The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 21, 1909, Image 7

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JtOBZRT
AMES
ILLUSTMIJOWWRMmiW
SYNOPSIS.
The stcry opens with the shipwreck of
the steamer on which Miss Genevieve
lcslie. an American heiress, I-ord Win
thrope. an KriKllshman, and Tom Blake,
a brusque American, were passengers.
Th three were tossed upon an uninhab
ited island and wvre the only ones not
drowned. Klake recovered from u drunk
. en stupor. Iilake. shunned on the boat,
because of Ids rouijlim-ss. became a hero
as preserver of the helpless pair. The
.Englishman was suinjr for the hand of
Miss I.-slie. I'.lake started to swim back
to tlie ship to recover what was left.
Blake returned safely Winthrope wasted
Ins last match on a ciRarette. for which
he was si orcd by Blake. Their lirst meal
--as a dead fbh The trio started a ten
;mle lnli- for liiKlier land. Thirst at
tatked tlit-in. Blake w.is compelled to
carry Miss Ix-slie on account of weari
ness He taunted Winthrope. They en
tered tin junsie.
CHAPTER V. Continued.
"You'd find those thorns a whole lot
worse," muttered Blake.
"To be sure; and Miss Leslie fully
iij reciates your kindness," interposed
Winthrope.
"I do indeed. Mr. Blake! I'm sure I
never could go through here without
your coat."
"That's all right. Got the handker
chief?" "1 put it in one of the pockets."
"It'll do to tie up your hair."
Miss Leslie took the suggestion,
knotting the big square of linen over
her fluffy brown hair.
Blake waited only for her to draw
out the kerchief before he began to
lorco a way through the jungle. Now
and then he beat at the tangled vege
tation with his club. Though he held
to the line by which he had left the
thicket, yet all his efforts failed to
open an easy passage for the others.
. Many of the thorny branches sprang
back into place behind him, and as
Miss Leslie, who was the first to fol
low, sought to thrust them aside the
thorns pierced her delicate skin until
her hands were covered with blood.
Nor did Winthrope, stumbling and hob
bling behind her, fare any better.
Twice he tripped headlong into the
brush, scratching his arms and face.
Blake took his own punishment as
a matter of course, though his tougher
and thicker skin made his injuries less
painlul. He advanced steadily along
the line of bent and broken twigs that
marked his outward passage, until the
thicket opened on a strip of grassy
ground beneath a wild fig-tree.
"By .love!" exclaimed Winthrope,
"s. banyan!"
"Banyan? Well, if that's British for
a daisy, you've hit it," responded
Blake, ".lust take a squint up here.
How's that for a roost?"
. Winthrope and Miss Leslie stared up
dubiously at the edge of a bed of
reeds gathered in the hollow of one of
the huge flattened branches at its
junction with the main trunk of the
banyan. i!0 feet above them.
"Will not the mosquitoes pester us
here among the trees?" objected Win
thrope. "Storm must have blown 'em away.
I haven't seen any jet."
"There will be millions after sun
set." "Maybe; but I bet they keep below
our rowst."
"But how are we to get up so high?"
inquired Miss Leslie.
"I can swarm this drop root, and
I've a creeper ready for you two," ex
plained Blake.
Suiting action to words, he climbed
tip the small trunk of the air root and
pwuim over into the hollow where he
had piled the reeds. Across the
broad limb dangled a rope-like creeper,
one end of which he had fastened to a
branch higher up. He Hung down the
free end to Winthrope.
"Look lively. Pat," he called. "The
sun's most gone, and twilight don't
last all night in these parts. Get the
line around Miss Leslie, and do what
you can on a boost."
"I see; but, you know, the vine is
too btiff to tie."
Blake stilled an oath and jerked the
end of the creeper up into his hand.
When he threw it down again it was
looped around and fastened in a bow
line knot. '
"Now. Miss Leslie, get aboard and
we'll have you up in a jiffy," he said.
"Are you sure ou can lift me?"
afked the girl, as Winthrope slipped
the loop over her shoulders.
Blake laughed down at them. "Well.
t guess yes! Once hoisted a fellow out
o! a oO:foot prospect hole big fat
Dutchman at that. You don't weigh
oer 120."
