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M. & M. Read the Daily Pioneer, SAME PRICE Kelliher yesterday evening. is on the siok list. so be sure you get it MODEL 05 CREAM weeK. made in our own town and acknowledged Dby 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. spent the night 1n the city. the term of the U. S. court. or two weeks. GhHe Model her was registered at the Markham last night. quarters for hay, grain, ground feeds and flour. terday afternoon from a business trip to the twin cities. specialists in fisting glasses, Oftice in S wedback Block. lodge last night was made more! interesting than usual by the|t, Fowlds. serving of refreshments and a social session after adjournment of the business meeting, give that elasticity, ease and graceful figure which comes by taking Hollister’s Rocky Moun- tain Tea. Tea or tablets. At Barker’s drug store. | the pleasure of listening to Williams’ Original Dixie Jubilee Singers who will appear at the city hall F week. This is the same company that appeared here last year under the auspicies of the| Presbyterian church. a and has a choice lot of berries cannot reach the seat of the dis- ease. Catarrh is a blood or con- stitutional disease, and in order t) cure it you must take internal The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing| . 2 catarrh. Send for testimouials| €1R€- Take it at once. Do not risk having Bright’s Dis- F. J. CHENEY & CO., ease or Diabetes, There is free. coastipation. the Pioneer offica. THE CITY. Charles Schaefer, traveling passenger agent for the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic railway, spent yesterday and last night in ithe city, looking up business for Read the Daily Pioneer. Mrs. William Lennon of Kelli- his company. Bemidji &levator Co. head- E. E. McDonald returned yes- J. EYES— Drs. Larson & Larson, The meeting of the Rebekah; Gymnastics alone can never pany for several months, Crooksten company. Bemidji people will be given ay evening of this Catarrh Cannot Be Cured city. Oysters - Oysters - Oysters e —— S We have just received from Baltimore, at our store, a shipment of these select oysters which can be had at the right price. If you are in need of any- thing in the bakery line or fruit line, call up Phone 118 and it will be delivered promptly from the Theodore Gullickson went to Lucille McCuaig, gianghtpr of Mr. and Mrs, William McCuaig, Joseph Bisiar and James Fraser went to Cass Lake this morning on a business mission. Mrs, Hattie Grant left this morning for Minneapolis, where she will visit with friends for a J. H. Scribner, the Minne- apolis land man, came in last evening from Brainerd and Lakeside Bakery. Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses at the Pioneer office. Aad A. Tone, the Northome attorney, was a visitor in the H. F. Young is in Minneapolis, where he is doing jury duty at expects to return home Friday. Mrs. George Kreatzand daugh- ter Loiraine have gone to Minne- apolis, where they will visit with relatives and friends for ten days W. B. Stewart is assisting the force at the postoffice in the clerical work, temporarily, W.J. Whiting of Blackduck passed through the city this morning on his way to Minne- Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at T. J. Nary arrived in the city last evening from his home at Park Rapids, and is a guest at the Markham. George Kirk returned night, via Erskine and several other round-about routes, from the twin cities. Bert Getchel left last evening for Margie, where he will do some cruising among the ‘‘wsll timber” for a few days. A. Kaiser, the Bagley banker, was in the city yesterday after- noon on business. home on the 3:50 train. Johnson & O’Conner sent a bunch of men to Akeley this morning to work for the Red River Lumber company at that No one will be disappointed who hears the Dixie Jubilee singers, They are greeted with a [ull house where ever they go. At Opera house Friday October Barney