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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 May 1899, p. 7

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U.i' M. -i' Oeoshlng beaits u- OwaraptlM. ; Kemp's Balsam will atop the couch at \ «oce. Go to your traggfet to-day anJ ret • Mtmple bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Q« at «aee; delays are 4aa> • gcroas. Perseverance and tact are the two ; great qualities most valuable for all men who would moont, but especially for those who have to step out of the crowd.--Disraeli. The debilitating drains and discharges which weaken so many women art caused by Ca­ tarrh of the distinctly feminine organs. The sufferer may call her trouble Leuchorrhoea, or Weakness, or Female Disease or some other name, but the real trouble is catarrh of the female organs and nothing else. Pe-ru-na radically and perma­ nently cures this and all othei forms of Catarrh. It is a positive specific for female troubles caused by catarrh of the delicate lining of the organs peculiar to women. It always cures if used persistently. It is prompt and certain. International Convention Yens People's Unions of America, RICHMOND, July 13-16, 1899. ONUY One Fare Round Trip VIA "Bl G FOU R" Ttek«iw will bc«n nale .July 11. 12 and is. Rett!rainR, tickets wiU be good until July Al«t. with a proviso for extension to leave Hlchmoud not later than August 15th. 1890, - xipou deposit of ticket with .Joint Agent at Richmond on or before July 38th, and pay­ ment of fee of 50 cents. For full information regarding tickets, rates and routes and time of trains, call on agents "Big Four Route," or address the undersigned, £. 0. McCORMICK, WARREN I. LYNCH. Bass. Trafflo Mgr. Asst. Gen. Pass. & Tkt. Agt. CINCINNATI, OHIO. '</> PISO'S CURE FOR Q Bee 4§IE UURES WH£«E ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cse ] In time. Sold by drnffRiats. COLD WATCH FREE! I" the wonderful endless chain syftem. Name and ad- <li>'3s on (Hiatal will brinif mil particulars. Address V K. I >a w.lev fir. I57 Peatman St.. New YorK. 8. N. U. No StO-99 Impoftast to Parnwit There Is a proposition made In the advertising columns of this paper by the John M. Smyth Co. of Chicago to furnish Standard and Sisal Binder Twine direct to farmers at eight cents a pound. This means a saving of thou­ sands of dollars to the farmers of the West who use a great deal of binder twine during the harvesting season. As there is a time limit to the offer, farm­ ers should send In their orders before June 1, when the limit expires and af­ ter which is not certain orders can be filled at this price. This proposition of the John M. Smyth Company for money saving is well worth considering. The firm is certainly one of the most exten­ sive as well as most reliable in the United States. Carious Burial Custom. mm Servians have a curious custom of giving a parting kiss to their de­ ceased friends before final burial, and the observance of it has caused a seri­ ous epidemic of diphtheria. The police prefect of Belgrade has accordingly is­ sued stringent orders against the cus­ tom, prohibiting it for the present, how­ ever, only in the case, of those persons who have died from that malady.-- Spare Moments. . Catalogues by Carloads. A statistical genius has figured that the various manufacturers of harvesting ma­ chinery have printed and distributed enough "advertising matter" during the Inst decade to fill 2,00U freight cars. The greater portion of this literature has been expended on the farmers of this country in an effort to make them believe that almost any kind of a machine is "as good as the I leering." In the meantime the L)eer\ng Harvester Company of Chi­ cago has prospered until at the present time its works employ more hands than any single manufacturing plant of any kind in America. Kilts in the Mosquito Season. Out of the 400 men required for the Victorian Scottish regiineut only sixty- four have' been enrolled, and on the third occasion of receiving applicants only eleven entered their names. So bare legs during, the coming mosquito season are too much for the Victorian Scotsmen's endurance.