THE "MORTAL J. N." Moat Picturesque of Characters Goes- to Asylum. As Boy He Could Speak Thirteen Languages -Mind Unhinged by a Great Criminal Trial Has Been Insane Hfty Years. Jacob Newman Free, "the immortal J. X.," has reached the end of his travels. He was finally adjudged in sane, and will spend the remainder of his days in the State Hospital of To ledo. He is now seventy-eight years old. Thus passes a character known in every sizable town in every State in the West. For more than half a cen tury he lived as the birds live. No town or State could claim him as its own. In each he was at home and among friends. It is his claim, and it is not disputed, that he knows more peo ple personally than any other living man. For fifty years he has travelled up and down and across the country, rid ing free on nearly every railroad, and living without expense in the best .ho tels, the towns he visited, afforded. D. H. on Every Railroad. Still in his possession are a hundred slips reading "Good for J. N. " His most treasured possession is a slip of paper signed by the leading officials of many of the biggest railroads in the country. It reads: "The immortal J. N. : pass him forever. Good on all roads from now until doomsday.'' Hotel men in the t6wns he visited did as much. He was never known to have more than a few cents at a time, but in the-flfty years of his wanderings few landlords have been bold enough j J WMUitf I II Ill THE HORSE IS A PASSENGER ON THIS CAR. to present him with a bill. It is re corded that a hotelkeeper once offered to throw off half the bill when he learned his guest's identity. "The im mortal J. N. " glared at the landlord then, declaring he would allow no one to outdo him (n generosity, and said he would throw off the other half. He seldom stopped in cities of more than 10,000 population, believing that In the large cities his personality would be lost. There are few news paper offices in the country outside of the largest cities where he is not well known. Some years ago he travelled all over the country ransacking the files of newspapers for his own obit uary. He has been reported dead more than once. He is an apostle of "truth," "press ure," and keeper of the "secret of the veil." For forty years he has been promising to "lift the veil" and put "on the pressure." Wherever he stopped in the course of his migrations his first announce ment was that men called him crazy. and that he was about "to put the pressure on." This "pressure" was some mysterious force which he alone he believed, prevented from crushing out of existence all the life of this con tinent. No one has ever doubted that he was insane. He himself boasted of it. But his is an insanity that up to now in spired only friendship and sympathy. But behind his insanity and his fifty years of aimless wandering over the country is a tragic story. Mind Unhinged by Blow. In his youth he was an infant phe nomenon. At four years of age he read almost all of the Bible, and dur ing his teens he acquired a reading and j speaking knowledge of no less than thirteen languages. During the gold craze in '49 he went West and startea a stage line. Within two years he had accumulated a fortune of 150,000. A partner robbed him, and then "J. N." moved back to Ohio and began the studv of law. Within a few years he stood at the top of the bar of Cincin nati. One day he was defending a mur derer in whose innocence he strongly believed. As a result of his eloquence the man was acquitted. The same day his client confessed that he was guilty4 "J. N." rushed back to the courtroom and started to explain, but the strain and excitement had been too much for him He was stricken with apoplexy. Within a short time he recovered his physical health, but never his mental poise. : HAS STUDIED STANDARD OIL There Is the making of a most val uable servant of the trusts in uoutn rtr.mra in thft form of a small 'boy whose name does not appear.. Be lieving he had killed seven-year-old LsretU