Walkerton Independent, Volume 34, Number 25, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 4 December 1908 — Page 8

It Quiets II jugh v>'WIB II II Ig." -Ly- - . ■ This is one reason why Ayer’s 1 Cherry Pectoral is so valua- ■ ble in consumption. It stops J the wear and tear of useless 3 coughing. But it does more | —it controls the inflammation, I quiets the fever, soothes, heals. I Ask your doctor about this. The best kind of a testimonial— I “Sold for over sixty years.” J A Mado bv«T. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. j XW Also manufacturers of SARSAPARILLA. flyers. Wo have no secrets! We publish ; the formulas of all our medicines. Hasten recovery by keeping the ' owels regular with Ayer’s Pills.

BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL. DR. M. S. DENAUT, Physician. Surgeon, Offices and residence In Denaut Building, Seventh Street. fBLBPHONB No. a. 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; ▲venue E. Telephone No. 34 S. P. TRACY, 8.5., M. D. Physician and Surgeon, R ALKERTON, - ■ - INDIANA. Office: Booms formerly occupied by J. W. Arlington, M. D. TELEPHONE NO. 35. NIGHT BELL. DR. R. NEVILLE, Physician, Surgeon and Obstetrician Dropsical Cases a. Speciality. Calls Promply Answered„D»y 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 the use of local anaesthetic. Leaves no bad after eflects. Teeth filled without pain by the use of antalgie. PHONE 56. MB. Slick, LL.B. Harvey J. Curtis, LL. B. SLICK & CURTIS, ATTORNEYS and COUNSELLORS AT-LAW, NOTARIES PUBLIC AND U. 8. PENSION ATTORNEYS. Settlement of Estates, Abstracts of 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’ Hardwire Store Wednesday and Saturday of each week tor the transaction of township business. Hours: 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. Miller Guy Gyrus E. Pattkk GUY & PATTEE Attorneys-at-Law 117 North Main Street. SOUTH BEND, IND. UNDERTAKING. SMITH & CO. Funeral Directors, F WfiWHnnw?™ ||W » ' ■ wi* *•« t ■ In X --rV/' fRz VL Personal Attention Given to All Calls. LADY ASSISTANT. OFFICE ’PHONE, No. 14. RESIDENCE, No. 4. WALKERTON, IND.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Try “Reiee” shirts. Three weeks until Christmas. Those wishing hardwood lumber to build cribs and sheds should call on D. W. Place. Our home made bread is getting better all the time, Don’t miss trying it. Crescent Bakery and Restaurant. Cheapest accident insurance—Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil. Stope the pain and heals the wound. All druggists sell it. I. 11. Cullers moved his box ball alleys to LaPorte Monday where he has a good location on Michigan street opsite the court house. O. V. Wolfe has bought of Lie father, T. J. Wolfe, the house and lot at the corner of Seventh street and Avenue D, which was overhauled recently and made into a fine property. Foley’s Orino Laxative cures chronic constipation and stimulates the liver. Orino regulates the bowels so they will act naturally and you do not have to take purgatives continuously. Sold by Red Cross Drug Store. Solomon Burkholder, a retired farmer, living near Teegarden, has bought a 40 acre tract of land in the Miami Valley, New Mexico. The price paid was $2,800, it being irrigated land. The sale was made through Steele Bros. We have arranged with The Weekly Inter Ocean and Farmer so that our patrons can secure that sterling paper together with our own, at the exceedingly low price of $1.75 for one year. This is a rare opportunity and should be taken advantage of. M. D. Leßoy last week traded his house and lot at the corner of Seventh street and Avenue D and a residence lot in Gary to B U E. Williams and M.ss Minnie Williams for their 56 acre farm adjoining the western outskirts of town. Mr. Leßoy intends to make some improvements on the farm. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Strang and daughter Ruth entertained with a six course turkey dinner Thanksgiving day at home. Among their gneets were the sister of the hostess, Mrs. Thomae Estlick, of Columbia City, Mrs. Sarah d. Elliott and Mrs. Green and daughter Avis of Gary, Mr. and. Mrs. Rogers and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Strang and Mies Blanche Perry of Walkerton. The serving of dinner was followed by an informal program during the afternoon. Eat all the good food you like. Quit dieting. You don’t have to diet to cure dyspepsia. In fact you can not cure dyspepsia or indigestion that way, but rather you must add strength to the weak stomach by taking something that will digest the food ■»*•*"* 71.7 stomßch can not digest. Kodol ie the only thing known today that wili do this, for Kodol is made of natural digestive juices found in a healthy stomach, and it digests all food completely. Kodol ie pleasant to take, and is guaranteed to give relief in any case of stomach trouble. Sold by Red Cross Drug Store. A NEW HEAVEN. Souls will Go to the Bright Stars for Rest and Peace. William E. Chandler, former Senator from New Hampshire, and former Secretary of the Navy, is the advocate of a new religious doctrine. He believes that after death our souls will go to seme of the stars, there to be re invested with physical bodies and have the same kind of existence as here only in a greater perfection. “My faith in the future life,” he said, “is strong and ever present with me. It is my only faith. We have no knowledge of it, and it is intended that we shall have no knowledge of it, We do not live as disinherited spirits; we go to one of the stare, where we inhabit new physical bodies which embrace our present souls. We will see and hear, and have the senses of taste, smell and touch, and perhaps, other new and more joyous senses. Admitting the future existence of the soul, what more logical thought can we have than that our souls go to some other part of the universe to take up their abodes there.” Medicine That is Medicine. “I have suffered a good deal with malaria and stomach complaints, but I have now found a remedy that keeps me well, and that remedy ie Electric Bitters, a medicine that ie medicine for etomach and liver troubles, and for run down conditions,” says W. C. Kieetler, of Halliday, Ark, Electric Bitters purify and enrich the blood, tone up the nerves and impart v’^or and energy to the ‘ weak. Your will be refunded if I it fails to help 50c. at the Red Cross Drug Sto: Satisfaction, Below we give the names of satisfied I customers to whom we sold the Gagan I Washer, the machine that ie guaranteed ' to wash your clothes without rubbing or boiling: Chas. Beechgood, James Jackson John Flack, sr : Obe Dipert, Nel Hershberger, A. C. Borden, D. Bennett, Myron Chase, Wm. Anderson, George Comerford, and J. M. Schroeder. For sale at Machinery Hall. Gary and Tolleston to Unite. The interurban tight for supremacy between the cities of Gary and Tolieston will be ended by the aequiesenee on the part of Toleeton to the passage of a bill at the next legislature of Indiana wherein the two cities are to be incorporated as one. The fight between the two cities was very bitter and has lasted ever since the steel city was started two years ago.

Poor Spelling Causes Worry. Eloquent testimony that the graded and high schools are deficient in teaching the fundamental rules in spelling is given in examples of incorrect spelling, which appear daily in themes handed to Prof. IN. Waring Barnes, head of the department of rhetoric and English composition in DePauw University. Noticing the general lack of knowledge on the fundementals in spelling among the freshmen, who constitute the membership in his classes, the professor has, during the last two days, tabulated the list of mispelled words on the black boards in hie classroom. One freshman declared that he came to “collige” to learn, while another said that he “hert” himself while running to the “dormatory” in haste. Another in writing a short story, told how one showed his “apprechiation” for another’s kindness, while still another pointed out the dangers of “eragularity” in eating. “Altogether" said another, the outcome of the recent political “campane” was not satisfactory to DePauw students, because “Watson, “who is a DePauw alumnibue, was defeated.” It was the opinion of one that more would "voate” for Watson when he ran for “Govener,” because he was one of the strongest men on the "tickit.” Os course, Taft was the man to be “presadent," but this particular freshman thought Cannon to be a very poor man to be "speeker” of the house. One declared that the campaign was a very hot one, and that most every night “drum crops” were used in getting a crowd of “peapie” together. According to another, much “inthousiasm” was displayed and many “epeaches” were delivered to the "Demacrats” before the “electshun" day. No License For Rabbits. Attention is called to the fact that it is not necSßsary for one to take out a license to hunt rabbits in the township in which