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~ SAME PRICE so be sure you get it MODEL 10K CREAM made in our own town and acknowledged by all good judges to be the purest, and smoothest and best ice cream sold in Northern Minnesota. You can get it at our store or OLSON’S Confectionery CITY DRUG STORE PALACE OF SWEETS MIDWAY Store and all the other leading deal- ers in this part of the state. Ghe Model THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer. H. R. Mitchell of Crookston Sundayed in the city. Dr. Warniger, the veterinar- ian, went to Farley this morning | R. Mrs. John Thompson and diughter of Turtle River were! visitors in the city last Saturday, H. C. Miles left this mornirg for the twin cities and later will go on to Chicago. He expects to be absent at least a week. George Kirk went to Wilton Saturday afternoon, and from that place drove out to hislogging ! camp, about ten miles north of Wilton. “Colonel” John Zearfoss, one of the oldest residents of Grand Forks, came over from the west Saturday and visited over Sun- day with Uncle Alex Mather, who has spent the summer in Bemidji. The latter showed the| *‘Colonel”’ about the city and im- pressed upon him the fact that Bemidji was the leading summer resort and the liveliest little city in the north half of the state. It is indeed good naws to our theatre goers to know that we are to have “The Belle of Japan,” the most phenominal hit in years, at the Bemdji Opera House on Thursday ard Friday, Sept. 27 and 28. We shall hear a lot of good singing, see interesting and amusing dancing, and a company of clever people who can enter- tain, augment:d by beautiful costumes, scenery and mechani- cal effects, in short it is the style of a performance to please all classes, It is advisable to get tickets early; they are on sale at the City drug store. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, I Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior pattaer of the firm of F. J._Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the smml of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by he use of Hall’'s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENREY. Sworn to before me and sub- scribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1856, (Seal) A, W. GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi- monials}free. . J. CHENEY & CO., Toledn, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 73 Take Hall’s Family P\lls for constipation. Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses at the Pioneer office. James A. Murray came down this morning from Blackduck. Aad A. Tone, the Northome attorney, came down from his home this morning. EYES— Drs. Larscn & Larson, specialists in fitting glasses, {Office in Swedback Block. F. C. Hale came down this morning from Blackduck and { spent the day in district court. Oscar Hanson of Cass Lake was a visitor in Bemidji yester- day. He left this morning for Akeley. Pat Walsh, the Cass Lake cruiser, came down this morning from Big Falls, and left this noon for Cass Lake. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro- |cured in the color you wish = the Pioneer office. The steam shovel on the I.is being worked at C where the dirt is being fill 1n the south appr~ new bridge at Big ' Keep your ties i oy, of Duluth, wh- ong the line of t* «d the G.N. A.C .:+chasing iagent, © *ul call on you. . Harmon of Braine . guests at the Brinkmau .curday. R. E. L, Daniel of Red Lake came down from the agency Saturday night and visited in the city over Sun- ay. A. Gilmore returned Saturday evening to Blackduck to resume his duties as pharmacist for A. O’Kelliher. e has been doing jury duty at the present term of district court, but managed to get excused. Frank Gorenflo, proprietor of the Hotel Tedford at Cass Lake, spent this forenoon in the city and went to Cass Lake this noon. He came down this morning from Big Falls, where he had been looking over some land. Chris. Schroeder, who is now agent for the M. & I. at Laporte, visited in the city over Sunday. He was telegraph operator at the G. N. depot here last year, but was let out after the strike of the ‘key’’ men last summer. Crookston Journal: Martin Mattson, an old Crookston boy who has been living on his claim jat Battle River for the last five years, arrived in the city Wednes- day night. He will spend a few days here visiting friends before returning to the claim. Hugh Alexander of Park Rapids, ex-deputy sheriff of Hubbard county, eame to the city Saturday night from Hibbing. Mr. Alexander is now engaged in supplying the trade on the range with potatoes, and s | states that business is very good over there. J. J. Opsahl