Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 26, 1908, Page 7, Image 7

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l/a story oj
v «
I | o_f the .
U THREE =
j BARS 3)
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| j SLATE AND VIRGIL D. BOYLES
.CojuriKbt bj- A. C. A Co., 15W2.)
SYNOPSIS.
Williston. a poor ranchman,
hif?' -minded and cultured. HcarchcH for
•cattle missing from his ranch the"Lazy
H " On a wooded .spot in t!i«* rivcr's bed
that would have been an island had the
Missouri been at hitfh water, he din
covt-w ;»t hand of liorsc thieves engaged
cr* working- over brands on rattle. He
rctr'gts near » noiigh to note the chanß
>llß- of the"Three Mars" hrand on one
steer to the "J. K." brand. I'aul Lan*?-
furd, the rich owner of the"Three
is informed of the operations of
the vjariK' of eat tie thieves a band of
•utlaws headed by Jesse Black, who
?<*ripc have delied the 1 iw and authori
ties. of Kemah county. South Dakota.
l*snj?f ord is struck with the beauty of
TVtary. commonly known is "Willislon's
Kittle *rirl " Louise Dale. an expert
• <mrf j^tenoffrapht-r. who had followed
!'.er uncJe. Judge Hammond Dale, from
Hie eaj*t to the "Pakotahs." and who
is living; with him at Wind City, is
-requested by the county attorney.
Kichartl Gordon, to come to Kemah and
tafee testimony in the preliminary
bearing: nf Jesse Jim Munson. in
waiting at the train for hotline, looks
:»t a. herd of cattle being: shipped by
Rill Krown and there detects old
M«p;. ' a well known "ornery" steer be
?«ynp;inp: to his employer of the* "Three
friars'" ranch. Munson and Louise start
«'or Kemah. Crowds assemble in Justice
Jta.meH it McAllister's court for the
preliminary hearing. Jesse Black
MprmßS the first of many great sur
prises. waiving examination. Through
-t;vk«* Sanderson, a member of the out-
Km smg he had learned that the
"Mag" had been recovered and
fhvif* saw the usebssiiess of
t trains t being bound fiver. Richard Gor-
Inn, the county attorney, who is un
bKtptilur b» ••ausc of his many failures
*'v »vt»viire convictions in court, wins
t i\e -Atlmira tior. <»f Louis*-, which is mu
tual County Attorney Gordon accom-
Louise Pale on her return to
.Vim! City. He tells her of the dis
appointments of his offlee, of witnesses
4 hat ran be bribed and of the system
►r tampering with justice which pre
vents* him from securing a conviction.
*le the girl's sympathy.
CHAPTER IX.—Continued.
Her hand touched the match box
.vt ia'st. A light flared out.
"Shut the door quick, dad," she said,
lighting the lamp on the table. "The
f.keeters'll eat us alive."
Williston stepped to the door. Just
i moment he stood there in the door
way. the light streaming out into the
nwhr, tall, thoughtful, no weakling in
of many failures and many mis-
Jatees. A fair mark he made, outlined
the brightly lighted room. It
was quiet. Not even a coyote shrilled.
'Vail while he stood there looking up
at the calm stars, a sudden sharp ro
fxjrt rang out and the sacred peace of
written in the serenity of still
summer nights, was desecrated. Hiss-
las and ominous, the bullet sang past
wniiston'« head, perilously near, and
lodged in the opposite wall. At that
cioment the light was blown out. A
jsrreat. presence of mind had come to
.tary in the time of imminent dan
ger."
"Good, my dear!" cried Williston, in
low tones. Quick as a flash the door
w.xs slammed shut and bolted just as
a second shot fell foul of it.
"Oh, my father!" cried Mary, grop
ins her way to his side.
"Hush, my dear! They missed me
riran. Don't lose your nerve, Mary.
They won't find it so easy after all."
There had been no third shot. A
profound silence followed the second
report. There was no sound of horse
uc man. Whence, then, the shots?
'One man, maybe, creeping up like
Mume foul beast of prey to strike in
the dark. Was he still lurking near,
abiding another opportunity?
rf. took but a moment for Williston
t» have the rifles cocked and ready.
Mary took her own from him with a
brrnd that trembled ever so sligthly.
"What will you do, father?" she
aalted, holding her rifle lovingly and
thinking God in a swift, unformed
thought for every rattlesnake or other
noxious creature whose life she had
put out while doing her man's work of
riding the range—work which had giv
er* her not only a man's courage, but a
Diax&'s skill as well.
