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TTized, Nezous Mothers 4s ta.e Unhappy Homes-Their Condition Irritates Both Husband and Children-How Thousands of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous Prostration anid Made Strong and Wel. i ip A nervous, irritable mother, often on s b verge of hysterics, is unfit to care :for chilren ; it ruins a child's disposi son and reacts upon herself. The Strouble between children and their Sothers too often is due to the fact that the mother has some female weak seas, and she is entirely unft to bear h ebs strain upon her nerves that govern Sin children involves; it is impossible for her to do anything calmly. The ills of women act like a firebrand upon the nerves, consequently nine pteths of the nervous prostration, ner vous despondency. "the blues," sleep lessness, and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. Do you experience fits of depression With restlessness, alternating with extreme irritability? Are your spirits s ly affected, so that one minute you raugh, and the next minute you feel Do you feel something like a ball ris la in your throat and threatening to bokie you; all the senses perverted, morbidly sensitive to light and sound; .e in the ovaries, and especially etween the shoulders; bearing down p~insa nervous dyspepsia. and almost a.ntinually cross and snappy ? If so, your nerves are in a shattered -adlition, and you are threatened with ltrvous prostration. Proof is monumental that nothing in Sth world is better for nervous prostra . l than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege Sasle Compound; thousands and thou _ .ead of women testify to this fact.t Er.. msukha's Ad ilm-A Wr.. 3.r Wi 8 tnb a Wemma Uo. IW a when~n ici: eatr of yMsks eeS Mice 7ZI~r tbY 2 LmwgL· P Wetm r RIdiug.walla. NOWT MAlS aN lUl' Fmr. "104. . AJ. LOWER CO. dlmat, 15.3.LL '1 iron WOMENle ira U" 5atrl 0 o itsd erassri -l ciao ligsld sadssplies ls FORa7 ad WOMENisPCA ttl ..st am a deh Lma rW-k~l llt · 6b~;"~ imfimummtleu -; rma uiwaw IPUI1AL RUESIIP· 666666 ~~~- Fmrmhmtbqhrita~mmtmabem W. L. DoucLAs t: 39&"3" SHOES ýW L. Douglas $4.00 OUt dge LUna eannot be equailed at any prled. SR rtý^ { nags ieri~m~ l S ~l s 101M 0this } W. L.Douglas $3.80 ahe"m have th Ieir at mbmst atyl. eany meting, and Scw kgw 3 is the wol. I mare ase -M Seeme that oust you sS.OJ;t ..rOStbse iny wm'eclmstheprica. Ill t*wo yInato mtDoctu Mwn.. thel Z..r~ i factory at btbrockt 3br, Mi dmmd.r sae re ,mlngMrf sad loW the are with which overy Whny W. L Douglai3.0egsa irc Mhbet ýýproWdnced LuI the world. a$" ends show rl, ad wlm~rl iII meld theo jee the of otheanbhetP Yoe would endtrst sd wy kw ara M ~ sE ot more tO askwy thw lknris, iklterwas Idgari . sed mm oL E` ' t~ts inrinic aletham grmy ehr$3.50 t Ointm mlt todatt y. EIToN.Inat ponba W.L.DeuIt ~ gemugas 'eithoug his ano mand prime heamped sa ioilme. "D. Idr ow rsot 1n·Hay lrir'o y Do asla shome rec not sold. Full lie of losetfree for inspeetion uponm request fa 6l Ep lete used, awing will .st ager kuemu. Writ, fer Illustrated Catalog of ]Pll 8716 W. _L DOUGLAS. aroekteS. Emme REFRISME STArOI for a«' When Answering Advertieementl Kindly Mention This Paper. 'W. N-1.U. HOUSTON-NO.. 42.1905 Ieat 8 . & . I Mrs. Chester Ourry, Leader of the Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 42 Sara toga Street, East Boston, Mass., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " For eight years I was troubled with aoz treme nervoume and hysteria, broughton by Irregularities. I could neither enjoy life nor sleep nights; was very rritble, rvo "Ly a E. Pinklham's Vegetable Compound was recommended and proved to be the only remedy that helped me. I have daily improved in health until I am now strong a well, and all nervousnem has disap. Mrs. Charles F. Brown, Vice-Preal. dent of the Mothers' Club, 21 Cedar Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I dragged through nine yearsof miseraM existence, worn out with pain and naervous ness, until it seemed as thogh I should !fy. I then noticed a statement o a woman trou bled as I was, and the wonderful results she derived from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, I decided to try it. I did so, and at the end of three months I was a different woman. My nervouness was all gone. I was no longer irritable, and ray husbnd fell in love with me all over again." Women should remember that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Is the medicine that holds the record for the greatest number of actual eures of female ills, and take no substitute. Free Advice to Women. Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., iavites all sick women to write to her foradlvie. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experience with female troubles enables her to tell. you just what is best for you, and; she will charge you nothing for her advice. lAW BRIGHT FUTURE FOR BOY. Knew Enough to Improve His Mind* In Odd Mementos It so chanced that all the passen gers that entered one of the elevators Li a tall buliding were going above the sixth loor, so they had oportual ty to slance at the book which the young elevator man had been read nag, and whicth lay fae up on bli stool. He had been so intently read Ing it before startlnlg with his passen ge. as to be almost abstracted, al though very lively and handy with the actual work once the start was made. "I'll bet that book is an Indian fghting blood-and-thunder." whispered one passenger to another he knew. "No; he's too old for that-I'd iay it was a thriller of a love romance." "Or one of the six best sellers of the month," interjected a third. Everybody was interested. All were "rubberiag" at the book and when the group of passengers got out of the cage one deliberately stooped. and looked at it. "Young America forever," he said; "it is a volume of Blaskstene. This kid will be sittig on the bench some day."-San Francisco Chronicle. Ungenerous Questlen. The first slice of goose had been at anad the minister of the Eion church looked at it with as keen san ticipation as was displayed in the faces round him. "Dat's as fine a ojie as I ever saw, Brudder Williams," he said to his host. "Where did you get such a ine one?" "Well, now, Mistah Rawley," said the carver of the goose, with a sau den ocess it' dignity, "when you preach a special good sermon, I neber axes you where you got it. Seems to me dat's a triv'al matter, anyway." Youth's Companion. Sometimes it is cheaper to spend your money than to invest it and lose a lot more on top of it. COFFEE NEURALGIA. Leaves When You Quit and Use PoN turn. A lady who unconsciously drifted into nervous prostration brought on by coffee; says: "I have been a coffee drinker all my life, and used it regularly, three times a day. . "A year or two ago I became sub ect to nervous neuralgia, attacklr of nervous headache and general ner vous prostration which not only, in capacitated me for doing my house work, but frequently made it neces sary for me to remain in a dark room for two or three days at a time. "I employed several good doctors one after the other, but none of them was able to give me permanent relief. "Eight months ago a friend sug gested that perhaps coffee was the cause of my troubles and that I try Postuem Food Coffee and give up the old kind. I am liad I took her adviae, for my health has been entirely re stored. I have no nore neuralgia, nor have I had one solitary headache i all thees eight months. No more o my days are wasted in solitary eon inement in a dark room. I do all my own work with ease. The lesh that I lost during the years of my nervous prostration has come back to me during these months, and I am once more a happy, healthy woman. I e .close a list of names of friends who can vouch for the truth of the state. ment." Name given by Postam Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Ten days' trial leaving of fese and using Potm itn Is aklent. AI poosro.~ LANDMARK WILL SOON BE GONE. Destruction Threatens Survival of Pre .historic England. An interesting survival of prehistor Is .ngland is threatened with destruc tion owing to neglect. This is the "Cerne Giant," a colossal human fig ure cut on the side of a lofty hill that overlooks the picturesque village of Cerne Abbas, eight mils ith of Dorchester. It is several years since the furrows which outline the giant's figure were scoured and re-lined with chalk. gradually the latter has been washed away by the winter rains, and it is now barely visible. Grass has so encroached on the channels that, seen from a distance, the details of the gigantic figure are hard to -trace, though the uncouth human form is still recognizable. The "Old 'Man, as he is styled by the natives of Cerne Abbas, is built on truly heroic lines. He stands 180 feet high, and his right hand grasps a knotted club 121 feet long. The unknown artist had his own notions of the just proportions of the human frame, as will be seen from the following further measurements: Length of body; 77 feet; legs. 80 !eet; head, 22 feet; right arm, 109 feet; nose, 6 feet; diameter of eyes, 2% feet. The antiquity of the figure is ac cepted by all archaeologists. Most au thorities ascribe it to the Celtic pe riod, while some have held