McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Oct 1903, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

* 0, v Deafness Cannot be Cured. focal applications as they cannot reach the St*. jMiaed portion of the ear. There 1B only one way to •-iare de.tfne.*R, and that Is by constitutional remedies. De fness !B caused by *>n Inflamed condition of the Bacons lining of tha Eustachian Tube. whon tli!a tube 1b In a. med you have a rumbling sound or Jm« perfect hearlny, an J when It Is ent irely closed. Deaf­ ness is the r'-ult. and unless tho inflammation can bo taken out and tula tube restore i to ita normal con­ dition. hcarlns will be desiroyed forever. Mine casea OOtof tan are caused byCatarrh, which Is nothing but •a Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will ({ivo One Hundred Dollars for any CMS of De«fnees (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured >fl " Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bond for clreulM*. free. F. J. CUJiXBY * C0.,Tal**k,0 Sold hv nrotntl'ta, ~5c. . - -i family Pills are the beat. •jrv*-*? " •- • . I Death to Convicts. A"^,8lnce'1852 more than 26,000 convicts "have been sent to French Guiana, of whom 84% per cent died of disease," hardship and insufficient food. Insist on Getting It. . „ fro era pay they don't keep De­ fiance Htxrch because they hnve a sto k ia hand of 13 • z. b and^, which tbev know cannot be sold tg a customer who lias on e <w*i tho 16 ok. pkg. Defiance Starch tor money. Our passions are like convulsion fits, which, though they make us stronger for a time, leave us the ter ever after.--Pope. • . , Why It Is the Best Iroecaiise made by an entirely different process. Dfianre Starch ij unlike any other, better and one-third more for It cants \ ; * T h e f a m i l y t r e e d o e s n o t b e c o m e a ^ifade tree until it is dead. Mrs. Austin's Pancake flour Is best of alL A fresh supply now on hand at your grocer's. No point of order is in order-when a woman has the floor. ^PUTNAM FADELESS DYES J* 10 cents per package. Lots cost of men, like stick to nothing. bad" mucilage, BEpTiil* PLEASANT THE NEXT MORNlMfl I PEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AMD MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. doctor eiys it arts gently on the stomach, Ifrer ftBd kMueys rmi is a pl*ftsnnt laxative. Twis drink is •bade rr«m hnri'8* and is pren^reri for u$o fcu eauilr 4m. It i» called Tea" or LAME S FAMILY MEDICINE All drnsrgi«ta orby mail 25 eta. And POcts. Buy It to IiftiifN Family Mrdicine moYr* tb© b#wr.l8 carh flny. In nrd«r to be h«v»l'hy thi*if HoeiiiM7. Address. O. F. Woodward* Le lvi*1. N.Y. B A D B R E A T H Don 't disgust your friend3 any longer. Your foul breath either comes from undigest ed and fermenting food En th@ stomach, or from a feverish condition, the result of Con >60pation. Dr. Caldwell's (LAXATIVE) Syrup Pepsin sweetens sour stomachs, cures indigestion and Consti­ pation. PEPSIN SYRUP CO., Monticello, lit. RE AT, ESTATE. Arlr^n'snc' ftpef Save the Commission and niAailoaa BG»la buy direct, elilier Improved or nnlmpr 'Vt'il farm lands In the best partof Arkansas. I have 15,000acrMliiUielieaithleataud be tall-round county in tho Butte, which I v 111 offer at. a bargain, in tracts of 80 acreB and up. This land Is from fairly good to the most fertile of bottom lauds. One flt.e rsnc'i. Terms to suit. £1. W. Greeson, Frescott, Ark. CALIFORNIA HOMES: Valley bind for srtlo In tractH to suit purchasers--1 O •crt'N iip--well adapted to fruit, oranges, vegetables and berries i f ail kinds. Also large b idles of ptoclc range land, upon which wo odor special Inducements to stockmen. Liberal terms arranged, Small cash payment, h.ilince tl-no. Forfull parl'otilars address BIICj: & GAP.DKEB, CO., Kcd Bluif, XchamaCo.,Cal. FARM--Must be Bold--a good 160-aere, lOmllcsfrom Eau Claire; hlj? barpaln. Go'd unimproved land iu Chippewa, Clin k, Gates and Taylor COM, Lvt tne know your wants. Jonas Bergh,i.l>4 Endy St:.3Cau Claire. Wis H0IT0E CAROLINA. Come to 17orth Carolina. It has the beat of climates, and produces Irults. vegetables, wheat, oats, corn, cotton, peanuts and potatoes, with good markets. I havemflny farmsnearli. It's and mar­ kets f.