Smith, a pupil Of the Colum ''bla public school, whom he knocked .onaAina with a snowball, a small boy, -who escaped before his identity .muM ha ascertained, hired a negro bov for 5 cents to assume all blame for the tragedy. The ;glrl Was more .frightened .than Tiurt. , , , . Mr. Bryan's daughter has taken 'to ' rwritlng plays, Senator Tillman Is writ ing a book, and .Congressman 'Long worth is accused of writing topical songs. By next November we may have very little left to be thankful for. UNIQUE STREET RAILWAY. In Which the Horse and the Passen gers Ride Together O wed 'toy a Weman. . j If the spirits of the poor, departed car horses are allowed to return to the land of the living, they must chuckle (if car horse spirits do such an un seemly thing) when they witness one of their kind standing on the back platform of a street car, meditatively chewing a straw and "viewing the landscape o'er" as the car merrily glides on its way into the town. But that is a spectacle that presents itself many times a day just outside the great city of Denver, Colorado. A short line of street railroads called the Cherrelyn Line, leads from one of the city terminals to the little town of Cherrelyn. It ascends gradu ally from the city, and its motive power, an ancient and decrepit speci men of the genus "car horse" creeps slowly up the hill, stopping frequently for breath. Once at the top however, his labors are over, for the time be ing. He is unhitched from the car, climbs aboard the rear platform, and proceeds to make himself comfortable. When the hour of departure is reached the driver gives the car a gentle shove and the whole outfit goes spinning down the hill to its starting point. ' The Cherrelyn Line is owned and controlled by Mrs. George H. Bogue, of Denver, "who claims that it is the only all-gravity system in the world. There was a similar line operating in southern California a few years ago, so the claim to that distinction may be disputed. Be that as it may, how ever, it is one of the sights of. Denver a street car on which both horse and passengers ride. The rolling stock of this road rep resented by the single car is not exactly up to date in style or finish. It Is shabby and worn, and the rear platform, not originally designed as a stable, droops disconsolately sides of the car, both Inside and out, are decorated with the carvings and writings of tourist fools Whose names are like their faces, Always seen in public places. Mrs. Bogue is not exactly a million aire as the result of operating her own railroad and drawing all the salaries and dividends, and she appreciates the deficiencies of rolling stock and road-'bed. But she takes keen de light in the management of the road and finds it a paying Investment. INDIANS RAID tTHE TREA8- ury. N A band f Osairo Indtass has looted the ttitfted "States Treasnfy of $59ov The lost atvagi permitted by the author ities. -for the Bed Men had the law on their Hide, the money being the expenses 'they were allowed by 'the Indian ' Omiminsioner in making 'the trip to Washington from their reserva tion. 'Each Osago vms allowed Ki by the Commissioner. They tiled Into the Treasury Building, a few weeks ago, silent as oysters and presented their order. They got their money and left the department without uttering word ouly a few grunts. The names they signed or iudicated b mark were well worth the money nnd were as follows: O-lo-hah-wal-la; I. Deerheart; Bacon Hind; Xe-ke-wah-tinn-ka; O-ioh-lmh mole; Nun-tsa-wah-lni; Arthur Bonni castle, and Eve's-Tnll-Chlef. THK RAID ON DO RATS HAVE SOULS? Tn the course of a lecture before the Ptrychotbernpeutlc Society, Dr. Ward announced that Prof. Elmer Gates, of Washington, D. C.. who has Deen ex nfirtmentine with light rays.' had found about five octaves above violet a form of wave slmlllar to x-rays, but differ ent in some respects. Under these rays living -objects throw a shadow which exists as long as there Is life to the animate object. -A live rat was placed