went over to Wilton Saturday afternoon to measure some lath bolts which are owned there jointly by Mr. Opsahl and M. A. Rognlein. There are between 300 and 400 cords of the bolts, which when sawed will make about 800,000 lath. The bolts will be manu- factured at the Wilton sawmill, J. W. Akard, the rifle expert for the U. M. C. Cartridge com- pany, advertised to give an ex- hibition of his skill at the grounds of the local gun club yesterday afternoon, but was compelled: to call the'event off, as his trunk, containing most of his parapher- nalia, failed to arrive. He was unable to get track of the trunk at any point and left today for Crookston, wheseheis billed to give an exhibition shoot vo- morrow. 6GhHe New Store Ts headquarters for the best Creamery Butter and Strictly Fresh Eggs. Call at the store or phone 207 f— T e ———————— the public can get vllmt they wanted all summer long IVE’S ICE CREAM Follow the crowd and get one of our CANTILOUPE SUNDAES They all come to us for Ive's e It 1s the purest of all lee creams. had at the Lakeside Bakery. ONLY M. & M. Read the Daily Pioneer. WANTED — Two girls for kitchen work. Apply Hotel Markham. 1i. D. Alger and S. E. Thomp- son of Tenstrike were visitors in 1. ~ity today. - Mills, roadmaster on 1., went to Brainerd 1 moaing. d. Pitkin, the Kelliher i chant, came down from +| tuelliher this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Hackett returned this morning to their home at Waterloo, Iowa, after having visited in the city for a week with relatives. W. B. Laughead, civil engineer for the Red River lumber com- pany, spent yesterday in the city and left this morning for Akeley, his home. Word comes from St. Cloud that Thomas Moody, city editor of the Pioneer two years age, is now in the employ of the St. Cloud Journal Press. Mrs. Edwina Baker of Mil- waukee is in the city on a visit with Mrs, George Tanner. Mrs. Baker expects tn remain until after the race meet, at least. W. H. Strachan, superintend- ent of the M. & I., occupying his private car ©50,” passed through the city this morning, enroute to Brainerd from Big Falls. William Muenzie, traveling auditor for the Minneapolis Brewing company, departed Saturday for Minneapolis, after having spent two daysin Bemidji on business. Miss Sadie = Chesborough, teacher of the intermediate de. partment in the Tenstrike public schools, returned home Satur- day evening after a short visit in Bemidji with her sister, Mrs. F. N. Hitchcock. Harry Bliler, a member of' the corps of rangers of the Forest service, and who has been employed in the vicinity of Bena for some time past, spent Sun- day in the city and left this morning for Cass Lake. Word received today from Superintendent J. J. Regan, who is in Reedville, Wis., at the bed- side of his mother, says that she is still living although her condi- tion is critical. Mr. Regan will not return for several days. Louis Entrup, the corpulent, good-natured representative for the Jerman-Eliel Drug company of Minneapolis, spent Sunday in Bemidji and left this morning for points on the line of Bemidji- Sauk Center branch of the G. N. R. H. McCoy of Grand Forks, N. D, president and general manager of the Grand Forks Lumber company, was a visitor in the city today, consulting with G. E, Crocker and M. P. DeWolf, representatives of the company in this vicinity. Crookston Journal: -J. F. Sperncer, formerly connected with the Edwards-Woods Co. in this city, washere yesterday at- tending to matters of business, Mr. Spencer is one of the pro- prietors of the Northland Prc- duce Co,, situated at Bemidji, 1t is certainly a pleasure to our theatre goers to know that they will bave an opportunity of wit- nessing something really new, and that they will embrace the chance and pack the house for *The Belle of Japan” when it comes to the local opera house on Sept. 27 28 there is no question. No play ever met with greater success, and that success is due to the fact that they give the people just the kind of a per- formancethat the average theatre goer likes, presented by a com- pany of merit, enhanced by beautiful costumes, scenery and electrical effects. Tickets will Read the Daily Pioneer. Bemidji Hlevator Co. head- quarters for hay, grain, ground teeds and flour. Mrs. A. G. Rutledge returned today from Cass Lake, where she visited over Sunday with friends. Knute Nelson, night foreman at the Crookston Lumber com- pany’s mill, went to Brainerd this morning. M. P. DeWolf, the Blackduck representative of the Grand Forks Lumber company, spent the day in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nangle and two children left this morn- ing for Elizabeth, Minn., where they wil! visit until Friday. The ladies of the Methodist charch will serve supper next Friday evening at the Masonic Temple beginning at5:30. Price 25¢. The girls of the high school athletic association will give a football 'supper in the Masonic hall Saturday evening from 5:30 to 8. Northome is to have a fair Oc- tober 2. All kinds of field and garden products will be exhibited and there will be a department where fruits, jams and dairy products will be shown. FAILED TO CLOSE SALOONS. Action Begun to Oust Mayor of St. Cloud, Minn. St. Cloud, Minn., Sept. 88.