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{ Nebraska DOWN IN STATES SHORTCAKE ZONE Finest and Largest Strawberries in the World Are Grown in Southeast Nebraska. [ ha ENFANT INDUSTRY IS GROWING STELLA, Neb,, (8 €ial.)—The soil Ne braska {s especially adapted to the growing of fine strawberri this industry at its birth greatest in the state_ is dling clothes, ing Stella is just beginning, W ant, a local grower, thi to make his patch bear contiruously for six consecutive weeks. Mr. Bryant 1 and there will be awhen July 1 comes. Tris y when it 1s stated that the b the usual family patch is ofter two week By mulching #traw, Mr. Bryant was of the patch producing carly keep it back it were. The berries were mostly Jumbo, with {Warfleld anq a fcw Senator Dunlap, June of southeastern and ella has only had Brownville, the | shipping point only out of its swad and at strawberry However, while grow-! commercially in D. Bry- year is able strawberries pateh remarkal v life n y p pa King berries in the began pi W over newy with bl | rom to as straw- tow | Half Acre Vields $1 Mr. Bryant's patch is ab: more—a plat sixty feet wide and 290 feet Jong—within the orate limits of the town. On .July eighty-five crates had been sold at 12 cents a quart, making | B sum of over $, all bought by the Jocal groceries and restaurants | Part of the Eryant patch is three years d, part two years ang part one year. he patch was increased with 3000 new lants this spring. The plants are set pighteen irches apart in rows four feet mpart. Cuitivation is with a hand plow tintil the runners get too blg, and then the patch 1s kept clean by pulling the weeds by hand. 0. half an | Strawberries and Onlons. The biggest strawberry undertaking in fhe community is being handled by J Overman. About a year ngo he jought considerable cheap property in he east part of town, and had the round plowed in the fall. This epring ! he ground was harrowed and then it | was rolled until it was smooth a Hoor. He had the roiller m: in fhe town. It is a tin can two feet long wnd one foot in diameter, filled with ce- ment and welghing 300 pounds. An iron rod with threads on tho cnd, runs through | the center of the cement, and to this | 0d shafts are attached so a horse can L hitched to the roller. Mr, Overman set out 6,800 plants, and ver since the season cpened kept man busy every day that work can be ;nm‘, in the patch. At the time of set- }ing, four men were employed daily. The batch is about two acres—thirty-eight | fows, 960 feet long. The plauts are | )Mghteen inches apart in rows five feet wpart. Mr. Overman is “killing two birds with | Jne stone,” or as It were, making “two blades of grass grow,” where before ihere was none. Part of his patch was | wne of the most unkempt places In Stella, | ind where weeds and slough grass | Mhrived, now are rowing fine rows of | ions alongside of the strawberries. fixteen bushels of onmlon sets were put wt, in rows parallel with the strawberry | ows. Three rows of onions are in the live feet between the strawberry rows. The rows of onlons ara a foot apart, and tach row of onlons a foot and a balf from the strawberry row. Profits Will Be Large. In normal seasons a bushel of sets will produce twenty bushels of onions, and \ccordingly, Mr. Overman have | 400 from his onions, as onions never sell n the local market at less than $1 sushel, and generally rcail at 5 cents a | pound. A small part ot the patch—in | Jize about a town lot—wes planted with nion seed. The harvest of the onions | August will get them out of the way In ample time for the yunners to cover the ground. The onion sets were put out | Wbout April S and a week later. work was | gun to set the straw o Y oo lints, Mr. Overman, who is postmast become g0 deft handling Uncl un'.