Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 8, 1907, Page 2

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| | | umpz‘ion 5 Your doctor Wi fltell you that fresh airand goodf aodarethe realcures for consum gtion. But often the cough is very hard. Hence, we suggest that you ask your doctor about Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. We publish the formulas J.C. O of all our preparations. Low: TH-E BEMIDJ BMLYPNNEEH!M “Ihe allusion 1s t6o bvlous o b A A AN AN | PUBLISHED BVERY AFTERNOON. | -, dug; s 2 o OFFICIAL PAPER--CITY OF semmn‘:gxp S b can be traced ’ A A A A AN AAAAAAANANANANANNNAS need polnting out. The oldest Hxed B, C) can be traced to te (424 %?;fpé ‘v‘gere the calendar wag Intro- in the middle of the forty-third Angd the hjstoi¥ of modern in Bgypt, where it about 3000 B. C. The PUBLISHING CO.'fost fecent discoferies give to the SENIDIL NONEE—*— Efin:i of Egypt a cjean rup of &bout A. G. RUTLEDGE | Managing Editor | i CLYDE J. PRYOR I Business Manager as second class matter. A ANAAA AR | SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUI\F i The Cass Lake forces finally, succeeded in killing all the nor-| mal school bills for vhis part et the state, It Senator Hausou's bill providing for aschool to be! located somewhere in this part! of the state had received the sup- port of the Cass Lake crowd, it would probably have gone through. But they wanted it all or nuothing. Senator Sageng came near the truth, we believe, when he told them that Cass Lake only wanted the school because the town was dying and needed the *boost.”—Clearwater | Crystal. | Remember, | Remember. [ remember, T remember ‘The hats they used to wear, The little one they called a toque That had a jaunty air: And then there was another one That long has had its day— The brim was flared above the brow way. this up And tilted I remember, T remember When came the change of style: The milliners gave thought to it With cunning and with guile. They took that flopping, flared-up brim And when they had designed The new hat it possessed a shape That flared up thus bebind. 1 remember, T remember The hats they wore last year, And some were high and some were low And some stuck on the car, But most were fashioned breadbowlwise A round and hollow cup: The brim was tilted fore and aft So up. it and went down 1 remember, 1 remember— But who believes me nov? I need not cite the many shapes “Thatsit on woman’s brow. I notice, though, the hats this spring Show fashion's fit of play- The breadbowl shape's inverted now, are turned brims this The ‘The Llon’s Mouth. The use of the llon’s mouth as the vent of a fountain is so common that it cannot be regarded as accldental. As a matter of fact, the custom (like so many customs—not forgetting the foun tain pen) came from Egypt, which adopted It because the annual inunda- Eutered n the postofiice at Bemidjt. Minn.." g 3 ed of thee!"—New York Press, . tlon of the Nile takes place when the sun I8 _In the constellation Leo—the 11,000 years without any admizture of for reigy races. “Egypt, land of hidden mysth _gfL i_Ereat mother of sclence and rt, wha inking tind has not dream- A Fair Exchange. An original scheme evolved by a cer- tain tobacco merchant to introduce his goods worked to the satisfaction of a physician to whom this dealer sent a box of clgars with a bill for §5 and an explanatory letter, which read: “Although you have not ordered these cigars, I take the liberty of send- ing them, feeling sure you will find them excellent.” After the doctor had smoked the clgars, says the Medical Times and Hospital Gazette, he mailed five pre- seriptions to the tobacconist, with a note, saying: “Although you have not asked for my professional advice, I take the liberty of sending you these prescriptions, feel- ing sure you willl find them excellent.” A Practical Husband, Surely the Monmouthshire man who caused his wife’'s wedding ring to be nseribed, “If thee doesn’t work, thee shan’t eat,” was determined that there should be no mistake in what he re- quired In a wife. The only wonder is how any woman could be induced to marry him with such a threat before her eyes. The exact date of this ring 1s not known, but it Is previous to the eighteenth century. — Chambers’ Jour- nal. The Forsaken North, A teacher in one of our public schools was having a lesson upon latitude and its effect upon climate. “Now, who can tell me” she in- quired, “why it grows colder as we travel toward the north?’ A young- ster crled, “It’s because you get farther away from the creator!”—Philadelphia Ledger. A Touchy Game. The man who tried to introduce a new game into society found that most of the women wouldn’t play. He asked them to begin by each wetting her finger In a glass of water and then drawing it down across her cheek.