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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1906)
KIDNEY TROUBLE Suffered Two Tears—Relieved In Three Months. - -__ C.B. Fize.r, A/T R. C. B. FIZER, Mt. Sterling, Ky., writes: “I have suffered with kidney and bladder trouble for ten years past. “Last March I commenced using Peruna and continued for three months. I have not used it since, nor have I lclt a pnin. “I believe that I am well and I there fore give my highest commendation to the curative qualities of Peruna.” Pe ru na for Kidney Trouble Mrs. Geo. H. Simser, Grant, Ontario, Can., writes: “I had not been well for about four years. / had kidney trouble, and, in fact, felt badly nearly all the time. “This summer I got so very bad I thought I would try Peruna, so I wrote to you and began at once to take Peruna and Manalin. “I took only two bottles of Peruna and one of Manalin, and now I feel better than I bave for some time. “I feel that Pernna and Manalin cured me and made a different woman of me altogether. I bless the day I picked up the little book and read of your Peruna.” It Is the Business of the kidneys to remove from the blood all poi sonous materials. They must be active all the time, else the system suffers. There ere times when they need a little assist ance. Peruna is exactly this sort of a rem edy. It has saved many people from disaster by rendering the kidneys ser vice at a time when they were not able to bear their own burdens. SICK HEADACHE Positively cared by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dis tress trom Dyspepsia. In digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem edy for Dlizlness. Nansen, Drowsiness, Bad Taste In the Month. Coated Tongue. Pain In the side. torpid LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE PADTFR^I Genuine Must Bear Wittle Fan-Simile Signature || P^LLS*. /$£*& t 1”*_[refuse substitutes. enable you to enjov your meals without having to spend half your time between them over a hot cook-stove. ' All the cooking is done in Libby's kitchen—a kitchen as clean and neat as your own, and there’s nothing for you to do but enjoy the result. 1 Libby * Products are selected meats, | cooked by cooks who know how, and t only die good parts packed. For a quick and delicious lunch any t'tne, in doprs or out, try Libby’s Mel rose Pate—with Libby’s Camp Sauce, j Booklet free, “How to Make Good Thine* to Eat" Write Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago ORDER YOUR Type and Printers’Supplies FROM THE SIOUX C1IY_PRINTING_C0MPANY Western agents tor the American Type founders Company. Foundry rates guaranteed. Alsoagents for the Tubbs ManufaeturingCompany and Jaenecke frinting Ink Company. Rheumatic Sufferers—Will tell you remedy that cured me and fifty others. It's free. Cunningham, SOS Corn .Exchange, Minneapolis, Minn. WHEAT, CO biialtola per Mere. Catalogue and an at pl«» FKKK Suiter 8e«Ml («., bus C, LucrtMMt, \V It Accommodated Her. The other day the president received | a letter from a young woman over in New Jersey, who explained that she wrote in behalf of six companions who wanted his autographs. The president dictated a letter in reply and as fol lows: "Dear Miss Jenkins—I take much pleasure in appending the six signu- ' lures you request. Yours sincerely. i "Theodore Roosevelt. "Theodore Roosevelt. "Theodore Roosevelt. “Theodore Roosevelt. | “Theodore Roosevelt. : “Theodore Roosevelt." A Premature Discussion. From the New' York Weekly. Miss Flighty—Have you decided to ! take any part In the discussion, "What j will we do in heaven?” Good Minister—No. miss. I am at j present much more interested In the ! question, "What shall we do to get there?" TESTED RECIPES. Veal for Lunch—Butter a good sized bowl, and line it with thin slices of hard boiled eggs; have veal and ham both in very thin slices: place in the bowl a layer of veal, with pepper and salt, then a layer of ham, omitting the salt, then a layer of veal, and so on alternating with veal and ham, until the bowl is filled: make a paste of Hour and water, as stiff as it can be rolled out; cover the contents of the bowl with the paste, and over this tie a double cotton cloth; put the bowl into a sauce pan, or other vessel, with wa ter just to the rim of the bowl, and boil three hours; then take it from the fire, remove the cloth and paste, and let it stand until the next day, when it may be turned out and served in very thin