Western news-Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1898-1900, October 20, 1899, Image 3

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    25c Sample Bottle lOc , for the next 3O days.
How Long Have You
Suffered With
How Long Have Yon Read About " 5 Drops" Wilton ! Taking Ttei ?
Do you not think you have wasted precious time find suffered
enough ? If so , then try the " 5 Drops" and be promptly and per-
nrmentlv cured of your afflictions. " 5 Drops" is a speedy and
Sure Cure for Rheumatism , Neuralgia , Sciatica , Lmmbu-
got [ lame back ] . Kidney Diseases , Asthma , Hay-Fever ,
Dyspepsia , Catarrh of all kinds , Broncnitis , Lia Grippe ,
Headache , Nervous or Neuralgic , Heart Weakness , Dropsy ,
[ Earache , Spasmodic and Catarrhal Croup , Toothache , N > r-
TRADE voiiHness , Sleeplessness , Creeping Numbness , Malaria ,
and kindred diseases. " 5 Drops" has cured more people during the past four years , of
the above named diseases , than all other remedies known , and in case of Rheumatism
Is curing more than all the doctors , patent medicines , electric belts and batteries com
bined , for they cannot cure Chronic Rheumatism. Therefore waste no more valuable
time and mpnc-y longer , buttry " 5 Drops" and be promptly CUBED. " 5Drops" is not
only the best medicine , but it is the cheapest , for a $1.00 bottle contains ROD doses. Price
per bottle $1.00. prepaid by mail or express , or 6 bottles for $5.00. 'For the next 80 days
we.will send a 26c sample FREE to any one sending 10 cents to pay for the mailing.
Agents wanted. Write to-day.
SWAWSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO. , I6O-I64 E. Lake Street CHICAGO.
PROFIT BY LOSS.
The Bank of ISiizland Makes Money in
This Way.
It is a fact , that to many minds , no
doubt must be very curious , that the
Bank of England has always had a
pretty steady source of profit in the
loss and destruction of its bank notes.
IWhat it has gained of late years iu this
way we are unable to say , but during a
period of forty years preceding 1832 ,
the bank had made a clear profit of
1,330,000 from outstanding paper
never likely to be presented for pay
ment. When the destruction or the
Irrecoverable loss of a note can be
proved , as in the event of a fire or a
wreck it can , the bank , of course , will
always pay the money it represents ;
and even when there is doubt about
It , the cash is paid on security being
given fdr indemnifying the bank should
the note ever be presented.
Many years ago a bank director lost
a note for 30,000. But being a man
of credit , and ns there was no doubt
about the loss of the bill , ho gave the
usual indemnity and got the money.
Many years after , when the man had
long been dead , the paper was present
ed. It was payable on demand , and
had come from abroad in the ordinary
way of business , and the sum it rep
resented had to be handed over , and
ns the indemnity that had been given
was repudiated by the heirs of the man
who had given it , and for some reason
could not be enforced , the bank on
that occasion had to put 30,000 on the
debit side of the account. For once in
n way they paid double honor to a bit
of their own paper.
There isanother story of a sum of
20,000 which the bank in its early days
for a short time refused to hand over
In exchange for its own notes. They
were presented by a .Tew. whose asser
tion that he had bought th'em was not
disputed , and whose personal integrity
was above suspicion. They had , how
ever , undoubtedly been stolen , and on
that ground the bank refused to pay
the money. The Jew went out into the
city , and began to spread it abroad that
the bank was shaky , and couldn't cash
its notes , and as he backed his asser
tion by displaying his indisputable pa
per , the assertion would in 'all proba
bility soon have caused a run on the
bank , and in a few minutes a messen
ger came to say that the notes would
be cashed if li would present them
again. London News.
Mormons l osinjj Xo Time.
Mormon missions have been estab
lished in the Philippines.
MAN'S LUNG SPRUNG A LEAK.
That la Why the Cleveland Ilackmaa
Was t-o Grently Swelled.