‘-} parcels and reading young women's post- | pards from their “best fellows,” that he | tan set two strawberry plants a minute, pnd his crew soon became experts in | gwiftnese. No soon were the plants set than weed killing began and it will be | continued all summer long until nos | B weed 18 left, | Quart in Henry Freld, the as e here should a has | ach Pla Shenandoah, la., | peedman, and an autiiority on strawberry | culture, estimates that the plant set | one season will produce a guart the next. | By this he means the parent plant and | ts runners. Ac ingly If next seas cs normal, Mr. Overman would have quarts of berries, which at 10 guart would be $80 from two a f the parent plants will be enough runners to the entire ground. The | the market in all prob at from 12 cents to 1i course Som 1id not live, but th practically cover first berries on ability will sell cents a quart This has been splendid many respects for strawberrics and favorable In other ways Plenty of rain made new plants grow well, unless they were washed out or washed with dirt; plenty of prolor H son, and made the berries but in some patches occasionally it wa wet for picking and the berries were covered withm ud | pdustry Has Great Fature, There 1s a big future for the commerci a1 strawberry grower in southeastern Ne- braska. Two home growers supplied 1) town of Stella ar M try sold to his neighbors size of a town lot berries. At Shubert Stella, Arthur M the Central Fruit had a half aere pateh any size in that locality, and he able tto supply the demand of Strawberry growing occupatior affords a tunity for capital Is over i the Krow rain soa larg it nes somet Os. n in the coun His patch, the $60 worth of miles of produce five Shubert east president of Growers Association the only patch of was un his town. an Inte splendid oppor not 18 res and ung ed It does require | ence and per Albert Shi ged the p; their sale ries sold at es Children pick the berrie box. Mrs Lugens | which proves that one year |ing its grip on life for many ' ment of the fruit indus |a | TS g . Famous Young American Te THE OM AHA SUNDAY N1 nor THRONGS WELGOME Ger €0 St Riars for the Seengerfost) WILSUK 0N HOLIDRY | t th pany, who alled e, Di Madame epert Tann se Pag | lia and Mr Neiy grand its world New York ary 1015 the most |and has Alt erg new « at litan, lanu role is one of m, this new opera to this ex ting and Gene New Y of aperas fame whese ac & ated re in rk City prese pany « ded the Metropalitan O in list ntec t g It from finds ratorio e ra com- Atlanta Mr. Alt oncert » and r spring scason in | and t appearances me to make many ¢ er Mr. solofst |in the announcement his opera Althouse of the Omaha sea will be coming auditoriur of the o of 21 \ppearance July to ful grower of strawberries smn'l patch each in the town lot, and has carefully rded the dustry in southeastern Nebraska 1910, she started in her next door nelghbor Mra B. M. Derstine, in the st iness, giving her twenty-five vear later, ther first bearing Derstine picked twenty-five quarts from this patch by actual 1 art it w d claimed by Mty When the pateh two years old etine picked forty "2 q it. Every r sinc paratively as good berries Willi and two The space occupied w and two-thirds of a re on a back yard watched and success of the strawberry vear rece in In May awherry wn ason \surement ra straw be:ry e a quart Field Mrs. Der arts frou has had “ing straw plant is set of berries, as v three she com- 1ccess Stine ¥ of Stella st picked 10000 quarts between one-Halt idence Tot it oo plants ars later Berries by Brownville, twenty in Nemaha county, carlot, and 18 the ding point in the state. Neosho, claims to be the greatest strawl ping point in the Brownville, the most important Nebraska, in the Carlot, miles from berries Stella, by the strawberry Missourd, rry ship- shij Ie world town In ploneer days, after log- years ani is blooming and through the develop- ry in its vicinity So proud is Frownville of what the lusc lous strawbgrry, the purple grape and the blushing pyach s doing for it that it held a “Strawterry Carni the helght of the strawberry Prominent fruit men were present as speakers, and there was a band concert and other at- tracvtions for amusement, automobile trips were provided through the fruit lands, and strawberries plenty were served with rich thick cream The strawberry business at Brownville is handled through the Be Growers' Association which Is an auxillary of the Central Fruit Growers' Association BOOSTERS RETURN FROM STATE TRIP (Continuea from Page One.) cause the West Polnt fellows, lively bunch, sinking into