The Loaf City North westeri J W BTKU3CH. Pubtlsber LOUP CITY. - • NEBRASKA RODENT RUNS RIOT. S«adrr why (oBMi are frightened By rat*' That * oat Thing «t newer mhuRt of cvsrtnk* Between a tea* and wife cm nigt: In a reatas read, and (Be i iwlialii were cartons and cun etc'lag and were (act leading eg tr tB* riot standard, the woman "balding Bar own.' and even more than (Bat. aben a rat ran across the rutm. Tta: settled the dispute. Tbe •sum lumped on the table, among aS the dishes showing ankles and lingene that would Lave made a Dutch iuiKwr dizzy with drUriam Hot the tww stepped and the laughter began, says the New Orleans Picayune Tbe latest rat story, however, comes from tew*.rx and It runs ilke this Dur Sag a maimer performance at one of the theaters, while the house waa crowded. a rat appeared ia one of tbe stain*, and consternation seized tbe crowd tartar.in Roman }ump*d on arvhestrn chairs, danced tbe highland Sing and other dings, screamed and acted like mad. while the rat ran r.ot through the rows of seats At one stage of the stampede ail the women screamed together, that pot the show ewt of biisiaiss Tbe actors lost their lines, the women bast their reason, and the rat last its life Why are women frightened at rats, and still wear them ia their hair* Owing he the stealing of pet dags and them sale to a medical college, the women's branch of the Antirruei ty Society in Philadelphia have de manded a law potting scientists who perch *»« dogs under the same police aaprrrisiua as pawnbrokers, claiming they are far too las la their accept ance of animals so brought to them if accord with property rights In a disraesicir of the kind lately one phy sician attached to such an institution admitted that no questions were ashed about where animals brought to him cam* from, as tbe purchasers preferred not to know. This virtual adwtsekm of receiving stolen pets will probably arouse dago* ner* every where tj demand similar restrictions. Mushrooms are cheaper in New York Him they bare ever been at any otter time m the history of the trade, the fart being due to a rapid devel opaewt la recent years of mushroom farming by suburbanites. It seems, therefore that not ail the suburban farmers bare been devoting their en tire attention to the raising of squabs. A woman arrested In New York as a shoplifter explained that her bouse •as being painted and that lb# fume* of tie paint bad gone to her bead. Bating ter irresponsible for ter ac liana. Vet some pessimists declare that the present practical age Is lack ing la imaginative power Sum* iconoclastic professor has dis covered that the Sphinx was built to l****rv« the cc-untenant* of an old Egypt-an king and not merely to give a spieac.d model la Impassivity to re actionary senators engaged la stand tag pat Somebody has discovered a substl «»t* for radium, but It is almost as ex tensive as the real thing, hence a ma purity of the radium users will nc doubt refuse to listen uhen they are offered something “equally good." The s'age dancer who walked on her toes town the U Sights of stairs la the MetropoBtaa Life bunding prob ably would resent brag asked to climb two Sights to a dressing room Bat The feet at American women, say the shoe manufacturers, are growing The average woman who a No 4 shoe II years ago now _It Sta.lt.ar hatter still a No (. A Washington lodge bu ruled that street idatws and organs are vehicles and mat carry rear lights after dark And this. toe. although they play hotting hat light music "Waists are to bctioa down tht Croat this summer." says a fashion •eft This being so. kaleadt ought Is he able to grab off a little vacation this summer, also The cnee of the Americas million airs who served twenty days in Bel gtmm as a vagrant is the ripest lllus tration of "they caaao* put you ia Jail Cor this.’ There was a tlms when baseball had to divide the limelight with race track gambling and pria* fighting The warmers of hake ball teams made less Roast dtkdlh. fried koodoo and glr affe steaks are to he served at a ban gate to New York Thai shows how great Is the suffering of New Y or ken in nan at the lobster famine. Lasher Burbank, tbs plan* wonder, butter*-* he can cure boys of tru awry. What's be going u> do. pro duce a spinel*** youngster, now* Thee* to a woman ia New Mexico aba killed a wildcat by pimping upon Ms hack. Sometimes tbs urn "weaker sex f—*d« ridiculous. After all is said, as good a breakfast Joed as there is. at any time of day. to the strawberry shcrtcake. 