""lake the back window, girl," he
answered briefly. "I'll take the front.
Stajsd to the side. (Jet used to the
starlight and shoot every shadow you
especially if it moves. Keep track
of your shots, don't waste an effort
and don't let anything creep up on
you. They mustn't get near enough
to fire the house."
voice was sharp and incisive.
The drifting habit had fallen from him
and he was his own master again.
Several heavy minutes dragged
•way without movement, without
.vvynd 'rom without. The ticking of
the <i'oc.k pressed 011 strained ears like
ghastly bell-tolling. Their eyes be
came accustomed to the darkness, and
t>y the dim starlight they were able to
dim/Aguish the outlines of the cattle
.-ihi-.if still, empty, black. Nothing
imifvt'd out there.
"t" think they're frightened off," said
Vdar> t.t last, breathing more freely.
"TBey were probably just one, or
he ?Vi not have left. He knew he
you, or he would not have fired
ayaZn. Do you think it was Jesse?"
".Tesse would not have missed," he
said, grimly.
At ihat moment a new sound broke
the stillness, the whinny of a horse.
Reinforcements had approached with
in the shadow of the cattle-sheds.
Something moved out there at last.
"Daddy!" called Mary, in a choked
whisper. "Come here—they are down
at thi' sheds."
Williston stepped to the back win
dow quickly.
"Change places," he said briefly.
"Daddy!"
"Yes?"
"Keep up your nerve," she breathed
between great heart-pumps.
"Surely! Do you the same, little
comrade, and shoot to kill."
There was a savage note in his last
words. For himself, it did not matter
so much, but Mary—he pinned no
false faith in any thought of possible
chivalrous intent on the part of the
raiders to exempt bis daughter from
the grim fate that awaited him. He
had to deal with a desperate man;
Ihere would be no clemency in this
desperate man's retaliation.
To his quickened hearing came the
sound of .stealthy creeping. Some
thing moved directly in front of him,
but some distance away. "Shoot every
shadow you see, especially if it
moves," were the fighting orders, and
bis was the third shot of that night.
"Hell! I've got it in the leg!" cried
a rough voice full of intense anger
and pain, and there were sounds of a
precipitate retreat.
Out under protection of the long
row of low-built sheds other orders
were being tersely given and silently
received.
".Vow, men, I'll shoot the first man
of you who blubbers when he's hit.
D'ye liear? There have been breaks
enough in this affair already. 1 don't
intend for that petticoat man and his
pulin' petticoat kid in there to get any
satisfaction out o' this at all. Hear
me?"
There was 110 response. None was
needed.
Some shots found harmless lodg
ment in the outer walls of the shanty.
They were the result of an unavailing
■ II II
Oark Sinister Figures Flitted frcm
Tree to Tree.
attempt to pick the window whence
Williston's shot had come. Mary
could not keep back a little womanish
gasp of nervous dread.
"Grip your nerve, Mary," said her
father. "That's nothing—shooting
from down there. Just lie low and
they can do nothing. Only watch,
child, watch! They must not creep
up on us. Oh, for a moon!"
She did grip her nerve, and her
hand ceased its trembling. 111 the
darkness her eyes were big and
solemn. Sometime, to-morrow, the re
action would come, but to-night—
"Yes, father, keep up your own
nerve," she said in a brave little voice
that made the man catch his breath.
Again the heavy minutes dragged
away. At each of the two windows
crouched a tense figure, brain alert,
eyes in iron control. It was a fright
ful strain, this waiting game. Could
one be sure nothing had escaped one's
vigilance? Starlight was deceptive,
and one's eyes must needs shift to
keep the mastery over their little
horizon. It might well be that some
one of those ghostly and hidden sen
tinels patrolling the lonely homestead
had wormed himself past staring eye
balls, crawling, crawling, crawling; it
might well be that at any moment a
sudden light liaring up from some
corner would tell the tale of the end.
Now and then could be heard the
soft thud of a hoof as some one rode
to execute an order. Occasionally,
something moved out by the sheds.
Such movement, if discernible from
the house, was sure to be followed on
the instant by a quick, sharp remon
strance from Wllliston's rifle. How
long could it last? Would his nerve
wear away with the night? Could he
keep his will dominant? If so, he
must drag his mind resolutely away
from that nerve-racking, still, and un
seen creeping, creeping, creeping,
nearer and nearer. How the stillness
weighed upon him, and still his mind
dwelt upon that sinuous, flat-bellied
creeping, crawling, worming! God, it
was awful! He fought it desperately.