blossor oblivon, agaln always a had monopolized the whole sireets of with thirty decorated cars they had brought to the town to the north to pilot the boosters to the county seat county. Then they led the a beautiful stretch of hard bottom road nine miles to West Point, the band was out booming away with choice ragtime. West Point B West Point is to have its annual racing meet this year, July 7, nd The whole town is on its toes for this event The great track west of town is already cleared for action. And everybody is boosting for this annual event, which each year attracts more and more atten- tlon as one of the classiest racing meets in the west. Nearly $4,000 is hanging like a juiey plum for the winners. Chris Shinstock, Fred Hunger, Billy Neligh and Harry Howarth drove all the way to Scribner with the Omaha fellows, and never missed an opportunity to urge the chaps from the metropolis to attend their race meet in Jul, The crowd lunciied at Scribner, and then began to make time homeward. Much time lost at Blair, when the ad- vance guard waited for the lost cars wandering around in the hills. When it was finally that they had missed the therefore, missed Jalr, the advance cars went on without them, ' An the of Cuming way over where ers on nd. was concluded turn and exceptional condition this party swe opportunity the of booxters for to observe o ¢ w three days country will small grain and look better in the t ready to to be cut at Wheat is headed and walting for the b plied in about full, but A epi vinee one falfa first ) the second Prairie hay view of that the could not altalfa | the The and cut any filled which Oats i1l require As far erned, cattle fairly all but floating wthy and red clover of stack is ready aply be rve ten will ripen ays is headed and few weeks stock gltstenin on t s of ti with « pwing in stands back ks e 0w ten « should Along the Corn alone e it it Li A8 far vet where this tim, the o vear olu Highway i of the first intry ted » m corn is not Much of it time, it is barely the well be rows ascs this hardly Th | wes r for the 1 weeds. f the n is, howev 2 id proceas of from ire A past |thriving e s the Jittle 0 > ) and khorn ey, the f Eepeciall v a better At e MAN PR ES® MUSTN'T H INCAATION of u| afforded | as can | PAUL ALTHOUSE this great American singer arouses wide attention | | clares that ordered the eventual ierman newspapers have been the to abstain plans for Belgium by by government of any annexation of | trom | the Germany Changes in Divorce Laws Urged by Bar; Bluffs Gets Meet FORT DODG In, June Special change in lowa dl orce ticial inquirtes into e defendants fall to to charges was rec today the Ba as In its closing sesson. Tho recommendation was one of five in~uded in the report of the committes on law | reform. am.)—Sc to merits of appear in | ommended sociation laws nable ses whe answer by Siate Lawyers also favored the establisbment | of a jury commission and changes ‘n | lecting the names of jurors; also favorcd | the grand juries reporting but once eacn year in counties under 25 Ly the jud Council Bluffs v meeting place, June Delegates to the American bar meet- ing are mett Tinley, Council Blufts; Fred Sargent, Des Moines, and Judge H I Deemer, Red Oak. | I*. F. Dawley, retiring president of the | sociation, made a strong plea for more local self-government for towns and| cities. Officers of the state as tocay are: Judge A. H Union, president; Willlam tumwa, vice president; Horack, Towa. City, secretary; L. T. Car- ney, Marshalltown, treasurer; A. J.| Small, Des Moines, librarian, Twenty-one district court judges formed a state assoclation and elected W. J, Springer, New Hampton, president, and H. F. Fry, Boone, secretary-treasurer. TELLS OF CONQUESTS | OF MEDICINE IN WORLD SAN FRANCISCO, June 26.—In assum- ing the presidency of t American Academy of Medicine, which convened here today for its fortieth annual meet- ing, Dr. Woods Hutchinson of New York | | told of medicine's conquest of the foes | of clvilization and the progre, unfinished oattles, | ‘The relation of medicine to transporta |tion and commerce will be the general topie for the sessions which will end Mon- | day. This ts in line with the of { the academy to specialize each on ’gun)» aspect of sociological m ) unless calleti le 9 ted as the next 1916, a | | oclation electe Hobson, McNett, Ot PEOR VN Y West | 88 of some | policy vear dicine. AMERICANS SPEND SIX MILLION A YEAR ON MUSIC | LO8 ANGEL Cal, June 2.