Decatur Democrat, Volume 51, Number 27, Decatur, Adams County, 5 September 1907 — Page 8

'g£.'-K <j>@ WK Tfl W Back to the arm That’s where you <7® get good coffee. None of that “ fresh roasted loose by the pound ” store stuff from nobody knows where, full of dust, atmosphere and soiled hands, but the real old, genuine egg and sugar coated Arbuckles’ ARIOSA Coffee, which the folks keep in the original package and grind in the kitchen. < That’s Coffee 1 Complies with all requirements of the National Pure Food Law, Guarantee No. 2041, filed at Washington. Piles get quick and certain relief from Dr. Shoop’s Magic Ointment. Please note it is made alone for Piles, and its action is positive and ceitain. Itching, painful, protruding or blind piles disappear like magic’by its use. Large nlckel-capped glass jars 50 cents. Sold by W. H. Nachtrleb. — : o A GRAND OLD PLAY. “Monte Cristo,” king of melodramas, will be the bill at the Bosse Opera House. Decatur, Ind., Saturday, September the 14th. It will be the well known Fred G. Conrad production as arranged and played by Eugene Moore, one of the best of modem “Monte Cristo’s.” The fame of this great play is well merited for it is a most brilliant stories ever written. Out of the best of all melodramatic novels has been evolved the greatest of all romantic melodramas .and both story and drama have achieved a popularity un-1 parelled in extent and. vitality. “Mon-1 te Cristo” is a play for all classes and i people of all ages. It is even a great j play for those who cnnot hear, but can only see, so bold and fascinating are all its scenes. Its outlies are so clear that the play can be enjoyed by sight. Manager Conrkd has gathered a company of adequate strength and will bring his special scenery which has been prepared with the benefit of several seasons experience with this play. o c— ————— The Kalver Junk shop will be closed all day next Monday on account of a Jewish holiday. j From all appearances the work of putting in the interlocking switch' system at the junction will be com-' pleted the later part of this week or the middle of next. The system is one :of the best manuafctured and will cost. the three roads in t henelghborhood of ten thousand dollars, which is no mean amount. However, the safety l connected therewith is full worth the ' price paid for the same. ——<□ Free, for Catarrh, just to prove mer-; it, a Trial size Box of Dr. Shoop’s Catarrh Remedy. Let me send it now. ; It is a snow-white, creamy, healing, i antiseptic balm. Containing such heal-1 ing ingredients as Oil Eucallptus, I Thymol, Menthol, et<Clt gives instant 1 and lasting relief to Catarrh of the nose and throat. Make the free test and see for yourself what this prep-, aration can and will accomplish. Address Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Large jars 50 cents. Sold by W. H, Nachtrieb. I —" . ; Run-down People Need VINOL the modern strength creator and body builder Many people right here in this vicinity are all run down and hardly able to drag about —don’t know what ails them. “Such people need Vlnol, our cod liver preparation without oil, which contains in a highly concentrated form all of the medicnal and strengthcreating elements of cod liver oil actually taken from fresh cods’ livers, but from which the useless oil is eliminated and tonic iron added.” We ask every man, woman and child in this vicinity who is run down, tired and. debilitated to try V’nol on our offer to return money if it fails. •MITM, YAGER A FALK.

