The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 28, 1909, Image 3

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SYNOPSIS.
Tlie storv opens with tho shipwreck of
lie st vainer on which Miss Genevieve
t-slie. an American heiress. Lord Win
hrope. an Knglishman, and Tom Blake,
i brusque American, were passenfiers.
riid- three were tossed upon an uninhab
ted ibiand and were the only ones not
Irowned. Blake recovered from a drunk
n stupor. Illake. shunned on the boat,
because of his roughness, became a hero
s preserver of the helpless pair. The
Englishman was suing for the hand of
Miss Leslie RIake started to swim back
Jo the ship to recover what was left.
RIake returned safely. AVinthrope wasted
Ins last match on a cigarette, for which
ie was scored by Blake. Their first meal
as a dead llsh. The trio started a ten
mile hike for higher land. Thirst at
atked them. Blake was compelled to
-arry Miss Ieslie on account of weari
inh. He taunted Winthrope. They en
'tvu the jungle. That night was passed
tostlng high in a tree. The next morn
ing they descended to the open again.
CHAPTER VI. Continued.
"How wide is it?" inquired Win-
thiojie, gazing at his swollen hands.
"About 300 yards at high tide. May
be narrower at ebb."
"Could you not build a raft?" sug
gested Miss Leslie.
Blake smiled at her simplicity. "Why
not a boat? We've sot a penknife."
"Well. then. I can swim."
"Rully for you! Guess, though, we'll
try something else. The river is chuck
full of alligators. What you waiting
for, Pat? We haven't got all day to
fool around here."
Winthrope twisted the creeper about
his leg and slid to the ground, doing
all he could to favor his hands. He
found that he could walk without pain,
and at once stepped over beside
Hlake's club, glancing nervously
around at the jungle.
Blake jerked up the end of the
rreeper. and passed the loop about
Miss Leslie. Before she had time to
become frightened he swung her over
and lowered her to the ground lightly
as a feather. He followed, hand under
hand, and stood for a moment beside
her, staring at the dew-dripping foli
age of the jungle. Then .the remains
of the night's quarry caught his eye,
and he walked over to examine them.
"Say. Pat," he called, "these don't
look like deer bones. I'd say yes;
there's the feet it's a pig."
"Any tusks?" demanded Winthrope.
Miss Leslie looked away. A heap of
bones, however cleanly gnawed, is not
a pleasant sight. The skull of the
animal seemed to be missing; but
Blake stumbled upon it in a tuft of
grass and kicked it out upon the open
ground. Every shred of hide and
gristle had been gnawed from it by the
jackals; yet if there had been any
doubt as to the creature's identity
there was evidence to spare in the sav
age tusks which projected from the
jaws.
"Je-rusalem!" observed Blake; "this
old boar must have been something
of a scrapper his own self."
"In India they have been known to
kill a tiger. Can you knock out the
tusks?"
"What for?"
"Well, you said we had nothing for
arrow points "
"Good boy! We'll cinch them and
ahk questions later."
A few blows with the club loosened
the tusks. Blake handed them over to
Winthrope, together with the whisky
flask, and led the way to the half
brcken patch through the thicket. A
free use of his club made the path a
little more worthy of the name, and
as there was less need of haste than
on the previous evening. Winthrope
r.nd Miss Leslie came through with
only a few fresh scratches. Once on
of.en ground again, they soon gained
the fallen palms.
At a word from Blake, Miss Leslie
hastened to fetch nuts for Winthrope
to husk and open. Blake, who had
I lucked three leaves from a fan palm
near the edge of the jungle, began to
irplit long shreds from one of the
huge leaves of a cocoanut palm. This
gave him a quantity of coarse, stiff
fiber, part of which he twisted in a
cord and used to tie one of the leaves
of the fan palm over her head.
"How's that for a bonnet?" he de
manded. The improvised head-gear bore so
grotesque a resemblance to a recent
type of picture hat that Winthrope
rould not repress a derisive laugh.
Miss Leslie, however, examined the
hat and gave her opinion without a
Mgn of amusement. "I think it is
splendid. Mr. Blake. If we must go
cut in the sun again, it is just the thing
to protect one."
"Yes. Here's two more I've fixed for
you. Ready yet, Winthrope?"
