The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 06, 1913, Image 7

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    LISTENING
TO AN INAUGURAL ADDRESS.
EES GF OTHER
Incidents That Marked the Day
in Former Years.
WASHINGTON'S OATH-TAKING
New York Scene of His Induction—
Story of Jefferson's Simplicity a
Myth—“People's Day” When
Jackson Took Office.
By E. W. PICKARD.
Woodrow Wilson is the twenty-sev
enth man to be inaugurated president
lot the United States, but the twenty- j
.fifth to be inaugurated in Washington.
George Washington took the oath of
ioffiee in New York and John Adams
|in Philadelphia. Moreover, the Fa
ther of His Country was not inaugu
rated on March 4.
Arriving at Elizabethtown Point,
iN. J.. on April 23, he entered a barge
rowed by 12 pilots clad in white,
and passed through the Kill von Kull
into New York harbor, which was full
of all manner of craft gaily decorated
and loaded with cheering crowds. The
Spanish man of war Galveston broke
out the colors of all nations, and
fired a salute of 13 guns, to which the
American frigate North Carolina re
sponded.
Arrival at New York.
As Washington stepped ashore at
Murray’s wharf the guns of the Bat
tery roared out their salute and Gov.
George Clinton and many members of
congress saluted the first president.
He was taken to the residence of
Samuel Osgood, and for an entire
week there was revelry throughout
the city.
Finally, on April 30, all was ready
for the inauguration. Washington
was escorted to Federal hall, then
the capitol, which stood on the site of
the present sub-treasury at Wall and
Broad streets. The streets had been
filled since sunrise with waiting
crowds, and the enthusiasm was in
tense. In the senate chamber Wash
ington was joined by Adams, Knox,
Hamilton, von Steuben and a few oth
ers, and all of them appeared on the
balcony. Robert R. Livingston, chan
cellor of New York, administered the
oath and cried “Long live George
Washington, president of the United
States,” whereupon there broke out
a mighty tumult of cheering, bell-ring
ing and the noise of cannon. Re
turning to the senate chamber. Pres
ident Washington read his inaugural
address and the history of the
United States under the constitu
tion began.
Myth About Jefferson.
If you are a good Democrat, no
doubt you believe that Thomas Jeffer
son rode unattended to the capitol on
horseback, tied his horse to the
fence, and was inaugurated with less
ceremony than would attend the tak
ing of office by a keeper of a dog
pound. Such is the old story, but it
is pure myth and is first found in
a book of travels in the United
States written by John Davis, an Eng
lishman. Davis asserted that he was
an eye-witness of the simple ceremony
which he described, but it has been
proved that he was not in Wash
ington at the time.
The inauguration of Jefferson, which
marked the defeat of the Federalist
party of Hamilton, Washington,
Adams and Jay, was the first to take
place in Washington. The newly es
tablished national capital, then but
a few months old, contained only 3,000
inhabitants, many of them negroes;
the houses were mostly huts and the
streets muddy roads. The big event
was thus described in the Philadelphia
Aurora 'Of March 11; 1801:
“At an early hour on Wednesday,
March 4, the city of Washington pre
sented a spectacle of uncommon ani
mation occasioned by the addition to
its usual population of a large body
of citizens from the adjacent districts.
A discharge from the company of
Washington artillery ushered in the
day, and about one o’clock the Alex
andria company of riflemen w'ith the
company of artillery paraded in front
of the President’s lodgings. At 12
o’clock Thomas Jefferson, attended by
a number of his fellow citizens, among
whom were many members of con
gress, repaired to tbe capitol. His
dress was, as usual, that of a plain
citizen, without any distinctive badge
of office. He entered the capitol un
der a discharge from the artillery. As
soon as he withdrew a discharge from
the artillery was made. The remain
der of the day was devoted to pur
poses of festivity, and at night there
was a pretty general illumination.”
Jackson Almost Mobbed.
When Andrew Jackson was elected
in the fall of 1828 the people of the
west and the radical elements of the
south scored a triumph and he was
hailed as a “man of the people.” This
character was emphasized on the day
of his inauguration the following
March, for never before had such a
huge motley throng gathered in Wash
ington. Jackson's wife had died not j
long before, and he asked that the j
ceremonies be made very simple, but j
the masses were too hilarious to heed |
the request. The weather was pleas- j
ant and the east front of the capitol j
was used for the first time for the in
auguration. In front of it surged J
10,000 persons who were restrained !
only by a great iron chain. Jackson
rode to the capitol on a white horse
and went through the ceremonies with
dignity, and started back to the White
House. Then began his troubles, for
the people broke loose with a ven
geance.