— Somerville Journal. Nipped Himself. A political speaker accused a rival of “unfathomable meanness,” and then, rising to the occasion, said, “I warn him not to persist in his disgraceful course ot he'll find that two of us can play @t that game.” Got His Share. “Casey do be a great fighter.” “He {s thot. Yisterdah he walked tin miles to lick a mon.” “An’ dld he walk back, too, I dunno?” “No; he was carried back.”—Cleve- land Leader. He who freely praises what he means to purchase and he who freely enumer- ates the faults of what he means to sell may set up a partnership with hon- esty.—Lavater. OLD 5 A great many people have an idea that old sores exist merely because of a diseased condition of the flesh BY where the ulcer FED AND KEPT OPEN IMPURE BLOOD is located. They TIKERISKS DCAOPS Senate Passes the Sundberg Insurance Biil. ol VOTE ON MEASURE 1S CLOSE Received Just Enough Votes for Its Passage—House Passes the Legis- lative Salary Bill in Committee of the Whole Without Opposition. 8t. Paul, April 6.—The senate passed Senator Sundberg’s bill, S. F. No. 105, proposing a constitutional amendment to authorize the state auditor to levy an acreage tax on lands insured against loss by hail, for the purpose of creating an insurance fund against damage to crops by hail storms. The bill received just enough votes for its passage without one to spare, there being 32 for and 12 against the bill. The bill authorizes the state anditor to levy an acreage tax on the land of the farmers who shall have signified their willingness to pay this tax by listing their lands for this purpose with the county auditor of the county in which the farms are located. This money is to be used as a fund for the payment of losses to crops by reason of hail storms. The constitutional amendment to authorize the state au- ditor to take such action is to be sub- mitted to the people at the general election in 1908. A bill raising the rate of interest on local improvement certificates to 12 per cent was passed by the senate un- der suspension of rules. The bill has already passed the house. The bill repealing the corrupt prae- tices act, amended by the special com- mittee to which it was referred so as to repeal only that section which limits the expenditures of the candi- dates, was passed by the senate by 38 to 7. Repeals Only One Section. The bill as originally introduced orovided for the repeal of the sections requiring the filing of expense ac- counts by candidates and fixing the 1limit of the expenses. When the bill was before the committee of the whole it was amended so as to include all of the sectlons of the corrupt practices, but later it was referred to the special committee on motion of the author, Senator D. S. Hall of Buffalo Lake. This committee reported an amend- ment simply repealing one section. The law as amended would enable a man who wanted to file a true state- ment of his expenses to put as much money into the campaign as necessary and still not be under the necessity of committing perjury in making his statement. The house passed the two state drainage hills prepared by the drain- age committee. The general hill was amended so as to cut out the appro- priation and leave the amount to be fixed in the omnibus bill; otherwise they were net changed materially. The house and the senate committees have been working together during the greater part of the winter drawing up the details of the bills and their policy has been pretty well agreed upon since early in the session. The general bill provides a compre- hensive system of draining state lands and leaves the work in charge of the present commission, composed of the governor, the state auditor and the secretary of state. A detailed system of procedure for the extablishment of - [CITY LOTS patiently apply salves, powders, plasters and other external applica- tions, but in spite of all such treatment the place refuses to heal. When- ever a sore or ulcer does not heal readily the blood is at fault; this vital fluid is filled with impurities and poisons which are constantly being discharged into the place, feeding it with noxious matter, which makes it impossible for the sore to heal. 014 sores may be the result of an inherited blood taint, or the effects of a long speii of sickness, or again the circulatioti may be contaminated with the collections of refuse matter which the different members have failed to expel through the channeis of nature. Whatever the cause the blood be- comes steeped in poison and a cut, bruise, scratch or other wound often develops into ® ° PS asore, fed and kept up by these impurities, gaus?g it to gflat deepe\; into the surround- ing tissue, inflaming, festering and caus- PURELY VEGETABLE ing pain. External appiications cun ooy keep the sore clean; they cannot cure the trouble because they do not reach the blood. 