Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 12 September 1895 — Page 3

SHERIFF WILKINS FREED »e.r ß of Slavery « ni How He Eacaped — Health la Improving Ha<l Gained Fifteen Founds in Weightlalka About His Deliverer Daily. -T& aU t^J? hio ’ S* 1 *- 9 > lsa s—tSpecial.) m.n. . . ls 1U a boll of excite Pbr.iAl « ‘ f “ CU about the '“Proven d'lwus of mauy of our ieadius utile... became known. Anderson .< b 'n “ ilo,esa * e "nd retail drug ted tha- th ca °u and frankly admit « resorted a great astonishment every out XttXf £‘ nce tha } time wehaT * der a ’ f boxes, and every one un »“ney B »nd aU t tee *° CUr * Or refund tht hiic'n'orf' Strange as it may seem, w< Th s la ear > a ca ll to refund money, and it i. n eed a great record of “erit. bir «,l.* £ ecause of this merit that tht brines in »?*> rp ® ulted - Aa every curt we L, — e ®st twenty-five customers, anon n * bat •'o-To-Bac can be relied onhr ; D , every respect, and No-To-Bac nol nnL. u ” nervous irritation and esaar. >ne use of tobacco entirely unnecforrifio .1 at tIP san 'e time builds up and I it,b -. llle general physical conddion. chant. Sa " ,no ot our Prominent merP , a8 , 9 , do "’ n opposite side oi I - ’; rpet; the -y "ere cured by No-To-Bae .iJ« and they have not used tobacco * “ C ® . and V haTe bpPn greatly imP <1 in health. We have a great “any customers, men who are well onLa Vd a yt,ars ’ ' Tbo have beer, onrto of the tobacco habit by the t.ti» o-To-Bac, and who continue taxing it right along for its tonic effects. a natural invigorator and stimulant Believe there is no preparation in America to equal it.” You know K. p. Wilkins, our sheriff, don t you ?" ow*’ of co "rse. I do.” ~ -^ ou " ant to interview him.” „v r - dk’us was called upon, and said: les November 4th, last, 1 bought mv first box of No-To-Bac from Anderson A Cramer. I had little faith, and to my F, r t at , Bur Pnse, after using part of the laird box. I was completely cured and did not nave the least desire for tobacco. 1 had been a perfect slave to tobacco for over twenty-five years; I smoked from twelve to fifteen cigars a day; to-day 1 feel better. 1 sleep better, think better, and 1 have gained fifteen pounds in « eight, and there is not a day passes that not recommend No-To-Bac to many or the tobacco users who I know are des.rojmg .their lives and vitality by the use of the weed.” Further investigation revealed the fact that there are 500 people living in this town and the surrounding country who have been cured by No-To Bae: ’if the eures go on at this rate it will not be very long before the tobacco industry is going to be seriously affected. The sale of No-To-Bac has been phenomenal. The public should be warned, however, • gainst the purchase of any of the many imitatici. . <m the market, as the success of No-To-Bac has brought forth a host of counterfeiters and imitators. The genuine No-To-Bae is sold under a guarantee to cure try all druggists, and every tablet has the word No-To-Bac plainly stamped thereon, and in the purchase of the genuine article you run no physical or financial risk.

Bono Food. One of the New York food reformers who would improve the diet of mankind has put out a proposition for the eating of bones, after they are ground line. He holds that under the existing regimen, the bones of the human frame are not properly supplied with the chemical elements needed to keep them in sound and vigorous con dition, and that these elements can be most easily obtained by consuming the powdered bones of the animals ordinarily used for food. He would sprinkle a steak or chop, for example, with bone dust, after the manner in which it is sprinkled with salt and pepper, and he maintains that thus the taste of the meat may be greatly improved.—New Y’ork Sun. Banner Diamond Wedding. This remarkable item comes from Kennebunkport. Me. The Manuel diamond wedding was celebrated there recentb,. and was a notable affair. Mr. Manuel is nearly 110 years old, and his wife is nearly as old. The wedding march consisted of a procession of centenarians, there being a number of Kennebunkport people who were over 100 years old. The children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren joined in the march. The ceremony was followed by an old-fashioned dance upon .the green.