He had stretched out across the
broadest part of the branch. As Miss
T "?- .- tkrl I"!...?-. 1 f ?r f tin lnnn r I
, ,-V"-" ""-" '" " -
t ii'ii'itoii rii in n "inn iiiii!iti i ri'im iiti iiii i
A-VVIA UV'MI UilU Uf-,! . J UU.U l VJJ.
the creeper, hand over hand. Though
frightened by the novel manner of as
cent the girl clung tightly to the line
above her head, and Blake had no dif
ficulty in raising her until she swung
directly beneath him. Here, how
ever, he found himself in a quandary.
The girl seemed as helpless as a child,
and he was lying fiat. How could he
left her above the leel of the branch?
"Take hold the other line," he said.
The girl hesitated. "Do you hear?
Grab it quick, and pull up hard if you
don't want a tumble!"
The girl seized the part of the
creeper which was fastened above and
drew herself up with convulsive en
ergy. Instantly Blake rose to his
knees, and grasping the taut creeper
with one hand reached down with the
other to swing the girl up beside him
on the branch.
"All right. Miss Jenny," he reas
sured her as he felt her tremble. "Sor
ry to scare you, but I couldn't have
made it without. Now, if you'll just
hold down my legs we'll soon hoist
hi? ludship."
He had seated her in the broadest
part of the shallow hollow, where the
branch joined the main trunk of the
fig. Heaped with the reeds which he
had gathered during the afternoon it
made such a cozy shelter that she
at once forgot her dizziness and fright.
Nestling among the reeds, she leaned
III W n Frn W K i I
Ik W vlEa
WW A WJJNX 1 I ZmrrUI ir
i ym L-" vfllM r c 'mini!' i II
'It's Only a Beast That's Killed
over and pressed down on his ankles
with all her strength.
The loose end of the creeper had
fallen to the ground when Blake lifted
her upon the branch and Winthrope
was already slipping into the loop.
Blake ordered him to take it off and
send up the club. As the creeper was
again flung down a black shadow
swept over the jungle.
"Hello! Sunset!" called Blake
"Look sharp, there!"
"All ready," responded Winthrope.
Blake drew In a full breath, and be
gan to hoist. The position was an
awkward one, and Winthrope weighed
.10 or 40 pounds more than Miss Les
lie. But as the Englishman came
within reach of the descending loop
he grasped it and did what he could
to ease Blake's efforts. . A few mo
mer's found him as high above the
ground as Blake could raise him.
Without waiting for orders, he swung
himself upon the upper part of the
creeper and climbed the last few feet
unaided. Blake grunted with satisfac
tion as he pulled him in upon the
branch.
"You may do, after all," he said.
"At any rate, we're all aboard for the
night; and none too soon. Hear that?"
"What?"
"Lion, I guess Not that yelping.
Listen!"
The brief twilight was already fading
into the darkness of a moonless night,
and as the three crouched together in
their shallow nest they were soon
made audibly aware of the savage na
ture of their surroundings. With the
gathering night the jungle wakened
into full life. From all sides came the
harsh squawking of birds, the weird
cries of monkeys and other small crea
tures, the crash of heavy animals
moving through the jungle, and above
all the yelp and howl and roar of
beasts of prey.
After some contention with Win
thrope, Blake conceded that the roars
of his lion might be nothing worse
than the snorting of the hippopotami
as they came out to browse for the
night. In this, however, there was
small comfort, since Winthrope pres
ently reasserted his belief in the
climbing ability of leopards, and ex
pressed his opinion that, whether or
not there were lions in the neighbor
hood, certain of the barking roars they
could hear came from the throats of
the spotted climbers. Even Blake's
hair bristled as his imagination pic
tured one of the great cats creeping
upon them in the darkness from the
far end of their nest limb, or leaping
down out of the upper branches.
The nerves of all three were at their
highest tension when a dark form
J swept past through the air within a
yard of their faces. Miss Leslie ut
tered a stifled scream and Blake
brandished his club. But Winthrope,
who had caught a glimpse of the crea
ture's shape, broke into a nervous
laugh.
"It's only a fruit bat," he explained.
"They feed on the banyan figs, you
know."
In the reaction from this false alarm,
both men relaxed and began to yield
to the effects of the tramp across the
mud-fiats. Arranging the reeds as
best they could they stretched out on
either side of Miss Leslie and fell
asleep in the middle of an argument
on how the prospective leopard was
mostly likely to attack.