FAIR’S NEW PAVILION Largest Place In America For Live Stock Shows Is at Indiana State Fair. WILL SHELTER 20,000 PEOPLE Handsome Structure of Brick and Steel Has Immense Arena —Fine Facilities for Spectators — How It Outranks Other Show Pavilions of the Country—lt Cost >IIO,OOO. The last legislature appropriated >IOO,OOO for a livestock show pavilion on the Indiana State Fair grounds, and when the exposition opens on Sept 9, the day the structure is to be dedicated x the fair management says that the largest and best appointed building of its kied in America will be seen. The work on the pavilion has-been pushed by a large force of workmen through the spring and summer. As soon as the legislature authorized the State Board of Agriculture to issue bonds with which to pay for the pavilion, a committee representing the board visited many of the large show pavilions of the country, and they have woven into the Indiana structure the good points of the others and left out the weak points. There are show pavilions in the country which cost more money, but members of the Indiana board are willing, they say, to match it against any of them. “We are going to show the people of this state,” said Charles Downey, secretary of the state fair, “that they have the finest livestock pavilion in America. It will also be seen that the money has been conservatively spent, for the cost of the building Itself will be within the >IOO,OOO, although some of the equipment, which the state will not have to pay for, will run the total cost above this amount. In beauty, size and appointments, the building on the Indiana Fair grounds will be without a peer in this country.” The work on the building is so far advanced that one may see what the finished structure will be like. Its walls are of brick, with steel support throughout. The outer walls are thickly coated with cement, tinted a shade to harmonize with the red tile, roof. The pavilion is 350 feet long, 200 feet wide and 28 feet high to the point where the roof begins. It is twice as large, perhaps, as any other building in Indiana that is used for public gatherings. The arena is 270 br 120 feet, with the ends raised like a racetrack, the arena floor being covered with about twelve Inches of tanbark. It is so arranged that several shows of livestock may be carried on at one time,, and spectators may move entirely around the arena if they desire. , /,' The Indiana pavilion is five feet shorter than the one of the Illinois State Fair, but has a larger arena. The Hoosier arena is 100 feet longer than the one at the lowa fair. The Madison Square Garden in New York, where some of the most pretentious horse '’shows of the world are given, is considerably smaller than the new building on the Indiana Fair grounds. The coliseum at Chicago is also considerably smaller. Two large entrances are in the ends of the building, with smaller ones at the sides for the public. A cement walk extends around the structure. It is twenty feet wide and connects' with the gates at the streetcar lines where nearly all of the visitors enter. There are offices for superintendents, committees and judges, as well as i ticket offices, lockers, check-rooms and i lavatories. The interior will be well | lighted by skylights, which may be ! opened and closed by a man on the floor, and at night the place can be brilliantly illuminated by electricity, for the State Board ot Agriculture expects year after year to go In more for night entertainments during fair ' week. | Spectators who see the livestock . shows will always be out of the way • of the animals. There are 5,000 opera j chairs, each one numbered, with a i hat-rack under the seat, and the chairs are tiered around the arena. Close to the arena wall is a row of boxes entirely around the show space. During a rainstorm .the big doors of the building may be quickly opened arid 15,000 people may find shelter In the arena, So the structure, with its seats, will enable 20,000 people to keep dry. In recent years the shows of horses and livestock have been strong features of the fair, but at the exposition this year they will be greater than ever. The new pavilion has been an incentive to the management t in j crease the premiums on Aorses and cattle to nearly >20,000, and this will insure hundreds of blooded animals for the shows. The best herds of the country will be represented In the • cattle displays. The prizes for light, harness and saddle-horses, as well as for draft animals and mules have been largely increased and more classes added, and this assures an extensive I horse show. In other years the horses have held their contests In a big ring hidden behind the barns. They were in the open air and rain or a water-soaked ground often interfered with the comfort of the spectators. The cattle shows were held at another point uni der a stuffy tent. But beginning this year, all of these shows will take I place in the arena of the pavilion, , where thousands of people may enjoy i them while band concerts are In • progress. £ MM—~ ~ ■ —