He knew he was lost if he could not
stop thinking about it. The sweat
came out in big beads on his forehead,
on his body; he prickled with the heat
of the effort. Then it left him—the
awful horror—left him curiously cold,
but steady of nerve and with a will of
iron and eyes, cat's eyes, for their
seeing in the dark. Now that he was
calm once more, ho let himself weigh
the chances of succor. They were
pitifully remote. The Lazy S was
situated in a lonely stretch of prairie
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1908.
land far from any direct trair. True,
it lay between Kemah, the county
seat, and the Three Bars ranch, but
it was a good half mile from the
straight routs. Even so, it was a late
hour for any one to be passing by. It
was not a traveled trail except for the
boys of tiie Three liars, and they
were known to be great home-stayers
and little given to spreeing. As for
the rustlers, if rustlers they were,
they had no fear of interruption by
the officers of the law, who held their
places by virtue of the insolent and
arbitrary will of Jesse Rlack and his
brotherhood, and were now carousing
in Kemah by virtue of the hush-money
put up by this same secret tribunal.
"Watch, child, watch!" he said
again, without in the least shifting his
tense position.
"Surely!" responded Mary, quite
steadily.
Now was her time come. Dark,
sinister figures flitted from tree to
tree. At first she could not be sure, it
was so heartlessly dark, but there was
movement —it was different from that
terrible blank quiet which she had
hitherto been Razing upon till her eyes
burned and pricked as with needle
points, and visionary things swam be
fore them. She winked rapidly to
dispel the unreal and floating things,
opened wide her long-lashed lids, fixed
them, and—fired. Then Williston
knew that his "little girl," his one ewe
lamb, all that was left to him of a full
and gracious past, must go through
what he had gone through, all that
nameless horror and expectant dread,
and his heart cried out at the unholy
injustice of it all. He dared not goto
her, dared not desert his post for an
instant. If one got within the shadow
of the walls all was lost.
Mary's challenge was met with a
rather hot return fire. It was probably
given to inspire the besieged with a
due respect for the attackers' num
bers. liullets pattered around the out
side walls like hailstones, one even
whizzed through the window perilous
ly near the girl's'intent young face.
Silence came back to the night.
There was no more movement. Yet
down there at the spring something;
maybe one of those dark, gaunt cot
ton woods, held death —death for her
and death for her father. A stream of
icy coldness struck across her heart.
She found herself calculating in delib
eration which tree it was that held
this thing—death. The biggest one,
shadowing the spring, helping to keep
the pool sweet and cool where Paul
Langford had galloped his horse that
day when —ah! if Paul Langford
would only come now!
A wild, girlish hope flashed up in
her heart. Langford would come—
had he not sworn it to her father?
Had he not given his hand as a
pledge? It means something to shake
hands in the cattle country. He was
big and brave and true. When he
came these awful, creeping terrors
would disperse—grim shadows that
must steal away when morning comes.
When he came she could put her
rifle in his big, confident hands, lie
down on the floor and —cry. She
wanted to cry—oh, how she did want
to cry. Cold reason came back to her
aid and dissipated the weak and
womanish longing to give way to
tears. There was a pathetic droop to
her mouth, a long, quivering, sob
bing sigh, and she buried her wom
an's weakness right deeply and
stamped upon it. How utterly wild
and foolish her brief hope had been!
Langford and ail his men were sound
in sleep long ago. How could ho
know? were the ruffians out there
men to tell? Ah, no! There was no
one to know. It would all happen in
the dark —in awful loneliness, and
there would be no one to know until
it was all over—to-morrow, maybe, or
next week, who could tell? They
were off the main trail, few people
ever sought them out. There would
be no one to know.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Cause of Seaman's Bad Language.
At Southampton (Eng.) a seaman
named Johnson had to appear before
the borough magistrate on a charge of
making use of bad language in St.
Mary's street. In explanation he
said he was married in St.
Mary's church, Southampton, many
years ago. lie left Southampton after
the ceremony and was away several
years. Coming back the other day he
went to look at the church, and find
ing there was still no eteeple to it he
did in his righteous anger use some
very strong words. In fining the de
fendant ten shillings and costs the
chairman of the bench said many peo
ple had said strong things about such
a beautiful church as St. Mary's hav
ing no steeple, but they did not use
such bad expressions as the defendant
bad.
A Breeches Stratagem.