Miss Leslie remained awake for
two or three hours longer. Naturally
she was more nervous than her com
panions, and she had been refreshed
by her afternoon's nap. Her nervous
ness was not entirely due to the wild
beasts. Though Blake had taken pains
to secure himself and his companions
in loops of the creeper, fastened to
the branch above, Winthrope moved
about so restlessly in his sleep that
Some thing Down Below."
the girl feared he would roll from the
hollow.
At last her limbs became so
cramped that she was compelled to
change her position. She leaned
back upon her elbow, determined to
rise again and maintain her watch
the moment she was rested. But
sleep was close upon her. There was
a lull in the louder noises of the jun
gle. Her eyes closed, and her head
sank lower. In a little time it was ly
ing upon Winthrope's shoulder and she
was fast asleep.
As Blake had asserted, the mos
quitoes had either been blown away
by the cyclone or did not fly to such
a height. None came to trouble the
exhausted sleepers.
CHAPTER VI.
N
IGHT had almost passed, and
all three, soothed by the re
freshing coolness which pre
ceded the dawn, were sleeping their
soundest, when a sudden fierce roar
followed instantly by a piercing squeal
caused even Blake to start up in panic.
Miss Leslie, too terrified to scream,
clung to Winthrope, who crouched on
his haunches, little less overcome.
Blake was the first to recover and
puzzle out the meaning of the crashing
in the jungle and the ferocious growls
directly beneath them.
"Lie still," he whispered. "We're
all right. It's only a beast that killed
something down below us."
AH sat listening, and as the noise of
the animals in the thicket died away
they could hear the beast beneath
them tear at the body of its victim.
"The air feels like dawn," whispered
Winthrope. "We'll soon be able to see
the brute."
"And he us," rejoined Blake.
In this both were mistaken. During
the brief false dawn they were puz
zled by the odd appearance of the
ground. The sudden flood of full day
light found them staring down into a
dense white fog.
"So they have that here!" mut
tered Blake "fever-fog!"
"Beastly shame!" echoed Winthrope.
"I'm sure the creature has gone off."
This assertion was met by an out
burst of snarls and yells that made all
start back and crouch down again in
Arm is Longer
-
Man and Gentleman.
J&te?ftn(nm
Or It Should Be If the Person Is Well wroRg. The arm of a weil-formed
Formed. j person, man or woman, measured
, from the pit, should be three-quarters
There are men whose arms when i of an inch ionger than the les. meas
they walk are like a couple of excited j ureU from the crotch. The runner
pendulums, trying to emulate the j usuaiiy carries his arm bent at the
stride of the leg, the right arm swing-, eiDOw.' Whv? The best runners are
ing in unison with the movement of j pigeon-toed. Why? Most athletes
the left leg. and the left arm keeping turn in their toes. Why?
time with the right leg. The military "J. 1
man is taught not to swing his arms;
the civilian swings expansively, often
covering a L gger radius than that cov
ered by his legs. When a man swings
his arms excessively he appears to
be paddlin- along. When a man
doesn't swing his arms at all he seems
to be advancing automatically. He is
altogether uncanny.
The Gorilla de Luxe has arms seven
inches longer than his legs. Can any
reader tell instantly, withe;;' using a
tape measure, which is the I. ager, his
arm or his leg? Not one! The uni
versal reply will be the leg. All
their sheltering hollow. As befon
Blake was the first to recover.
"Bet you're right." he said. "Thi
big one has gone off, and a pack o
these African coyotes are having t
scrap over the bones."
"You mean jackals. It sounds likt
the nasty beasts."
"If it wasn't for that fog I'd go dowr
and get our share of the game."
"Would it not be very dangerous
Mr. Blake?" asked Miss Leslie. "Wha
a fearful noise!"
"I've chased coyotes off a calf with i
rope: but that's not the proposition
lou don't find me foo:;ug aronud ir
that sewer gas of a fog. We 11 roosl
right where we are till the sun doei
for it. We've got enough malaria it
us already."
"Will it be long,-Blake?" asked Win
thrope.
"Huh? Getting hungry this quick:
Wait till you've tramped around z
week, with nothing to eat but youi
shoes."
"Surely, Mr. Blake, it will not be sc
bad!" protested Miss Leslie.
"Sorry, Mis3 Jenny; but cocoanut
palms- don't blow over every day, anc
when those nuts are gone what are w
going to do for the next meal?"