to hermetically sealed i tube and held In the path of the rays In front of a sensitized screen. Bo lomr as-the rat was alive It threw k -shadow.. -'When It -was Uled it be came 8dadenytr(msr't'rte'4,; ham lenpfli df 'time. ' " '.'Here," 'saw the -lecturer, tiwm was a strnnge fmenoraenon. it the veitr lnatnnt the "rut 1 berime tMM- nnrent, a shrfdow df -ayxartry 'ttr same shape was notlc1!! ' to 'rmn 'as it "Were 6dt 'of Slid "beyond the glass be- and ...Li. i'...a nnmni im th sensitized screen.". ONLY WOMAN SHIP KEEPER. ,- - - - Saeket Harbor 'Nry Yard in Charge of Woman. Some rieihber of Present Keeper's Family Has Been Stationed Here Since Navy Yard Was Established riaoy Years Ago. Women are steadily encroaching up on the occupations of "men, and -now -another position heretofore -filled by a man has gone to one of the fairer sex. The charge and care of a govern ment naval establishment, almost for gotten, has been turned over to her, and for the first time in the history of the American navy a woman has the rank of "ship keeper." The woman is Mrs. Albert-H.. Met calfe. She has been placed In -charge of the navy yard at Sacketts ' Harbor, N. .Y., on Lake Ontario sot far from the St. Lawrence, and will receive salary of 365 -a year. Albert H. Metcalfe, keeper of the yardsince 1868, died recently, and his position was given to his "widow." The Sacketts Harbor Navy Yard is not a big establishment. It consists of an acre and a half of ground, on which there are half a dozen small buildings and a few guns used In the war Of 1812. Once Prominent Place. It used to be a prominent place, and shortly after the close of the war a shlp-of-the-line, then the biggest type of war craft built, equivalent of the first-class battle-ships of modern times, was planned, and the building begun at Sacketts Harbor. The vessel was to have been the New Orleans. The work progressed slowly, how ever, and was finally abandoned, but the hull of the big vessel remained up on the stocks. Away back, probably along in the '40's or '60's, a man named Metcalfe was appointed ship keeper. " In 1808 he died, and his son, Albert H., succeeded him in the posi- : lion. Some years ago all that was j left of what was to have been the New Orleans was torn down; but the posi- ; lion and title of the keeper remained. Keeper for Thirty-eight Years. i Albert H. Metcalfe watched the gov- ! eminent belongings around Sacketts : Harbor for thirty years, and then died. During all the years the Bu ! reau of Yards and Docks of the Navy I Department has regularly submitted i an estimate of $365. to Congress for ! the annual salary of the ''ship keep- i er" at Sacketts Harbor, and that Is probably the only place where the name "ship keeper" appears in n official way on the records. WAS A REAL MAGICIAN. A Bostonian was praising the other day the astronomical and literary work of Percival Lowell. "Before the last eclipse," he -said, Mr. Lowell observed to an old colored man whom he liked: 'George, if you will watch the chick ens out at .your place to-morrow morning nt 11 o'clock you will see them all go - to :eosf." " 'HI, hi,' George'iaagtoed. 'Dat's a good Joke!' " "He thought, rye isee, that Mr. Lowell "was ifooltag ta. But, sure MwuAii. wlMn 111- o'clock came the next isuemtBg Wte 'ami ndarkened and the chickeus dtdjfco 'to roost. -Geosge was tasdd. ?He sought Mr. -Lowell out and -said: , 'Wot yu Hone tole me was true, sail. Mali chickens went to roost, sab, Jist lalk you said "dey would.' "'Yes,' George, I suppose they did,' the astronomer returned. " 'How long, sab, id you .know bout dis?' naked George. " Oh, a long time George.' 1HK TREASURY. " 'Did you know idey would go to roost a Tear ago? , ? '"Yes, fully a year ago.' '"Well, flat beats all.'