The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 08, 1908, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    V:-.
.4
tr.
lOflfeJMimflL!
wPvMR
Usually it is age rather than wisdom
that establishes a man as the oracle
of a rural neighborhood. But some
times it is a sort of quaintness, a
readiness and an aptness in the ex
pression of opinion, and often it re
quires more judgment than is likely
to be found in most communities to
detect the difference between facility
of speech and that intellectual virtue
which the ancients regarded as sa
pience. One night at a social gather
ing to celebrate the golden wedding
of a justice of the peace old man
Brizintine had for more than half an
hour held forth on the beauties of un
compromising truth when Lim Juck
lin remarked:
"Yes, there are very few things
more beautiful than the truth some
times. But I don't know anything
that has given the vicious better op
portunity to vent their spleen than
truth at all hazards. The man that
don't know when to tell the truth or
to sidestep a trifle from it hasn't
enough judgment to be trusted with
a dangerous article."
"Do you mean to say," said Brizin
tine, "that truth is a dangerous ar
ticle?" "Yes, j-ir, sometimes as dangerous
s gunpowder in the hands of au
Idiot. That is, when truth is re
stricted to its narrowest sense, and
that is the way that some men insist
upon using it. Mack somebody I
came across him somewhere wanted
to know if there was such a thing
as administerin' to a mind diseased.
There is. and it is the withholdin
from that mind the true state of its
own condition. A good deal of the
sickness of this world is in the mind
only. Tiiis don't make it any the less
real, for the mind is as real as the
body and a good deal more so. "We
see that a man's mind is diseased. He
asks our opinion, and if we tell him
the truth it confirms his own belief
and makes him worse, and maybe a
few doses of our truth will finish
him. No matter bow big a liar a fel
ler may be. we believe him when
he tells us we ain't lookin' well."
"1 don't exactly follow you." replied
Brizintine, "but wouldn't you rather
know the truth on all occasions?"
"Well, not perhaps until afterward.
I recollect that one time 1 went on
three notes for a man. When the first
one fell due the feller that held all
three came to me and said that the
man 1 had accommodated had signed
over property enough to meet the
other two, but that I would have to
pay the first one. It didn't amount
to enough to wairant me in sellin' my
farm, so I went to work with extra
force and made the money and paid
T was the night be
fore Christmas."
i ... ..
J' J j write those
I I words. How much
literature has
been started by
that phrase!
but it didn't all
turn out to be
literature. Yes.
that phrase was
a good starter; i.
is the locomotive
that draws a long
and ofttimes
heavy train of
thought along
33xsr'"" ways covered with
CrS ?-Va. icp and snow nast
the homes of the
rich and poor;
and the inevitable
destination of each train is Merry
Christmas.
It is easy to get up steam and start
your train along the rails rails at the
heartlessness of the rich; rails at the
Insincerity that accompanies the giv
ing of presents: rails at the helpless
condition of the poor, with so much
money locked up in safes. You can
get along on the rails all right for
a time. But after the engine has gone
a few feet particularly if it be verse
you are writing the wheels i evolve
on the slippery track (and in your
head) and it sometimes takes a heap
of sand to get her a-going again.
You are approaching a crossing now.
It is time to ring the bell. "Ring l
happy bells, across the snow." Your i
Christmas story wouldn't be the real
thing if you didn't work that in. It '
is now about time to stop and let your
hero or heroine, or both, get aboard.
And while the train waits pluck a few
holly berries and mistletoe, for these
are indispensable.
Now you're off again. Is your hero
going to be rich or poor? If poor, make
him barefoot and have him wonder
what he'll hang up in lieu of stockings
for the visit of old Kris Kringle be
sure to call him by that quaint title
at least once. If he be rich, clothe
him in golf stockings, and it will puz
zle the old saint how to fill them.
The train is slowing up again. It
is here that the consumptive mother
and the rich and surly uncle come
aboard. Make the old man a Grad
grind. Buy a copy of Christmas car
ols from the train boy, so you'll be
able to get the right atmosphere for
your story. Also open the window
and let in a whiff of frosty air.