It is not often that a thin man be
comes alarmingly obese within twenty-
four hours. This , however , was the
experience of Martin McIIugh , who is
a hack driver and lives at 21G Hamil
ton street. Wednesday morning he
was too small for his clothes. Several
hours later he had a pronounced "bay
window , " his hands , feet , legs aud
arms were twice their natural size and
his cheeks assumed rotund proportions
that surprised the members of his fam
ily.
ily.He
He did not stop here , but continued
to grow big. finally being compelled
to discard his clothing and take to a
bed. Dr. D. B. Steuer was called. He
said it was evident that McHugh's
lungs were leaking. This , according to
when it was ; een that with each breath
the rotund portions rose and fell.
In speaking of the curious case Dr.
Steuer said last night : "McHugh was
injured Wednesday morning by being
struck with the thill of a wagon. He
felt no immediate effects , but was
obliged to go home later in the day.
Every portion of his body seemed to
nche. He then commenced to bloat ,
his body swelling to twice its natural
size. When called in by the family I
saw at once that one of the man's lunga
had been injured and was leaking air.
With Dr. N. Stone Scott I decided on
an operation. The body was punct
ured. The air came out with alarm
ing force. The disabled lung was then
laid bare. It had been injured , a
splinter having probably entered the
casing. The wound was cleaned and
the lung carefully sewed. From last
reports the patient was doing nicely
and will 30011 be at his old stand.1
Cleveland Leader.
A Valuable Pet.
A Minnesota man captured a king
fisher when it was young , made a pet of
It , and trained the bird to capture fish
and lay them at its master's feet. In
summer the bird is taken to the river ,
where fish are known to abound , and
set at liberty. It poises in the air , and
suddenly dropping , grasps its victim
and promptly delivers the fish to its'
master.
-alety in Flight.
Larry was on the witness stand.
"Xow , witness , " began the judge ,
"where were you when the prisoner be
gan shooting into the crowd ? "
"Within a hundred fate , yer Honor. "
"Then you were a bystander ? "
"Xo , ser ; Oi didn't stand a minute ;
Oi run loike th' wind. "
CAP ABLE mother must be a healthy mother.
A The experience of maternity shouldnot be approached
without careful physical preparation.
' Correct and practical counsel is what the expectantand would-
be mother needs and this counsel she can secure without cost by
voting to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn , Mass.
MRS. CORA GILSON , Yates , Manistee
Co. , Mich. , writes :
" DEAR MRS. PINKHAM Two years ago
I began having such dull , heavy , drag
ging pains in my back , menses were pro
fuse and painful and was troubled with
leucorrhcea. I took patent medicines
and consulted a physician , but received no benefit and could
not become pregnant.
"Seeing one of your books , I wrote to you telling you
my troubles and asking for advice. You an
swered my letter promptly and I followed
the directions faithfully , and derived so
much benefit that I cannot praise
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound enough. I now find myself
pregnant and have begun its
use again. I cannot praise it
enough. "
MRS. PERLEY MOULTON , Cj-
Thetford , Vt. , writes :
DEAR MRS. PINKHAM
I think Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound is an
excellent medicine. I took
several bottles of it before
the birth of my baby and
got along nicely. I had no
after-pains and am now
strong and enjoying good
health. Baby is also fat and
healthy. "
MRS. CHAS. GERBIG , 304.
South Monroe St. , Balti
more , Md. , write's : "DEAR
MRS. PINKHAM Before tak
ing Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound I was
unable to become pregnant ; but since I have used it my
health is much improved , and I have a. big baby boy , the joy
and pride of our home. "
"Forbid a Fool a Thing and
* That He Will Do. "
Don't Use
iJ
PIEST BLOOD IS SHED.
FIFTEEN BRITISH SOLDIERS ARE
SLAIN BY BOERS.