--South Austra­ lian Critic. Farmers and Binders* Twine. The offer made elsewhere in this pa­ per by the John M. Smyth Company, of Chicago, to furnish farmers with Binder Twine is certainly something unprecedented in these days. The prices are named on the different grades of Twine and the privilege of examination and comparison with other qualities and values offered each pur­ chaser. The firm making these offers is one of the most reliable and ex­ tensive In .the United States. Plentiful Supply of Water. The town of Wild bad in Wurttem- berg probably beats the record in re­ gard to water facilities. The supply would suffice to provide every inhabit­ ant with 1,200 quarts a day. Average Age at Marriage. It is stated that the average age at which men marry is 27.7 years, while the average age at which women marry is 251,/; years. Hott'R Tblai ^Jr We offer One Hundred Dollars R«war<1 for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHKNEY & CO., Props- Toledo. O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last ir> years, anJ believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and finan­ cially able to carry out aey obligation made by their firm. , West & Truax. Wholesale I>ruggists. Toledo. O. VVak)inc. Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Drug- jists. Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, anting directly upon the blood end mucous surfaces of tbe system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Japanese cities have in every quarter public kitchens, where poor families cast, for a trifling sum, cook their meals. To On re a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All dragprists refund the money if it fails tocure. 25c. Tlie genuine has L B Q. on each tablet. In .Germany a clock has been made that is warranted to go for 9,000 years. WT JULES AND EAGAN a AVegeiabic Prcparationfor As - Promotes Digest ion,Cheer ful­ ness atidRest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC. Asp* *-OUIk-SH<rELPtTCBSJi JKunpJcin jUX. Senna * Jt»ck*Ur Sclis -- Atin Srett • Jkppermisg: - JSt Carta;nlkSatm * fHmSctd- A perfect Remedy for Constipa­ tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- tiess and Loss OF SLEEP. fac Simile Signature of TSTEW YORK. EXACT COPT07 WRAPPEB. GASTORIA For Infants and Children. iThe Kind You Have Always Bought BEEF COURT MEMBERS FIND CHIEF IN ERROR. rl Declare that Xte SHbtkld Made Prompt Keport-No Chemicals Used *0 Preserve Heat -- tx-CommlHarj Wrong in Buying Untried Rations. The long-drawn-out Inquiries of the mil­ itary court appointed to investigate the charges made by Gen. Miles in regard to the beef supplied the army during the war with Spain are at an end and the findings have been submitted to the Presi­ dent and approved. Ia fits report the 009 censures Gen. Miles for not reporting the unfitness of the rations at the time that the complaints reached him. It declares that the refrigerator meat-was not chem­ ically treated and holds that the canned beef was good. Gen. Eagan is severely scored for buying such immense quftqtitles of an untried ration. The packers are ex­ onerated, it being shown that they fur­ nished the same goods that they put on the general market. The court recom­ mends that no further action be taken in the matter, while it suggests that several persons have placed themselves liable to prosecution. The report is longhand it reviews the conditions under which the Srmy operat­ ed, but it finds no excuse for the charges of Gen. Miles. Briefly stated, the report not only finds that Gen. M^s made false allegations against the War Department and the packers, but that he furnished no evidence to show that he had any excuse for believing that these allegations were true. The court finds that there was overwhelming testimony to the fact that the refrigerated beef was not chemically treated, but was preferable in every way. to the fresh beef killed in Cuba and Porto Rico; that this beef was not a serious cause of sickness; that the canned .jroast beef was not furnished under the. pretense of an experiment, and that it was not beef pulp, from