The Englishman nodded, and the
three sat down to their third feast of
cocoanuts. They were hungry enough
at the start, and Blake added no little
keenness even to his own appetite by
a grim joI:e on the slender prospects
of the next meal, to the effect that if
in the meantime not eaten themselves
they might possibly find their next
meal within a week.
"But if we must move, could we not
take some of the nuts with us?" sug
gested Winthrope.
Blake pondered over this as he ate.
and when fully satisfied he helped him
self up with his club he motioned the
others to remain seated.
"There are your hats and the
strings," he said, "but you won't need J
them now. 1 m going to take a pros
pect along the river, and while I'm
gone, you can make a try at stringing
nuts on some of this leaf fiber."
"But, Mr. Blake, do you think it's
juite safe?" asked Miss Leslie, and
he glanced from him to the jungle.
"Safe?" he repeated. "Well, noth
ing ate. you yesterday, if thct's any
thing to go by. It's all I know
about it."
He did not wait for further protests.
Swinging his club on his shoulder he
started for the break in the jungle
which marked the hippopotamus path.
The others looked at each other, and
H Saaha .aPt HSniiBnf a JkLW nil Kv Juii lllNSI&iECSmH
-lJr raFrTa
Stopped to Survey
Miss Leslie sighed. "If only he were
a gentleman!" she complained.
Winthrope turned abruptly to the
cocoanuts.
CHAPTER VII.
Around the Headland.
was mid morning before
Blake reappeared. He came
from the mangrove swamp
where it ran down into the sea. His
trousers were smeared to the thigh
with slimy mud; but as he approached
the drooping brim of his palm-leaf hat
failed to hide bis exultant expression.
"Come on!" he called. "I've struck
it. We'll be over in half an hour."
"How's that?" asked Winthrope.
"Bar," answered Blake, hurrying
fotward. "Sling on your hats and get
into my coat again, Miss Jenny. The
sun's hot as yesterday. How about
the nuts?"
"Here they are. Three strings; all
that 1 fancied we could carry," ex
plained Winthrope.
"All right. The big one is mine, I
suppose. Til take 'two. We'll leave
the other. Lean on me if your ankle
is still weak."
"Thanks; I can make it alone. But
must we go through mud like that?"
"Not on this side, at least. Come
on! We don't want to miss the ebb."
Blake's impatience discouraged
further inquiries. He had turned as
he spoke, and the others followed him,
walking close together. The pace was
sharp for Winthrope, and his ankle
soon began to twinge. He was com
pelled to accept Miss Leslie's invita
tion to take her arm. With her help
he managed to keep within a few
yaids of Blake.
Instead of plunging into the man-
rrvswa VTrtl Vitrtl- Tiovn nr ! am I
wirC .m LV r Z "UUCI i
grown with a thicket of giant ferns, I
T)f..l.h nl.MJ n......3 .l- I
uiatvc stviiicu aiuuuu in lilt; ujujii un
til they came to the seashore. The
tide was at its lowest, and he waved
his club towards a long sand pit which
curved out around the seaward edge
of the mangroves. Whether this was
part of the river's bar or had been
heaped up by the cyclone would have
been, beyond Winthrope's knowledge
had the question occurred to him. II
was enough for him that the sand was
smooth and hard as a race track.
Presently the party came to the end
of the spit, where the river water rip
pied over the sand with the last
feeble out-suck of the ebb. On their
right they had a sweeping view of the
river, around the flank of the man
grove screen. Blake halted at the
edge of the water and half turned.
"Close up," he said. "It's shallow
enough; but do you see those logs
over on the mud-bank? Those are al
ligators." "Mercy and you expect me to wade
among such creatures?" cried Miss
Leslie.
"I went almost across an hour ago
and they didn't bother me any. Come
on! There's a wind in that cloud out
seaward. Inside half an hour the
surfll be rolling up on this bar like
all Niagara."
"If we must, we must. Miss Gene
vieve," urged Winthrope. "Step behind
me and gather up your skirts. It's
best to keep one's clothes dry in the
tropics."
The girl blushed, and retained his
arm.
"l prerer to relp you," she replied.
"Come on!" called Blake, and he
splashed out into the water.
The others followed within arm's
length, nervously conscious of the
clST
the Coast Beyond.
rows of motionless reptiles on the
mud-fiat, not 100 yards distant.