— ~ YOUR HERVES. The Most Untiring of All Are Those of the HeerL The most easily tired nerves in the body are the nerves of smell. They can detect the faintest whiff of perfume. As you pass a rose In the garden the quantity of perfume that gets Into your nostril must be many millions of billions of times smaller than the tiniest grain of sand. But rub the strongest perfume on your upper lip and in a few seconds you fall to notice lb the nerve of smell is so quickly fatigued. . The heat nerves and cold nerves, which are quite distinct from the nerves of ordinary sensation, also give over working very quickly. A bath that seems quite hot <?when you step into it very soon ceases to cause uny particular feeling of heat Nerves of hearing and sight can go through an enormous amount of wor| For sixteen hours a day they work hard and are still willing to do more. The nerves of the heart are the most untiring of all. From the first dawn of life until the last gasp they work without-stopping for one Instant And even after death if some salted water Is pumped into the heart it commences to beat again, showing that the nerves are still willing. — Pearson's Weekly. KE REVISED IT. Yeung Author Was Anxious to Comply With the Editor’s Request “Your story possesses merit,” wrote the kindly magazine editor in returning a manuscript to a struggling young author of Washington, “but you have embellished It with too much description, atmosphere and other irrelevant matter. What we want is a story setting out the simple facte—facts, just plain facts. If you will revise your story according to our ideas, we will be glad to pay you >25 for It" A. few days later the editor got the following from the struggling young author of Washington: “Herewith revised story. Please send check by return mail, as I need the money.” And this was the story as rewritten: “Jonas loved Eliza, but he was poor, and wealthy papa kicked. Jonas went Into Wall street and made a million, incidentally bankrupting papa. Then Eliza went fishing, fell off a log Into the mill pond, and Jonas fished her out. Papa relented and borrowed a hundred thousand from Jonas. Marriage.” Post , Explesion of Gasoline. A gasoline tank rarely explodes. It cannot unless It contains gasoline vapor and air in explosive proportions, which latter condition is almost never present. It does not explode because it contains too little air or too much gasoline. Even if a tank of gasoline were to burst from heat applied to Its exterior the confined heavy gas would not explode If in 'contact with flame or fire, but would burn Instead. True, a tank of gasoline with no vent could do considerable damage were It to burst and throw burning oil and flaming gas about, but 1,000 gallons of gasoline in a vessel’s bilges would notbe so dangerous from explosion as a hundredth of that ainount. The larger quantity would burn rapidly, while the smaller would be sufficient, if mixed with the proper amount of air, to utterly demolish almost any boat—Scientific American. / ' Aldrich’s Birthplace. The quaint old town by the sea call- , ed Portsmouth is thq only seacoast town in New Hampshire and is one of our very oldest settlements, for it was founded in the year 1623, and it has a history worth knowing. It was an old town when Thomas Bailey Aldrich was born in one of its quaint and ancient houses on the Uth of Nbvember in the year'lß36, and he has written a very deliglitful book about Portsmouth called “An Old Town by the Sea,” while his famous “Story of a ' Bad Boy” is a very true account of ' his boyhood in the New Hampshire seaport—J. L. Harbour In St. Nicholas. Cut Rate Contributors. In a certain parish of Greater New ' York the rector, while admonishing his 1 flock on Sunday last that the collection 1 basket receipts' were steadily growing ! less, took occasion to declare that “cer- ' tain parishioners contribute according ! to their means, but others give in keep- ’ Ing with their meanness.” He added * that in measure such exhibitions of > false pretense reminded him of the 1 story told of the pilgrim fathers upon . their arrival at Plymouth Rock, “First 1 they fell upon their knees; then they ■ fell upon the aborigines.” | i , , 1 The Folly of Delay. 1 It is one of the strangest things in J life how few people have /settled In I their own minds- what it is they really I want or who will take the trouble to 3 be happy. “I have often thought how - much I should like to do so and so,” B we hear people say, and nine times t> out of ten It is something they could s very easily have done, only they al--1 ways put it off.—London Spectator, s 8 \ Quick Fingers. The dexterity of a modern virtuoso’s 1 fingers made a deep impression on an old farmer who was among the audlb ence at a piano recital. Clapping both 3 hands suddenly down upon his knees, i- he was heard to exclaim, “I’d give e >IOO to have that man pick peas for i- me!” ; s *■ e Mischief comes by the pound and i, goes away by the ounce.—French y Proverb. Q; ; ? ■ I Cotton cloth made In India is menI tloned by Herodotus B. O. 400.