which the nutriment had been taken for beef extract. It is admitted that canned roast beef was not intended for a field ration, and that the commissary general committed "a colossal error for which there is no palliation" in making such large purchases of this ration. In answering the questions propounded by the President to the court as to the character of the rations, and who was re­ sponsible, the Toport censures only Gen. Miles for allegations which were untrue, and Gen. Eagan for purchasing 7,000,000 pounds of canned roast beef, considering the use that had been made of it in the regular army. Regarding Eagan, the court finds no ground for any imputation of any other actuating motive than the earnest desire to procure the best possible food for the trooips. The court was un­ able to find any worthy motive for Miles' mistake in making such allegations or any excuse for his not reporting at once to the President or Secretary of War, if he be­ lieved his allegations were true. Throughout the fifty printed pages the report is a tempered scotching of the com­ manding general, showing him as an offi­ cer at the head of the army, who, without excuse, bore false testimony against the Government in its conduct of the war. The concluding paragraph in the summing up is in its mild phraseology a severe cen­ sure upon Gen. Miles. The court says: "It has been developed in the course of the inquiry, as recited in this report, that In some instances certain individuals fail­ ed to perform the full measure of duty or to observe the proprieties which dignify high military command, but the court is of opinion that the mere statement in the official report of the facts developed meets the ends of discipline, and that the inter­ ests of the servioo will be best subserved if further proceedings be not taken." In Use Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE GCNTJH/» CO*****. NEW YOWK CITV. Bear in Mind that "The Qods Help Tlpose Who Help Themselves." Self Help Should Teach You to Use SAPOLIO RUSH INTO UTE RESERVATION. Opening Does Not Dru m m Very Large Crowd. There was considerable excitement at Durango, Colo., over the opening of the Ute reservation to settlers, but the rush into the 000 acres south when they were thrown open did not equal the Cherokee opening. Less than a thousand people started in the mad rush to secure valua­ ble sites. - It was thought that nearly 3,000 would make the race, but many were disappointed with the appearance of the land. The start was made promptly at noon, and several hundred people who did not bother with the land office officials made a race for the choice locations. Only 120 lined i\p at the land office. No trouble was reported. All night men were seen start­ ing in the direction of the Ute laifcTs, and all forenoon there was a continuous stream of home seekers toward the poiat Where the race commeuced. The King of Portugal is a perpetual smoker. Sarah Bernhardt often trims her own bonnets. Rudyard Kipling's favorite headgear is a golf cap. Maj. Strong says Col. Fred funston-la the bravest man, that ever lived. King Oscar of Sweden has just had his life insured. He is 70 years old. Ex-President Casimir-Perier of France is said to be contemplating a trip to this country. Kipling has produced fifty-three publi­ cations since he began writing, eighteen years ago. Count George Apponyi, former leader of the Hungarian Conservatives, has pass­ ed his ninetieth birthday. Rear Admiral Schley will succeed Rear Admiral Howell as president of the naval retiring, board at Washington. Queen Margherita of Italy speaks Ger­ man fluently, and generally uses that lan­ guage when she meets German artists. Lady Lechmere is one of the greatest women hunters. She is now with her hus­ band sfc»x>ting big game in Somaliland. Bellamy Storor. the .new Minister to Spain, is a Harvard man, as are the am­ bassadors to Great Britain and Russia. Senator Quay is a master of French lit­ erature, and finds his chief delight in read­ ing Victor Hugo's works in the original. Since Senator Allison became a widower over*»'fteen years ago his wife's mother has been the manager of his household. Senator Hoar has decided to give up his European trip and spend the summer in literary work at bis Worcester, Mass., home. Gen. Wheeler has recei^ly had set as cuff buttons two buttons that were shot from his urflform during the war of the rebellion. Representative Landis of Indiana has had one of the hall windows of his house at Delhi fitted with glass from the Maria Teresa. Andrew Carnegie was recently asked what was the best Way for a boy to "get along ip ti»e world.'