that it rep resents an idol once worshiped by the Pagan West Saxons. Another view is that it was the work of the monks of the then newly founded Benedictine abbey of Cerne. Some color is given to this theory by the existence of a similar figure at Wilmington, in Pus sex, where once stood a Benedictine priory GERMAN CRITICISMS OF ENGLISH Visitor Thinks Islanders Dwell Too Much on Physical Ills. A German publicist who spent a part of the summer in a boarding house at Teignmouth, England, says: :"English seaside visitors display most remarkable ingenuity in sustaining a lengthy coIveisation founded on no other topic than the weather. When !this is exhausted they turn to their ,aches and pains; each individual ad iduces some striking examples of bod ily suffering on his or her part and e combined ailments of the com y afford themes for endless discus "Next in popularity to the remark, 'Hotter than ever,' came the question, ('How is your lumbago?' and the lum bago of most of the visitors was, I 1regret to say, very bad. I must, how ,ever, warn my traveling fellow-coun trymen that English anatomy ends with the diaphragm. The mention of the stomach, even, is not permissible in polite circles. There is, however, one striking exception to this rule the liver may be discussed at all and sundry seasons. "Full advantage is taken of the con cession and the,vagaries of this organ supply the basis of many a lengthy if somewhat monotonous discourse. Half the ills of the Anglo-Saxon race are attributed to the liver and wherever one goes the eye is cheered with aod vertisements of nostrums to corre:al that portion of the human frame." Help Your Vile. A man ain'd got much droubles Here pelow. Der pastor makes up couples Dot you know. Bud id is der husband's vile, Who is burdened in dis life, Leedle sunshine, heaps or shtrife, Ain'd id so? In der house she's shtuck all day Yawcob's sick. She must tuck her meals avay Awful kwiek. She must comb Louiso's hair Baby's shunt fell from his chair Bob has chased der cat somevhere Mit a shtick. Vlfie shpills his coffee hot On his clothes. Heinrich ties into a knot Minnie's bows. In his nose lIans shtuffed a pill Albert's fighting brudder Bill Fritz fell oft dot vindow sill On his nose. No, id aln'd all bread und butter, Married life. 'Tain't all joy to be a mudder Bud de shtrife Could be made, I'm sure, more shweet, If at night van you did eat. '8htead or lying down to read HELP YOUR VIFE! -New York News. Against the Bell. The young man, who was making a call, had said he would have to be $p' uing and they were standing just out side the front door having a final lit tle chat. He was leaning against the house talking in subdued tones. It was then 11:30 o'clock. They had been there ten minutes perhaps, when suddenly a man in pajamas appeared at the door. "Father," said the girl in a tone that showed mortification, "why are you down here looking that way? Are you walking in your sleep?" The father looked at the young man. "George," he said, "I've never complained about how late you have staid here talking to Mary, and I'm anot going to kick about that to-night, but for goodness' sake stop leaning against that doorbell! You've got the whole family awake!"-Kansas. City Times. The Hardships of Childhood. Little Howard, who celebrates his fourth birthday in April, entered the house the other day and sadly said to his mother: "There's nobody for me to play wiv. `I wish they wouldn't have any school." "But Thomas hasn't gone to school," answered the little boy's mother. "You can play with him, can't you?" -1 "No," Howard said with intense dis gust, "he's too young." , Thomas wasn't 4 until August. Feeding the Lagoons. At the St. Louis Exposition a guard of one of the bridges that lead to the lagoons was approached by a well dressed lady who asked him where' the lagoons were. He replied that they were at the other end of the bridge. Her next question was, "What time did you feed them?" "Princess of Peace." The Grand Duchess Olga of Russia is known as "The Princess of Peace." She is the Czar's youngest sister, is 24 years of age, and was married four years ago to Prince Peter, Duke of OldeburS. THIN BLOOD-WEAK NERVES One Follows the Other, but Dr. WiI Ilams' Pink Pill Quiekly Cure Both. The steady use of a particular set of muscles tends to chronic fatigue, which produces faulty or difficult motion, trembling, cramps and even paralysis. Writers, telegrapiers, tailors and seam. stresses are among the classes most threatened in this way with the loss of their power to earn a living. The fol lowing instance shows that nerve power may be recovered