. said George, in n awed 'voice. ''Dem ehlokens wuza't hatched a year ago.' "Satur day Evening .Post ;.' CURTSJPOR SEASICKNESS. EWtiicCiirrMt Used to Quiet Nerves ,mt the Sufferers. Those "who bare been prostrated by the' heave and the chop-chop f ocean kessels "will te "glad -to -learn that me cure for seaslckKees Is promised The ship physician of the Hamburg- American 'liner TPfttMca "las 'f oufld hv experiments conducted - on the last voyage of the sstp that simple elec tric vlbrattoni'ebatr'does the work, ud I so tuwessfullv did ha demonstrate this I to the satisfaction of the ship's officers AUTOMOBILE SKATING. Skates Run by Storage Battery .Strapped to Mao's Waist. iReoent 'eable descriptions t auto mobile skating In Paris . stare been verified. Alphonse Constantini, an Italian who lives In Paris, has been making many successful experiments with his new form of automobile skater which he Invented. "The -apparatus consists of two 'four wheeled 'Skates each operated by - an air-cooled "motor Of 112 horsi power capacity. A small tank -containing -gasoline, sufficient for t46 mile run. is. strapped about the skater's waist. Attached to the tank are the ignition battery, the throttle lever and the spark control. v A speed of St miles an hour can be attained and diminished by means of the throttle lever which the skater holds in his left hand. It is claimed that almost any hill tan be climbed. HELPS BURGLAR TO ROB WEALTHY WIFE. "I had no trouble gettln' Into the house," "said the reformed burglar in a reminiscent mood. "It was one ef the old fashioned kind which had not been modernized, and a 4-year-old could have opened the windows. The female party that owned the house had the reputation of beln' mighty rich and sunthin' of a miser, so I thought there might be good plckin's for me In the way of old silver and the like. She had married a young man about a year before my visit who was -known to be -sunthin' of a high roller. "The first room I struck that seem ed promisin' -was the dlnln' Toom filled tip -with massive mahogany fur niture like they don't build nowa days. -I iiad no trouble in omenta' the sideboard, "where I 'found 'a few 'real silver -spoons and a blamed lot ' "Plat ed trash that -wasn't worth - carrrin" acway. I "was just about to leave -the room when out flashed, an electric light "and 'I tfouml myself utarln' at the barrel of a -pistol. A young tel ler' In .pajamas held the 'gun, -and trs hatfd Tfltdn't shake a -bit He 'had "s, business lo6k rabbis eye, -so when Tie t61d ine "to "throw up tny liands I Xltme so withont no 'argument. "" How -much -of "a "haul tave 'you mader" he asked "pleasantly. 'I told mm omy iew "spoons, -asa that it was a low-down trick' to-ptnch a man who tiSdn't ot enough to pay tor his trouble. He -acknowledged there was a trass on me, and then asked me If I 'was amatoor, or -could I blow up "a safe without roustn' "the ttelgliber hood. 'If you have the materials "with you to crack a safe,' ays 'he, "why, you an' mell divide ' the spoils.' I acknowledged that I bad come prepared to open anything In the hardware line, and then, with his gun p'inted, he backed me out of the room to one adjoinin' where there was a safe in the vralL Then he told me to go to work and sat down In a chair with his pistol turned my way. . "Well, .sir, to make the story short, I opened that safe with this pelican superintendin the job. There -was wads ' lone green In a tin box that would choke a cow, likewise diamonds and other 'shiners. : The - boss o the business sorts 'em over careful, and when the box was clean empty lie hands me over some old breastpins and napkin rings and a baby's silver mug and told me that that was my share,, while he pockets the rest as calm as ye please. 