Decatur Democrat, Volume 45, Number 22, Decatur, Adams County, 8 August 1901 — Page 7
Wawassee, Indiana June Ito Sept. ‘lO, G. R. &!• w >l* se " round trip tickets at rate of $3.20 good until Oct. 31. J. Bryson. Agent. Our experience, says a successful and presistent advertiser, has been that vou cannot afford to cut down your advertising during a season of dull nefl g. Os course when your advertising bills come around every month and vour business has been very slack it is not pleasant to see the collector come in. At the same time it is bad business policy to cut down your advertising because times are dull. American storekeepers spend money to invite people to visit their stores and examine their stock, regardless of any intention to buy. The London storekeepers wish no visitors who are not purchasers, one of them haying gone so far as to put up a placard, reading: “Americans will please take notice that this store is not a museum.” This store is not likely to get much American patronage. An Indianapolis letter says: Gov. Durbin is going in stronger on military than any other governor. He has appointed either directly or by exerting his influence so many members of his regiment to places about the state house that it is a pretty safe policy when one meets a state house attache to give the military salute and say: “How de-do, major?” They range as low as corporal, but a corporal is never offended by lieing called a major.
Harruff & Lenhart REAL ESTATE BROKERS. t » /E ARE MEMBERS of the Central Association of Real VV Estate Dealers whose agencies extend to nearly every state in the union, and in thirty days time can place your property before 100,000 buyers. This is a good business proposition and costs you nothing unless sale is made. Here are a few bargains.
NO. I.—l 0 acre farm, three and one-half miles from Decatur, on new stone road: close to church; one mile from school house. Ninety-five acres cleared; all under good fence; all i lack land, well tilled. Good frame house of seven rooms, large frame barn and all necessary out-buildings. Good cherry orchard of seventy trees; plum orcharch of twenty-three trees: apple orchard of one hundred trees: all young, thrifty trees l»earing select fruit. Good driven well and steel wind pump: also dug well with iron force pump; both excellent wster. This farm is a bargain at $6,000 00 NO. 2.-40 acre farm, four miles south of Decatur. one-fourth mile from stone road, close to church and school. Thirty-seven and one half acres cleared; two and onehalf acres small timber: all black land and well tiled, except one small field. Well fenced. One story plank house of three rooms and summer kitchen, fair condition: log barn with sheds on three sides; cribs, granary and other out-brildings. Good driven well and steel wind mill, water tank, etc. Gnod bearing orchard. Price, *2,000.00. NO 3 ,—4)O acre farm, throe and one-half in lies southeast ot Decatur, on s one niad. All cleared and well fenced: all black land: good frame house of seven rooms, in good repair; large frame barn in good shape, granaries, cribs and other necessary buildings. Fine young orchard of about two hundred apple, cherry and plum trees, tine and thrifty and ln*aring select fruit. Land all well tiled and very productive: good dug well, splendid water, with iron force pump. One mile from school and near to church. Cheap at <4.000X0. NO 4.—100 acre farm, three miles southeast of Decatur, on gravel road. Eighty-five acres cleared and fenced into six fields: good fences; balance timber land: oak. walnut and other timber. Soil black, sandy, river bottom loam, very pioductive House of seven rooms, one and one half story solid frame, well built and in good tbsp* aDo frame house of six rooms.one story, in good condition. Frame bank barn. 32x50 feet; stable under whole barn, and all in fine shape; cribs, granaries and other out build ings Driven well with iron force pump, can not be pumped dry; first-class water: also dug well of good water Orchard of fine fruit : thrifty trees. This Is a fine farm and has been well cared for and is a bargain. Price. H.tUOU). No. 5. -Good 40 acre farm In Lorain county, Ohio, four miles south of Grafton Station, and four miles southwest of Belden Station, in gtMtd neighborhood, near to school and church. House of eight rooms in good repair: good barn, hv rse barn, granary cribs and other ntcessary out-buildings. Two good, never failing wells, good cistern ; orchard of bearing trets -apples, pears, peaches, small fruits, etc Land all cleared and all under good cultivation. Ten acres creek bottom and balance fair clay soil, all in good condition. A des rable small firm. Cheap at 5L650.0U; one-third cash balance in payments to suit purchaser, at rt per cent, interest. No 6. HO acres of good unbroken prairie land in Kidder county. North Dakota, situated four miles from Dtwson. on Nori hern Pacific railroad, and twelve miles from Steele, the countv seat of Kidder countv. Church and school near to land. This land will make a fine home for the right party. If you are in want of a cheap home and a good tarin. It will pa) to investigate this otter. Will exchange tor small house and lot in Deratur. Is very cheap at 9650.00. No 7.