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Show Straight to the Spot THOUSANDS PROFIT OFFER OF DOAN'S AND GET CI RID. Acliii loin pan r- - - p. TLt-- ml' .: Kidney Pills god gravel. eiieney i " dl; : Jeans Ui't ' ' no p:i;u i:, i .( ' is gone. u!m I,.-- : . t r. i ; , i i. ,;e '- . - Fotr . Mii.eKS Co triii s h;J:e A y State Delicious! For Mcruirer.t to Zo',3. The K::::i Zn'.a I.ltjiaiy a;:t! iaiio:; of Now York, orii i t.'ip patdze,) of theor.set.t ... Kret.ch t '.;! y. a r: o. a; the time of his defi fc .if Cnpt. Irc.vt'u. will give a if ffc's fair at the Crand tennal Pair.ee ia Nuvtmler to raise funds for a mrmi'tnr.nt to Zida. i Leaped ; rHtlnp Krnp.1 6e!? us ii.rt ..n:i, reurcM tlw aiu, euive Mtit colic. 2cbwlila - Aids to Photography. One) can .scarcely keep track ' of Qie and devices for the of photography, so rapidly ire they brought to our notice. The latest, is a liquid lens that by Its use instantaneous photographs may be made by gaslight, and a fiposure will he sufficient for a moonlight scene. A certain oil Is Intro-Jucebetween the parts of a rectilinear lens, and thus the refraction li greatly increased. Inventions d Our Three Crown tut Extract have tne iiiitu: ; They cost u tnlie mtjre, tronger than stamUinl ose them : n'U tr in t ; ts Fads in Dinner Napkins. Napkins boiame popular in France scioner than in Ih. gland. At one time it was customary of great French dinners to change the l.apkins at every course, to perfume them with and to have them folded a different way for each guest. iul vnnilJa :tie fruit four t'liies Whv nut irT I CLAIMANT'S AT write to N HICKrOKlf, H wtllrecolve )::.!, II Sua tttbCums. ICCUTC nB ;i r. pHCn Piu.ut.a Laiitive Bromo Quuiuie Tablets. C!a:oibitu;elS78 t . Btops the) fongh nnd Works Off the Cold n c .11. thoj !).'.,H.VoH .res n..MhV !r i or p:utei-iiprofit; a fitrnuirt I ' ;.nv tr:t wtisbeii patent mellftneK. e:i;... j.i fiiin s. ravortni: powders, tieanen. liie!:ei.. l'rlre 10 c'iite.e h. ALU A Bl'ECIAH'l 00., 1194 tAYSH AVE., LLtVLLANI), OiliO. NEW 1 DROPSY ..ti;n raAftfl. B2 BiMU'-- tf'Sien". Dr.H.n.uKE&N DISCOVERY: Pries C5a Pope Leo's Many Legacies. The pope has been happy In legacies. It has been reckoned that during his pontificate a stim of more than 1,000,000 has been bequeathed to him In various ways, $600,000 having come to him In one year, and one recent bequest being for no lesB than devour own iuju- biff m PUTNAM FADELESS DYES but 10 cents per package. rose-wate- r Hewlett Bros. Co. gives nulck retlef nrt curfts worst 10UAY8 treatment $200,000. it,AUaut,u By BYFOS YlUlwis, The youns man who has durinpr the summer streminnsly iu stretching Li abbreviated fnlary to cover an occasional dish of months. ice ertani for his lady friend, and who Is now .1 hy the thou.tht that his Uncle Thrt Sails will khou !e cot. tea! .rwumig his winter the ovoreci. jf .e (b.psn't rn;-- e tl.e due equivalent, will Kirigly Salary. standfast when oonfrouied with the statement that the royal family of Russia !: almost $1 4.oe0,o,.,i to (spend annually. The lack of equality in this world f finance will be none the less impressive when bo loams that the ruleipf Germany, Austria. F.nsland and Italy have an allowance of pin money ejth t.oeii.o.i.i, Hulers of other year txceciing countries- ate also well fixed sc far as a long, cold winter is concerned. Xor is the young man the only one impressed. There are others of cs who may ponder on how thest moguls are going to Keep the wolf from the door cen now and the coning 0( anemone memorosa next spring. There must he considerat ludvantage in being horn to a kingship. Cleon, the fellow we used to read about in our old third readers, hud a million acres, it ill be remembered. Despltihls riches, It Is written of Cleon that be had more trouble than the man ith the prickly heat. Tho third readers were not specific, but it is presumed &e 0pj granger's trouble came from grasshopis the pers, chinch bugs and foot-ro- t sheep. lie this as it may, he had troubles multifarious. With the lords tea k!ng, how different! They don't have to worry or bug the potatoes. The money is in bank for them, earned by a