Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 77, Hammond, Lake County, 17 September 1907 — Page 3
Tuesday, Sept. 17, 1907. THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES
oilers. By REX E. BEACH. Copyright, 1505, by Rex E. Beach. ICOirriXUED. Then he consul abruptly, cringlnply, and threw up an arm before hia face i 4' "I'll how you teio'a matter Jiere!" as It to ward ore a blow. Framed In the window was the pallid visage of a man. The air rocked, the lamp flared, and Struve whirled completely around, falling back against the wall. His eyes filled with horror and shifted down where his hand had clutched at his breast, plucking at one spot as If tearing a barb from his bosom. lie Jerked his head toward the door at his elbow in quest of a retreat, n shudder ran over him, his knees buckled and he plunged forward upon his face, his arm still doubled under him. It hid happened like a flash of lljrht, and although Helen felt, rather than heard, the fdiot and saw her assailant fall, she did not realize the meaning of it till a drift of jwtwder smoke assailed her nostrils. Even so, she experienced no shock or horror of the siht. On the contrary, a savage joy at the spectacle seized her and she stood still, leaning slightly forward, staring at it almost gloatingly, stood so till she heard her name called, "Helen, Uttle sister!" and turning, saw her brother In the window. That which he witnessed in her face he had seen before in the faces of men locked close with a hateful death and from whom all but the most elemental passions had departed, but he had never seen a woman bear the marks till now. No artifice nor falsity was there, nothing but the crudest, intensest feeling, which many people live and die without knowing. There are few who come to know the great primitive, passionate longings. But in this Mack night, fighting in defense of her most sacred self, this girl's nature had been stripped to its purely savage elements. As Glenister had predicted. Helen at last had felt and yielded to irresistibly powerful impulse. Glancing backward at the creature sprawled by the door, Helen went to her brother, put her arms about his neck, and kissed him. "He's de,d?" the Kid asked her. She nodded and tried to speak, but began to shiver and sob Instead. "Unlock the door," he begged her. "I'm hurt, and I must get in." When the Kid had hobbled into the room she pressed him to her and stroked his matted head regardless of his muddy, soaking garments. "I must look at him. He may not be badly hurt." said the Kid. "Don't touch him!" She followed, nevertheless, and stood ntiar by while her brother examined hi victim. Struve was breathing, and, discover ing this, the others lifted him with difficulty to the couch. "Something cracked in here ribs, I guess." the Kid remarked, gasping and feeling his own side, lie was weak and pale and the girl led him into the buukroom where he could lie down. Only his wonderful determination had sustained him thus far. and now the knowledge of his helplessness served to prevent Helen's collapse.' The Kid would not hear of her going for help till the storm abated or daylight came, insisting that the trails were too treacherous and that no time could be saved by doing so. Thus they waited for the dawn. At last tliev heard the wounded man faintly calling, lie spoke to Helen hoarsely. There was no malice, only fear, in his tones: "1 said this was my madness and I got what I deserved, but I'm going to die. O God I'm going to die, and I'm afraid." He moaned till the Bronco Kid hobbled in, glaring with. utKiuencbed hatred. "Yes, you're going to die, and I did It. Be game, can't you? I sha'n't let her go for help until daylight." Helen forced her brother back to his couch, and returned to help the wounded man, who grew incoherent and began to babble. A little later, when the Kid seemed stronger and his head clearer, Helen ventured to tell him of their uncle's villainy and of the proof she held, with her hope of restoring justice. She told him of re attack planned that very night and of the danger which threatened the miners. He questioned her closely and. realizing the bearing of her story, crept to the door, casting the wind like a hound. "We'll have to risk it," said he. "The wind is almost gone and it's not long till daylight." She pleaded to go alone, but he was firm. "I'll never leave you again, anl, moreover; I know thje flower . trail
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quite well. We'll go down the gulc to the valley and re -Si town that way. It's farther, but it's not so dangerous." "You can't ride," she insisted. "I can if you'll tie me into the saddle. Come, get the horses." It was still pitchy dark and the rain was pouring, but the wind only sighed weakly, as though tired by its violence, when she helped the Bronco into his saddle. The effort wrenched a groan from him, but he Insisted upon her tying his feet beneath the horse's belly, saying that the trail was rough and he could take no chance of falling again; so, having performed the last services she might for Struve, she mounted her own animal and allowed it to pick is way down the steep descent Ixihind her brother, who swayed and lurched drunkenly in his seat gripping the horn before him with both hands.