AnTArmored Train Jo .Destroyed Near
JVIafekinjr Victors Shell the "Wreck
age Formal Declaration of "War lu
Made-United States Is Notified.
A dispatch from Cipe : Town , Africa
says that a British armored train from
Mafeldug was blown up and destroyed by
the Boers at Vryhurg Thursday evening.
Fifteen British soldiers were- killed and
the first blood of the war shed. The
Boers shelled the wreckage after the
train was derailed. Vrylwrj ? is midway
between Kimherley and Mafi'kiug on the
cape government railroad , which skirts
the whole western frontier of the Trans
vaal and Orange Free State. War was
declared Wednesday by the South Af
rican republic , the formal declaration go
ing into effect at 10 o'clock Thursday
Ilaving determined to act on the in
itiative the moment the time specitieJ in
their ultimatum should expire , the Boors
crossed the Natal border Thursday , thus
committing a distinct act of war. The
campaign now begun may have far-reach
ing consequences. The British may be
driven out of South Africa , or the Boers
may be reduced to their old position as
a British dependency. The former re
sult would be but the beginning of the
dismemberment of the British empire.
President Kruger erred in judgment
when he refused to permit his burghers
I.IEUT. GKX. AV111TK ,
Who Is to Command the JJritisli Forces in Natal.
to raid Natal three weeks ajro. Then
they might have swept through the col
ony without iiHH'h opposition. Now the
British forces have been jrreatly strength
ened by the arrival of troops from India ,
and the task of reducing fortified towns ,
defended by experienced soldiers , is cer
tain to prove tedious if not impossible.
As long -as the British remain on the
defensive , as seems to be their policy , the
Boers may occupy the famous Laing's
Nek , wipe out the 100 iiieu of the naval
brigade at Estcourt. destroy bridges and
damage railroads , as reported by cable ,
but their object , the conquest of South
Africa , will be as far away as ever. On
the other hand , " if the British troops at
present in the colonies of South Africa
hold their own until the army corps from
England reach the cape the prospect of
an ultimate Boer victory is very doubt
ful. Real danger threatens British Be-
chuanalaud , where , in Mafeking , Col.
Baden-Powell , with a slender command ,
is awaiting probable extinction at the
hands of Commander Cronje and his
4,000 burghers. Such a move would
strengthen the Boers' cause , secure na
tive allies and perhaps induce a Dutch
revolt in Cape Colony. All this may by
accomplished , and yet the real campaign
awaits the arrival of the .10,000 British
soldiers under the leadership of strateg
ical masters , whose wits and numbers
are supposed to be a match for the na
tive craft and courage of the warlike
Boer. '
Sympathy is largely with the Boers ,
aud the nations of Europe are loud in
their denunciations of Great Britain , hut
academical expressions of jrood will add
nothing to the Transvaal chance of sue1
cess.
United States Notified.
The State Department at Washington
was notified on Friday of the withdrawal
from Pretoria of Conynjrham Greene , the
British diplomatic agent to the South Af
rican Republic , and the existence of a
state of war between Great Britain and 1
that republic , ilr. Mucrum , the Ameri
can consul at Pretoria , has accordingly
been instructed to undertake the care of
the British interests iu that section dur
ing the war. The notification came to the
State Department in the shape of a note
from Mr. Tower , the charge of the Brit
ish embassy there. The details of the
transfer of British interests in case of I
war had been previously arranged , so
that all that was necessary was the dis
patch of a brief cablegram to Mr. Mac-
rum at Pretoria.
There is no present intention at the
State Department to issue a proclama-
tipn of neplrality. It has come to be
the custom to omit these proclamations
until some emergency arises calling for
their issue , and such an emergency is
? iot expected to occur in South Africa.
TO TRAP AGUINALDO ,
i
liawtou and Mac Arthur Plariniun to C
Move North of 3Ianiliu I
While Gen. Sclnvan is ensured in scattering - J
tering the Filipinos in Cavite province , d
Gens. Lawton and Mat-Arthur are maky
ing preparations for an important moveg
mi'iit to the north of Manila. Gens.