constituency more or less willing They don't have to ponder or perspire. They don't even have to imagine things. Their checks are always good at financial rainbow pudding and talS headquarters, and they can hav9 angel's-food- , about the ancient age of their tines te their hearts' content. They can wean seven-comchariots eleven different Kinds of clothes, rids in and "put on" as much ostentation as the millions of allowance will allow. If they run short, there Is alwayi niore wbere that came from." Excuse us If we repoat thttt14.ooo.OOO figure. It Is like the tlntlaabula-tlo- n of the rivulet In the bof ky dell sweet music to the ear. It reminds us of standing in the shadow of the attrojal ball and hearing the "frou-frou- " feminine petticoats of silk "n the dance rocs on." What would you do If you had an income of $14,000,000 a yearT Here Is the rub. What would you do with it? Would you be any happier after the Those glamer and the clink of the golden guinea had grown con.monplaceT who have never had $14,000,000 annually would bo prompt in replying that they would be happier thus. That settles the argument with them but. The writer, having had $14,000,000 on several ocaslons, has discovered It Is a vain and empty show, an unsatisfying arrangement of Providence. After yoa have the "primrose path of dalliance trod" for a time, you are not one whit happier, not one more Iota satisfied, than when you were worrying about your Uncle Three Balls' disposition of the overcoat! That is the way we felt about It when we awoke! The President of the United States manages to "sled along" on $60,000 a year. Occasionally some org raises the cry that there Is nothing In the Presidential chair from a financial standpoint They even po so far as to make the statement that the President Is losing money. Then everybody trying to get the position, so they may lose their gets out and plays leap-fromoney. If there is a nood thirg In $50,000 a year, how much better Is there in Little Willie Jones, away down at the end of the class, may $14,000,000? answer. Looking over the list of kingly salaries, we are Inclined to feel sorry for the recipients. Tbey don't know the real value of wanting something and cannot enjoy the happiness of securing that for which, In happy uncertainty, their hearts have yearned and their fancies painted. With them every wish, very whim, is gratified. Not one of these kings can coerce his wife by promising a new hat She can buy herself a dozen. Tommy won't do the chores for a new knife, Mamie won't wash the dishes, because she doesn't have to do menial service. What Is home without a boy doing chores and a daughter washing dishes? Wouldn't It make some of you old heads of families lonesome to go home soms night and not find some member of the family ellmbing your anatomy for a new something? After all, kings may hav money, but they cannot buy happiness, they cannot purchase love, they art helpless to secure from the elements or from the God above one act or look of obeisance. They cannot love the blue sky or any other of the beauties of Nature more than you. They are powerless to bs anything more than good men. It Is not wealth, or position, or luck, that makes happiness? It is contentment! He who has that, has a greater dowry than all Lhe kings j rtfrfgtto ars of the earth. Drawbacks of of tin' London Zoologl-:;:- ) d::vtt u a visit to the Malay F"r ,irec CauAHJamjii.a.:ai Piso'BCure Is tltebost tnenielne woevnrcsed fur all aSwilons nf the thro it and luui-'s- . Wh. 0- Esnsi.ltv, Vnueuieii. Ind., Feb. 10, lif.10 5T to ttni. WIiim1w' t Is mem! .(!:. e '. nearly terir.x'f.a. d. s t.ierod a curious insact, tailod t te !ai tern fly, w tleh makes tin ia Icijis nitbuttt thi aid of Its wisps It was seme time before he could find cult where its I aping power lies, bu he at laj't discovered a Queer on the front of its heai, like projection a r"-- , at it tins 11 !ein!s Dack under til nbdumen, and then suddenly releases it. the effect being Uke that of u sprlntthoard. 