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w? h-bftf'&jl ESE&*:- AN - ^ Gvt e upenders *$&'"< ^HHHr * CHAPTER XVI.Continued. With tho Barbaric Hosts. For a man who has a fad for ham and doesn't care who knows it, his bearing is all we have a right to expect that it should be. Among the group of' arrivals, men of his own sort, he is speaking of the ever shifting fashion in beards, to the evangel of a Texas oil-field who flaunts to the world one of those heavy moustaches spuriously' extended below the corners of the mouth by means of the chin-growth of hair. Another, a worthy tribesman from Snohomish. Wash., wears a beard which, for a score of years, has been c. j let to be its own true self to express. S ) fearlessly, its own unique capacity for jj I variation from type. These two have ral# i j lied their host upon his modi3hly trimmed | j. side-whiskers. I : "You're right," says Mr. Higbee, ami i ably, "I ain't stuck any myself on this way of trimming up a man's face, but the L | madam will have it this waysays it looks I more refined and Ne w Yorky. And now, I do you know, ever since I've wore 'em this j wayever since I had 'em scraped from I around under my neck hereI have to go | to Florida every winterCome January | j or February, I get bronchitis every blamed I i year." b Two of the guests only are alien to the I J barbarlo throng. jj j There is the noble Baron Ronault de I I Palliac, decorated, reserved, observant i : almost wistful. For the moment he is ' picturing dutifully the luxuries a certain marriage would enable him to procure for his noble father and his aged mother, who eagerly await the news of his quest j. ' - for the golden fleece. For the baron con- 'j J templates, after the fashion of many con- .^ | acientious explorers, a marriage with a * (, native woman though he permits himself to cherish the hope that it may not be conditioned upon his adopting the man ners and customs of the particular tribe that he means to honor. Monsieur the Baron has long since been obliged to confess that a suitable mesalliance is none too easy of achievement, and, In testimony of his vicissitudes, he has writ ten for a Paris comic paper a aeries of grimly satiric essays upon New York so ciety. Recently, moreover, he has been upon the verge of accepting employment In the candy factory of a bourgeois com patriot. But hope has a little revived in the noble breast since chance brought him and his title under the scrutiny of the bewitching Miss Millicent Higbee and her appreciative mother. And to-night there is not only the pretty Miss Higbee, but the winning Miss Bines, whose dot, the baron has been led to understand, would permit his beloved father unlimited piquet at his club, to say nothing of regenerating the family cha teau. Yet these are hardly matters to be gossiped of. It is enough to know that ihe Baron Ronault de Palliac when he iscovers himself at table between Miss *ines and the adorable Miss Higbee. be comes less saturine than lias for some time been his wont. He does not forget previous disappointments, but desperately snaps his swarthy jaws in commendable superiority,.to any adverse fate. "Je ne donne pas un damn," he says to himself, and translates, as was his practice, to better his English"I do not present a damn. I shall take what it Is that it may be." The noble Baron de Palliac at this feast of the tribesmen wsa like the captive patrician of old led in chains that galled. The other alien, Launton Oldaker, was present under terms of honorable truce, willingly and without ulterior motive sav ingas he confessed to himselfa con suming desire to see "how the other half lives." He was no longer the hunted and dismayed being Percival had met in that far-off and impossible Montana but was now untroubled, remembering, it is true, that this "slumming expedition," as he termed it, had taken him beyond the recognized bounds of his beloved New York, but serene in the consciousness that half an hour's drive would land him safely back at his club. Oldaker observed Miss Psyche Bines ap provingly. "We are so glad to be in New York!" Bhe had confided to him, sitting at her right. "My dear young woman." he warned her, "you havn't reached New York yet." The talk being general and loud, he ven tured further. "This is Pittsburg. Chicago, Kansas City. Denveralmost anything but New York." "Of course I know these are not the swell old families." Oldaker sipped his glass of old Oloroso sherry and discoursed. "And our prominent families, the ones whose names you read, are hot Ne w York any more, either. They are rather Lon don and Paris. Their furniture, clothing, plate, pictures, and servants come from one or the other. Yes. and their manners, too, their interests and sympathies and , concerns', their fashionsandsometimes, theirermorals. They are assuredly not New York any more than Gobelin tapes tries and Fortuity pictures and Louis Seize chairs are New York." "How queerly you talk. Where is New York. then?" Oldaker sighed thoughtfully between two spoonsful of tortue verte. claire "Well. I suppose the truth is that there isn t much of New York left in New York Asya matter of fact I think it died with thd old volunteer fire department. Any way the surviving remnant is cov Real old New Yorkers like mvselfneither poor nor richare swamped in these days like those prehistoris animals whose bones t\e And. There comes a time when we can't live, and deposits form over, us and we're lost even to memory." But this talk was even harder for Miss Bines to understand that the English * speech of the Baron Ronault de, Pallia and she turned to that noble gentleman as thee turbot with saucesCoraill was serve '* i ' * i.' Th dining-room, it wal walscottedd from floor to ceiling in Spanish oak. was flooded with soft light from the red silk dome that depended from its crown of gold above the table. The laughter and talk #\ wero as little subdued as the scheme of . the rooms. It was an atmosphere of prod- " Igal and confident opulence. From' the \ music-room near by came the soft strains t ' of a Havdn quartet, exquisitely performed - o " * ' hy finished and expensive artists. i'.