BIC CATTLE SHOWS •I z / I X Prizes Offered at the (Jomirj Indiana State Fair to 1 $12,397? SHORTHORNS AND HEREFORDS Both of Tkrioe Especially Well Provided for In Rich Premiums—Shows and Parades in the New >IIO,OOO P?vlllon—>4oo in Prizes for Millihg Contest / Cattle shows will be one of tVfe dominating features at the Indiana State Fair, which opens on September 9 for five full days. With a and well appointed pavilion at fit disposal, the fair management will fgo id stronger for live stock exhibition/ than in any former year. Bothythe battle and horse shows win take place in the big arena of the pavljlon, around which are 5,000 corrrfort/ble seats for spectators. The /btay prize awards to be made in the cattle classes amount to >12,397, a, material Increase ever what has been offered before. One of the features of the cattle •hows will be the parades, and In the class exhibitions a large number of the animals will be shorthorns, for the premiums for them are especially rich, amountlhg to >2,746. The State Board of Agriculture offers, prizes on shorthorns amounting to >876; the American Breeders’ Association gives >750; prizes; in the jnllklng contest reach >4OO, and the Indiana Association of Shorthorn Breeders adds >920 to the prizes. The Herefords will In number not be far behind the shorthorns, for the premiums win amount to,. >2,500. The State Board gives >1,132; the American association, >300; the Indiana association, >1,057, and a silver cup values at >SO will also be awarded. Another class In which premiums in liberal sum are offered is that of the Aberdeen Angus, the total amount being >2436. The state board gives >1,673; the American association, >2OO, and the contests that are open only to Indiana breedrs carry prizes of >863. The prizes for polled Durhams amount to >1,310; Galloways, >531; red polled, >532. There will also be a contest for the championship of all the beef cattle classes. The Indiana Fair has few attractions that are of more interest to the women from the farms than that of dairy cattle. The Jerseys, HolsteinFreslans, Ayrshlres, Guernseys and Brown Swiss have been provided for by the State Board of Agriculture, which offers >438 in each of these classes, and the Indiana Jersey Cattle Club offered >35 in special prizes in the Jersey contests. The dairy cattle department at the coming fair will, be in the charge of Clem Graves of Bunker Hill. The dairy building is another center of interest to the Hoosier farm women for there they not only see the best products of creameries and home dairies, but also obtain a great quantity of information on the making of butter and cheese. Mr. Graves will also have charge of the dairy building, with Prof. O. F. Hunziker of Purdue University as an assistant/ Over >2OO in prizes will be. distributed among the butter makers. The cold storage of the dairy building will be ready to receive exhibits on September 2, and all must arrive by September 7. There will be a large exhibit of dairy utensils and machinery from factories and supply houses. The Purdue School of Agriculture will have a working dairy In operation. The building will be headquarters for the members of the Indiana State Dairy Association and, if practical, the instructors from Purdue will give short talks on the requirements of a perfect dairy cow. At the fair last year the contest for milking shorthorns received -so much attention that It will be repeated at' the coming fair. The >4OO in prizes will be paid by the State Board of Agriculture and the American Shorthorn Breeders’ Association. On the first morning of the contest, all the cows are to be milked in the presence of the judge in the ring. The milk will be weighed, and this will be repeated morning and evening for three consecutive days. The older cows must produce from fifteen to tweny pounds of milk at each milking and the younger from eleven to fourteen pounds. The object of the contest Is to show the adaptation of the shorthorn to both beef and milk production. Ih all of the cattle and dairy contests, the best herds of Indiana and several other states will be represented. The rivalry is especially sharp among the Shorthorn and Hereford breeders to make the best showing at the State Fair, and it is their faith In these classes that has caused the two state associations of breeders to contribute liberally to the prizes. 'At the fair last year, Walter Hadley and. Allie Brown, two wellknown Indiana breeders, offered a stiver cup for the best pair ot Herei fords under two years old. The cup ’ must be won twice by a breeder before ' it becomes his property. The Red Polled Cattle Club of America, through ,H. A. Martin, secretary, ’ of Gotham, Wis., offers for the- first time money awards In this class at the Indiana Fair. In every class of beef and dairy cattle, the State Board I holds strictly to the rule that all anli male exhibited must be registered in ! a herd book. It is this requirement 1 which keeps the cattle show* at a > high standard. ■|