"Could we not make bows?" sug
gested Winthrope. "There seems tt
be no end of game about."
"Bows and arrows without points!
Neither of us could hit a barn door
anyway."
"We could practice."
"Sure six weeks' training on ail
pudding. I can do better with a hand
ful of stones."
"Then we should go at once to the
cliffs," said Miss Leslie.
"Now you're talking and it's Pik
Peak or bust for ours. Here's ont
l night to the good; but we won't last
many more if we don't get fire. It's
flints we're after now."
"Could we not make fire by rubbing
sticks?" said Winthrope, recalling his
suggestion of the previous morning
"I've heard that natives have nt
trouble "
"So've I, and what's more, I've seen
'em do it. Never could make a go ol
it myself, though."
"But if you remember how it is
done we have at least some chance
"Give you ten to one odds! No; we'll
scratch around for a flint good and
plenty before we waste time thai
way."
"The mist is going," observed Miss
Leslie.
"That's no lie. Now for our coyotes
Where's my club?"
"They've all left," said Winthrope,
peering down. "I can see the ground
clearly, and there is not a sign of the
beasts."
"There are the bones what's left of
them," added Blake. "It's a small deer.
I suppose. Well, here goes."
He threw down his club and dropped
the loose end of the creeper after it
As the line straightened he twisted the
upper part around his leg and was
about to slide to the ground when be
remembered Miss Leslie.
"Think you can make it alone?" he
asked.
The girl held up her hands, sore and
swollen from the lacerations of the
thorns. Blake looked at them,
frowned, and turned to Winthrope.
"Um! you got it, too, and in the
face," he grunted. "How's your
ankle?"
Winthrope wriggled his foot about
and felt the injured ankle.
"I fancy it is much better," he an
swered. "There seems to be no swell
ing, and there is no pain now."
"That's lucky; though it will tunc
up later. Take a slide, now. We've
got to hustle our breakfast and find
a way to get over the river."
TO BE CONTINUED.)
Sounds Which Carry at Sea.
Examinations by naval experts in
wireless telephony as to the sound
which will carry the greatest distance
at sea develops that a siren under T2
pounds of steam pressure will emit
a blast which may be heard 40 miles.
Next comes the steam whistle, the
sound of which is carried 20 miles
Among the softest sounds which carry
a considerable distance is the whis
tling buoy installed by the lighthouse
board, which has frequently been
heard a distance of 15 miles.
Our children are growing more in
dependent. It is not the fauit of the
parents nor of the children; we are
not careless, and they are rot un
grateful. The conditions of life ars
responsible for the medern "youm.'
Familien Zeitung, Vienna.
Than the Leg
The Cress of a Good Wife.
Her clothes are comely rather than
costly, and she makes plain cloth to
be velvet by her handsome wearing of
iL She is none of our dainty dames,
who love to appear in variety of suits'
every day new as if a good gown,
like a stratagem in war, were to te
used but once; but our good wife sets
up a sail according to the keel of her
husband's estafe; and if of high par
entage, she does not so remember
what she was by birth, that she for
gets what she is by match. Thomc(
Fuller.
SURPRISED AT THE SCHEDULE
Colored Man Felt He Was Being Rail-
roaded Into the Class of
"High Financiers."
A colored man was tried the other
day before a Charlestown court for
stealing some clothes from a young
white man. A pretty clear case was
made out against the colored man
and he confessed.
"I reckon I ain't got nothin' to say,
white folks," he said with humility.
" 'ceptin' hit's jes Iaik it is."
"Well, since you admit your guilt,"
said the judge, "I will try to make it
light for you. But first we will have
to get an estimate of the value of the
clothing. Mr. Plaintiff, what do you
value these articles at?"
"The dress suit cost me $80, your
honor," replied the young man, "the
overcoat $75 and the silk hat $10."
"Mr. Jedge," broke in the accused.
"I'd lak ter say des one word befo'
you goes any fudder."
"All right; go ahead."
"I submit dat I tuk dem clo'es, boss
man, but at no sich prices as dem!"
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- t
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- I
ble can be entirely overcome by using i
Defiance Starch, as it can be applied ,
much more thinly because of its great- i
er strength than other makes.
New England English.
