Walkerton Independent, Volume 34, Number 19, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 October 1908 — Page 8
Is Your I Hair Sick? i 5 ^mWMmaaKA.^^TWK^T; ■■mi ir. i am * inn^w——■ That’s too bad ! We had noticed it was looking pretty thin and rough of late, but naturally did not like to speak of it. By the way, Ayer's Hair Vigor is a regular hair grower, a perfect hair tonic. The hair stops coming out, grows faster, g keeps soft and smooth. Ayer’s I Hair Vigor cures sick hair, I makes it strong and healthy. The best kind of a testimonial — “ Sold for over sixty years.” OOBBBwawmvfKrr--:■ v-n *■ - n. iww—w J| Mads by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Also manufacturers of X-M ? SARSAPARILLA. / a IJZ>T*Q !>I!LS - A. UW / O CHERRY PECTORAL. BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL DR. M. S. DENAUT, Physician. Surgeon Offices and residence In Denaut Building, » Seventh Street. rHLBPHONB No. 5. NIGHT BELL W. F. Miranda, M. D., Physician and Surgeon The Treatment of all Diseases of Women and Children a Specialty. Office Consultation Free. Office in new building near residence on; Avenue E. Telephone No. 34 S. P. TRACY, 8.5., M. D. Physician and Surgeon, F ALKS’^ rOA, - - - INDIANA. Office: Rooms formerly occupied by J. W. Arlington, M. D. TELEPHONE NO. 35. NIGHT BELL DR. R. NEVILLE, Physician, Surgeon and Obstetrician Dropsical Cases a. Specialty. Calls Promply Answered. Day or Night. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE PHONE No. 79 Walkerton, Indiana EYES : EXAMINED : FREE Glasses fitted at moderate prices. Satisfaction guaranteed. DR. J. BURKE & CO. OPTICIANS. Paxson Bldg, Established 1900 230 So. Michigan St., South Bend, Indiana Dr. H. S. Dowell, DENTIST. Crown Bridge Work and Orthodontia a Specialty. Teeth extracted without pain or sleep by Iha use of local anaesthetic. Leaves no bad : after eflects. Teeth filled without pain by the ! use of antalgie. PHONE 56. M 8. Slick, LL.B. Harvey J. Curtis, LL. B. SLICK & CURTIS, ATTORNEYS and COUNSELLORS AT-LAW, NOTARIES PUBLIC AND U. 8. PENSION attorneys. I Settlement of Estat s, Abstracts ot Title, Rea Estate, Loans, Insurance and Collections. SUCCESSORS TO W. A. DAILEY. TRUSTEE’S NOTICE. georgeT ROSS, TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE, Hereby gives notice that he will be at his office in Ross’ Haidwire Store Wednesday and Saturday of each week for the transaction of township business. ttouKb: 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. M ILLER Guv Uyrub E. Pattee GUY & PATTEE Attorncys-at-Law 117 North Main Street. SOUTH BEND, IND.
UNDERTAKING. SMITH & GO. Funeral Directors, kif ■ 22^. j^W/ - VW^7 Personal Attention Given to Al! Cails. LADY ASSISTANT. OFFICE ’PHONE, No. 14. RESIDENCE, No. 4. WALKERTON, IND.