—The people of the United States spend nearly $6,000000 annually for music in various forms, according to statistics presented at the National Federatfon of Musical clubs, which fs in sessfon here The delegates attending were of the opinfon that part of this—or an adequate sum in additlon—should be spent to de- | velop musical education in the public | schools. | Creating a love of music In the youns, | It was declared, would improve morals | far beyond the present standard, DR, BF con- | cuse for too use the wrong methods. teeth attended to at the first signal of warnings. teeth Aching Painless Met aches, but di Better than ¥ 100,000 peo Bradt Gu by Dr Go| Fear Nere Money Back Guarantee DR.BRADBU 20 Years in € tha, L Lith and Farnam Sts., Omah, Hours—8 to 6 nless Ex Send for | working women as she clasped the presi- | l dent today, What Folly to let poor teeth distress you ory tooth pa lainkillings Railroad ¥, ‘Presldem Settles Down at Summeri Capital in New Hampshire for Period of Rest i - |18 GIVEN A HEARTY GREETING CORNISH, N Under fnrdm-- from his physician to take a | complete rest President Wilson set |tled down at the “summer White House” today for a brief vacation |to prepare himselt for the arduous | work he is expecting within the next | |few months in connection with the | Buropean and Mexican situations | The president brought few official docu- ments with him and officials at the White | House had orders to forward him only the most pressing businese, but neverthe less he plans to give much thought in the quiet seclusion of the Cornish hills to the next in the Mexican question to the with Germany and to the discussion with Great Britain commerce ™ t of Work "n = Secretary Lansing will do most of the Actual work on the note to Great Hritain now being prepared, but the president has already gone over with him the broad questions of policy involved the note before it is offict to London. He read with | toda unofficial forecasts from that there was a possibility that many's submarines warfare would somewhat modified, but refused to com- | ment The president arrived noon after a trip Massachusetts and frequent H., June 26 step submarine over and will seo | y deep forwarded | interest | Berlin | Ger- be | here this after- through Connecticut, Vermont marked by from crowds which thered at every station. He refused to ake any but smiled broadly at laudatory comments from several hun. men, women and children with whom | shook hands. The crowds were much | larger and more enthusiastio than have | ever gretted the president en route here ! before and many told him they approved | his course In the forelgn situation. ovations v speeches | Writing Great Letters. | “You have been writing great letters | to those forelgn governments,” said one | dent's hand. Ie thanked her. | “Excuse the dirt,”” apologized a factory emplc president. “I don’t mind that,” the presi- | dent replied as he shook hands. You've been working too hard and T | hope you have a good vacation,” was the | greeting of another woman. I hope so, ton,” answered Mr. Wilson. As the president stood talking to the crovid at one stop a man remarked that | he looked heavier than he did when hera t year. The president sald he weigied | it the same. “Your face looks fuller,” sald the man “I guess 1 have more cheek,” replied | the prosident, amid laughter. aby Cheered Agnin and Again, Virtually the entire population of Windsor, Vt, and this village were at the station to greet the president as he stepped from his private car with Miss Margaret Wilson and Dr. Cary T. Gray- son, his naval alde and physiclan. They cheered him again and again and for a few minutes he was completely hemmed in by people who wantad to welcome him back to the summer capital. Mias Helen Woodrow Bones, his cousin, was with the party, The president's joy was evident In the afternoon, when his daughter Mrs. Fran- cis B. Sayre, with