1 ~ Hetir Npuih ! a. a — ot ^_Jar * 3: . I Would Have No Go-Betweens _ mtt_ Thomas L. James' Story About Grant That Throw* Light on the Peremp tory Removal of Marshall Jewell From the Cabinet. "Twice in my experience as an offi cer under the administration of Presi dent Grant I found him to be of the most unflinching integrity, and most loyal in his support of administrative officers under him who were trying to do their duty. One of these occa sions was when, after an interview with him occasioned by bis summons to me to call upon him at Washing ton, he said to me: Mr. Postmaster, yuu are absolutely right in your at tempt to establish a civil service in the New Y rk postoffice. Don't pay any attention to the politicians. Always remember that you have a firm sup porter in me." ' The second occasion was one which threw light upon President Grant's re lations with Postmaster General Mar shall Jewell." continued Thomas L«. James, postmaster of New Y’ork under Grant and Haves and postmaster gen eral under Garfield. “There have been many surmises as to the reason for the peremptory demand made by President irsnt upon Marshall Jewell for his res ignation as the head of the postoffice department. Jewell himself professed never to know the reason of his dis missal. I think I can throw some light upon It incidentally while showing you what sort of man I found President Grant to be. “It was in the winter of 1S74-5 that •here appeared at the New Y’ork post oflice an inspector whose home town was Oshkosh. Wis.; he had never been In New York until that time. He began to make a most drastic Investi gation of the postoffice, and I aided him all that I could. “It happened while this Inspection was under way that Gen. La Rue Har rison. who was chairman of the ommittec of the posteffice department whose authority was over inspec tions of this kind, called upon me. I asked him what the mean ing of this peculiar inspection was. and I told him frankly that I was sure some political purpose was behind it. General Harrison smiled queerly for a moment, and then said half confiden tially that Postmaster General Jewell wanted to cut down the appropriation for the New Y’ork postoffice 130.000. He clearly intimated that there was poli tics behind this purpose. “!n reply 1 said that I would do everything in my power to reduce the surplus of the post office; that an Inspection was not necessary to n -L - - - -i_rLi-LrLn3i-n_r-u-i--u-uruj-unu-LjT. that end. I summoned two of my sub ordinate officers, and told them that the postmaster general wanted to cut our appropriation by $30,000. They replied that it could be done, but that it would involve some severe hardships among the employees. But the cut was made, and Marshal! Jewell had the $30,000 to use elsewhere. "Within a month or six weeks I dis covered what the politics was back of the cut. At that time Connecticut held its elections in the spring. Jew ell used the $30,000 in Connecticut. He increased the postal service and the number of clerks, and in other ways which were lawful utilized the whole of that money, his real purpose being to strengthen his party in Connecticut. But it diun't avail, for the Republicans were beaten at the election. "General Grant must have heard of the use made of the $30,000. for he sent for me some weeks later, and 1 had hardly entered his office in the White House before he asked: " ‘Mr. Postmaster, wasn't it the un derstanding between us when I ap pointed you postmaster of New York that there shouldn't be any go-be tweens? I will not have go-betweens interfering with myself and the presi uential appointments. Why did you fail to come to me at the time this Jew ell matter was in progress at the New York post office? 1 would have stopped it instantly.' “ ‘Well,’ Mr. President. I explained. ‘I did not want to annoy you about a matter of that kind.’ “ ‘But it was a matter of principle, and that would not have annoyed me.’ the president replied. ’However, I will overlook it this time.’ “As he said this. President Grant took a box of cigars from the drawer and offered me one. A mere cursory inspection of the cigars told me that their strength was beyond my capacity. He laughed, and then took up again the subject of my call. ‘Don't let this happen again.’ he cautioned, grave ly. ‘Always remember that you're next to me; and I will tell you frankly that you are not going to be bothered very long with the present postmaster gen eral.' “ 'It was only a few weeks after that that I learned that President Grant had peremptorily demanded Marshall Jew ell's resignation. That was an almost unprecedented occurrence, the only similar case. I think, having arisen when President Johnson demanded the resignation of Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton. (Copyright. 