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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1912)
MIGHTY HITTERS OF BOSTON RED SOX AND NEW YORK GIANTS e* •mm'*£- *• ' «« ■ '• - •* 4 • -: \ T • > i '•* ' '• right—Stahl. Hooper. Gardner. Speaker Krug. Wagner. Yerkes. P* > • * • ' ght- Doyle. Meyers. Herzog Murray. Snodgrass. .Merkle and 3ERGER IS Finn OF SEASON > o- LifMK PtomtO or «r>|ft«e h.mw t Tr.ran^n *Var ett Line «fl First Game, <*a» of 'be |’rt'r»i ftftttdt ol the 'mm. a* 'hr ( h tnwtt of Wiacotiata •As fare'll I d• t >r(rr !u the flrat itlrtjrr (a»r hr pJoaed or trtalrd < • (ft thfokfi the rarsttv line at • ifi * The a. it. av «e ■ . <agna!, who is ■ 'Urt rasa ter part of Otto rStangel. stied the ■ attract tun for the uoteca afaa gathered at fatap Rat: m’J t« match tb» prartsre Time after • me he shat through bole* :u tbe '»!••'« litre for big gattta, hie most perfariilar hcrfurtiiaaee being a TT and gain 'hro -gb right tackle with aif of the 'pa .a trjtug to stop h:m A L3jli Berger minute later and he again wormed his >«:> through the forward wall tor nine atds carrying the ball within strife sg flsuarr of the goal It s as then, now ever, that the sm who were se erred to pun'liMn on the first eleven -seed aad buried bark three assaults eat at then t»> the scrub barfefleld oods heutg i-naiii nailed in bis rack# as he tried loft tackle for the so .ard» necessary tor a score Lose «g P teoer*. .many fsssd of the ('lira team is he leading fsirter of the Xew York ■date league fur the season having <soa :» games and lost hat five Na dr of Qain is also sell up. having sad IS aad lost t so 1‘appalau of fro* msmrd a winner ti times, but .fruppod ten games Friei whom 'ierasim t*roed over to Albany for a iTrbrr has 5» frtsrm to his credit •ad ***** si« base* Itecaaniere and * i'sltrf of the Karoos joined the team *i«te ta the rare, and each won sit xaa.es with hut one toss e»ch. Buck if f'ttea sun 51 and lost 14 Mallet if f'tica come* neat s-th 1C victories «nd It reverses *•" »«d Hai Some Shot Putter The great nai »lM-pinrr. \lrk under Rl-pk Roe i-iwnbe* u the Ml befit man to the *orld and a 'WOT »Kh tbe weight* The Fiiin -'and* « few* t :eeber 4*. rbest and * *ery fntle staatoeh. his waist mots tthsrsl being 3d \« blander gare tsfk Kro and MdhJttaid. the Anm *a» rewapetkiars -a the Oil topic games at Merkholm. the fight of their lire* tia tbr too hkiidrd shoe put and It was aeir hr lathes that Mrlmrtld took m>«4 place frum the Finn. A Treat for the Spectators The lireshlya National league dab’s res grandstand is equipped sith a ■etepbooe traMk apparatus, whereby ■h* apartaturs are kspt informed of the tiBh of the hatters numfjer of tttfhsp and balls and changes in posl t lasts of the players OB the teams Manatee Is Defeated Hocstoe. the **sners of the Texas Vague pet-naat. payed a post season .erte* gat Meats moot the tai!-eaders sad ft iokwk! woe 0 CUBS MAKE RACE EXCITING j Cnc»;o Team Prevented Giar.ts From Making Farce Out of National League Contest. * lore of the National league season ' 1 caused little excitement. Had it not t-et. for the Chicago Cubs the strug gle w.iuid have been the worst the •rgamcat.on has had in many sasons. The New York Giants, w inners of the j flag, set out to make a farce out of it and would have done so had uot the j' ubs stopped them for a while and | prevented them from cinching the pennant until September. For a time c appeared as If Chicago would over take the Gothamites, but the latter. !risen desperately by their manager. John McGraa. held their ground and I * ventually won with ease Frotn the opening of the season un ; til close to June 1 the race promised to be evcitit g Hank t)'I>ay stood out ; like a great manager during that time, as the Cincinnati Beds were on top. Hut the ex umpire’s greatness soon '«ded alien the Ked slowly dropped j bark to the second division Johnny ! K1:•*s also had the Bostons near the top a' th« s*art. h.it the lirst division teams became too s'rong and Boston fell bat k to its ri stutnarv jiosition — { last The Pittsburg Pirates were power ful t.-’.til July 1. when they fell into a lefts rat at.d slid hack to make way for the Cubs It was then that the latter began their straggle to shove the tliatit* oat of first place. The National league rare became inter esting and for days the baseball world was ’a!!. : g of the wonderful flirt of Vanager < "nance's men It continued until September I. when the strain prated too great for the < bs and they lost their grip, drop !