her husband ani baby boy, arrived here for a visit. Francis Woodrow Sayre, the president's only grandson, who he saw christened a few weeks ago at Willlamston, Mass., cooed with delight and cuddled in his God- fathers arms. Harlakenden House, the property of Winston Churchill, the novelist, which fs occupled by the president and his family Las been completely renovated eince thelr last visit Mr. Wilson spent most the entire afterncon and ovening looking over the estate and attending to some correspondence, but took a short omoblle ride before dinner, here. al- How He Wil Speud Time, He plans to devote nearly all his time while here to golfing and automobiling, and reading and resting. He will go Eolfing each morning twenty miles away at Hanover, N. H,, and in the afternoons he will motor through the picturesque Connecticut valley. The president learned today of the marriage on the day he left Washington of John Rlye, one of his secret service men and Miss Johanna Henrick of Wash- ington The couple are spending their honeymoon here. As Slye finished his tour of duty of helping guard the presi- he was met by his bride, RADBURY IN NEW OFFICE There is no ex- Folks who have them They do not have their th troubles are utter folly Dr. Bradbury's hods will not only relieve the tooth- spense all fear of the dentist's chair, that-—he guarantees his work. | Investment nany Defends Its Use of Gas in War; Says Allies Started RERLIN, Ju memi-of ficlal (Via hae Aefe London.) statement been 1 the explaining and ding Ge of asphy xiating e first point made French employed and renta 1se P T that the and the such gases in addition of th concerning Germans carller icial a state ierman al the war roports, wuch the cite mmunication sald to by the Fronch ministr two sorts of proje a stifling usage use, of statement now a describing war thles oduce their snid teslgned the » and Kns, This me com- | Aated em to have Feoruary the plaved gas in their attack b 3 German statement refers to alleged roports published in American newspapers that t Lausitania 250,000 pounds f tetra-chloride of French government production of asphyxiating ing of alleg forts to sympathies of gas, the against the ot conventlon, adopted the American delegates, wa protocol that it had n that she with esphyxlating gasos wero \ Inhumane 1 method war. The German finally comp, the of the In- undntion of 1 ireas, instancing the flooding of the 1 of Nieuport by ll\u‘ elglans s and argues that both methods b that an to escape their munication Germans Ypres before upon ried tin consigned to the and intended for the gases. Speak arouse American for its use says the gas in The Haguo against the votes of added to the | en proven arninst to Germany ement proviso OF unnecessary statement with crue |e ting gas ne time ago are ¢ imane and merely to withdraw te nemy 1 i | 1 Conditions in City | 0f Mexico Becoming Threatening Again WASHINGTON, I Anx today In official quarter the situation in Mexico City b n creased 1 communieate for al Brief dispatchoes that the Carranza officlals chagrined at the apparent f eral Pablo Gonzalez to ent Reports that Gonzalez w an artillery ducl with the I from Vera Cruz stated were much flure of « the capital eneaged in n- | forces in Mexico City had determined to offer resists to the ranza army, Instead ¢ Reltable informatior General Gonzales communication Moxico City, in order rata forces Famine conditions in Mexico City been growing dafly and with the by @ new army In progress, (ears are expressed that much suffering to foreigners will ensue. Pays $7,010 and Gets Dozen Pqtatoes for It LITTLE ROCK, Ark., June 26.—Twelve | potatoes In exchange for $7.010 formed ' the basls of a complaint to the local polic by Louls Repett!, aged 60, a wealthy com- mission man. Repetti sald he was out that amount as a result of operations of a countryman, one Ricel. Both deposited securities, Ttepetti alloges in boxes of sim- flar appearanco. When Repett! opened | his box he found only the potatoes Ricel 1s at large Terre Haute Men Finish Their Terms INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 25.