* He replied: "Deter- J nine to do so." * , WATSON ORDERED TO MANILA. 'V- < ; ' • ' •f Will Bfttlever>ewejr When the Ad- •r'Miirai Wtoh« to Quit. Rear AdmiHiT John C. Watson has been ordered to proreed to Manila to relieve Admiral Dewey as' e<tomander-in-chief of the Asiatic station^; Secretary Long said= that Rear Admiral Watson would not: succeed ileal Dewey as a member of the Philippine commission, and that the Admiral will Wjnaiu in Manila until the commission's Work Is completed. The orders to Hear Admftal Watson are due to the intimations received from the Ad- miral J"8 desire to return to the United RKA* ADMIRAL. WATSOST. States and of the request of Watson to be assigned to duty. While it is itnpossi- ble as yet to fix an exact date for the re­ turn of Admiral Dewey; navy department officials express the belief that it will only be a matter of a short while. They base this opinion on the supposition that the native army is about to surrender and that the opposition in the Philippines can­ not long continue. Even at this early date the national welcome to Dewey on his home coming has been proposed. The arrangements for Dewey's return have been understood to contemplate a passage through the Suez and entry through New York, in order that he may proceed at once to Washington and that the Ol.vmpia may be overhauled and re­ fitted at Brooklyn navy yard. Dewey's home is in New England, and it is believ­ ed he has expected to come back that way. The Olympia, however, was built on the Pacific coast and has been engaged in pro­ tecting that port. Her crew is largely composed of westerners and the coast cities believe they have first right to wel­ come her. The entire West is united in demanding that the admiral be allowed to enter the country at the uearest port to the scene of his triumph and proceed over­ land to Washington. DEATH RODE THE WIND. Seventy-five New Graves Tell the Story of Missouri's Cyclone^ The death-dealing cyclone, of which Kirksville, Mo., was the especial target, was one of the worst calamities in the his­ tory of the State. Seventy-five new graves is a most eloquent, and yet most terrible, evidence of the awfulness of the storm. In the hospitals and homes are 200 hu­ man beings suffering from broken limbs or worse injuries, and over all this sc«ne is the grief of the bereaved men and women . Plllpiao Peace Proposals. Peace must be made on oar own terms. --Nashville American. Snrrender first, peace and reconciliation afterwards.--Louisville Courier-Journal. It is regrettable that there should be any delay in arriving at terms of peace.-- Buffalo Courier. e It is useless to urge that Aguinaldo can­ not surrender without the authority of the Congress.--Omaha Bee. Aguinaldo*s effort to work the manana game on Gen. Otis was not successful.-- Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Self-preservation will force Luna to ac­ cept Gen. Otis' terms of unconditional surrender.--New York Mail and Express. Aguinaldo is the kind of general who thinks twice before allowing a war to in­ terfere with his summer vacation.--Wash­ ington Star. Talking of peace cannot stop fighting just now, unless complete surrender is agreed to, for the serious part of the rainy season is near at liand.--Minneapolis Times. If the insurgents insist on losing another capital or two before making peace. Gen. Otis should hasten to gratify their desire with all possible dispatch.--Sioux City Journal. Of course Otis is carrying on the nego­ tiations with the Tagals badly! He is an ignorant wardog 011 the ground, and the khow-it-alis here could tell him off-hand that he ought to surrender uncondition­ ally!