.sjjk, “ For years I had suffered from falling of the womb, inflammation of I ■* / the stomach, and weakness of the XjSSrwwMjeredrwfe female organs, i ■ ' v .. -s E. PM-hani'g SCTpEglsmßa pound, and aB found a perfect ! r I f slks - Lizzie S'' I Decline, 224 | . Grand Street, 1 1 -L r-ey City, 5eW Jersey. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst bcrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both’thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Head the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose one tablespoonful .in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists.

II ARIS READY FOR A SIEGF Preserved Food in Storage Sufficient to Feed the Population. Taking into ecftouqt the remarkable advances that science has made in the way of preserving and compressing food so that it can be stored in an infinitely small space in proportion to its nutriment, it is not likely that any besieged city in the future will undergo the horrors of starvation. Paris has learned a substantial lesson from the experience she had in 1870 and 1871, when the German invaders completelj' surrounded the city and prevented any ; food whatsoever from going in. If, in fact, an attack should come at a moment’s notice, the Parisians would now find themselves well supplied and with everything in their warehouses necessary to support life for an indefinite time. The War I Department has made the accumulation of an enormous stock of provisions its especial hobby. Not only meat, flour, biscuits, preserved vegetables and solid soups are stored away in the Government magazines, but also milk, "Pasteurized,” and petroleum, wood, chemicals and coal. Even the horses have been kept in mind, for there are packed away great stocks of compressed fodder and grass preserved by the silo system. That all these supplies can be kept on hand in the comparatively small space the War Department has for the storing of provisions is not so remarkable when it is remembered that 40,000 rations of preserved vegetables can be stored in a space measuring forty inches each way. Milk, the scarcity of which was a grave cause of distress during the siege of Paris, is now well provided for. Dr. Autefage’s method of “Pasteurizing” milk, wire i the Government has adopted, will preserve this important necessity of life for I almost any length of time, rendering it pure and sweet after months and even years. By new chemical methods ice can | be dispensed with in the storage rooms, and by the use of ammonia , machines it can be readily made for household and garrison use. This is extremely important as regards pre- . serving meat. One special feature of the policy of the War Department | is that it has all its arrangements perfected toward immediately col- , lecting, in the case of impending : danger, hundreds of thousands of carcasses of beef and mutton and ' hundreds of thousands of fowls. In ' a few hours, almost, the city could be substantially provisioned for nearly a year in this regard. Beside this, scores of thousands of cans of preserved meats are kept continually on hand.

SOME POSTAL DON’TS. Hints for Letter Writers From the Post Office Department. Every day about 9,000 letters are received at the New York Post Office addressed incorrectly. As a result Postmaster Dayton will d istribute cards telling people how to send mail matter. Here are some of the suggestions on the card: Don’t mail any letter until you are sure that it is completely and properly addressed. Don’t place the address so that there will be no room for the postmark. Don’t, in the hurry of business in addressing a letter write the name of your own State upon it instead of that of the person addressed—a very common error. Don’t fail to make certain that your manner of writing the name of an office or State may not cause it to be mistaken for one similar in appearance. It is often better to write tne name in full. Don’t fail if you are in doubt as to the right name of the office for which your letter is intended to consult the Postal Guide, which any postmaster will be pleased to show you. Don’t fail to give the street and house number of the person for whom mail matter is intended in addressing it to a city or large town. Don’t mail any letter until yon are sure that it is properly stamped. Don't fail to place the stamp on tlie upper right hand corner. Don’t write on the envelope “In baste.” “Care of postmaster," etc. It does no good and tends to confusion in the rapid handling of mail matter. Don’t fail to bear in mind that it is unlawful to inclose matter of a high class in one that is lower—e. g., merchandise in newspapers. Don’t mail any letter unless your address, with a request to return, is upon the face of the envelope, so that in case of non-delivery it will be returned directly to you. Don’t fail to give your correspondents your full address, so that a new postman cannot fail to find you. Don’t fail to inform your postmaster of any change in your address. Don’t trust to the fact that you are an “old resident,” “well-known citizen." etc., but have your letters addressed in full.