—Deputy Sheriff 3d Henneman has served pa- pers on Mayor J. E. C. Robinson and a duplicate has been filed in the clerk of court’s office. The plaintiff is the state of Minnesota ex rel. Attorney General Edward T. Young. The com- plaint says that the action is com- menced on complaint of citizens of St Cloud. It states that upon the powers conferred upon the city licenses for selling liquor were issued to Adolph Lindenberg and others, The plaintiff alleges that the liquor stores of Adolph Lindenberg and oth- ers remained open until 12 o’'clock every night and all day Sunday, with the knowledge and approval of the mayor; that the attention of the de- fendant was called to the fact that the license holders were flagrantly violating the law and desecrating the Sabbath and that the citizens have frequently requested him to prevent the violation of the law. The mayor failed and neglected to perform the duties imposed upon him by the stat- utes and is guilty of malfeasance in office and for this reason he should forfeit his right as mayor and pay a fine of not less than $100, nor more than $500. Murderer Commits Suicide. Greensburg, Pa., Sept. ! )—David Buttlemack, who has been a fugitive since Monday night, when-in a fit of Jealousy he fatally shot John Falhelm, a seventeen-year-old boy, at the fair grounds, returned to his home at Youngwood during the day and com- mitted suicide with the same weapon he used on his victim. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. Henry Robinson, a widely known banker and manufacturer of Akron, O., is dead. It is semi-officially announced that the queen of Spain is in a precarious condition. The sovereign grand lodge of Odd Fellows will meet in St. Paul next September. Sir Thomas Lipton and Mr. and Mrs. T. P, O’'Connor have sailed from Liverpool for New York. be on sale at the City drugstore. ‘William O’Brien, at one time busi- ness manager of the Minneapolis Times, is dead in the Mill City. General James C. Hill, a distin- guished Confederate officer, is dead at Richmond, Va., aged seventy-six. ‘William E. Eagleton, manager of the American Steel and Wire company, fell dead while eating dinner in a New York restaurant. John E, Enright of Janesville, Wis., has been appointed private secretary to Governor General Smith of the Philippine islands. Mills Whittlesley, general agent in New Jersey of the Northwestern Mu- tual Life Insurance company, shot and Willed himself at Trenton, T. Edward Hambleton, retired bank- ef, father of the rapid transit system of Baltimore and a multi-millionaire, s dead; aged seventy-eight. Fire at Tacoma, Wash., destroyed property valued approximately at $160,000. As a result one’ woman is believed to have lost her life, while two men are unaccounted for. In the formation of the Cuba-Amer- ican Sugar company, which has been Incorporated in Trenton, N. J., five of the largest sugar companies in the Cuban fleld have been consolidated under one head. Negotiations are in progress he tween E. H. Harriman, Willilam Rocke- feller and the Smith estate by which control of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railway may be turned over to the Uni n Pacific and Southern Pa- UOTATIONS, : Minneapolis Wheat, Minneapolis, Sept. {1.—Wheat— Sept., 78%¢; Dec,, 78%c; May, 77%c¢. On track—No, 1 hard, 77%c; No. 1 Northern, 77¢; No. 2 Northern, 75c; No. 3 Northern, 73% @75%c. 8t. Paul Unlon 8tock Yards. St. Paul, Sept. £1.—Oattle—Good t6 choice steers, $56.60@86.26; common to Bood, $8.25@4. good to cholce cows and heifers, $: 50; veals, $4.50@ Sheep—Weth- ‘N ATILIE® MmA - ELEVATOR Bl 8core of Horrified Young Women Wit- ness Tragedy. La Crosse, Wis, Sept. 7»—Miss Katherine Wright, seventeen years old, lost her 'life by decapitation, while a score of horrified young wo- men looked on. —/Miss Wright was peering down a freight elevator shaft in the plant of the La Crosse Cracker company when the car, descending, struck her head and neck, As the heavy car continued its de- scent the unfortunate girl’s fellow workers stared in terrified helpless- ness and Miss Wright’s head was practically severed from the body. The girl