—Thir ty-one Terre Haute poll fraud conspira tors were released from fail at the of their sixty each. Costs amounting $91.53 a share In the expenses the trial, were paid, in addition to fines of $1 Nee invading ( \ evacuating that line indicates cut the Vera Cruz to isolate the himself of rtween na Zn o have worse | here today of to xpiration days each, sentences \ | —— THE “SUMMER MAN" NOW AT HIS BEST Dresher’s Put the Vigor and ‘‘Go’’ Into Palm Beach Suits, Panama Hats, Ete. Small Expense of Cleaning Amply Repaid by the Pres- tige Clean Clothes Give. { | v | A man who wouldn’t command a second | look in dark, common-pluce clothes, re cetves a heap of attention when attired In spick and span Palm Beach Sults | Panama Hats, White Shoes and all that | sort of thing what's nttire of this sort is always more comfortable when the mercury flirts with the top of | the tube, Dres! ana more, er Brothers, the cleaners and dyers with the $i7,00 dry cleaning and | | dyeing plant at 2211-2213 Farnam strest, | n should remind you that over ple have been successfully treated yury In hig 26 years of practice, m Diseases Cured $1.00 Up -50¢ Up Jentistry, 50 Miles Allowed., RY, DENTIST 22 Woodmen of the World Bldg. Phone Doug, 1756, t tracting . e Booklet on Unusual I are for Sunday 10 AT Y | an successf ute stuge . 1y treated witl Vit ed by “t fLer serum no complicatic « Ufe certificate irn uonths and years ed treatment 80 bad that m 1l cases Liave been suc Ing more could \ bac antee you a su ¥ serumn and leaves no Byster 4 Bee Bldg, Omalin, Neb. loss ntire ad after effects, make & huge speclalty of the cleaning, | ressing and re-styling of men's Panama | its Hats, are the ones with whom you may safely entrust #55 Palm Beach, If you posseis one | that expensive. But, let it be sald right | here, that a $7.00 Palm Beach sult 1y | Just as well worth cleaning and will be | cleaned just as well as the $5% suit if it is sent to Dresher's | Attention is again called to D: Hat Manufacturing Dept. In this depart hats not only repafrel, r blocked and trimmed, but are mads new to finish. In other words,| Dreshers can take the raw materials and up a complote hat. It goes with- | that with such fectiities be immeasurably Letter clean your summer # | 8end & Panama finést cleaning job | money—anywhers, | Panama ete., and | your her's | ment are from start make saying Dreshers equipped leadgear, | hat that any out must to Panamas, 1 got the done for ete. here a an be time Dreshers the also clean white shoes, aye ktles, outing ga togs and all wenrables ¥ wirk to nd it to Dro. hers. ave your work at| Fernam St | in the Stores, belts, , automobile mmer ally lalists when you M anner You are send your P | Phov I Tyler or esher the 1 | &t the room of the Dresher branch Brandels A Defense at Annapolis Charges Lower | [STUDENT GIVES SECRET AWAY {of inqu made 'haa the |ae the members known, timony [ruted that it would be {nection hetween 1t and the subject under | bulldings to got | Infor to with which |holding a number of books out in each the State department has been unable to lhand as long as he could possibly stand made to do the patas gave (and admitted that © extending & grimy hand to the |tho first indication that the Villa-Zapata (upper claseman he himselt had indulged UNDERCLASSMEN An Elegant 36-Inch COMPELLED TO CRIB : STEAMER TRUNK Window A wonderful value in a trunk vou will be proud to take with you on vacation All three- ply veneered lumber, good can- vag glued on, hardwood slats, heavy brassed hardware, good lock and side fasteners, cloth lined, and fitted with a con- venient tray Made by us, which insures quality and value We have all sizes, hardwood Students Forced to Break Into | 2 Buildings by Hazing. | | | |® Hazing which ANNAPOLIS, June 26 at the Nava! supposed academy be a was stamped out of the di to have n ten years ago as result con gressional investigation and missal of a dozen or more midship during the ording men, la at Midshipman Charle has been practiced least, M sion of the court two years ac to Reagle, tes tifying at today’s se squAre {runks . 