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Try “Reiss” shirts. Try our steam baked bread. Everybody likes it. At Shirley’s. Subscribe for the Independent and keep posted on the d alkerton markets. I Those wishing hardwood lumber to build cribs and sheds should call on D. W. Place. Swelled head is a disease from which the recovery is more painful than the disease itself. \ eal calves bought at highest market prices. If you have any to sell let me know at once. W. D. McDaniel. Our home made bread is getting better all the time. Don’t miss trying it. Crescent Bakery and Restaurant. An army officer was fined SSO for making eyes. Foolish man! He should have let the brass buttons do the flirting for him. Envelopes with your name and address printed on them for 50 cents a single hundred. In larger quantities they are cheaper per hundred. Call at the Independent office. A New York druggist who has been in the business for forty years says that there are 35,000 proprietary medicines for sale in the city. Don’t let the baby suffer from eczema, sores or any itching of the skin. Doan’s Ointment gives instant relief, cures quickly. Perfectly safe for children. All druggists sell it. Why not get in line? Yes, it is a special—a very special—rate $1.75 for this paper and the Weekly Inter Ocean and Farmer for one full year. Don’t let it get away from you. Miss Lillian Doty of the piano department of the South Bend Conservatory of Music will be in Walkerton every Saturday. Pupils in all grades of music received. Beginners a specialty. Inquire at the Independent office. We have arranged with The Weekly Inter Ocean and Farmer so that our patrons can secure that sterling pape r together with our own, at the exceedingly low price of $1.75 for one year. This is a rare opportunity and should be tasen advantage of, The long winter evenings will soon be here and if you are not now a subscriber to the Independent you should be. The paper is worth the money, but perhaps it will not cost you a cent, and you will be money ahead, by watching the : special announcements of Walkerton’s enterprising merchants from time to time. Tea drinking in the German army is to be encouraged in the future on the suggestion of the emperor. In many canteens tea has been regularly served tor some time. The new military instructions state that the nerving out of tea as well as of coffee on long marches at the field kitchens, is considered advisable. At any time when your stomach is not in good’eondition, you should take Kodol, besause Kodol digests all the food you eat, and it supplies health and strength for the stomach in that way You take Kodol just for a little while when you have slight attacks of indiges gestion, and you take it just a little longer in order to get relief from severe 1 attacks of Indigestion or Nervous DysI pepsia. Try Kodol today. Sold by । B. E. Williams. — An attractive new book from the pen i of Jennie Van Ailen is “Cat Tales and : Kitten Tails,” the lives of real cate and j kittens told in story and verse and illus- . trated by over fifty exquisite half tones. ; Those who have learned to look for the ; charming contributions of this gifted : authoress in the Chicago Sunday Tribune, American and other papers and magazines, will not be disappointed i in the “Cat Tales and Kitten Tails” for ; it is in her happiest vein and cannot 1 fail to delight both young and old. Price one dollar. Postage 10 cents. Address the Argue Press, 140 Monroe street, Chicago. Places Happiness First Emil Ascher, of Chicago, has been spoken of as a strange individual. He seems to be strange and at the same time an unusually sensible man. Heir to a fortune of more than a million dollars he is uncertain as to whether he can accept the heritage and all because of the present happiness of his family. Until a short time ago Ascher never dreamed of having such an opportunity, He probably never for an instant thought of having a million dollars. Then it was found that an uncle of whom he had never heard had died and the fortune was awaiting him. A strange
" story with strange features. The Aschers have eight children, Ascher says it is a happy family. He says they arq especially so when gathered around the board in the simple i little dining room of the flat which they call home. He says he is a man of simple wants and that his family is the same. Above all things he says that they are happy. Hence, he is afraid of a million. Such ideas are rare in this day and age. In the scramble after dollars very few indeed would hesitate to take as many as were sent their way. They would be more likely to consider the i effect later. With the majority of those i who have accumulated wealth rapidly : there is a lack of preparation. From : the extreme of careful saving they go to ! the other extreme of careless spending. | Hence, what is sometimes referred to as j “our vulgar rich.” i Strange as the instance of Emil Ascher is it must be said that his view is one which few would stop to take and ‘ one which shows rare common sense I He puts happiness above wealth, where it belongs and where few’ really place it. Ascher knows that happiness is not marketable and that it cannot be bought, -South Bend Tribune.
Buy “Reiss” shoes. The aged inventor of the Mauser rifle has now perfected a weapon which fires 25 shots at a single loading. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the famous little liver pills. They are small sure, safe pills. Sold by B E. Williams. Sid Ewing, barber, one door west of Hotel Starr. Revolving chairs, compressed air and other modern conveniences and appliances used in the barber's art. Two French army dogs have drawn light ambulances, the invention of a lieutenant, with a load of 160 pounds each, for some 375 tnilee, without a breakdown, showing how they can be used in war time. Tired mothers, worn out by the peevish cross baby have found Cascasweet a boon and a blessing. Cascasweet is for babies and children, and is especially good for the ills so common in hot weather. Look for the ingredients printed on the bottle. Contains no harmful drugs Sold by B. E. W illiame. Drought Prevents Disease. The first report of county health officers for the month of September, received this week shows that the re cent drought was really a boon to the people of Indiana, although it caused damage to the crops and considerable suffering to the people. The reports of the health officers show a greatly decreased number of contagious diseases and deaths. There was lees typhoid fever than there was during the same period last year. In July the indications were that there would be more typhoid this year than last. However, the drought made the shallow wells in many parte of the state “go dry,” the health officers say, thereby eliminating one of the most dangerous sources of typhoid fever. Kodol is a combination of the natural digestive juices and it digests all classes of food and every kind of food, so you see it will do the work that the stomach itself does. The only difference between it and the stomach is the stomach can get out of order and Kodol cannot, but Kodol can put the stomach into good order, Buy Kodol today. It is guaranteed. bold by B. E Williams. D' You Remember? Does the following Boater remind you of any time in your own life? "And then there was the time you took her to the county fair. You wore that new $9 98 suit; had a new rig and a new whip with a red ribbon tied around it. She wore a white dress with a blue sash and a string of glass beads about her neck. Mind those entries in your “daily expense" book?—candy, 10 cents; peanuts, 5 cents; merry :go round tickets, 25 cents; side show 20 cents; shooting gallery, 10 cents; tintypes— you've got ’em yet, you sitting and she standing with her hand on your ehonlder—so cents. "Gee! but you thought you blew yourself that day, didn’t you?” Burns, bruises and scratches, big and little cuts or in fact anything requiring a salve, are beet and quickest soothed and healed by DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve. The best salve for piles. Be sure you get DeWitt's, Sold by B. E. Williams. The Indiana Anti Saloon League is getting ready to enforce the county local option law. L. M. Barney, superintendent of the Indianapolis district, said recently that the state will be divided into districts of a dozen counties each and special elections will be held in them on the same day. “Dry" clubs will be organized and they will have charge of the local missionary work. Many counties are perparing to take advantage of the law, but the league will advise its followers not to attempt to hold elections until after the general election in November. Constipation cures headache, nausea, dizziness, languor, heart palpitation, Drastic physics gripe, sicken, weaken the bowels and don’t cure. Doan’s Reg ulets act gently and cure constipation. 25 cents. Ask your druggist. Notice of Final Account. Estate ot Samuel C. Wenger. By direction o Ophe’ia H. M. Weng r, executrix of the estate of Samuel C. Wmger, late of St. Joseph County, in the state of Indiana, deceased. Notice is herebv given to the heirs, legatees and dev'sees of said decedent, and all other persons interested in said estate, that said executrix has tiled in this Court her final account and vouchers for the final settlement of said estate, and they are therefore hereby required to be and appear in said Court oil the 30th Day of October, 1908. when the same will be heard, and make proof of their heirship, or claim to any part of said estate, and show cause if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not. be approved. Witness, the clerk and the seal of the St Joseph Circuit Court at South Bend, udiana, this 30th day of September, 1908. Frank P. Christoph, Clerk. By John Cully, Deputy. Rheumatism More than nine out of every ten cases of rheumatism are simply rheumatism of the muscles, due to cold or damp, or chronic rheumatism. In such cases no internal treatment is required. The free application of Chamberlain’s Liniment is all that is needed and it is certain to give quick relief. Give it a trial and see for yourself how quickly it relieves the pain and soreness. Price 25c; large size, S’** For Sale by B. E. Williams.
—— in II- - Gatti— | jntWrtnri..! - OLD TIME MEMORIES From the Files of the In, ■ ependent July 23, 188 T„ j C. W. N. Stephens and Dari l Beall took a car load of hogs to Chicag ®* last Wednesday evening. ■ * K The Stephens Store com®P an y a t this writing—Wednesday mornin®g—has purchased over 3,000 bushels of Snow wheat. The present price is 66 cente® * * ■ * s The new pickle factory ■"'ill be completed and ready for bueir® Bßß three or four weeks. The workr®- ien will begin putting in the vats next® week. * * K * s The “Little Nicols" ball club have canceled their engagemer®t with our local team, and have retu® rne d to their home in St Louis. They® expressed a desire to meet the Walkert®° n dub next season. a I * n The McDaniel Bros,, we Bare informed, have threshed over 6,00 W bushels of wheat this season up. tW I this date Tuesday. * *** Charlie Byers has pi *aed Squire Nicoles' residence and ear the M. E. church, and will jession of the same the first c Walkerton is one of ti >st towns in Northern Indiana for t Agricultural implement business. -T a are three agricultural firms here and they all drive a good trade. g *** ■ The receipts of the! Presbyterian social, held at the Preslßyterian church last Tuesday evening, Iwere over sl4 I’here was a fine turnolut and the ice cream was excellent. I *.* I * | About 40 tone of hay iln stacks and in the field was destroyed wy fire last Wed nesday on the Williams Barm, near town. The hay took fire frotnlthe sparks of an . engine on the Lake Erie! railroad. The loss is estimated at sl7®. V I D. W. Place has bald surveyed and added to the town of wValkerton an ad dition consisting of 17 lifts He expects to have a street openedf through this addition as soon as practicable. This move will undoubtedly be tjne cause of there being several more new residences built hero in tbe near future! %* I Rev. Leonard, paeußr of the Presbyterian church, will prjoach bis farewell sermon Sunday evenin®. %*T Mies Anna Fulmerl was tendered a pleasant surprise las* week on Friday evening by a large party of her friends. ** « ’ Quarterly meeting Iwas held at the 1 M E. cburch Satu^Lav and Sunday, I Presiding Elder Bec'^Bfficiatiiig There was a good attendaiJr. and tbe preach ing was able and full As interest. **! Mr. and Mrs. J. Turner have re- : turned to their homJf in Walkerton and , will take a well eanrd vacation during . the summer montlB; They have been playing important l,»rts with the Wiliiam J Scanlan cot pany iu the prinei
! pal cities of ^ha eastA ■ "”n Will Tank leaves t jia Saturday morn - ing fora trip through the west. He will visit Wyoming I'er, Newton, Kan , Kansas City and other places. He ex । pecte to be away at out six we?ke He will be accompanied by his mother ae far ae Davenport, lowa, where she in 1 tends to visit relativ <s a few weeks. I ♦ ♦ Rev. Leonard, ps etor of the Presby- [ terian cburch, will go to his home at Findlay, O , next M enday, where he will enj >y a vacation until about the fl September, when h 9 intends to resume * hie theological s tudiee in Chicago. I There will be no regular preaching at . the Presbyterian churcb until fall. । OVERTAXED. i I
Hundreds of Walkerton Readers Know What it Means ' The kidneys are Overtaxed, Have too much tp do. r I They tell about at in many aches and ' pains— I Backache, sideache, headache. Early symptoms of kidney ills. Urinary troubled, diabetes, Bright’s disease follow. I Edwin Gibson, iof Michigan street Plymouth, Ind., says: ‘ For several years a weakness of the kidneys and backaches seriously annoyed me. At the period when the pain was at its height, it was hard for me to stoop, bend or lift and when I caught cold it settled in my kidneys. Though I used many remedies to cure this trouble nothing got at the cause of the disease until I took Doan’s Kidney Pills. A short use of this remedy stopped my many aches i and pains and iidnd that my general health is much better. There is nothing too good for me tdsay in favor of Doan's Kidney Pills.” j For sale by Bl dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mulburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Farmers Hold Clover Seed. Although the clover seed crop for the present year was heavier in quantity and better in quality than for the last three or four years, farmers are not marketing the product at this time, evidently waiting for higher prices. The wholesale buying figure for ths present week is possibly 25 cents lower than last week, despite the fact that little seed is beu g sold. It is generally conceded that the market will be higher owing to the fact that there is no last year's seed to fall back upon, as is usually the case. Fr m this it is deduced that the buyir g price this year will be higher and as a result growers are demanding more money for their output.—lndianapolis Star. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup is used nearly everywhere, because it not only heals irritation of the throat and stops the cough, but it drives the cold out of the system through its laxative principle by assuring a free and gentle action of the bowels, and that is the only way to cure a cold. You can’t cure it as long as you are constipated. Insist upon | Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup. Sold ' by B. E. Williams.
AUTOS DESTROY ROADS. Expert Says Northern Indiana Highways Will Not Last a Season. . W. Hatch, of the contracting firm of Hatch & Sone, of Goshen, the biggest road builders in northern Indiana, reports that northern Indiana counties face a crisis in road building. The invasion of heavy high-speed automobiles in ever increasing numbers has played havoc with the highways. The old gravel roads built up by the the township trustees with the aid of farmers of the district, will not last a season. The material beat suited, according to ex periments, is a crushed stone with a binder, but so far all binders are too expensive to be practical. The crushed stone is irregular in shape and does not roil but interlocks. Even brick will not withstand the attacks of the automobiles. Had a Close Call. Mrs. Ada L. Croom, the widely known proprietor of the Croom Hotel, Vaugnn, Mise , says: “For several months I suf sered with a severe cough, and con sumption seemed to have its grip on me, when a friend recommended Dr. King’s "NbW Discovery. 1 began taking it, and three bottles affected a complete cure.’ The fame ot this life saving cough and cold remedy, and lung and throat healer is world wide Sold at B. E. Williams drug store. 50c. and $1 00. Trial bottle free. Sale bills at this office. Social Sain FOR OCTOBER We lead In quality, price and delivery. Many people look to us for their wants. How about you? UNDERWEAR Ladies’ Fleeced Vests & Pants, 25c quality, 15c. Better qualities 25c, 35c to 50c. Children’s Fleeced Underwear, 15c and 25c. Misses’ 50c Union Suits, 25c. Men’s Heavy Fleeced Shirts & Drawers at 37Ac. Men's Ribbed Fleeced Under- : wear, brown, tan, blue, 45c. A good line of Staley’s Underwear. DOMESTICS Standard Prints. 4c and sc. Standard Ginghams, 5c and 6c. Toil du Nord, cut lengths, 10c a yard.
Chester, new full pieces, 10c yd. W Hope 4-4 Bleached Muslin, cut lengths. 6s. e Lonsdale 4-4 Bleached Muslin, cut lengths. 7Ac yd. e 72x00 Bleached Sheets, 39c. 8 81x90 Bleached Sheets, 49c. 36x45 Pillow Cases, 10c. Bleached Crash, 16 inch, 3ic. Brown Honeycomb, sc. t Best Linen Crash, Bc, 10c and 1 12icyd. ' BLANKETS 1 Crib Blankets, 20c each. Crib Blankets, 35c pair. 10 4 Blankets, 374^0 pair, white, gray and tan; others at 50c, 60c and 75c pair. 11 4 and 12 4 Blankets, $1 & $1 25 pair
All Blankets way under price. » Eiderdowns, 25c j ard. Cloaks at Half Price ■ i We offer a manufacturer’s line of Chili dren’s Cloaks at half price, $195 $2 50 to $3 50 There are 300 Cloaks in this lot, sizes 2 to 14 years—just received. Ladies' and Misses’ Cloaks, mixed cloths and black, all long, at $3 and $5; s about half price—just received from the ma'ufacturer. Ladies’ Black Mercerized Sateen Petticoats, special 95c; embroideried mer- * cerized Taffeta Petticoats, special at 95c. 1 t COME AND SEE US 3 ’ South Bend. Indiana. 3 I ;WE HAVE A CUSTOMER For a good 40-acre farm near Walkerton, who will exchange city propertyin South Bend; al-o a customer for an ) 60-acree farm near Walkerton. See or address Northern Indiana Investment Co, Rooms 416-437 Jefferson Bldg. Home Phone 1368 SOUTH BEND. IND. TuCDGES. MASONIC, i W MOUTON LODGE, F. A A. M. ’’ No. Hl9. Regular meetings the first and third Thursday of each month. Visitors welcome. C. E. Baxter, W. M. i J. Carson, Secretary. Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervousn«K, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kedo! cures indigestion. This new discovery represents the natural Juices of digestlen as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure does not only cure indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy auras all stomach troubles by cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. Mr S S. Ball, of Ravenswood. W. Va., says:— " I area troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured me and we are now using It in milk ferbsby.” Kodol Digests What You Eat. Bettles only. SI.OO Sire holding 2H times the trial site, which sells for 5C cents. PreparW by b. o. Dewirr a oo„ Chicago, 'FOK SALE By BE. WILLIAMS. i
( ---- ----- - • -• Soooooocxxxxg tims £ l HE V TOMIZER § e relief of hay fever It ie an >ow on the market. It will eprny X vessel as well as it does from a Q hat annoying disease, hay fever, Q hich will give you immediate X NEER X . It makes old Ihinge new. It O ass, etc. “ X )rug Store X NK X w cxxxxxxxxxxr; J that- | a MIAMI RANCH g 1 rg i Located Near Springer, N Mex. ® r vg S Hes Is worthy of your careful investigation is best evidenced K h the judgment of a party of prospective investors who S iccentlv v’isited the ranch. In a partv of seven there Li"* g were seven purchasers-in other words, every one of S rg Ine party found conditions satisfactory and ROITGFIT BEFORE LEAVING. THEIR de^SoYwm be YOURS K . after you investigate. « Dm Wlth ev a er / acre sold . is included Perpetual Water S i and the water is there ready to use now | g Price m forty-acre tracts from $35 to S7O per acre. Car & g ai e i efunded to purchasers of forty-acre tracts Next excursion days, Oct. 20, Nov. 3 and Nov. 17 Write us ® t a ' a | STEELE HR OS. | g WALKERTON. IND. § g Ea g **' ,n answering this ad., please mention Ihe Independent Imitation typewritten CIRCULARS Printed at the Independent office. Fine for circular advertising.