You'd better stop pretty soon for
rfH 'Mm
l ' " iwljj,n' 7'.
f
JPl
it. Well, about six months afterward
here came the feller again and said
a mistake had been made and that
it was the third note that was to be
taken care of and that I'd have to
pay the second one. This shocked me
a good deal, but he declared by all
that was good and bad that the third
one would give me no trouble, so I
strained again, doubled the forces of
my energy and soon met the other
note without sellin my farm. Then
I knew I was all right; but, sir, in
due time here came the holder of the
notes and said that he was sorry to
have made .such a mistake but that
the property set aside was worthless
and that I'd have to pay the third
note. This hit me between the eyes,
but I strained again and paid the
note."
"But I don't see where the virtue
of all that lyin' come in," said Brizin
tine. "Well, I do. If it had been made
known to me at first that I had to
pay the three notes I would have let
my farm go at a forced sale and
would have been worse than home
less; but as it was, believin' that I
could meet the small amount, I went
to work with a vim and when I got
through I found that the surplus of
my extra exertion had put me beyond
where I had ever been before. The
holder of the notes was a wise man.
He knew that the feller I had signed
for had left the neighborhood, dis
honest and broke; and he knew, also,
that the full knowledge of it, told to
me right off, would crush me. In a
way he was a liar, but both him and
me benefited by it. There is such a
thing as bein' a professional truth
teller just as there is a professional
honesty. I recollect once there was a
toll gate over here on the pike, and it
was kept by an old man named
Bowles. He and his son worked out
in the field while his wife took care
of the gale. On one occasion she went
away to look after some young chick
ens and left the gate open. Along
came a man on a hoss. He hel
loed and no one came ouL Then,
lookin' across the field, he saw the
old feller and his son at work hoein'
corn; so he got down off his hoss and
trudged across the clods of the field
and came up to where Bowles was
sweatin' under the br'ilin' sun.
" 'There wan't anybody down at the
house to let me through the gate,'
said he.
"'That so?' thefeld man inquired,
lookin' at him sharp.
" 'Yes, so I have brought you the
five cents.
" 'Oh, j ou have,' he said, takin the
five cents and lookin' at it as if it
ByChaclsVatteII Loomis
refreshments. Whether you're going
to feed your characters on stale fish
balls and candle-ends or on a regular
turkey dinner, a meal of some kind
is absolutely necessary.
The journey hasn't been so bad
thus far, and you needn't make it
much longer. Kemember that the en
gineer and the reader are human and
let up on them.
If your hero be poor make it all
right with him, just as those bells are
ushering in the dawn of Christmas;
I if he be rich, give him the usual
change of heart, and from habitual
and ingrained niggardliness and rasp
ing ill-temper metamorphose him into
a genial old philanthropist it'll go, in
a Christmas story.
Drop a few turkeys and cranber
ries on the poor consumptive's bed;
let some kind-hearted old Hebrew in
the sock business donate a dozen of
the useful articles to the poor little
barefoot boy, fill 'em up with candies
and the usual outfit, and then have the
brakeman stick his head in at the car
door and yell: "Merry Christmas. Last
stop!"
HERE are morn
ings that invite
women who live
in or near the
country to go out
and take a walk.
Those -are the
very . mornings
when stockings
need to be darned
or shelves need
to be dusted, or
perhaps floors
need to be swept.
Now there is no
question but that
a plain duty lies
before these wom
en thus early in
the morning.
Will the woman
go out and breathe
the morning air
and fill her eyes
with nature's paintings or will she reso
lutely sit down to her darning or
stand up to her dusting and sweeping?
Women, learn to do your whole duty
in this matter. Do not be swayed by
foolish promptings; do not say: "It
will not make any difference if I do
it just this once. I can do the other
thing later."
It will make a great deal of differ
ence to your children and to your hus
band. It may be their stockings that
you are darning or his desk that you
are dusting. It makes a great deal of
wTYuilb
was a curiosity. 'Nobody ther. eh?
But wan't the gate open?'
" 'Yes, the gate was open all right'
"'But you wouldn't ride through?'
"'Xo, I didn't'
'"And you come trudgin' all the
way across this field In the hot sun
to pay five cents?
"'Yes, sir, I've done that because
I'm honest'
"The old man turned to his boy and
called out: 'Jim, watch this feller.
He'll steal somethtn' before he gits
off the place.'"
Some of the boys laughed and Briz
intine said: "Well, but the man proved
his honesty."'