Nelson has placed a gasoline launch on Mud lake, and he is at the depot in Puposky on the arrival of the morning train from Bemidji, prepared to take passengers across the lake e returncd Lou Smith returned yesterday from Grand Forks, where he has been looking after the interests of the Crouokston Lumber com- Save all your cast-off clothing and other articles for the Meth- odist rummage sale to be held the 25th, 26th and 27th of this will spend the winter at Ten- strike, in the interest of the Horace Dunham, lineman for the Northwestern Telephone Ex- change company, night at Tenstrike on business for the company. Frank Pierce, who bas been at Hibbing for several months, has returned to Bemidji and accepted a position with Arthur Hagberg, at the Bemidji meat market. R. C. Little, better known as “Bob, the shoeman,” was here from Duluth yesterday and lett this morning for points along the south line of the Great Northern. Mrs. M. A. Oiiver and daugh- ter Eugenia left this morning for their home at Merriam Park. They passed the summer in one of the Freeman Dowd cottages at Diamond point. T. A, Harris, father of A. E. Harris, local manager for the Telephone company, came over from his home at Crookston last night and spent the day in the city on business. The most awkward and un- gainly woman can be transformed into a beautiful, lovely creature if she has the brain power to ab- sorb the fact that Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will do the business. Tea or tablets, 85 ceuts. At Barker’s drug store. W. B. Sherman came in yes- —— terday afternoon from Duluth, Choice Residence.for Sale. ibringing with him a car filled I offer for sale a twc-acre|with men for Ross & Ross. The residence tract in Wagner’s‘men were sent to Kelliher on addition. The place is improved last night’s passenger, in charge of Mr, Sherman, and will be em- and small fruits. Good dwelling, | ployed in the Ross camps at that barn and hennery. A splendid |place. piece of property to be sold cheap. Apply at the residence.|afternoon for A, B. Daggett. E. R. Getchel left yesterday Bona’s Ferry, Idaho, where he will hereafter make his home, having entered the employ of a lumber company by local applications, as they|oyut there. Mrs. Getchel is al- ready at their new home. The Getchels have resided in Bemidji for several years and have many friends here who sincerely re- remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cur.e gret their departure from the is taken internally, and acts di- rectly on the blo.d and macous Brooks’ *“right-hand man” in the north country, came down this morning from Northome and surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure ’ is not a quack medicine. It was Fo LEY s prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescrip- tion. It is composed of the best tonies known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting di- WILL CURE YOU rectly on the mucous surfaces.|of any case of Kidney or Bladder disease that is not beyond the reach of medi- Props., Teledo, O. nothing gained by delay. Sold by Druggists, price 75¢. Take Hall’'s Family Pills for P UGE BURGTITUTR spent the day in the city looking after some business matters for George Anderson, charge of the lumber yards at Bemidji and Crookston for the Lumber ' company, went to Crookston yesterday afternoon, and see how matters were progressing in the yards KIDNEY CURE There is nothing that takes away the beautiful, womanly charms like a plodding, stooped, awkward carriage. solutely no excuse for that as Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea Tea or tablets, 35 cents at Barkai’s drug store. There is ab- 50c. and $1.00 Bottles. e A et Mttt s A FLOUR! FLOUR! FLOUR! We have just received a carload of the celebrated White Jacket Flour Those who have used the White Jacket flour are reorder- ing it and say for a good flour that will give satisfaction there is no flour its equal. If you have used it we know