They had been gone perhaps a half hour when another horse plunged furiouslj' out of the darkness and halted before the roadhouse door. Its rider, mud stained and disheveled, flung himself in mad haste to the ground and bolted in through the door. He saw the signs of confusion in the outer room, chairs upset and broken, the table wedged against the stove and before the counter a shattered lamp in a pool of oil. He called loudly, but, receiving no answer, snatched a light which he found burning and ran to the door at his left. Nothing greeted him but 'he empty tiers of bunks. Turning, he crossed to the other side and burst through. Another lamp was lighted beside the couch where Struve lay, breathing heavily, his lids half closed over his staring eyes. Boy noted the pool of blood at his feet and the broken window; then, setting down his lamp, he leaned over the man and spoke to him. When he received no answer he spoke again loudly. Then, in a frenzy, Glenlster shook the wounded man cruelly, so that he cried out in terror: "I'm dying oh, I'm dying." Roy raised the sick man up and thrust his own face before his eye3. "Thi3 ts Glenlster. I've come for Helen where is she?" A spark "of recognition flickered into the dull stare. "You're too late I'm dying and I'm afraid." His questioner shook Struve again. "Where is she?" he repeated, time after time, till by very force of his own insistence he compelled realization in the sufferer. "The Kid took her away. The Kid shot me," and then his voice rose till it flooded the room with terror. "The Kid shot me, and I'm dying." He coughed blood to his lips, at which Roy laid him back and. stood up. So there was no mistake, after all, and he had arrived too late. This was the Kid's revenge. This was how he struck. Lacking courage to race a man's level eyes, he possessed the foulness to prey upon a woman. Roy felt a weakening physical sickness sweep over him till his eye fell upon a sodden garment which Helen had removed from her brother's shoulders and replaced with a dry one. He snatched It from the floor and in a sudden fury felt it come apart in his hands like wet tiseuo paper. He found himself out In the rain, scanning the trampled soil by light of his lamp, and discerned tracks which the drizzle had not yet erased. He reasoned mechanically that the two riders could have no great start of him. Bo strode out beyond the house to see If they had gone farther into the hills. There were no tracks here, therefore they must have doubled back toward town. It did not occur to him that they might have left the beaten path and followed down the little creek to the river; but. replacing the light where he had found it, he remounted and lashed his horse Into a stiff canter tip toward the divide that lay between him and the city. The story was growing plainer to him, though as yet he could not piece it all together. It3 possibilities stabbed him with such horror that he cried out aloud and beat his steed into faster time with both hands and feet. To think of those two ruffians fighting over this girl as though she were the spoils of pillage! He murt overtake the Kid he would! The possibility that he might not threw him into such ungovernable mental chaos that he was forced to calm him self. Men went mad that way. He could not think of it. That gasping creature in the roadhouse spoke all too well of the Bronco's determination And yet, who of those who had known the Kid in the past would dream that his vileness was so utter as this? Away to the right hidden among the shadowed hills, his friends rested themselves for the coming battle, waiting Impatiently his return and timing it to the rising sun. Down in the valley to his left were the two he followed, while he, obsessed and unreasoning, now cursing like a madman, now grim and silent, spurred southward toward town and into the ranks of his enemies. CHAPTER XXI. AY was breaking as Glenister came down the mountain. With the first light he halted to scan the trail, and, having no means of knowing that the fresh tracks he found were not those of the two riders he followed, he urged his lathered horse ahead till he became suddenly conscious that he was very tired and had not slept for two days and nights. The recollection did not reassure the young man, for his body was a weapon which must not fail in the slightest measure now th.at there was work to do. Even the unwelcome speculation upon his physical handicap offered relief, however, from the agony which fed upon him whenever he thought of Helen In the gambler's hands. Meanwhile the horse, groaning at his master's violence, plunged onward toward the roofs of Nome, now growing gray la Uie first jla wo,
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It seemed years since Roy had seen the sunlight, for this night, burdened with suspense, had been endlessly long. His body was faint beneath the strain, and yet he rode on and on, tired, dogged, stony, his eyes set toward the sea, his mind a storm of formless, whirling thoughts, beneath which was an undevlating, implacable determination. He knew now that he had sacrificed all hope of the Midas, and likewise the hoie of Helen was gone; in fact, he began to realize dimly that from the beginning he had never had the possibility of winning her, that she had never been destined for him and that his love for her had been sent as a light by which he was to find himself. He had failed everywhere; he had become an outlaw; he had fought and gone down, certain only of his rectitude and the mastery of his unruly spirit. Now the hour had come when