“The president was literally pursued
by a motley concourse of people, rid
ing, running, helter-skelter, striving
who should first gain admittance into
the executive mansion, where it was
understood that refreshments would
be distributed,” wrote a contempo
rary, Mrs. Samuel Harrison Smith. In
their mad rush the crowds smashed
furniture and dishes and seized the
food as if they were starving. “The
confusion became more and more al
palling. At one moment the presi
dent, who had retreated until he was
pressed against the wall of the apart
ment, could only be secured against
serious danger by a number of gen
tlemen linking arms and forming
themselves into a barrier. It was
then that the windows were thrown
open, and the living throng found an
outlet. It was the people’s day, the
people's president, and the people
would rule.”
Exposure Killed Harrison.
For 12 years the Democrats con
trolled the destinies of the country,
and then the Whigs elected William
Henry Harrison, who was inaugurated
March 4, 1841. By this time trans
portation was made easier by the
building of railways and the crowd
that flocked to Washington was im
mense. It was much better behaved
than that which "honored” Jackson,
but it was hungry for offices.
Cold, wintry blasts swept the streets
of Washington that March day, and
Harrison, already old and rather
feeble, rode his white horse without
cloak or overcoat, and with his hat
off in salute to the cheering crowds.
The line of march was unprecedent
edly long, and so was the inaugural
address, and then the president led
the procession back to the White
House. The exposure was too much for
him and within one month he was
dead.
Lincoln's First Inauguration.
Immensely dramatic was the first
inauguration of Abraham Lincoln in
1861. From the day of his election
threats against his life were numer
ous, and detectives discovered and
foiled an organized plot to assassinate
him on his way to Washington. The
big bodies of troops that had been
employed at former inaugurations
merely to add pomp to the occasion
now were used for the protection of
the president. As ' he rode to the
capitol in a carriage he was preceded
by a company of sappers and miners;
a double file of cavalry rode on each
side, and in the rear were infantry
and riflemen. On house tops and in
windows all along Pennsylvania ave
nue were posted riflemen.
The day had opened cloudy, chilly
and dismal, but as the president step
ped forward to take the oath from
the aged Chief Justice Taney the sun
burst through the clouds and shone
full on the bowed head of the man
who was to give up his life for the
country he loved. Lincoln himself
noticed this “sunburst” and drew
from it a happy augury.
In Recent Years.
The inaugurations of Cleveland and
Roosevelt are too recent to need tell
ing. To the former the Democrats
flocked in tremendous numbers. Wash
ington entertained 100,000 visitors
that day, and 25,000 persons march
ed in the parade. Colonel Roosevelt's
inauguration attracted another im
mense throng, and was made espe
cially picturesque by the Rough
Riders and other Spanish war vet
erans who appeared in the proces
sion.
If one wishes to stir the wrath of
the "weather man” in Washington, it
is only necessary to mention March
4, 1909, when William Howard Taft
was inducted into the office of presi
dent. Every preparation had been
made for an imposing ceremonial and
parade, but the entire affair was spoil
ed by a fierce blizzard and snowstorm
that swept over the national capital.
The weather bureau was caught nap
ping, and gave no smallest hint of the
coming storm. The parade was held,
after a fashion, but the ceremony of
inaugurating the president had to be
transferred from the front of the cap
itol to the senate chamber, where but
few could gain admittance to witness
them. The weather bureau will not
hear the last of that fiasco in th*s
generation.
New President Reviews Immense
Inaugural Procession.
AVENUE A GLORIOUS SIGHT
aeneral Wood, Grand Marshal—Vet
erans, National Guard and Civil
ians in Line—Indians Add
Touch of Picturesque.
By EDWARD B. CLARK.
, Washington, March 4. — Woodrow
Wilson, as ex-president of Princeton,
rode down Pennsylvania avenue to
day, and later rode up the same ave
nue as president of the United States,
and as the highest officer of govern
ment a few minutes thereafter re
viewed the multitudes of soldiers and
civilians which, with playing bands
and flying flags, marched by to gite
him proper official and personal honor.