you will reorder. If you have not used it we invite you to try a ‘trial sack. Call at the store or phone 207. ROE @ MARKUSEN. G. Krea'z returned lasteven- ing from Walker, where he had been for two days on business. The board of county commission- ers of Cass county-and the aichi- tect in charge'of the courthouse at Walker allowed Mr. Kreatz the amount of his first estimate on the courthouse. Mrs. G. Crone entertained the young people of the Baptist church last evening at her home on Minnesota avenue. The rooms were crowded, and a pleasant evening was passed with games and other means of entertain- Refreshments served toward the close of the ents’ mailed | BER P B alo Y. Read the Daily Pioneer. LR EEEE T FRREEE ‘P. J. Russell left this noon for CORRESPONDENCE h X ; g Motto Adorning Title Page of Demo- | gn assault case by a cute young law- Cags Lake, where he had some| %333333333333332333 339! cratic Campaign Book. yer, who questioned his veracity re- legal business to transact before i Washington, Oct, 4—Bearing the | §arding a matter of time. thie U, 8. land officials. HORNET. mlnu‘: “Bqual rights to all, speclal| “You h::‘ no watch, and yet you are o ) r ha ught | orivileges to none,” on its title page, | positive it the defendant was only Mrs. C. H. Miles left this noon thefl“’o“ B{l.g;‘;:‘gomes:fl? e Demberstis eorates oan o] Vel thinntes Khasat 7 Souti 1o oal s for Hibbing, where she will join Robert Shaw is in able to| 2% In the approaching congressional | 8ble to estimate ten minutes of time her husband and witness the | gork alteraweek;‘l.llnfil campalgn has been 1issued by the | correctly,” he said. : hich will be held there ALY o A 3 Democratic congressional commilttee. ‘Try me,” said the old tar. races whic - Ben Winaa is building a fine| It 1 one of the most voluminous of | The lawyer drew his watch from his during the next four days. new house. Geo. Bogart is doing eny similar publication heretofore got- | pocket and said, “When I call out August Johnson, who is run-|the carpenter work. ten out, being composed of 243 pages, | 'NOW’ you allow ten minutes to pass, 3 : : ; and contalning a vast amount of mat- | 80d when it is up call out “Time’s up.’ * ning for sheriff of Itasca county| Miss Frizelle, teacher at the| ter destgned to combat the claims and| The old salt nodded, and the lawyer on the republican ticket, was a|Winan school, visited at her|policles of the Republican party, | called out “Now.” Slowly the time briet visitor in the city - yester- bome in Bemidji over Sunday. ::,h"e 1‘ th?e“',ne “n;: ,‘: ghoma al mtr:«:id tt: ;Mh'yfhfi‘?nt:fl:zh: e princ! 8 for ’ 2 day. He stopped between trains|, Chas. Green has taken a con it i ey Y i 2 o contends. missfon that time was up. The sallor on his way from Northome to gl‘:lc[:lge?i:d?{l.:%;te di{':g o:o:l:le After quoting in full the platform|Pald no heed and exactly at the.end Grand Rapids. 2 R adopted by the national Democratic|Of the ten minutes shouted, “Time's Sherman Maish and brother convention at St. Louls in July, 1904, | UP.” The bewildered lawyer turned T.A. Harris and son A, E.|have given up the job of clearing| the book enters into an exhaustive [ Found confused at the court’s loud Harris went to Cass Lake this |the grounds at the Winan school. history of the protective tariff sys.|laughter, and his eye lighted on the noon. A. E.is manager of the|They took the job too cheap, $50| tom, golng back to the firat act ot | Sourtroom clock behind him, which had telephone exchangeat Cass Lake for one acre, 1789, It 18 declared that the Republic- | 888isted the oil sailor in his task. ans refer to this act “with unremit- e R B _ EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALL. " Measured the Time. : An old sallor was belng examined in the afternoo ting joy,” becauge of the preamble that Rossini’s Lasiness. s0d,spent 2 e ako f’ 0 locking . SEDISH. “It 18 necessary for the support of tle| Rossini was one of the most Indolent