MacArthur and Lawton will proceed to
the north in the hope of trapping Agui-
naldo and Ins forces in between the three
columns. Gen. Schwan's movement to
the southward of Manila is merely in the
nature of a demonstration for the pur
pose of scattering the insurgents who
have intrenched themselves in Cavite
province , the home of Aguinaldo and the
nest of the rebellion.
Gen. Young entered Arayat Thursday
morning , after half an hour's lighting.
Maj. Bachelor's battalion of the Twenty-
fourth ( colored ) infantry charged o'JO
insurgents , who retreated in the direction
of Magalang. The American loss was
one man slightly wounded. Four of the
enemy were killed. Gen. Schwan's col
umn , which has been operating south of
Manila , is resting at Perez Dasmarinas ,
after a fatiguing but unmolested march
through submerged rice fields from Sau
Francisco de Malabon. Two hundred and
fifty insurgents evacuated Terez Dasniaf ]
rinas before the Americans
THE USEFUL BICYCLE.
It Haa Taken a Distinctive Place in
the Social Economy.
There io a quite general belief In
this country that bicycling is dimin
ishing rather than increasing , but it
5s doubtful if the number of bicycles
in actual use is not larger to-day than
ever before. There has been a shift
ing in the classes of people who use
them. Many who took up the exercise
as a "fad , " or because of its novelty ,
/have abaudoned it for golf or other
sport ; but at the same time a new and
larger class of riders , induced mainly
by the advent of the cheap bicycle , has
arisen , to more than make good the
deficiency. So it is the world over , ap
parently , for at a recent international
cyclists' congress in London thirteen
different nations were represented , and
their deliberations were considered of
sufficient importance to entitle them
to a leading article in the London
Times , in which many interesting state
ments concerning the popularity and
social influence of the bicycle were
made among them that about oue
huudred members of Parliament be
long to a cyclists' club.
In its reflections on the subject the
Times called attention to the share
which the cyclist is to have in the work
of the world as well as in its amuse
ments , saying : "The fact that almost
every one can at small cost travel
three or four times as fast and as far
as before is already producing great
industrial changes , and others must
follow , iu town and elsewhere. The
country doctor begins to make his
rounds , the rector his visits , the tax
gatherer his demands , by means of the
cycle. Tlfe tradesman takes his or
ders and executes them by means of
the modern shoes of swiftness. They
are now the mainstay of many a coun
try house. The clerk or workman
reaches his suburban house , except in
bad weather , on wheels. Not a few
things go more smoothly now that they
go on wheels. We are only at the be
ginning of considerable economic and
social changes , all ascribable to the
ubiquitous 'safety , ' which has already
done more for the workingman since
its introduction than legislation and
philanthropy combined during the
same period. It is hard to say where
its influence ends. " New York Even
ing Post.
MEASURING LIGHTNING.
Hovr ITumboldt Struck oa the JFnl-
Kiirite Idea.
It is Jiot generally known that many
i
flashes of lightning not ouly measure
themselves but actually manufacture
the recorder by which they are defined.
When a bolt of lightning strikes a bed
of saud it plunges downward into the
sand for a distance less or greater ,
transforming simultaneously into glass
the silica in the material through
which it passes. Thus , by its great heat ,
it forms a glass tube of precisely its
own size. Now and then such a tube
known as "fulgurite" is found and dug
up. Fulgurites have been followed into
the saud by excavation for nearly thir
ty feet. They vary in interior diameter
from the size of a quill to three inches
or more , according to the "bore" of the
flash.
Fulgurites are found also iu solid
rock , though very naturally of slight
depth , and frequently existing merely
as a thin , glassy coating on the surface.