slices. An excellent lunch in trav eling. Sweet Strawberry Cake—Three eggs, one cupful of sugar, two of Hour, one tablespoonful of butter, a teaspoonful, heaped, of baking powder. Beat the butter and sugar together, and add the eggs well beaten. Stir in the Hour and baking powder well sifted together. Bake in deep tin plate. This quantity will HU four plates. With three pints of strawberries, mix a cupful of sugar and mash them a little. Spread the fruit between the layers of cake. The top layer of strawberries may be cov ered with a meringue made with the white of an egg and a tablespoonful of powdered sugar. Save the largest berries, and arrange them around in circles on the top in the white frosting. Makes a very fancy dish, as well as a most delicious cake. Pure Ice Cream—Genuine ice cream is made of the pure sweet cream in this proportion: Two quarts of cream, one pound of sugar, beat up, flavor and freeze. For family use, select one of the new patent freezers, as being more rapid and less laborious for small quantities than the old style turned entirely by hand. All conditions being perfect, those with crank and revolving dashers effect freezing in eight to fifteen min utes. Fgg Sandwiches—Hard boil some very fresh eggs, and when cold, cut them into moderately thin slices, and lay them between some bread and but ter cut as thin as possible; season them with pepper, salt and nutmeg. For pic nic parties, or when one is traveling, these sandwiches are far preferable to hard boiled eggs au natural. Cream Strawberry Tarts—After pick ing over the berries carefully, arrange them in layers in a deep pie tin lined with puff paste, sprinkling sugar thickly between each layer; fill pie tin pretty full, pouring in a quantity of the Juice; cover with a thick crust, with a slit in the top, and bake. When pie is baked, pour into the slit in the top of the pie the following cream mixture: Take a small cupful of the cream from the top of tlie morning's milk, heat it until it comes to a boil, then stir into it the whites of two eggs beaten light, also a tablespoonful of white sugar and a teaspoonful of corn starch wet in cold milk. Boil all together a few moments until quite smooth; set it aside, and w hen cool, pour it into the pie through the slit in the crust. Serve it cold with powdered sugar sifted over it. Raspberry, blackberry, and whortle berry may be made the same. Lettuce Salad—Take the yolks of three hard boiled eggs, and salt and mustard to taste; mash it fine; make a paste by adding a dessertspoonful of olive oil or melted butter (use butter al ways when it is difficult to get fresh oil); mix thoroughly, and then dilute by adding gradually a teacupful of vinegar, and pour over the lettuce. Garnish by slicing another egg and lay ing over the lettuce. This is sufficient for a moderate sized dish of lettuce. Potato Salad Hot—Pare six or eight large potatoes, and boil till done, and slice thin while hot; peel and cut up three large onions, into small bits and mix with the potatoes; cut up some breakfast bacon into small bits, suffi cient to fill a teacup; and fry It a light brown; remove the meat, and into the grease stir three tablespoonfuls of vinegar, making a sour gravy, which with the bacon pour over the potato and onion; mix lightly. To be eaten when hot. • ♦ • Keep the cultivators busy. That’s the way to keep crops humping in a very dry season. In orchard or corn field the shallow cultivator is the thing now. --- STRICT_ Women Obtain Mrs. Pinkham’s Advice and Help. She IT an Guided Thousands to Health.— How Lydia IS. Pinkham's Vegetable Com* pound Cured Mrs. Alice Berryhill. It is a great satisfaction for a woman to feel that she can write to another telling her the most pri vate and confiden tial details about her illness, and know that her let ter will be seen by a woman only. Many thousands ■■ of eases of female diseases come be fore Mrs. Pinkham every year, some personally, others by mail. Airs. Pink ham is the daughter-in-lawof Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years under her direction and since her de cease she has been advising sick women free of charge. Mrs. Pinkham never violates the con fidence of women, and every testimon ial letter published is done so with the written consent or request of the writer, in order that other sick women may be benefited as she lias been. Airs. Alice Berryhill, of 313 Boyce Street, Chattanooga, Tenn., writes : Dear