8. S. S. cures Old Sores by going to the very bottom of the trouble, driving out the impurities and poisons and purifying and building up the entire circulation. When S. S. S. has removed the cause the blood becomes rich and healthy, the sore begins to heal, new flesh is formed, the place scabs over and is soon permanently healed, Book on Sores and Ulcers and any medical advice free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GAs During the year 1906 we sold more lots in Bemidji than any year previous. The future of Bemidji is assured and those intending to make this their home should not fail to purchase residence lots at this time. We also have a fewfgood business lots for sale. For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block, Bemidji. ditches is provided. The owners of private lands may start the proceed- ings by petition or they may be started by the state commission, but in all cases the private landowners are to be assessed for benefits the same as under the county or judicial drainage system. The second bill provides that the cost of drainage of state lands shall be added to the minimum price for which state lands may be sold and also that 8 per cent interest shall be charged upon this amount until it is paid. Legislative Salary Bill Passed. The legislative salary bill was passed out by the house committee of the whole without opposition. When the bill came up last week the question was raised as to whether the passage of the bill would disqual- ify any of the members of the present legislature from being candidates again. R. J. Wells of Breckenridge, author of the bill, produced an opinion from the attorney general stating that the bill would not prevent any mem- ber from being a candidate. The only limitation made by the constitution was that any salary increase should not take effect until the following ses- sion and also that no one should be eligible to an office created by the leg- islature of which he was a member. The bill recommended gives each member of the Ilegislature $500 for each year for which he is elected, and $5 per day additional for the speaker of the house and the president of the senate. Under the present law the members of the legislature are paid $5 a day for every day from the time the ses- sion opens until it closes, whether meetings are held or not. The house committee on state fair made a favorable report on the state fahh bills. One of the bills provides for an appropriation of $150,000 and the other a loan of $250,000 for im- provements at the state fair grounds, both being necessary on account of the failure of the semi-centennial bill. The house passed the’ senate bill providing for summer sessions at the state nermal schools. WEER (S SR STERNBURG GOING HOME. Tariff Agreement With Germany Is About Completed. ‘Washington, April 8.—Baron Stern- burg, the German ambassador, called at the state department to say good- bye to Secretary Root and the other officlals before departing for Germany on a short visit to his ancestral es- tates in Saxony. He expects to sail from New York April 9 on the Kaiser ‘Wilhelm der Grosse, accompanied by Baroness Sternburg, and will return to America about July 1. The negotiations for a new agree- ment to continue In forcé the présent minimum rates for duty on American Imports Into Germany have progressed so far as to warrant the statement that the finishing touches can be add- ed in Berlin, probably during the am- bassador’s stay there and certainly before the expiration in June of the existing German decree on that sub- Ject. EIGHT HUNDRED MEN OUT Minneapolis Carpenters Seek to En- force Wage Demand. % Minneapolis, April 8.—Carpenters to the number of 800 have quit work and construction on a number of big build- ings fs at a standstill. The master builders had announced to the strike committee of the union that all compromises were off and that the men would be expected to go back to work for 40 cents per hour. The union men decided upon a mass meeting to discuss the matter. The master builders oftered a compromise at 4214 cents an hour, but the car- penters refused this. = The builders then agreed to pay 45 cents an hour after July 1, but the carpenters want- ed the raise at once. This was re- fused and a strike followed on all jobs where the master builders. re- fused to give the workmen 45 cents an hour. MORE TEACHERS NEEDED. Available Supply for Philippines In- sufficient. ‘Washington, April 8.