Such fulgurites occur in astonishing
abundance on the summit of Little
Ararat in Armenia. The rock is soft
and so porous that blocks a foot long
can be obtained , perforated in all direc
tions by little tubes filled with bottle-
green glass formed from the fused
rock. There is a small specimen iu the
national ] museum Avhich has the ap
pearance ] of having been bored by the
toredo. 1 and the holes made by the
worm subsequently filled with glass.
Some wonderful fulgurites were found
by Huuiboldt , on the high Nevada de
Toluca , in Mexico. Masses of the rock : <
were covered with a thin layer of green I <
'
glass. Its peculiar shimmer in the sun <
led Hmnboldt to ascned the precipitous j <
peak , at the risk of his life. <
Tommy's Gentle Hint. <
"Father , " asked Tommy the other I <
day , "why is it that the boy is said to ! <
be the father of the man ? "
Mr. Tompkius had never given this <
subject any thought , and was hardly
prepared to answer offhand.
"Why , why , " he said stumblingly ,
"it's so because it is , I suppose. "
"Well , pop , since I'm your father , I'm
going to give you a ticket to the theater
and half a dollar besides. I always said
that if I was a father I wouldn't be so .
stingy as the rest of them are. Go in , |
pop , and have a good time while you're !
young. I never had any chance myself - \
self ! " j
Mr. Tompkins gazed iu blank aston- j <
ishraent ; at Tommy. Slowly the significance - i
cance of the hint dawned upon him. i
Producing a silver dollar , he said : i
"Take it , Thomas. When you really i
do become a father I hope it won't be !
your misfortune to have a son who is I
smarter than yourself. " i
Luck. '
"There's no use talking , " said the
man who was on the piazza looking over 1
his hotel bill , "Rip Van Winkle failed < !
to apreciate his luck. " 1
"Luck ! " <
"Yes. Fancy a man's being allowed
to stay twenty years in the mountains <
without it's costing him a cent ! " 1
Washington Star. ,
Sick headache. Food doesn't di
gest well , appetite poor , bowels con
stipated , tongue coated. It's your
liver ! Ayer's Pills are liver pills ,
easy and safe. They cure dyspep
sia , biliousness. 25c. All Druggists.
Want your moustache or beard a beautiful
brown or rich black ? Then use
i BUCKINGHAM'S DYE tirh&s
60 era , or PRUCGIITS. on . P. HALL A Co. NUMUA. N. H.
* * l < ta * * * h * * * * * * * * * * ' " * * * * * rf l * W * * i
A Fitting Simile.
"I told Smithers I thought he had a
model wife. "
"I suppose that pleased him. "
"Well , I dou't know. He said he had
found to his expense that she was
feud of being a model for her dress
maker. " Philadelphia Bulletin.
Guilty.
She I think it was your friend
Graspitt who gave currency to the
rumor.
He You evidently don't know Grasp
itt. He never gave currency to any
thing in his life. Why , it would break
his heart to even give up a nickel.
Paris Publications.
There are now published in Paris
2,585 periodicals , nearly 100 more than
were issued at the corresponding date
last year.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Brorao Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund the money if it fails to cure.
25c. E. "W. Grove's signature is on each box.
A broad-minded man , in the opinion
of the street loafer , is one who always
has the price of a drink to loan.
Hall's Catarrh Cure
Is a constitutional cure. Price 75 cents.
Half of life is hope , but half of hope
isn't life hope is good as an JncentlvCj
but not as a reality.
Piso's Cure for Consumption is the only
cough medicine used in my house. D. C.
Albright , MifiHubunr. Pa. . Dec. 11. ' 95.
Don't run into debt as long as you
can find anything else to run into.
- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
FITS Permanently Cured. No fits or nervousness
after first day's us of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Re
storer. Send for FKRES2.00 trial bottle anil treatise.
DB. K. H. KLINE , Ltd. . 931 Arch bt. . Philadelphia. Pa.
Sloth makes all things difficult , but
industry all things easy. Franklin.
Danger Ahead Signalled by n Conga is averted with
Hnle's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Of Druggists.