was dead when the elevator had been raised high enough to allow of the removal of the body. BY EXTERMINATING RATS. Successful Fight Waged on the Plague in India, Lahore, India, Sept. #~ —The sup- posed connection between rats and the plague is considered to have been proved by the extraordinary success in decreasing the scourge which has re- sulted from the war of extermination against rats that has been carried on in sixty towns in the Punjab. The operation is still incomplete, but the experiment is regarded as of immense importance in view of the fact that 1,000,000 people already have died of the plague in the Punjab alone. In consequence of good rains, assuring crops, the vast stocks of wheat held in the Punjab will immediately be ib- erated for export. PEASANTS REFUSE TO PAY TAXES Schools and Hospitals in Odessa Dis- trict Closed. Odessa, Sept. £ .—~71 consequence of the unanimous and unalterable re- fusal of the peasants in the Odessa district to pay arrears of taxes the local zemstvo has been notified by the governor that it is impossible to main- tain the schools and hospitals, which consequently must be cl closed. GOMEPERS IS GRATIFIED, Extension of Eight-Hour Law Gives Impetus t9 Labor Movement. Washington, Sept. 3 .—“Impetus has been given to the labor movement in politics by President Rooosevelt’s order directing the rigid enforcement of the eight-hour law,” declared Sam- uel Gompers, president of the Amer- fcan Federation of Labor. “We are much gratified that the president has issued (e order, al- though we conceive it to be a little late,” said Mr. Gompers. “The orig: Inal request for the enforcement of the eighthour law on government work was made by me nearly three years 8go. During the intervening time I have repeatedly called the president’s attention to the continued violation of the law and cited specific instances backed up by affidavits. “On March 22, 1906, the president vequested Frank Morrison of the Amer- itan Federation of Labor. to bring to his attention specific instances of the violation of the law, which he would refer to Mr. Neill for investigation. This was done on April 21, with the result that the order requiring the enforcemént of the law was issued. ~“It certainly will encourage labor to pursue its work of organization in the campaign which has been mapped out in the hope that a larger degree of justice may be attained.” INTERVENTION NECESSARY. Insurrection Would Con- tinue Indefinitely. ‘Washington, Sept. {2—The true condition of affairs in Cuba has been- made known through government ad- vices received here of most authentic origin, These positively assert that the present insurrection can last in- definitely because of the fact “that neither the insurgents nor the govern- ment is able to overthrow the other. All business interests, it is declared, want intervention, while the insur- gents are opposed to it because they want offices and graft, which interven- tion would not bring. Trade is dead. Six weeks more of the present state of affairs, it is stated, will mean ruin for the tobacco crop and immense loss in the next sugar crop. McClellan to Otherwise ight Hearst. New York, Sept. 2~ —Mayor George B. McClellan has announced that he will attend the Democratic state con- vention at Buffalo Tuesday. It is un- derstood that Mayor McClellan will go to Buffalo to lead the fight against Charles F. Murphy and William R. Hearst on behalf of District Attorney Jerome, The Floor of the Pacific. The red clay which covers the deep floors of the Pacific and the Indian oceans {s made up of refuse and residue ~—that which can withstand the strong chemical action of the gases. In it may be found decomposed volcanic rock, pumice, zeolitic erystals, man- ganese oxides, meteoric Iron, teeth of sharks and ear bones of whales. Few Pertect Flying Machine, Gulls are masters in the air. 1 have ‘watched by the hour birds simflar to these following along in the wake of 8 steamer, but had never before had such chances with a camera. Often they 'polse, resting apparently motion- less on outstretched wing. It is a diffi- cult feat. A small bird can't do it. A sparfow hawk can only polse by the rapid beating of his wings. The gulls seem o bang perfectly still, yet there 1s never an instant when the wings and tail are'not constantly adjusted to meet the different air currents. Just as fn shooting the rapids in a canoe, the “Turme: Very few London denlerl Indeed are competent to judge Turner's W that is, without a certified hist lady acquaintance of mine had a large pleture In her house which she had al- ways regarded as a Turner, and, desir- ing to sell it, she offered it to five or 8ix of the leading