Airs. Pinkham:— “ Three years ago life looked dark to me. I hail ulceration and inflammation of the female organs and was in a serious condition. “ My heulth was completely broken down anil the doctor told me that if I was not op erated upon 1 would die within six months. I told him I would have no operation but would try Lydia K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Be tried to influence m» against it but. 1 sent for the medicine that, same day and began to use it faithfully. Within five days I felt relief but was not entirely cured until I used it for some time. “ Your medicine is certainly fine. I have induced several friends and neighbors to take it and I know more than a dozen who had ; female troubles and who to-day are ns well i and strong as I am from using" your Vege table Compound. ” Just as surely as Airs. Berryhill was : cured, will Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound cure every woman suffering from any form of female ills. If you are sick write Airs. Pinkham for advice. It is free and always help- i lul. WHY “MASHERS” EXIST From the Washington Star. '‘Over In New York the other day,” said a man who la back and forth a good deal. *'I saw a rather gaudy and overdressed young woman sprinting after an elderly man on Broadway. As she ran she kept her rolled umbrella upraised. Her purpose was to catch the elderly man and chastise him with the umbrella. That purpose was obvious to everybody. It was particularly obvious to the elderly man—so obvious that he sprinted good and hard to avoid such a disaster. Despite his age, he was the better runner, making allowance, too, for the fact that the young woman was hampered by her skirts and by her very high heels In the sprinting business. After being chased for a block or so the elderly man lumbered into an office building, jumped into an elevator that was fortu nately waiting on the ground floor, and went up to one of the upper floors to wait for the thing to blow' over. “The gaudy young woman, foiled in her effort to belabor an elderly man with her close-rolled umbrella, gathered a crowd around the entrance to the office building by excitedly declaiming that the elderly man was a masher, and that he had made goo-goo eyes at her a couple of blocks be low on Broadway; wherefore she had In tended to club him with her umbrella had •he been able to catch him. “Nowr, that elderly man hadn’t tried to goo-goo that girl at all. He is one of the solidest and most decent man In all New York—a banker of the most unimpeach able reputation In everything that apper tains to a high-grade man. He is the fath er of a large family of grown daughters, has no pleasure In life except in his own home, Is just as far removed morally from the ‘gay old dog’ class as he Is geograph ically removed from Spitzbergen, and would just about as soon lie down and let a subway car run over him as even dream of flirting with a young woman, or an old woman, or ajiy other kind of a woman on the street or anywhere else. In addition to a sort of cherubic, rosy face, which gives him the constant appearance of smiling, this thoroughly decent elderly banker has a nervous affection of the eyes, which at times causes them to roam about until he get3 a certain focus, and when that focus Is reached makes it Impossible j for him to remove his gaze until the mo mentary paralysis of his orbs has passed. If he got that focus fixed on the eye of a yellow' dog ho couldn’t remove it until he’d passed on. And that’s how It happened, j The young woman with the punitieve um ! brclla just got the wrong idea, that’s all. She had a sort of a chip on her shoulder, and was just waiting for something to j happen that would enable her to use her umbrella upon some brutish and Boetlan I male person. 