In the center of the bar, where the
water was a trifle over knee-deep,
some large creature came darting
downstream beneath the surface and
passed with a violent swirl between
Blake and his companions. At Miss
Leslie's scream, Blake whirled about
and jabbed with his club at the sup
posed alligator.
"Where's the brute? Has he got
you?" he shouted.
"Xo. no; he went by!" gasped Win
thrope. "There he is!"
A long bony snout, fringed on either
side by a row of lateral teeth, was
flung up into view.
"Sawfish!" said Blake, and he waded
on across the bar without further com
ment. Miss Leslie had been on the point
of fainting. The tone of Blake's voice
revived her instantly.
There were no more scares. A few
minutes later they waded out upon a
stretch of clean sand on the south
of the river. Before them the beach
lay in a flattened curve, which at the
far end hooked sharply to the left and
appeared to terminate at the foot of
the towering limestone cliffs of the
headland. A mile or more inland the
river jungle edged in close to the
cliffs; but from there to the beach the
forest was separated from the wall of
rock by a little sandy plain, covered
with creeping plants and small palms.
The greatest width of the open space
was hardly more than a quarter of a
mile.
Blake paused for a moment at high
tide mark, and Winthrope instantly
squatted down to nurse his ankle. ,
"I say, Blake," he said, "can't you
find me some kind of a crutch? It is
only a few yards around to those
trees."
"Good Lord! you haven't been fool
enough to overstrain that ankle Yes.
you have. Dammit! why couldn't you
- mn wro,..
- ".V uvv
Country Has
They Are as Scarce in Bulgaria a
" Black Swans.
Bulgaria is the nearest approach to
a peasant commonwealth which the
world has known in modern times.
There is not a Bulgarian Slav who is
not the owner of a plot of land upon
which he lives and out of which he
gets his own livelihood by his own
labor.
Large landowners are almost un
known, says the London Illustrated
News. The few men of wealth in the
country are mostly of foreign birth
or descent; and even they would not
be counted as wealthy according to
the standard of other European coun
tries. The smart landowners, wno form
the vast majority of the population.
are peasant born and peasant bred.
They are extremely thirfty. They are
content with very plain food; they
wear the same sheepskin garments
from year to year, only turning their
coats inside out with the changes of
the season.
Wnole families, even of well to do
peasants, Fieep in the same room upon
mats stretcied out on the floor. They
live under conditions of dirt and dis
comfort which no British or German
or French laborer would tolerate for
a week. Yet notwithstanding their
disregard of the simplest sanitary ar
rangements they grow up bi..jularly
strong and healthv.
Moreover, they are free from the
irritation caused among ctler labor
"It did not feel so painful in the
water."
"I helped the best 1 could," Inter
posed Miss Leslie. "I think ityou
could get Mr. Winthrope a crutch',
"Crutch!" growled Blake. "How
long do you think it would take me to
wade through the mud? And look at
that cloud! We're in for a squall.
Here!"
He handed the girl the smaller
string of cocoanuts, flung the other up
the beach and stooped for Winthrope
to mount his back. He then started
off along the beach at a sharp trot.
Miss Leslie followed as best she
could, the heavy cocoanuts swinging
about with every step and bruising her
tender body.
The wind was coming faster than
Blake had calculated. Before they had
run 200 paces they heard the roar of
rain-lashed water, and the squall
struck them with a force that almost
overthrew the girl. With the wind
came torrents of rain that drove
through their thickest garments and
drenched hem to the skin within the
first half-minute.
Blake slackened his pace to a walk
and plodded sullenly along beneath
the driving downpour. He kept to the
lower edge of the beach, where the
sand was firmest, for the force of the
falling deluge, beat down the waves
and held in check the breakers which
the wind sought to roll up the beach.
The rain storm was at its height
when they reached the foot of the
cliffs. The gray rock towered above
them 30 or 40 feet high. Blake de
posited Winthrope upon a wet ledge
and straightened up to scan the head
land. Here and there ledges ran more
than half-way up the rocky wall; In
other places the crest was notched by
deep clefts; but nowhere within sight
did either offer a continuous path to
the summit. Blake grunted with dis
gust.