• e back to third place, finishing :h*-r« for the first time since 1905. >• --..Mi. • nisi: was the same as this This is the fourth pennant M<-t;raw has won and he is tied with Krauk Chance of the Cubs There were few changes in ihe-line ups this season Boston and Brook Ijr* are the only clubs which rear ranged their batt.ng order frequently, hoping to add strength Johnny Kling d.«1 ai! m his power to bring Boston p higuer in the race, but the material i e possessed was unable to respond i !e has bad enough of the managing end. according to reports, and will re tire from the game O'Day did con siderably 1 tetter than was expected, tut he was able to accomplish this owing to the good ball players on his roster They say Terre Haute wants Mor dt-cai Brown as a manager Many coaches would like to get ! > agg s recipe for developing punters. , Isn't it a relief to get to read a lit- * tie football dope after being surfeited with baseball? It is to be presumed that you have a perfectly good line oti ail the big foot ball teams now I: is said that more titan half the crib* in the International league will 1 HidiaUK' i f* John Paul Jones, the phenomenal I i Cornell runner, has been made presi : dent of the senior class fiddle Harlan, the former Princeton J star, is coaching the John? Hopkins | 1'nlversi'y squad in Baltimore Any writer who imagines bis words ’itfiuence the belief of the average fan has plenty of time to think agaiu. Tenney, who scored Brown's touch ' j down against Harvard last year, is a member of the Brown team again this ! ear After a careful inspection of mate i rial on band Coach Stagg thinks high ly of the Maroon 1912 football pros pect* Baseball players have formed a fra | ternltr. One of the highest rites of ! the order is the thirty-third degree of | umpire baiting Mathewson. Ames and Wiltae are j 'he only members of the present ! Hiatus' squad who took part in the j world's series of 1906. The squad o. candidates for the • Michigan football team is said to be . ; small, as compared to the other big ! schools this year TACKLES MUST BEAR BRUN' Survey of Football Rules Leads to Be lief Game Will Be Close Cousin to That of 1J09. Walter Camp's latest variety of fool ball rules has beeu accused of be in, everything from a return to the oh eat 'em alive mass play rules to beini a slight modification, which will hav< little effect on the style of play. Act ually. a survey of the new footbal laws leads to the belief that the ganv that will develop under them will be ; close cousin to that played in 1909, ai invitation to the tackles to stand u] and be killed, l-ast year's rule favored the defense to such an exten that scoring was almost impossible and fluky in the extreme It appear that in their effort to strengthen thi offense, the rulemakers have gone t< the other boundary and that scorinj this year is likely to be enormous. The mass play died when pullin' and pushing a man through the lint Walter Camp. was abolished. Rut the tackle now will have to stand the shock of hi: opponent forward, and then of a-heavy man bent on making two or three yards. He will not. in all probability get much help from the secondary de fense. To weaken the defensive back line unduly will be simply an invita tion to the offense to work the now unrestricted forward pass to it: heart's content. The situation will be much the same as Yost faced when Notre Dame beai Michigan and which, later in the same year, he compelled Pennsylvania te meet. The threat of the forward pas: was always there, but the play itsei1 was no great factor in the scoring lustead. the first defense was simply battered down by "straight football.' while the backs waited helplessly foi the forward pass that didn't come. •— -t Bat Made of Concrete. Some genius is trying to put a con crele bat on the market. He claim: that it is no heavier than a hardwood bat. and drives the ball much farther According to the laws of the game the hat must be made of wood, so thal the statutes would have to be al tered before the stone stick could bf utilized. The game, right now, doesn’l need a bat that will drive the ball any farther, but more batsmen who car drive the ball with the bats in current use if they ever get bats that will hit 'em farther, the games- at Roston Chicago and New York National League parks will be nothing but pa rades of home runs. Burkett Still Can Hit. Jesse Rurkett. who is managing th« Worcester team of the New England league, can still show many of the coll players how to perform in the na tional pastime. He has a batiing aver age of .399 for 16 games and has field ■d 1.0<H). accepting 17 chances without an error. Rurkett. a score of years ago. was one of the leading batsmen of the country. In 1S92 he hit .372 and in the succeeding 11 seasons he continued to hit .300. In three o! these years he registered over .400. Two Champions to