For several nights Pennsylvania ave
nue has been a glory of light. Today
it was a glory of color, movement and
music. There are 300,000 inhabitants
of the city of Washington. Its tem
porary population is nearer the half
million mark. The absentees from the
flanking lines of the parade were most
ly the policemen, who were given or
ders to protect the temporarily vacat
ed residences of the capital.
Woodrow Wilson asked that “Jeffer
sonian simplicity" be observed in all
things which had to do with his in
auguration. The command for Jeffer
sonian simplicity seems to be suscep
tible to elastic construction. There
was nothing savoring of courts or roy
alty, but there was evidence in plenty
that the American people love uni
forms and all kinds of display which
can find a place within the limits of
democratic definition. It was a good
parade and a great occasion generally.
Throngs Vociferous With Joy.
The inhibition of the inaugural ball
and of the planned public reception at
the capitol had no effect as a bar to
the attendance at this ceremony of
changing presidents. Masses were here
to see, and other masses w ere here to
march. There was a greater demon
stration w hile the procession was pass
ing than there was four years ago.
Victory had come to a party which
had known nothing like victory for a
good many years. The joy of posses
Washington. The West Point cadets
and the midshipmen from the naval
academy at Annapolis, competent be
yond other corps in manual and in
evolution, the future generals and ad
mirals of the army, had place in the
first division.
All branches of the army service
were represented in the body of regu
lars—engineers, artillery, cavalry, in
fantry and signal corps. The sailors
and marines from half a dozen battle
ships rolled along smartly in the wake
of their landsmen brethren.
The National Guard division follow
ed the division of regulars. It was
commanded by Brig. Gen. Albert L.
Mills, United States army, who wore
the medal of honor given him for con
spicuous personal gallantry at the bat
tle of San Juan hill. General Mills is
the chief of the militia division of the
United States war department.
The entire National Guard of New
Jersey was in line, and Pennsylvania.
Massachusetts, Maryland, Virginia,
Georgia, Maine and North Carolina 1
were represented by bodies of civilian j
soldiers. Cadets from many of the
private and state military schools of
the country had a place in the militia
division. Among them were boys from
the Virginia Military institute, the Cul
ver Military Academy of Indiana, the
Carlisle school, Purdue university, the
Citadel cadets and the Georgia Mili
tary academy.
Veterans and Civilians.
The third division of the parade was
composed of Grand Army of the Re
public veterans, members of the Union
Veteran league and of the Spanish
war organizations. Gen. James E.
Stuart of Chicago, a veteran of both
the Civil and the Spanish wars, was
in command.
Robert N. Harper, chief marshal of
the civic forces, commanded the fourth
division. Under his charge were po
litical organizations from all parts of
the country, among them being Tam
many, represented by 2,000 of its
braves, and Democratic clubs from
Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, Balti- i
more and other cities.
They put the American Indians into
the civilian division. The fact that
they were in war paint and feathers i
helped out in picturesqueness and did i
nothing to disturb the peace. Mem
bers of the United Hunt Clubs of
America rode in this division. Their
pink coats and their high hats ap
parently were not thought to jai
“Jeffersonian simplicity” from its
seat. Pink coats were worn on the
hunting field in Jefferson's day and in
Jefferson’s state.
There were 1,000 Princeton students
in the civic section of the parade.
1 Many of them wore orange and black
Escorting the President-Elect to White House at a Previous Inauguration.
sion found expression in steady and
abundantly noisy acclaim.
President ■ Taft and President-elect
Wilson were escorted down the ave
nue by the National Guard troop of
cavalry of Essex county, New Jersey.
The carriage in which rode Vice
President-elect Marshall and Presi
dent pro tempore Bacon of the United
States senate was surrounded by the
members of the Black Horse troop of
the Culver Military academy of Indi
ana. This is the first time in the his
tory of inaugural ceremonies that a
guard of honor has escorted a vice
| president to the scene of his oath tak
I ing.
Parade a Monster Affair.