"Ah, hah, and that was the trouble:
He wanted to prove it He was too
particular, and a good many such lit
tle things were brought up in his
favor some time afterward when he
was arrested for forgery, but they
proved it on him and sent him to the
penitentiary just the same. If hon-
i esty hasn t become so mucn or a
thoughtless habit as to be unconscious
it will bear watchin. There ain't noth
in' more beautiful than the principle
of truth, and its highest aim is to
benefit man. But when it is turned
into a profession they make a sort of
art of it, and, from what I can gather,
art as art always goes a little too far
to be real."
"But you wouldn't teach a son to
lie?" said Brizintine.
"No, but I would teach him truth so
sly as to make him belieVe it was
born in him. One bit of inherent
virtue is better than a hundred vir
tues acquired. The constitution we
are born with will stand more strain
than the one we build up. You can
fatten a razorback hog, mebby, just
the same as a Berkshire, but give him
a chance and he will run off his fat,
because he was born that way. But
keep on fattenin razorbacks, and af
ter several generations they will lose
their disposition to run wild. Gettin'
back to truth, it ought to be an un
conscious quality, like a health' organ
in the body. A man don't begin to
doctor his stomach until he feels that
he's got one, and truth that needs
medicine ain't of the best sort. You
know what the Son of Man said when
they asked him if he would pay trib
ute to Caesar. He didn't say j-es or
no, but he gave em a beautiful figure.
A blunt truth would not have been
any truer and not half so wise."
"But, Uncle Lim," said a young fel
low, "how about a 'possum dog that
barks up the wrong tree jest to en
courage a feller?"
"My son." replied old Limuel, "I've
been talkin' about men and not dogs."
(Copyright, by Opie Read.)
difference whether you do your duty
or not ever' morning.
When you rise from the breakfast
table and see the basket of undarned
stockings or notice that you can write
your name in the dust that has ac
cumulated since the furnace was last
shaken when you see these things
and then look out of the window, and
the birds and the air and the scene in
vite you to take a walk along pleasant
paths, do your duty by your husband
and your children and yourself. Take
the walk
--
OW is the time of
year when, as
Chaucer said,
"longen folk to
gon on pilgrim
ages" and these
good Americans
go abroad and vis
it strange lands.
And some of
them never forect
ivS that thev aresrood
t ' Americans, but
proclaim it wher
ever they go so
that the foreigner
laughs in his
sleeve and says:
"There are those
boastful Ameri
cans again. Me-
thinks they do
protest too much."
If yov are sure
deep down in your heart that on the
whole you belong to a country that is
a leetle the best on earth you will
do well to say nothing about it while
you are abroad.
Just act so well that perfection of
manners will come in time to mean
something distinctively American, and
then, when the foreigner sees a sober,
well-behaved, kindly man walking
along the streets of his town he will
say: "Ah, it is easy to see he is an
American. There are no people in all
the world as fine as they not even
my own countrymen."
(Copyright, by James Pott & Co.)
For and Against Suffrage Cause.
Marie Corelli continues to write and
speak against "votes for women," in
England, while Beatrice Harraden is
busy traveling from place to place
giving readings from "Ships that Pass
in the Night" and her other books to
raise money to help the suffrage
cause. It is said that Miss Corelli has
refused to meet Miss Harraden in de
bate, saying she didn't care to make a
spectacle of herself.
$
4LNT
S
HEALTH BRINGS HAPPINESS.
Invalid Once, a Happy Woman Now.
Mrs. C. R. Shelton, Pleasant Street,
Covington, Tenn., says: "Once I
t seemed a helpless In
valid, but now I en
joy the best of health.
Kidney disease
brought me down ter
ribly. Rheumatic
aches and pains made
every move painful.
The secretions were
disordered and my head ached to dis
traction. I was in a bad condition, hut
medicines failed to help. I lost ground
daily until I began with Doan's Kidney
Pills. They helped me at once and
soon made me strong and well."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
SHE BAMBOOZLES HIM.
Mrs. Caller You surely don't al
ways give your husband a necktie on
his birthday?
Mrs. Athome Yes, I do, and the
poor dear doesn't even know it's the
same one each time!
DOCTOR SAID "USE CUTICURA"
In Bad Case of Eczema on Child
Disease Had Reached a Fearful
State His Order Resulted
in Complete Cure.
"When I was small I was troubled
with eczema for about three months.