Quit. The retirement from track athletics of two well-known champions is an nounced. They are Simon P Gillis who won many titles for the New Vork Athletic club, and Roy Borland, the 300-yard champion of America Both will engage in business in for cign countries. Gillis in Spain and Doriand in Brazil. The Passing of a Ballplayer. Of the warriors who battled in the world’s series of 1903 between Boston tnd Pittsburg only three remain in ’ast company. These are Fred Clarke. Hans Wagner and Tommy Leach. Women Careless? Ask at the Hote i . j « »T was the afternoon hour ' when the corridors of the i (f *i m Waldorf-Astoria are usually j crowded with women. livery one of the restaurants was A>g \ filled, and the tables had ^ ** overflowed into the oak room and the foyers. A continuous j stream of femininity came in at theen i trance on the Thirty third street side ■ nearest Fifth avenue, hurried through 1 the tunnel" leading to the foyer, turn ! 'n*° Peacock alley, progressed slowly and gla cially through it to the office, turn ed to the left, coursed past the office deck, con scious more or less of the male loiterers standing and sit ting about, hur ried through the oak room, tnen up the Thirty third street corri dor. either to find acquaintances or perhaps seats, or . else to start again on the same tour. A woman hur ried up to the lost and found j section of the of i.--r -af -^rt- r the trash collect or doesn't work on that holiday, and what had been in the waste basket was now in a big bin be low stairs, six feet deep by twelve feet long. With a cham bermaid and a porter the mans uw uro&. out* uriu 11* a uirsu ; handbag. 1 "I saw a woman who had this bag ; n her hand sit down if the corridor.'" ‘ she said. "She got up a few minutes - 'ater and went away, leaving it. I I bought she might return, so I kept s ray eyes on it for a while; but now i ♦ have got to go. and as she has not i come back 1 thought I had better turn » ;he bag in to you.” > A few minutes later another worn *n came up to the same piace and ask ?d whether anything had been beard • ’ of a feather boa. which she w as sure somebody had stolen After a search he clerk produced the hoa and she went out of the hotel. Fifteen minutes afterward a taxi cab driver entered and turned in at the office a feather boa which he said t fare front the hotel had left in the cab. To the clerk it looked familiar. He examined it carefully. It was the same boa that had been claimed only 4 quarter of an hour before. Only a few minutes had passed when t third woman rushed up She asked the clerk to please to tell the hotel detectives or the police or the newspa pers. or somebody, to find a valuable fur muff which had been stolen from her. She was positive she had left t in her room The clerk listened at tentively to her description. Then he ducked under the counter and sol emnly handed her the muff "'Why. where did you get this?” she demanded. "It was picked up in the corridor, madam.” was the reply. She signed her name to the receipt book and then we it away in the same haste she had come When the clerk looked up from the book he found she had left her pocket book on the counter. The rewards giv»n by women, and men. too. to tnose wno have return ad lost property are sometimes as tonishingly small Two women who were occupying an apartment in an exclusive hotel went away to spend the Christmas holidays One got back the day before the other. When she entered the bedroom she was amazed to see lying on the dressing table a diamond bar pin belonging to her friend. It contained la jewels, and was worth several thousand dollars. She was going away from town that same day and simply enclosed the pin, together with a note, in an envelope. >nd left the latter on the dressing ta ble. The ne.xt morning the other woman ; j showed up. The day after that she . sent a hurry call downstairs for the manager. "Oh this is tragic!" she exclaimed when the latter entered her room. “My diamond bar pin is gone. It was stolen. 