The military and the civil parade, a
huge affair which stretched its
length for miles along the Washington
streets, formed on the avenues radiat
ing from the capitol. After President
elect Wilson had become President
Wilson and Vice-President-elect Mar
shall had become Vice-President
Marshall, they went straightway from
the capitol to the White House and
thence shortly to the reviewing stand
in the park at the mansion's front.
The parade, with Maj. Gen. Leonard
Wood, United States army, as its
grand marshal, started from the capi
tol grounds to move along the avenue
to the White House, where it was to
pass in review. The trumpeter sound
ed "forward march" at the instant the
signal was flashed from the White
house that in fifteen minutes the new
ly elected president and commander
in-chief of the armies and navies of
the United States would be ready to
review “l»is troops.”
It was thought that the parade might
lack some of the picturesque features
which particularly appealed to the
people on former occasions. There
were Indians and rough riders here
not only when Roosevelt was inaugu
rated. but when he went out of office
and was succeeded by William H.
Taft. The parade, however, in honor
of Mr. Wilson seemed to be pictur
esque enough in its features to appeal
to the multitudes. They certainly
made noise enough over it.
The procession was in divisions,
with General Wood as the grand
marshal of the whole affair and hav
ing a place at its head. The display,
in the words invariably used on like
occasions, was “impressive and bril
liant.”
Regulars in First Division.
The regulars jf the country's two
armed service naturally had the right
of way. Maj. Gen. W. W. Wother
spoon, Vnited States army, was in
command of the first division, in
which marched the soldiers and sailors
and marines from the posts and the
navy yards within a day's ride of
sweaters and they were somewhat
noisy though perfectly proper. Stu
dents from seventeen other colleges
and universities were among the
marchers.
There was music enough for any
democratic occasion. The judicious
distribution of the bands prevented
the clashing of tunes. There were
fifty bands in line, but only one of
them, the Marine band, was allowed to
play “hail to the Chief,” a tune which
every band on an occasion like this
hitherto has insisted on playing almost
incessantly, to the routing of every
thing else known to the composers of
the past.
Spectators Cheer Constantly.
All along Pennsylvania avenue, from
the capitol to a point four block be
yond the White House, the spectators
were massed in lines ten deep. The
cheering was constant and Woodrow
Wilson cannot complain that the cere
monies attending his induetion into
office were not accompanied by ap
parently heartfelt acclaim of the peo
ple over whom he is to rule for at
least four years.
Every window in every building on
Pennsylvania avenue which is not oc
cupied for office purposes was rented
weeks ago for a good round sum of
money. Every room overlooking the
marching parade was taken by as
many spectators as cound find a vant
age point from which to peer through
the window panes. The roofs of the
buildings were covered with persons
willing to stand for hours in a March
day to see the wonders of the inaugu
ral parade, and many of them partic
ularly glad of an opportunity to go
home and to say that after many years
waiting they had seen a Democratic
president inaugurated.
The parade passed the reviewing
stand of President Wilson, who stood
uncovered while the marchers saluted.
When the last organization had
marched by dusk was coming down.
The hundreds of thousands of electric
lamps were lighted and Washington
at night became along its main thor
oughfare as bright as Washington at
day. The loss of the attraction of the
inaugural ball was compensated for
by the finest display of fireworks, it is
said, this city has ever known.
Live Baby as Football.
A dozen boys playing football with
a pasteboard box in a vacant lot in
Brooklyn sat down to rest after an
hour’s play. "That’s a funny-looking
box,’’ said one of them. “Let’s sec
what's inside.” They untied the
strings. A four-days-old baby boy,
naked and to all appearance dead,
rolled to the ground. A policeman
took it to a hospital. Half an hour
later it was crying lustily. It will
probably live.—New York Sun.
"Every Picture
TellJ a Story. ”
1
Straighten That Lame Back!
Backache is one of Nature's warnings of kidney weakness. Kidney disease
kills thousands every year. Safety is only certain if the early warnings are heeded
while help is possible. Doan's Kidney Pills have helped many thousands to get
rid of backache, strengthen weak kidneys and regulate bladder and urinary disorders.
Don't neglect a bad back. If your back is
lame ir. the morning, if it hurts to stoop or lift,
if the dull aching keeps up all day, making work
a burden and rest impossible—suspect the kid
neys. If the urine is off color and shows a sedi
ment: if passages are irregular, too frequent,
too scanty, or scalding, this is further proof.