Don’t fail if you intend to be away from home for any length of time to inform your postmaster what disposition shall be made of your mail. Don’t delay the delivery of any mail matter that you may take but for another. Don’t fail to sign your letters in full, so that if they reach the dead letter office they may be promptly returned. Don't, when you fail to receive an expected letter, charge the postal service with the loss until you have learned from your correspondent nil the facts in regard to its mailing, contents, etc. Much information also is given by these cards regarding the mailing of parcula to this and foreign countries. Latest Trolley Fender. One of the latest trolley fenders has two small wheels to support it on the track. It seems to be an improvement, but it is faulty in protecting only the front of the car, leaving the person struck still liable to be thrown under the wheels from the •ide.

A KOLA NUT TEST. Enables a Sick Soldier to Beat a Well Man ir. a Race. American surgeons and army offi<w=re have for some time been experimenting with the kola nut. with a view of introducing it into the commissary department of the army, to be used in lieu of other food in forced marches where there is little or nothing for the soldiers to eat. says the Minneapolis (Minn.) Tribune. Dr. ■Chas. E. Woodruff and Lieutenant Harris, of the United States army, stationed at Fort Sheridan. Chicago, have made experiments which have ; shown that in forced marches the kola nut gives far better satisfaction ■ for nutritious purposes than ordinary food . Both Dr. Woodruff and Lieutenant Harris found that they were less fatigued from the long walks they took whan they ate nothing but the kola than when they ate full rations of ordinary food. An experiment with the kola nut was made in Minneapolis, and the result was identical with that of the Fort Sheridan officers. A number of the army officers of Fort Snelling were anxious to see the result of an experiment, and the test was so arranged. Corporal R. P. Wyatt and Private M. C. Olson, both of Company F, started from the Ryan Hotel at 8:4O to walk to the West Hotel,at Minneapolis, and to return to the Ryan at once. Private Olson was not allowed to eat breakfast, but he was given five little reddish nuts about the size and shape of a good sized hickory nut, which he was told to eat’slowly on the way. Further than this, he was not allowed to eat any food while making the trip. Corporal Wyatt was allowed to eat a good, hearty .breakfast, and told he could eat and drink what he wished on the way. He was requested to regulate his diet according to the soldier’s bill nf fare when the larder in the commissary’s tent is well stocked. At 5:30 the two men arrived at Ryan Hotel from their journey to (Minneapolis. In giving their acI count of the trip, which comprised I a walk of about twenty-five miles in , the hot sun, they plainly showed that the kola nut had proved the more satisfactory diet. Corporal | Wyatt had eaten and drank freely as I he felt inclined during the day, and came in almost overcome by heat and ! thoroughly tired and stiff from the j long walk. Private Olsen, who but . recently arose from a bed of sickness i and has not fully regained his I strength, was much the fresher of | the two, and had suffered little from the heat. He said he ate two of the nuts on the way to (Minneapolis and two on the way back, and that he sat and rested while his companion ate and drank. He said that he never felt better than when be returned from the long tramp, and that he thought that the walk had done him good He had not felt the need of food. Transit at 150 Miles at Hour. The recent business combination effected I between a great locomotive manufacturing company and an eastern electric company is already suggesting to students of the question the great possibilities of the future in the way of rapid transit. It now seems that the assertion of several prophets that we shall yet travel at the rate of 150 miles an hour can no longer be regarded as visionary. The motive power witli which the inventors are experimenting. of course, is electricity, ami many of the authorities in this line of work do not hesitate to say that transit at about three times the present maximum rate is entirely possible, so far as supplying adequate power is concerned. Tesla and Edison, it is said, have already perfected the means of producing and applying an electrical motive power which can push trains i over the earth at the rate of 150 miles an I hour, if not at a still higher speed. The question, indeed, has sifted down ( to a matter of mechanical appliances and I the perfection of means which will make such transit practicable and not too ex- | pensive. It is a question of inventing the , wheels which could stay on the track at i such a high speed and the apparatus that ’ would withstand the enormous strain involved. That these problems will beover- : come is apparently the belief of those I most competent to judge. IV bat the introduction of such improveI rnents would mean in the conduct of modern business methods can be but I faintly foreseen. One hundred and fifty 1 miles an hour 3,600 miles a day—when i it becomes possible to travel at that rate | the world will indeed be a little place, so far as concerns travel across its laud areas. New Explanation of Hypnotism. Recent investigations of the operations of the mind indicate that the I subject under hypnotic influence is in a partial faint. The effort required to concentrate the attention on the operator or any striking object results in a reaction similar to that produced by strong emotion in "neurotic” women, except that the collapse is partial, some of the faculties remaining active, while the operation of others is suspended. This hypothesis will account for some phenom- ( ena that are not accounted for by the theory that the hypnotized subject is in a condition resembling normal sleep. He Gave It Up. A nest of rattlesnakes was discov- ! ered by an Indian in the mountains eleven miles west of Ulich Cal. He was out hunting, and in ascending a rocky point was warned of the pres- ; ence of a serpent by an ominous rattle. He discharged his rifle at the rattler, and immediately thereafter large numbers emerged from a rock pile. The Indian retreated, and securing a branch of pine tree, invaded the nest and gave battle. He continued the slaughter until exhausted, but seeing the impossibility of exterminating the reptiles, left the place after having killed forty-nine I immense

Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report ABSOLUTELY PURE

• Giant Shot Are Not New. In 1478 Mohammed 11., in forming the siege of Scutari, in Albania, employed fourteen heavy bombards, the lightest of which threw a stone shot of 3<o pounds weight, two sent shots of 500 pounds, two of 750 pounds, two of 850 pounds, one of 1,200 pounds, five of 1,500 pounds and one of the enormous weight of 1,040 pounds, enorinor • even in these day, the only gun., whose shot exceed the heaviest of these are our eighty-ton guns, throwing a 1,000-pound projectile, our lO> ton, throwing one of 2,000 pounds, and the 110-ton, throwing air 1,800 pound shot with a high velocity. The stone shot of (Mohammed’s guns varied between twenty and thirty-two inches in diameter, about the same height as a dining table; 2,534 of them were fired on this occasion, weighing, according to a calculation of Gen. Lefroy’s, about 1,000 tons, and were cut out of the solid rock on the spot. Assuming twenty-four inches as the average diameter of the shot fired at this siege, the total area of the surface dressed was nearly 32,000 square feet. At this siege the weight of the powder find is estimated by Gen. Lefroy to have been 250 tons. At the siege of Rhodes, in 1480, Mohammed caused sixteen basi11.ks, or double cannon, to be cast on the spot, throwing balls two to three feet in diameter. She Dill Not Furchase. Woman—Have you any stove-lifters? Hardware Clerk (from Boston —We have stove-lid lifters, madam. 1 presume that is what you mean. Woman (defiantly —I mean stovelifters. Clerk (patronizingly;—A stove-lifter would besomelbing to liftupastovc. A jack-screw, for instance. Woman angrily)—Have you any jack screws? Clerk surprised)—Yes, madam, I believe so, in the basement. Woman meditatively;—Are they silver-plated? Clerk dumbfounded,—No, madam. Woman triumphantly)—They 1 don t want any. I wouldn tbe seen puttinsr up a stove with a jack-screw that was not silver-plated. I’ll go deal at some store wnere they have a better class of custom, and keep aristocratic goods. Good-morning.—New York Weekly.