'a:;; 1' In that industry in A Chartipio.1 Y N Observation cost Preacher Advocates Divorce. Rev. O. P. Eaches, D. D., of Hdghts-town- , N. J., startled his fellow members of the Baptist Ministerial union by declaring at a meeting that the cost of obtaining divorces is too great In this country and that a uniform rate of $10 should bo established. He explained his position in this way: "In this state It costs anywhere from $75 to $100 for a divorce, the amount being too great for those of the middle classes to pay. The result Is that Instead of being divorced they simply part and marry at will." hn-n.- tc bc-t- e golden-knobbe- Gi-&- The anticipation of Joy In this world la often more pleasurable than lb Itself. The small boy awakens at daybreak, after dreams of catching whales In the placid river. He gives an exhibition of how . . , Anticipation . . . His troustrs are on with a sweep. 'One suspender Is over ., .. the shoulder one Is plenty to support his nether toga until there Is more time for dressing. He spurns a collar and shoes and Is off to the fishing place with his breakfast In his hand, even before his mother realises h haw heard her call. All the way he ia painting pictures of what bs ex pects to catch. He may not get a nibble, but, happily, the same enthusiasm stirs him by the time he Is permitted to make another fishing trip. In after life we are like the boy. We think much of some anticipated It may be a trip to the old home, a Journey to foreign lands, a pleasure. wedding night or any one of the Innumerable things to which we may look forward with roseate thoughts. We dream as adults as we dreamed when we were children. Oftentimes the pleasure Itself is marred by some unforeseen Incident or condition. We get not a lonely nibble! Hence the anticipation Is greater pleasure than the thing itself. Pleasure anticipated and pleasure retrospective has each its Individual bslo, but both are soothing to the mind. We are Inclined to paint them In brighter colors than the central Joy, and it Is well that we do. Commonplace incidents of long ago revive themselves In the thoughts In gilded frames and iridescent colorings. Tbey have become artist's masterpieces by the haud of time. Joy ,., 'rl I ;ioi . d;y - i ..,'. a ..A i s fcts Berxeficiallyi s Irvjly as fr--t 1 a Laxaciivce to the cultured and the well- informed and to the healthy, because its com ponent parts are simple and wholesome and because it acts without disturbing the natural functions, as it is wholly free from every objectionable quality or substance. In the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal virtues of Syrup of Figs are obtained rup of Figs appeals ' r ': A-..-- fi;. .V ' ' V 'itssf".-- from an excellent combination of plants known to be medicinally laxative and to act most beneficially. To get its beneficial effects buy tho genuine manufactured by the if fc... .k,, Louisville Tor . Few men realize their otter helplessness in this world nntll they try to beat a carpet to suit the "womea folks." This may be a pastoral remark, but . It Is nothing so simple to the man who Is making the dust itPB ByTbe ordinary carpet whacker was not made for a Putting Up man. Just at the renlth of his muscular development the Stove. handle comet oft and the wire strikes his wife In the eye. While she Is bathing this in cold water the strong man steps backward Into a pail of suds the maid has set carelessly by while she tries to encourage him. Having been duly rescued, he gets a tough oaken pole from the wood-Bilfloor covering In a way that bids fair and antagonizes the to fray Its very warp and woof. When there Is no more dust In It bis wife comes out and, looking critically at the limp texture, says determinedly, "A little more on the under side, please." Then the husband recalls Bob "Romance of the Carpet" 5a.r Frek.rcisco, Cel. e new Yor k.N.Y. Price, fifty cervts per bottle Ky. ell drui'atA Bur-dstte'- a lana CARBOLIC SALVE wiil present blood pjiscning in Cuts, Utah s Favorite Confections Wounds, Sores, Bruises, and heal them, too. 25 cents. Would you have carnatiopTchocolates Z TOOTHACHE for 15 cents? Our Jap- CXM anese Tooth Ache Drop3 will rid you of both. DeC03TAS LIVER PILLS is Health z AsK. HI OWNERS worth? DUOS'T Dim cr rnoM Oft i StOHIS