—One hundred and twenty American schoolteachers will sail for the Philippines before June 1. Most of the new schoolteach- ers are men, as the Philippine com- mission prefers them to women. be- cause of the hardships which must be endured -at interior towns. All of the teachers sent to the islands are sub- Jject to civil service examinations. The certified list of teachers has not been sufficient to supply the full quota re- quired this vear and another exam- ination will be held soon to fill the remaiaing places. There are about 800 American teachers and 3,000 Fili- pino teachers employed in the insular schools. The new school year opens there on Juue 1. Fifteen Thousand Mile Trip. Superior, Wis., April 8.—Captain J. H. Ewart of San Francisco has arrived here to take out the steamer Winne- bago, bound for San Francisco, the entire trip being over 15,000 miles. The Winnebago will probably take on a cargo of carbolite at Detroit. The ship, together with the Lucy Neff of Milwaukee and Minnie F. Kelton of Tonawanda, have been purchased for the San Francisco-Puget Sound lumber trade. O e —— A Story oI False Imprisonment. One of the strangest of stories of false imprisonment comes from France. A woman was sentenced to imprison- ment for life for having caused the death of her husband and brother. The three had lived together at Malaunay, near Rouen, in a cottage, the lower part of which was used as a wine shop. When tUie woman was sent to prison other people took the wine shop, but the new tenants suffered, the man from fuinting fits, his wife from nau- sea, from which she died. Another couple tried their fortune, but they, too, were overcome by the “spell of the o ," as they thought it. They w ject to fainting and loss of memor, last a scientific exam- ination of {he premises was made. Then it was found that adjoining the inn was a lime kiln, In the wall divid- ing it from the cottage were many fis- sures, so that whenever lime was burnt monoxide of carbon escaped into the inn. This was the secret of the deaths for which the woman was suffering. She was brought out of prison after six years of servitude. A Doctor of the 01d School. Father was a doctor, a genuine, hemp sewed, corn fed country physician of the gray haired class of our oldest school. He neither wore kid gloves nor practiced in them. His patients either had to get well or die, with no loiter- ing on the way. He felt the pulse with one hand and poured castor oil with the other. “Put your trust in castor,” was fa- ther’s creed, and he lived it and ad- ministered it. Castor oil was both his diagnoser and his curer. He gave it any way. If it ‘worked, well and good; if not, he used some other lubricant or else adniinis- tered liberal doses of more energetic concoctions. There were no milk and ‘water mixtures in his medicine case. But castor oil first; castor oil, the dis- ease secking chaser of everything with- in its reach, and by the great table- spoon it reached about everything.— “Gumption,” by N, C. Fowler, Jr. When Folks Feared Gas. In the early days of the last century, when illuminating gas was first used in London, timorous people talked of the dangers of suffocation and of explo- sions to which the gas, which was still Imperfectly purified, exposed the citl- zens. Scientists confirmed these asser- tions, and the first gasometers erected in London by Samuel Clegg so terrified the people that no workman would ven- ture to light the gas jets which had been placed on Westminster bridge. But Clegg soon overcame this difficulty by lighting a torch and applying it to the burners with his own hands. On another occasion before a committee of the Royal society of London he bored a hole in the gas holder and put a light- ed candle to it, to the great alarm of the spectators, but without causing the slightest accident. Gradually the eyes even of the most prejudiced were open- ed to the truth. A Feminine Failing. I was being rowed across a Canadian lake by a party of Indians and was told I must not break the stillness or the spirits of the place would be of- fended, says a woman writer in the Indiana Farmer. It was a calm, cloud- less day, and the canoe sped like an ar- row across the smooth waters. Sud- denly, when in the middle of the lake, I determined to prove to these simple folk the folly of their belief. So I lifted up my voice in a wild cry that woke every echo of the hills. The Indians were filled with consternation. They uttered no word, but, straining every ve. rowed on in frowning gilence THEY rencned tne shore in safety, and I had triumphed. But the leader of the Indlans looked on me in concern. “The great spirit is merciful,” he sald. “He knows that the white wom- an cannot hold her peace.” No Dissection In Jersey. In many states the law assumes if a dead man has no friends to bury him there will be no.objection made if the body is dissected. For this reason all unclaimed bodles are given to medical colleges, Although there are more than -150 1medical ‘colleges in the United States, not one is in operation in New Jersey because dissection of the hu- man body is prohibited by law in that state. The. Cross Counter, Two debutantes were lunching at a table by a window. “I've been wondering all day,” said the blond, “why you weren’t invited to the Smith-Smith’s.”” The brunette, with a sweet, clear laugh, replied: “And I've been wondering all day, dear, why you were.”