--New York Tribune. The Filipinos may be anxious for peace, but if the Government, is determined to maintain its hold on the islands it will do well to adhere to its purpose of re-enforc- ing the American army of occupation.-- San Francisco Chronicle. While the Americans are determined to give the Filipinos the opportunity to lay aside the burden of war. they must, in doing so, acknowledge the sovereignty of the United States and surrender without conditions.--Providence Telegram. The unchallenged sovereignty and un­ qualified supremacy of the United States in Luzon and the Philippine Islands must be accepted and recognized by all within the archipelago, beginning at Luzon, be­ fore anything else is done.--Philadelphia •Press. . Hero of the Hone. Hurrah for Gen. Funston! He richly deserves his promotion.--Kalamazoo Tele­ graph. Hail to Col. Funston, the nnosculated Hobson of the Orient!--Detroit Free Press. It is Gen. Funston now. No American volunteer ever deserved better of his coun­ try.--Washington Times. Ten to one when Aguinaldo gets his last ditch ready that man Funston will be on hand to swim it.--Cleveland Plain Dealer. Col. Fred Funston is so small that it will be easy to Hobsouize him when he returns to this country.--Springfield Jour­ nal. In the race for fame the Kansas colonel who bites is several laps ahead of the Ne- A SCENE IN THE CYCLONE'S WAKE. who mourn the loss of friends and homes. Years will not blot out the memory of this terrible storm, which left a path of death and desolation in its wake. At Kirksville over 100 houses were torn to splinters, and of the inmates of these houses none escaped injury--and many met death: death came in all shapes of horror, and the sights that greeted the eyes of those who were early upon the scene after the fury of the wind had been 6pent shall be memorable for their grue- someness and ghafitliuess. The walls of buildings fell with a crash that sounded above the roar of the storm, burying peo­ ple in the ruins. Frame buildings were twisted and lifted from their foundations; others were utterly demolished, pieces of them being carried for .miles. The bodies of the storm's human victims were found hundreds of yards away from where their homes had stood. W omen and children ran shrieking through the streets; the injured, many of them made prisoners beneath the fallen walls, moaned a piteous chorus, while scattered about, their faces or their hands or their legs, protruding from the wreck­ age. were scores of bleeding corpses. And of these sickening, horrible reminders of the calamity many were the bodies of GATHEKIXO THE DEAD. children--of babies--their tender forms pierced and crushed and mangled by the fallen timbers. It was indeed a sight to make the strongest quake. It was a pic­ ture of desolation, of ruin, of death HIS SHELL A SUCCESS Gathmann's Gun Cotton Projectile Tested at Sandy Hook. Louis Gathmann, the Chicago inventor, achieved a remarkable triumph at Sandy Hook. A big cannon loaded with a gun cotton shell, to which was attached one of his special fuses, was tired. The gun was blown to pieces, but the shell remained in­ tact, showing that through the device of Mr. Gathmann, gun cotton shells can be 6afely used in war as engines of destruc­ tion. The experiment further demon­ strated that gun cotton will not detonate when discharged by means of a high pres­ sure. It was believed the cruiser Vesuvius had made a new era in naval warfare when gun cotton shells were discharged by pneu­ matic pressure. In the Sandy Hook ex­ periment the gun was purposely exploded in order to demonstrate that gun cotton could be used with the minimum qf dan­ ger. The element of safety was introduc­ ed by tbe Gathmann fuse. braska colonel who only barks.--St. Paul Dispatch. Col. Fred Funston, the Kansas cyilwiio in the tropics, is not a Chicago man. He didn't stop to boil the- water.--Omaha Bee. Col. Funston can have anything he wants in Kansas when he gets home, even Jerry Simpson's socks, if he can find them.--St. Paul Globe. If the people of Kansas do not elect Col. Fred Funston to something they will miss a great opportunity to honor a real hero.