-rsafe at reasonable prices. KniuHca^h paym'ts, bal. 1.1 •ne. Als:> valuable quarries of building Btone; gold and copper mines; mineral 8prln;r». Write for prices. Jn-. Y. JJea't-', Keal EstateAEt.,Conoord,X.G. $40,000--CAN BE WADE--$40,000 In one d:iy by T-rltlnt? MARK GRAVES, Adrian, Minne­ sota. 1 have 1 a.OOO a»res of choice Farming Land In Manitoba In well i ettled country, near croud tow us Dear United States line. A Towu site of 200 acres on line of new railroad In a rich old settled couutry In Southern Minnesota, und 1,0C0 aorta of choice Fann Land In Southern Minnesota. Will sell part or all of above for cns-thlrd less than It's worth to close an •estate; could u*e a few hordes In tradj. MARK GRAVES, - Adrian, Minnesota. V . * -> IMPROVED FARMS with l.Mlldtiifs, $10.00 to $26.00. RAW LANDS $5.00 to $10.00. | WESTERN LAND CO., 4TC Hiiin Et.. Winnipeg, Canada. $6,600 WILL BUY a SOLID SECTION of Good Land Just Iv.-o miles from station; splendid pet; Lt'mei>t'. "Tu'o hun- dreti end fortjracres cnuer crop. Two huudied au<£ JHty acres fcnced. Good outfit of buildings; running creek; pood buildings; 50 acresgood timber; no w aste land, TH?I CAKES LAND CO. •5S Main bt., Winnipeg, Man., Canada* DOL.L1AR WHEAT If you want a farm in the "dollar wheat belt" writ ' for our booklet--"LAND WEALTH," giving de­ scriptions of the flnoet in the west. If von want to sell yoor land we obtuin bigheet pricea for it. Our booklet--^"HOW Wi; Do IT" freo. Don t buy or sell land till you see us. Virland Land & Idt. Co. ST. PAUL, MINN. m % AN ANECDOTE OF DISRAELI. "OLD BAILEY*** LONDON'S LANDMARK, m PROCESS OF DEMCLITION TO WOMEN! PAXTINE To prove the heating and •Jleansing power of i'axtln* Toilet Antiseptic we will mall a large trial packaga with bock of instructions absolutely free. This is uo* a tiny sample, but a largo package, enough to rou- vinoe anyone of its value. Women all over the country are praising Ptixtine for what it has ione iu local *reat» meiit of female Ills, ' aring E'l iuthunniutioi! anil discharges, wonde^'i". as» eieansing douche, for sore throat, nasal catarrh, as a mouth wash and to remove tartar and whiten the teeth. Send today; a DOSL&I oard Will da Sold by drug plats <ir sent poxtpald by as, M CHtoi large boi. Smisfactiou guarsutsSih SBJC K. I AXTON CO.. Boston. " 114 Coluaibus Ave. •' P B WW Improvements in London are rapidly sweeping away old structures that for centuries have been landmarks in the British metropolis, included in these Is Christ's Hospital, the celebrated "Blue Coat" school from which distin­ guished men of letters have gradu­ ated. Old Newgate of malodorous WAS WIFE OR WHISKY. Elliott Chose the Whisky and the Wife Thereupon Got a Divorce. Mrs. Cyrus Elliott told the circuit fridge at Macon, Mo., why she wanted a separation from her husband. "Most honorable judge," she said, "I love that man as well as I do my own live, and I've put up with him for twenty years. "Time and again he signed a pledge to quit drinking, only to break it. When sober he's the best man that r°sr lived. When drunk, he's the ^brst. "At last I determined to settle it once for all. I got a pint of the best whisky I could find and put it oh the table. " 'Cy,' I said, 'there's a bottle of the stuff that's ruined you. It cost me $1. Now, you can choose which you want worst--that bottle of whisky or me.' "Judge, it was a hard proposition. The tears went to his eyes, and he began to shake. I said nothing. He looked at me and then hungrily at the whisky. "His lips moved, but he didn't speak. It was too much for him. He reached for the bottle with trembling hand, pulled out the cork and the hell-fire gurgled down his throat. "Then I left him--anil for good." The woman got a divorce. They have several grown children and are in good circumstances.