he lives. Neither is it necessary for any one to take out a license to hunt any kind of game in season on land of which he ie the owner or tenant. It is unlawful without a license for any one to kill and (not including rabbits) in the township in which he lives on any land except that owned or controlled by himself. On account of the misunderstanding of the game law, persons who do not intend to kill any game except rabbits in the immediate vicinity of their homes have taken out licenses and are thus out a dollar each, of which the county clerk of the county gets not a penny. WRITES DYING SENSATIONS. Student Who Takes Morphine Jots Down the Advance of Death. Dragging out bis death through several hours, John Tcherniac, a college student at Guelph, Ont., set down a record of the symptoms of successive doses of morphine tablets. His body was found in a chair with the head and arms on a table, and with the pencil with which Tcherniac had written of approaching death still clasped in the nerveless fingers. The youth took thirty tablets in six doses of five tablets each dose. His watch lay on the table before him, and he recorded the time of the doses. Each interval was of half an hour. Fif teen minutes after he had swallowed the first five tablets Tcherniac writes: 1 “Have gone five morphine pellets on the way to death, and am feeling bully. Nothing that looks like death in view as yet.” "Just before he took the fourth dose the youth wrote: “The stuff ie beginning to get in its fine work. Am sweating as though pitching hay on a July day with the mercury blowing its head off.” With approaching weakness he became serious. "I’ve taken twentyfive tablets so far,” he wrote. “I can’t go back now. I see only blackness. Am very weak and the pencil feels as heavy as lead. “Taken five more tablets. Won’t be long now. This ie the end; I’m gone, I’m gon—" A faint streak across the pad showed where the student had tried to finish the sentence, and instead had sunk down to death,

I Easy I I Confinement | If you have cause to fear the H *1 pains of childbirth, remember that w H they arc due to weakness, or dis* I ©1 ease, of the womanly organs, and K I that healthy women do not suffer, m M tike weak ones. The specific, Medicinal, vege- H 1 H table Ingredients, of which that I I famous, female medicine and wo* I Bl manly tools 7 CARDU! WOMAN’S RELIEF I is composed, will build up the | I womanly organs to a healthy state I and thus prevent needless suffer- HE K in «- r J” ‘'Before ray confinement,” writes M Mrs. Rose Schubarth, of Monu--11 went, Colo., “I had such bearingI down pains I didn’t know what to ||| ■ do. Cardui quickly relieved me. I ? I Some months later I had a fine I S I 12-lb. baby, was sick only thirty ® minutes, and did not even have H a doctor.” At All Druggists E WRITE FOR FREE ADVICE, M stating age and describing symp- g® I toms, to LadiM Advisory Dept., MS The Chattanooga. Medicine Co., Eg. j Chattanooga, Tenn. E 35

FORCING CHILD’S EDUCATION. One of the Greatest Mistakes of School Management. Some parents grieve because their children do not get on so rapidly in 1 their school work. 1 In most cases the parent is wrong. The old idea of pushing children in ' their school studies is no longer held by the best educators. Most teachers hold with President G. Stanley Hall, who says “today children need retarding in their develop- 1 ment more than they need pushing I forward.” The utterance of such a sentiment would have been accounted heresy a few years ago. President Hall says: “Precocity is the great danger now. Our children rush ahead and become adults before they should. The best way to broaden ie to retard—to delay, to allow children to linger in their paradise and get the full benefits of heredity.” This age is a faster one than that in which the child’s parents were reared. There is danger lest the child learn too 1 much, mature too rapidly. ] Above all, it must be remembered that education is a growth. Growth re quires time. Education is development. Development comeAby slow processes. It is a little less tian a crime to cheat a child out of id childhood. And a child may be pushed out of the paradise it deserves to occupy by cramming it with information it cannot digest, by trying to force a culture that comes only with years. The very first thing to be looked after in the education of the child ie the physical health. First of all, make it a good strong animal. You can’t get mental power