after the business being done| Kdward Soland returned from | government, for the discharge of the|Of men and in his younger days used there by the “hello,” Wilton Thursday. debts of the United States and the|to do most of his composing in bed. . ‘ encouragement and protection of man-| Once be had almost completed a trio, 3 ufacturing, that duty be pald on]When the sheet fell out of his hand and ; goods, wares and merchandise fm-|Went under the bed. He could mot 1! ported.” reach it, and, rather than get up, he 3 Tarift history, it is maintained, dis-| Wrote another. The lazy man, if he 3 proves the Republican platform con-| Works at all, does so by spurts, snd 3 tention that “Democratic tariff has al-| Rossini, working agaiust time, wrote ‘ways been followed by business ad- O. M. Olson of Northome,| Duffie Dahl spent Sunday in deputy sheriff of Itasca county, | Wilton and Spaulding. e and who was recently defeated =Aly1n hI?Ltty of tMn,ple Plain is for the republican nomination for V'M::g é:fipfl(l;i:;:t s::se;;i“ sh};er;fi,t ;“T;mlr;&isfiom his | mjjlie Olson were at Redby Sat- me at No morning | urday. ¢ By ; versity, a Republican tariff by busi |days. When Donizett! was told of this and lef, this noon for Grand| MissOra Neely spent Saturday [ ness ety ol it ,S.'e,p':, be remarked, “It 18 very possible. He Rapids, Bovey and other points|and Sunday at Bemidji visiting| thereto the book has this to say: 18 80 lazy!” The overture to the “Gazza over east, on business, friends. “That hoary Republican misstate | Ladra” was vg—ltten under curious eir- A, L. Thwiag, tepublican can-|> Archie Ditty, who is working meit has « beon relterated in every|Simstances. ‘On fhe very day of fhe Fo s campaign since the war, but it re | first performance of the opera not a didate for county attorney of g: g;engty& L, visited his parents | ;504 tor Senator Lodge to embata | Rote of the overture was written, and Itasca county, spent a few hours % “The Barber of Seville” In thirteen < <3 it in a Republican platform and to|the manager, getting hold of Rossini, i A 4 Miss Florence Huck visited | have it aprroved by a president of |confined him in the upper loft of La in Bemidji Yes‘e“dg on his way | her parents in Bemidji Saturday | the United States.” Sc-l;. sem:fm fo;; s, k-!tz&m: 20 to Grand i ! —_— guard over . These bouie < opids from and Sunday BEREAVED GIRL SUICIDES. |as they were filled and threw them out — Northome, where he had been Mrs. M. Knox and sons went oy of the windows to copyists beneath. solidifying his political fences, |to Bemidji on Friday eveniogand | Loses Mother and Sweetheart Within _— Mr, Thwing has the reputation |returned on Monday morning. Twelve Months. Subjective Drowning. of being one of the best lawyers School report for the month of| Minot, N. D., Oct. 4—Grieving ove:| The dentist’s chair was tipped so far in this judicial district. September in District No. 39: the loss of her mother and her be | back that escape for the village seam- Number enrolled, nine; average| trothed within a year and being un- | 8tress,a lady of remarkable conversa- John Grabam returned yester-|daily aitandance, seven; neither day from St. Paul, where be|absent nor tardy, Mary Plante. went several days ago to Jennie Ditty and Frank Ditty. purchase the fixtures that will SPAULDING. be used in the Graham &| puivectig over and sticking Hawkins meat market at Minot, begun, N.D. He gave the order for the| \iss Rosy Olson visited Mrs. fixtures, whichh will be shipped |Stai last Wednesday. direct to Minot, and Mr, Graham | The ladies aid met at Mrs and Mr, Hawkins will leave for|Henry Bjoring’s last Thursday. home in the East Lizzie Erickson|Of absorbent cotton were tucked be- aged twenty-five years, living on a|Death her tongue, some patent appli- claim three miles north of Stanley|ance held her jaws apart, and all the with her brother, committed suicide| 10Wer half of her countenance except by shooting herself in the head with a| o2 back tooth was concealed under shotgun. The girl's mother died a|® decidedly damp rubber dam. The year ago and her betrothed within a|Patlent’s mouth was full of water, month. Friends refused to allow her to visit her old home on account of her disposition to brood over her sor- TOWS, naturally talkative lady was suffering agonies of discomfort. The engrossed dentist paid no heed to her squirmings or to the appeal in her eyes. Fortunately, however, the Eight Days of Rainfall. their new field in a few days. _Jack Frost painted his first| wNaghville, Tenn, Oct, 4.