i puiins I. ii ii, HORSE DOCTOR'S DIARY by wrltlnyjto Lyon Manviftvcturlng Co.. 45 South 5th St., Brooklyn, N. Y., living name and address. MEXICAN MUSTANG I RELIABLE ASSAYS. vVr?81-- DGDEN ASSAY CO, i-C Z. C. M. OF ANIMALS LINIMENT. UTAH JUNK CO.bM" - - i SALT l WK Will receive, free on application, a little pamphlet containing om Z oh Sole Makers. Insurance for All Lunj Diseases itart with a cough. If you will couo;h up & quarter for a bottle of Cough Balsam I you'll stop coughing Japanese Corn Cure will rid you of a doncu CORNS for a quarter. Which do you love the best-co- rns or quarter? ALL Dealer for Them. Salt Lake Candy Co., Ln 23 cents a policy. X What is your health i your OITV, rlfTU r l hnm. yrits sui'i'irco . prtlrulri Box ift.Mit Lt W. N. U.. Salt iVkel"No. 48, 1(903 fTl In fLjmt tlm p ' r-- ni .. ,.,,.r.'q g M- 1 ilrrtll hr buj "And the entiled as Cn on mop, And said ehe would tell him when to stop." 6he seldom tells him, however. He usually stops of sheer exhaustion, There which you who have never beaten a carpet cannot truly appreciate. Is only one thing worse than beating a carpet That Is putting up a stove. James Montgomery Bailey, "The Danbury Newsman," ha? a corner on this story. It won't do to trespass but perhaps you know from your own experience about the mixed stove pipe. Any man who can successfully beat a carpet and put up a stove in one day has a great future before him. He possesses what might he termed the squlnteRsence of condensed genius, v v MOLASSES DAINTIES 11 m mi UHiti An Iowa paper says a Connecticut man Ia asking tha courts for a divorce from his wife because she heat him over the head with a broomstick, pulled his hair, hit him In the face with a ctiHtard pie, played a ou his craslum with a tattoo Him She Hit poker, threw a cup of tea In his eye. Jabbed him In the stomach with a table-fork- , and with a Custard Pie. swore at his parents. There la no Question as to the Justice of the plea. He should be given his freedom; a woman who will act thnt way Is no gentleman! This woman is certainly not the kind of brlc-- brao a man would feel safe In UBlng as decoration for his happy home. He would not even care te trust such a pugilist with his chlnaware. A virago of that cast of muscular development might be expected to protest because she had to saw the wood, take In washing, brand the calves, and split the chunks, hustle the do other Joyful domestic tasVs that fU to the lot of woman. Any woman who wields a custard rlc as a weapon Instead of the "ouly weapon that grows keener with constant use" the tongue should be separated from her hatband. She Is llalde to provoke him. coal-hod- , "Oh, woman, In her hours of ease, Uncertain, coy, nd hard to please, And variable a the shade, fly the light quivering aspen made Rut In her tantrums save the plel And from the guard the eye. Clve her divorce and give It quick A bas! the pokff nd broomstick! ... . e . it .v.. wrr- - a wantaA tn ai ,m t v. a t.n.v..ri did she not feed him the custard plT Inward application, rather than outward smear, would have been tbs proper anner of procedure. Will wones iKM.ru 10 untune mrui tea-cu- RfT. II. Stubenvoll, of Elkhorn, Wis., is pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of that place. Kev. btubenvoll is the possessor of two bibles presented to him by lltnperor William of Germany. Upon the fly leaf of one of the bibles the Kmperor lias written in his own handwriting a text This honored pastor, in a recent let ter to The I'ertina Medicine Co,, of Columbus, Ohio, says concerning- their famous catarrh remedy, Peruna; St John's - Peruna Medklne Co., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen: " had hemorrhages of the lungs for a long time, and all despaired of me. I took Peruna and was cured. It gave me strength and courage, and made healthy, pure blood. It increased my weight, gave me a healthy color, and I feel well. It Is the best medicine In the world. If everyone kept Peruna In the house it would save many from death every year." H. STUDENVOLL. The If you do not derive prompt and satisThousandsof people have catarrh who would be surprised to know