After the battio of Ramillies had
been won by the great duke of Marl
borough, Lord John Hay, who com
manded a regiment of Scotch dra
goons, when the regiment of foot,
called the King's, consisting of 1,200
men, submitted to him and surrend
ered their arms and colors, ordered,
to prevent their running away, and
the necessity of setting a strong
guard over them, that every man
should cut a piece out of the waist
band of his breeches, which obliged
them to hold them up with one hand,
and in that posture they marched
with a guard of only 25 dragoons and
a sergeant. Charles XII. did some
thing like this by the Muscovites after
the battle of Narva.
Gossip Set to Music.
"I went to the opera last night."
"What did you hear?" 'That Mrs.
Browning is going to get a divorce,
Mrs. Biggs has the dearest dog and a
new baby, and the Mutton's are going
to live iu India." —Harper's Weekly.
CLIMATE IS IDEAL
GREAT WEALTH ACQUIRED IN
GROWING GRAIN.
Writing from Saskatoon, Saskatche
wan, Canada, W. H. Ellwanger, who
was formerly a resident of Green
Mountain, lowa, says:"The climate
in summer is ideal for growing grain.
Long, clear days of sunshine, no bad
storms. We never need to guard
against cyclones; I never saw a better
climate in my life. We made more
money during the season of IDOG than
any previous five years in central
lowa—one of the best districts in the
Btate." Put Mr. Ellwanger was a resi
dent of the town, and it might be more
interesting to read what a farmer ha 3
to say about Western Canada. From
hundreds of atters all filled with
words of praise, recounting success in
Western Canada there has been one
selected. It is as follows:
Paynton, Sask., Canada,
Dec. 10th, 1907.
To Whom This May Concern:
I moved to this address February 3,
1907, from Montgomery, lowa, and
took a homestead 35 miles north of
Paynton. It was cold when I moved
here but it did not stay cold long; it
broke up the Bth of February, and was
not so cold after that but the spring
was late on account of the heavy snow
fall, but in spite of the late spring I
saw better grain than I ever saw in
the states, raised this year. I helped
a man finish sowing oats the 4th of
July and they made fair oats. In a
good year oats will go 100 bushels to
the acre and wheat 25 to 50; all root
crops do well here. I saw turnips weigh
7 and 8 pounds. I raised potatoes this
year that measured 11% inches
one way and 18% the other in cir
cumference. This is a line stock coun
try; hay in abundance, good water,
plenty of fuel, free and plenty of
building material —the government
gives us timber to saw into lumber
and we can get it sawed for about
SG.OO per thousand. All small fruit
grows wild here, then there are ducks,
geese, grouse, pheasants, deer, moose,
elk and fish in abundance. I was over
to Turtle Lake yesterday where there
is lots of fishing being done this win
ter. I saw about a carload of white
fish in one pile. I gave 25 cents for
86 pounds of fish. What do you think
of that. Brother Yankee? I think this
is a fine place both to make money
and to live. There was an old man up
here visiting his brother-in-law. Now
this man owns land close to Des
Moines, lowa, and is in good circum
stances, but he took a homestead and
says he will lie contented if he can
only putin the rest of his days in
Canada. He would get up in the morn
and look out of the door and say:
"Well, who wouldn't live in Canada?"
Now I have been in 13 different states
in the United States, and I never saw
the chance that there is here for a
man that has a little muscle and a
little brains. Three cheers for Cana
da! (Signed.)
W. A. SPICE."
This is the temperature through
November. I took it myself so I
know it is right, in the shade:
Morning at
Morning . 112 Mornlne Af
Date nt s *' , Date »t s ,
Sunrlso sun!,e ' Sunrlßß
1 27 37 1G 28 35
2 30 40 17 12 20
3 2G 37 18 12 29
4 29 34 19 20 33
5 27 36 20 12 24
6 30 38 21 18 27
7 12 30 22 16 28
8 28 34 23 15 27
9 • 17 16 24 18 22
10 2 13 25 8 20
11 5 26 26 32 28
12 28 20 27 20 16
13 7 11 28 8 14
14 21 18 29 18 20
15 20 31 30 18 27
NOT SO BAD AS HE LOOKED.
She— you admit that you only
married me for my money?
He —Well, I'm glad you know that
at least I'm not a fool.
LUMBAGO
This is really Rheumatism of the
Muscles of the Loins and is character
ized by a severe, at times, agonizing
pain in the small of the back, allow
ing the sufferer scarcely a moment's
rest, while the ailment is at its worst.