after it seems entirely lost, if the right means are taken. Mrs. O. S. Blacksten, of No. 684 North Bow man street, Mansfield, Ohio, says: "For years my hands would become so numb at times that I would drop anything I attempted to lift. Later they became so bad that I could not sew any longer, and at last I could scarcaly do anything at all with my hands. At night the pricking sensations would come on worse than ever, and my hands and arms would pain so that I dreaded to go to bed. My family doctor gave me some nerve tablets. They helped me a little, but only for a short time after I had taken them and if I happened to be without them for a day or two I would be as bad as ever or even worse. Finally I got a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and began to take them. "The result was surprising. By the time I had taken the last pill in my first box I could see a gain. Thanks to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, lam now all right. I can.sleep undisturbed by pain, and for two years I have been as well as ever." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills feed the nerves by making new, rich blood and in this way have cured nervous diseases of every description from simple rest lessness to paralysis. They have ban ished the tortures of neuralgia, the weakness of nervous prostration, the disability and awful pain of locomotor ataxia. They are sold by all druggists or direct by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. When the fool killer met the scorch ing automobilist, "there was a hot time in the old town that night." Acetylene Gas. All country people will be interest ed in reading about it in another part of this paper. If you started in now to count 1,000,. 000,000 in figures, and kept it up con tinuously, day and night, without stop ping to eat, sleep or thing of anything else, you would be finished on Septem ber 20, 1921. BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA. Face Like Raw Beef-Thought She Would Lose Her Ear-Healed Without a Blemish-Moth er Thanks cuticura. "My little girl had eczema very bad when she was ten months old. I thought she would lose her right ear. It had turned black, and her face was like a piece of raw meat, and very sore. It would bleed when I washed her, and I had to keep cloths on it day and night. There was not a clear spot on her face when I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and now it is completely healed, without scar or blemish, which is more than I had hoped for. (Signed) Mrs. Rose Ether, 291 Eckford St., Brooklyn, N. Y." In an old French window 'of the if teenth century is preserved a record of an ancient custom-the method used by the cloth shearers. It shows how the cloth was spread upon a ta ble and its nap removed by great scis sors made like pincers. SmATs or Omo, CITY ow TOLzo, s. Lvos Couzr. t rwns J. Cazmsy makes oath that hb is sealor sne tnr of the arm of F. J. Cunxty & CO. doing bunss .t the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid and that said iLrm will pay the sum or ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every ce of CT.Anas that cannot be cured by the use of £a]KtL'a crr Cvuz SC C . RANK J. CENEY. Sworn to befor me and subscribed in my prees eese this sth day of December, A. D. to. _. - A. w. GLEASON. -ass }NOTARY Pusuo. Halls Catrrh Cure is taken nternally and act dtrestly on the blood and mucous aurfaces of the yste. Send for tettm.lon.a. free. eJJ. C.ERte ao CO., Toleto, A Tak Hl's ramily, Pills forcasttpatioc. Since the process of photographing on silk and linen has been brought to such perfection In France, many per sons have their portraits upon their linen, instead of their names or ini tials. The portraits are not injured by washing. When Your Grocer Says he does not have Defiance Starch, yon may be sure he is afraid to keep it un til his stock of 12 os packages are sold. Defiance Starch is not only bet ter than any other Cold Water Starch, but contains 16 oz. to the package and sells for same money as 12 os. brands. The best and rarest moral bracer in the world is the knowledge that some one has faith in you. Try me just once and I am sure to eome again. Defiance Starch. Holiness without heart is but a hin drance to hunmanity. A good story bears repeating. Use Red Cross Bag Blue. Always gives satisfaction. Ask your grocer. Politicians are men who try to save the country at its own expense. Im.ortant to Methers. masals eaetaltr every beette of CASTOEA, a se and sae sedy lt n . . stWans sharir, ad se that it Snature of Is ts eor e Tears. Ibe Wds Tea Nase Alwas Bsol. She once had a picture