it, because factory results from the use of Peruna, it bas been called some other name than write at once to Dr. llartman, giving a catarrh. The fact is catarrh is catarrh full statement of your case and be will wherever located; and another fact be pleased to give you his valuable adwhich isof equally great importance, is vice gratis. Address Dr. llartman; President of that Peruna cuius catarrh wherever The llartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. located. Catching Fish With Mirrors. In France a novel method of catching fish Is being tested by anglers. A tiny mirror Is attached to the line near the baited hook. The assumption Is that a fish, when It sees Itself In the mirror, will conclude that some other fish Is trying to carry off the bait, and will make haste to secure the tempting morsel for Itself, the result being that It will speedily be caught on the relentless hook. From experiments Which have been made there seems to be some foundation for this assumption. At any rate, some anglers say that they catch more Hah when they use the little mirror than they ever caught before. THE 6T, PAUL CALENDAR FOR 1903 fix sheets 10x15 Inches, of beautiful in colors, of pastel reproductions, drawings by Bryson, Is now ready for distribution and will be mailed on re(25) cents coin ceipt of twenty-fivor stamps. Address F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago. A Bad Spell. Of 141 students who took an trance admission In spelling Northwestern university en- for eighty-fiv- e missed twenty or more words out of a list of 150 which was fairly selected without special soarch for the unusual and the difficult The comment of Prof. Clark on the showing Is: "As long as the word method of spelling Is taught In the public schools, just so long will boys and girls enter college unable to spell correctly." New Tork Tribune. SUBSTITUTION. "Tell me the tales that te ma were to dear, Long long no, long, lone ago!" - fimm A. i tneii . T!tiTiI.-- t:j PE-RU-N- - t day are pupiis of Jk.hi. Krita - . ' " ,- 1, (i SPZI Kidney i'i - An;.! V'vv ..... r- t. Philosophic . . I FREE FOR THE ASK! v. :. ;r.; i '.:: :!.' .::te : ; ; s:t ;i in the iron and vr, itii to 1891 ha ui.d iiper!ntendnt is i ;.: f ar..! ax nor plant of at '! t'. ti.e r.i octt:pat:y. Ha li to he li, e ot.ly turvlvor of hintroduced the Beaaemer :!.ot fUfl pioees? in tne raited State and m r cil.-ui- L in palpitation, gleepltsiicss, lie;.- e !". nervousness, 1 received the free Tbi.1. City, Ink. I'll.- trial of Doan s Ki They my splendid. I had an :w fill pain in my fwk on taking the pill tin? pa. a left nu riirlit Stephen away and I feel like new man tkhaefcr. Mrs. Apiie Aj.nur.., !'. F. D. No. 1. re eived the Hhodhiad. Wis . w ntc- free trial of l)oan Kidncv I'i lttithi :ch v benefit. My little i. pie jr scarlet terribly with kidney tnu!..:-- f fever. Two doctors failed tohelp him a:td he finally went into p.:Mi.. His fatl.tr gave him Doau's kidney li:ls mid fr.m the second dose the p.. in was less. He began to gain and U to dry a veil boy, his life saved by Luu's Kidney Fills. 1 smith and La :. a -- 1. v' puling, d'ii.niini: d:-- - ft:, f ti- "!' r liigli KIL-NE- WAS BFmF'PED, ADA QXriD VJIv I BY AN ffopFROnA.0 t 5AVED BY ronrraitee t:.e i,., BY ' Veteran tf i.f ti.teler a d'.a-u p;v.!a in tr- - Waldorf-Astoria- , N' w lroa-- : m j.ilii i'i. 'i, tt it a:u! ir.vvui.i. of Beth'.eheuv, i'.t s e ht.'"th blrthda. ut Mr a t u :ve of lVcitsylvauia, THE FRFF VTONDERFUL HE SUITS K O V. A PILLS FKi E TRIAL OF THE V. C Kl l)'S GREATEST KIDNEY MCDX I I KrnKi: Mm Kt -I- rc-ii and .; 1'v' "f the 'mi of niils Tin v i- :- n. e 1 bid e !. hUid. r i ;:.i,. ,, :;. !; f't Up eften lb,"--- V.'c ;t N " a i'i'. limbsa'el Hs-.