without physical power. Build up a good body. The strain of after years will test it to the utmost. There’s danger in forcing the child mind. You are likely not only to stunt the body, but also to blunt the faculties and even lower the moral strength of the child. After good health, education consists in making a good working organ of the brain, A good brain, like a good body, must be slowly matured. It ie built up by processes that require time. Mushrooms may be quickly grown, but not brains Hothouse methode will not pro duce gray matter. Do not try to force your child's edu cation. Give the child time. The richest woman in the world, corn monly known as Hetty Green, has just passed her 73rd milestone in life She paid her daily visit to her New York office and despite her years she ie alert and keen, as ever in all her business affairs and asserts that she will give personal attention to her businese matters as long as ehelis able. I THEY AL^ DEMAND IT. 1 Walkerton City and Town in k hiion, Receives I ‘ I People with kidney ills want to be cured. When ode suffers the tortures of an achng back, relief is eagerly sought for. There are many remedies today that relieve but do not cure. Here is ’ evidence that Doan's Kidney Pills cure, and the cure is lasting. J. L Coovert, tile manufacturer, of ' JOl North Washington St., Valparaiso, Ind., says: "Symptoms of kidney dis--1 ease bothered me for several years, in spite of the use of many different reme--3 dies and prescriptions, I finally learned of Doan's Kidney Pills, procured them ’ and after a short use I was relieved and later on cured of my trouble In addition to the hard, grinding pains in my ' back and a weakened condition of the kidneys, I suffered from splitting head- ’ aches. After Doan's Kidney Pills banished these troubles in my case 1 have t taken pleasure in recommending them ' to others suffering in a similar way.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United 1 States. It is unpleasant to turn back, even 1 though it be to take the right way.— German Proverb. ' Since September 1 1291 saloons have . been voted out of Ohio, forty-one coun ties voting dry and five wet. 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. Feel languid, weak, run-down? Headache? Stomach'‘off”? —Just a plain case ■of lazy liver. Burdock Blood Bitters tones liver and stomach, promotes digestion, aids digestion, purifies the blood. From the position of telegraph operator 4 to that of vice president in charge of the traffic of the greatest railway system under one management in the world is the phenomenal record which has been achieved by Charles F. Daly of the New York Central Lines.—Daly was formerly general passenger agent ' of the Lake Erie & Western road, with headquarters at Indianapolis, I Charged with destroying government property, James Alford, of Warsaw was arrested by United States Marshal James Martin, of Indianapolis, on Wednesday of last weak and lodged in jail over night On Thursday morning he was taken to Indianapolis, where he I will have a hearing this week in the 1 federal court. About a year ago it ie alleged that Alford, who was hunting with a rifle, fired several shots through the rural mail box of Geo. S, Bloom. Many persons may not be aware of the fact that rural mail boxes, although purchased by the farmer himself, are the property of the government and that ; it is unlawful to tamper with them or to I even place advertising matter in the i boxes.

This is Worth Reading. Leo F. Zelinski, of 68 Gibson St ! Buffalo, N. Y., says, “I cured ho must j annoying cold sore I ever had., with Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. I applied this salve once a day for two days, win n every trace of the sore was gone. ’ 11 als all sores. Sold under guarantee at the Rod Cross Drug Store 25c. The new name for automobiles is "the coroner’s delight.” A boy who runs away from school is as independent as a dog without a license. The city of Niagara Falls is rapidly increasing in population, owing to the rapid industrial expansion of that sec tion of the country . Every case of backache, weak back bladder inflammation and rheumatic pains ie dangerous if neglected, for such troubles are nearly always due to weak kidneys. Take DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder Pills. They are antiseptic and soothe pain quickly. Insist upon Do Witt’s Kidney and Bladder Pilis. Regular size 50c. Sold here by Bed Cross Drug Store.