--New York Sun. memory is also. doomed, and on Its ruins will rise an imposing building for the use of the criminal courts. The Old Bailey likewise Is rapidly vanish­ ing, and the famocs court, in which some of the most notorious criminals of centuries have stood, will soon pass away. GIVES OUTLET TO THE SEA. Why the Portland Canal Is of Value to Canada. For years the boundary line be* tween Alaska and Canada has been disputed. The main question ^was whether It ran across the numerous in­ lets. and arms of the sea of the ter* ritory, or whether it ran around them. Canada contended that the line cut across these inlets, leaving the United b JOHN THE BAPTIST DEFIANT. Self-Styled Prophet Denounces Dowie as a Faker. John the Baptist II., now in New York, claims to be the real prophet, and declares Dowie is only a faker, not having been called to the work in the right way. The self-styled prophet gives his name as John Hoop and went to New York from Minnesota for the sole pur­ pose of showing up Dowie. He de­ clared that he" had done so in Chi- JOHN i i M ' i JZflTf 7HEJ3AP7Z5TJT (Says lie's the Only Real Prophet and That Dowie Is a Faker.) cago, and that he would do so even more directly in the Eastern metropo­ lis. rarpursr? territory afckjhp Ku-.TL.AND CAm •«. BOUfJPABY CLAUSED BY -TOT uinTKD 3~cnxr.9 mm •POUNfAKY • OTEAT PJHTAU} States nothing but a waste track of rocky isolated promontories. " The controversy centered upon Can­ ada's effort to acquire an outlet to the sea, the assertion being that the Rus- so-British treaty of 1825 fixed the boundary line as mentioned by them. They also said that, the inlets less than six miles wide In the disputed territory belonged to them. The Portland Canal or Channel, which Is by the decision of the com­ mission given to Canada, is an import­ ant point because it grants to that country the desired exit to the sea. The United States is conceded con­ trol of the Lynn Canal--possession of which was chiefly desired by England because of the rich mining towns of Dyea, the port of entry; Skagway, ,Wbite Pass and Lake Bennett, situ­ ated along its banks and within easy access of the sea. It is in and about this section that the rich gold deposits are located. Gen Miles an Oil Magnate. . Official announcement is made in New Orleans that all the vast Hogg- Swayne interests in Louisiana and Texas, together with those controlled by Gen. Nelson A. Miies, are to be combined In one. Thereby the general will become an oil magnate. Since his retirement from the army Gen. Miles has passed the greater part of his time in the southwest, where he and his associates have acquired large oil land holdings. Dislike Colored Man's Presence. Rev. S. Timothe Tlce, the presiding elder of a Methodist district on Long Island, has made a contract for a house on one of the most fashionable \avenues of Richmond Hill, a fashion­ able suburb of Brooklyn. He paid $400 down and is to take title to the place, which he will occupy with his family. The residents of the region do not relish his presence among them and have endeavored to bribe him to make his home elsewhere, but he stub­ bornly refuses. The cause of the op­ position to his occupancy of the house in question is that Mr. Tice is of Af­ rican extraction. Student Mountain Climbers. Amherst college students have form­ ed a mountain-climbing club and have elected as its president Dr. Edward Hitchcock, dean of the faculty. The doctor is 75 years old and is a gradu­ ate of the college in the class of '49. Despite his years Dr. Hitchcock ' ill lithe and active and