- On A Strange Calculation. Taking the length of the permanent rnllways on the surface of the globe at nearly sixty thousand geographical miles, with a dally average of ten trains, It Is estimated that the total loss suffered by wear and tear each day by the metallic rails of the earth Is about six hundred tons. The six hundred tons are lost in the form of fine powder, and are carried back to the earth In the shape of soluble Iron salts. Builds up the system; puts pnre, Hon blood in the veins; makes uid aud woman aeronrand healthy. Burdock Blood Bittan. At any drug store. Long Term In City Council. Alderman Manton of Birmingham, England, who Is now in his ninety-fourt- h year, has been a memher of the city council for half a century. "Cure the congh and save the life." Dr. Wood'e Norway Pine 6ycup cores oooghs and oolde, down to the very verge of Navigation on the Yukon. When free from Ice the Yukoa river is navigable for large steamers 1.965 miles, a distance more than twice as great as that from Chicago to New Orleans. TTTfC M4.0TO ri'KSE. Nothing to onrttmt erw 2&e ctca, poitptid. AddreM P. U. Grind Vi.w Bu, Sm Muim, lewa, PKUiUsOM, Please listen to a short talk upon a most vitally Important subject one which Is greatly disturbing the world to day. Tou have doubtless beard of the You have probword "substitution." ably read that "substitution Is fraud." Tack that saying thinly in your mind and keep It there. It Is worth something. It Is true almost Invariably. You call at a store and ask for an article of a certain brand or manufacture, one which hss been thoroughly advertiied for yc.rs, aud which has earned an excellent reputation. The dealer says "here's something juat as That dealer good for lees money." rl thereby usually tells a direct falsehood. He knows that the article which he offers yon at a lower price is Inferior, but the point Is that It yields him a greater profit; hence his dealre to substitute. VV. You may ssk If an article Is superior it Yes, is advertised. because it Juat IV. L D u ilai .9 fire ('' standard of th$ itor'rf. Is, and here's why. The many n.l oil mora afi'i Good-jW. I,, ponrlu made houKei which spend millions lio'ii ia the lint Well illnrl Sfwfl l'riri- li mon'tn i.t l"J thin m oihnr nianufctrr. of dollars every year In the good pubK t I It II nil! If .l.lto aBjoaewhe l: hlrl (fin lications of the country are niar.a.';ed W I U.UJU iir iliprnte tlil untemnit. by men of bralr.a aud wide business L. DOUCLAS S4 SHOE9 W. thct-men know only CANNOT Bfc EXCELLED. exporience. end ell that unless an article baa too Bctt mowerf nn dwrori leather). Hyl'l merit there Is absolutely no buslnet--i Patent Calf, tnnmtl, ft' Calf, Calf, Vicl d. Conmt sense In spending good money to ad Colt, Hat, kantiamo, I nut Color Fyelfla oaed. adverC ...llnn I Tha gnnlna havaW. 1. DOUOLAST vertiie It It docs not pay to VilllUUU nn.i rrica n'lmpwt on bottooa. tise auy article of general use for a Musi liy tin... - ec f rim. J'lut. tMUung.iTm. W. L DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. short time only. Every advertiser must wait snme time before his advertising has created the desired Impresfor Everybody. sion and while he Is waiting his goo. Is InfciT.a(ion must have time to prove whether or ftant"ftd ty SH not they are good. If they are good, TT N Hi hH'l lUt Hr L. at Miff. SMe, M .,Hi-Hhrl.l.rTe If do and if not, not they they stick; v. rreNt rulera ltr wrltta - iiiff 'ci n.Hhll 'LeetrtV lm... tir. they were cot good and did tot stick, ltairite. ' iMiry. tmT Murrlttff, N't r U in Ttttil would this eipei ietieed business man bsmuOlul Ut d continue to fpend food money adverAul Iwoltbj W .,.i!.!. pin.Hii ' Nr.. 4 Thh fcoftk mVu UqvHtt, tising the goodi throw good money of to an by ruM trtulv! were? aa r.ftt,H It Noverl He wi . after bad .. (ltW Hmtrt1 itW til II f tell h Milt.!-Lull Until) gnuttU W mm)m nn, has too much business souse. Tbe average attlclo which yon see fffliitt M 'ii in Mry, tj. l CUlfw K." advertised month aHr month In good SaitesNMlltrmiNi ' il.aeek. Nn Ov N IrMcr, ItBolf Is an tiugmr N good. Buy publications Th 4M linking steel edv.rttted article. It Is the true safe tttt 'i'II C th mif way. tU " trmertm tad UtlliM"K When you are buying ask for what C , Arm U profeMof what you ak for. yen want and mrh.t wlwhr nr j. 10 tip fee tad Remember! "Substitution Is Fraud." ftUrtcn t' it ptaf arson's Magailue. rxguT A -- un it, tin 'UUW bust-Bes- s pi VII. L. DOUGLAS GHOESmaoI $3&$32 H 1 flud-lnk- oaf Ct-- .t ! 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