It was all over my face and covered
nearly all of my head. It reached
such a state that it was just a large
scab all over, and the pain and itching
were terrible. I doctored with an able
physician for some time and was then
advised by him to use the Cuticura
Remedies which I did and I was en
tirely cured. I have not been bothered
with it since. I used Cuticura Soap
and Cuticura Ointment but do not
know exactly how much was used to
complete the cure. I can safely say
that Cuticura did a lot for me. Miss
Anabel Wilson, North Branch, Mich.,
Oct 20. 1907."
The Word of Excuse.
Ascum I've often wondered what a
diplomat really means when he speaks
of expediency.
Wise Usually it means that his di
plomacy has failed.
Be Your Own R
eV . v f r ,. w maw
Wan W-ii:r S-- wa Book
FlashiaaSBg Pas 13
amr S-- ir
aW ' - -- P&&!rySp''''' ' x bk
Lamm t,. - vaftflEHEw' zr '"'" Baa
aw "' taawmmaaamaaavmr 4"1-:' aW
hW lvJ laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawaW''' a
aV SJUbIbbbbbbbbbbbbHP -aM bV
- .-- ,v'-"'r Se
Valley Fa 13
w V4.,Ji iTV-aaaa. aV
m aaf-'-Vt'jaaaaaamX m
M aam-WaaW m
BaV aBBBBBBBBBBSHaaaaabLLSlfiB'BBBBr .-'. Bbm
m eMHeHIHeEl' 1
ES aMaw2&?&jFaaaaaaaaaaaaaMati El
Ew aaaattt&fyg&iaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaj at
"ytJZjBjFoof Book
Flashiai Sl'r' Fa IS
bt j&G$P& v&'Ji?2i' 'SYztLL.
m Ar - '' ...-,', .A . m
aw i i 'i ' f , ., . ,r , , , , aaak m
aW ' ' ji .fBBBBkI VM
ssm ii "vxbT5" & i Fwmaaaaaaao1 bbV
H Vw. V JaaaaawVlffi&Zr aaW
mV :CJrfjaaaaaamt XftKSZr AW
bbv -. t v.'jl y r MMwaaaaac aw0-maw aaaw
fA V -.: -mmmaam mammfmW mW
mmm. -js1bK" c mar .mamr
maarn CrT1 maaaWT.'- s " .aaaaamV&?Zr' fmh.
fy,. B J'BTBTBTBTgiCV.-.-.-.--Vyk.
. BBBBBBtfCBBEHKjEry-v. V-(3Bm
OU JSH-. '"&aa
- KiB
SRoofB.- jAaW:3Maaaaam
""S9 aaawSriSte!i.-''33ixi9aaaaaam
aaaaMa&l'-t'&K3SaaaaaaaaT
.aaaaaaass':MSSMaaaaaaaaW
Truth and
Quality
appeal to the Well-Informed in every
walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and creditable standing. Accor
ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of
known value, but one of many reasons
why it is the best of personal and family
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
sweetens and relieves the internal organs
on which it acts without any debilitating
after effects and without having to increase
the quantity from time to time.
It 'acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as it is free from all objection
able substances. To get its beneficial
effects always purchase the genuine
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug
gists. A Cold Lunch.
The pupils of a distinguished pro
fessor of zoology, a man well known
for his eccentricities, noted one day
two tidy parcels lying on their in
structor's desk as they passed out at
the noon hour. On their return to
the laboratory for the afternoon lec
ture they saw but one. This the pro
fessor took carefully up in his hand
as he opened his lecture.
"In the study of vertebrata we have
taken the frog as a type. Let us now
examine the gastrocnemius muscle of
this dessected specimen."
So saying the professor untied the
string of his neat parcel and disclosed
to view a ham sandwich and a boiled
egg.
"But I have eaten my lunch," said
the learned man bewilderedly. Lip-cincott's.
A Good Turn.
"Here, wake up," cried Subbubs, ap
pearing on his porch in his pajamas.
"You've got a nerve to be sleeping in
our hammock." J
"Nerve?" replied the hobo, sleepily.
Wily, 1UI it Uf Ufiutiui , 11 11 nasu l
fur me holdin' dis hammock down de
mosquitoes would 'a lugged it off
long ago."
Try Murine Eye Remedy
For Red, Weak Weary, Watery Eyes.
Murine Doesn't femart Soothes Eye Pain.
All Druggists Sell Murine at 50cts. The 48
Page Book in each Pkg. is worth Dollars
in every home. Ask your Druggist.