-80 acre farm, throe and one ha’t miles east of Dvcatur, on a good road, onehalf mile from uchool. one mile from church, part black land and balance sandy clay loam, seventy acres cleared, balance in small timber and woods pasture, fences fairly good. One and one-half story trame house of five rooms, snd summer kitchen, all in gcxMl repair, rooms nicely papered and all in good shape. Barn 46166 feet, solid oak ’.rame set on stone pillars and with slate roof, first class In every particular good granary, corn cribs and other out-buildings built apart fro.n barn, good driven well with iron pump, never failing, aft barrel coO men ted cistern, good soft water for drinking or washing purposes. Two orchards ot nice thrifty young bearing trees, apples, □peavs, etc; fine grape arbor, excellent grapes. About fifty acres of this farm is now well set down to grass. This Is a fine farm in an excellent neighborhood and Is a bargain you should not miss at 00 per acre. No. 8. -80 acre farm on good gravel road
REMEMBER, that if you want to sell your real estate we can find you a buyer, and if you want to buy real estate can sell you. NO COMMISSION UNLESS SALE IS MADE Harruff & Lenhart. DECATUR, -INDIANA.
Wk i WaS R’ cknd U P °» the streets of W heeling, \\ , Va., one day lately pronounced dead by two doctors, sat upon by a coroner’s jury, which found that death was due to heart failure removed to the undertaker’s and within ten minutes sat up and sang the doxology was hustled into court and lined hvedollars for drunkenness. The doctors and the coroner’s jury were not tried. A fat man strolled into a grocery store in Legonier according to the Leader and asked if he could rest for four or five hours. The proprietor, who had just found a nest of new born mice in a coffee grinder, told him he could, and then asked him wbv he didn t go to a hotel. The man replied: “I am suffering from nervous prostration, and the doctor said to get a quiet place to rest. I see you don’t advertise. I knew I could not find a better place.” And with that he sat back in his chair and watched the swallows build a nest in the cheese case. The Top Shelf. Dr. Marshall's Lung Syrup has reached the top shelf, there is nothing that equals this medicine for coughs, colds, asthma bronchitis or any affection of the throat or lungs. It has been thoroughly tested for this class of diseases, and stands in the front rank at the head. This medicine is guaranteed to give satisfaction, who could ask for more. Give Dr. Marshall’s Lung Syrup a trial, it has cured others and it will cure you. Do not fail to use this in time. Price 25, 50 and sl. By all druggists. a
running from Union City to Fort Recovery. Ohio, three-quarters of a mile from school, near to church, and good neighborhood. Kixtv-fiye acres cleared and fifteen acres in timber— maple, oak. etc. Land well tiled, fences in fairlj- good repair. Frame house, one and one-halt stories, six nice rooms ami cedar, all in good shape Frame barn, shed ded on three sides for stables, two good wells, never failing, ar d good cDtern-al-ways plenty of water. Good bearing orchard of all varieties of fruit. This farm lies nine miles from Union City and six and onehalf miles from Fort Recovery, and one mile from postoffice with dally mail. This is a splendid chance to buy a good farm, and will not be in the market long at the price at which it is now quoted. Price, <3.u00 00. No- • Residence property on corner of btxth and Jefferson streets: house one and one half story, seven iwujs. neat ami in good repair, good cell <r. house piped lor gas. city water piped into lot, plenty of fruitapples, pears, plums ami peaches, good grape arbor and small fruits. This is one among the most desirable residence properties in the city, and a bargain at 11*500.00. Will be sold on easy terms. NO 100. * fine residence property in Decatur, Indiana, six squares from business center. on a stone street: corner lot #3x132 feet, nes high and dry, tine maple shade trees next to streets; bearing apple and pear trees and grape* vines in good bearing condition. One and one-halt story frame ho ise of ten rooms, well built and in good repair, piped for gas. well of good water with iron pump, under roof. good dry cellar, g'>od barn witn stable room lor six ho ses: also a large building which has been used tor a carpenter shop, ran t e arranged lor dwelling house with small outlay. A very desirable residence property. Price, <2.ouu.Ou. one-half cash, balance in one and two years at six per cent. NO 101.