'Now, then, about face and dont kick, for this gun is likely to go oft, says he, .and heads me back to the window through -which I'd -entered Git through there, and beuick about It, son.' he ' says, And then, as if to add insult to inj'ry, gives me a push that, sent me flyin' inter the back yard ready to 'choke with rage. The reformed burglar nere uttered some very unreformed profanity as the picture of that night rose to mem. orv. A when I d got on me feet I neara a pistol. go off in the house an' a yell for help and knowed who done it. There -was -nothing for me to 'do 'bat light out. It seems that young -man was the old party's husband. She'd kept him short of funds and he took this Chance to maice gooa. now, -ma ye ever hear -a meaner Job played on a hard working man than he "played on me?" ; . WERY BAD BREATH. Senator "Clay, of 'Georgia, told the following story to a number Sf his colleagues In the Senate cloak room a few days ago: "Sam Jones, the evangelist, was holding meetings In my -home town last .summer .tn the open air. 'His subject for the particular evening of which: I speak was "Death. He had been, preaching some fifteen er twenty minutes when he reached the climax of Ala theme with 'My. Friends, think of It Think of It, I say. And you net prepared -to die. At my every breath a soul drops deal" Then a small boy away back In the rear exclaimed, "Why don't you chew cloves?" . ill -fJl jfji yHtiawi 1 Illl II I Mfc l-j HOW TQ GET THESE in SELLING lYira r YToacan earn ' I " i J -J 1 taint; SJUJli, jvf. I fttnlnla o money required; wetrutyoi. id Tour name iMm.Puir'. i-willMtdVvou the caeu uero at luo. lriuv. I T-i. tailed loi.liiiwlMTer.aneleKaia ?.' Premium you uiren rrw (or aeuing m articles at 10 oeiiti each. back goods not lorder now. a BASE BALL OUTFIT. (TRUE BLUE CO., Dept. BnrhlWtat'-i-oTitains'SS Slew : B.BaUOspa . I. Belts 1 BsasBsU 1 IM'im lOMen.vm lCstchHssk lBLfak, Complete corafrfcfteout fit- Tim for Mil tng-tf -article At 10 cent. Evwt boy warn (tin dot In uaitorin. Hr UUMhnUM. .UOWiUCHMam. . , , NAPH0TXXMERA with com ljtwq Je. TrtOTTttlRrfc rTiDt.Hff Out (It for both In- oub A time PXJMMlirC,- Morocco-' Ue Ctoae.. Yon can ttki tricv tnmof UmtocRpet, telldlnn, por- tnuttot lAtiieranamoiiier.irienai, BreMiimrUMul Iotqt. In fact fi7 thiiiRtheereuAntMi. ;.veii iVee for wiling article! at Wets. each. TH IS96 LAWN 6WINQ tlrta, coBf ott ft. hlh. 4 ft. wide, weiiiuc 100 llw. MAdeof rtftra wood, .bolted finely made, lrltlr and doubt wldtii Unit, made of pMmU tMlsind braced, KtA after they are started, swintfag la rontlnnod by preuing tlie feet on the footboard. Great fan for the children, and flditllt will And 4hein oultA n-siiifnvtahlsra bing, patented kmmk ii v ar pku isT m auie suae. Bate Ball Bales. ' This eomplete suit Free for veil ing 2& articles at 10 oeuts, r- and ornamental, (siren Free for ellitiK 80 article at 10 oenta each. UNEXCELLED HAMMOCK. lArge size, very handsome, cool; take comfort. Kama mock and be hnnDv. V.iwn l selling Hit articles at 'he Urentent Vnlu y- coot; take comfort. Kiirna bain 1 mock anil behnppy. Given Pre JL VJ1W. for selling ft& articles at 10c . Vm. The Urentet Vnlu Writiven by a t$T$ You fiin have any of (he above) premlnitia nhaoliitrly fVe. Ileiure and wrlt at onre-. It U ey to sell our quirk-sell In artlrlva. Now, dear render, art tlowa and m4t us m olal, NOW, and w will aetid you the nrtlclea powt-nald AT ONfF. Address all orders TRUE BLUE CO., Dept. 834. BOSTON ."MASS. U POSTMASTERS OF OZDEN TIME. Ninety Years Ago Incomes Arg-. umented by Acting as Agents. The postmaster of today may think he has troubles of his own, but there was a time about the year 1817, when queer things were expected of post masters. An old 'pamphlet dated April 5th, 1817, states that a "new daily and thrice -week paper" was to be printed "at the seat of government." After the Yirtues of the proposed publi cation were set forth the editor-to-be says: . - "Postmasters -are hereby authorized to receive subscriptions for the Gaz ette, and for all moneys collected nd transmitted to the editor, at the . city ot Washington, a discount of 10 .per cent 'will be allowed. Distant -subscribers will have their papers care fully packed and punctually forwarded ; to order. It is to be presumed mat copy of this pamphlet was sent to each postmaster In the United States. Under the system that then existed this method was entirely proper and It Is claimed that postmasters derived considerable income from -such sour- The prospectus" further states that "a competent reporter will be employed to furnish the proceedings -of Congress for the Gazette," snnd that !).