A Syndicate of Monsters. Here art the names of the abominable trio that compose it. hated and abhorred by man and woman kind -dyspepsia, biliousness and constipation. Wliat is the most successful way to attack ami squelch these united monsters? Take Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. and they will null up stakes and make tracks for parts unknown, leaving no trace behind. The Bitters also exterminates malaria. rheumatic and kidney trouble and nervous aliment. Peculiar Appreciation. “I don’t understand how you aan be away from home so much. You are off traveling two-thirds of the year,” said a homely mother, who stays at ho»e, to her married daughter. “My dear mother, I know why I am away so much. My husband never appreciates me except when I am away from him, and I want him to appreciate me as much as possible.”—Texas Siftings. Home-Seekers Excursion During Sept, and Oct. Agents of the N ickel Plate road will be pleased to furnish, upon application, complete information relative to these excursions. Bear in mind the elegantly equipped solid through trains via the' popular route. Two Kinds of Paleness. “You are awfully pale,” said Esmerelda Longcoffin to Birdie McGinnis. “ Yes, I know 1 am pale: but my paleness is natural. It comes from dyspepsia: but you get your paleness by the box from the drug store.”. —Texas Siftings. I can recommend Piso’s Cure for Consumption to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D. Townsend, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, ’94. Maud—Did you know that chaperon ip French was masculine,not feminine? Marie-Really? How I wish I had been lorn in t rance' Wabash Dow Kate Harvest Excurcursionsfor 1895 Will be run from all stations on the Wabash Railroad on Sept. 10th and Sept. 24th, to the West, Northwest, South and Southwest. For full particulars, apply to nearest ticket agent of the Wabash or connecting lines. A straight flush is hard to hold simply because the man who has it is apt to give his hand away. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Strut for Childrpn teething; softens the gums, reutires inflammation, pain, cures wind colic. 25 ctnts a bottle. Art loses nothing by conceding modesty a fig-leaf. Remember the Nickel Plate road has authorized a low rate Home-seekers Excursion to points in the West, Northwest aqd Southwest, on Sept. 24th. Enquire of agents for particulars. Short sermons make wideawake Christians.

The Foundation of Good Health is Pure. Rich Blood And the surest, best way to purify your blood is to take Hood s Sarsaparilla l-lnnrl’e Di 11 c ar ® tasteless, mild, effecilUvU o i 11 IO tiye. AU druggists.

Muggins—Never knew a man take so much interest 'n business as Closefist. Buggins-What is he? Muggins —A money lender THE MODERN BEAfTT Thrives on good food and sunshine, with plenty of exercise in the open air. Her form glows with health and her face blooms with its beauty. If her system needs the cleansing action of a laxative remedy, sne uses the gentle aud pleasant liquid laxative isvrup of Figs. The man who knows Christ well will not expect to find perfection in anyone else. Agents of the Nickel Plate road are in possession of information which will enable them to quote special excursion rates to points in the Northwest, West, Southwest. and S >uth. for tickets sold during September and October. Further information may be secured by applying to local agents of that popular low rate line. There is no such thing as making- a guilty man happy. He must first lose his guilt. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price 75 cents. Guns without foresight shoot wide of the mark. A healthful clearness is .irqiSred by the sallow skin washed daily with Glenn's Sulphur Soap. "Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Blaca or Brown, 50e. Bank books contain many tales of fashion. The Nickel Plate road offers a splendid opportunity for visiting the West, Northwest, and Southwest; by authorizing excursion rates to points in that territory, on Sept. 24th. Ask agents for further information. GREAT BOOK FREE. When Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. t rublished the first edition of his work, The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser he announced that after 680.000 copies haa been sold at the regular price, $1.50 per copy, the profit on which would repay him for the great amount of labor and money expended in producing it, he would distrioute the next half million free. As this number of copies has already been sold, he is now distributing, absolutely free, 500,000 copies of this « * most complete, interest- I COUPON I ing and valuable common I No. 112 I sense medicalwork ever* * published—the recipient only being required to mail to him, at the above address, this little COUPON with twenty-one (21) cents in onecent stamps to pay for postage and packing only, and the book will be sent by mail. It is a veritable medical library, complete in one volume. It contains over 1000 pages and more than 300 illustrations. The Free Edition is precisely the same as those sold at Si.so except only that the books are bound in strong manilia paper covers instead of cloth. Send now before all are given away. They are going off rapidly.