—Five room house on N’nth street, nortn of Monroe. Decatur, hit 66x132 feet; house in good repair, except needs painting outside, well finished inside, gas pijxdfor two stoves, good wellot splendid water. good cistern. forty-tV e fruit ire«s on lot. apple, pear, plum and peach tr <s. grape arbor, currant and gooset»erry bushes. 1 his property will make a fine home tor the right man. Pries, fuou.uu. NO 102. -Residence property on north Eleventh street. Decatur. House of four rooms, neat and in good repair, lot tXix 132 feet; nicely situated, with apple, pear, cherry, plum and peach trees, bearing and in good thrifty condition: raspberry and currant bushes, grape arlior. strawberries, etc. House piped for gas and water piped into lot; good tank cistern. A fine location and cheap at SO.OO. NO. 103. Residence property.—One and onehalt story frame house of eleven rooms, two large clothes rooms, buttryandchinaclos* t. iwm< all newly papered. and all in good condition, t large dry cellar, hous*» piped tor gas. fine drilled well, iron force pump, splendid water, riuhty-tive barrel tank cistern with pump in kitchen.good large wood house and summer kitchen, also cowl house. This desirable residence is situated on a tine, large lot, on a brick street in Decatur, inside of the railroads less than three squares from the business center of citv. The lot contain* apple pear, rlierrv and plum trees ail excellent irtilt. and is nicely situated in a good neighborhood. Price. t1.90U.00. NO. 104. — lence nropprty In city of’'euaiur. II iih« of five room., two clothe* room, and flue lar<e buttry. rooms newly papered and painted last spring, house Is pip. d for pus and city water, also has flue drilled well ot splendid water, new fifty barrel tank cistern put In one) car atro. good large summer kitehen piped for gas. good barn and out-bulldlnirs. I bls residence Is situated on a good alley lot on Indiana street, one-half square west of Fifth street and one-half square from Third Ward school building: lot Is iktxlie feet with msiile shade trees next to street, also next to alley back of summer kitchen In good nelghlxrrhood and cheap at #«00.00, NO. 105.— flood residence property on south Mntb street. Decatur. One and one half story frame house, six rooms and summer kitchen; house newly papered and In good condition; mped for gas; good tank cistern; aboutthirtybearlng fruit trees apple.pear, cherry This will make you a nice home and can be bought on easy terms. Frloe. #1.010.00.
Rome City May 15 to Oct. 31, the G. R. & J. will gjjH excursion tickets at rate of $1.90 for 15 day limt and $2.30 good for season or Oct. 31. Telephone No. 10 for advertising matter and it will be sent to your home. J. Bryson, Agent. Mm. Finn, of Lima, 0., obtained excellent results from the use of Foley’s Kidney Cure. “It relieved my backache and severe pains over the hips. It toned my system and gave me new vim and energy. It is an honest and reliable remedy, a sure cure for all kidney diseases.” Holthouse. Callow & Co. a F. T. Thomas, Sumpterville, Ala. “I was suffering from dyspepsia when I commenced taking Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. I took several bottles and can digest everything.” Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is the only preparation containing all the natural digestive fluids. It gives weak stomachs entire rest, restoring their natural condition. Smith, Yager & Falk. a Through sleepers to Marquette Michigan Chicago & North Western R’y, 8:00 p. ni. daily. Marquette for breakfast. Temperature delightful. Low rate tourist tickets with favorable limits. For full yarticulars regarding rates, time of trains and descriptive pamphlet apply to your nearest agent or address W. B. Kniskern, 22 Fifth Ave., Chicago, 111. There is so much news that even if it comes by telegraph we overlook some of it. Isn’t it a fact that you have seen Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsi" advertised several times and have neglected to to try it? An ounce of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is as good as a three week’s vacation. Ask any druggist or anyone who has taken it. Sold by Smith, Yager & Falk, a The horse hats that are now so much in favor were introduced into this country by a Philadelphia dealer iu horse luxuries who had discovered them in Paris. They are simply the cheapest sort of hats for men, with holes punched for the horse’s ears, and are sold at such a low price that it seems a pity that for lack of them the sun is scrambling and frieassing the brain of our friend, the horse.