1 am sure, and you must have the chambermaid arrested. The manager looked at her. She answered his questions impatiently, but they drew from her the informa tion that when she entered her bed room the day before she had found a note on the dressing table from her friend, but she was in such a hurry to dress for dinner that she had thrown it aside; and yes. she admitted after some hesitation, it was iwssible It might have fallen over into the waste basket that stood near. The chambermaid had straightened . up the apartment that morning, and ! under ordinary circumstances the con tents of the waste basket would by this time have been on their way to 'he city incinerating plant. But it happened to be New Years day, and 5"* oeiooK niniseir to me oaseraeui. and stood by while the two took out the refuse, piece oy piece, from the bin. After a solid hour's work, the porter found an envelope, from which be took the missing pin. The owner of it gave him one dollar. Somewhat similar was the case of another woman at a different hotel, who on the night before she v»5 due to sail for Europe came down to the desk in great excitement. Her valu able pearl necklace was gone. She had wrapped it. she said, during the rooming in tissue paper, preparatory to packing it. and must have left it on the bureau To the manager the idea of the tis sue paper suggested the waste bas ket. The contents of the waste has been taken to the cellar and had been compressed with other refuse into a 250 pound bale. There was but one thing to do. and that was to examine this bale. The manager and the steward set themselves at the task. Piece by piece the paper was removed, but at the end of almost three hours not a sign of the neck lace had appeared. The day after the departure of the steamer the manager received a letter from the voyager, sent ashore by the pilot. "I am so sorry to have given you so much trouble." it read. "1 have found the necklace in my trunk." A woman from Washington, who al ways travels with a lot of diamonds, arrived one night at a New York ho tel unaccompanied by the maid, who usually traveled with her About half past nine o'clock the next morning she came downstairs breathless. "1 want those doors locked and no body permitted to leavh this budd ing." she cried. "Mv chamois *v»g. >n w hich ! carry all my jewels, is g.cv.e. and I want all the help searched. When I went to bed last night I la!d the bag under a piece of crumpled newspaper in a corner of this shelf in the closet." Are you sure that after all you did not put it in your trunk*" sug gested the manager. The woman was indignant at the idea, and demanded that police head quarters be communicated with in stantly. When the central office de tective reached the hotel the mana ger called him aside, explaining the situation, and advised him to insist upon the woman opening the trunk. Ten minutes later the sleuth came downstairs grinning. "The bag was where you said it was. ad right." he said to the man ager. An engagement ring figured in a theft charge at a Fifth avenue hotel. A young woman who had been out shopping entered the hotel breath lessly one morning and hurried to her room. In a very short time she was downstairs again, with a demand upon the manager that he have the cham bermaid arrested She said that her engagement ring, which had cost $600 had been stolen from her room and as the chamber maid was the only person who had access to the room, she simply knew the woman had it. She was so positive in her state ment that the manager immediately telephoned to the nearest police sta tion for a plain clothes man. The chambermaid had been in the hotel many years, and was well thought of. A few questions convinced the detec tive of her innocence. Then he put some questions to the woman who had lost the ring. i i>he was indignant, but finally re membered that she had put the ring, together with four others, into her pocketbook that morning before breakfast. The purse she had left . on her dressing table when she went downstairs to breakfast. That must have been the chance the chatuber maid took, for when later in the morti j i[ig she opened her purse in a de partment store to pay for some pur chases the engagement ring was miss ing. She insisted that the detective arrest the chambermaid. The sleuth refused, and decided to | make a thorough examination of the i i room, in spite of the young lady's pro- ‘ tests. At one end of the dressing ta ble. on the fioor. stood a pair of high , shoes The detective picked one up. I and turned it upside down. Out roll J ed the missing solitaire ring. Appar ently when its owner had swept the 1 five rings together to put them into . her purse, the solitaire had rolled off 1 the table. Th*y looked for to express at | least .some gratification over the re jcovery of the trinket; but no. she was so enraged over her mistake that she made no amends to the chambermaid she had accused and did not even thank the detective. Somewhat similar in its outcome was the experience of a woman front Washington. She arrived at a hotel in a fashionable district one night about nine o'clock, and her first or der was for a pitcher of ice water. A ! bellboy took it up and placed it on a table in he rsitting room. The 'next morning she called up the manager in a condition bordering on hysteria, and informed him 1 that a big marquise ring containing 32 diamonds was