It Makes Old Things New w W IT ALSO keeps them new. There will be no old, dull looking furniture or dingy woodwork in homes where this wonder-worker is used. No refinishing or revarnishing necessary. Liquid Veneer is not a varnish, but a surface food and cleaner that builds up the original finish and makes it brighter than ever. It instantly restores the brilliant newness and finish of Pianos, Furniture, Picture Frames, Interior Woodwork, Hardwood Floors and all polished,varnished or enameled surfaces. Removes scratches, stains, dirt and dullness. A child can apply it. Nothing but a piece of cheese cloth is needed and there is no drying to wait for. NEW SIZE PACKAGES 4-Ounce Dottle - - 25 c 12-Ounce Bottle • • sOc j SOLD BY Central Drug Store I UNDER - PRICE SALES of CLOAKS and UNDERWEAR At the opening of the season for warm clothing we offer bargains such as usually come only in January or when the demand is over —lay . in a supply now for cold weather. Read these prices: Children’s Coats, $1.95, $2.50, $3.50 We offer a manufacturer’s stock of children’s cloaks at about half price, sizes 2 to 14 years, rough and smooth cloth, plain and fancy, all made up in the newest styles, all at January prices, just when you need the goods. Ladies’ Long Box Coals, at $3.00 and $5.00 One lot made of gray mixed material, velvet collar at $3.00; another line, dark brown mixed, with velvet collar, also black kersey coat, velvet collar, $5.00 for regular 10.00 coats. Ladies’ Long Tight Fitting Coats, SIU.OO Made of line black broadcloth nicely tailored, some are full lined’ some half lined, special at $lO. At $lO to S6O we offer black and colored broadcloths and kerseys, satins and velours, all the newest lines. An unusually complete line. i ~ ^RuTTpEcirC I We offer thirty 8 3xlo 6 and 9x12 Royal Wilton Rugs in clearing sale $25 each, i’hesa j I rugs are worth $35. Underwear Under Price ! Ladies'cream flieced vests ~d ; pants, 15c each: better qu di’ at . 25c and 50c; regular ana out - z>. * medium weight, cream ribbed ■ vests and pants, 50e qj.jlit>. -) ■. I ' 3 for sl. 5 Mieees’grey fleeced u ion ,’ i’ at half price, 25 ; lad ion sui’s, $1 quality 50 ,whil ■Ln \ ■ last. Children’s sloepa g gar | ments, with feet, 50c. Men’s Vellastic ribbed fl‘ecod j ! shirts and drawers, brown, blue | and tan, exceptional at the pri e. ! 45c; men’s flat fleeced eh rts and ’ drawers,37l^c; men’s b 'avy fl >eced . ribbed balbriggan. 50 ’: mediut i s weight ribbed balbriggan, 50c A good line of Staley’s u dor ' wear in stock Separate gar ments and union suits. COME AXD SICK I’S Ww&cil South Bend, Indiana.