is known as the pioneer in the movement for physical education in colleges. Claims Much Tennessee Land. Mrs. Emmet Humphreys of Sher­ man, Tenn., is In Knoxville endeavor­ ing to establish title to 100,000 acres of land in Tennessee. She is the great granddaughter of John Sevier, the first governor of the state, and the land for which Bhe Is suing in­ cludes part of Nashville. Advantage of College Training. "1 dunno what my boy Josh would have done without his college educa­ tion," said Farmer Corntossel. "In­ deed!" "Yes. While he was home he got on the same side of a fence with a buir, and mother an' me was power­ ful thankful that he was a runner and jumper." Buys Island for Thirty Cents. Senator John E. fcox, Harrisburg, Pa., owns an island In the Susque­ hanna river, opposite that city, which was purchased for thirty cents. The island was formed by the gradual accumulation of sand and alluvial de­ posit. It contains one acre and forty- four perches. Senator Fox filed a formal claim for it, and the Internal Affairs department has decided that the property Is his. The price paid under the law was the regulation thirty cents. The senator will shortly take steps to make extensive improve­ ments on his new holdings. Statesman's Adulation Staggered 'the Fair Recipient. On one occasion this habit of exas- gM ated adulation led to so bold an at­ tempt by the fair recipient to turn it to her advantage that he was driven to save the situation in a way that was very far from being appreciated. The charmer, a young lady of "ad­ vanced views," finding the great man so exceedingly ptofuse in his atten­ tions, thought it an excellent oppor­ tunity for making him a convert to her Utopian ideals, which were of the most daringly democratic order. After a long recitation of her propaganda she wound up with a fervid appeal to the prime minister to Immortalize himself by, espousing her ingenious panacea for remedying the wrongs of humanity! As she finished her im­ passioned harangue, with flushed' cheeks and flashing eye. Disraeli, who had been silently watching her with apparently the profoundest sympathy and admiration, suddenly dropped his eyeglass and softly murmured, "Oh, you darling!" "If It laad been at din­ ner," she afterward declared, "and i had had a knife, I would have stabbed him!"--Blackwood's. The McBride Case Again, St. John, K.ms.. Oct. 26.--Mr. and Mrs. William McBride and Jesse L. Limes, M. D„ have gone before Mr. George E. Moore, Notary Public, and have sworn and subscribed to written otaterr.ents confirming the story of the awful illness and subsequent cure of the little son of Mr. and Mrs. Mo- Bride.- « Dr. Limes is particularly emphatic in his statement, and there does not now seem to be any room for doubt as to the fact that Dodd's Kidney Pills, and nothing else, saved the little boy. He was so had that he had Epileptic spells which seized him with increas­ ing frequency. He was semi-paralyzed in the right side, and his mind was Dadly affected. In their sworn statement, Mr. and Mrs. McBride say: "Tho very day we began to use Dodd's Kidney Pills our boy had twen- iv-seven of these Epileptic spells or fits. In less than a week he ceased having them entirely." The case has caused a great sensa­ tion in the neighborhood. The sworn statements have confirmed the whole story. Woman Wins Distinction. An Irish woman. Miss Douglass, has been appointed to the post of horti­ cultural lecturer by the county coun­ cil of Louth, the first woman appointed to such a post in Ireland, and over men competitors. When Your Grocer Says he does not have Defiance Starch, yon may be Mire he is afraid to keep it until hra stock of 12 os!. packages nre sold. Defiance Htarch is not only better than any other I'ohi Water Starch, but contains 10 oz. to the package and 6ells for same money as 13 oz. Lrands. Only 11 per cent of the families of London employ a servant, but there are 206,858 persons of the servant class. More Flexible and Lasting, won't shake out or blow ont; by nsinf Defiance Starch you obtain better results than possible with any other brand and nne-third more for same monev- Seareh others for their virtues and thyself for thy vices. Thomas Fuller. CITC ' • 11 O tlwt day's use er. Semi for FHKK aU.OO trial bottle and tre&tl** Dm. U.O. Kijas, Ltd., 831 Arch BUeat, Philadelphia, 1% The peek-a-boo waist will Boon give way to the low-and-behold. opera gown.