-nnter-estiirgttaeres nit mtelUgenee -will -be carefiullv meiecttd swd iwAMsned." ; The Mltor-tfbe, .tn prions oi -nan- self says: . '- '-i "As the humble truardlan ot the puo- lic weal, he will occasionally use the' privilege he has a right to exercise, in expressing his temperate disappro bation of such measures ot the, coun try. 'If .those opinions should some times be erroneous,' he wishes them to be ascribed 'to the 'coramon 'falibllity of human judgment, which cannot be always In the ght. As tar as it may be possible, he will labor to be Im partial, but that there will be a bias, and that that bias "will be in favor of tA nresent dominant party, he has too much candor to deny and too mneh honesty to conceal. What he can oo within his humble sphere, eball be-done tnv thn tmnri of the country ana u he falls he will console himself with the reflection that he had discharged his duty to the utmost of. his amiuy and power." It Is announced that the fnd of tak lng snuff is again coming into vogue in France. nkttnn faihrioa of fine Quality nro found in Peru In tombs that date fcnek to the time of the Incas. Sumatra Is now producing about as much coffee as Java. Xearlv all the cigarettes of the United States are made In New York, Richmond, New Orleans, and San Francisco. - - THE SOCIETY GATtfE .' Taught by Hall ' -1 Cmpl Cotisr-Ste twi"" --IU tor. Fres Hanasome BoakKC -Address. N. Y.'Brldge Correspondence 8cbool,lnc, '3 East 42d St.. Www Tfortt fc-ity r A S'.C.ET wSasaMs as the aassat sad address o( m.le or lenule, wno are or were scents .nh virn, lor nmate sad aacagsre.-one Ki.k t,.u. ilaat Mlaa..akMnint)veksrd andena-nivad wilh any iniual without asirs clisnrs. betid strip of naner site of firarer. las is 4iie frsalast easi ear ottered for the moof. ,1a crdoesatalw oec hall Mm rtmrs beauty. . It bh for a Sio. ri. rate in New York and 1 hM Nicrtftt man are all rhe race . HiHt but ttia vtnv for either aiireol slallaawia. Itoaal antes til id raaa ahaaira bait MV1 ao ernta St ODca sioaaad sftef b. I7:xnam er r,T trm. More .M.v .8 . il erJmcetv this besutiru'JMinset KJn for only aocerrT. AMiut ruac. iisaroiUiC.iaiuuiinl. t. at ta tlte piloses ttatnnjr-wm f Tasaaif ews Ihmperaoas PREMIUMS FREE OUR rAST-StLUKBTrrri REPEATING ElFlEfn n urn-re rtnu them in on day. ana auareas, we, Thlsisnotacheap, -4 ingle shotrllle, but -f i article bv mail. ana return toe' . ;ll , -H. ,,- . choose. Vi a take REPEATING WfK sold. Send Tour noetai card will do. 834, Boston, Man. Hhoota HAS itmM without .eloadlnn SIMM oi eai tei polished -w a 1 n tr stock. Strong, aorur rate and safe. V Base - Ball Suit. give you rree th nne i hunting rifle f o& selling K aniuies at aaru each. wcetus Cold Watch A Chalrw. Shirt, Pants. Xap end A perfert besnfysoUc 614 LalC Eagravei 0an;Aaeii an sfove- tseu, , 8"g SDtat, war ranted cor rect time; equal in nneatani'e to ftSB aBd M4 ia., 4;naranteed tMdtt martaof 1 andsoine Sattern, yoke ick, A Tefrvei inserted: inch buttoned cnlf, elnforred col lar, double neck i and and bowl den finely fln ftehed, aad 'all eemt double tBUtabed. - Paata tame mater4al, nmde in strongest venra, iilven atolntelv ! to hoy or girts anyone telling arutuea at 10 osnts. GIVKUINE IKDIAN-Wt&WAM. ETory w Ton wm liav mors iud wiiu iiuui yov mnr Mm. Oe It on twit -utwn aim enjoy the out -door ir,nuiiiKmiuM- bi-, cruislair or iraiiiimiK, us lost tu tmnff. It His Inlo all the axmes.and sooris tlie boys in tor vo Many iotc. Flavins likllai ears; 4 heavy It stran a, larga lilp pocket, silk elastic garter at kiwe, Hy front. Oap to match Mitt: Pittsburg Kational at vie. and Horitcr la alvravs dpar to a tor's htart, and the additional fiin derlTVd from the DoReesBlon of a rpal Wilrwalit can hardlv be cal- i-tilated. Is 4 fert liluli, B ft. tt- iiirwr. niaae oi nmj enfeiinn. Colored