missing. The only person who had been in the room be sides herself was a bellboy, and she remembered that before the bellboy entered her sitting room she had taken off her ring and placed it on the table while she was washing her hands. The bellboy bore a good record. Aft er a search of the room he was put through the third degree. He con vinced the manager of his innocence. The next day. just as she was about ! to leave the hotel, he woman came in j to the manager. i i very wiucn mortinea, sne said. "1 found me . Ing just now as ; 1 went to pack my trunk. “I left Use . window open the other night and the wind must hare blown the curtain so that it swept across the table and took the ring with 1L A pair of rub bers was standing by the side of the table, and when I went to pack them in my trunk just now the ring roll- j -d out of one of them.” American Fruit Consumpton. Statistice for 1909 show that the apple crop of the United States was ! worth $*3,000.On. peaches $28,000,000, grapes $22,OoO.OOO. and strawberries i 170.000. oranges reaching the same Urge figures. The people of the Uni ted States consumed $10,000,000 of plums and prunes, $7,000,000 of pears and cherries and $5,000,000 of the rasp berry. —. One of the curious features of this producUon of fruit has been the less ening of the apple crop, which in the past decade, with a growing pupula tion. has decreased from 175,000,000 tc ' 150,000,000 barrels. On the other hand, the production of tropical fruits in ; continental United States has about trebled In the same time, and ten times as many pineapples are grown . now zs were produced ten years ago Gen. Booth Died a Poor Man. General William Booth, who mad* the SalvaUon army the great organ ization that it is, died poor. His per senal estate amounted to only $2.44c aside from a fund of $26,475 whict was setUed on him for his privatt use. General Booth never drew ot the army funds for his support or ex penses. Special Marks for Lightning Nowhere else do the electrical dis i charges of the atmosphere assume so intense and terrifying a character as on the summits of high mountains i.ast August the laboratory of the So ciety of Observatories, built on the summit of Mont Blanc, was struck by lightning, with fatal results to ot?e of its occupants. This building is of wood, roofed with sheets of copper, and is not provided with lightning rods It 1 was practically buried in snow at the i time of the disaster. The famous Janssen observatory on Mont Blanc was repeatedly struck, although it bore numerous lightning rods, connect ed by cables to some rocks a few hun dred feet distant. This building was of wood and was built on the snow. The effects of the lightning were ex traordinary and appalling; the metal . tableware was frequently melted or ! perforated; the bolts and nuta ir. th* walls were melted; the woodwcrt charred; the metal cap of the largt telescope was pierced with holes In Gotham. "Old Dubble isn’t givtng big eontri buttons tor the foreign mtssious thii year.” "N'o; he’s been losing money.” “How’s that?” “They’ve been publishing a list ot the places ite owns he’s been rentinj to, professional gamblers." Bees Hold Freight Train Bees, each of whom seemed to have nly a single thought, to sting as one. 1 roved themselves mightier than the ! rain crew of a Great N’orthern mixed reight and passenger train between Minneapolis and Hutchinson recently, .nd there are persons scattered at sta tions from Crystal Bay to Hutchinson jcho are wondering why their baggage jr freight did not arrive. When the rain started from Minneapolis there were ten hives of bees consigned to Rev. Francis Jaeger at St. Bonifacius, Minn. By the time the bees got to Crystal Bay three of th“ hives were smashed, and as a result no feight was left there, and the car door was closed with a ten-foot pole. At Minnetonka Beach a policeman was asked to restrain the bees from inter fering with interstate commerce, but he -flunked" on the jcb. Father Jae ger now has his bees at St. Bonita j cius, but is waiting until their tern pers improve before unloading them and tbi car—with all the rest of the freight—will stand on the sidetrack for some time. The Consistency. I The face of nature is an appropri i ate one, is it not?" I “How do you mean?" “In it, do you not notice that the : brow of the hill is always placed above the mt-iiih of a stream?" GOT RICH IN THREE YEARS SXPER'ENCES OF A BRITISH IM MIGRANT IN CANADA-WEST. The following straightforward state ment needs no comment to add to its force and effect. It appears in a recent issue of the Liverpool Mer cury. H. Patterson, of Xutana, Saskatche wan, Canada, when he arrived from Liverpool, had "Six of us to