Summer excursions to Colorado and Utah From June 18 to September 10 the Chicago & Erie R. R. will sell cheap excursion tickets to Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, and Glenwood Springs, Colo., Ogden, and Salt Lake City, Utah; Hot Springs, and Deadwood, S. D.; St. Paul. Minneapolis. and Duluth, Minn. Tickets will be good returning until October 31. For information see agent or write W. S. Morrison. T. P. A.. Huntington, Indiana. Don’t Ih> satisfied with temporary relief from indigestion. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure permanently and completely removes this complaint. It relieves permanently because it allows the tired stomach perfect rest. Diet ing won’t rest the stomach. Nature receives supplies from the food we eat. The sensible way to help the stomach is to use Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, which digests what you eat and can’t help but do you good. Smith. Yager & Falk. a Notice to Wheelmen. We, the undersigned, do hereby agree to refund the money on a 25 cent bottle of Henry & Johnson’s Arnica and Oil Liniment, if it fails to cure bumps, bruises, scratches, chafes, cuts strains, blisters, sore musics, sunburn chapped hands or face, pimples, freckles, or any other ailments requiring an external application. Lady riders are especially pleased with Arnica and Oil Liniment, it is so clean and nice to use. Twenty-five cents a Irottle; one three times as large for 50cents. Page Blackburn. if Notice —We, the undersigned, do hereby agree to refund the money on two 25 cent bottles or boxes of Baxter’s Mandrake Bitters, if it fails to cure constipation, billiousness, sick-head-ache, jaundice, loss of appetite, sour stomach, dyspepsia, liver complaint, or any of the diseases for which it is recommended. It is highly recommended as a tonic and blood purifier. Sold liquid in Ixjttle, and tablets in Ixtxes. Price 25 cents for either. One package of either guaranteed to give satisfaction or money refunded. Page Blackburn. ts A trip to the moon. You can make this trip and many others at the Pan American Exposition. The Chicago and Erie railroad will sell excursion tickets daily to Buffalo and return at half rates plus SLIM), tickets good ten days. Every Tuesday tickets will be sold at rate of one cent a mile, good returning the following Thursday,stop over allowed at Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Chautauqua Lake on one way and round trip tickets to to New York, Boston and all eastern points. Call on or write Erie agents. W. S. Morrison, T. P. A„ Huntington, Ind. 3m A young lady’s life saved at Panama, Columbia, by Chamlierlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diaorrhoea Remedy. Dr. Chas. H. Utter, a prominent physician of Panama. Columbia, in a recent letter states: “Last March I had as a patient a young lady sixteen years of age, who had a very bad at tack of dysentery.” Everything I prescribed for her proved ineffectual and she was growing worse every hour. Her parents were sure she would die. She had become so weak that she could not turn over in bed. l What to do at this critical moment was a study for me, but I thought of. Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera and j Diarrhoea Remedy and as a last resort: prescribed it. The most wonderful | result was affected. Within eight j hours she was feeling much better: inside of three days she was upon her feet and at the end of one week was entirely well. For sale by Holthouse, Callow & Co. a J
WORK IN A LIGHTHOUSE. Dally Tank* Performed In Keeping the LampN Driftht. The duties of the lighthouse keeper are many and important. The top of the tower Is usually a tiny room, all glass windows. The lantern is in the center of the room. It is a great prism of glass, in shape like a beehive. The lamp is set Into this, and the lenses magnify the comparatively small light of the lamp and make it a great beacon seen far off over the waters. Should the luminant be a flashlight, there Is machinery to lie wound up every few hours to cause It to revolve. At sunset the keeper climbs the steep steps In the high tower, takes down the curtains that darken it throughout the day and sets the lamp inside the lantern. At midnight the lamp Is changed. A freshly filled one Is put In the place of the first lighted one. When storms are raging or fogs prevailing. the keeper stays awake to wind the machinery that keeps the fog signal booming over the water. Many sleepless nights are thus spent by the light keepers in devoted vigil of the aids to navigation. At the gray of dawn the keeper Is again climbing the steep Iron ladder to the tower top. Before the red rim of the sun appears the lamp Is extinguished, the fine prismatic lenses are covered, and the huge panes of glass that form the walls of the room are curtained. The large lamp Is carried down the flights of an almost perpendicular ladder and when filled, trimmed and cleaned is ready for the sunset hour. The work of the keeper Is not concluded with this feat. The most perplexing portion of the daily routine is now to be performed. The light keeper must give an account of bls stewardship. A record is kept of every gill, pint, quart and gallon of oil that is nightly consumed by the lamps, the fractional parts of Inches of wick burned, the lamp chimneys broken and the general consumption of all supplies furnished yearly in large quantities by the government.