It can come from cold, exposure to
draft, from getting wet feet or wear
ing wet or damp clothing. It causes
acute suffering, and if allowed to be
come chronic it may permanently dis
able the sufferer. The way to secure
quickest relief is to redden the skin
over the painful part by rubbing with
a flesh brush or piece of flannel rag,
and then apply ST. JACOBS OIL by
gentle friction with the hand.
To refuse to yield to others when
reason or a special cause require it Is
a mark of pride and stifl'ness.—Thom
as a Kempia.
PERUNA EDITORIAL NO, 2.
Dr. Hartman has claimed for many years that Peruna is an EXCELLENT
CATARRH REMEDY. Some of the doctor's critics have disputed the doctor'*
claim as to the efficacy of Peruna.
Since the ingredients of Peruna are no longer a secret, what do the medi
cal authorities say concerning the remedies of which Peruna is composed?
Take, for instance, the ingredient HYDRASTIS CANADENSIS, OB
GOLDEN SEAL. The United States Dispensatory says of this herbal remedy,
that it is largely employed in the treatment of depraved mucous membranes,
chronic rhinitis (nasal catarrh), atonic dyspepsia 'catarrh of the stomach),
chronic intestinal catarrh, catarrhal jaundice (catarrh of the liver), and in
diseased mucous membranes of the pelvic organs. It is also recommended for
the treatment of various forms of diseases peculiar to women.
Another ingredient of Peruna, COBYDALIS FORMOSA, is classed in th»
United States Dispensatory as a tonic.
CEDRON SEEDS is another ingredient of Peruna, an excellent drug that
has been very largely overlooked by the medical profession for the past fifty
years. THE SEEDS ARE TO BE FOUND IN VERY FEW DRUG STORES.
The United States Dispensatory says of the action of cedron that it is used as
a bitter tonic and in the treatment of dysentery, and in intermittent disease*
as a SUBSTITUTE FOR QUININE.
OIL OF COPAIBA, another ingredient of Peruna, is classed by the United
States Dispensatory as a mild stimulant and diuretic. It acts on the stomach
and intestinal tract. It acts as a stimulant on the genito-urinary membranes.
_________________________ Useful in chronic cystitis, chronic dys
_ entery and diarrhea, and some chronio
Our Peruna Tclblct diseases of the liver and kidneys.
- _ .. . , These opinions as to the ingredient*
IS reruns With °f Peruna are held by all writers on
_ the subject, including Bartholow and
Fluid Removed. Judder.
OF HYDRASTIS, BARTHOLOW
SAYS it is applicable to stomatitis
(catarrh of the mucous surfaces of the mouth), follicular pharyngitis (catarrh
of the pharynx), chronic coryza (catarrh of the head). This writer classea
hydrastis as a stomachic tonic, useful in atonic dyspepsia (chronic gastrio
catarrh), catarrh of the duodenum, catarrh of the gall duct, catarrh of tho
intestines, catarrh of the kidneys (chronic Bright's disease;, catarrh of the
bladder, and catarrh of other pelvic organs.
BARTHOLOW REGARDS COPAIBA as an excellent remedy for chronio
catarrh of the bladder, chronic bronchitis (catarrh of the bronchial tubes).
BARTHOLOW STATES THAT CUBEB, an ingredient of Peruna, pro
motes the appetite and digestion, increases the circulation of the blood. Use
ful in chronio nasal catarrh, follicular pharyngitis (catarrh of the pharynx),
increasing the tonicity of the mucous membranes of the throat It also re
lieves hoarseness. Useful in atonic dyspepsia (catarrh of the stomach), and ia
chronic catarrh of the colon and rectum, catarrh of the bladder, prostatorrhea,
and chronic bronchial affections.
MILLSPAUGH, MEDICINAL PLANTS, one of the most authoritative
works on medicinal herbs in the English language, in commenting upon
COLLINSONLA CANADENSIS, says that it acts on the pneumogastric and
vaso motor nerves. It increases the secretions of the mucous membranes in
general. In the mountains of Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Carolina,
collinsonia canadensis is considered a panacea for many disorders, including
headache, colic, cramp, dropsy and indigestion. DR. SCUDDER regards it
highly as a remedy in chronic diseases of the lungs, heart disease and asthma.
These oitations ought to be sufficient to show to any candid mind that Pe
runa is a catarrh remedy. Surely, such herbal remedies, that command the
enthusiastic confidence of the highest authorities obtainable, brought together
in proper combination, ought to make a catarrh remedy of the highest efficacy.