"It'd take a fire ladder to get up this
side,'he said, "'.'e'll have to try
the other, if we can get around the
point. I'm going on ahead. You can
follow, after Pat has rested his ankle
Keep a sharp eye out for anything in
the flint line quartz or agate. That
means fire. Another thing, when this
rain blows over, don't let your clothes
dry on you. I've got my hands full
enough without having to nurse you
through malarial fever Don't forget
.he cocoanuts, and if I don't show up
by noon save me some."
He stooped to drink from a pool in
the rock which was overflowing with
the cool, pure rainwater, and started
off at his sharpest pace. Winthrope
and Miss Leslie, seated side by side
in dripping misery, watched him swing
away through the rain without energy
enough to call out a parting word.
Beneath the cliff the sand beach
was succeeded by a talus of xocky
debris which in places sloped up from
the water 10 or 15 feet. The lower
part of the slope consisted of bowlders
and water-worn stones, over which the
surf, reinforced by the rising tide,
was beginning to break with an angry
roar.
Blake picked his way quickly over
the smaller stones near the top of the
slope, now and then bending to snatch
up a fragment that seemed to differ
from the others. Finding nothing but
limestone he soon turned his atten
tion solely to the passage around the
headland. Here he had expected to
find the surf much heavier. But the
shore was protected by a double line
of reefs, so close in that channel be
tween did not show a whitecap. This
was fortunate, since in places the talus
here sank down almost to the level ,ol
low tide. Even a moderate surf would
have ' rendered farther progress im
practicable. Another 100 paces brought Blake to
the second corner of the cliff, which
jutted out in a little point He clam
bered around it and stopped to sur
vey the coast beyond. Writhin the last
few minutes the squall had blown
over and the rain began to moderate
its downpour. The sun, bursting
through the clouds, told that the
storm was almost past, and Us flood
of direct light cleared the view.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Few Rich Men
-
ers, overworked if not underpaid, by
the spectacle of neighbors living in
affluence and ease without any neces
sity to curtail their expenditure. Rich
men are black swans in Bulgaria. I
was told by a foreign banker in Sofia
who had traded for many years in
the country that he doubted greatly
whether there were 50 men in all the
rural districts who had net incomes of
$5,000 a year.
The Language of Science.
"I must say," remarked the plain
every-day man, "that I feel as if I had
a cold in the head. And I'm so hoarse
I can hardly speak."
"I see," answered the scientist. "You
are suffering from a slight cohyza,
causing congestion of the mucous
membrane and suffusion of the optical
organs, and inducing a somewhat
phlogistic condition of the pieglottis.
Perhaps, however, you had better send
for a physician."
"Send for a physician? No. I don't
want a doctor. Send for an inter
preter." Home Help.
Small Daughter It's most school
time and I've mislaid my geography.
Cultured Mother Well, tell me
what the lesson is about and I'll write
out the answer for j-ou to learn.
Small Daughter The lakes of Africa.
Cultured Mother Um er If you've
mislaid your geography, you careless
child, you can just hunt till you find
it. New York Weekly.
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HOT IN ARC OTIC.
iSmi
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MntJW-
AperfettRemetyforOoisftfr
tion . Sour slDBadLDiantaa
WonasjCom-DJswnsJCTcna
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
NEW YORK,
iGuaTatteedtMMfcrtnel
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
COULDN'T GET SI TO ENTHUSE
Kirsd Man's RcmarksN Could Hardly
Be Said to Be in Nature of
cf Compliment.
The young lawyer, having been
nominated for the office of county at
torney, thought to surprise an eccen
tric genius by the name of Si who
was working as a hired man on the
young lawyer's father's farm.
"Well. Si, what do you think?" the
young can began.
"Sometimes one thing, Lonny, an'
sometimes 'nother."
"But. Si, they have nominated me
for county attorney."
"They might 'a done worse. Lon
ny. Howsomever, don't holler till
you're out of the woods."
The young attorney was duly
elected, and on his next visit to the
farm announced the fact unctuously
to Si, who was at the woodpile, saw
in hand.
"Well, Si, I am elected by a large
majority. What do you think of
that?"
"Well, Lonny, down in our parts
where I was raised, when we wanted
a stopper 'n' hadn't any cork, we
generally took a corn cob." Youth's
Companion.
