MLJ&d p --? ', - - IJT A - V- JK ur - ' "' - B i -V 4 y,Jf m - T- 5f-f- J gWMeggiay. Mbi asyySgaKssi iua,imua.' .iUfc.yUi f-, !, Kf t A I A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE. How a Veteran W3S Saved the Ampu tation of a Limb. B. Frank Doremus, veteran, of Roosevelt Ave., Indianapolis, Ind., says: "i naa oeen showing symptoms of kidney trouble from the time I was mus tered out of the army, but in all my life I never suffered as in 1S9T. Headaches, diz ziness and sleepless ness, first, and then dropsy. I was weak and helpless, having run down from ISO to 125 pounds. I was having terrible pain in the kid neys, and the secretions passed almost involuntarily. My left leg swelled un til it was C4 inches around, and the doctor tapped it night and morning until I could no longer stand it, and then he advised amputation. I refused, and began using Doan's Kidney Pills. The swelling subsided gradually, the urine became natural and all my pains and aches disappeared. I have been well now for nine years since using Doan's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-ililbura Co., Buffalo, N. Y. "We reason from our heads, but act from our hearts. Fielding. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c. You pay 10c for cigars not so good. Your deal er or Lewis' Factory, l'eoria, III. How poor an instrument may do a nobie deed. Shakespeare. Defiance Starch is the latest inven tion in that line and an improvement on all other makes; it is more eco nomical, does better work, takes less time. Get it from any grocer. Tokio's New Harbor Works. The new harbor works at Tokio will cost SI 0,000,000. The money is being raised by the Japanese government by foreign loan. CHEAP IRRIGATED LAND. Grand opening Sept. 5th under Carey Act. Little Snake River Valley, Routt County, Colo. $25.50 per acre for land and water. $5.23 per acre down. Ex cursion rates. Routt County Develop ment Co., 14 17th St., Denver, Colo. An Early Discovery. "Your epigrams and adages show great wisdom,"' said the dependent. "Yes." answered Marcus Aurelius. "I can's deny tha't I regard them as something very wise indeed. There is nothing like them for popularizing an administration." "V7Uh a smooth iron and Defiance Starch, you can launder your shirt waist just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will be less wear and tear of the goods, and it will be a positive pleasure to uso a Starch that doss not stick to the iron. Evidently Frank Has a Cinch. The following letter was picked up in the streets of Longmont the other day, says the San Francisco Call: "Aly Darling Frank: I swallowed the postage stamp that was on your last letter, because I knew that your lips had touched it, and, oh. Frank, I felt so happy afterward. Put two stamps on jour next letter." What Did She Mean? Mrs. Armitage had a negro servant who continually prated of a certain Mrs. Reed for whom she formerly worked. Weary of hearing Mrs. Reed quoted so often, the mistress asked one day: "Well, Saraantha, what kind of work did you do at Mrs. Reed's, anyway?" "Well, honey, I cooked foh huh, I did. an I cleaned foh huh. an swep' foh huh. an' I washed huh pussonel appea'ance." Lippiucofct's. In Extremis. The yacht was heavily becalmed. There were but ten bottles of cham pagne in the lockers. Their last signal of distress had been sent up, without bringing any response. "Gentlemen," exclaimed the commo dore, in a quavering voice, "I can no longer conceal the hideous truth from you. Sobriety stares us In the face!" It was a wildly various scene which ensued. Some blasphemed, some prayed, some, in an access of frenzied wantonness, sang songs, while some sat stoically by, awaiting their fate with at least an outward calm. Puck. HighPriced Meat may be a Blessing If it gives one the chance to know the tremendous value of a complete change of diet. Try this for breakfast: fe jr. 1- A. Little Fruit Jk. dish of Grape-fiat and 'Cream I :- A. Soft-toiled Egg !i Some Jfice. Crisp Toast I Cup of Well-made - fostum Food Cqffes I'Jr If- Lj That's all, and you feel comfortable Ljje and well-fed until lunch. IP?.'' THEN REPEAT, And at night have a liberal meat an. vegetable dinner, with a Grape-Nuts pudding for dessert. Such a diet will make a change in your health and strength worth trial. -There's a Reason." Scad "The Road to WellviUe," in pkga. BUftDINGUPBUSIHESS AN ORIGINAL PLAN TO TEST NEW ENTERPRISES. AN INDUSTRY INCUBATOR Suggestions as to Assisting Small Manufacturers Toward Success and Helping Town Interests. Regardless of the magnitude of a city or town there must be employ ment for the people. In fact, popula tion of any city depends upon the op portunity that it may afford the resi dents gaining a livelihood. The agri cultural town