* PIso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of aa a cough cure.--J. VV. O BHJKN, 323 Third Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0,190a The tailor-made dress does not always cover a well-lined stomach. Stops the Cough and Works OflT the Cold rAxative Broino Quinine Tablets. IMce25b. Even If a man doesn't manage come out on top his hair will. to If you don't know what you want, try Mrs. Austin's Pancakes for a really good breakfast. It is notable that good sons rarely figure in the divorce court. A. PROMINENT CHURCH WORKER SAYS ; SHE OWES HERLIFE TO PE-RU-NAj. ?|| HER GREAT F0RTUKE. ; Mrs. Hattle LaFountalB A, DOCTORS ^ PRESCRIPTIONS AILED TO RELIEVE Mrs. Hattie La Fountain, Treas. Protected Ladies of Ohio, writes from Galion, O., as follows: "After my first child was born / suffered for several months with bearing down pains accompanied by dreadful headaches. I was afraid my health was ruined for life, and felt very downcast about it One day when a friend was visiting me she told me of Peruna and what it had done for her when she suffered with irregular menstruation. My husband procured a bottle the same evening and I be^an to take it daily according to directions. Before the first botte was used / was entirely we//, and you certainly have one grateful woman's blessing. I have also advised my friends to use it." MRS. HATTIE LA FOUNTAIN. Home Circle Catholic Secretary Woman's State Federa­ tion Says; "Pe-ru-na Does More Than is Claimed for if Mrs. Julia M. Brown, Secretary of the Woman's State Federation of California, writes from 131^4 Filth St., Los Angeles, Cal., as follows: "I have never known of any patent med­ icine which did what it professed to do ex­ cept Peruna. This remedy does much more than it claims, and while I have never ad­ vocated any medicine, I feci that it is but justice to speak a good word for it because I havjB found it to be such a rare exception. "I have known several women who were little better than physical wrecks, mothers who dragged out a miserable, painful exist­ ence, but were made well and strong through the use of Peruna. I have known of cases of chronic catarrh which were cured in a short time, when a dozen different remedies had been experimented with and without good results. I use it myself when I feel nervous and worn ont, and I have always found that the results were most satisfac- factory." JULIA M BROWN. A Woman Saved From Ufa- Misery and Made Happy and Useful. C A woman confined to the bouse for se»» eral years with a chronic female derate* ment had finally given up hope of being cured. She had tried physician after physician, and remedy after remedy, without anypef manent improvement. Her treatment had cost her husband, who was a poor man, hundreds of dollars! They had been obliged to deny themselves msfay comforts of life in order to get money enough to pay the physicians. The woman bad become weak, nervooa and wretched, and scarcely able to keep out of her bed. Her children were grow­ ing up neglected and ragged because of tha want of a mother's care, her husband was becoming discouraged and brokea down with overwork. Picking up the paper one day she hap* pened to read an item which contained tha news that Dr. Hartman would treat such cases free of charge by letter. She imme­ diately wrote