—For elght| patient’s hands were free. Groping fm —_— pictures last .Wednesday night. | days rain has been falling throughour | the reticule that hung from her belt, Five Dollars Reward. Ruford Hayes and Robert Stai| the Mississippi valley and reports| she brought forth paper and pencil and visited at Mr. Blom’s last Thurs-| coming in from isolated districts con. | Wrote: We will pay five dollars reward d for information leading to the =L i 2 Mrs. Stai and Rosy O'son recovery of two bars of pig lead |yisited Mrs. Ihde last Wednes- stolen from in front of our place|day. . of business on Minnesota avenue| Mr. Djjnne saw a bear a short last night. distance west of his place last Jerrard Piumbing Co, Friday. e S T Miss Hadda Blom 1s now home Blackduck’s New Church. again 3%91' spending a few G. Kreatz went to Blackduck weelts in Bemidji. this morning to inspect the werk farii‘;.l exi’z?%ug:‘ggl‘;:infi;fi “Help! Help! I'm drowning."— Youth’s Companion. firm earlier statements of heavy dam- age to cotton and corn. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS, " A Poet’s Curious Compliment. o It was the habit of Richard Henry Many fishing craft have been lost in| gtoddard, the poet, to always speak a storm which has just swept over| well of every one. No matter how bad the coast of France. the .character of a person, the good James H. Higgins, mayor of Paw | gray poet invariably found some traft tucket, has been nominated for gov-| to praise. Oné day in his office om ernor by Rhode Island Democrats. Park row some friend entered and " The city of New York now has one| asked him whether he knew so and ¥ telephone for each fourteen persons.| and, If so, what was the man’s reputa- There are now 276,000 telephones in( tion. It happeéned that the man had & that is being done on the new ¥ .’ | service. shady reputation and was well known Cnthotie chfr b wiiioh™ % bein ‘f”':e' S h"hey will make their| “yq girector of the mint Wednesday | a8 @ “gold brick” operator. The aged < 4 £ | future home. purchased 250,000 ounces of silver at| poet lighted his pipe and answered: erected in that village, and of| Iraand Elmer Moore of the| 69.21 cents per fine ounce, delivered| - “Yes, I know him. He fs the most which Mr. Kreatzis superintend. | town of Eckles left Wednesday | at the Denver (Colo.) mint. ::Mergeui.‘m&mgmm ‘;ve'klnwd 0 l;: . 3 N Istic of an ing th i the actual work | for North Dakota, where they in | Eighteen students have been ex- na’ 8 g the building, otiial wortll, nd to work during the fali| pelied from Lake Forest (Ill) college,| Mmitigated rascal that I ever met."— being done by other Pf"“les.- The season. following their refusal to sign a pledge | Leslie’s Weekly. new place of worship will be . that they would refrain from hazing M I land f frame, 30x44, with a steeple, and i85 Tnger. Sola left for} fresmen. the contract calls for its com-|where she has been engaged to Cold Storage Im Irish Bogs. For long it puzzled me to know what the poachers did with the birds they Green Bush last Thursday,| ", gne day the city of Seattle over- subscribed to the extent of nearly pletion November 15. teach a nine months term of| $100,000 the $500,000 stock issue of the | 8ot in July. There is:no cold storage school. Alaska-Pacific-Yukon exposition, which ;‘:m‘::.e“"‘zn":‘l;m?.r‘ they hes 3 il e e to tak . a b 1 5 g Bettering Storage Plant. O is to take place in Seattle in 1909. ied f or five deep g The Duluth Brewing company MARKET QUOTATIONS. is making extensive alterations on its cold storage plant, located on the M. & 1. tracks near the) john Anderson and E. Halvor- depot. Anmother story is being[son are busy building the bridge added to the building, more|across Blackduck river, at room being necessary to store|Quiring. eSS § i Erick Erickson has returned 8t Pavl.Unlon Stock Yards, the largo amouns 0l ice-zednired from North Dakota., His health| St. Paul, Oct. 3.