receives its support from whatever mercantile traffic it can gain from contiguous territory, and what Industries in the manufacturing line that can be advantageously conducted. The city draws support from the smaller towns in an area of country, which, owing to its geographical posi tion and what other advantages it may have, it ma' command the trade of. It is to the advantage of every town to have as many manufacturing plants as can be profitably operated. Natural conditions regulate manufac turing to a great extent Transporta tion facilities, the cost of raw material and fuel are highly important factors; yet there are certain lines of ..small manufacturing that can be well car ried on in any community if only rightly managed. For many years ambitious towns have followed the practice of offering bonuses to manu facturing concerns in order to secure their location. The bonus system has not always operated satisfactorily. Too often promoters of manufacturing enterprises look to the bonus offered as a means of making profit rather than to the legitimate conduct of the business. Then, again, there are stock-jobbing schemes that operate in connection with the bonus plan, and it has been known that hundreds of thousands of dollars have been lost by people anxious to further the manu facturing interests of their home towns. Numerous manufacturing centers have been gradually built up through the right kind of co-operation of the citizens. There is one prosperous city in Illinois that owes its activity main ly to the plans pursued by an enter prising class of Swedish citizens, who some SO years ago organized a Swedish Aid society. This society ad vanced money to worthy workers who desired to engage in business. Officers of the society supervised the. business to a great extent, and small concerns which were established have grown to be factories whose output run well up into the millions annually. This aid society loaned money to be repaid from the profits of the business. The plan was a successful one. The system here referred to sug gests a means whereby each town or city which desires to build up manu facturing interests can do so at the minimum cost; that is. that the dan gers and objections offered by the bonus systems are entirety eliminated, as is also the chance for promoters to reap a harvest through the exploita tion of unsound enterprises This plan involves the incorporation of a promoting company. Local capital may be subscribed to whatever extent is deemed expedient. To illustrate: If an organization be formed with $25, 000 capital, $10,000 of this capital can be employed in the equipment of a building for manufacturing purposes'. This building can have facilities for half a dozen to a dozen small manu facturing concerns. The power neces sary may be supplied, from a general power plant The machinery for man ufacturing can be Installed as required. A board of directors shall be selected to oversee the business. Whenever a small enterprise is found to be seek ing a location, the directors are em powered to negotiate for its location in the town. The concern may be in corporated and a small amount of stock taken by the holding company. Facilities for manufacturing and mar keting whatever the product may be are afforded. If the enterprise proves successful it can be moved from the experimental station into a separate building, the holding company invest ing in its stock, and the dividends on the stock can be placed in the general fund for the extension of other enter prises. Should an enterprise prove to be lacking in merit it can be discard ed. In this manner from half a dozen to a dozen different enterprises can be carried on and thoroughly tested as to practical workings. Of course, it must not be expected that all of the undertakings will prove successful, but if good judgment be used in select ing enterprises, a large percentage will prove profitable. Those who sub scribe for the stock of the holding company can be compensated by re ceiving an equitable percentage upon the amount invested in stock. This plan eliminates the objection able features of granting bonuses and the subscribing for stock in concerns that are in embryo stage and purely experiments. TOWN HELPS. Poor hotels are abominations that cause travelers to pass by the towns where they are located. It has been known that the reputation of a hotel has ruined the prospects of otherwise promising towns. Each town should have a good pub lic hall, a place where meetings can be held or entertainments given. If such a hall be erected by private en terprise if rightly managed can be made a profitable investment in the average small town. Quite often when towns are organ ized the matter of providing for public parks is