—Woman’s Home Companion.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Currants are delicious when served with bananas. Slice the latter fruit and add plenty of sugar because of the acidity of the currants. For cleaning a hairbrush use a weak solution of soda water. When tepid, shake the bristles In it. They will be cleaned without being weakened. Space in a closet can be much increased by using bangers or wire forms bung on slats put across above the wooden strips that bold the usual hooks. How do you get the pa tnfl n on top of the jelly? Put a piece that you think when melted will cover the jelly in the glass. Pour the hot jelly in. The wax will come to the top. When you wash handkerchiefs, collars. etc., put them in a pillowslip before they go into the boiler. You spend no time fishing for them, and they don't get lost or thrown out with the suds. Pineapple juice drained from the fruit and mixed with currant, lemon, blackberry or raspberry juice makes a delicious drink A few wedges left to float in the lemonade bowl improves the flavor of that beverage. All on n Year. A clergyman by the name of Mathson was minister of Patterdale, In Westmoreland. England. HO years and died at the age of 90 During the early part of Ins life ins benefice brought him only £l2 a year II was afterward Increased to £ls which It never exceeded. On this income he married, brought up four children and lived comfortably with bis neighbors, educated a sou at the university an<l left behind Ihm upward of a thousand pounds. With'Hint singular simplicity and In attention io forms which characterize a country life, he himself read the burial service over bis mother, he married bls faiher to a second wife, and afterward buried him also He published tiis own banns of marriage In the church with a woman lie bad formerly christened, and he himself married all tils four children. Alaika Drift wood. No frees grow anywhere on the const of western and northern Alaska, and yet these shores for thousands of miles and the Islands of Bering sea are strewn with Immense quantities of driftwood, in places piled high on the bench, la-arlng good testimony to the work of the rtvers. This drift is the salvation of ihe Eskimo, furnishing him with fuel and material for bouses, boats and sleds. The entire northeaster.u half of Bering sea Is very shoal, less than .’>oo feet In depth, while the southwestern half Is mostly about 12,000 feet deep.
STRONG AGAIN. I You who once posaeesed .»turdy physiques nn<l steady nerves, but now have insufficient physical force to properly attend to ordinary duties; you who hnvea sense of al! goneness" after the slightest exertion; you who are dull, languid and old in spirits at an age when you should be full of physical fitr; you who may feel that your life is not worth the struggle— there isa lentitic means of I-deeming all the precious powers whikh scent to be entirely lost Have cured thousands such ns you. Don’t expetiment with your health or money. We will take the risk. If six boxes do not cure you, your money is returned. For years we have been cm mg men on Hit »<■ satisl.ictor s tet ms. SI (X) per box, (» for s*oo mailed In Plain package Book free. Address lal hlr.divine Co., Cleveland, Ohio. For sale by
A good looking hone and poor look- < z Ing hit rne a s Is the ' worst kind of a combination. Eureka Harness Oil "A not only makes the harness and the I Yk hone bn tc better, but makes th® ‘|l» leather soft and pliable, puts it in con- |IIA >i||i i _g/ . ditlon to last -twice ni long Ok 1,3 1 ordlnaril >’ would. /Wl ' A Sold *rvrywhcre m c*u»—*ll llirela alia*. Made by AJ v r Wlvi( standard Your Horse a xrwXS Chance!
THE 25c. FAMILY DOCTOR.
Croak Springs, Mich.—. Mrs. Isaac Dunham, a well-known lady of that place, writes: “I cannot praise Dr. A. W. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills too much. They did for me what doctors and other medicines could not do. I was troubled with severe disorders of the kidneys and enlargement of the liver. My family doctor treated me the whole of last winter, but did not help me very much, so I gave him up and began using Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills.
The result was simply wonderful. I am now strong and healthy again, thanks to Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills.’’
KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS.