Complaint was made to a local man
by one or his employes that boys who
were swimming in a pond were caus
ing quite a nuisance. The owner of
the property gave the man the privi
lege of putting up a sign, as he had I
asked permission to do it. The no
tice reads as follows:
"No Lolling or Swimmig on Theas
Growns Order by . If Catched
Law Will be Forced." Berkshire
Courier.
Flowers.
Flowers have an expression of coun- ,
tenance as much as men or animals; '
some seem to smile; some have a sad
expression; some are pensive and
diffident; others, again, are plain, hon-
est and upright like the broad-faced
but thesunflower and the soldierlike
tulip. Henry Ward Beecher.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
Id use For Over 30 Years.
ine Kina you Have Always tsougnc
Spectacular Oil Fire.
The most spectacular lire ever wit
nessed in the oil industry was at one
Df the Des Bocas wells in Mexico.
About 60,000 barrels of oil were
burned up daily for nearly two
months. The flames rose to heights
of 800 to 1,400 feet.
A Series cf Breakages.
"Banks had his engagement bro
ken." "Did he take it hard?"
"Yes; after it was broken off, he
was all broken up, and then he broke
down."
A Rare Good Thine.
"Am uslnj: ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, and
can truly say I would not have been with
out it so Ions, had I known the relief it
would give my aching feet. I think it aj
rare good thing for anyone having sore
or tired feet. Mrs. Matilda Holtwert,
Providence. R. I." Sold by all Druggists,
25c. Ask to-day.
Innovation.
Stella Did she have an unusual
wedding?
Bella Yes: the church was deco
rated with common tropical plants in
stead of the rare.
Nothing causes a young widow to
sit up and take notice quicker than
the discovery that another widow Is
on the trail of the man she has spotted
for No. 2.
Smolcer also like Lewis Single Binder
cigar for its purity. It is never doped,
only tobacco in it natural state.
Let us not seek to alter our destiny,
but let us try to make the best of our
circumstances. C. H. Spurgeon.
Mr. Window's Soothlnjr Syrap.
For children teething, rot tena the gum, reduces ftj
flammmUoa,mUaya pain, curea wind colic 22c a bottle.
The battle without goes as goes the
battle within.
"Sr 0m
The Sunshine Ginger Wafer
These are called Yum Yums they are made at the
"Sunshine Bakeries" too with the other "Sunshines."
Baked in white tile top floor ovens amid pure air and
sunshine. They are the best ginger snaps you ever tasted.
Sunshine Yum Yums
'
Daintywaferswithjustenough snaps until you taste the "Sun
spice to be appetizing. shine" kind.
We employ infinite skill and Sunshine Yum Yums are
costly material to create them. packed in thrice sealed cartons
You miss the best in ginger amply protected from dust
JoOSE-(ILES biscuit Co.
AFTER
FOURYEARS
OF MISERY
Cured by Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound
Baltimore, Mi "For four years
my life was a misery to me. I suffered
iirom lrreiruian.
ties, terrible drag- !
ging sensations,
extreme nerrous
ness, and' that all
gone feeling in my '
stomach. I had '
given up hope of '
eTer being well
when I began to
take Lydia E.Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound. Then
I felt as though
new life had been
given me, and I am recommending it
to all iny friends." Mrs. W. S. For.-,
1938 Lansdowne St, Baltimore, Md.
The most successful remedy in this
country for the cure of all forms of
female complaints is Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound. It has
stood the test of years and tolay is
more widely and successfully used than
any other female remedy. It has cured
thousands of women who have been
troubled with displacements, inflam
mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir-'
regularities, periodic pains, backache,
that bearing-down feeling, flatulency,
indigestion, and nervous prostration,
after all other means had lailed.
If you are suffering from any of these
ailments, don't give up hope until you
have given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound a trial.
If you would like special advice
write to Mrs. Pinkhara, Lynn,
Mass., for it. She lias guided
thousands to health, free of
charge. ,
SICK HEADACHE
Positively ccrcd by
these Little Pills.
CARTER'S
P trebsfrotaPy..pepsIa.ln-
J m&Wf IdigestionamlTooHearty '
IB llfER Ea,in-- A perfect rem- '
KB j dy for Dizziness, Naif
13 PILLO !ea. Drowsiness, Bad
pa BJBf TasteintlieMouth,Coat- I
'SjHBBj e(j Toncne, Pain in the
I Side. TORPID LIVER. .