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
Without labor there is no arriving
at rest, nor without fighting can the
victory be reached. Thomas a
Kern pis.
WriteToday for Heppes Roofers' Book FREE
o4sk for a free copy of Heppes Roofers' Book, worth dollars to any property owner or builder.
This book is a practical handbook that teaches you how to lay a Heppes No-Tar Roof on
any kind of a building barn, shed, granary, residence, store, dairy barn, silo, poultry house,
ice house, crib or outbuilding.
It tells How to Measure a Roof; How to Make "Valleys' and "Gutters"; How to Lay Heppes No-Tar
Roofing Around Chimneys ( "Chimney Flashing") , or over old Shingle Roofs, or up against the side of a build
ing with a fire-wall ("Wall Flashing"), or how to apply No-Tar to the sides or interior of buildings, and a
great many other practical points. The roofing knowledge you get out of this book is valuable you can't
get it anywhere else. Best of all, the book explains the process of making Heppes No-Tar Roofing tha
grandest substitute for shingles ever known, because it gives ten times the protection against time, water,
sparks, heat and cold, at a mere fraction of the cost of shingles. Write us a postal for Free Roofers' Book.
Heppes No-Tar
Grandest of All Materials to Take the
The prohibitive price and poor quality of the shingles now on the market has created a widespread demand for
satisfactory material to take their place. HEPPES NO-TAR ROOFING is that material. Its price is
so exTraonunaruy low inai we comoinea cosi oi ottytnm ana laying neppes Mo-Tar Koonng is much less
than the mere cost of shingles. The cost of laying a shingle roof is one-fourth the cost of shingles them
selves,andHeppesNo-Tar Roofing meets modern requirements ten times better than shingles ever did.
It makes a handsome, leak-proof, weatherproof, fire-resisting and time-defying roof. It withstands tha
snow and ice and storms of winter. It is proof against the hottest sun. It is so easy to apply that any
man, with the aid of the HEPPES ROOFERS' BOOK can be him own roofer. Its value as a fire
resister is shown by the fact that Fire Insurance Companies charge 25 per cent less for insuring buildings
proiccica oy neppea no-a or noonng man
Used on All
Heppes No-Tar Rooting is used on Houses, Barns, Sheds, Granaries, Hog Houses,
romiry nouses, xcc nouses, carnage nouses, wagon oneas, criDS ana au otner tarm ouudings. Cover
the aide of buildings as weU as roofs with it. It will pay big returns on the investment.
Unlike shingles, it does not crack, curl
off or deteriorate. It seeds no repairs and
Heppes No -Tar Roofing
Better Than Shingles Costs 50 Less
The Popularity of Heppes No- Tar Roofing extends from ocean to ocean. Ours is the
roofing business in the world. Dealers everywhere seU our roofing.
It is made from the strongest wool felt, water-proofed, and made fire-resisting by being soaked with
pure asphalts, and reinforced with coatings of Asphalt, Flint and Mica, under tremendous heat and
pressure. Its cool, gray stone color is pleasing to the eye.
Heppes No-Tar Roofing is put up in compact rolls 36 inches wide, and in 1-ply, 2-pIy and 3-ply
weights. Each roU contains two "squares" or 216 square feet. Each "square" is guaranteed to cover
100 square feet of surface, including a 2-inch overlap. (It is also put up in 1-square rolls.)
Free Cement for Seams and Free Large-headed Nails, with Instructions, art packed in the
hollow center of each roll. Easy to lay no experience necessary.
fMy . Look out for certain brands of "imiution" roofing now on the market which
W 31111110 are merely building paper soaked with tar and sprinkled with sand while hot.
W Ql UlUg heppes NO, TAR ROOFING is guaranted to be free from Tar.
It does not contain wood pulp, or rosin, or oik
Send today lor Free Root: era Book.
FREE SAMPLES of Heppes No-Tar Roofing and Ten Tests to teH the
quality of any roofing. Address
The Heppes Company, 639 Sooth 45th Ave.. Chicago, m.
BAiujwrjuu. mu iajmdlk. u&alucs can make profitable connections with us in
towns where we have no distributors. Write. Goods shipped from our warehouses at
sU principal Railroad distributing centers, maldngrx)su)le quick deliveries and low freight.
mawmMsmmm$B$mmmmxK
SMALL THING HE FORGOT.