1911. by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) _ Elkins Helped Reveal Fraud - «-i He It Was Who First Supplied the Information That Resulted in Uncovering the Huge Star Route Postal Swindles. •'Sometimes, when I have heard ot the great service rendered by the late Senator Stephen B. Elkins ot West Virginia through the drafting of what is now known as the Elkins law. the most effective Instrument for the prevention of railroad rebating. I have thought of another great service ren dered by Senator Elkins of which the public never had any knowledge. The time has now corue when I can tell the incident. "I think It was on the second day of March, 1881.” continued Thomas L. James, postmaster general during the Garfield administration, “that Mr. El kins, whom I had learned to know well when he was a delegate to con ; gress from the territory of New Mexi : co. called upon me at my office in j the New York postofflce. After the greetings of cordial friendship were over. Mr. Elkins explained that he wanted to send a telegram to James ‘ G. lllaine, and he presumed he would Merchant Almost President How Abbott Lawrence of Massachu setts Was Nearly Nominated for Running Mate to Taylor In 1848. Every president of the United States, at the time of his election, was either a lawyer or else had gained great military renown. Yet there was a time when, but for the narrowest chance and the queerest sort of politi cal sentiment. a manufacturer and merchant would have been nominated for vice-president upon a ticket with a candidate for president who, two years after his inauguration, died. It was in 1848. The great Whig leaders of that time had pitched upon General Zachary Taylor of Louisiana as the man for presidential nomina tion who would be more likely to ap peal to the voters of the United States than any other Whig General Tay lor had gained renown in the Mexican war, and after its termination had re tired to his cotton plantation in Lou isiana. He himself was reported to have said that he didn’t know- exactly where he stood politically, he wasn't sure whether he could properly call himself a Whig or not, but he was a protectionist—and that was enough for the party leaders, one of the most prominent among their number being Thurlow Weed. Indeed. It was Mr. Meed who first suggested General Taylor for the presidential nomina tion. and he It was who convinced his fellow leaders that they could make no wiser choice. ^ After we had decided upon General Tarlor." Mr. Weed was fond of telling In the closing years of his life, “we of one accord felt that it would be well to select for the vice-presidential honor a man from New England. We also felt that the candidate should be a strong advocate of the principles of protection so strongly advocated and supported by Henry Clay, and so, finally, we decided upon Abbott Law rence of Massachusetts as just the man we were after. "Mr. Lawrence was a manufacturer of cotton goods. He had utilized the water power of the Merrimac river, built great mills upon the banks of the river and thus founded the city which bears his surname. He was a splendid man—a public-spirited citi zen, a man of much cultivation, and one of the leaders of the development in manufacturing interests in the United States. We were sure that the presidential ticket of Taylor and Law rence would appeal to a majority of the voters of the United States, and when, prior to the assembling of our convention, the split came in the Dem ocratic party which resulted in Martin Van Buren being nominated for presi dent upon a Free Soil platform we were more than ever sure that our ticket, as agreed upon in conference, would be elected. “But we had overlooked one little thing. Shortly before the convention met a Louisiana Whig wrote to us saying that it would never do to have Abbott Lawrence on the ticket, and for one reason. General Taylor, he said, was a cotton planter; Abbott Lawrence was a manufacturer of cot ton goods—it would never do to have cotton at both ends of the ticket. “It had never occurred to us, but we saw instantly the force of the ar gument. Therefore we reluctantly abandoned Mr. Lawrence and at the la6t minute Millard Fillmore of New York was selected as the Whig can didate for vice-president. And that is why he and not a manufacturer and merchant, through the constitutional succession, became president of the United States in July of 1850.” (Copyright. 1911. by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) receive an answer within an hour. He added that the telegram referred to something that concerned me. "When we returned to the postofflce after luncheon, we found a telegram there awaiting Mr. Elkins’ return. Hastily reading the message, he said that he had telegraphed Mr. Blaine, who was to be secretary of state in the new administration, to know if there were any change in General Garfield's cabinet plans, and Mr. Blaine had replied that there had been none. Then Elkins said to me: ’You are to have a great opportunity, and a very difficult and perhaps dangerous task before you. as soon as you enter the postoffice department. “ ‘You doubtless have seen in the newspapers lately a good many vague intimations that the government is be ing wronged by the star route con tractors. I tell you. Mr. James, that these reports are true. I know from personal observation in New Mexico that the government is being robbed by star route contractors, and gov ernment officers are being bribed by these contractors. I can furnish you some details. The first thing you do after you have got fairly well ac quainted with the postofflce depart ment should be to make an investiga tion of the contract department. Tear ; it up. The contract department is ex ploiting star route service to the amount of millions a year, when no service is given, and men the contrac- j tors are whacking up with some of j the postofflce authorities. You will run counter to some very influential politicians. I am here to tell you. however, that you w-ill have absolute support from the president, from Mr. Blaine as secretary of state, and from Mr. Wayne MacVeagh, who is to be attorney general.’ "Mr. Elkins thereupon gave me some Information regarding the frauds. Upon that information I was ! able to base the investigation of the contract department of the postofflce department. We speedily uncovered huge swindles. I have estimated that the government was robbed of some where between six million and eight million dollars by these frauds. "We prosecuted criminally the lead ing conspirators, but we found It im possible to obtain a jury at Washing ton which would convict But we broke up for good and all the star route swindle—a service that was due in the first Instance to the information given to us by Stephen B. Elkins. It was one of the greatest services ren dered to the government of which I have any personal recollection. Bat until now. President Garfit^d and his cabinet were the only ones, excepting Mr. Elkins himself, who knew that it was through the initiative of Mr. Elkins that this work of reformation was begun." (Copyright, 1911. by E. J. Edwards. AH Rights Reserved.) She Laughed It Off. "What is wrong between them?" “He suggested jokingly that her hair was false, and she started to laugh It off.” "And did she succeed?" "Yes, when she threw back her head to laugh it off It caught in the back of the chair and came off. _ i Muscle* May Move Themselves. A.lx rt von Haller, a Swiss surgeon of the eighteenth century, was the first to point out that the muscles of our bodies have an automatic action. Be 'ore Haller s time It was believed that ihe muscles could not contract or swell -P of themselves, but were drawn up by the nerves of voHtion. Haller dls | roTfred that this is not so, but that a muscle. If Irritated, will draw itself to gether automatically, even when It Is T jlte sepaarted from the nerves, and this has since been proved to be true by a great number of experiments. So that though It Is true our nerves sre the cause of our moving, because they excite the muscles and so cause them to contract, yet tlfe real power of contraction is in the muscle Itself. The body of man is full of wonders, not the least of which is this automatic P®wer of contraction in all muscles. Broke ’Em Both. The society page tells us that the latest big wedding "beggared descrip tion.” We have private advices that It did the same thing to the bride’s father.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. How Dutch Grasp Africa ————- Tl Roosevelt Says That the Englishmen as Settlers Are Far Behind the Boer Farmers. What 1 saw a year ago in East Af rica was illuminating. In British East Africa the men who dscovered the country, who annexed it, who started to settle it, who are govern ing It, who have made it what it Is. are the English. But the men who are breeding its future citizens and masters are the Dutch! The English men there are line fellows; they are doing excellent general work; I like and admire them. But as settlers they are hopelessly behind the Boer farmers whom I met. because they have very small families, and most of them do not look on the country as their permanent home. Of ten set tlers of eafch nationality, the ten Englishmen will be the leading men in the present life of the colony; but the most of them are looking forward to going “home," as they call it, to — England; only three or four of them will be married, and those will among, them have only five or six children. The ten Boers think of Africa as their home; each is married, and almost every one has a good-sised. probably a large, family; and. unless condi tions change, the future is theirs, so far as the white race in that part of Africa ia conceded.—Theodore Roosevelt, In the Outlook. Superstition Just Plain Fear. But superstition is plain fear with out any cause, and is utterly demoralis ing. If a man is afraid to overeat it makes him healthy; If he is afraid of ghosts it makes him a foot If he is afraid to lie or do a mean act it pro ouces growth and makes him more manly; if he is afraid to be happy or to leave the house in the morning starting off with his left foot instead of his right it stnnts his manhood and j makes him childish. Ready for Duty r -. » Personal Exploits in the Great Civil War, Told by Veterans 4 I; AMOUS examples of ' courage under arms j are usually those dis played in some des- j perate sortie or some . very spirited, if brief. | action. The courage j demanded to face imminent danger for days or weeks without faltering. I though less celebrated, is certainly of ■ as high an order. It was courage ; such as this which made possible the 1 long, tedious siege of Petersburg, per- ' baps the most trying campaign in its way of the