A Certain Cure for Aching FeeL Allen’s Foot-East, a powder; cures Tired, Aching, Sweating, Swollen feet. Sample of Foot-Ease Sanitary CornPad, a new Invention. Address, Allen 3. Olmstead, Leßoy, N. Y. /■■’■;7====me==='' i '".z. T.J 1 ,r~’ : LEGAL ADVERTISING. APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRA- ' / T ° R ' Notice Is hereby given that the undersighed has been appointed Administrator with the will annexed of the e/cate of Leah Bolds, late of Adams /tounty, deceased. The estate is probably solvent DANIEL N. ERWIN, Admr. Dore b. Erwin, Atty-' August 20, 1907. v APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR LICENSE. To the citizens of the town of Buena Vista and Hartford township, Adams county, Indiana: Notice is hereby glv. en that I, Alonzo Runyon, a male Inhabitant of the state of Indiana, over the age of twenty-one years, and who is a person not in the habit of becoming Intoxicated, will make application to the board of commissioners pf said county at their next regular session in October, 1907, for a license to sell spirituous, vinous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, to be drank where sold, in the building situated one the following described property, to-wit: Commencing at the southeast corner of lot No. 5 in said town, thence running north 20 feet, thence west 40 feet, thence south 20 .feet, thence 40 feet to the place of beginning. 'The room where said liquors are to be sold and drank is the lower room of a one and one-half story frame building situated in the southeast part of lot No. 5 in the town of Buena Vista, Adams county, Indiana, said room having opening in front, rear and north side. Said applicant also desires to keep a lunch and cigar stand in said described room and sell cigars, tobacco and lunch therein. 27-3 t ALONZO RUNYON, Applicant NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. State of Indiana, Adams county, ss: In the Adams Circuit Court, September Term, 1907. No. 7422. Suit to • quiet title to real estate. Conrad Stop-1 penhagen, Christian Stpppenhagen vs. James Hinton, Caroline Doelker,Christian Smith, et al. - It appearing from affidavit, filed in the above entitled cause, that James Hinton, Caroline Doelker, Christian Smith, .Emily M. Brown, Rebecca Ashley, Mary L. Deaver and Isabelle Ashley of the above named defendants are non-residents of the State j of Indiana. Notice Js therefore hereby given the said above named parties that they be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Adams Circuit Court on the 15th | day of October, 1907, the same being i the 38th Juridical Day of the next j term thereof, to be holden at the' Court House in the City of Decatur, : commencing on Monday, the 2nd day of September, A. D., 1907, and plead by answer or demur to said complaint, or the same will be heard and determined in their absence. Witness my name,. and the seal of said Court hereto affixed, this 17th day of August, 1907. DAVID GERBER, Clerk. By Paul Baumgartner, Deputy. August 17, 1907. (Seal) Schurger and Smith, Attys for Plaintiffs. NOTICE OF PUBLIC LETTING. Notice is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Adams county, Indiana, will receive bids for the construction of a macadamized road in Root township in said couney, known as the Elzey Macadam Road Extension up and until 10 o’clock a. m., on Monday, October 7, 1907, at a regular session of said Board of Commissioners held in the city of Decatur, Adams county, Indiana, • sealed bids will be received for the construction of said road in accordance with the plans, specifications and report of the Viewers and Engineer which are now on file in the Auditor’s Office of said county, said roads to be built of crushed stone alone. A good bond must accompany each bid twice the amount of the bid filed conditioned for faithful performance of said work and that the bidder if awarded the contract therefor will enter into contract therefor and complete the same according to such contract and in accordance with the bid filed. All blds shall be made so as to give the amount for which said road will be constructed for cash payable on estimates to be made by the Engineer in charge, not to exceed eighty per cent of any one estimate out of the funds to be hereinafter raised by the sale of bonds as required by law. Each bidder be rqulred to file affidavit as provided by law. The Board of Commissioners reserve the right to reject any and all bids. • C. D. LEWTON, 24-3 t Auditor of Adams County. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. State of Indiana, County of Adams, ss: In the Adams Circuit Court, Sep- ■ tember Term, 1907. Eliza Hartman, former widow of Paul D. Hoffman, et ■ al, vs. Clara L. Hoffman, Sarah E. I Hoffman, Eli E. Hoffman, et al. No. t 7411. To quiet title and partition of real estate. ' It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause, that Milton ; Browder, Edward Butler, Louis Brow- ' der, Helen Browder and Lucy Brow- • der of the above named defendants ■ are non-residents of the State 3f Inl diana. - Notice is therefore hereby given the i said Milton Browder, Edward Butler, t Louis Browder, Helen Browder and k Lucy Browder that they be and . appear before the Hon. Judge of the Adams Circuit Court on the 23rd day of September, 1907, the same being