—Cattle—Good to _— for the regulation of the temper- choice steers, $5.50@6.25; common. to The Taet Masket, 4 : . _|zave out, and he had to return g > , ature to the plant. The interior 5 g0od, $8.25@4.00; good to choice cows| .Chancellor James R. Day was once of the biilding is ilso being re. home before tio Intendedsto: and helfers, $3.50@4.50; veals, $4.50@ | advising a young undergraduate of arranged, under the direction of Mrs. Ed Dietrick and children visited with Mrs. Chas. LeRoque over Sunday. Minneapolis Wheat, Minneapolis, Oct. 3.—Wheat—Dec., T4% @74%c; May, 78%c. On track— No. 1 hard, 78%c; No. 1 Northern, 76¢; No. 2 Northern, 74c; No. 3 North- ern, 72%c. out perfectly fresh at the end of two or three weeks. When one remembers the bog butter dug out of the peat Hogs in a comparatively fresh state after belng buried for probably -200 or 800 years, it is not difficult to belleve that grouse might keep, under the same cir- cumstances, for two or three weeks.— Letter in Country Life. Mrs. Ten Eyck and Mrs. E.|550. Hogs—$6.00@6.55. Sheep—Weth. | Syracuse university to cultivate tact.: Johnson visited with Mrs. C. J. | ers, $4.50@5.25; good to prime spring| “But, alas,” he said, “I fear that advice J. P. Signal, local representative | Carlson Sunday; they also called | lambs, $6.25@7.00. .on such a subject must always be A for the company. on Mrs. T. P. Dooher. Dt St wasted. On tact the last word was ] M d M F. J. Dooh . spoken by. Barbey d’Aureville when he § vir. and rs. I J. Doeoher| pyuth, Oct. 3.—Wheat—To arrive | gaid: READ AND YOU WILL LEARN visited with Mr. and Mrs. W.[ _No. 1 Northern, 76%c; No. 2 North-| = * If tact could be bought, only those That the leading medical writers and | Hills Thursday. Mr. Dooher is| ern, 75c. On track—No. 1 hard, 77%c: | already possessed of it would want to teachors of all 'the several schools of |otherwise busy laving a founda-| No. 1 Northern, 76%c; No. 2 North-| buy it ” : i &.ron zost terms possible, each and every | tion for his new house, which he e, 75c; Oct, 76¢c; Dec., 75¢; May, TR T ingredient entering into the composition | will build in the spring. 78%¢c. Flax—To arrive, $1.12%; on{ Haking New Rubber Plants; of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Mafifi.lé) scovery Th, tenid.fine inbhet track, $1.13; Oct., $1.12 Nov., $1-] From a rubber plant which s grow-- for the cure/of Weakistomach, dyspepsia, e weather is fine in the bown | 151, "neg, §1.1034; Jan, $1.11%; May,| tng In & living room, the best wayto: h, “li laint,? Rt ! ’ e var, o bitiousnoss, ehronts bowal | 'f Quiring, just rain enough | g4z, get plants §s by scoring the bark of the: affections, and all catarrhal diseases of | settle the dust. Hope it is so i — Mmb , where .you want the roots.te: ;vlg:fl;;cfig‘f:fi:;;nfixrn:lfl::;‘{&chr?nz: slsewhere. The roads are good, ChicagolGraln and Drovsionk. grow and_covering the Injury with: or long standing cases of catarrhal affee- | '0d the ladies know it tco, for |, Chicago, Oct. 3.—Wheat — Dec.,| sphagnum moss, which must always be t{:ms nnddtlhelr ‘{‘e!ultun('a, as tbrom:hml, hey all turned out to vote. 'llig (DTEEC; :;!ay. zg%@g%c. Caln;n kept damp.. Roots will soon permeate 1] seases (except consum —Dec., 43c; May, i t(crno)latc';:mpfiedwnh severepmughs. t | Rev. Bondahl of Blackduck _-D:: 3434¢ M{y 35’;‘%33;,: gori: "': m“;"' u:;“ q‘e';'mbl:h""“lln"'m i8 not so good for acute colds and coughs, | ; s ith M a M ", 2 AN et 6T S off and poi —Garden. Magazine, but for fingerlng or chronic cases 1o 14 | 00k dinver witl T an T8.