entire war. The life be hind the bombproofs is vividly re called by J. H. Campbell. “We were for three months under continuous fire. Our position was well within range of the enemy, who kept up their fire almost without cessa tion. “There are a number of bombproofs j and a series of sheltered roads con- j necting them, so that we could pass from one to another. It Is one thing to make a charge or meet one, but quite another to work day after day, night after night, and not know what instant will be your last One gets accustomed to anything, and curiously enough one of the greatest dangers was that we would grow so familiar with our danger that we would ignore it Familiarity breeds contempt for : bursting shells and sharpshooters, as ! for anything else, bat to relax for a moment and step for an instant be t yond the shelter might cost one his ! life." EjTTj'll AT the battle of Lookout Mountain a Xew York regiment was in tthe front rank and contributed greatly in determining the issue. The work of the 215th New York in this ' famous engagement is by no means as i familiar as it should be. James i Schmidling. who fought in this regi ment, now the commander of J. L. Riker Post, and who incidentally fought in seventeen pitched battles, in recalling the fight above the clouds, said: “Our regiment was early on the scene, and this promptness had an important effect on the fortunes of the day. The battle, it will be remem bered, was fought above the clouds. Now, in fighting, the position of the troops at the beginning often decides the battle in advance. Since this bat tle was fought practically on a moun tain top. on very high ground, the troops holding an elevated position naturally had an immense advantage. Our regiment held an important van tage point, but we were ahead of the main army and faced a force vastly superior in numbers. It was a ques tion of hours before our reinforce ments could come in. I think every' man realized what depended upon us. We lost heavily, but we held our ground until the main army arrived, On the Mississippi THE most continuous fighting in the navy during the war was probably encountered by the smaller boats engaged in keeping the lower Mississippi open to Union ex peditions. The river was of course well supplied with forts, many of them very powerful ones, but the banks were in addition lined almost continuously with small guns, cannon and sharpshooters. Charles Just, com mander of Rowles Post, New York, who spent the greater part of the war in this region, in recalling these days, said: "We didn’t so much mind the forts, although they were bad enough, as the bushwhackers. Any southerner with a gun or a pistol could fire at us with comparative safety from the shore trees and bushes. As a result there was a continuous peppering of shots from off shore day and night. One was never safe for an instant. The bullets raked our decks from sev eral quarters at once, no matter what our position. They used minie balls and occasionally they would bring up a nine-pound howitzer. When they got too hot we would try to dislodge them with our cannon and, failing this, we would go ashore and chase them, but they always came back. “In our patrol we had of course to pass the forts, when we would be raked by their heavier guns. We seemed to be always in trouble. With both sides of the river against us, we would sometimes be raked by a cross fire from two or more forts at the same time. Even on the quietest day oae was afraid to show himself on deck, for the minie balls would cut us down when we least expected them. I was a soldier before the war, having served in the Crimea I had been cap tured by the British and spent six months in a tread mill jail in London, but those minie balls were the most insidious danger I have ever met.” As Galsworthy Saw Life. The wtsdom of John Galsworthy: Like flies caught among the impal pable and smoky threads of cobwebs, so men struggle In the webs of their own natures, giving here a start, there a pitiful small jerking, long sustained, and falling into stillness. “Bloc d 7 Angle" THE most deadly battle of tbe en tire war, Pickett’s famous charge, is recalled by scores of soldiers. One of these veterans, who was wounded on the third day at Gettys burg. J. B. Block, of the Sumner Post, New York, carried the bullet he re ceived until very recently. “We stood behind Pickett's charge," said he. “It is a matter of history, of course, how frightful the loss was. Later, when we came to count the coet, we found, as all the world knows, that some of our regiments had lost 75 per cent, of all the men who went into the fight. I am told that there is no such loss recorded elsewhere in military history. "The fighting at ‘Bloody Angle’ beg gars description. In any ordinary bat tle, even a lively one, you may see a man drop from time to time, and in a desperate charge the ground may be, as the saying is, covered with the dead and wounded. But that is an exaggeration. After a hard battle I have seen bodies scattered pretty thickly, but the ground was not tit etally covered. But after Bloody An gle It would have been impossible to exaggerate the awful loss. Some regi ments were reduced to a mere hand ful of men. Many of the companies were practically wiped out of exist ence. Imagine the most fatal rail road wreck, when scarcely any one succeeds in escaping from the cars, and you will have some idea of the appearance of our regiments. 