SKIN ERUPTION CURED.
.Was So Sore, Irritating and Painftjl
That Little Sufferer Could Not Sleep
f Scratched Constantly.
i
Cuticura's Efficacy Clearly Proven.
"When about two and a half years
old my daughter broke out on her hips
and the upper parts of her legs with a
very irritating and painful eruption. It
began in October; the first I noticed
was a little red surface and a constant
desire on her part to scratch her limbs.
She could not sleep and tho eruptions
got sore, and yellow water came out
of them. I had two doctors treat her,
but she grew worse under their treat
ment. Then I bought the Cuticura
Remedies and only used them two
weeks when she was entirely well.
This was in February. She has never
had another rough place on her skin,
and she is now fourteen years old.
Mrs. R. R. Whitaker. "Winchester,
Tenn., Sept. 22, 1908."
Fatter Crc A Cbcsa. Corp., Sole rropt, Boston.
COMFORTING.
Man in the Water Help! Help!
I'm drowning!
Droll Gent What! you don't need
help to drown, man.
Reputations.
"The Autocrat," remarked the Re
condite Person, "made a remark the
import of which escaped me until the
other day. He said: "Many a man
has a reputation because oi the repu
tation he expects to have some day. "
' "That's not a half bad remark," sug
gested the Practical Person, "but my
son just out from college, you know,
and in the habit of thinking hump
backed thoughts, as it were said
something only this morning that ap
pealed to me: 'Some men,' he said,
'get a reputation and keep it; other
men get a reputation and make it
keep them."
Sheer white goods, In fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way ther
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau
ty. Home laundering would be equal
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
Improved appearance of your work.
In the Editorial Sanctum.
Editor I like the last verse of your
poem the best.
Poet And why?
Editor Well.' principally because it
is the last. Judge.
9
The Kind You Hsre Alway
m cso icr ore? SO years,
and
0(2- aoaal sopcrrisioa sface ttsfafaacy.
Z6ccA4l. AJiownoonetddeeeiTeyooimthla.
AH Goaaterfeits, Imitations and' Jnst-as-good"axe but
Experiments that trifle frith and endanger the health ot
Infants and Children--Experience against ExperimemV
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Ott, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing- Syrnps. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic It relioves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural steep
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Seaxs the
C&Lstrffffl&&u
The Kind Ton Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years
TMC CKNTMIN COMMMT. T
He Bit.
The city man was Jogging on to
ward the summer boarding-house in
a -rickety old wagon. The driver was
glum and far from entertaining, and
the city man felt rather lonely.
"Fine field over there," he ventured,
after a long silence.
" "Fine," grunted the driver.
"Who owns it?"
"Old man Bitt."
"Old man Bitt, eh? Who are those
children stacking up hay?"
"Old man Bitt's boys."
"And what is his idea in having
them out there in the field such- a hot
day?"
"Wal, I reckon he thinks every lit
tle Bitt helps, stranger. ' Anything
else you want to know? Get up here,
bosses."
The Thrifty Scot.
A Scotsman and his wife were com
ing from Leith to London by boat.
When off the Yorkshire coast a great
storm arose and the vessel had sev
eral narrow escapes from foundering.
"Oh, Sandy," moaned his wife, "I'm
na afeard o' deein', but I dinna care
Jto dee at sea."
"Dinna think o' deein yet," an
swered Sandy; "but when ye do, ye'd
better be drooncd at sea than any
where else."
"An why, Sandy?" asked his wife.
"Why?" exclaimed Sandy. "Because
ye wouldn't cost sae muckle to bury."
The extraordinary nopularity of fine
white goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a matter of great im
portance. Defiance Starch, being free
from all injurious chemicals, is the
only one which fs safe to use on fine
fabrics. It great strength as a stiffen
er makes half the usual quantity of
Starch necessary, with the result of
perfect .finish, equal to that when the
goods were new.
Well, Not Very Often.
The little daughter of a Republican
candidate for a local office down in
Philadelphia, when told that her fa
ther had received the nomination,
looked serious for a moment, then her
wee voice trembled abit as she ex
claimed: "Oh, mamma! do they often die of
it?"
It in a mother's duty to keep constantly
on hand rame reliable remedy for use in
case of sudden accident or mihap to the
children. Hamlins Wizard Oil can be
depended upon for just such emergencies.