overlooked. Every town is a city in embryo. No one can prophesy how great it may become in time. It is well to look into the future and to set aside grounds that may be used for park purposes. It has been the experiments of many cities that the park question is a troublesome one when not looked after in ample time. There is nothing that makes the 'city more attractive or is such a blessing to its people as a cozy park where they may meet for recreation during the warmer months of the year. EQUITY IN BUSINESS. Practice of Live-and-Let-Live Prind- pies Most Desirable. Too frequently It Is, noticed that In the struggle to attain wealth the rights of the individual are ignored. Fair .dealing is a desirable thing as well as most simple and it require! only common honesty to practice it Not alone is there honesty involved in the matter of selling but also in the matter of buying. It is quite as dishonorable for the purchaser to ex act that the seller receive no profit on an article sold as It is for the seller to demand an exorbitant price for his goods. There is much sound philosophy in the live-and-let-live gospel. This is nothing more than an' observance of the Golden Rule that has found ex pression In all ages of enlightenment from the time of Gautama down to the present In every day dealings it is apparent that there is too much of exaggerated selfishness in evidence, too great a struggle for the vantage. There should be a spirit of .Christian cooperation that would be just to all alike. Whole communities suffer sometimes from the lack of this sense of equity on the part of merchants and their customers. How often is the complaint heard in rural districts that the storekeepers of a town charge too high prices for what they have to sell? How often is it noticed that where this feeling dom inates the people that the home town suffers as a consequence? It is short sightedness on- parts of mer chants to require of their customers more than what may be considered a legitimate and just profit In fact, it is poor business policy to follow out a plan of this kind. There are many towns whose growth has been pre vented through a grasping tendency of the merchants to make all they pos sibly can in a few short years, and to give the people as small an amount of goods as they will take for their money. The natural result of a pol icy of this kind is that the people seek other towns in which to do their trading and quite often buy from the distant mail-order house. Habits once formed are hard to break. It is quite as difficult for the merchant to recover from the habit of making exorbitant profits as it is for the patron of the. mail-order house to turn his trade to the home stores. Should both the merchants and their customers calmly consider principles that enter into commerce, and both determine to practice equity in their dealings, the .merchant to sell honest goods at honest profits and the cus tomer to give patronage to merchants who would practice this principle, it would be wholesome not alone for the home towns, but for all the com munities. TOWN HELPS. It is .easy to estimate the business importance of a place by the appear ance of its stores. Dingy, dirty ap pearing business places always give a bad impression and are generally indi cative of the character of the business men of the town. Good newspapers are important fac tors in building of towns. Well filled advertising pages, as well as local news pages speak for the prosperity of a place and makes an impression upon the readers that assist the town to greater prosperity. Large trees grow from little seeds. A small industry in a town may not appear to be much but by proper nurs ing it may develop into an enterprise of national importance. In every manufacturing undertaking there is a turning point that means failure or success. Each small industry that is established in a town should receive the most careful attention of the townspeople and be given the support that it should have in order to make It successful. Commercial clubs are important fa tors in the development of resources of small towns'. To the farmer the commercial club of the home town is as important as it is to those residing within the limits of the town. It is the aim of the club to improve the town and in doing so it must benefit the surrounding country. Thus we see plainly the reason why the pro gressive farmer should take as much interest in the town commercial club as if he were a resident of the town. OVERLOOKED OPPORTUNITIES. Chances in Average Small Town for Profitably Engaging in Business. According to the United States cen sus of 1900 there was produced in,. the United States 1,293,662,433 dozen eggs. The same statistics give the annual production of poultry