he would perform his last mission, de- j riving therefrom that satisfaction j which the gods could not deny. He would have his vengeance. The scheme took form without conscious effort on his part and embraced two firings the death of the gambler and a meeting with McNamara. Of the former, he had no more doubt than that the sun rising there would sink in the west. So well confirmed was this belief that the details did not engage his thought; but on the result of the other encounter he speculated with Borne Interest. From the first McNamara had been a riddle to him, and mystery breeds curiosity. His blind, Instinctive hatred of the man had assumed the proportions of a mania; but as to what the outcome would be when they met face to face, fate alone could tell. Anyway, McNamara should never have Helen Roy believed his mission covered that point as well as her deliverance from the Bronco Kid. When he had finished, he would pay the price. If he had the luck to escape, he would go back to his hills and his Bolitude; if he did not, his future would be in the hands of his enemies. ne entered the silent streets unobserved, for the mists were heavy and low! Smoke columns arose vertically In the ftlll air. The rain had ceased, having beaten down the waves which rumbled against the beach, filling the streets with their subdued thunder. A ship anchored in the offing, had run In from the lee of Sledge island with the first lull, while midway to the shore a tender was rising and falling. Its oars flashing like the silvered feelers of a sea insect crawling upon the surface of the ocean. He rode down Front street heedless of danger, heedless of the comment his appearance might create, and. unseen, entered his enemy's stronghold. He passed a gambling hall, through the windows of which came a sickly yel low gleam. A man came out unsteadily and stared nt the horseman, then passed on. Glenlster's plan was to go straight to the Northern and from there to track down Its owner relentlessly, but In order to reach the place his course led him past the office of Dunham & Struve. This brought back to his mind the man dying out there ten miles at his back. The scantiest humanity de manded that assistance be sent nt once. Yet he dared not give word openly, thus betraying his presence, for It was necessary that he maintain his liberty during the next hour at all haz ards. He suddenly thought of an expedient and reined In his horse, which stopped with wide spread legs and dejected head while he dismounted and climbed the stairs to leave a note upon the door. Some one would see the message shortly and recognize its 'urgency. In dressing for the battle at the Mi das on the previous night he had placed his leather boots with, "mult luks," which are waterproof, light and pliable footgear made from the skin of seal and walrus. He was thus able to move as noiselessly as though in moc casins. Finding neither pencil nor pa per in his pocket, he tried the outer door of the office, to find it unlocked He stepped Inside and listened, then moved toward a table on which were writing materials, out m doing so heard a rustle in Struve's private of fice. Evidently his soft soles had not disturbed the man inside. Roy was about to tiptoe out as ne baa come when the hidden man cleared his throat. It is In these involuntary sounds that the voice retains its nat ural quality more distinctly even than in speaking. A strange eagerness grew in Glenister's face, and he approached the partition stealthily. It was of wood and glass, the panes clouded and opaque to a height of some six feet but, stepping upon a chair, he peered into the room beyond. A man knelt In a litter of papers before the open safe, Its drawers and compartments remov ed and their contents scattered. The watcher lowered himself, drew his gun and laid soft hand upon the doorknob, turning the latch with firm fingers. His vengeance had come to meet him. After lying in wait during the long night, certain that the vigilantes would t spring his trap, McNamara was astounded at news of the battle at the Midas and of Glenlster's success. He stormed and cursed his men as cowards. The judge became greatly exercised over this new development, which, coupled with his night of long anxiety, reduced him to a pitiful hysteria. "They'll blow us up next. Great heavens! Dynamite! Oh. that Is barbarous. For heaven's sake, get the soldiers out, Alec." "Ay, we can use them now." Thereupon McNamara roused the commanding officer at the post and requested him to accouter a troop and have them ready to march at daylight, then bestirred the Judge to start the wheels of has court and Invoke this military aid in regular fashion. "Make it all a matter of record," he said. "We want to keep our skirts clear from now on." (To he Continued.)
