Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, February 25, 1899, Page 11

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\ i>. i 1] This is the glad season of the year} when the plumber gets square with the fce man. Suggestions for Women as to the Care of Dainty Underwear. It is one thing to have pretty ee ings, and another to keep them so, nothing can this be more truly said thar so generally of woman's underwear, ruined in washing with’ strong, impure -oap, and by hard rubbing. Silk ano len underwear should never be washed vn a cloudy day. When ready to do the work, half fill a tub with warm water, olve a fourth of a bar of ap, and wash the articles through it with the hands, rinse in warm water and squeeze, but do not wring. Hang on the line and press with a hot iron while damp. ELIZA R. PARKER. Dor ing ot comes in at the window when y is denied at the door.—Jewett, ifealth for Ten Cents. naturally, destroy microbes, cure headache, billiousness and constipation. All druggists. Disec ance; s infirmity of will—bKmerson, To CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Laxative Bromo Quinire Tablets. AN ggists refund the money It it fails to cure. The genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet. TES YOUR HAER TURNING GRAY? What does your mirror say? Does it tell you of some little streaks of grayP. Are you pleased? Do your friends of the same age show this loss of power also? Just remember that gray hair never becomes darker without help, while dark hair rapidly becomes gray when once the change begins. = Ayer’s fialr Vigor will bring back to your hair the color of youth. It never fails. It is just as sure as that heat melts snow, or that water quenches fire. It cleanses the scalp also and prevents the formation of dandruff. It feeds and nour- ishes the bulbs of the hair making them produce a luxu- Tiant growth. It stops the hair from falling out and gives a fine soft finish to the hair as well. f _ We have a book on the Hair and Scalp which you may obtain free upon request. If you do not obtain all the benefits ‘ou expected from the use of Vigor, write the Doctor about it. ‘Address, DR. J. C. AYER, “Lowell, Mass. SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU DRY. be fooled with a mackintosh or rubber coat. If you ita coat that will keep you dry in the hard- est storm buy the Fish Brand Slicker. If not for sale in your town, write for catalogue to A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. FOR 14 CE We wish to gain this year: pew customers and ence tee Phg. Es Hy Rive Cabos ios Early Ri o s- Bary Bie ¢ are i Long lights'g Gacamber ve Salzer's Best Lettuce, 130 Palifornia Fig Tomato, y Dinner Onion, ' Ive Brillfant Flower Sesds,_t5¢ Worth $1.00, for14cents, $1.W Above 10 pkgs. worth $1.00, we will ail you free, together with our great Plant and ‘Seed Catutogue ec avite your tr ‘now when you once try Sal seedayouwillnever get alony lp aees outthem. Onion Seed Ser an up_a Ib, ‘otatoes at SI. 30 Bbl. Catalog alone 5c. No. wa PO.) LA CROSSE, WIS, A GOOD CARDEN A a pleasure and aprofit. Gregory's seed book di- rects aright beginning. Gregory's Seed insure the most su ul ending. Get the book now it’s free. JOMES J. H. GREGORY & SON, Marblehead, Mass. WHEAT] $25, $100, $500, $1,000 will give you regular monthly in- eby ourp'an, Absolutely surc. Nothing better. __ ‘aii in operation over 10 years. Now is the time to make money. Markets active. Highest references. PEAKER & CO, GRAIN, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. PS NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worst DE Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treat~ ment Free. Dr. H.M.GREEN’S SONS, Box B, Allanta, Ga. WANTED—Case of pad health that R-I-P-A-N-8 t benefit. Send 5 cents to Ripans Chemical ALL ELSt ¥ Best Cough Syrup. ‘Tastes Good. Tee intime. Sold by druneista, a SCONSUMP. TION / Cascarets make bowels and kidneys act ont is the want of self-reli- FOR BOYS S AND GIRIS. SOME GOOD STORIES FOR OUR JUNIOR READERS. . Where the Robias Go for the Winter Time—“How They Became Ac- quainted,” Tale of Pussy-Willow. a Juvenile Romance—A In Winter Weather. Oh, where is the children’s playground? It is buried beneath the snow; The flowers are dead, the birds have fled; Now where will the children go? They will go to the cozy corner, Where the fire burns warm and bright, And there they will meet ‘the fairies, Who bask in the moon’s pale light. They will find fair Cinderella; They will