific Coast points, every day February 15 to April 30, 1903. One-way, second-class colonist rates via Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul and Union Pacific line. To the Northwest via^ this route, or via St. Paul. Additional infor mation on request. 9. A. MILLER. Qmersl Puttngar Agsat Chlcags. 2EHHHnaas«n CUBES WIEIE *11 ELSE r«lli^ licit Cough Syrup. TMtei Good/Ui In time. Sold by druggliU. liSiiv tVrlllnjjU'ji. W.V/ : •:= .vr-a" Ev&ST .k'&££•:%' is a wise loaf. Gold Medal Flour makes all loaves "long" in economy; makes the most bread and makes It most nutritious; makes the best bread and makes it always the same. Washburn, GrosbgF** Flour SHBURIi CROSBY PAftr