FOE MADAM AND MADEMOISELLE
IN MY LADY'S BOUDOIR Expense is often an objection to the Turkish barn. Ir. such cases a homemade substitute is to jut one of the tin alcohol hot water heaters, which may be bought for about a dollar, under a cane seated chair. The bather, after the lamp Is lighted, gats herself on the chair and wraps around It and h rself a heavy blanket. She should remain until in a profuse perspiration, when she should Jump Into a bath that has- been filled with moderately hot water. Rub vigorously and spray with water that has gradually been made very cold. Finish with hard friction with a rough towel and lie down for an our If possible. People with greasy skins will find a little borax or ammonia added to the water of the bath excellent to take oft he much despised shine. Moth patches are so frequently a sign f a disordered condition of the blood that It is well to consult a physician as to their treatment. Nothing makes a face so insipid s too scant eye brows. The growth may be thickened by rubbing Into them nee a day" some red vasaline. The white skin has been so refined that ir as less strength. He careful in making any apphcaion to the eyebrows not to rub the hair the wrong way as In a short time they annot be made to lie Hat. They may quite easily be trained into a narrow graceful line by drawing the first finger and thumb along them from the nose out. Bad teeth are not only disfiguring but positive menace to the health. Many woman considers herself a chronic ufferer from neuralgia when ail sae needs is a visit to a good dentist. However economical one must be in bringing up one's children, never stint on the care of their teeth. The mr.st beautiful face will be spoiled bv uclv 11-shaped teeth, while the peace of a whole family is equally ruined bv a hild crying all night with toothache that a little care would have nreented. Boys especially are apt to be careess about their teeth that it is well to oribe them into good habits in this re spect. Offer a small prize or an increased allowance to the child who has not neglected to brush his teeth after each meal and before retiiiner during one day in the seven. It will be found much more effectual than scolding or punishing. Nothing assists the healthful action of the skin like hard rubbintr with a rough towel or bath brush. When cold cream is found to dis agree with the skin as sometimes happens, try rubbing in a little almond oil perfumed with a few drops of bergamot. Wash the face well first and then rub in the oil using the massage movements. Wipe off carefully all superfluous oil. Fruit, particularly acid fruits, act so directly on the digestive organs that unless forbidden on account of too great acidity of the blood it should form a generous part of the daily menu. The flabby throat, that is such a give away to the woman who has passed her first youth, whether she wants people to know it or not. can be overcome by systematic exercies. The muscles of the neck get soft from lack of use as do all the other muscles of the bodv. but will respond to treatment rather more quickly than some of the others. There is nothing better to restore this firmness than to practice the rotary motion of the head many times a day. This should not be done jerkily, but with slow, even movements, letting the head fall as far to the front and sides as possible. If done rapidly or too continuously at first there will be a sense of dizziness which is most annoy ing. CARING FOR THF TYPHOID PATIENT There is positively no disease that needs more careful nursing than ty phoid fever. To give intelligent as sistance in this, or to help your patient, you should know something of the nature of the disease. It is a .selflimited disease, that is, it runs just so long and never varies from a few rules, such as, the first week the temperature begins to go up Indicating fever; the second week it continues to go up, and towards the end of the second week, or tbe first of the third week the fever reaches its height and then begins slowly to descend, as it slowly ascended. From the time of the first fever it is generally twenty-one days until the i tever breaks, but often the patient drags around for several days with fever and does not give in, until the doctor is called in and the patient is put to bed. The germ of typhoid is a poison attacking the intestines as it is taken in through the stomach. This poison produces what the scientists call "Pever's patches" on the inside of the intestines, which of course are more like sore places, and renders the intestines incapable of digesting or of receiving anything except fluid diet. Very severe relapses have been caused by giving solid food, even one piece, be fore the Intestines are healed, thus causing a re-poisoning of the system, as the patches do not heai imme diately, and careful physicians do not advise solid food until at least three or four days after the fever has entirely gone. The diet of your patient is important, as a typhoid patient gets in a drowsy way and will not care to be roused up for nourishment, as there is no appetite, while the poison is doing its work. But the strength should be kept up and nourishment should be given every two hours during the day up to 10 o'clock at night, then once or twice during the night, and begin the regular every two-hour diet at 7 o'clock in the morning. In this way you keep up the patient's strength until the appetite returns, which will be when the fever breaks, and then you will have to restrain the patient as they are apt to overwork the stomach and intestines. During the first and second weeks, the liver is relaxed but during the third week it will be necessary to put
By
SUSIE smithers.