--Baltimore American. Now that he is a brigadier general, Fred Funston will be denied the privilege of converting himself into a gunboat in emer­ gencies.--Detroit Journal. Since Col. Funston and his men have taken to swimming rivers in search of bet­ ter fighting, it is probable the Filipinos have revised their plan of whipping the American army with a rainy season.-- Milwauk«>e Sentinel. Just now Brig. Gen. Funston of Kansas --of the Twentieth Kansas--is occupying the center of the stage. No one American is to-day the subject of more general com­ ment than this young hero who has done so imic-h to reflect credit on his State. Funston of Kansas is much in the pub­ lic eye now, and the newspapers are al­ ready fixing up a political position for him. - A greater affliction cannot come over the military hero than to force him into politics. Let Funston „ alone in the enjoyment of the laurels he has won by his brave acts in the Philippines.--South Bend Tribune. The Ball Teams. The New York team is the laughing stock of the country.--New York Evenine World. Pittsburg has won a game. This is a notable occasion on account of its rarity this season.--Pittsburg Dispatch. The ex-prides of Van der Ahe haven't as yet had their batting eyes forwarded from St. Louis.--Cleveland Leader. It looks now much as if Manager Han- Ion had taken the wrong batch of stars over to Brooklyn.--Brooklyn Citizen. The Boston nine continues to emphasize the brilliant success with which it can lose games this season.--Boston Herald. Can it be possible that this is the begin­ ning of the end that has marked the play­ ing of tbe Phillies for several seasons past?--Philadelphia Times. The chief trouble with the Colonels this spring does not seem to be that the men are playing poor ball, but they do not ap­ pear to work together.--Louisville Post. What is wanted is a team run by Mc- Graw and Robbie and owned by gentle­ men who not only live in Baltimore but stay in Baltimore, are at Union Park to see their team play, and who have not superior financial baseball interests in any other city on the circuit.--Baltimore News. Latest Achievement of Science. Wireless telegraphy gets here just in time to announce the arrival of cowless nfilh.--St. Paul Dispatch Wireless telegraphy is evidently one of the solid scientific achievements of the Any.--Springfield Republican. " WOMEN are assaileu at evAry tarn by troubles pecaSar to their sex. Every mysterious ache or pain is a! symptom. These distressing sensations will keep f On coming unless properly treated. The history of neglect is written in tbe worn faces and / wasted figures of nine- tenths of oar women, every one of whom may receive the invaluable ad­ vice of Mrs. Pinkham, without charge, by writing to her at Lynn, Mass. Miss LULA EVANS, of WOMEN WHO NEED MRS, PINKHAM' n 0? Parkersburg, Iowa, writes of her recovery as follows: "DEAR MRS. PINKHAM--I had been a constant sufferer for nearly three years. Had inflammation of the womb, • lefacorrhcea, heart trouble, bearing-down pains, backache, •: | headache, ached all over, and at times could hardly stand on my feet. My heart trouble was- so bad that some nights , I was compelled to sit ' np in bed or get up ; and walk the floor, * ® for it seemed a« ? though I should..'^: smother. More ,0. than once I have been obliged to have the doctor; visit me in the , middle of the , night. I was alse V very nervous anfc'ywl fretful. I was ut­ terly discouraged.-"4" One day I thought E- would write and seefcfe*- if yott could do any-, thing for me. I followed! ' your advice and now I feel a new woman. All those dreadful troubles I have n<i ^ more, and I have found Lydi* E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash a stir*. •* cure for leucorrhcea. lam very thankful for your good advice and medicine." JOHN M. SMYTH COMPANY ISO-166 W. Madison S t . , CHICAGO, ' • -'U We Meet and Defeat ALL Competition on ' "J ' t | BINDER TWINE AND WE FULLY GUARANTEE THE TWINE. YOU » MONEY BACK , IF NOT A3 REPRESENTED. IN OTHER WORDS, IF WE FAIL TO 1 DELIVER THE GOODS AT SMALLER COST THAN ANYWHERE ELSE FOR EQUAL