POOR LO ADOPTS THE AUTO. A Wealthy Cherokee Indian Who WiaiheN to Appear Civilized. With his long, coal-black hair - straggling to the winds from under ais big, white sombrero, Sam Bobb, a iiixed-blood Cherokee ludian-negro, lashed through Bartlesville, Okla., re- . eutly in his new six-cylinder touring car, bound for his new residence on tiie oil lease at the edge of town, which was a few months ago the subject of sensational litigation and an investigation by the Department of the Interior. In every section of the United States in which there is an Indian reservation, the story has been told of the' Indian who, upon receiving a large sum of annuity money from the government, bought the hearse whose plumes had caught his fancy, and, loading his family of squaw and papooses in it, started for his wigwam on the plains. Whether the story is true in every, instance or not. it is true in a general sense as illustrating the Indian’s lack of thrift and his disposition to buy anything that 1 takes his savage fancy. It is a far cry, however, from the time of the plains Indians and the hearse to this time of Cherokee In- • dian civilization and automobiles bought with the wealth that came to the tribe from holdings of land producing enormous quantities of petroleum. The accident of a lucky oil strike on his allotment has made him one of the singular figures of this section. When the lands of the five civilized tribes inhabiting the then Indian Territory were allotted in severalty six years ago by the Dawes Commission, Sam Bobb’s guardian had filed him on an eight.v-acre tract near where Bartlesville was later located, but his filing was contested on the ground that another member of the tribe had made a prior improvement. Rival oil companies backed the rival claimants, spending thousands of dollars, for the allotment was estimated to be worth half a million dollars or more because of the oil believed to be under it —a supposition since borne out by the drilling of wells. Bob won the contest, and the big touring car he new supports is one of the evidences of his great wealth. lie has abandoned the cow pony for the equipage of fashion, and wears a mask to protect his eyes from the dust, instead of wearing spurs on his heels. OddeM of All Fans. Fans for women may be had from any of those regions loosely described as “the four quarters of the globe.” When the sweet girl graduate reads a solemn essay on how to manage the world, site is glad to have a fan that will distract attention from her. Grasses from the South Seas are in demand for fans. I.ace and bamboo make up a fan that comes from India. The laee is soft yellow and the bamboo. | with its streak of brown and gold, forms a happy spine for the structure. Rush funs are good for use on porches. There comes from Hawaii a fan mailt of grasses studded with the tiniest of sea shells. Hawks' Burdock Creates appetite purifies the blood, cures rheumatism, kidney, bladder ard I stomach troubles Large one dollar size ! bottles for 35 cents. For sale by | J.J.Fink. ,
Shoe Repairing. All kinds of shoe repairing neatly and promptly done by Samuel Blocksom next to Independent. Bring in those old shoes and have them made as good as new. “Had dyspepsia or indigestion foryears No appetite, and what 1 did eat distressed me terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me.”—J, H. Walker, San dusky, Ohio. Dr- G. A. Garpp OSTEOPATH At Residence of J. E. Bose Tuesday and Friday Afternoons. No Charge for Consultation and Examination. J Machine Oils AT A. T. KALE’S I Headache I I Every Month | 9 You may think, Because you Os have long had it, that you must wM *“■ have a headache every month, Bl being a women. ■8 But if you think so, you are K| sn wrong, since a headache is a ■S sign of disease of your womanly Ki organs, that thousands of other JP H women have been able to relieve M^ or cure, by the use of that wonderful, woman's medicine, 7 CARDUI WOMAN'S RELIEF II “I recommend Cardiff to all skk | women," writes .Hrs. A. C. Beaver ■■ | of Unicoi, Tenn. “1 suffered with wl | headache, bearing-down pains, I feet swelled, pains in shoulders Hl | and many others. At last 1 took SM I Cardui, have gained 20 pounds K | and have found it the best med- H | Line I ever used ior female H | troubles." If At All Druggists H WRITE FOR FREE ADVICE, S Kg stating age and describing symp- Sa RB toms, to Ladies Advisory Dent., gag The Chattanooga Medicine Co., JO B^l Cnattanooga, Tenn. E 3? / ;