painted .to look like her. Now she paints to look like the picture. Storekeepers and Hotelkeepers Should investigate acetylene gas. Write "Acetylene Jones" to-day. When a man is devoted to his wife, she is generally devoted to having him devoted to her. It takes a certain amount of skill to pick a lock, but anybody can pick a quarrel Some people are born rjh, while other strike a diaper-pin 'he trst week. ,lllorlnlelen illl byI is wly l ryIliioe To oure, or aoney refanded. by fyou'_nr usbant, so not ty Itt r. Pic Analysis of Medicine. Open "There is ae public demand. there is not the slightest public a essity for a law compelling the pu cation of the formula of proprietary medicines," says the Committee on Legislation of the Proprietary Asso. elation. "Every Health Commissioner and every Pure Food Commissioner in the country, as well as every pri vate physician or chemist, if he pleases, has the right to make an analysis of any proprietary medicine and to publish the result and to tell the public what he thinks, and there is nothing in the world to prevent, such action. But that is not what the agitators for such legislation want. Their object is to destroy the sale of such remedies entirely." Real destitution is rarely seen in Japan. Though some of its inhabit ants are very poor, yet all seem to be fairly well fed. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.-one full pound-while all the other Cold Water Starches are put up in 3-4-pound pack ages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then, again, because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem. icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and flgurew "16 ozs." Demand Defiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron sticking. Defiance never sticks. San Francisco's demand for brick is so great it has created a brick famine in California. XcCANl'5 DETECTIXV AGrNCY, Houston, Tezas, operates the lamgest force of competent detectives in the South, They render written opinions in cases not handled by them. Reasonable rates. When a woman i~ears a new gown on the street she wonders how she can let the world know of it without telling it. Hee is Relief for Women. - Mother Gray, a nurse ln New York, dis covered a pleasant herb remedy for women's ills, called AUSTRALIAN-LAF. It is the only oertain monthly regulator. Cures female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney and U'pary trouble. At l Drugi ts or by mail50 ia. Sample mailed F AEL Address, The Mother GIry Co.. LeBoy, N. Y. A column of small "adds" means money in a ledger as well as in a Journal. sam wodswO Se Sseemng raywsp Icsmsamlarnii y ,sar, vtsgesb. so. eabse The greatest Jar to love in a cottage in the cold, stern fact that stomachs as well as hearts must be satisfied. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature'sgreat remedy--Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At drug gists, 9Sc., 500. and 81.00 per bottle. Adam found gardening in Paradise impossible, for' he had neither son nor heir. Farmers and Merchants will be interested in announcement of "Acetylene Jones" ii this paler. You can never tell when you start in to break a.,colt whether you will break the colt or the colt will break you. Pi'so Cure for Consumption is an intflli.le medicnlae for coughs and olds --N. W. SAuam., Ocean Grove. N. J.,Peb. 17, 1900. More than 2000 people earn a living in Paris by fortune telling. Red Cross BagBlue makes clothes whiter than snow. Delghts the laundress. A groces sell it. ee imtation, Early to bed and early to rise makes a farmer so darn tired that he hankers for Sunday. A father thinks he is a good discip linarian when he gets mad with hbfis wife because the children won't mind him. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Os . hrit:ralod ibatrorm ti.mW:t 2"eaIsdit-- s:a1 ee *Al ltarUadll nýeIsh 'U WiSERt Witimm i~pr iu * d lae~r fUsw-r im ag . osta f all £dn RHEUMATISM CURED WITH -RADIO-SULPH ore than 10.000 people havered thenm. selves at home using Rad-xe-u lgee r hi any and everr. Easily rusedand applied. Hendi of cases oed with cu bottle thousands with five and aiz bottles. Th1amonds of testimonials re ceived from gratefsl tients. Only on the market a year and hail. Hart made. a ret record. Our patrons do the ad. vertisin for us. oent br marl pestage pa~i,, ..r bottle, eir bottlee P4 expwe paida directions with eah order. Write today. Pampheiesntfree. 