There may be dizzy spells, headaches,
nervousness, dropsy swellings, rheumatic
attacks, and a general tired-out, run-down
condition.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills, the remedy that is
publicly recommended by 100,000 persons in
many different lands. Doan’s act quickly, con
tain no harmful nor habit-forming drugs and are
wholly harmless, though remarkably effective.
Cared After Doctors Gave Up Hope
H. R. Hatch, 2316 Cedar St., Everett, Wash., says:
"I doubt if sr.y one ever suffered more than 1 did with
kidney complaint. My hack was so bad I could hardly
walk. The least jar or mis-step, caused twinges that
fairly made me groan. 1 dreaded to stoop, for I knew
what I had to suffer when I had to straighten up
again. There was generally a frequent desire to
urinate, but at other times the secretions were re
tarded, dark in color, almost like blood and pained
terrible in passing. The doctors said I had but a
short time to live. As a last resort I began to use
Doan's Kidney Pills and rapidly grew better, and at
last was completely cured. 1 have remained in good
health ever since.”
When your back hurts, when your kidneys trouble you, when
you feel tired, worn-out or depressed, don 7 simply ask for a
kidney remedy—ask distinctly for Doan’s Kidney Pills,
the same that cured Mr. Hatch, and make >are the name
DOAN’S is on the box.
44 When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name”
DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS
At all Dealers or by Mail. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
SHE WASNT SKEPTICAL.
“Mebbv youse wouldn’t berlieve it,
ma'am, but I come uv purty good
Btock.”
“Oh! I don’t doubt it. Anyone can
see that it has never been watered’’
ECZEMA IN RED BLOTCHES
205 Kaoter Ave., Detroit. Mich.—
“Some time last summer I was taken
with eczema. It began in my hair
first with red blotches, then scaly,
spreading to my face. The blotches
were red on my face, dry and scaly,
not large; on my scalp they were
larger, some scabby. They came on
my hands. The inside of my hands
were all little lumps as though full of
shot about one-sixteenth of an inch
under the skin. Then they went to
the outside and between and all over
my fingers. It also began on the bot
toms of my feet and the calves of my
legs, and itch, oh, my! I never had
anything like it and hope I never will
again. The itching was terrible. My
hands got so I could scarcely work.
"I tried different eczema ointments
but without results. 1 also took medi
cine for it but it did no good. I saw
the advertisement for a sample of
Cuticura Ointment and Soap and sent
for one. They did me so much good
I bought some more, using them as
per directions, and in about three
weeks I was well again. Cuticura Soap
and Ointment entirely cured me.”
(Signed) Benj. Passage, Apr. 8, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
post-card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”
Adv.
A woman with bulging ankles seems
more afraid of having them seen than
one without them is of a hole in -her
stocking.
To Women
Do Not Delay
/lf you are convinced that
your sickness is because of
some derangement or dis
ease distinctly feminine,
you ought at once bring
to your aid
Dr. Fierce’s Favorite Prescription
It acts directly on the
organs affected and tones
the entire system.
Ask Yout Druggist
DIDN'T PROVE AN EXCEPTION
Photographer Thought He Was Going
to Escape Ancient Joke, but It
Was Not to Be.
“That fellow who just went out of
here after having his photograph tak
en is a marvel,” remarked a pho
tographer to a bystanding friend. "I've
a great mind to give him that set of
a dozen cabinet size free."
“What's his special point?" asked
the friend.
“Why, there've been in this studio,
since 1 started some years ago, aboui
1S7.00C and some sitters," went on the
photographer. “And out of that num
ber that fellow just now is the only
one who hasn't said to me with a
grin as I posed him, 'Look out, or 1 11
break your camera!’ I’ve begun to
look upon it as an essential part of
taking a photograph and if I didn’t
hear it at the right time I do believe
I'd unconsciously wait for it before 1
snapped the shutter. Hut that fellow
didn't say a word; just stood up there
and got snapped like it was a—”
“Say. partner,” interrupted a voice
from the door, which just then opened
and admitted the head of the lately
departed customer, “say, I hope I
didn't break that there camera of
jours."
Politeness Ignored.
A Virginia farmer was driving a re
fractory cow down the road one morn
ing. The cow and the driver came to
a crossroad. The man wanted the
cow to go straight ahead, but the cow
picked out the crossroad.