NEW YORK FASHIONS Pattern For Fancy Tucked Blouse Designed by May Manton No. 5762.
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DIRECTIONS Send 10 cents to this office, give number desired. It will then be sent to you by mail always give ull address. Several days must lime water, one teaspoonful to a glass of milk, to have a relaxing influence. The best diet is milk, one glassful every two hours, and do not get discouraged about giving it; if the patient is very weak and unconscious and cannot drink it through a glass tube, you will have to feed it to the patient little by little in a spoon. Most patients can take it lying on the back, turn the head a littlo to one side, and they can draw the milk through a tube, let them take it slowly so it will be digested and absorbed slowly. Some physicians give meat broths once a day, or strained gruel, mostly milk, and beef juice, or coffee or tea once a day to vary the monotony of the milk, but the latter is the best nourisher. Never let the patient move, as It is most important to keep the abdomen especially perfectly still so there will be no strain, for one of the serious results of typhoid is a hemorrhage from the intestines, and it is thought by keeping quiet there is less danger of breaking a scab, on the interior of the Intestines. Some physicians keep ice on the abdomen to stamp out the poison and It produces good results. Some physicians have ice water injected into the intestines, but this must ' be done carefully and without irritation, and this has good results, too. When the fever is high, it is well to give cold sponge baths every three hours. In hospitals, where there is plenty of help, the patient is lowered in a large tub of cold water and rubbed for ten minutes, then taken out and the circulation kept up with more rubbing; hot milk and whisky are given before the bath. In country homes, where there is not the convenience of a hospital, a very comfortable bath, and one that reduces the fever, can be given as follows: By turning your patient to one side you ran fold under her a blanket, covered with a heavy ruber sheet, then turn her on to this and cover the bed with it, on the other side. Have a bath towel under the patient, and a large bath towel over the patient. Give her one tablespoonf ul of whisky or brandy in a little water. Put a cold cloth on the forehead to prevent the blood from rushing to the brain. Have the sides of the rubber sheet lifted In a ridge to protect the bed from getting wet, and have a foot tub at the foot of the bed. If it is a narrow bed, lift the head on two blocks of wood, lift the head on two blocks of wood or bricks, then have the ruber sheet pinned at
A GENUINE McDOUGALL DOESN'T COST MUCH. In fact, the cost Is very small compared with the Immense saving It makes in kitchen work and food. It saves enough food to ray for Itself In the first few months. It saves half of the time ordinarily spent
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Or It Isnt Cienuine.
rVlcDougall Prices 320.00-332.00
LION STORE FURNITURE DEPT. KAUFMANN & WOLF, Hammond, loci.
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Long lines undoubtedly are becoming to many figures, and here is a waist which i charming and which also shows that feature. It Is made of handkerchief lawn, and there is a simple design embroidered on the spaces between the tucks that simulate box plaits. Applied motifs can be substituted for the embroidery or insertion in any width thatmay be liked and can be used instead, or, again, if a simpler blouse is desired the front can be left plain. In this instance there are Mulo frills of the lawn which are both dainty and smart, but these also are optional, and the plain finish can be used if preferred. All the pretty lingerie materials are appropriate for the design and also the wash silks that are so useful for between seasons and early autumn. The waist is mado with front and backs. The front is laid in full length tucks that are turned in opposite directions to simulate the box plaits and in groups between these of graduated depth, while the back Is tucked to give a tapering effect to the figure and to form a box plait at the center, beneath which the closing is made. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is 3H yards 21. 3 yards 27 or l"s yards 44 inches wide, with CM yards of ruining. Sizes for a 82, 34, 35, 38, 40 and 42 inch bust. FOR ORDERING. of this pattern. No E762, and state size postpaid. Be sure to write plainly and be allowed for delivery of pattern. the foot, so as to form a "run" for the water to go to the foot tub. Have beside the bed a basin of cold water, with a small piece of ice in it, to keep it cold, have two sponges and use first one and then the other to spongo off the arms, the chest, the back (very gently over the abdomen) and the limbs, not moving the patient except to turn on the left side, and sponge the back, and then turn on the right side and sponge; most of the sponging can be done when lying on the back. Continue to sponge for ten or fifteen minutes according to the need. But do not continue if the patient complains of great chilliness, or if you see the finger nails begin to turn blue, and other signs that the patient has had enough. Drain the rubber sheet Into the foot tub, have largo bath towels to put under and over the patient, rub gently for a few minutes, then give a glass of hot milk; put on the patient's nightgown and let her rest quietly. You will find this has r4'uced the fever and induces rest and quiet and a refreshing sleep. Pour carbolic acid solution, 1 to 20 on all excreta and have the bed linen soaked and boiled before it is mixed with the rest of the household linen. Do not allow your patient to get out of bed until the fever has broken; keep the room cool and pleasantly dark, as the eyes of all sick are, for the time being, weak. There will be little medi cine given; some physicians give strychnine and whisky after the third week, but it depends on the severity of each case what the physician in charge finds necessary to give. ' TODAY'S MENU Drenkfant. Stewed Prunes. Shredded "Wheat Biscuit with Cream. Meat Balls. Stewed Potatoes. Toasted Rye Bread. Coffee. Luncheon. Radishes. Cream of Corn Soup Hot Biscuits. Veal Stew. Rice Croquettes Potato Salad. Oocoa. Lemon Tarts. Hot Gingerbread Dinner Dinner Rolls. Puree of Tomatoes. Broiled Spring Chicken. Potatoes Escalloped with Cheese. Baked Egg Plant. Water Cress Salad, French Dressing. Date Pudding with Lemon Sauce. American Cheese . Wafers. Coffee. .1 Hl t FOR SALE BV
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DERMA VIVA Whitens the Skin Hetl, llrowa or Dark Far, ?Seok, Arn or Ilanda Made White at Oim or V our iloatj Hack. Is used in place of powder. Has same effect but does not show. Contains no poisons and does not peel the skin. EHVITIOXS, MOTHS. KIIECKLKS, or i.ivr.KsroTS. cured in a very short time. Delightful after shaving. On sale at all Drug and lep't stores. Price 60c Accept no worthless substitute dishonest dealers will try to soil you because their profit is greater. Sent BE repaid for 60c. lie auro to Aak far rma t h a. DEHU.V VIVA CO. 135 IVaatiinatoa St.. Chicago, IIL LION' STORK DHKi UKHT. Local Agent. Underwood Standard Typewriter .... i in S"? rr'7ri?--' " For Speed Safety, Surety A Solid Roadbed is essential Visibility Speed in the Underwood (Tabulator) Typewriter are supported by perfectly balanced con struction. Underwood Typewriter Company 135 Wabash Avenue, CHICAGO S3 CHAMPION BELT POWER , HAY PRESS "-n'llM feat Xl other pr ures no preaa has us tell you what they are. Write ua for special terra and pricea. i j.. .. i'"v-- " mam FAMOUS MFG. CO., 60 Chicago Ave., East Chicago, Ind f!li?irrinfnn lr-v7V MAI rAtS5 -iorse Moun-ea rJZZz Power or Gisoiine G-.-?-iZZ:Z . of plunder to oaa round of hornea. Side and end hitch. Pelf feed. Automatic Biock Dropper. 2 to 2 ton per hour. Full line of belt nower trss. , FtPOU; MFC CO.. 60 Ch.iiiro t.. EAST CHICAGO, INI Eveiy Vicmaa U iuu-renu;a ana tnuuia mmw about thrt wonuerful MARVELWhirlingSpray 'i.ie Uew olal ryriBK. lent. It cl-auf ifc.5UistauUy. At your druggist for it f htt rtnnot UPIT tLe CP . . . .r , ' , ..... w-.t n r cithtT. but x-nd ktamp lor Illustrated book ?aul. It frlTM full particulars and directions in-
In the kitchen and makes kitchen work a pleasure Instead of a drudgery for the housewife. The McDougall Kitchen Cabinet Is the greatest household convenience known the standard by which all others are Judjtr-i. It Is widely Imitated. Oftentimes people think they're getting the McDougall, but they get the so-called "just as good." Being Imitations they can't have the careful construction, convenience and durability of the McDougall. It pays to be careful. The McDougall Name Plate Is the guarantee of life-long satisfactory service, easy working parts, dust and vermin proof construction and everything that is strictly first class In a kitchen cabinet. Look for the Name Plate. And the McDougall doesn't cost any more than the "Just-as-good." and is lota the cheapest and best to buy. There's a McDougall made to suit every taste and purse, so we surely have one that will just cult you. Come in and see them.
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