the 19th Juridical Day of the next regular term thereof, to be holden at the Court House in the City of Decatur, commencing on Monday, the 2nd day of September, A. D., 1907, and plead by answer or demur to said complaint, or the same wil| be heard and determined in their absence. Witness, my name, and the Seal of said Court hereto affixed this 29th day of July, 1907. v. DAVID GERBER, Clerk. By Paul Baumgartner, Deputy. Schurger and Smith, Attorneys for Plaintiff. (Seal) 25-3 t NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. State of Indiana, Adams county, ss: In the Adams Circuit Court, Sep-, tempber term. 1907. J. Gardner vs? Thomas A. King, whose true Christian 'name is to the pontiff unknown. No. 7417. Attachment and garnishment proceedings on account. * - . v It appearing from affidavit, filed fn the above entitled cause, that Thoma? A. King, whose true Christian name is to the plaintiff unknown, the above named defendant is a non-resident of the state of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given the said Thomas A. King, whose true Christian name is to the plaintiff unknown, that he be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Adams Circuit Court of the 7th day of October, 1907, the same being the 31st Judicial Day of the next regular term thereof, to be holden at the Court House in the City of Decatur, commencing on Monday, the 2nd day of September, A. D. 1907, and plead by answer or demur to said complaint, or the same wilt be hearfl and determined in his absence. Witness, my name, and the Seal of said Court hereto affixed this 12th day of August, 1907. DAVID GERBER, Clerk. By Paul Baumgartner, Deputy. Aug, 12th, 1907. (Seal) D. D. Heller snd Son, Attys, for plaintiff. APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given to the citizens of the Third ward in the City of Decatur, Adams county and State of Indiana, that I, Charles Zeser, a male inhabitant and resident of said ward a person over the age of twenty-one and a person not in the habit of becoming intoxicated, and a fit person to be entrusted with the sale pf intoxicating liquors, will make application to the Board of Commissioners of the County of Adams, at their October term of the, year 1807, for "a license to sell spirituous, vinous, malt and other Intoxicating liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time with the privilege of allowing them to be drunk on the premises where sold. My place of business whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank is situated in a room on the following real estate, towlt: Commencing at a point on the north side of Monroe street, fn the City of Decatur, 66 feet west of the southeast corner of inlot No. 250 in the original plat of the City of Decatur, thence running north at right angles with said Monroe street 132 feet, thence west parallel with said Monroe street 66 feet to the alley thence south along said alley 82 feet to a stake thence east parallel with said Monroe street 45 - feet to a stake, thence south 50 feet to the north side of Monroe street, thence west 21 feet to place of beginning. 26-3 t CHARLES ZESER, Applicant. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. State of Indiana, Adams county, ss: In the Adams Circuit Court, Sep- ' tember Term, 1907. Nancy Passwater vs. Thomas W. Passwater, Mary, J. Everett, William Passwater, et al. It appearing from affidavit, filed in the above entitled cause, that William Passwater, Harrison Passwater,George Pass water, Judson Passwater, Dilton Passwater, Ottie Passwater, Sarah Panner, Elliott Panner, and all the unknown heirs of Sarah Panner and , Eliott Panner of the above named defendants, a non-residents of the State of -Indiana. / Notice is therefbr|e hereby given the said William Passwater, Harrison Passwater, George Passwater, Judson Passwater, Dilton Passwater, Ottie Passwater, Sarah Panner, Elliott Panner and all the unknown heirs of Sarah Panner add-Elliott Panner that they be and appear before the Hon. ■ Judge of the Adams Circuit Court on the 21st day of October, 1907, the same being the 43rd Juridical Day of the next regular term thereof, to be holden at the Court House in the City of Decatur, commencing on Monday, the 2nd day of September, A. D. 1907, and plead by answer or demur to said complaint, or the same will be heard and determined in their absence. Witness, my name, and the Seal of said Court hereto affixed, this 27th day of Aug., 1907. DAVID GERBER, Clerk. By Paul Baumgartner, Deputy. August 27, 1907. (Seal.) Schurger and Smith A . 26-3 t Attys for PlaintM. Cough Caution Never, positively never poison your lungs. If you - cough—even from a simple cold only—you should always heal, soothe, and easetha irritated bronchial tabes. Don’t blindly suppress ft with a stupefying poison. It’s strange how jonja. things I finally come about. For twenty years Dr. Shoop I has constantly warned people not to take cough mixtures or prescriptions containing Opium, Chloroform, or similar poisons. And now—a little late though—Congress says Put it on the label, if poisons are In your Cough Mixture.” Good I Very good 11 Heiuafterforthlsveryreasonmothet*. - and others, should insist on having Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. No poison marks on Dr. Shoop’* labels—and none In the medicine, else ft must by law be on the label. And it’s not only safe, but it is said to be by thgse that know ft best, a truly remarkable cough. remedy. Take no chance then, particularly with your children. Insist on having Dr. Shoop’s Cough Cure. Compare carefully the Dr. Shoop package with other* and note the difference. No poison marks there! You can always be on the safe side by demanding Dr. Shoop’s Cough Cure W» H NACHTRIEB