support." to use hik own phraseology, and his funds were getting low. He secured a homestead 32 miles out from Sun durn, and started living on it April 15, 1907. The previous fall he put ail his money. $137, into a shack and lot, making sure of a home. As cook and caterer in a local hotel he made $75 a month, and out of this had some savings out of which he paid his breaking and improvements on the homestead. The shack was sold to good advantage. Then Mr. Patterson tells the story after he had removed his family to the homestead: “For the first month life was so strange and new that I hadn'*; to think of anything, only fixing up our new home. 1 was so ‘green' to farm life that I didn't know the difference between wheat and oats (I do now)! Between working out. cropping my place, and with my gun, we managed to live comfortably for the three years, which time was required to put in my duties. I had accumulated quite a stock of horses, cows, pigs, fowls, and machinery in the three years. “In October, 1909. I secured my pat ent to my land, so took a few days’ holidays to Saskatoon to locate a purchased homestead (viz.. 12s. per acre) from the Government. Instead of getting the purchased homestead, I secured a half section (320 acres I on the Saskatchewan River for $25 per acre on easy terms, nine years' payments with a cash payment of $1,000. I mortgaged my first home stead. obtained chattel mortgages on my stock, and on December 24th, 1909. tooK possession: on June 10, 1910, I sold out again for $40 per acre, clearing, besides my crop (140 acres!, $4.S00. I also sold my first home stead, clearing $1,800 and two Saska toon town lots, which we value at $1,000 each today. We placed all our capital in another farm (river front age i and some trackage lots (601, also a purchased homestead (river front age!. I remained as Manager of the Farm I had sold on a three years’ contract at a fine salary and house, garden, and numerous privileges. "So by the time my three years have expired, with my investments and the increased value of my frontage and lots, I am hoping to have a clear profit on my $137 investment of $50,000. My land doesn't eat any thing, and it is nearly all paid for. I hold a good position (and securd"— Adv. Talk With Shakespeare. "But. BUI,” says Shakespeare’s friend, "I’ll be bodkinized if 1 see the sense in that song Ophelia sings, nor why you put the song in there for her anyhow." "When you’ve been in the show game as long as I have." replies Shakespeare, still a bit excited over the first performance of “Hamlet,’’ “you'll know that v\heu the producer wants a song in a scene, the song goes in. Besides this girl that’s play ing Ophelia was a hit in musical comedy, and the manager argued that the public expected to hear her sing somewhere in the piece. Let's go over to the Mermaid aud buy driuks for the critics." Safe Betting. Little Andrew had been repeatedly urged to hasten his dressing Sudden ly he knelt, crossed and clasped his hands like a pictured angel and voic ed this earnest petition: “Oh. God. don't let me dawdle. Ob, God, keep me from dawdling. But if you want to, ch. (rod. make my mother reconciled to my being slow!” "There, mamma." he exclaimed, ris ing. "I've done my best, haven't I? ’Cause, if God chooses to keep me from dawdling he will, and if he don’t I can’t help it. But." with a sudden, joyous energy. "I'll bet you a dollar I’ll be just as slow tomorrow as My day." A Mistaken Idea. “The storm caused me a great deal of suffering by breaking all tb- win dows in my house." “Why. I always understood that breaking windows was a nerfectly pane-less operation." Mrs. Winslow's Soothir.ff Syrup for Chilrtrri tetri bin:;, softens the (rums, rt-ducrw mMamma tinn. allays pain, carets wind colic.a bottle AdT A preachment by any other name would be quite as uu wanted. BAD BACKS DO MAKE WORK HARD Backache makes the daily toil, for thousands, an agony hard to endure. Many of these poor sufferers have kidney trouble and don't know it. Swollen, aching kidneys usually go hand in hand with irregular kidney action, headache, dizziness, nervous ness and despondency. When suffering so. try Doan's Kid ney Pills, the best-recomr- nded kidney remedy. Here’s an Oregon Casa L. Bo nney, Eu gene. ore . says: k ‘I con traded se- w vere kidney f trouble through t heavy lifting, j There w as a V steady ache | across the small ■ of my back, and pains i>ke knife thrnsts shot through me. “Doan's Kid- I ney Pills cured I after doctors I failed, and now my back Is 6ironc*r than before in years. “ Get Doan’s at Any Drue Store, 50c a Box DOAN’S VA"«V FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. rijtasBiEsiiniEsarih ^nimrrrTiunTfli