the doctor de&ci iking hercasv and giving him all her £)UI[:(OELS. She soon received a letter telling her ea* actly what to do, atid what medicines aad appliances to get. She 1 egan the treal», ment (the principle remedy Leing Peruna), at once, and in a few weeks shewaswellj and strong agnin, able to do her own woik. i This offer of free fccme treatment to wom­ en is still open to all who may need the serv­ ices of this eminent physician. All letter# applying for treatment will be promptly answered, and be held strictly confidential* i Miss Annie Hoban, Post Pocahontas at Yemassee Council of Red Men (Wcmen'a Branch), writes from 872 Eighth Ave., New York: | ' 'Three months ago I was troubled with | backache and a troublesome heaviness about j the stomach. Sleep brought me no rest fot j it was a restless sleep, 1 he f'octor said my ; nervous system was out of order but his pre- j scriptions didn't seem to relieve me. I ymm j told that Peruna was good for building npj the nervous system. After using it for two 1 months I know now that it is. I want to say j that it made a new woman of me. 1 he tor» i turing symptoms have all disappeared and X I feel myself again. Peruna did me mord good than all the other medicines I have taken.** ANNIE HOBAN. I Miss Mami* Powell, Lake Charles, Lou­ isiana, writes: "I sincerely believe that Peruna Is won* an's best friend, for it has certainly been that to me. I had had headaches, backaches and other aches every month ior along time, bat shortly aft<?r I jjjgan taking Peruna this was a thing of the past, and I have good reason to he grateful. I take a bottle every spring and '< fall now, and that keeps my health perxect, and I certainly am more robust now than I! have been before and am weighing more. \ J do not think anyone will be disappointed itt j the results obtained from the use of FO"| runa." MISS MAMIE POWELL, ' If j'OU do not derive prompt and satisfft^: tory results from the use of Peruna, writ® ' at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state* j ment of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of TbS Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus. O. 1 f j'-. .'1'^ vV-i'V VW'J] 1 : :: •It / J i n A Bad Fix When one wakes up aching from head to foot snd tha ilesh tender to the touch, when Soreness and Stiffness •&> makes ercry motion of the body painful, the surest . and Quickest way out of the trouble is to use St. Jacobs Oil pran^ily. K warms, relaxes, aires. Pricc, 26c. and 50c. iAI Much Money for New York. Mr. Livingston, commissioner of public works in New York, contends that under an old ordinance the space under stoops may be regarded as vault space, for which the city may collect a penalty of $100 In each case, mak­ ing a total of $8,000,000 or $9,000,000. A suit is threatened against a prom­ inent builder and if it is started will serve as a test case. It is estimated that between 80,000 and 90,000 resi­ dences in New York are affected by this contention. 8lxty Years in Same Store. James J. Woodward of Semers- worth, N. H., has been a merchant for sixty years and during all that time has conducted his business in the same store. RICE LANDS If Interested In Rice Cnltare Investigate my 30,000 acre tract of land located In most tortile rice producing scctlon of Texas, 50 miles west of Houston. High prairie, watered from shallow wells. Splendid railroad facilities. BIR crop new harvesting at large profit. Land sold at prices and terms to salt. Join one of our cheap excursions. Write quick for rates, dates, etc. JOHN LINDCRHQLM, . Oh«st»rvlll«, Tvxaa, > Or^Room I, No. 234 La Salle Street, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. ElUPER'S PASTILLES. 4^Asttim fiTAWl^r * e iiA by HIHil. cfnts. BIOniXL & CO., Hfn. Gbarlestown. Mass. lEWIC'SINGLE ®^TKBESTQ»AUTY BINDER SnMGHi5*CiGAR always reliable jour joliljur or ulrect in. row Factory, i'eorls. 