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Show H r, . H TATATATATATATATATATATATATATATA1 H 3 Did it meet with 45c COFFEE g H fe approval of every 45c QUALITY gj 1 5 member of the 2 H family? the Folger's jg H 5 Golden Gate Coffee WTW t2? 8 you bought FOLGER WEEK H " Your grocer now hu a freih supply ' ' j B jj J. A. FOLGER & CO., San Francisco fe " kTATAVATAVAVATATATATATAVAVAVAT H M jK of Baauty H C JWJMtf&r JH question of com H i mf JB pldon With a , ' Si JzZF P"6 complex H' jfc&Jt lon yu overcome M Jr nature's defidende3. H' ',0 Gouraud'e if Oriental Cream B I wWte appearance tha perfect beauty. H JHcafing and refreshing Noivgreasy. H 9 llrfie.4arlrlHalt9 oo TODAY'S BEAUTY HELP You can keep your hair at Its very best by washing it with this simple, Inexpensive shampoo, which cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly of all the dandruff and dirt and leaves a clean, wholesome feeling: Just use a teaspoonful of canthrox dissolved in a cup of hot water, afterwards rinsing thoroughly with clean water. One finds that the hair dries quickly and even ly, 1b unstreaked, bright, soft and fluffy, fluf-fy, so flnffy in fact that it looks more abundant than it is, and so soft that arranging it becomes a pleasure. All scalp irritation will disappear and the hair will be brighter than ever before. Advertisement oo oo mmmk TEH TO OMKEM HUB She mixed Sulphur with it to Restore Color, Gloss, Youthfulness. Common garden sage brewed Into a heavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant. Just a few applications will prove a revelation revela-tion it your hair is fading, streaked or gray. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe at home, though, is tioublesome. An easier way is to get a 50-cent bottle of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound at any drug store all leady for use. This is the old time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients. While wispy, gray, faded .hair is not rinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractiveness. attractive-ness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, because it does it so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen dam-pen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw this through your hair, taking tak-ing one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disappeared, disap-peared, and, after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant This preparation is a delightful toilet toi-let requisite and Is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. Advertisement nn SEE WHAT CUT1CURA. DOES FOR MY HAIR AND SKIN The Soap keeps my dan freah and clear nd warp free from claridruff. Tho OInt. ment soothes and heals any akin trouble. Sample Each Free by Mall i Children Cry Sor Fletcher's 03io Kind Xon Have Always Bouplit has borne the signature signa-ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has heen made unclex his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allpw no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-pood" are but experiments, and endanger the health of Children Experience against Experiment. i What is CASTORIA ! Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- J. goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither- 1 Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de- J stroys "Worms and allays Foverlshncss. For more than j thirty yoars it lias been in constant use for the relief of . Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou- hies and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Boycls, ' assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought jy Bears the Signature of ! In Use For Over 30 Years THK CCMTAUn COMPANY. NEW YORK CtTY. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ! ense of Catarrh that cannot bo curd by Hall'3 Catarrh Care. ' T. J. cnEN'EY & CO., Toledo, O. i. Wc. the undorolencd, haTo Vnoirn F. 3. Cheney for tho last 1C years, and bclleye htm ' perfectly honorable In all buelneffa trinictlonj and financially nble to carry oat any obligations ; made by his firm. t NAT. BANK OF COMMERCE. Toledo, Ohio. noil's Catarrh Cure M taken Internally, acting directly upoa tho blood and mucoua narfacw of tho ystcra. Testimonials eent free. Prlco 75 cento pr bottle. Sold by all Drujelats. TaLo Hall's Family PlUn for constipation- nm"B" tiimiiii-i'iuirii "JUJ Every Now and Then j . I run across the man who " doesn't cheap things better could never have E j believe in advertising" one who says existed. "advertised goods cost more' If it had not been for the railroads-1 I As a general rule while he says that great and wide distribution could not j' I he at least is not influenced by advertis- nave existed. j ing-he has on an advertised collar and If it were not for the advertisements !) I advertised shoes; he shaves with adver- that take to millions of people the news : J tised soap and an advertised razor. He of what the great factories are producing j ; 1 reads advertised books and goes to an the factories could not exist. 1 advertised theatre. And if he smokes T, . . . 1 it's an advertised tobacco. rnJil- I m might be paying $2 for something that I I Every time I meet him I'm genu- was better made a hundred miles away I i 1 inely sorry for him, as I am sorry for the for $L i 1 man who doesn believe in telephones. j u : t j J (For such men still exist.) ' -And-if it were not for advertising, I t m you would be living today without even 1 The big economic problem of the knowing of the existence of most of the j 1 I world is now, as it always things that are now neces- I has been sary. to ouv comrort. The r I "How can each of us o sewing machine costs money! 1 get the most from his day's r but cheapens shirts. The) work?" tms arttde-one of a series h printing press costs money I I ' Advertise Advertising iias writ- f i 1 I J Measured in gold, wages ;' Afss!ciaLe,d ?'"; but cheapens books. g I , , T 1 i inZ Clubs of the World (head- 1 f may be lower or higher than quarters indhnapoiis) by The telephone costs mil- I they used to be. ' gjgv-ss lions and saves tens of mil-, f Measured in things to eat CicrMotorncomPanr. lions- Advertising costs 1 and things to wear; in books J money and not only lowers ;, 1 to read and music to hear; selling costs, but, by increas- I I measured in comfort or convenience ing the field of competition, lowers I in shoes to walk in or automobiles to nrice tnn : I ride in everyone or us gets infinitely j 1 more for his day's work than anyone a And advertising does a finer thing I hundred years ago. than all of these. For it stirs in men the f I A j . a, i . desire for better goods for better homes 3 I And so, more m proportion than last and sofor finer Kvcs It j f year, or last month-or, indeed-than biggest, broadest, single economic influ-. I I yesterday. ence for good in tne worid today. J j This century has made more "dife So-when, now and then, I meet th? 1 I ence, m the physical things of life, than man who doesn't believe in advertising' ' I f any other single century ever made For I am glad. For I am apt to tell him some1- I I this century saw the beginnings of steam Gf the reasons that I think him wrong I I and electricity. Steam meant quicker Which is a pretty good way to burnish I transportation of goods electricity up and strengthen my own faith. I I quicker transportation or ideas. I Tf it liqn't heen for areat and Write the A. A. C. of W., Indianapolis, for 1 : irit nadnt been ror great ana booklet, written for buyers like yourself. Every I I wide distribution, the great factories-- man or woman who buys any kind of commo( J which have made good things cheap and ities will find it profitable reading. I - J ll i |