at 250,623,114. The butter made on farms each year is in excess of 1,000,000,000 pounds. The cheese made on farms averages about 20,000,000 pounds" annually. These statistics are interesting, anS with each farmer growing poultry and eggs and making butter and cheese, it hardly seems possible that such com binations as dairy trusts and egg and poultry trusts could exist, but that they do is nevertheless a fact. Every small town in a farming dis trict can command sufficient butter, egg and poultry trade to support a prosperous exclusive produce estab lishment The practice has generally obtained, in agricultural districts of storekeepers in various lines taking farmers' produce in exchange for goods. The produce thus received bv merchants is forwarded to the com mission houses in the large city, and these houses are factors that make it possible to maintain trusts in the pro duce business. It appears that If each town had its exclusive produce estab lishment to buy what the farmer has to sell instead of the produce going through the local stores, that better prices could be paid the farmers and the business made a most profitable one if rightly conducted. According to the natural laws of business industry succeeds best where advantages are most abundant Thus. it seems that the produce offers a j most excellent field in the majority of ; agricultural towns. " j SETTING THE BRIDE AT EASE. JWidderV Sympathy Went Out to Fellow Passenger. A couple recently married had just entered the train that was to bear them to the mountains on their honey moon, when they became aware of the close scrutiny of them by a female pas senger, ,who had evidently "spotted" a bride and groom. The young wife, on opening her handbag, let fall some rice on the floor, and the woman smiled. The other passengers regard ed the couple with interest. Seeing that the bride was every moment be coming more flushed and uncomfort able by reason -of their scrutiny, the' woman in the goodness of her heart leaned across the carriage. "Never mind, my" dear!" she said. "I'm. a widder now, but by this time next week I'll be in the same fix my self!" NO RELIEF FROM ECZEMA For Over Two Years Patent Medi cines, Quack Cures and Doctors , Fait Cuticura Succeeds. "I was very badly afflicted with ecze ma for more than . two 'years. The parts .affected were my limbs below the knees. I tried all the physicians in the town and some in the surround ing towns, and I also tried all the pat ent remedies that I heard of, besides all the cures advised by old women and quacks, and found no relief what ever until I commenced using the Cu ticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent. In the Cuticura Remedies I found immediate relief, and was soon sound and well. C. V. Beltz, Tippecanoe, Ind., Nov. 15, '05." Depends on the Dogs. Asa Goddard, of the American Auto mobile association, was recounting in Worcester some of his touring adven tures. "One summer morning," he said, "the approach of a great fleck of sheep obliged me to pull off the narrow coun try road. I halted my car, and wash ed with interest the -passage of the sheep, the intelligent dogs and the shepherd. "I had a short talk with the shep herd about his odd and difficult trade. " 'Look here, I said, 'what do you do, driving sheep like this on a narrow road, when you meet another flock coming in the opposite direction?' "'Well, said the shepherd, 'ye just drive straight on, both of ye, and the one thai has the best dogs gets the most sheep." Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because 'of its great er strength than other makes. No Doubt About It. Kind Father My dear, if you want a good husband, you just marry Mr. Goodboy. I am quite sure that he is really devoted to you. The Girl I am truly glad to hear you say so, papa. But are you quite, quite sure? Kind Father Positive, my love, pos itive. I've been borrowing money of him for six months, and he still keeps coming here, so it's all right, it's all right. He loves you! Starch, like everything else. Is be ing constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago are very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the lat est discovery Defiance Starch all in jurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient, in vented by us, gives to the Starch a strength and smoothness never ap proached by other brands. - A Nice Sentence. "You have a pleasant home and a bright fireside, with happy children sitting around it, haven't you?" said the judge. "Yes, sir," said the prisoner, who thought he saw a way out of the diffi culty. "Well," said the judge, "if the happy children sit around the cheerful fire side until yon return, they will stay there just 42 days." What Caused the Lynching. Out at Stafford the other day a group of farmers met a train, and when a tall, sunburned man stepped off the car they all grabbed him and shook his hand warmly. The man looked them over calmly and then said: "Gentle men, I am sorry to disappoint you. I know you think I am a harvest hand bat you are mistaken. I am a light ning rod agent." Kansas City Star.