go with her to the ball; They will find that lovely fellow, Clever Jack, and the beanstalk tall. And Red Ridinghood will be there; And the wolf, he will be there, too; But now that he has wiser grown, I am sure he will not harm you. They will there meet Mother Hubbard, And good old Mother Goose as well, And a score of other people Of whom we have all heard tell. They are all there in the corner, For there is the Fairyland true, And when it is winter weather That’s the place, children dear, for you. —Arthur J. Burdick. Where the Robins Go. Ray was looking out of the window, watching the snowbirds hopping about under the trees, looking for some of the crumbs he had thrown out that morning. Auntie,” he asked, “where do all the other birds go when the snow comes—the swallows and the bluebirds and the robins? Where do the robins “Come here, dear,” said Aunt Bess, “and I'll tell you what I saw last win- ter when I was in southern California. Ray came, and the other children, Jack and Daisy and little Ted, left their play and came, too, for they were always ready to hear Aunt Bes- sie’s stories, and especially ones about Califernia. Auntie lifted Teddy upon her lap and began: “One morning in February, when the sun was bright and warm, I was out in the yard picking an orange, when I heard a queer little noise near me. It seemed to come from a big pepper- tree that stood there, and sounded like two things—like rain-drops pattering on the ground and corn-popping up in the tree. “While I was wondering what it could be, suddenly there was a ‘chir- rup!’ that sounded very familiar, and I said, ‘Why. they’re robins, eating the pepper-berries!’ And sure enough, there they were, a big flock of them, picking away, and that made the pop- ping, and the berries they dropped made the rain-drops. “The pepper-berries are tiny, round, bright red balls that grow in bunches, something like grapes, and taste like our black pepper; and how the robins were eating them! Perhaps they need- ed something to warm them after their long journey from the north.” “TI know!” said Jack, “pepper’s good for chickens, and maybe it is for rob- ins, too.” “Perhaps,” said auntie. “Well, all at once there was a great whir and clatter, and there came a big gray mocking-bird right in among them! That was his own particular tree, where he always sat to sing his morn- ing song, and he didn’t propose to have robins taking possession and eat- ing up his berries! “So the selfish fellow flew at first one and then another, chattering and scolding, and drove them all away.” “Did they stay away?” asked Daisy. “No; indeed! When they found it was only a harmless mocker they came back in spite of him and went on with their feast; and when he found he couldn’t drive them off, he flew away, scolding, “They stayed about all winter, sing- ing their morning and evening songs in the peppers and the tall eucalyptus- trees, just as they do in the summer here; but when the spring came, all at once they were gone, and we knew they had flown away to spend the summer in their northern home. “So that, Ray, is where some of the robins go when the cold weather and the snow come.” The children were silent a moment, and then little Ted asked, soberly: “Auntie Bess, do you s’pose it’s eat- ing the red pepper-berries that makes ‘heir -reasts so red?” HELEN LOUISA DYAR. How They Became Acquainted. “I do wish 1 had somevody to play with,” sighed Pearl, as she set Vic- toria Jane in the corner, and turned with a wistful look toward her mam- ma, “There isn’t any one in this whole house only papa and you and me; but papa’s at the office, and you are busy working most of the time, and I get awful lonesome by myself.” “Well, there are Victoria Jane and Fluffy,” replied her mamma. “I know,” said Pearl, “and I do lov. them both, but Victoria Jane’s a doll, and Fluffy’s only a dog, and I do want some peoples to play with!” But just then there was heord the sound of the rumbling of heavy wagons in the street, and mamma said to Pearl, “Run to the parlor wiadow, dear, and see whet it is.” “O mamma, somebody’s moving into the house across the street!” she cried joyfully, and then she watched until all the furniture was safely housed, and she forgot te be lonely. Each morning for several days, and many times during those days, Pearl would go to the parlor window and watch the house across the street, and more than once she sajd, “I wonder whether there is a little girl over there?” One cold day soon after this mamma