This is our claim, and we are able to substantiate this claim by ampl»
quotations from the HIGHEST MEDICAL AUTHORITIES IN THE WORLD.
Result of Business Growth.
Recently a livery firm in a southern
town built a one-story frame addition
to its stable for the accommodation of
wagons, etc. Jerry, the night watch
man, whose long service has con
vinced him that he is part proprietor
of the concern was overheard explain
ing the matter to a couple of inmates
in this wise:
"Yes, our business done concreased
bo dat we's been obliged to build diß
hyar substantial in de reah!"
EYESIGHT WAS IN DANGER
From Terrible Eczema—Baby's Head
a Mass of Itching Rash and Sores
—Disease Cured by Cuticura.
"Our little girl was two months old
when she got a rash on her face and
within five days her face and head
were all one sore. We used different
remedies but it got worse instead of
better and we thought she would turn
blind and that her ears would fall off.
She suffered terribly, and would
scratch until the blood came. This
went on until she was five months old,
then I had her under our family doc
tor's care, but she continued to grow
worse. He said it was eczema. When
she was seven months old I started
to use the Cuticura Remedies and in
two months our baby was a different
girl. You could not see a sign of a
sore and she was as fair as a new- j
born baby. She has not had a sign of
the eczema since. Mrs. H. F. Hudke,
LeSueur, Minn., Apr. 15 and May 2, '07." ,
Your Very Own.
There's one thing that seems to me
funny.
When the state of a bank becomes runny,
You're supposed togo back
And sit down. It's a fact
They get mad if you ask for your money.
—Lippincott'a.
WIIAT CACSES HEADACHE.
yrom October to May, Colds are the most fre
quent cause of Headache. I.AXATIVE HHOMO
QUININE removed cause. E.W.Urove on box 2i> c
"Live and learn" is a good motto,
but at the age of 30 the average man
begins to live and unlearn.
A pood way to keep well is to take Oar
field Tea frequently: it purifies the blood,
insures good digestion and good health!
A beauty sleep iss likely as nod to
be mit de mout open.
Mr*. Wlnilow'n Soothing Syrup.
For children tecthln*. eoftena the gunn, roduee« tn
flammatlon, allay• pain, curea wind colic. ifsc a botUe.
Many a man seems to have the cour
age of a crawfish.
There ta Only One
"Bronto
That la
Laxative Brom
USED THE WORLD OVER TO CURE A OOLO IR ORE DAY.
Always remember the full n&me. Look C* iV
for thla »tjjnatur« on ererj box. 260.
Absolutely biff profits raining poultry by
our approved practical method. You mnko
easily SK) per month, SIOOO per year, from 24
h»*iih, ors;>(Jo from 12 hens. Nothing to buy
—no Incubators or expensive appliances.
Either man or woman can start our plan at
once without assistance.
HenSets6Daysonly
Not 21 Days, as usnal. With onr complete
book of instructions we send all dencrip
tions, plans, illustrations, eto.,thoopinions
and endorsements of leading poultry ex
perts, also a library of valuable fifi
information for all poultry rai»- V/ 1/
ers. Our price now is only ~
MONFY RACK If you do not find this DMV-.l\
DMV-.l\ n ffor andoutflteiuctly
as we claim, return it at once at our ex
penae and got your Dollar back without
question. The plan is worth a fortune to
you. Don't delay.
THE ELWOSEHN CO.
514 O. T. Johnson Bldg. Los Anfelea, Cal.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by
CARTERS 'teae Little Ptlla.
u—D l»I\V Thoy algo relleTe Dia .
IITTLC tre»» from Dyspepsia,ln*
llfrn digestlonandTooUeartf
I iff 5 K Bating. A perfect renv
KE nil I a edy for Dlzzlnesß, Nau>
H 1 I LLw. Drowsiness, Bad
.r Taste in the Mouth, Coat*
i ed Tongue, Pain In the
TORPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable,
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. -
PACT CDC I Genuine Must Bear ,
uAftlLno Fac-Simile Signature
|!S&
mrnm I REFUSE substitutes.
I THE MAN WHO SWEARS BY
THE FISH BRAND SLICKER
tlKe man who
h s fried to get I
the same service
out of some
other makfl
flgg,
brW®
an Light-Durable
irontecd Waterproof
1 Sold Everywhere
*322
LI usTPiTfo e«ruoo
tltt «JMH»
I i Thompson's EyeWater