Cup nnd Flair. Side Ieco rated tienaiae laoau Dealim, Hnpportrd ly a Tripod. Ko Centre 8 gorea, fully lined, sun visor. rerr stromr web ro p. aii umrwirt insme. HERE IS A buckle and ad juflt- Tone- lvtlie most remarkable ever offered tn tents. These Wlimaans are the latest novel lies. I)o not compare them-wlth ordinary terrta sold for 4.10 and $6.00. ClTm for frelllnir SOartirlrflRt lonentseach. Larqc, Powerful Achromatic Tttiscopt. mensme elnseiliainrbea, and open over feet In 6 sections. Rrsu HKt, Rrau aaMy Cap on each end fo exclude dust, etf.,vltn aowernil Lum, flaraat4 hit.ah r. Every n(nnmerltthe eenntrT or at ReaHMe resorts should eertalnW seenre oner these tnstniinents. Objex'ts niUs awrty are brought to view wim astonishing OMarness, uiren Te for selling S6 articles at 10 oeuts eaciu riTn Permanently Cured. Vo flti or nerroannese af u-r T I I O fimt da's use of Pr. Kline's Oreat Nerve Re storer. Hon l for TREE ,3.00 trial boitleamt treads,-. Da. R, H. Kuxl, Ltd., K31 Arcr.81, Vbiladelpata, Fa. A HANDSfflSffilLLOW mm tiest creation in ailk Mtwn:wura. Ail 111c colors of the rainbow !41ir.;3 oeanafully blended. T1.? P "- An ornampnt to any beautifully blended. 'ritS :4ioaie. Ko cost corner r"anfrf J . eomntete without one. : 3 -Outfit eonsista of one ' ,4 otnaplete block, silk and diagTamatld inatsvcHona foriiiakirtg. Com plete outfit as above, poMnaid, 35 cents. Pillow topoontaininj 49 blockaall-piaoed t (leather ana, ready for raffle and back 4io. JSasaple block and particulars 4 ccata.' - -KANCY SUWJLV' CO. Box 215 :iWptMotan, D. C. mmr. t ml . ibu 'U-.iir uiwu. Free. A Wonderful Wrpmtion Whloh Turns Umok ttn IHcmd of TlAie-VIkes th Old Tsmngamittho Xnuns IsmSWL Free Bamples of the Greatest Hair . Tonic om-fiarth IMatribnted by a WeU-KnownHedical InaUtnto. ' KO HOOM LEFT TOR DUBT. We can cur yon ef baldness, hair falllnf, canty parttnet. an aiteases or in he scalp, atop - hair sailing ana 1 its onirinal color. hair i 1 and raaton gray-acd nair ta tMe drm'twaatn to take oar word tor this. We will prove It to you AT UUK OWN EX- - FKEE PACKAGE af oar wooderfal treat shotild VI -MB m tssaa ' ment wilt get your s itnar conxroi ana snaka 90U happy. Our remedy 1 NOT ADTK nor hair color-' mg, but manralloaa nd natural Hair Pood. -.Yoa aanoot make a mistake tn trying 11, tor wo hip it to you prepaid at our own ipeme, and 4o not ask you or- cast ef OMasey aniens yon leel justified by results. It tnak4ot th aliahtert 4lfferneetoes bow 4atjir.yoti have bad your trouble. W Will go to the toots of it and ourerit -Think Juat tor snoroent what this means I Think what it promises tor those who have lost, or who are looemg, th tl lortous trasaesoi youth! We will reator your hair, make U long and strong, make it-as yoo wiah it to b. and gtv yon mof) -saliasaction than yon have ever betof) cxperiencvu. mi not ue uiufsnmcu beeaaaa yoa 'kav sd ether -ihalr-rented iea .without r suits. I e Just to yourtelf and to us Onr remedy will-make yon happy.-What it bw idon ior othari it will do lor yon. Wa ask you tn ll kirdmrs to write rotn and ssrlllMnd yoa by retwn mail, at onr own expense, a inn trial trcaiircrit 01 iDcjrcaiev Hair Grower n earth. i will aleo and yoa our interast ins; booklet of advice and hundred nf testimonials Irora dellahted salients, giving their experience lor the benefit of others who have become tllaconragrd. Yon will never, reeret wrawaring this annouocraeot. tor it eaeaas much to yoa, more thanyoocanunaeme. If yoa want beautiful nair. u your r ir 'tnttin; ao thatyau look Med or your pertonal appaaranca is disparaned. -writ to for help Vaarcan lncortoiateilComiiany,loa prrvat concern. We -want you ana your irienu iu know wbt we can do, and how we do it. end to-day, w do not put it off. Yoa -will -be- de lighted Willi what we send yon. and h coat yoa) Botmnv.HkAdrireaain fall, enoloaltw " ,"mp Mn- fiuimKi Incorporated. Dept. ffM) 118-1 Nortn t-aaaslt, iuiuuior. kid. .

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