was busy up-stairs, and Pearl stood again in the parlor with her little nose pressed against the window, watching the house into which the new neighbors had moved, when a little curly head bobbed up at the opposite window, and the bright face’of a little boy smiled across at her. Then Pearl smiled, too. “I must bring Victoria Jane and Fluffy to see that nice little boy,” she said. and hurried off to get them, and soon they were perched up by her side at the window. The little boy greeted the new- comers with a smile, and then disap- peared, but returned soon and ar- ranged a company of soldiers on the window-sill, and held up a little white rabbit. Then Pearl and the little boy ex- changed pleasant smiles; the soldiers marched across the window-sill; Vic- toria Jane silently looked on; the rab- bit raised his ears and Fluffy barked. And then into Pearl’s busy little brain came a thought, and away she ran, and returned with her alphabet blocks. Then against the window she spelled with the blocks, PEARL. Once more the little curly head op- posite disappeared, and when he re- turned he spelled with his blocks against the window, HARRY. All through that winter Pearl and Harry played together although the street separated them, and they lived in different houses. In the window on one side were arranged day after day the different toys of a little girl, and in the window opposite those of a little boy, and mamma did not hear her little girl say again all that winter that she was lonesome, FRANK E. GRAEFF. ‘ A Tale of Pussy- Willow. From the time the willows grow bare in the fall till the first birds ap- pear in springtime little Ethel is watching for pussy-willow. She im- agines all sorts of pretty things about the cunning fuzzy balls, and keeps the vases in the parlor full of willow bou- quets. One of her beliefs is that all the kitties that have ever been drown- ed in the creek down in the pasture come back in the shape of pussy-wil- lows. For this reason she loves them and pets them, and talks to them as she would if they were real pussies. The other evening Brother Rob was having a torchlight procession and all the boys in the neighborhood were helping him. Their torches were “cat- tail” flag reeds gathered in the swamps and soaked in kerosene oil,which made them the jolliest torches imaginable. Ethel was having a merry time watch- ing the boys form in line, when she happened to hear one of them call his torch a “cat-tail.’” She stopped and thought a moment, and then, rushing in to her mother, buried her face in her dress and sobbed, ‘‘Oh, it’s dreful; the boys are using the tails of my grown-up pussy-willows for torches.”— Ruth Newton Rennick. The Rarest Stamps in the World. The Mauritius postoffice stamps, while commanding the highest price, are not the rarest stamps known. They rank third in scarcity—the 2-cent Ha- waii, of which five copies are known to collectors’ hands, ranking first, and the British Guiana pink -2-cent, eight copies being known, second. The stamps of Puerto Rico, Cuba, Hawaii, and the Philippines are being taken up by an increasing number of collec- tors in the United States. At the Oc- tober meeting of the Philatelic society, New York, Mr. Audreini exhibited a large number of Cuban and Porto Ri- can provisionals, most of which were new to the members present.—Harper’# Round Table. Icicles and Bicycles. Icicles and bicycles, What a pretty rhyme, Though one belongs to winter, And one to summer-time. Bicycles and icicles, They’re almost merry mates For the boy who rides a wheel ip June, In January skates. —Ann M. Prat. Avoided Him. “Now, that Harry Tucker is the worst boy in school, and I want you to stay away from him as much as possible.” “Oh, yes, maw, I do. He’s at the head of the class always.”—Il- lustrated American, Unusual Fruit. His Mother—‘Why, Mary, what’s the matter with the’child?” Mary—‘Sure, ma’am, he’s been crying all the way home because the man as sells fruit told him he never kept star-spangled pananas.”