—St. Louis Globe- Democrat. Just o Misplaced Comma, An article on the milk supply of large cities in the British Medical Jour- nal contains this remarkable passage: “The man having finished milking, his cow offered. to take me into an ad- joining room where the milk was cooled.” A Similarity. “He's quite wealthy and prominent I now,” sald Mrs, Starvem, “and they say he rose practically from nothing.” “Well, well!” remarked Mr. Border. “That's just what I rose from—at the breakfast table this morning.” The Preferred. Dumley—What they call preferred stock is the stock that pays dividends, isn’t it? Wiseman—Not at all; but the stock that does pay dividends is al- ways preferred.—Exchange. Alms of a higher order, even though they be not fulfilled, are more valua- ble than lower ones entirely fulfilled.— Goethe. Betfing on a Sure Thing. A cértain captain in Colombo was an inveterate gambler. He had had such bad luck he determined to go home to his friends in Europe. The night before he was to sail he stayed at a friend’s house and the next morn- Ing at breakfast remarked apropos of nothing, “What a high table this is!” “Is it?” said his host carelessly. “Why, it cannot be less than—yes, 1 should say it was quite thirty inches. Bet you what you like it's thirty inches.” “I thought you had given up bet- ting.” “This is my last bet in Ceylon. Shan’t have another chance.” “As you like.” A measure was brought and the height ascertained. It was found to be twenty-nine inches exactly. “I've lost,” said the captain ruefully, “yet I would bhave sworn it* was thirty inches.” “I know you would. Shall I tell you why? When I was shaving this morn- Ing my bedroom door was open. I saw your reflection in the glass. You were measuring the height, and, knowing what was to follow, I took the precau- tion while you were out for a stroll of having an inch sawed off the legs!” Facts About Cigars. Few cigar smokers are aware that all cigars are named according to their color and shape. A dead black cigar, for instance, is an “Oscuro,” a very dark brown one is a “Colorado Madu- ro,” a dark brown is a “Colorado,” a medium brown is a “Colorado Claro,” and a yellowish light brown is a “Claro.” Most smokers know the names of the shades from “Claro” to “Colora- do,” and that is as far as most of them need to know. As to the shapes, a “Na- poleon,” the biggest of all cigars, is seven inches long; a “Perfecto” swells in the middle and tapers down to a very small head at the lighting end; a “Panatela” is a thin, straight up and down cigar without the graceful curve of the “Perfecto;” a “Conchas” is very short and fat, and a “Londres” is shap- ed like a “Perfecto,” except that it does not taper to so small a head at the lighting end. A “Reina Victoria” is a “Londres” that comes packed in a ribbon tied. bundle of fifty pleces in- stead of in the usual four layers of thirteen, twelve, thirteen and twelve. The World’s Highest Monument. The cornerstone of the Washington monument was laid, on its fine site which overlooks Washington, George- town, Arlington and Mount Vernon, by President Polk, July 4, 1848, Its mar- ble shaft rises, in all the dignity of un- adorned stmplicity, to the height of 555 feet. The base of the shaft is fifty-five feet square, and It gradually tapers, until at the 500 foot point it has di- minished to less than thirty-five feet. This monument is said to contain 18,000 blocks of marble, each two feet thick. They were lifted on an elevator run by steam, suspended in ‘an Inner frame- work of iron, which was built up at intervals, thirty or forty feet at a time, In advance of the surrounding masonry. The aluminjum capstone, nine inches high, was set in position Dec. 6, 1884, thirty-six years and a half after the cornerstone was laid. The Derrick. A derrick is an innocent mechanical apparatus for lifting heavy weights, but it gets its name from an English hangman called Derrick, who flourish- ed many years ago. The people of that time thought that the device used only in the hangman’s trade resembled the more common mechanism which now bears his surname. Somewhat similar- ly, the term ruffian is belleved by many to have come from Morocco, ‘where the inhabitants of the Riff