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure iu one Minute.
Don't .imagine that the hotel-runner
'
runs the hotel.
Mrs. Window's SOOTHING STROP inr Children
teething : softens the sums , reduces inflammation ,
allays paiu , cures wind colic. 23 cents a bottle.
A few men are as good as their
wives.
LOCAL
and
CLIMATIC
Nothing but a local
remedy or change of cli
mate will cure
CATARRH.
Tbe specific is
Ely's Cream Balm
It is quickly Absorbed.
Gives Relief at once.
Opens and cleanses the
Nasal Passages.
Allays Inflammation.
Heals and Protects the
Membrane. Hestores the Senses of Taste and Smell.
No Mercnry , No Injurious dru . Regular Size , 50
cents ; Family Size. $1.00 at Druggists or by mail.
ELY BROTHERS , 56 Warren Street , New York.
Nation of
There no - remains only one pcoplo-
and one little valley south of the equa-
I tor whose sovereignty has not - been-
i claimed by some European power. It
is the valley of Barotsc , fifty or sixty
miles wide , north of Lialun. In South-
! Africa. And the only reason why thaI -
I Marotse. who inhabit it , have preserved-
I their independence is that England and-
Portugal both claim It , and therefore-
the work of "civilization" is at a stand
still.
It may not be so easy to conquer tho-
Marotse when the time comes , 'or they
are a tall , well-set-up race , very blaclc
in skin. In manners they are very-
courteous and in bearing dignified. Ev
ery full-blooded Marotse is by birthright -
right a king , and takes his place in the-
aristocracy of the empire. In fact , as
every one is king , there is no head ruler.
The bare fact that he is a Marotse In
sures the respect of the subservient :
tribes , and as he grows to manhood a <
sense of superiority usually implants la
the native the dignity of self-respect *
All the labor is done by slaves \vb -
have been captured from neighboring ;
tribes.
Children cannot be expected to al
ways be Hke grown people any rnoro-
than grown people can always be ex
pected to behave themselves.
flow a jollier Banished Cigarettes-
Tobacco A Harmless Remedy.
That Can Be Given In Tea ,
Coffee or Food.
Anyone Can Have a Free Trial PacKage
by Sciiding- Name and Address.
Sometime ago a well known business man.
whose stomach and nerves were ruined by the
tobacco habit was secretly given a remedy by
his wife and ho never knew what cured him ol'
the habit. lie suddenly evinced such a dislike
for tobacco that hu concluded the weed ha& >
Dually floored him and that his own determina
tion made him quit : she then treated her son , o-
youiiK man just iM. lie was a cigarette neud.
inhaling the deadly fumes almost constantly and.
he , too , was made sick of the "weed. " His-
mother enjoys a quiet laugh to herself , at th&
manner In which the young man tells of how to
came to the conclusion that cigarettes were
"drugged aud poisoned now-a-days and not fit.
to smoke. "
The remedy Is odorless and tasteless , can be-
mixed with colfee or food , and when taken Into-
the system a man cannot tise tobacco in any
form. The remedy contains nothing that could
possibly do injury. It is simply an antidote for
the poisons of tobacco and takes nicotine out of
the system. It will cure even the confirmed
cigarette fiend and Is a ( Sod-send to mothers who
have growing boys addicted to the smoking of
cigarettes. The remedy Is called Tobacco Spoci-
lic and a free trial package of the remedy \\illbo
mniled prepaid upon application to Rogers Drug
& Chemical Co.Ta Fifth and Race Sts. . Cincin
nati , Ohio. This will help any woman to solve-
the problem of curing her husband , son or
brother of a habit that undermines the health ,
leaving the body susceptible to numerous lingering - -
ing and dangerous diseases.
MEN
"
TO 8X14.
Our Northern Orow
Stock. Best VVatref. Pay Weekly. .