A negro was coming along the cross
road.
"Haid her off! Haid her off!” yelled
the driver.
The negro jumped about the road
and waved his arms. The cow pro
ceeded calmly on her way.
“Haid her off! Haid her off, nigger!"
yelled the driver.
“Ise a-tryin’ ter!” replied the negro
“Speak to her! Speak to her and
she’ll stop!”
“Good mawnin', cow—good mawn
in'!” said the negro politely.
Nervousness Explained.
The young man entered the presi
dent's office and stood first on one
foot and then on the other. He
dropped his hat, handkerchief and um
brella. Altogether he was a highly
developed case of nervousness.
“Well, well,” said the employer.
“Out with it!”
"1 have come, sir,” said the young
man. and then began to stammer.
“Well, speak up. Have you come
to ask for the hand of my daughter
or a raise in salary?”
“If you please, sir,” stammered the
young man, “it's both.”—Exchange.
Too Well Known.
Have you a speaking acquaintance
with the woman who lives next door
to you?" we asked an east end lady,
just to make a little conversation.
“A speaking acquaintance?" echoed
the lady, opening her eyes wide.
"Why, I know her so well that I don't
speak to her at all!”
While the season’s always open for
fortune hunting, few of the hunters
are good shots.
An Ear for Music.
“What is that tune your daughter
is playing?”
“Which daughter?” asked Mrs.
Cumrox. “If it is the older girl it's
Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody, and if
it’s the younger one it's Exercise
Twenty-seven.”
Winner.
“Did you get any of that bargain
ribbon?”
“Yes,” answered the college girt
proudly. "I bucked the line for ten
yards.”—Purple Cow.
Just as Good.
Thirsty Girl—Bring me a hot lemon*
ade.
Innkeeper—Haven't any, miss, but
the beer is warm.—Fliegende Blaet
ter.
Daily Thought.
. Be calm in arguing; for fierceness
makes error a fault, and truth discour
tesy.—George Herbert.
FILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DATS
Yorrdruggist will refund money if PaZO olNT
MKNT fails to curt* any case of Itching, Hliud,
Bleeding or Protruding Piles In 6 to 14 days Ufc.
It isn't always the most attractive
woman who attracts the most atten
tion.
LEWIS’ Single Binder costs more than
other 5c cigars. Made of extra ijual.ly
tobacco. Adv.
In some circles men are like pianos
—if square they are considered old
fashioned.
No thoughtful person uses liquid blue. It’s a
pinch of blue In a large bottle of water. Ask for
lied Cross Hall Blue, the blue that’s all blue. Ads
It's the easiest thing in the world
to instruct another how to do things.
CONSTIPATION
. IUNYONIS
paw-paw
PILLS
(g“
Munyon's Taw-Paw
Pillsare unlike anoth
er laxative: or cathar
tics. They coax the
liver into activity by
gentle methods, they
do cot scour; they do
not gripe; they do not
weaken; but they do
start all the secretions
of the liver ana stom
ach in a way that soon
puts these organs in a
healthy condition and
corrects constipation. Munyon's Paw-Paw
Pills are a tonic to the stomach, liver and
nerves. They invigorate instead of weaken;
they enrich the blood instead of impover
ishing it; they enable the stomach to get all
the nourishment from food that is put into
iL Price 25 cents. All Druggists.
The Man Who Put the .
E E s in F E E T
Look for This Trade-Mark Tio
ture on the Label when buying
ALLEN S F00T=EASE
The Antiseptic Powder for Ten.
Trade-Mark. dcr, Achine Feet. Sold every, i
where, 25c. Sample FRER. Address,
ALLEN S. OLMSTED, Le Boy, N. Y. I
GALL
STONES Home Remedy (NO OIL)
Bind Stomach Misery. Send CBrP
— for 66 page Liyer-Gall Book ■ ■*££
GrnlUtone Reaiedj t«., Dept. 4«tf, 219 S. DeArbora 8t., ( hlr.ja
Pettits Eye Salve
TONIC
FOR EYES
W. N. U„ OMAHA, NO. 10-1913.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colon than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers.. They dye water better than any other dye. You can
dye any garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG COMPANY, Quincy, |||.