| —Jan, $13.42%. Flax—Cash, $1.12. especially efficacions n producing per- (C. J. Carlson Wednesday. He|Butter—Creameries, 19%@24%c; dair- Kept. Her Word. e eal et Bloatoot, Stana yot, | 728 on his missionary trip to| les, 18@21i4c. Kges—15@19c. Poultry | “This sald the school friend who . Mandrake root and Queen’s root—all of | Shotley and no of Red Lake. | —Turkeys, 13c; chickens, 11¢; springs, | had not seen her for a year, “this Is.the. which are highly praised as remedies for | He will have moetings on his way | 11@11%c. girl who vowed to me that she nevee. all the above mentioned affections by such porth —_— would belong to any man, eh?” 5 Chicago Union Stock Yards. “I don't” said she- who had t cago, e X loggy Frof, Hags, of tho iy of Fas A Prottarian Diet 06T 00; cows and hetore, $1600;| Encred the matter of some v monthe Dot Mo Collogs. Onigigos Brof. Jonn | A frultarian diet consists of the | g30: " stookers and. fevders. snog | " T belongs to me- King, M. D., late of Clnc(nnu.tl-bPror. fruits of trees (like apples, oranges, 440; ‘Tem._ $3.70@4.40; Westerns, o A e i Hale M. D of |Penanas and ollves), the fruits of bush- | §3.50@5.40; calves, $6.25@850, Hoga| ‘W knom a movraie ot womenn Hahhemann Med. College, Chicago, hnd |es (like currants and raspberries), the | \izoq ang butchers, ' $6.35@6.85; 'fl° “‘“; . i “em,‘ scores of others equally eminent in their |fruits of plants (like strawberries and | goo4 heavy, $6.45@6.82%; roush | oo iters, an: m’:'fi U e very:. several schools of practice. . d beans and cucum- » i & ; good looking—wmuch, better. looking,, at: "The Golden Medical Discovery ls the |melon, lentils an heavy, $5.90@6.35 ; light, $6.35@6.80; | any rate, than men writers, whose ap~ guiy ‘mealciae put 5 for Salo through | ber), th trults of aratacs (ke Whewt | plgn 35150640, Shoop. 35650540} | penrance In very eldom 5 abiacite ruggists for like purposes, that has an 1] ), , $4.90@7.50. 786l @ ] frults of Bt trees (from Aibert to co. | oo 34900750 a8 thelr. works.—\cademy. e e of Gralaary oot more than suy numiber. of nary testl- | . onut), together with some earth N = Oty oaebor 1 the. bont wasmibla | frults (like potatoes), and a modicum of Golt and the Liver. i guaranty of its merits. A glance at this | yegetables and salads. To these may | Golfis the greatest of all games, It published formula will show thateGolden | po" gqgea butter, milk, honey and |10 the only recreation that is at one and || chemical ure, triple-refined glycerine | go free from risk of contamination an I 4 K Deing used nstoad. giycerine I8 entirely | gnimal infection as 18 the case with the Mflg “physically exhaustive, But I Interect ‘o8 : unobjectionable and besides {s a most am' profoundly convinced that it 18 fa: aary. 1 want: another dollef to roi eminent medical writers and teachers as Prof.- Bartholow, of Jefferson Med. Col- Women Writers. i1 fent in the cure of all stom- | Products of the vegetable kingdom and I 5 at : “ Soh 88 wall aa bronGHIAl, throat and long | the world of fruits, Grown under |better for & mars liver that he ahould [the house on in the meantiie—Chica- affections. ‘There i8 the Mflhest medical | pealthy conditions, with diseased specl- | PIa¥ ‘& poor game than & good ons. T |g, g i : %‘i,?‘.’%}{w‘% "5;;“: s'{,‘,,:e,,.‘,‘;‘é},‘d";f# mens easy to detect and remove, it is; hlfil—flbw eric extract of native, medicinal roots' |far more possible to live healthily and and {8 safe and reliable. well upon a fruitarian -dietary than | klet of extracts from eminent, the products of the slaughter | edical authorities, endorsing its i JpAE. He Rrochete 0 p medical authorities, on{Adg‘r: Woilie. able to gratify a desire to revisit Ler | tional” ability, was lmpossible. Wads — speech was impossible, and the poor, * I— in dry peat, and, I am teold, vome __