1 These imaginative women, who dre.yn that most of the peripatetic males they meet on the street are trying to slip them the goo-goo lamp are becoming mighty frequent and numerous these days, any how. You can hardly pick up a paper without reading about some women club bing some man on the allegation which she excitedly puts forth after it is all over that he has attempted to mash her. I have gone to the bottom of a lot of these cases, and have actually seen plenty of them. I’ve found that the women are mis taken in about three cases out of five. ’’There are some specimens of that grisly species, the masher, of course, prowling about the streets of all cities; but there are not one-tenth as many mashers as some of these imaginative women try to make themselves believe there are. "There's one fact connected with this masher-and-mashed business that stands out in the light in plain view of all rea sonable persons, namely, that not one male person out of a million, including the actual masher, will take the chance of ac costing a woman, or even giving her the happy eye unless she 'gives him the office,’ as the thing’s called. Even the masher doesn’t pick out the woman on the street who behaves, and, as for the non-masher, he'd just as soon take a chance on trying to attract the attention of a girl or woman who is going on about her business as he would of knocking a crossing cop’s helmet off his head. Flirty men don’t try to en gage in the asinine business of flirting with women who manage their eyes cir cumspectly. "A woman who conducts herself with propriety on the street—on any street in any American city—will get by all right, ninety-nine times out of a hundred, with out ever being bothered by any male brute, masher or otherwise. But when a girl or woman flirts along, giving out sort of half smiles and saucy eyes and thus laying her self liable to the imputation that she wouldn't resent a little word or so spoken under the breath of the passing man whose attention she thus attracts, it’s up to her to take the consequences without com plaint. "Not long ago in Cincinnati they arrest ed and punished a notoriety-loving young woman who had ‘umbrella’d’ about half a dozen male pedestrians for ’trying to mash her,’ as she told the police. It was found that this young female person deliberately flirted with men for the purpose of having them ’fail’ to her charms, and then, when they addressed her, turned upon them and tried to whang the daylights out of them with her rain-shield. This thing was more than suspected by the police, and they verified it by putting their best-loking de tective on the shopping beat generally taken by the young woman with the rec ord for umbrella cases. He met up with the girl in due time, and she gave him the cunnln’ eye and the cheery smile, and, when he walked over to her and made some trifling remark upon how much weather there seemed to prevail, she up and tried to get her umbrella into action. Sho found the umbrella cooly wrenched out of her hands in something less than a twinkling, however, and about four min utes later she found herself taking a ride in one of those hurry-up vehicles. When the police put her through a few of the little degrees she broke down and owned up that she’d got by with her little stunt all those times purely out of a love for no toriety. "1 know fat women of fifty, and lean, hatehet-faced spinsters of equal years, who are complaining all the time that they Just simply can’t do downtown without a whole slew and slather of coarse, brutal male persons—generally strapping, hand some young men, the rude creatures!— trying to flirt with them on the streets. They remark petulantly that In their opin ion it's a sin and a shame that men on the streets can't let ’us girls’ alone. And they never see that they’re Just Jokes. Even when they catch the men who over hear these remarks exchanging glances or winking at each other, they don’t get next. They go right on spinning their web about how the louts of well dressed men—’men that look as If they ought to be gentle men’—try to ogle them on the streets, and all that. “There Isn’t any punishment too severo for the actual, simon-pure masher, but there are few of him, and he is becoming a rarer genus every year. Hut there is something in the way of a knock coming to the girl or woman who breezes along tho street distributing coy and arch i glances and then freezing up and doing the ’unhand-me’ Junk when she is ad dressed by male persons who have been re cipients of those glances. I would fain have a rest from all of these mashing elfin tales. There are too many of them, and they’re too much alike, in that most of they are the product of over-calorie lm- 1 aginations.” The emigration from Italy la in the 1 proportion of fourteen to every 1,000 | inhabitants a year. ... ^Vegetable Preparationfor As similating thcFoodandRcgula ting l he Stomachs and Bowels of -~n- • rnmmmmmmmrnmm Promotes Digestion,1Cheerful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. jaKveofOUDrSAMJEUmaEB Pltmck'm S«e*i~ v Alx Smna * 1 Hxkdh Salts - I AnimSmd a 1 feu ) Aperfccl Remedy forConstlpa Hon. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ! f ---x^jW The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over SO years, has borne the signature of />. an<l bos been made under his per Sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What Is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Uarcotio substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worm# and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind, Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panocciv—Tho Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of ^ . The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years TWIT OCNTAUN COMPANY, TT MUHWAV •TUCCT, NtW YO*K CITY. The Wild Beasts of New York City. From the Metropolitan. As a matter of fact, It Is not very generally known that wild trout may be taken and wild game killed within the corporate limits of New York city. Certainly I have found but few that seemed to know that foxes, and not al ways foxes bred for the purpose, but the genuine wild reynard, are chased on Staten Island. The city limits are very extended. A good slice is taken off of Westchester county at the north —the whole of one end of Long island at the east, while Staten Island entire Is included at the south. There ure wooded districts within these bound aries—brushy hills and swampy thick ets—some of them well nigh Inaccessi ble. There are fresh water streams and lakes, and there ure vast areas of salt water; also, there are wide-set meadows or marsh lands where the waters of ocean and hay and sound swept long ago. and where salt creeks and Inlets still make and ebb with the tide. Such haunts as these are Ideal, and the creatures that have held them against three centuries of civilization are not to be easily driven away. SEVEN YEARS AGO A Rochester Chemist Found a Sin gularly Effective Medicine. William A. Franklin, of the Frank lin & Palmer Chemical Co., Rochester, N. Y., writes: “Seven years ago I was suffering very much through the failure of the kid neys to eliminate the uric acid from my s y s t em. My hack was very lame and ached If I over exerted myself in the least degree. At times I was weighed down with a feeling of lan guor and depression and suffered con tinually from annoying irregularities of the kidney secretions. I procured a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills and began using them. I found prompt relief from the uebing and lameness in my back, and by the time I had taken three boxes I was cured of ull Irregu larities.” Sold by all dealers. CO cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Yr. Puzzled Pa. From the Chicago News. The country boy who was going to play on the college baseball team had written a letter to the old folks down home. “I reckon he’s gettin' on all right,” drawled the old man, as he scrutinized the page, “but 'pears to me he’s doin' some things that a gal ought to do.” “How’s that, Hiram?” asked the old lady. “Why, the other day he says he made two or three muffs.” State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas Coun ty, ss.: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and thut said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Ca tnrrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my - * this Cth day of December. A. D. A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimo nials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by nil Druggists. 73c. Taka Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Rank. Captain Homer Hedge, president of the new Areo club, was talking hopefully at West Point about the future of flying. “No doubt we shall all fly some day,’’ he said, “as safely and easily as we now ride ! or sail. Before that day comes, though, I every subtlety of flying must be mastered. ! I fancy that we look at the art too broadly j now. We handle It in too cursory and ; general a way. We handle it as an old : man 1 once knew in the west handled mil- . ltary rank. “Meeting this old man one day, I said to him: “ ‘Let me see, your nephew enlisted for i a soldier, didn't he?’ “ 'You’re right, sir,’ said the old man. •He did.’ “ ‘Well,’ said I, ‘what rank does he hold now?’ “The old man frowned reflectively. “ ‘Let me see,’ he muttered. 'I ain’t quite sure, but I know It's either a gen eral or a corporal.’ ” ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE Sh— A Certain Cure tor Tired, Hot, Aching Feot. DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. on every box. LeRoy. N,l SIOUX CITY GEEM^m CO.! THE E. J. HATHAWAY CO„ Proprietors %. Highest Cash Price for Cream F SIOUX CITY CREAMERY CO. SIOUX CITY, IOWA ^SaleTe nMill ion Boxes a Y ear. ■ '■-'i rftBOay THE FAMILY'S FAVORITE MEDICINE * fill g (ctocaxtto I H CANDY CATHARTIC gig fg Dnnu |J* Hx BEST FOR THE BOWELS JB Comforting. From Tit-Bits. “John, dear,” said the Invalid’s wife, “I’ll have to run away from you an hour or so today. I have to get the material for a new dress that the dressmaker’’— “But,” complained the slek man, “do you think It Is right to be thinking of dress while I am so 111?” “Why, John, It will be all right, no matter what happens. It’s a black dress.” Dr. Harward Turner, Clifton. Bristol, England, made a will containing the strange direction that no person bene fiting under it should attend his funer al, "under pain' of forfeiture of his in terest." LIMB WASTED WITH ECZEMA. Suffered Untold Agonies—Doctor Said It Was the Worst Case—Wonder ful Cure by Cuticura. “I used tlie Cuticura Remedies for erzema. The doctor said it was the 1 worst case lie ever saw. it was on both limbs, from the knees to tlie an kles. We tried everything the doctors know of, but the Cuticura Remedies did tlie most good. 1 was obliged to lie with my limbs higher than my bend, for the pain was so terrible I could not walk. I suffered untold ag onies. One limb wasted away a great deal smaller than the other, there was so much discharge from It. 1 found tlie Cuticura Remedies very soothing, and 1 still keep them in tlie house. I ' am very thankful to say that I am cured. I found the Cuticura Remedies all that you say they are. I hope that you may be spared many years to make the Cuticura Remedies for the bcneilt of persons suffering from the torture of skin diseases, such as I had. Mrs. tiolding, Box 8, Ayr, Ontario, Canada, June 0. 1005.” Easily Done. From the New York Weekly. Ticket Agent—at railroad station—"I wish some way could be invented to keep men away from the ladies’ win I dow.” Hystander—"Easy enough. Put the sign ’For Ladies Only’ on the other window.” The Dally** Dottle. Too great care cannot be used in keep ing the nursing bottle clean. As soon as it is empty, remove the nipple and put the latter to soak in a cup of pure, boiled wa ter. Cut a potato i; small pieces and drop in the bottle: fill half full of Ivory Soap suds and shake well. Empty, rinse and put to boil in cold water. ELEANOR R. PARKER. Gentle Persuasion. From Judge. Politician—Your brolher-ln-law, big ' Mike Callahan, has applied for a po- I litical Job. Can you safely recommend 1 him? Costlgan—Well, Ol couldn't safely do anything else. You Cannot 1 all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such a* ti asal catarrh, u ter I ne catarrh c*aam6» by feminine ills, sore throat, ao** mouth or Inflamed eyes by simptygr dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubbaw affections by local treatment with J Pat tine Toilet Antiseptltf which destroys the disease germs,check* discharges, stops pain, and heals th* inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successM local treatment for feminine ilia ewe* produced. Thousands of women testifa to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. n Send for Free Trial Bar TUB R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Hu*. A Skin of Uenu.y is n ,)oy Forever^ DR. T. Follx Ocuroud'e Orlsntal Cream or Magloa! Beuutlfleiv 2 v a? Removes Tin Plnnl^ «•*?■« Freckles, Moth TmiekmZ U 3 - a Rush, and Ski* iHeeaaaf Gg ®ia and every ftMp on beauty, «m da* r- dee delectlo*. ft I lias stood U» M taste it ukmMl is properly OMift. Accept no c~ tame. Dr, ton <a “ As you will use Uok , 1 rtcosiMif 'fiiiSTiiml’s Crenrn' as the least harmful of all III skin 1 [xenaraitons." For sale by all druggists and Fassf* Goods Dealers In the United States, Canada and Esioyfc IEHD.1. HOPKINS, Prop., 37 flrat Jan Sheet InrTiA SONS OF FARMERS Have Twenly-live Chances to Win a Fortune is (be NEW SOlilHWEST Attains! One al Kiai SEND FOR OUR PRIZE OFFER OF TEXAS FARM LANDS ON EAST IE RMS. sr.vi be independent forever. Write now tr of O. II. IIEAFFORD, Secretary Farm Land vcloymeol Co., 277 Dearborn Street, Chicaao, IliiuJt LOO Virginia farms for salt*. Write for our catalogue. All property shown froa» Perclvall Bros., Petersburg, Vrv. SiOUX CITY P'T'G CO.. 1,142, 24—*909 lo“'."‘.Thompson’s Eye Water