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable
SMifd PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
A 25c RAZOR WITH A
$5 SHAVE
TRY IT
If yon don't get the cleanest
and easiest shave you've ever
had. if for any reason at all
you're not better satisfied
with the "SHKP-SHAVK" .
than any razor you've ever j
h.id, bend it back to us and
T1 . 1 . A.. MA..... t. ...I. '
to you.
Complete Razor mailed post
paid on receipt of quarter or
stamps.
Shrp-Shavr Raztr Ct.
70 Diane SL. NewYarkCHy
LAXD IRRIGATED LAND. Perpetnal
t.atcr rijrbt; ore water: productive anil: crup
failures unknown:: MJbu.wfcont pcracrp:3ito5toni
alfalfa: healthful el'-nate: lrce timber: cay terms;
write now. LUWOOD LASS CO., Kck Sprlag, Wjsb.
nrrilMPr CTARPU eatlett to work with and
ULMMlMaV dlfUibn ltarcnea clothea nicest.
W. N. U OMAHA, NO. 30-1909.
sssl$'siSsHH
BaaS: v4iSSrSr?sBmjrrhj
sssWr?7l
l39aaVaaaa
CARTERS
PfTTLE
TlVER
PILLS.
FQlSa
If
;The gingery ginger snap"
and moisture.
They are at your grocer's in
5c packages.
Try a package judge all
"Sunshines" by them.
Famous English Detective
Tries to Catcb the French
Gentleman Criminal -
Arsene Lupin is oId. Be announces
beforehand in the papers what his next
move is going to be. His story begins ia
the August number of
The first iastakaeat u "No. 514
Series 23." It is a story that will bold your
interest The French Police family give up
in their attempt to trap" the wQy Lupia
and send to England for Berlock Sbolmes.
Then follows a battle of wits. The derer
Frencb rogue against the keen reasoning
English detective.
Send us $1.50 for a year's subscription
to "Short Stories" and' .llow the fascinat
ing, amusing Lupin. Every month, too. there
are numbers of good, crisp, short stories
printed in big. clear type. Every news
dealer can handle your subscription.
Short Stories Compaay, Ltd.
1M Eut lttk Stan tew Ytk Cftr
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
NOTHING LIKE IT FOR
TUP TPPTU 'axt"e excek any dentifrice
I fit I mJkm IHia cleansing, whitening and
removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying
til germ of decay and disease vvbick ordinary
tooth preparations cannot do.
flip MM ITU Pax&rcusedasamouth
I fflaL IMUU I II wesh dJicfects the mouth
and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs
which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat,
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness.
TUP FYFQ en mfiamed, bred, ache
fib Ld and bum. may be instantly
relieved and strengthened by Paxune.
f ATABBU faxtue wu' destroy the germ
M I AHHH that csuse catarrh, heal the m
flammanon and stop the discharge. It b a sum
remedy for uteriae catarrh.
Paxtme is a harmless yet powerful
Used in bathing it destroys odors and
leaves the body anusepttcally clean.
FOR SALE AT DRUG STORCS.SOc.
OR POSTPAID BY MAIL.
LARGE SAMPLE FREE!
THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. BOSTON. MASS.
Bad Taste
in your mouth removed while
you wait that's true. A Cas
caret taken when the tongue is
thick -coated with the nasty
squeamish feeling in stomach,
brings relie It's easy, natural
way to help nature help you. 903
CASCARETS toe box week's treat
ment. All druggists. Biggest seller
in the world. Million boxes a month.
DAISY FLY WaJJIlMraS
a a ll I . .
nit iiirs. .. v.,
(l.-vtt? nrn&mpntAll
iConTenifiit.clieap.
uuiB mum. can
not upt j. or tip
over, will not roll
nrlnjareanvthlnir.
t.uanuiteeu elfeo
tUe. fll.lr,
nrBtntprttmidfot
'iii iiiii......
SOB Balk lm,
BfWaiiB.B lark.
Saves Time & ves Money
NO STROPPING NO HONING
KNOWN THE
WORLD OVER
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
' - - A tuantiflpa tha
11. m ., hmiitnt Armwth-
Verar TOM to Haatoroj uiw
uau so sis xobibxui vv.
SOUP OlSMMJ M BUT HI
g.anltin)t Praagsts.
UafftlctrdwlU.)
sore ejea, use)
Tfetaasta's jt Water
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