coun- try were and are pirates and altogether: persons of evil character. Sydney Smith’s Retort. ‘“We can relish a pleasantry,” obsery- ed a Scotchman once to Sydney Smith, “as much as our neighbors. You must have seen that the Scotch have a con- siderable fund of humor.” “Oh, by all means,” said Sydney Smith, “you are an immensely funny people, but you need a little operating upon to let the fun out. I know no in- strument so effectual for the purpose as the corkscrew.” == £ FRIEND TO FRIEND The personal ccommendations of peo ple who have been cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy have done more thax all else to make it a staple article of trade and commerce over a large part of the civilized world. Barker’s Drug Store Just Reeeived A large shipment of Singer and Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Ma- chines. The best and most beautiful line of cabinets ever carried in the city. Also a complete line of Pianos, Organs and Sheet Music at popular prices. Repairs for machines of all kinds. sewing BISIAR,VANDER LIP & COMPANY 311 Minn. Ave. Phone 319 Bemidji ONE CENTIA WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED—FKor U. S. army able- bodied, unmarried men be tween ages of 19 and &5, citi- zens of TUnited States, of good character and temperate habits, who can spesk, read and write English. For in formation apply to Recruitirg Officer, Miles block, E dji, Minnesota. WANTED, for; the U S. Marine Corps; men Letween the jages 2[ and 85. An opportunity to see the world. For {full in- formation apply in person or by letter to 208 Third Street. WANTED: Good giri for gen- eral house work—small family. Good wages. Inquire 608 Be- midji avenue. FOR SALE. FOR SAILK— Rubber stampr. The Pioneer will procure ary kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice, FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head, mounted; will be sold cheap Inquire at this office, FOR SALE—Tool chest and car- penter tools. Al in good con- dition. W. A. Ferris. FOR SALE: Good second hond safe. Inquire at this office. MISCELLANEOQUS. ‘mere subscribery number, 5 ce) o Kroe. Bubscribs today. » Lndy Ageaty Wanted, Handtome premigmeor commi . _Pattern Catal ( of 6oe de.. L e e Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays ard Saturdays, 2:30 to 6 p, m. Thursdays7 to 8 p. m. also. Library in bLase- ment of Coirt House. Mabel Kemp, librarian. Miss PROFESSIONAL <« CARDS: LAWYER . WM. B. MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW Practices before the United States Supreme Court—Court of Claims—The United States General Land Office—Indian Office and Con- gress. Special attention given to Land Con- tests—Procurement of Patents and Indian Claims. Refer to the members of the Minne- sota Delegation in Crongress. Offices: 420 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markham., E. E, McDonald - ATTORNEY AT LAW Bemld]l, Minn. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgecn Office: iles Block 60 YEARS® EXPERIENCE TrADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a skotch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an Invention is probably annmh!a. Communica- tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent frea. Oldest agency Tor securing pateuts. atents taken through Munn & Co. recelve special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely fllustrated weekly. Largest olr- culation of any solentific journal. Terms, $3 a ear: four months, $L.S0ld byali newsdealers. & (0,38 18roacwar, New York ‘Branch O P 8t. Washington, D. C. 'DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGECN Telephone Number 309 Third St., one block west of 1st Nat’l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer. Phone 40. 404 Beltram: Av Tom Smert Dray and baggage. Safe and Piano moving. Phore No. 58 | 18 America Ave. DENTISTS. Dr. R. B. Foster. SURGQECN DENTIST PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK ‘Thera are mors Mo eTme 50ld Intte United Btates then of any et! ke of patterns. This is o8 account of their style, accuracy and simplicity. q The of Fashion) has McCallls Mpgastas (T Quengt Fion gy shfesiiinng L year's subscription (12 pui o Every o0 m; sent free, Addiess THE McCALL CO. Now Yors years' practice. SUR- PASSING REFERENCES. Forfreo Guide Book on Profitable Patents write to S503-505 Seventh Street, WASHINGTON, D. C. ABEAYTIEUL EACE BEAUTYSKIN = 'DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist First National Bank Build’g. Telephone No. 230 Gse PIONEER Delivered to your door every evaning Only 40c per Month beneficial results are guaranteed or money relunded. CHICHESTER CHZMICAL CO.,’ Madison Place. Diailadelphia. Pa, -

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