May Have Accounted for His Proposal
Being Turned Down.
Senator Beveridge described, .at a
dinner, an absent-minded farmer.
"The man was so absent-minded,"
he said, "that he couldn't open his
mouth without-making an arrant ass
of himself.
"Once he courted a young woman.
His suit looked promising for a time.
Then, with a sorrowful visage, he
ceased his courtship.
'"Yet she seemed infatuated with
you, Jabez,' said I, one day when he
came to me for sympathy.
'"She were, too,' Jabez agreed.
"'Well, what could have been the
trouble?
"'Dunno,' said he. He filled his
pipe. 'Dunno; but when I perposed,
she turned me down cold.'
" 'Perhaps your proposal wasn't ard
ent enough?' I suggested.
" 'Oh, it was fiery,' said Jabez. 'Hot
as pepper. I told her she was the
only woman I'd ever loved, ever
looked at, ever thought of, or1 '
" 'But said I, 'you forgot, then, you
were a widower.
"'Jingo,' said Jabez, ao I did.'"
ASKING FOR ONE.
He If we were not in a canoe I
would kiss you.
She Take me ashore instantly, sir!
Smokers appreciate the quality value oi
Lewis' Single Binder cigar. Your dealer
or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111.
No man on earth is rich enough to
enjoy paying taxes.
SICK HEADACHE
I - VTtTD'C
jAK I t0
fijjm
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis
tress from Dyspepsia, In
digestionandToo Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem
edy for Dizziness, Nau
sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Taste in the Mouth, Creat
ed Tongue, Fain in the
Side, TORPID LIVER.
WITTLE
FIVER
H PILLS.
They regulate' the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
'Pk j 3rtl mw
CARTERS
tlTTLE
WlVER
PIUS.
ROOFING
ror puuoinga who sningie roois.
Farm Buildings
or rot Unlike tin or ealvanized iron, it
lasts as long at the building.
No-Tar Is not an imitation' tooSasW ths
MRS.FRANKSTROEBE
BBBBBBBaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBnaF bbbwbHHbbbbbb
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbw v "SbsSb i m F'bmbbbbbj
bBbbbbbbV: " -BbbB
px vbbbBbb1
BBbBbBbBbBbBbSb :....- BBBBBBB
BBBBBBBBBBBBBBB&OS "'.?rvdllK BBBBBBBB
bbbbbbbbbbbbbhj). .s SqsySbbBbI
BBHbBBBBBBK x VBBBbI
BnBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBnK.' VaBBBBBB
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbi(p?'' bbbv o'bbbbbbb
BBBBBBBBBBBSM: tsBBB.- bBbBBBb
SnaBMFHvHBBBV bbbbb1 ,'
bbbbbbbtc-: IbvSbbV i
A Remarkable Recovery.
Mrs. Frank Stroebo, R. F. D. 1, Apple-)
ton, Wi& writes : I began using Peru-naa-fow
months ago, when my health
and strength were all gone, and I was
nothing bat aervmas wreck, could
not sleep, eat or rest properly, and felt
So desire to live. Peruna made mo look
at life in a different light, as I began to
regain my lo6t strength.
"I certainly think Peruna is without
rival as a totUcaxtditreagthbuUder, "
Why Waste Time?
Adding in the old way when
RnNcoaf, the modern ad
ding and listing machine will
do the work three or four
timea faster than the old way
and with unerring accuracy.
At your request you can
have a demonstration on
your work in your office at
our expense to prove the ad
vantage of using the Uni
versal. Write today.'
You need me.
I'm built on honor.
I print red total.
I sell on my merits.
I am fully guaranteed.
Adding Machine
Universal Adding Machine Co.
til Paxtai iaiUiat Osnlu. He.
or
3897 La Cfeie Ansae. St. ttmb
DEFIMCE STARCH-:
K ounce, to
the paekag
other .tmrch. only U ounce Mine price an!
"DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
Place of Shingles
Cow Barns, Sfloa,
does not mat. hltxm
fastest - growing
real tkmmt
.
oofer!
aaSaaam
C3n
M0S MJI
J(
ta ZfgflSVr M-M
? CBbPlEBiaf Vi
Sx tTjBI - J3mm M ill
3gS. OaW
?4jk kW
t-'x-iZ''T'ti:'''j-yKsSTa aaal
BBBaBHMfeflEBBik
- .&