18 with steel covered elats, wstraps, con- venfent tray, neatly lined, equipped with brassed hard- brieed only <.t DO relin & Steinle Best ry investigating frregularities inationg at the academy. remark visit he in exan The revelation by ume from Hen to a informat was there In describing a made advi oo R rtain room Midshipman factng the wall” | o ounsel for ' Builders.” ' 1803 Farnam St. never 7GR 6 CHEFRSR ¢ SURAIWT. 3 CHEENID © 0 some and A Bolling ho said Must ressin def w Face Wall of the what Con an Carlin “Omaha's fred Baggage entered inq th and at AN upper las the fourth ¢ wall nan u plebes of the the Watt hazing, room lass ar mu Ady especting t face Judgo te objected to t urt e but the mitted if nvestigntion Mr. C ntended could he shown nnounced that that had forced underclassmen to break into | marks and obtain other them through haze them ¢ of the Stants. gle then related some of the things clared he was compelled to submit to do, such as having mucllage inside tho legs of his trousers arlin the upper defense to show lassmen . Consider- A savings account as a means -not an end. to mation tening N fe hazing or Use our savings system accumulate, You may be anxious to invest some day. If you have saved dollars you may hundreds. SOUTH OMAHA SAVINGS BANK 24th and M Streets H. 0. BOSTWICK, President TRUMAN BUCK, V. Pres. F. R, GETTY, Cashier. Re or soured invest t Ho standing on his head, mald that and other stunts. oceasion he was “sloop forward” until he the point of exhaustion. stated that hazing was very during the lnst academic term since he became an on on ached Reagle flagrant n the “unlawful practice Russia Takes Move For Polish Freedom PETROGRAD (Via The Russian council of ministers todey | clded to appoint a commission com- posed of six Rutsians and six Poles, un- der the presidency of Premier Goremykin, | to deal with the preliminaries to the | arrying into effect of autonomy for | Poland, which was proclaimed by Grand | Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chlef of the Russian army, on August 24 of last | year, | l ER u l u i {and safest anaesthetic, always A STAMDARD PAMILY REMEDY | s painless, For Ordinary Grip; ' DR. ALLWINE For All Catarrhal Conditions; | For Prevention of Colds. | DENTIST ;N.E. Cor. 16th & Douglas. An Excellent Remedy For The Convalescent; For That Irregular Appetite; For Weakened Digestion. Ever-Ready-to-Take Just 3 Days Left to get one of my $20 Sets omanaN) Of Teethfor $10 All Dental Work Painless—to Patient For 20 years T have given special attention to extraction with gas and oxygen, the best London), June 24 D-6863 \Vacationists, Attention! Duffy’s Will Be Have You Good Teeth? Without good teeth It is {m. possible to masticate your food properly—thercfore your digestion §guses poisoned blood—poisoned blood causes pimples, headaches, drowsinoss, rheumatism, kidney trouble and general tearing down of your system. PAINLESS EXTRACTION BY VITALIZED AIR. Taft’s Dental Rooms 1617 DOUGLAS STREE You have anticipated change for months and rightly sc. You will pack your trunk or suit case carefully with ample supplies of clothing. Be equally wolicitious about your health, for upon it de- pends your good time and your op- portunity to recuperate, Be pre pared for disturbances caused b 1ge Of water and food, excessive at or sudden extremes of weather, and unusual exereise, by taking Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey along with you. It 48 & gentle, in- vigorating stimulunt that influences for good every important organ of the body, It tones and strengthens and helps keep all the organs healthy and active. It will ald you to go through the summer fortified against the danger of impure or change of water, unripe or spoiled frult, sud- den chankes of the weather, and the hundred-and-one other causes that many times lead to serious illness. For ‘your vacation be sure to “‘@et Duffy" Keep Well” At most drug- ®ists, grocers and dealers, $1. If they can't supply vyou, write us. Medical booklet free. a rest and NONF BETTERS Henry PolLock RETALL DEALET * NE - DOUCE, 24 The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N, Y. The quality printer urges his customer to nd | money for good engravings, because it is money well spent. The best printer in business cannot get re- sults out of an inferior cut. We make them to suit the job. Pompelax l