jFriends’Oatsj i (Kiln Dried) | Superior/ i Sgi toany . . Aw Ro,led / Oats... / * J F Sold only In F 2 ‘ pound I Packages ? } At All Grocers § A MUSCATINE OAT MEAL CO. * K ’• MUSCATINE. IOWA f)

“All women T vSx' are beautiful \ I —in telegraphic reports.” (N. Y. Sun.) So all washing and cleaning is easy, quick and safe —if you believe what the peddlers and some grocers tell you about certain washing powders. Now, you can test the ease and the quickness very soon. But the safety—that is another thing. You can’t prove that to yourself without a long, and perhaps expensive and disastrous, trial. Better stick to the first-made, never-changing, best-known washing-compound —Pearline. Almost any woman can prove to you the safety of Pearline. And nothing that can be, and has been, thus proved will do ali your washing and cleaning so easily, so quickly, and so economically. rl Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you “ this is as good as* or “the same as Pearline.’’ IT’S FALSE —Pearline is never peddled* i an d if your grocer sends yvu somethin? in place of Pearline, be K <3, C- fC honest — send it back. £Ol JAMES P\ LE, New York* “IF AT FIRST YOU DON’T SUCCEED, TRY SAPOLIO

TwhSe iii else fails- _ H Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use B __ tn tfmft gold by druggist*.

BEST IN THE WORLD. IA V Vov tosioiWi) ‘ex A \ cYxeawfiess / @TH£ RISING SUM STOVE POLISH ia cake, for general blacking of » stove. THE SUN PASTE POLISH for a quick after dinner shine, applied and polished with a doth. Morse Bros.. Prove.. X'anton. Mass., I • S. A. Beecham's pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples loss of appetite, etc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things fo> everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in the world,especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book,free at your druggist’s,or write B.F. AllenQo.,36sCana’ St., New York. Pills,io<J and 25$ a box. Annual sales more than 6,000.000 boXea. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR * ★ The BEST★ INVALIDS A JOHN CARLE & SONS. New York. ★ ■B Mr. Myrlck Plummer, a wholesale paper dealer at 45 Beekman street, New York, relates that his first experience with Ripans Tabules began 18 months ago. Prior to that he could not recall a time when he was not troubled with constipation. Nothing gave more than temporary relief; but, since taking Ripans Tabules, however, nobody, Mr. Plummer thinks, has more perfect digestive organs than he. The bowels perform their functions with regularity; there is no distress after eating, no headache, no heartburn, no dizziness—nothing of a dyspeptic nature. Ripans Tabules arp sob! by druggist* or by mall if the price (50 cents a box) is sent to The Ripans chemical < ninpauy, Nu. lu Spruce Street, New York. Sample •lai, 10 cents. THE BEST TEST IS USE. Below are a few condensed extracts from letters received: "Used for my own babe, and can truly say that It is elegant. palatable, nourishing, and easily digested."—J. W. Lightner, M. D., Napoleon, Mo. "I am feeding my baby by the ’Special Directions.’ !• has worked like a charm.’’ Mrs. H. S. Ti bman, Boston Highlands. Mass. Another physician writes. After Trial of Ridge's Food: 'lt ineeta my most sanguine expectations. I expect to us© it whenever occasion offers.” "Everybody thinks h<“ is a month older than he is—a great, fat. strong, healthy hoy A great many of my friends are trying to induce me to change, but if my baby thrives on Rumie’s Food, that is enuugh.”—Mrs. Lena G. Vose, Lynn. Mass. • I have used Ridge’s Food the past six months, and find It Just as recommended. In fact, would nut be without it.”—Miss Doha S. Davis, Rockford, 111. Send to WOOLRICH & CO., Palmer. for "Healthful Uinta.” SENT FREE.

na<f'*UTn ThomM P. Simpson, WaghfnrtotL PflT F NTS Dc - No ntt 8 ” ntil Patent oS I ■ ■ ■»*’« •ar talued. Write for In Ten tors Gulds. |F.W.FL XL - - - No. 37—M TVFen waiting to Advertisers say you •aw the advertisement iu thia paper*