—Truth. Little Marjorie’s papa is a photogra- pher, and Marjorie’ is always very much interested in all his experiments, One evening as they sat together watchirg the playing of the lightning and listening to the distant thunder of an appreaching storm, Marjorie looked up anc sc'* “Para. are the angels taking flach-l’ght pictures now?” MISSOURI’S WAR GOVERNOR Restored by Pe-ru-na, A iy l ' "* Z [' "fy GoveRNoR T. C. FLETCHER Hon. Thomas C. Fletcher, the noted war Governor of the State of Missouri, is a great friend of Pe-ru-na. He writes: The Pe-ru-na Drug M’f’g Co., Colum- bus, Ohio. Gentlemen—For years I have been afflicted with chronic catarrh, which has gone through my whole system, and no one knows the torture and misery I have passed through. My doctor has prescribed various reme- dies, and I have never found any relief until I was persuaded by a friend to use Dr, Hartman’s Pe-ru-na. After the use of one bottle I feel like a new man. It also cured me of a dropping I had in my throat, and built my sys- tem up generally. To those who are suffering with catarrh I take pleasure in recommending your great medicine. Very respectfully. Thomas C, Fletcher. Everything that affects the welfare of the people is a legitimate subject ot comment to the real statesman. ‘The statesman is not a narrow man. It is the politician who is narrow. The true statesman looks out on the world as it is, and seeks, as far as is in his power, to remedy evils and encourage the good, Catarrh in its various forms is rap- idly becoming a national curse. An undoubted remedy has been discov- ered by Dr, Hartman. ‘This remedy has been thoroughly tested during the | past forty years. Prominent men have come to know of its virtues, and are making public utterances on the sub- ject. To save the country we must save the people. To save the people we must protect them from disease. The disease that is at once the most prevalent and stubborn of cure is ca- tarrh. No Resemblance. A Pittsburg teacher of languages met cne of his pupils on the avenue and greeted him affably, but the pupil did not respond as the teacher expect- ed. “I think you are m-m-mistaken in the p-p-p-person,” said the pupil. “Certainly not. I know you very well,” said the teacher in surprise. “M-m-must be some other p-p-per- son,” persisted the young man. onsense! You are one of my pu- . Don’t you know your teacher?” “Perhaps it is my b-b-brother you m-m-mean. I d-d-don’t kitow you.” “Well, the resemblance is very strik- ing. You look just like him and talk just hke him.” “N-n-no, I don’t t-t-talk like him. He has an im-p-p-ediment in hi peech, and I haven’t.”—Pittsburg Chronicle- ‘Telegraph. Rules for Long Life. The figures and statistics of the cen- sus and the life insurance companies show, according to P. McArthur, in Ainslee’s Magazine, that if one would live long one must follow Beecher’s advice and be careful in the selection f your parents, especially long-lived s: be born a female; be a genius with a leaning toward philosophy; be a Quaker: void financial worr buy an annuity; make a happy marriage nd live a moderate, temperate life be- tween the thirtieth and fiftieth degrees of latitude. Even then some would question whether his life was worth g on these conditions. And if ev- erybody bought annuities, who would provide them? Pretty Fall, He stood on the rear platform of the street car and flung his arms, slapping his sides to keep warm. 4 Another passenger jumped aboard | and, without waiting to peer through the frosted glass door, said: ' “Whot’s the matter? Why don’t you | go inside.’ Is it full in there?’ } i i “Full?” the other replied in a tone that was laden with disgust; “my ;{ friend, it’s so full that you can’t even ; look into that car without overcrowd- ; ing.’—Chiecago Daily News. Man’s Indebtedness to Insects. According to Grant Allen, in the Strand Magazine, becties and other in- sects anticipated man in the burial of its dead and manuring of his fields by devouring and burying dead. animals, where they enrich the soil and promote the growth of vegetation. ‘There is,” he sa “hardly a human trade or a htiman activity which aoes not find its counterpart in animal and vegetable life.” Time's Alterations, “The New York police are always peculiarly handicapped in their search for big criminals.” “How is that?’ t “Why, the suspected men get so old that when they are finally arrested no- body can identify them.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. More Economical. H “What style of tandem are you go- Ing to ride this year, Grumpey? I re- member Miss Miggins objected to the one you had last year.” “I'm going to ride the same tandem, but with some other girl.””—Chicago Tribune. Not the Proper Thing. “T have been invited to attend the photographic salon,” remarked Mrs, Snages. “T hope you won't send a negative,” commented Mr. Snaggs.—Pittsburg 1 Chronicle-Telegraph. ; hess seldom get up in the world. A Mean Insinuation. “Yes; I'm trying a new cure for the grip—sprinkIMmg sulphur in my shoes.” “Getting accustomed to it, eh?”