111. GOOD HOMES GOOD HOMES In Morton Co., N. Uskota. $6to$10pera. One crop pay# for be;>t farm In North­ west. Flenty water. Splevdld stock and dairy country. Abundance Of coal. Ksll- roada, towns, markets, churfcbes, schools. Come,see, audbellcve. Add. J. H. Block, Trea*. State Miun., or Good Homes Land Co., 514 Endlcott Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. GOOD HOMES GOOD HOME j Supply of Platinum. The $2,142,207 worth of plathanm extracted In the Gorotiagodatski dis­ trict of Russia last year is practical^ the world's supply of that metaL ifikr fvn Bank Note Circulation. Natioual bank notes are one-sixth of the money In circulation. %l. ' iV. ' S0Z0D0NT Tooth Powdor " Good for Bod Teeth JTot Bad jur'tiood Teethm n *Ohr»a the Teeth a Pearly Luetov BIS BOX s; 2Sc CANCER CURED AT HOME. no. 6i _„CQMPANI0N New Subscription Offer. The New Subscrik FREE The New Subscriber who cuts out and sends this slip er the name el this Paper at eace with $1.75 will receive: All the issues oi The Compsnion lor the remaining weeks ol 1903. The Double Numbers (or Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Tear's. The Youth's Companion "Springtime" Calendar lor 19M. lithographed in twelve colors and gold %'i Then the lifty-two issues o( The Compsnion for 19M--• library si Ihe keal wading Isr every member ot Ihe family. K3°x Illustrated Announcement and Sample Copies of the Paper F"ree. Vfr MS THE, YOUTH'S COMPANION, BOSTON, MASS. 5 • "l&J IF YOiS WANT a GOOD FARM I PAY SPOT CASH FOR MILITARY BOUNTY Land Warrants W H E R E ONE CROP WILL PAY FOR THE LANP, eome to RANSOM COUNTY, N. D., where you Can sec this kind of a crop tbi-i year, and as flae land there lutn the world, at from $18.00 to $23.00 per acre. For fur'bor particulars call on or write BOTJKILE'S LAND, LOAN ft INSURANCE AQEaCY IXB30N, NOBTH DAKOTA. Issued to soldiers of any war. Write me at FRANK H. KEUKK. liarUi Block. Denver. Per Dos FlfitlT FINISHES Siac x 4 iiichcs Send any i'boto with l&c. te. gtsmy for rrtum p»*Uee, and we wfll »et>d y 15 elottDiiy SUNPFAM PtMTO HK'H INCLUDE* .-«? PBOUOIADE I I Hanrl-PalciM Pbot i Wairh Cbaras Broo' h-Pin. OrtKloa) { »N1 C»U)oc 1 '"rin^i. L*caioc:io «D.I sample » •Mnagssbtu* l'hoto Madia, ISSOTkM it,.. West The golf girt joes a'gojfinj In Uie s;kid test of gowns. The sun shines sultry on her In the surliest of frowns. O'er the green she chases gayfjr In a fierce perspiring march. But her clothes don't show a wrinkle 'Cause she used Defunct Starch $3 50 per Acre AT ALL GROCERS 16 OUNCES FOR 10 CENft Pictrto Manufactured by W. N. U. CHICAGO, No. 44, 190S When Answering Adverti-^rhenta Kindly Mention Thi^^aper* Ite vmm Stan (o OMAHA. NE& 2BHEDQ3 boM by drufytita,. W. L. DOUGLAS *3.22 & *3 SHOESaS •Von caa «av# from ^3 to $5 yearly by wearing W. L. Douglas $3JK) or $3 shoes. They equal those that have boen cost­ ing you from $4.00 to 85.00. The im­ mense sale of W. L. Douglas shoos proves their superiority over all,other makes. '•^Sold by retail shoe dealers everywhere. Look for uauio and price on bottom. That Doaglaa use* Cor­ ona Col t prottss I here is value iu Douglas shoos. Corona IN Ihe highest fraile Pat.Leatheriuailc. ftouf Color Kyrlfts iwd. tjtvj EdjGLinnrannot eouaJleu a' any price by mail, i»5 r*nts extra. Illustralt-J Cfctfciog frcd* W. L. DOKitAS, ItrocVton, Uass, T H R I F T Y F A R M E R S •re Invited to nettle In the Suite of MiiryiAud, wbere they will find a delightful and healthy climate, Orst- Class markets for their product* and plenty of land at reasonable prices. Mupj and descriptive pamph­ lets will be sent free upon application to E. BADENHOOP, See*) State Board ol Immigration. BALTIMORE, MB. No Knife, Pain orPlastb. KOI IS I' TB T1MO- M.LS run. Mi son Csnoer Institatt, ISO W. 4Sd BU.Baw Yoc*

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy