Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, November 01, 1912, Image 2

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    HARD FOR THEI
HOUSEWIFE
It's hard enough to beep house if
in perfect health, but a woman who
is weak, tired and suffering all of
the time with an aching back has a I
heavv burden to carry. Any woman j
In this condition has good cause to ,
suspect kidney trouble, especially if j
the kidnev action seems disordered
at all. Doan's Kidney Pills have j
cured thousands of women suffering
In this way. It ia the best-recom- |
mended special kidney remedy.
A MARYLAND CASE.
"Bvtrv Picture tfgfb Miss I.nclnda j
IWU u blury. Price, Klovenili !
, Bt.. Laurel, Md^
were
■ b" 1 * doc to rod
ktS Sed W
nittSo uie well."
Get Doao's at any Drug Store, 50c. a Box
Doan's K j>lfir
FOSTER-MIL3L7RN CO., Buffalo. N. Y.
WMttemore's
If Shoe Polishes
FINEST QUALITY LARGEST VARIETY
They uie«»t every rennlremont. for cleaning ami
pollsUlug shoes of all kinds and colors.
GIT>T EDGE, the only ladies* shoe dressing
that pubttivciy contains OIL. Blacks and Polishes
ladles' and children's boots and sho«>s, aliinoa
without rubbing, 25e. "Freurh tiloM." luo-
HTA It cotnoination for cleaning and polishing all
kinds of russet or tan shoes, 10c. "Itanriy" sue 25c.
HAIIY I*:MTK com nidation for gentlemen who
tak<* pride in Having their shoes look Al. Restores
color and lustre to all black shoes. Polish with a
brush or cloth, 1U cen's. ♦•Kllte" si/e 25 cents.
If your dealer does not keep the kind you want, !
■end us the price ia stamps for a full size package,
charges paid.
WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO.,
ZO-20 Albany St., Cambridge, Mass.
Th« Oldest and Largest Manufacturers of
•Shoe J'olishe.i in the World.
Steamboat Memories.
fx)ndou Opinion, commenting on
the recent celebration of the centen
ary of the steamboat, remarks that
it is interesting to note that the Brit* j
ish admirality of. that period rejected
the invention with the declaration
that "a paddle wheel steamboat could
be of no use in navigation," and that •
a Dr. Lardner, a pundit of that day,
who proved "that no steam vessel
could ever cross the Atlantic, lived !
long enough to bolt to America in a
steamer along with another man'i
wife!"
EXCEPTIONAL LUCK.
"Did Gadderly have much luck on
his fishing trip?"
"Remarkable luck! Why, everyone
believed the tales that he told!"
™ mmmm
A Million
Persons
Breakfast every morn
ing on
Post
Toasties
Suppose you try the
food with cream and
sugar, as part of break
fast or supper.
You may be sure it
will be a delicious part.
" The Memory Lingers"
Post rim Orfiil Company, Ltd.
Uuttl* Creek, Mich.
i'
VERA CRUZ FALLS;
DIAZ A CAPTIVE
Mexican Rebels Offer Slight
Resistance to the Attack
103 DEAD AND WOUNDED
j -
American Warships Send Medical Aid
i and Supplies Ashore After Fighting
in City—Washington Believes Oth
er Rebels Will Soon Surrender.
Vera Cruz, Mexico.—The revolt of j
Gen. Felix Diaz, nephew of the exiled |
I President, has beeu short lived. The j
' town of Vera Cruz, which he occupied j
I with about 2,000 adherents for several
' days, was captured by the Federal
| forces, Diaz and his staff being made
i prisoners. The casualties were few.
| Two Federal columns, commanded
' by Gen. Joaquin Beltran and Col. Jimi
nez Castro, entered \ era Cruz lrom
the north and south. There was little
opposition to their advance. Col. Cas
tro, with less than fifty men, captured
Gen. Felix Diaz, whose 300 men at Po
lice Headquarters refused to fire at his
; command.
The killed and wounded number less
than 100. No foreigners were hurt.
| Desultory firing continued after the
| Federals entered the town. Instead of
a great battle, everything was in a
I muddle. Rebels and encount
ered each other in the streets without
[ knowing which side the others were
j affiliated with, as the uniforms of ail
were alike.
The Federal troops first took posses
! sion of the Custom House. They then
| seized the municipal buildings and the
| telegraph office.
The majority of the men of the re
i bellious Nineteenth Regiment of In
! fantry surrendered their arms without
! fighting. The barracks in which Felix
| Diaz and his followers had concentrat
j ed were then surrounded.
Medical officers and assistants have
j been sent out through the city by
j Commander Hughes, United States
I Navy, to give such assistance as might
be possible.
Gen. Diaz is believed to have had
| about 2,500. The battle differed from
j all previous conflicts fought during
j the two previous revolutions under
! Madero and Orozco in that nearly all
j the forces on both sides were seasoned
j regulars, directed by trained military
j men. Heretofore in the two revolu
| tions regulars had never opposed reg-
I ulars in a pitched battle.
FIVE BANKERS GUILTY OF FRAUD
Federal Jury Convicts Financiers of
Conspiracy.
Memphis.—Five bankers well known
in Memphis, Kansas City, Oklahoma
City and other cities, who have been
on trial here charged with conspiracy
to defraud, were found guilty by a
Federal jury.
W. C. White, ex-director of the All
j Night and Day Bank of Memphis and
I the Union Trust Company of Hot
Springs, Ark., also named in the in
dictment, was acquitted.
Those convicted are E. L. Hendrey,
J ex-president of the Memphis All Night
I and Day Bank; If. C. Wynne, ex-presl-
I dent of the Little Rock (Ark.) All
I Night and Day Bank of Oklahoma
j City; C. A. Bonds, ex-president of the
j Kansas City All Night and Day Bank,
| and J. H. Brooks, ex-director of the
| Memphis Bank and head of a local
I lumber company.
I "MORMONS ARE NICE PEOPLE."
Danish Deputy Defends Them Against
League of European Powers.
Copenhagen.—ln the chamber a sen
sation was caused when the Socialist
member, Samuelsen declared himself
a Mormon and made a lengthy defense
of Mormonism. The Mormons, he
i said, are "nice people who acted hon
estly." He then asked the government
i if it were true that a secret agreement
existed between the Scandinavian
| countries and the Powers against
! Mormonism.
M. Appel, minister of worship and
; education, denied such an agreement
existed but he added that he sympa
thized with the efforts of the clergy
and other persons against Mormonism
because it induces girls to leave home,
driving many families to despair.
AERO'S FALL KILLS MITCHELL.
Presidentj of Aviators Association
Dashed 600 Feet to Death.
Montgomery.—Louis Mitchell, presi
! dent of the American Aviators Asso
ciation, while flying at the exposition
grounds 10-st control of his machine
j at a height of 600 feet and was dash
ed to death.
Mitchell was making a spiral glide
w,lien he lost control. Seven thou
: sand persons witnessed the trag
edy.
I
: SCOURGE KILLS WILD DUCKS.
Thousands Die from Unknown Diseasa
in California.
San Francisco. California wild
| ducks are dying by thousands of a dis
ease new to sportsmen and scientists.
| After examination of six ducks that
died of the scourge at Vista Lake,
| Kern County, th<> I,'nlted States Bu
| reau of Health here is unable to make
j a diagnosis, but finds that the symp
' toms resemble those of h scourge on
Great Salt Lake, in which it is esti
mated that a million due ks died.
! POTATO BELT
GAINS WEALTH
Berks and Lehigh Counties
Unit ue in Productiveness
THE TOIL THAT MAKES GOOD
1 Plenty of Backache Before Tubers
Change to Gold and Bring Asset.
One of Most Interesting
Places in State.
Reading.—Like the promised land
! of old, the Potato Belt of Berks and j
i Lehigh counties is fertile farming soil; 1
i but it demands, as did that ancient i
' heritage that 'flowed with milk and
| honey," constant cultivation if it is to
I produce at its best. That's why the i
| successful farmers of the region must i
! go to bed with backaches and arise I
| before they can quit yawning. That's
I why their wives and daughters know j
I that the best dinners, breakfasts and
S suppers iu Pennsylvania are none too
i good for such workers —and why they .
get them. The Potato Belt is one of
the most interesting places in the
| Keystone State. It stretches along I
! the Blue Mountains, practically from
Hamburg in Berks County to Slating
ton in Lehigh County, with the great
! centre in the townships of Greenwich j
| in Berks and Lynn in Lehigh. Here j
i every farm is a bank, every farmer j
1 his own banker with time enough left j
after the hard harvest is gathered to
enjoy life to the limit.
Backbone of Community,
j Visiting such a locality at various j
seasons of the year one cannot leave
| it and not hear of two persons the j
j very backbone of this singular com- ;
j munity. The first one is that veteran j
' and genial good fellow, Reuben Bach- :
man, who claims to have been the first
farmer in this belt to discard the old ;
idea of raising wheat only, and plant- '
ed the first really big acreage of po- i
, 1 tatoes in Lynn township; and to-day !
he is king among the potato farmers.
The second is William Hoffman, who
S started out as a potato farmer sue- |
i ceeded, then bought another "run- [
down farm," and made it burst with j
j tlibers, then adopted the roll of ship- {
per, taking care that Ills fellow-farm
ers found good markets for their po
tatoes, and that they got the highest
prices possible.
While the total acreage of potatoes j
. : in the United States is close to 3,700,- j
j 000, and the crop is estimated at 401,-
j 000,000 bushels, this Potato Belt of
| Berks and Lehigh counties can well
hold its own. Every farm here —and
I there are more than 1,000 in the belt-'-
i has from 10 to 50 acres in potatoes. j
j If you draw a line five miles in either '
! direction with New Tripoli as the cen
; ter, you can count on a crop of half
| a million bushels; and you can draw
! similar lines from other centres, tak- j
ing such towns as Kempton, Trexler, 1
i Wanamakers, Lynnport, Lynnville and j
j others; for whether you look north, j
south, east or west the potato bug
could find a luxurious subsistence in
either direction, if the wary farmer
| would but let him.
Bobs Up to Die.
Wilkes-Barre. —While shooting at a ,
target at the Ninth Regiment, N. G. P., j
rifle range, at Wanamie, Bruce Lorah,
' 18 years old, the attendant and scorer,
was shot and killed by one of the
' marksmen. Lorah, who was in the
I pit, raised his head too quickly, and
the ball from a markman's r.fle struck
! him in the neck. The National Guards
| man surrendered himself, and it being
j shown that the shooting was purely
, 1 accidental, he was released on bail.
Slays Bear in Village.
Bloomsburg.—Following three days'
■ 1 bear chase by Benton residents, dur- •
ing which scores of hunters left for
the woods, Ira Michney, of that town,
' i shot a 300-pound bear in the borough
. j limits. Four bears have been seen in
; \ and near Benton in the last week, and
| every man in the borough who could
1 I beg or steal the time from work has
" | been daily on the bear-hunting job.
' Fortune in a Gas Gusher.
' I Kane. —A big gas well, going at a
rate of a million and a half feet a day,
and the second largest ever struck in
L this part of the country, was opened
' live miles north of this city at a depth
i of 2,500 feet in the Cooper sand. The
I well is owned by J. F. Wood, John
1 Stoll. John Nelson and John Lindberg,
and will be marketed by the Keystone
1 Oil and Gas Company.
Prosperity for Weatherly.
Weatherly.—The Weatherly Iron
11 and Steel Company has purchased the
3 abandoned shops of the Lehigh Yal
l" ley Railroad Company here. When
the Lehigh Valley Railroad abandoned
s the shops it was feared that it would
l " be a deathblow; but there are assur
'* ances now that the town will enjoy an
era of unprecedented prosperity.
Want $250,000 Hospital.
Jenkintow® — Prominent men and
8 ! women of the Old York road section
I have inaugurated a comprehensive
1 , plan to raise the funds desired for the
proposed Abington General Hospital.
'■ ' Plans for the structure have betn ac
-1 cepted, and with thousands of dollars
'• already pledged work will h ■ started
at the earliest possible date. It is
B | planned to raise $250,000; but active
1 work will begin when ?UM>,ouo Is
" raised. The Board of Trustees in
eludes members of the Elkius, Wide
I oer, and other noted families.
ARE AFRAID OF
FIRE MARSHAL
existence of Departments Tends
to Decrease of Incendiarism
BUT FOUR SUITS IRCU3HT
. •'I
f-ear of Detection and Punishment 9
Preventive of Arson—State Mar
shal Baldwin Confident of
Effect of New Plan.
(Special Harrisburg Correspondence.)
Harrisburg.—Joseph L. Baldwin,
! State Marshal, says that the very ex
istence of a department to prevent
llres and detect causes of fires has re
sulted in a marked decrease of incen
' (liarism in this State. Statistics are
not at hand to make comparisons of j
i arson during other years aijd this year,
but only four suits for setting fire to |
j buildings have been brought since the
lire marshal's department went into !
! operation. This is an average of |
about one a month, and Baldwin says
this is far less than the number which
! would be expected by men familiar
I with such matters. "I haven't the
j slightest doubt," he said, "that the
lire marshal law has acted as a deter
rent. Fear of detection and punish
ment is one of the greattest prevent
| jves of all crimes, of course, and the |
fact that a detective force exists, one
i at whose principal duties is the in
| vestigation of all cases of suspected
j arson, is naturally going to make a !
i man think before wilfully setting lire
I to a building." A number of cases of
suspected incendiarism have been in-
I vestigated by Baldwin's inspectors,
\ evidence lias been found in four.
Many Corporations Report.
Over 24,000 corporations of Pennsyl
j vania will be called upon by Auditor |
j General A. E. Sisson to file their re- ,
i ports oil capital stock and corporate
loans for 1912 at his department dur- J
ing the month ot' November. The
blanks for these reports are prepared
for mailing at the department and
j comprise a couple of cart-loads of en- j
! velopes, the postage bill on this mail- j
i ing list being the largest of any opera- j
tion of the kind oil Capitol Hill. Un- j
der the law the corporations must (lie i
their reports during the month of No
| vember so that the basis of capital
I stock taxes may be established. The
| corporate loan reports are also to be I
made at that time, although they
cover such items for the calendur
year. For years the proposition of j
changing the capital stock report pe- |
riod has been under discussion, as the
j business of most of the corporations (
runs with the calendar year, there- j
quirement of State reports up to No- |
vember necessitating the making of j
special statements of business.
Coal Rate Inquiry.
The subject of inquiry into the j
charges that anthracite coal carrying j
rates charged by the Philadelphia Ai
Reading, Pennsylvania, Val- j
I ley, Central Railroad of New Jersey, J
! and Delaware, Lackawanna & West- j
j ern to Philadelphia and vicinity are
| exorbitant was taken up by the State j
Railroad Commission. The conimis- j
siou will call on all of the railroads j
made respondents to answer, and will ;
then appoint a time later in the fall
for a hearing. The inquiry will be the
most important ever undertaken by
the commission, and will probably re
quire many weeks of investigation of -
conditions in the coal fields and Phila- :
delpliia and railroad facilities. The 1
question is solely one of charges for j
carrying coal.
Rifle Practice Keen.
, Rifle practice season for the Na- j
Clonal Guardsmen will close with Oc
tober 31, and the militiamen are hard
at work oi\ the ranges making up their
scores so that they can be forwarded
to the Inspector-General of Rifle I'rac
tice promptly. Practically every regi
,mental inspector of small-arms prac
tice is now making the rounds of his
organizations, looking up the work
: that is being done, and urging the
completion of practice. Under the law
every member of the Guard mtist
qualify at the ranges, from the gen
erals down to the privates, and in
many organizations the rivalry is very
keen regimental and battalion shoots
being held.
Pave Way for Big Park.
| The State held an auction sale of
! houses at the Capitol, when 33 houses
in the Capitol Park extension area
! were knocked down to low bidders for
the material in tliem. Altogether
! £1,14.650 was realized, or ?i>('o more
j than was obtained for 52 houses which
were sold in one lot through bids pre
sented after advertisements. The
successful bidders must remove the
houses and fill up foundations before
the end of the year.
Typhoid in Reedsville.
At Reedsville John Albert Butler
died from typhoid fever after an ill
ness of only two weeks. He was a
Ron of Commissioner G. A. Butler and
proprietor of the McDonald Drug Com
pany. Mr. Butler is the second victim
of an epidemic of the disease which
prevails , in the little tow ns along the
banks of the Kishaeoquillis Creek, and
many believe that this stream, from
which much of the drinking water is
obtained, has become infected. It
drains the dumping ground for slaugh
■sr house offal.
SNAPSHOTS AT
STATE NEWS
All Pennsylvania Gleaned for
Items of Interest.
REPORTS ABOUT CROPS GOOD
Farmers Busy in Every Locality— |
Churches Raising Funds for Many
Worthy Object#—ltems of Busi
ness and Pleasure that Intere&t.
Judge Criswell, at Franklin, revoked
the sentence of a Greek prisoner In or
der that he might goto war.
Peter Alaburds died at the State
Hospital, the result of a fall of coal at
Boston Run Colliery.
The Allentown Playgrounds Asso
j elation has been organized, with Mrs.
! Waiter C. Guilder as president.
Seventeen foreigners were arrested
In South Bethlehem ar.d fined $2 and
costs each for creating a disturbance
; in a coffee house.
Members of the Industrial Commis
sion, of Bethlehem, are trying to ef
fect, annexation of North Bethlehem
to the borough.
Thomas Ferguson was sent to jail
for two years by t.he Lancaster Court
for robbing the house of illiam L.
j Reinhart.
James McDonald, a well-known Cen-
I tralia resident, temporarily insane
from ill health, killed himself by cut
ting his throat.
Clearfield people believe that cer
tain improvements and additions to
industries will bring their population
up to 25,000 in five years.
A three-acre field of buckwheat own
!ed by Jacob S. Moyer, of Bergey,
i yielded 150 bushels of the three-corner
ed grain.
The jury of view appointed by the
; Chester County Court has decided to
; report favorably for the erection of a
new bridge over Brandywlne Creek on
West Main street, Poatesville.
Leaning out of a second-story win
dow at York, Gladys, two-year-old
daughter of James West, lost her bal
ance and plunged 30 feet to the side
walk, sustaining fatal injuries.
It is recalled by old residents of Al
lentown that the Rev. Robert %V. Lan
! dls, who became the pastor of the
i Mrst Presbyterian Church there iu
| 1839, inaugurated the system of rent-,
! ing pews in that church.
George Matzik was sentenced in
: Montgomery County to not less than
' 14 years nor more than 17 years in the
! Eastern Penitentiary for fatally stab
bing Andrew Babyok at King-of-Prus
sia.
For taking liberties with Linnie Mc
! Neill, of Chester county, while she was
a guest at his home. In Norristown,
I Thomas McCool, middle-aged and mar
j ried, was sent to jail for two years by
| Montgomery County Court.
The Perkiomen Seminary building
committee has awarded the contract
for the $20,000 Carnegie library which
is to be built on the campus to the
! Ochs Construction Company of Allen
] town.
Men who cut down an immense oak
j tree on the lawn at the Park Hotel, at
Wiliiamsport, found two owls' nests
in the trunk. The tree was long the
; refuge of an owl that looked calmly
upon the people bound to and from the
Pennsylvania Railroad depot.
William A. Liglitner, who was killed
by a locomotive at Erie a few days
ago, was Treasurer of Perry county
from 1885 to 1888. He taught school
for 17 years in Perry and Cumberland
counties. He was secretary of the
Perry County Fruit Growers Asso
ciation.
H. L. Murray, secretary of the Al
! toona Market Company, while fishing
in the Juniata River, near his cottage
| at Aughwlck .Mills, Huntingdon coun-
I ty, caught a large water-dog, or fresh
i water alligator, which put. up a feroci
| ous tight before being landed. This is
' not the first specimen of the rather
: rare species of reptiles Mr. Murray has
j caught. The water-dogs, which are
more than a foot long, and have the
j legs, tail, mouth and other equipment
of a full-fledged alligator, are rather
i prevalent near his cottage, and he ai
-1 ready had one in a collection Qf nat
-1 ural curios he and members of his
family have been gathering at Uieir
summer home.
i A 10-pound red beet was frown 1
Mrs. A'treu Gruber, of Jefferson towu
j ship, Berks county.
| i Postmaster John B. Hess, of Dußois,
| has been notified that he has been ap
pointed custodian of tne new Federal
' lot recently purchasod by the Govern
' in nt in that town. According to the
J instructions in the letter Mr. Hess
must keep down the weeds?, c!enn the
! sidewalk in winter, allow no use of
' the grounds that would offend tho pub
lic and in other ways keep close tab
>n this lot.
SUCCESS FOLLOWS
JUDICIOUS FARMING
IN WESTERN CANADA IT 18
CERTAIN.