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. TUMOR EXPELLED. Unqualified Success of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Our Policy of Territorial Expansion. Annexationists are advocating the addition of Canada to this country, and| Mrs. Exizanera Waretock, Magno- think it can be accomplished in a! lia, Iowa, in the following letter de- peaceful manner without exciting a| scribes her recovery from a very criti- quarrel with England. Such questions | cal condition: call for the wisest statesmanship, just! «Dear Mrs. Pinkuam:—I have been as dyspepsia, constipation, liver and ! t¢a}3 Ve kianey @iseases call for a reliable rem- barnisnieic ae ni plopapaiins monn ba edy like Lostetter’s Stomach Bitters. iG eaisen AE has done won- ders for me in relieving me of.a tumor. “My health has been poor forthree years. Change of life was working upon me. I was very much bloated and was a bur- den to myself. Was troubled with smothering spells, also palpitation of | the heart and that bearing-down feel- | ing, and could not be on my feet much. “Twas growing worse all the time, until I took your medicine. “After taking three boxes of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Lozenges, the tumor passed from me. “My health has been better ever j Since, ean now walk quite a distance | and am troubled no more with palpita- tion of the heart or bloating. I rec- If you are but content, you have erough to live upon with comfort.— H Plautus. | Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of | smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on pesca remo from reputable physicians, asthe lamage they will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon ihe blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure besure you ioe the genuine. Itis pees eteten ks and made in Toledo, Ohio, y F. J. cheney Co. Testimonialsfree. Sold by Druggists, price 7c per bottle. ‘Hall's Family Pills are the best. It’s a pity women can’t strike out from the shoulder with her fist as well ; as with her tongue. $3,000 for a New Corn. That's what this new corn cost. Yields 313 bushels per acre. Big Four Oats 250 bushels—Salzer’s Rape to pasture sheep and cattle at 25c per acre yields 50 to: potatoes $1.20 per bbl. Bromus Inermis. the greatest grass on earth; Beardless | i | { | Barley 60 bushels per acre; 10 kinds | ommend your medicine to all sufferers Brasses and clovers, ete. f paella bles.” Send this notice to JOHN A, SALZER | rom female troubles. SEED CO., CROSSE, WIS., with 10c It is hardly reasonable to suppose stamps and receive free great Catalogue; $3,000 Corn and 10 Farm Seed Sam- ples. {w.n.] that any one can doubt the efficiency of Mrs, Pinkham’s methods and medi- cine in the face of the tremendous vol- Probably Niagara falls because the ume of testimony. bed of the river couldn’t hold it up. | Could Not Keep House Without Dr, Seth Arnold’s Cough Killer. Barton, Boyd, Wis. 25c. a bottle. Mrs. E. J. People wno never get down to busi- The polish on a man’s coat doesn’t help him to get into society. Is a variety which brings from 5 to7 cents per bushel more than any other variety grown. Itis on the wheat fields of Western Canada that such a grade is grown, anda farm of 166 acres is.given free to every, donafide set ter. For particulars apply to the Depart- ment of the Interior, Ottawa, Canada, or to ' Ben Davies, 154 East Third St, St. Paul, or | TD. O. Currie, Stevens Point, Wis. I believe Piso’s Cure isthe only medicine that will cure consumption.—Anna M. Ross, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, ’95. Nothing succeeds like the success of some people’s failures. CANDY CATHARTIC Mrs. Winslow’s soothing Syrup. For children teething, softeus the gums, reduces tn- flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle, Wise is the baggage-smasher who wears a chest-protector. FROM SUDDEN WEATHER CHANGES Come sometimes Soreness and StiffneSs musctes and joints. ST. JACOBS OL OUR 60 NERVE AND BRAIN PILLS... spuranteed to cure any disease for which they are intended. ‘THis WILL CULE YoU on feel generally miserable or suffer with @ thousand and one indescribable oth mental and physical, among them low spirite, nerrousners, fitelessness, weakness, dizziness, fecling of fullness, like Bloating 8 eating, or sense of goneness or emptiness of stomach in morning, flesh soft ‘and Jacking in firmness, headache, blurring