QUALITY, TAKE THE OTHER A SEND OURS 4 i BACK AT OUR EXPENSE. IS THAT GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU? t ^ \-Jr • • who have not already ordered your twine will please take notice V j| I I that we stand ready to furnish you for less money than any ^ } I other house asks for equal quality. A big deal closed by oe enables us to back up this broad statement to the letter, provided orders come in not later than June 1st. After that date we can make no definite promise, as at prices quoted, no matter how big the quantity, it would be scattered over the graitt* • - - - growing regions in short order. Why not two or three of you get together aai£ ? order in quantities, thus tacilitating shipment and saving on freight charges ? i IN ORDER TO KEEP THIS TWINE OUT OF DEALERS' HANDS r" '" AND GIVE THE FARMER THE FULL BENEFIT, WE LIMIT SALES ; i J. TO NOT MORE THAN FIVE SACKS IN ONE ORDER (60 LBS. Ill V SACK), THE SMALLEST ORDER WE CAN FILL BEING ONE SACK. •: Now Glance Over the Specifications and Prices and Order Promptly, AS THERE IS NO TELLIN8 HOW LONG THE STOCK WILL No* I • No. 2. No. 3. CLEAN WHITE SISAL--Pure , Runs about 500 feet to the pound and is evenly spun--this twine is noted for being to ali Intents and purposes inscci proof --and Is much sought for in the regions tributary to- Kansas and Nebraska. 8 cents per pound STANDARD, A very popular twine--is clean and evenly spun, being free from lumps, gnarid and thin spsts. Both /STANDARD and SI­ SAL will give entire sat­ isfaction-- 8 cents per pound ; i. t \j . f; ,4 ' JM THESE PRICES ARE FREE ON BOARD CARS IN CHICAGO-NO DISCOUNT UNDER ANY CIR­ CUMSTANCES-CASH to ACCOMPANY ORDER. YOUR MONEY BACK IF NOT AS REPRESENTED IS YOUR SAFEGUARD^ 600-ft. MANILA --long fibre Manila, es­ pecially brought from oar new possessions In Uw Philippines for this pur­ pose- is iisocf in propor­ tion of 3 to f with purt white Sisal and runs from 575 <o 615 feet to the pound We particularly recommend this, as, al­ though it costs msreT II is economy in the long run to use it. 9 cents per pound •M Suppliers of everything to eat, wear and use. Cat- aloguefreeon application Reference: Every man, woman and child in Chi­ cago. Established 186 7. John M. Smyth Company, '•'•'sS a . * j •-bri • 150, 152, 154, 156, 158, 160, 162, 164, 166 5> J WEST MADISON STREET CHICAGO % -1 5 « . , ( An Old Proverb That-- but just as forceful today as one bnndrad »mt« It's (rood common sensfi ndvico fn almost pverr transnrtinn fcr* r™. S^coroTa^Stir.1 bUppo8e you are soio« biad«r, • mower L0e D«ri^U|deu!n,ade "P ̂ ̂ 8°methin« than And it certainly it "bettor Perhaps it i« not yet too late to "co back. to go back thau to go wrung." That word "cheaper" is an old fraud. Do not be deceiv«d by it. Deerlng Ideal rrain and grass harvesters a r« "ideal" hi»cau» tlu-r mM. the best thoughts and suggestions of the farmer and the mecbanic?^^^ They are Simple, scientific and substantial. They are the cheapest to buy because they are tbe best to own. PEERING HARVESTER CO Chicago. A Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. CfltRAlll'S OKI FN T CREAM, OK MAGICAL BEAl IUItB. Renjores Tan. Pimples. Freckles, i'au-heis Ka li. ami Skin -Wci t {Ureases, c*erjr bkmis-h t n -<2=^ } beauty, ana i dtuvii»n. It fcu* I /.fVy istood ihe test o* 50 i? so £ W'v» // xuirmlos we it ^ ^ o to be fcurv it is prop­ erly made. jUvept no eounterfwt of etnii'ar ti&zue. l>r. L. A. Sayiv to * lady of the baut-toa (a patient): "As you ladies U**? tht-m, 1 reoomniend 4Gtn^ and's Cro&ui' as Iffist harmful of ail the Skin prepara­ tions." For sale b9 aJ I DrufflfUt* ana Vkoey-Ooodt Dttlerc in the U. 8* Ctau*adaa* ana Europe IBRD. T. BOPKIN& FropT, 37 OrsM Jones St.. N T. A Natural Black is Produced forth# o ^jWfaisiM*fc SO I " * Buckingham's Dye< SO cts. of druggrttso* R.P/Htlilt Co..fc i -3 i W LADIES! The Periosteal Mont Mr R«.|a*a«-- i.ever falls; scaled box b; mall. $1.00. SKI# MMC CUUIUUAL eu. Box 70, Milwaukee, Wtaeuada. 8. N. U. "JO IN «r(Hi| t* Mwtlim, picas* 4s act Ml t» • Mm jrsa saw tfea JUvcrtiscasal la Ub paper.. ti

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