if- B . THAT H 1 MIAMI RANCH| g a. Located Near Springe,, N. .Vlex. § 13-4 your careful investigation is best evidenced ® by the judgment of a party of prospective investors who B LJ recently visited the ranch. In a party of seven there Q xZj \yere seven purchasers—in other words, every one of H u the party found conditions satisfactory and BOUGHT * 4 IJ'd'ORE LEAVING. THEIR decision will be YOURS w R after you investigate. M > With every acre sold is included Perpetual Water § Right, and the water is there ready to use now. B US Price m forty-acre tracts from $35 to S7O per acre. Car E Ll fare refunded to purchasers of forty-acre tracts. g Write us. g JA —— — g 1 STEELE BROS. 1 S WALKERTON. IND. g A^-In answering this ad., please mention the Independent | CROUP THERE IS NOTHING that strikes terror to the hearts of parents more than to be awakened in the night by the ringing cough which accompanies an attack of croup. The child may retire with nothing but a slight cold and a few hours later the family be aroused by the ominous symptoms. Every home where there are small children should be prepared for these sudden attacks, as prompt treatment is necessary. Do not experiment with remedies of doubtful value, but get CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY I that has been in use for nearly forty years and never known to fail. Mr. Homer Krohn, of Lisbon, “We guarantee every’ bottle of lowa, in a letter to the manufac- Chamberlain’s Cov.gh Remedy,” turers of Chamberlain’s Cough says W. M. Parish, Palmerston, Remedy praises this medicine for Ontario. “Out of the many bottles what it has done for his children. sold last winter not one was reHe says: “It has not only saved turned. We recommend it espethem once but many a time. Only cially for children with croup.” two weeks ago my boy had the Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is croup so bad in the night that had famous for its prompt cures of it not been for having a bottle of coughs, colds and croup. When Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy in given as soon as the child becomes ! the house_he would have choked hoarse,an attack of croup maybe before a doctor could have gotten averted. This medicine is entirely to the house. It is a medicine that free from narcotics or injurious sub--4 no one should be without at any stances of any kind and may be 0 time.” It is pleasant t® take and given to the little ones with abso- | many children like it. lute safety. I Attacks of croup are most likely to occur during the early winter months, and every family with young children should be prepared for it. Keep a bottle of CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY in your home. It only costs a quarter, large size 50 cents. Your druggist sells it. For Sale by Grover C Spahr, Druggist IMITATION TYPEWRITTEN CIRCULARS Printed at the Independent office. Fine for circular advertising.

The Great Chicago Stock Show. It should be understood that the purpose of the International Live Stock Exposition, which will this year be held from Nov. 28 to Dec. 10, is the improvement of the live stock of the nation. It is educational in its nature, aims, m “tbods and results. It brings together u eua 1) from 6,000 to 10,000 of the v rld’s choicest animals, to be judged in upwards of 600 classes, in competition for over 2,0J0 cash premiums aggregating more than 575,000, besides other numerous valuable prizes, trophies, medals of honor, etc , and holds constant business during the week composed of the foremost live stock representatives of the world, also a series of bril liant evening horse fairs and displays of premium live stock in the arena, with music and special features, all for the purpose of instructing the eye and the mind of the producer of live stock to the importance and necessity of better m thods and the greater profits to be di ived from raising the better kinds of farm animals, thus expanding and improving the industry throughout the ' m ion, and increasing greatly its agricultural prosperity. In short, it is a v t o'j tel lesson, intended for the imipr ivement of the live stock of the United States, the upbuilding of public } co .fidence in the hea'th and excellence of American animals and meats, and the cr ation of a better demand for them at home and abroad. Guilty of Counterfeiting Passing counterfeit money is no worse th n substituting some unknown worth--1? ’ remedy for Foley’s Honey and Tar, th ’ great cough and cold remedy that cures the most obstinate coughs and heals the lungs. For sale by Red Cross Drug Store. A 1000 horse power vertical gas engi e, said to be the largest of its kind, was recently put into operation at Runcorn, England, driving an electric generator. —Milwaukee Free Press, <

WE HAVE A CUSTOMER For a good 40-acre farm near Walkerton, who will exchange city property in South Bend; al*o a customer for an 60-acree farm near Walkerton. See or address Northern Indiana Investment Co, Rooms 416-417 Jefferson Bldg. Home Phone 1368 SOUTH BEND. IND. LODGES, MASONIC. WiLKEKTON LODGE, F. * A. M. ’’ No. 618. Regular meetings the first and third Thursday of each month. Visitors welcome. C. E. Baxtek, W. M. J. Carson, Secretary. STOVE PIPE STOVE PIPE I say, get your Stove Pipe at the Tin Shop A. T. KALE’S Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervous ne»s, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to Indigestion. Kodoi cures indigestion. This new discovery represent! the natural juices of digestion 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 cures 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 was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured ma and we are now using It In m!A for baby." Kodol DSgests What You Eat. Bottles only. $ 1.00 Slxe holding 2M t'mos the total stee, which soils for 50 cents. Prepared by t. O. DeWITT A 00., ONIOAOA ‘FOR SALE By B. E. WILLIAMS.