1 went through the three days unhurt, but on the last of the third day a bullet caught me in the leg. I carried that bullet for 40 years until a bad fall made it necessary to extract it," Indian Tribes Amalgamate. Students of the Indian tell us taat while the numbers of the red men are diminishing there is a slow amalga mation of the tribes wherever their geographical location makes this pos sible. It is supposed that there were 1,000.000 Indians on this continent when the Europeans settled here. In 1885 a government report showed an Indian population of 350,000. and It is estimated that the present population is SO.OOO less. I REPATRIATED. HE HAD $400X0 IN CASH IN 1903; NOW WORTH $8,000X0. My parents were originally Cana dians from Essex County, Ontario. I was born in Monroe County, Michigan, from -which place I moved to Red Lake Falls, Minnesota, where I farmed for 22 years. I sold my farm there in the summer of 1903 and in September of that year came to Canada with my wife and eight children. I had about $400 in cash, team of horses, a cow, a few sheep and some chickens. I took up a quarter section of land near Jack Fish Lake, Meota P. O.. and later on purchased for $2,000X0 an adjoining quarter section. I have now 48 head of cattle, a number of horses, good buildings and consider my holding is worth at least $8,000.00. My children have raised from $300 to $500 worth of garden truck each year since we have been here. I have never had a poor crop and have never had on# frosted. My wheat has averaged from 25 to 30 bushels per acre with one or two years considerably mor . My ] oats have always yielded well up to 50 bushels per acre and once or twice as high as 85. My cattle have never been stabled in winter, and do not need it. I consider that this country offers bet ter opportunities for settlers than any where I have ever been. I am sura ; that almost any person can come here and buy land at say $15.00 per acre and pay for it in one crop. My ex perience is that if a man farms his land in the right way he is not likely to have his crop frosted. Most of the settlers in my district are Americans and Canadians and I know lots of them who came here with little or no capital who are now do ing well, but I do not know of any who have left through disappointment, or becoming discouraged, have returned ! to their former homes. EUGENE JUBINVILLE. There are many whose experience ; is similar to that of Mr. Jubinville. | Secure Canadian Government litera : ture from nearest Canadian Govern ment Agent, and see for yourself. — What Mamma Said. When the new minister, a hand some and unmarried man, made his first pastoral call at the Fosdicks, he took little Anna up in his arms and tried to kiss her. But the child re fused to be kissed; she struggled loose and ran off into the next room, where her mother was putting a few finishing touches to her adornment be fore going into the drawing room to greet the clergyman. “Mamma,” the little girl whispered, ‘the man in the drawing room wanted me to kiss him.” “Well," replied mamma, “why didn’t fou let him? I would if I were you.” Thereupon Anna ran back into the drawing room and the minister asked: "Well, little lady, won't you kiss me now?" ? “No, I won't," replied Anna prompt ly, “but mamma says she will.”—Ex change. Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done In a “manner to enhance their textile beau ty. Home laundering would be equal ly satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at the improved appearance of your work. “When a Wife Is Cruel.” The husband rushed into the room where his wife was sitting. “My dear,” said he, excitedly. “Guess what! Intelligence has just reached me—” The wife gave a jump at this point, rushed to her husband, and, kissing him fervently, interrupted with: “Well, thank heaven, Harry!” * Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria With One Exception. Harduppe—Every man should mar ry. Everything 1 have in the world I owe to my wife. Wigwag—Don’t forget that ten spot you owe me —Philadelphia Record. If constipation is present, the liver sluggish, take Garfield Tea; it is mild in action and never loses its potency. Hardly anything can make such a fool of a man as side whiskers for him to be proud of. Lewis Single Binder, extra quality to bacco, costs more than other 5c cigars. Don't let your money bum a hole in some other fellow’s pocket. When the digestive system needs toning and strengthening take the Bitters promptly. It does the work. Try a bottle today. |8RMHB|9niRELItF rOR 1 J imaknuva wc«k ■^MMiBaaHliiMHsoRc eves