dealers, but not one of them would buy it at any price, as- serting that Turner never saw It and that it was nothing like his work, and Soon. A few months afterward a doc- ument turned up among her family pa- pers showing that the pieture had been specially painted by Turner for her It any shore deposits are apparent in it. The rock is vitreous refuse, belched forth by subterranean or insular vols canoes. The minerals are supposed to be of cosmic origin—planetary dust and weteoric frugments that have fallen into the sea and have become-dlsinte- grated. The great quantity of sharks’ teeth remains quite unaccounted for— at least their apparent gathering to- gether in these ocean basins is consid- ered very strange—J. O. Van Dyke in *“The Opal Seal.” “A 8ad Plctare, At Varzin once, after sitting for'some time sunk in profound reflection, Bis- marck lamented that he had derived but small pleasure or satisfaction from his political actlyity, but, on the other hand, much vexation, anxiety and trou- | ble. He had, he said, ‘made no on happy by it, neither himself, his' family nor any one else, continued, “many unhappy. Had it not been for me there would have been three great wars the less, the lives of 80,000 men would not have been th ut probably,” he | husband’s fatler, and In a week she had sold the work for £2,240, The av- erage dealer s almost frightened to touch a Turuer, and you seldom or nev- er gee one exposed for sale In the gal- leries.—Chambers’ Journal. paddle must be adjusted every moment to meet the different eddies, currents and whirlpools, and it is never tue same in two different instants. A gull by the nerfect adjustment of its body. without a single flap of the wings, makes headway straight in the teeth of the wind. I saw one retain a perfect equilibrium In a stiff breeze, and at the same time reach forward and scratch his ear.—American Magazine, Our Foolish Alphabet, Why, think of it! We’ve not even a reputable alphabet. The letters are all tangled up. J is J when It isn’t ¥, and more than half the time Y is doing duty for L. S Is sometimes Z, G is J, and poor C fs always either 8 or K. We've got four distinet ways to ex- press the N sound—gn, pn, kn and n; four ways to write the terminal sylla- ble “er”- er, ar, or and Ir; five ways to sound the letters “ough”—uff, awf, ow. 00 and o. And there are no rules. Each of the myriad cases must be sep- arately hammered into a student’s head. And this is work for babes!— Mary Bronson Hartt in Woman’s Home Companion. One of the first explorers of the in- terior of South. Africa was Willlam Cotton Oswell, a noted hunter and a friend of Livingstone, to. whom he ren- dered important aid. In his biography the following story is given from one of his African letters: An incident highly creditable to Kafir womanhood occurred just as we reached Mabotse. The women, as is their custom, were working in the fields, for they hoe and the men sew. A young man, standing by the edge of the bush, was chatting with them. A lioness sprang on him and was carrying him off, when one of the women ran after her, caught her by the tail and was dragged for some little distance. Hampered by the man in her mouth and the woman behind her, she slackened her pace, whereupon her assailant straddled over her back and hit her across the nose and head with a heavy short handled hoe until B she dropped her prey and slunk to cover. Color and Aroma of Coffee. There are two things which people fmagine are guides to the goodness of coffee which are really of no conse- quence whatever. They are the color of the decoction and the aroma of the coffee when ground or as it escapes from the pot in drawing. The color is due almost entirely to the roasting. This is true also of ten. The finest coffees and teas, when properly roast- ed and prepared, to give out their finest flavors will color the water but little. The real essences which give the flavor have practically no color. An Ingenfous Accusation. “The favorite horse of the Chinese Emperor Tsl,” sald a Chinese states- man, “died through negligence on the part of the royal master of the horse. = The emperor was so enraged at this that" he drew ‘his sword and would have’ run the careless functionary through the bady. “But - the learned mandarin, Yen- tse, struck up the emperor's sword, saying: “‘Sire; this man has not yet been — formally accused of any crime. He de- —_— ter to die, but his accusation should To Make It Tender. tome first. It Is the law.’ “Walter!” called the customer in the | *‘Well’ sald the emperor, ‘tell me restaurant where an orchestra was | What e has done.’ ¢ playing. “ ‘Listen, you rogue,’ said the man- “Yes, sah.” €arin, turning to the trembling master “Kindly tell the leader of the orches- | of ‘the ‘horse—‘listen to a ‘catalogue of tra to play something sad asd low|your helnous offenses. In the first while I dine. I want to seeif it won't | place, you have allowed a horse to have a softening influence on this |perish that his majesty had intrusted steak.”—Mil'vaukee Sentinel. to your.care. In the second place, it _— Is on your account that the emperor became so exasperated that he was actually on the point of disgracing bimself in all his people’s ‘eyes b; killing a man for the sake of a horse. “‘Enough,’ said the emperor, appre- clating the rebuke. ‘Let him go. He Is pardoned.”” Mixed. A professor at one of the Australian universities recently informed his class that “the darkest hour in the day is Ip, the middle of the night at 3 o'clock In the morning.” On another occasion the same professor made his apology for the intricacies of a statement by add- ing, “I can’t give you an easier expla- nation without making it more diffi- cult.” Breaking It Gently. “Laura,” said Mr. Ferguson as he buttered a Lisguit and passed. his . cof- fee cup for a second “filling, “I don’t miss anything, but after I had come in last night, about 11:30, I found the bouse had been broken into. Some- body had smashed a pane of glass in a basement window, crawled inside and made his way up the stairs to the first floor. There hasn’t been anything dis- turbed in the pantry, the china closet or the sideboard, has there?” “No,” answered Mrs. Ferguson. “But, mercy, who could it have been. and what do yon suppese he wanted?” | “I suspect,” he rejoined, clearing his throat, “that I- er—did it myself and that I wanted to get Inside without disturbing anybody.. You hagd all-gone to bed, and I had left my latchkey in my other trousers. It will ‘cost about 25 cents to repair the basement win. dow. The weather man, ¥ see, pre- dicts possible showers for today.”— Chicago Tribune. A Lesson In Japanese Courtesy. T remember many years ago a dinner ‘ut_the. palace—a great official dinner— where amopg the guests were-many of the 61 ‘leaders of rebellions, old up- ~aelders: of the shogunate. The last shogun, himself, Prince Tokugawa, proud, silent, grim, sat opposite to me, ‘and'T wondered If any human emotion could :show itself' on' that impassive face. “At that moment the: emperor ‘ralsed his glass and bowed In kindly #miling fashion to his ancient oppo- nent. The face d:mnged, ‘was suffused = for one lluminating’moment with a 1 lpw of responslve fire. It seemed as the. emperor - was-once more than! Ing the shogun for his splendld pa- Ariptic’ act when after, .of strug- gle_he voluntarily -laid his power and his prerogatives at the emperor's feet “for the good of the country,” and as it Prince Tokugawa, looking back— and looking forward—for Japan, sald himself once more, “It was m »—'Mary C. Fraser In World'n His Ambition.. Father—My son, do you Lfiaw that most of the rich men of today began poor? Small Son—Yes, sir. Father— And yet, instead of saving your pen- oles, you spend them. Small Son— Yes, sir. When 1 start out I want ta.f.! heein noor. SKIN DISEAS FIERY ACIDS IN THE BLOOD All skin diseases are due to the same cause—an excess of acid in the blood caused by faulty assimilation of food and poor bowel action; this fiery acrid matter is forced to the surface through the pores and gllmh Pustules are formed, discharging a sticky fluid which dries and makes a crust, causing intense itching. When the crusts or scabs are scratched off the skin is left rzw and bleedix‘:g. n"u— Birs—] & m‘:.ih ptu‘:'lm - Sometimes skin diseases are in the rash or eruvtion w n 8 dry form, and bran-like scales comeon i{""" S0kureidontinusd toget S s the flesh, or the skin becomes hard and st i 3 dry, often cracking, and the painful itching causes acute suffering. It does not matter how the trouble is {ias sare ntirely. manifested, the cause is the same—an lmflflfln. Gal. L. MARNO. excess of acid in the blood. Salves, powders, cooling washes, etc., while they relieve the itching and give the sufferer temporary comfort, cannot cure the trouble because they do not reach the acid laden blood. The best treatment lor nll skm diseases is S. S. S., a remedy that ble and one which acts directly on '.he bl with a cleansing, healing effect. S. 8. S. neutralizes the acids, and purifies the o bln;gn:l:;th&skan ifld{:ungbluh!d and burne e i nourished PURELY VEGETABLE' a supply of {oohngaiellthy’ blood Syadll book on Skin Diseases and any medical advice desired will be furmished without charge. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO:, ATLANTA, GAs- Mouldln!v a“‘ 1 Wall Paper J. A. HOFF . Reliable Pflnh