It is easy for a woman with false
teeth to bite off more molasses candy
than she can chew.
PERKY DAVIS PAIXKIIXER
for all sorts of cuts, brnlses. burns and strains.
Takm internally it cures dlarrbcaandCj&vrjterr.
Avoid substitutes. 2Sc. 34c and SOc
The wastes of love bring greater
riches than the wisdom of greed.
Mrs. WInoinwo Soothls Syrup.
For children teething, often the gurna, reduce ta
fltmmatiou. allays Data, cares wind colic 2Scabotte.
Duty bas a stern face only
looked at askance.
when
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar;
You pay 10c for cigars not so good.
Gifts to God oan never make up for
thefts from men.
fyfleV-VeMWIeaE
U-!4aJ-
Guara"!
Biliousness
"I have used your valuable Cascarets
and I find them perfect. Couldn't do
without them. I have used them for
some time for indigestion and biliousness
and am now completely cured. Recom
mend, them to everyone.. Once tried, yon
will never be without them in the
family. Edward A. Man, Albany, N.Y.
Pieasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sickeo.Weakea or Gripe.
10c.23c.50c. Never sold iabcQc. The sen
nine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to
cere or ycur xsccey back. 929
Boqebt. anA wkich bos
Job doxz ffco Jgnafnre r
kas been made uderkJtpecw
Signature of
MOMUT STSCCT.
W. N. U-, OMAHA, NO. 31-19C9.
ATtaicFer
The Whale Family
This splendid tonic win keep
every member of your family
in good health. Adults suffer
ing from dyspepsia, or indi
gestion, general exhaustion or
breakdown will find in this
natural tonic renewed health
and strength. Delicate, rapid
ly growing children will find
in this tonic th: assistance
their digestive organs need to
get the proper nourishment
and strength from their food.
DR. D. JAYNES
TONICVERMIFUGE
acts directly on the stomach
and other digestive organs,
toning them up and enabling;
them to do'their work properly.
In this way it brings about
permanent health and
strength. On the other hand,
ordinary tonics, which give ar
tificial strength by stimulation
andby supplying food material,
mn only enective as long as
they are taken.
SmU by JIU ZrjtXa
tee, Oo auuCJtfc
TaTnBr. S. Jay'agsMtHwat
if you wist to set rid of yow
Coos or Cold.
SICK HEADACHE
TT1 Positively cared ky'
CARTERS
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dli
tress front Dyspepsia, la
dlgestionandTooIIearty Eating-. A perfect rea
etly fur Dizziness, Naiw
sea. Drowsiness, Bad
ITTIX
IVER
PIUS.
Taste I n the Mouth, Coat
ed Tongue, Pain in tho
Side, TORPID UVKR.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PUCE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signatart
IEFMSE SMiSTmmS.
STEEL GRAIN BINS
KAT-PROOF
luivrKOor
KUST-l'KOOr
FIKE-PKOOF
GalTanlzed. Elilprd
rollrtlup. fcjurllvmtt.
g'tlier by l!un mm
earn. QuIcLly etnptted
ami iuTra.sa,ea
ImniniH-a. bar
vext help and
Imullntf. rayafor
ltft ! nyear.
.. jour dealer
for pr!rra and
ci-ra'aronpront
tbruugh ftorlnc
If Lb dnra But
handle, crila na.
v itmLe eom
blnatint Rtotk
r.i TtTin,
BC1XER StaXCFACTURIXft CO.
1430 TVest Tentb Kansas City, Ma.
Artistic Homes!
Have Shingles
J on sides as well as the roof. Get
i your architect to show you plans
of cottages ivith shingled sMcs
and insist on his specifying' the
u brand shown below.
Live Stock and Miacellaneons
Electrotypes
In great variety for sale
at the lowest prices bj
WESTE1N NEWSrATEK UNION
73W.AdamsSt, CHICAGO
KM FARMSH& Vta
CASH BWUCBKmM75KS
KITE
IT.-HmM LI
I
CARTERS
VlTTLE
TlVER
CtSdt" fatty aSMiXa?'- a a i
KUJksE29so3?iA
IlOfflaiES
r'RSKaaHBl
BlJiifMmsK
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