of eyesight specks floating before the eyes, matron irritability, poor memory. culllinees,elferaching wits hot Bushes laesita throbbing, gurgling, or rumbling vensationsin bowels, with heat, or ninping, paing gccasionally, tation of the heart, short breath on exertion, slow circulation of blood, cold fest, pain and oppression tn inestand hase, pata aroged the lola, aching. God wensineas of the lower limbs, di ‘ese after meals but nervous wakefulness at night, languor in the morning, and @ con- ig ‘dread as if something awful was going to happen. If you have any of these symptoms our iillcure you. No matter what the cause may be or how severe your trouble. is, ean RAIN PILLS wil’ cureyou.. ‘These pills have a remarkable effect on both old an mannot be equalled by any other medicine es 4 cure for impotence, spermatorrhoes, night ions, varicocele (or swoolen veins), weakness of both braii 3, arising from excesses an Kind: it will tond up the whole hervous system, no mattter, ee much worn out, overw red Jor the weak and timid young man made strong and bold again; they will give youth- ‘anew lease of life to tha old, ARE OF QUACK DOCTORS, who advertiseto Scare mei into money for remedies which have no’ merit. Qur ‘and Brain Pills are compounded from a pre- Eoription of one of the most noted of German scientists, ame as have been used in German hos- pitals for years with marvelous success. HOW TO CURE YOURSELF. and full and explicit directions, are enclosed with every box, ‘All orders and inquiries concerning these pills will by treated confidentially, and all shipments made in plain sealed pack ‘ONLY $3 00 FOR SIX BOXES. Enough to cure any case: tar how long standing, whether young or old no matter from what cause.. Send us $3.0) ill send you Postpaid, in plain sealed package, with full instructions, ful! i di5141,_ Price per box. ;6 boxes (an amount to cure anyone) $3. t ys need Bus, this ia the firet time the American people have had en opportunity of getting the gentine Lz: Chase's eu and the first time they have been sold any where at anything like our price, LARGE DRUG UATALOGUE FREE. Size 94x12. eo sure and send for it. We can save you money on Drugs. All orders filed by registered Pharmacists, There is no line of goods you pay so much for as Drugs when you buy them at retail. T. M. Robert’s Supply House, Minneapolis, Minn. is prompt to act and sure of a prompt cure. Guaranteed the highest Grade on the market. Six boxes positively vi payiny ASK everybody you know to save their tin tags for you The Tin Tags taken from Horseshoe, “J. T.,” Cross Bow, Good Luck—and Drummond Natural Leaf—vwill pay for any one or all of this list of desirable and useful things—and you have your good chewing tobacco besides. Every man, woman and child in America can find something on this list that they would like to have and can have—FREE! Write your name and address plainly and send every tag you can get to us—mentioning the number of the present you want. Any assortment of the different kinds of tags mentioned above will be accepted as follows: TAGS 1 Match Box, quaint design, im- TAGS 19 Alarm Clock, nickel, warranted .. 200 25 | 20 Carvers, buckhorn ‘handle, good 25 steel 200 25 | 21 Six Roget ‘Tez 225 * Fork and Spoon 25 | 22 Knives and Forks, six each, buc! 5 Salt and Pepper, one each, quad- horn handles. ie tuple plate on white metal... 60 | 23 Clock, 8-day, Calendar, Thermom- 6 Razor, hollow ground, fine English eter, Barometer . steel 80 | 24 Stove, Wilson Heater, size © No. 30 7 Butter Rais triple plate, best qual. 60 8 Sugar Shell, triple pl wa bom 60 9 Stamp Box, sterling silver........ 70 10 Knife, “Keen Kutter,” two blades 70 11 Butcher Knife, “Keen Kutter,” very hi: @-inch blade 15 | 97 Watch, solid silver, full jeweled’. 1000 12 Shears, “Keen Kut 28 Sewing Machine, first class, with — all attachments, 29 Revolver, Colt’s, best 30 Rifle, Winchester, 16-shot, 22-cal. 1500 31 Shot Gun, double barrel, Rammer- less, stub twist . 2000 $2 Guitar (Washburn), rosewood, laid with mother-of-pearl . 33 Bicycle, standard make, ladies’ or BOOKS 30 choice selections same as last year’s list, 40 tags each. 17 Base Ball, “ Mature: ”* bestqual. 100 18 Watch, stem wind and set, - teed good time keepet ©. --. This offer expires November 30, (899. Address all your Tags and the correspondence about them to DRUMMOND BRANCH, St. Louis, Mo. = “THERE IS SCIENCE IN NEATNESS.” BE WISE AND USE SAPOLIO

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