50e0 bottles solda n Ismothb Wetartd the irst da., 1n months ato, with si bottles. i it how our patrons arer eommend. .tg RadI__.S..l$p. (Get Raes ei-,, a ad Care Yursel. We have our owa sani tarium and physbian. THE RADIQ-SULPHO CO. rsO flack Bik., Denver, Coe. m Please -alo s trt -ser A penny is estimated to change hands about 126,000 times in its life. Johnson Grass Killed. Mr. W. C. Smith, of Bartlett, Texas, writes: Gentlemen-The sample can of "DINAMINE" seems to do the work all O. K. Think I could do good busi ness with it here, Give us your term, etc., and oblige. Five goalotn of "DINAMINf w "in make 100 gallons of treating solutiosi cost $.00. A trial order will convince the m.st skeptic. Ask your dealer for It "NOW," or send us the money and we will ship at once. Sir Isaac Holden used to get reese. atlon out of compulsory walking. Shilrt Bosoms n S Collars and Cuffs laundered with Defilance °Starch never crack nor beseo " brittle. They last twioe ".. ·as long as those laus dtiered with other starehes san give the wearer much better satisfaction. If you want yeour husband, brother or son to look dressy, to feel eomuforl-l able and to be thoroughly happy use DEFIANOC -iSTARCH in the laundry. It S is sold by all good grocers at 10 a package-18 ounces. Inferior starches sell at the same price per package but contain only 12 ounees. Note the diter ence. Ask your grocer for DFaIANCN STARCH. Insist on getting it sad yeot will never use any other brand. * Defiance Starch Company, Omaha, N*b. TI-E SEa - WX EEECILo. POST'S --GRAT CLUSBING AND PREMIUM OFEiR WIT- THE INLAND FARMER. THE INLAND PARMER is a high lass Weekly Agriultural Journal.` It is bqeiut fully llustrated, wide-awake, independent and progrsaive. Each imue ceutais from I5 to Si pages. 8pocial dertments of interest to A.MSMEitS, hTOULMSME, DALRYMEN, POSL T]BYIMER AND IJKUIT GROWERS. Attractive household secttons for the women, the girls and the boys. Its eeatribuatlo are practical people who write Ia expresslve sad comose-esnse language. The subscription price of the IsLANDI) AR iER is $1.00 per yewa "Farmers' Favorite" SFer STOCKMEN sad FARMER SThree dles, and all good ee. Halnd' trgds W dlowesteeal,.eta fd and gl,. .,round to suit the sn user. No better ste ee -tag handlefour inde loaug TestCe gBld I eda German Nb lag fancy, but thezo In l ftiknife,Ith fAREBi For $1. weekly, for one yer, and llo one year's uuhacripliee to the Semi-Weekly Poet. TH] HOUSTONI POt5. Notstonr Teuas. I seeept this oan er sad emclene g............... oae year' sabeertptle to the two papes sad thParesad' Wki avelr' IEalft e .0. Adresse .............................................County ...................... ate:. . ........ .............ree, . . o. .. ....o ... tate........................ asxtee b Pe at Oflee or oporess Mesey Order or by &egLteetrrd PatU. Cut out this entire Coupon and erpd wit your $1.60. abesriptles may be new or renewals. Cit t1 at now. This ad wll set appear agala. -..eDo ORDERS DIRECT TO- T2EE S Za-r.ld 7gzIEnE2cL" 'Po T, vtoutem, Texas. PRI TI- IP IIE SA TI- TO CURNE S 8P, BAD COLA, DEADAA 5 AN ERALAL I J 't selAat s. to d who wo't 00 o SIt.I oilD OOL , IIuUrI.M 5 it 1 IW lIlIN :t '. CHl...er. LC PATENTS! PROFIT MUST FULLY PROTECT AN INVENTION. Wa*hInsn, D. C., Estabta bIsd 161. 645*for our Icad Aairmwsety aes .3eOLt. show lugmufastustum of X~eoh~alai Moieudma Safer. C h lom.rstret usd *b"raads arl a. o1 u tei soo t. Ulo rrdr r( d the tLuU. Ommmuuorlmetop oe.SsulaLt Vill us tpo~u. wSIAh SE TaRU tirs h· t d Clt 'IUs WLLOtrnf tISsM ab t~ tr )EIFII IBE MAN RVUe~ to ame BIG SENSATION IN HOUSTON. Houston, ,Texas, Oct. 17, 1905. When the Houston daily papers an nounced that the Riggins Furniture Company would leave Houston and lo cate In Los Angeles, California, it came like a thunderclap from' a clear sky. They have always carried the best goods at the. lowest prices, doing a big business. They advertise goods at fifty cents on the dollar. Any party in the state can save money by comina to Houston and buying their furjture and cooking stoves. Write immedi ately to Riggin Furniture Company, Houston, Texas, for their five lists of special bargis at fifty cents on the dollar, or better still, coBte to Houe ton. The sale begins Wednesday, Oct. 18, at 10' a. It .s expected that 10,000 people will attend this sale opening. WI cme Cfiicens denr 'I ta th I~ir X IsaUM, tKC SAX . um..am4 Iu. T SAN1 AiOZR;O, Th.a DEFIARe 8a01 Wat w Starmc makes lauadtr wok o pleaFs. N Ol. p~ 1.. Decision in Cotton Cotton will be moving rapid ly from now on, and you will have to decide quickly what to do with each lot, according to the circumstances of the moment. Our services and our facil ities are at your command, and you will make no mistake by shipping to us. Win. D. Cleelani d & Sons. House.. : .. :. To=*