A JACK-OE-ALL-TRADES. i h » Bi Yi in | Ijs w W A l' if art O’ 11 [ Iff Hw . f If | JACK Os all TRADES MADE BY FAIRBANKS MORSE 4C6 I • I pump water, shell corn, saw wood, grind feed, chum butter, run sewing machines, and am handy for a hundred other jobs, in the house or on the farm. I can work 24 hours every dav. Weather does not affect my work, hot or cold, wet or dry, wind or calm, it is all the same to me. I have the strength of 15 men. It costs nothing to keep me when not working. It costs between one anti two < ents per hour when I work. I can pump 600 gallons of watt r per hour. You have just to start me and I will do the rest. Call and see me working at ROSE & BELL. A HEALTH and vitalih Wf Wt M gw H II nn - MOTT’® wWK w nw NEUVimiNId I’ILTiS < jk The great remedy for nervous prostration and all diseases of the gem rative ts organs of either sex, such as Nervous Prostration. Failing or Lost Manhood. Impotency, Nightly Emission . Youthful Errors. Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco or Opium, which lead to Consumption and Insanity. With every ACTED IlClilC <5 order we guarantee to cure or refund the money. Sold at SI.OO per box. Ar luii UOIHU. 6 boxos for $5,00. I>K. t AL co M Clevelan<l« For salp by Nachtrieb A Fuelling. I| A FAIR QUESTION” TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS. / A WOULD you give two cents or two and ill a half cents for immediate and posi- \ tive relief from the exhausting and .. Jw nerve-racking asthma from which you suffer ? One dose of Foley’s Honey and Tar is positively and unconditionally guaranteed to give relief, and there are ten doses in a 25 cent bottle—twenty-five doses in a 50 cent Foley s Honev and Tar Will cure asthma if not too far advanced, and alway s will bring relief. Remember one dose means relief from the terrible wbre/mg and choking-up. wtlW 1* our guarantee worth the price of a trial to you I Foley s Honey and Tar ” ia the name. Louiae Prickett. sog Bryan Ave., Danville. 111., writes : ” I had suffered several years with Asthma and after trving a great many remedies I had given up all hope I was advised to try Foley's Hooey and Tar. It immediately stops the coughing spells and I get my breath more freelv. vBPw It is the onlv medicine that ever gave me relief." BANNER SALVE heals all hurts. Sold by Holthouse. < allow 4 Co. 'druggists. Decatur. -jr—WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY Thev have stood the test M years. OTnniin . And have cured thousand* of XI Kll till of Nervous DueaseM, siu Ib ■ -iv I VlllvilU Ca Debility, Duzineo. SlcrplessW TIT 1 rM An M 111 I ne»« and Vari- ocele, A trophy. Ac. V AJ r . 4 h**y ' l pi| r the br.#m, Sti rngthcu A 1 the circulation, make digestion perfect, and impart a healthy 4. vigor to the whole beln". All drains and losses are checked Unless patients v '' re T' rn P rr, y c’tr-d. their condition oftea worries them into Insaaity, (’onsumptiotl or Death. Mailed sealed. Price I per box; 6 boxes, with iron-cLui guarantee to cu-e or refund tha xfalS xaonc;, 4s.an. Lend lor free book. Address* PEAL MEDICINE CO. ” **.iaiid. U. PagoXßlackburo, druggist.-Decatur, Indiana
The Deserving One. I IMyt. with >i playwright friend, was . once witnessing the production of a '*play— not his own—says the New York Clipper. The leading man was well known to be a poor "study," and this night was on very unfamiliar terms with bls part. The voice of the prompter was continuously In evidence, though I this was overlooked, for the actor was a great favorite. Just before the end of the act Hoyt went out, but returned a moment later Just as the curtain went down on deafening applause. "Who are they calling for?" he naked of his friend, who answered by naming the leading man, whom, to spare hU feelings, we will call X. " —1 (This stands for a little swear word.i I don't see what they want X for. I should think they would call for ths prompter.”
Shenandoah, Pa.—Sylvester Pappert of No. 117 South Main St., says: “For twenty years past I have been troubled with constipation and kidney trouble and during that time I have taken dozens of packages of different remedies but uone of them did me an v good. The secretions were irregularandunnatural. I got some of Dr. A W. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills and since using them the action of the kidneys is normal and regular and their general cathartic effect is good.”
DU. A. W. CHASE'S
Genuine bear portrait and signature of Dr. A.W. I Chase. 25c. at all dealers or Dr. A. W. Chase MediI cine Co., Buffalo, N. Y