The fitory of the Big Farmer In
Western Canada, and the immense
profits he has made in the glowing of
grain, has been told and retold. Ha
has been found in all parts of th«t
provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan
and Alberta. His splendid farm build
ings have been pictured, his traction
outfits dercribed and his princely sur
roundings, resultant of his success in
growing grain, have been portrayed by
letter, press and camera. It certainly
is not to his discredit that by suc
cessfully applying common sense and
up-to-date methods to the conditions
that climate, a good soil, and splendid
market have placed at hand, that he
has made the best use of them. He ia
not too proud to admit that he came
to the country a very few years aga
handicapped as to money, leaving be
hind him unpaid mortgages in his old
home land (which are now wiped out),
and he is still today the same good
hearted fellow he was in the days that
ha had to work for a neighbor, whila
the neighbor broke the land on his
homestead, which went to make up tht
settlement duties.
Then, there, too, Is the farmer
the farmer's son, already wealthy, whft
has bought large holdings in Western
Canada, in either Manitoba, Saskatche
wan or Alberta, who has made forty
to one hundred per cent, on his invest
ment, whose big grain crops and
whose Immense cattle herds are help
ing to improve the country. Health
and strength, energy and push, and
bull dog grit are as essential in West
ern Canada as in Ohio, Indiana, Illi
nois, lowa, or any of the states from
which BO many of these people come,
and then, when you have added to
that a fair amount of means, with
which to make a start, the land which
is only waiting for the skill of the
husbandman will quickly respond.
But there is the smaller farmer, th«
man who has not. made sufficient in
! four or five years, that he might com
i fortably retire if he felt like it. There
are many of them in all the three
Provinces. It is not the less to his
credit that he has earned hia home
stead by the three years residence,
j that he is free from debt, and has a
I reasonable bank account. He, too,
| came to the country handicapped by
debts, and with very little means. Ha
is contented, has a good home, land
free of encumbrance, some stock, and
with good prospects. One of these
! writes: "I formerly lived near Day
; ton, Ohio, on a rented farm, had as
j good a chance as the average renter,
I but after ten years of hard work, satis
fied myself that if I ever expected to
secure a home, I would have to under
take something else. Hearing of West
ern Canada, 1 investigated, and seven
years ago last Spring settled in a
j homestead and purchased (on time)
;an adjoining half section, arriving
i with a carload of household effects and
i farm Implements, Including four
; horses and three cows, and SI,BOO in
' money—my ten years' work in Ohio.
"The first year our crops gave us
j feed, the second year 100 acres of
! wheat gave us $1,S00; no failure of
j crop since starting here. I have now
! 22 head of horses, 15 head of cattle,
| and 35 hogs. We own 1,120 acres of
land, and have same all under cultlva
j tion. Was offered at one time $35.00
per acre for a half section where w®
| live, and all the other land could be
I sold today on present market at $30.00
j per acre. Should we care to dispose
; of our holdings, could pay all debts
j and have over $30,000 to the good, but
j the question is where could we goto
Invest our money and get as good re
turns as here?
"We have equally as good, if not bet
ter prospects for crops this year, as
we had three years ago, when our
wheat reached from 30 to 4S bushels
per acre. I never believed such crops
' coulil be raised until I saw them my
| self. I had 15 acres that year that
j made 50 bushels to the acre. Our har
| vest will be ready by the 12th. We
j have this season in crop 400 acres of
j wheat, 125 of oats, 90 of flax, and
1 run three binders, with four men to do
the stooking.
"We certainly like this country, and
the winters, although the winters are
cold at times, but we do not suffer aa
one would think. What we have ac
complished here can be duplicated in
almost any of the new districts. If
anyone doubts anything I have satd
in this letter, tell them to come
and I can prove every word I lia\ a
written."
The name of the writer can be had
from the Superintendent of Immigra
tion, Ottawa, Canada, who can give
the names of hundreds of others
equally successful. Adv.
For the Sake of Variety.
I Customer —This,l suppose, is a fold-
I Ing bed.
j Merchant —No, sir; we call this an
unfolding bed. I'll show you. (Un>
; folds it.)
The straight and narrow path doe»
' n't look good to the rounder.
FOLEY KIDNEY PIUS
Are Richest in Curative Qualities
FOR BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM,
KIONEY3 AND BLADDER
o-. I,4Boacres. II mom bonso. Silo. 1
! barns. Hi head fitock, f&UUO. 20ii<»st
i farms in li.S., blit<*k loam, iid stonos 112 vi.OO j»er hohv
j cataloguo ir«»o. J.IMSIIAIIAN.POKT IIKNHI, Mcvrvoo*
Ue*t Cough Syrup* Tiilei Good. U«e Ej
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