THE JEWELL .NUJlbEltY CO. . Lake ClU. Ml _
CATAJ.OI.UJ ;
Lowest prices on
aml OId Books.
tsquarlan Bo
43 E. Van Huron Street , between State and
bash , CHICAGO.
Cures a11 diseases without medl *
Cjne > Guarantees a paying buj5 >
U T fl I I U P neSMakes ! you healthy ana-
n L H L I n O happy. To learn dow to do It. ad
dress KEY. J. AV. Kimmcl , Leavenworth ,
Washington ,
. 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. .
Late Prlnolcal Zx&cniner D.3. Pension Buroao.
! SjrainciTiJ war 15 adjudicating claims , attr smc
C" * . M MMV - fo > * snle in Illinois , Jowa , ? _
I O. F III S "r 'ika , So. Dakota & Kanga&
J ! Sena lor descrlittlve circular. WmJ
W.Vearc , Owner , OM Colour JUW& , Chicago. lUS
S. C. X. U. - - - - 42-99
It's good enough for Uncle Sara
it's good enough for you.
MAILORDER
COMPRISED OF ARTICLES NEEDED IN EVERY HOUSEHOLD.
Take each piece separately ,
We are in compare prices and note how
business in much yo > save by buying this
combination see if the price
Chicago one-
we ask isn't half or less. Not
third of a cen
howchcap _ but how good was
tury. our inspiration in getting this
References : outfit together. It consists of
34 pieces each and every one
any man > of which is of daily nso in
woman or any household. It is not the
child inCh cheap trash ordinarily adver
tised , but will remind yon of
Ch cago. tinware grandmother used.
HERE JS THE COMBINATION :
1 Large IXX Anti Rust Wash Boiler , flat bottom. I Set of FOUR Card Party Cake Cutters.
1 Large IXX Anti Rust Tea Kettle , flat bottom. I IO qt. Flaring Pail.
14 qt. IX Polished Copper Rim Coffee Pot. i 12 qt. Extra Heavy Dairy Pail.
13 qt. Fancy Bowl Bottom Polished Tea Pot. I Angel Cake Pan.
117 qt. IXX Extra Heavy Dish Pan. stamped. I Milk Strainer.
18 qt. Heavy Retinned Preserving Kettle. I Extra Large Wash Bowl.
15 qt. Heavy Retinned Sauce Pan. I 2 qt. Dipper.
1 Extra Large Square Bread or Cake Box. I Large Wood Handle Soup Ladle.
1 Complete Never Break Kitchen Lamp. I IQYt and IIV- inch Pot Cover.
1 Large Cuspidore. 4 9 inch Perforated Pie
1 Large Iron Frame Grater , extra heavy. I Self-Closing Match Box.
1 Almond Grater and Slicer. lAppIeCorer.
1 Large Cullender. I Dust Pan.
11-qt. Graduated Measure. I Flour Sieve. Buys it Complete.
'n which is listed al lowest wholesale prices
everything to eat wear and useis furnish ?
ed on receipt of only 109 to partly pay
postage or expressage and as evidence
iof good faith the 109 is allowed on first
purchase amounting to S199 or above.
OF TE-3E GRANDEST OFFERS EVER
The first five persons procnrmg the Endless Chain Starcli Book from their grocer , -will each obtain one lar o 1 * p"ckneo of"
D CJROSS" Starch , one.large lOc. package of "KCBIXGEK'S BEST" Starch , two Shakespeare panels "plated in tvrelvo-
ieautiful colors , ns natural as life , or one Twentieth Century Girl Calendar , the finest of its kind ever printed , all absolatelv free
LU others procuring the Endless Chain Starch Boole will obtain from their grocer two large lOc. packages of starch for 5c. an
he beautiful premiums which are being given away. This offer is onlv made for a short time to farther introduce the famous "T
3ROSS" Starch. d th- celebrated " ' "
"KTTBIXGER'S BEST" cold
water Starch. .Ask TOUT grcccr for this s reu