- But He Was Gone. I tell you what." said the sad-looking man, "it's pretty hard for a man with a large family to live on a small Income." "Yes, eagerly agreed the stranger, , "but it's a great deal harder for his family if he dies on one. Xow, my line Is insurance; let me interest you Eh? What's your hurry?"' The Size of Him. "Yes," snarled the eminent Octo pus who had just had returned to him what Shakespeare sarcastically callei "trash." "This is my purse, and the contents, 11.143.09, are intact; but it is three days, seven hours and nine teen minutes since I lost it. Where' Is my interest, young man; where is my Interest?" Puck. COFFEE AILS Quit when you POSTUM "THERE'S A REASON." Bead the little book. "The Coed to Well-vUe."lapkKs. What is Castoria. ASTOEIA is a harmless -substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops aal V Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant It contains neither other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and aHayi Feverishness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic It rdjeres Teethmg TronMea, cures Constipation and Hatulency. It assimilates the Food, legulata&he Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The chflcboAi Kmaoeo The Mother's Friend. . f The End You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use far owr 80 years, has home the signature of Ghas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under lis personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. M Counterfeits, Imitations and llJustra3-good,f are lmtEiperimentslliat trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment IT1t!lTW!WS "ALCOHOL pro fit..-" Atfc&falfrPmmrinn CI. sto'iaimgiteQiodsiKlRegu&j luigufcouautZUBiattUWWlSat RoraolesDigesfionflwriU rtcssand Rest.Containsnciter Opium.Mofpliine norJJiaeni m m m mi.i i OT -NARCOTIC. m JKfearoUJkSMWmB EESr AMeUtx- h wsWBdttm' A)oktt9evotijtocCmtft iioa.ouur awsscibUHiiiKa WanasEftmisimsJnm IKSSOriLOSSOrSIXEE NEW YDBK. Guaranteed underi Exact Cop7 of Wrapper. Woman Grave-Digger. A woman cf 25 has been appointed grave-digger, bell-ringer and organist in the Danish town of Grenaa. She is the first woman grave-digger in Den mark. Countries of Large Area. In round figures, the area of India is 1,500,000 square miles;- the United States, 3,500,000. and Russia, includ ing Siberia, 8,000,000. Ladies Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after uing Allen's Foo Ease. A certain cure for swollen,8weating, hot, aching feet. At all Druggists, 25c. Ac cept no substitute. Trial package FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted. Le Rov, X. Y. We begin to live only when we begin to love. And we begin to love only when self dies, and we live to bless others. George Eliot. No Headache in the Morning. Krause's Headache Capsules for over-indulgence in food or drink. Druggists. 25c. Norman Lichty Mfg. Co., Des Moines, la. Without content, we shall find it al most as difficult to please others as ourselves. Greville. Guns, Traps, Decoys, Etc Lowest prices. Write for Free catalog No. 1. N. W. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapolis. Hold on, hope hard in the subtle things. That's spirit. Pacchiarotto. Lewis' Single Binder costs more than other 5c cigars. Smokers know why. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, IU. Cheerfulness is health; its opposite, disease. Haliburton. iHeatMHRnn. For chlldrea teethta. softens the gums, reduces k iimTapuB, cares wmacoiic BcaooUM. They have hope of victory who en dure. Persius. Mimzwmz Mfe To convince say D woman that Pax sj fW tiae Antiseptic will W W Wm unproTc her ncalta mjmn and do all we claim llflor it. We will send ber absolutely free a large trial box of Faxtiae with book of instruc tions and genuine testimonials. Send ana aaaress on a postal eara. PAXTINE cleanses and heals mucous n m hrana iL lections, such as nawl catarrh, nelrie catarrh and Inflammation caused by fetal nine .ins ; gore .eyes, sore throat and moots, by direct local treatment Its cur ative power oyer these troubles Is extra ordinary and gives immediate relief. Thousands of women are using sad rec ommending It every day. cents at drupgistsorbymaiL Bemember.howevrr. w vvoxa Mwy jmm. HU iu XJiX XX. jt A-avavKwa w.. Bottom, W. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 33, 1907. I Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Dr. F. Gerald Blattner, of Buffalo, N. Y, says: Tew Castoria Is goo for children and I frequently prescribe it, always obtalaim the desired results. Dr. Gustave A. Eisengraeber, of St PamL HmiL, says: 1 have wet your Castoria repeatedly in my practice with good results, and can recoxft mend it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children. Dr. E. J. Dennis, of St. Louis, Mo., says: ThaTe used and prescribed your Castoria in my sanitarium and outside practice for a number of yean and find it to be an excellent remedy for children. Dr. S. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, Fa, says: I have nsed your Cas toria In the case cf my own baby and find It pleasant to take, and have obtained excellent results from its use." Dr. J. R Simpson, of Chicago, 111, say3: "I tare .nsed your Castoria In cases of colic in children and have found it the best medicine of its M on the market.' Dr. E. E. Eskildson, of Omaha, Neb, saysr "I find your Castoria to he a standard family remedy. It is the best thins for infants and children I have ever known and I recommend it." Dr. L. R. Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo, says: "Your Castoria certainly has merit. Is not its age, its continued use by mothers through all these years, and the many attempts to imitate it, sufficient recommendation?. What can a physician add? Leave it to the mothers." . Dr. Edwin F. Pardee, of New York City, says: "For several years I have recommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do so, as It aaa Invariably produced beneficial results." Dr. N. B. Sizer, of Brooklyn, N. Y, says: "I object to what are called patent medicines, where maker alone knows what ingredients are pat In. them, hat I know; the formula of your Castoria and advise its use. OINUINBTCASTORIA ALWAYS TsbV Yb w Me a jmki wo GtLy&ffiiE&ti The Kind Ton Have Always Bought .. In Use For Over 30 Years. tmc enrrawa mt rMsssssss ssB ssfslssssisslsssPffrrM W. L. DOUGLAS $3.00 & $&50 SHOES 8HOC8 FOR EVERY MEMBER THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. ,"", Bmtammmtt jumrm as 'm 99 A S8.SQ mhmmm M (ss amor mikam rntk TOE REASON W. L. Dowlas shoes areworn bv more nmto In all walks of life, th&a amy other make, is because of their excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior wearing qealities. The selection of the leathers and other materials for each part of the shoe, and eTcrr detail of the making is looked after by the most coapleteorganintionof snperintoadents.fortMeaaaa skilled shoemakers, who reeeire the highest wages paid in the ahoe industry, and whose workmanship cannot be excelled. If I conM take you into my large factories at BroektoB.Mass and show yoe bow caret ally W. JU Douglas shoes are made, yow would then understand why they hold their shape, St better, wr matter ani sro 01 newer vaine inan any W. U. uonfias scamps his name and price huih rnirai miv mm nanniintr. j r TTT sntm llOBInTS I Jest CthrMttHUmttdctcltmttlK. Cmtmlogmmltitjrtt. W.1SMUS1UU.J Off ci-- yoK.' Mj 4Ss4 7US y V: ?Us-j hSc. "--vr.o 7i. &Ci -kT r - f . 02 , 7&H4vr Jt2ew u -x, tyfrc 4r i cus. - AJlpzaftn. Electrotypes m OREAT TARIETT FOR SALE AT THE LOWEST PRICES BY AUUXOGCraWSPAKftCO. 7 W. Asssm Ssrasf, CUCAM Cbas. H. Fletcher. signature or BEST IN THE WORLD OF. otner mace. on the bottom to protect yoe acatnst bis i everywhere. - Po CW y : art, - Xo-c- Atva-wCre tTjS 4tfiC- 1 . m prices G&c&acjL yvmju. y - X fa str . " '- &. 4 uxri4i v ' j iLs - x? yu-&ls? SORE SHOULDERS I woeld like very msea to penomr.Hr mret every reader of this paper who owns any l.r- t bat havw sore sbouMera and teU nimaboci hvtinty Uail Halve. TMsUtsspessiMesHiaaa gulfc- to teU yea tnroagb tbenaper. Toe and I both knew that nones working with sore ehoaMers are In pain, and tlut ibey eant do as much work wttaoet raanirr down at when, they are free from pain. 1 also know perfect! j weU that Severity Uall Halve wUl core these shoulders, net yoe do not know K. If yoo did you would bay a hex of yoer dealer at once and enie them cp, for you have no doebt often wished that yon know of teme taiDg jtob euuM rrly on. Ton ca rely absolutely em Heeonty Gall Halve. It will do Its work every time, vr if jjo prefer to try it Bnt 1 will mall yoe a, sample can tree. Just write for it ItwiUaetoyee cnnratmall. AIo 1 want to tall -warn that Seenrlt Aatlaaafta Dealer is a guod for kerb wire cuts as Maturity mil rain is iur nuKanuii. veaiers carry i la ac. aac aau mum ai '. un laem JOT year A imnrnw Benanmusxucuon. ...rraak B. Deaale, President. SSCTJarrT JUlUUr CO, MiaaeaaeUa, 1 1 M l v . n I I - lTt ,-r .- : YJI&r.$mil a22fc&. lairry ;. $?! 5vVm suiu!MS8&fEteifa,r. .. . L-.rJ.er,.sW- .Tr ftiesiL - ' J ,-i f- -f -capi laVpWS" .t' ,iLC,i. .i. , V; v &."ar--