-" "Say. Higbee!" It was the oil chief from ft Texas, "see if them fiddlers of yours can't \ . play 'Ma Honolulu Lulu!' " pji Oldaker, wincing and turning to Miss **- Bines for sympathy, heard her say: - ^ "Yes. do, Mr. Higbee! I do love those jjjy - rag-time songsand. then have them play ar*r - 'Tell Me, Pretty Maiden,' and the 'Inter- -y mezzo.' " . . IJ' He groaned in anguish. V The talk ran mostly oengreat practical affairs: ' |?/' tn e current values of th staple corn - s', moditics thepromisedcrop corn had been *$$" light whatwhy wheat to bring how young Burman of the Chicago Board of Trade had.been pinched in his Own wheat . corner for four millionsr"put up" by his . admiring father what beef on the hoof commanded how the Federal Oil compa ny would presently own the state of Texas. Almost every Barbarian at the table had made his own fortune. Hardly one but Could recall early days when he toiled on farm or In shop or forest, herded cattle, prospected, sought adventure in remote and hazardous wilds. M0TOA1T EVENING, ^||p A Tale of the Third Generation. C ^ * By HARRY LEON WILSON. Copyright 1903 by Lathrop Publishing Co., Boston. " 'Tain't much like them old days, eh. Higbee?" queried the Crown Prince of Cripple Creek"when you and me had to walk from Chicago to Green Bay, Wiscon sin, because we didn't have enough shil lings for stage fare?" He gazed aboijtt him suggestively. "Corn beef and cabbage was pretty good then, eh?" and with sure, vigorous strokes he fell to demolishing his filet de dinde a la Perigueux. while a butler refilled his glass with Chateau Malescot, 1878, "Well, it does beat the two rooms the madam and me started to house in when we was married." admitted the host. 'That was on the banks of the Chicago river, and now we got the Hudson flowtn' right thru the front'yard, you might say, right past our own yacht landing." From old days of work and hardship they came to discuss the present and their Immediate suroundings, social and finan cial. Their daughters, it appeared, were being sought in marriage by the sons of those among whom they sojourned. "Oh. they're a nice band of hand shakers, all right, all right." aserted the gentleman from Kansas City. "One of 'envtried to keep company with our Caro line, but I wouldn't stand for it. He was a crackin' good shinny player, and he could lead them cotillion dances blowin' a whistle and callin', 'All right, up!' or something, like a car-starter.but. 'Tell me something good about him/I says to an old friend of his family. Well, he hemmed and hawedhe was a Ne w York gentleman, and says he, "I don't know whether I could make you understand or not,' he says, 'but he's got Family.' jest like that bearin" down hard on 'Family* 'and you've got money,' he says, 'and Money and Family need each other badly in this town,' he says. 'Yes.' says I, 'I met up with a number of people here,' I says, 'but I ain't met none yet that you'd have to blindfold and back into a lot of money,' I says, 'family or no fam- ily,' I says. 'And that young man.' he says. 'Is a pleasant, charming fellow why,' he says, 'he's the best-coated man in New York.* Well, I looked at him and I says, 'Well,' says I, 'he may be the best-coated man In New York, but he'll be the best-booted man in New York, too,' I says, 'if he comes around trying to spark Caroline any more,or would be if I had my way. His chin's pushed too far back under his face,' I says, 'and besides,' I says, 'Caroline is being waited on by a young hardware drummer, a good, steady young fellow traveling out of little old K. C * I says, 'and while he ain't much for fam'ly,' I says, 'he'll have one of his own before he gets thru,' I says 'we start fam'lies where I come from.' I says. "Good boy! Good for you," cheered the self-made Barbarians, and drank success to the absent disseminator of hardware. With much talk of this unedifying character the dinner progressed to an end thru selle d'agneau, floated in '84 champagne, terrapin convoyed by a spec ial Madeira of 1850. and canvass-back duck with Romanee Conti, 1865. to a tri umphant finale of Turkish coffee and 1811 brandy. After dinner the ladies gossiped of Ne w York society, while the barbaric males smoked their big oily cigars and bandied reminiscences. Higbee showed them thru every one of the apartment's twenty two rooms, from reception-hall to laun dry, manipulating the electric lights with the skill of a stage-manager. The evening ended with a cake-walk, for the musical artists had by rare wines been mellowed from their classic reserve into a mood of rag-time abandon. And if Monsieur the Baron with his cere monious, grace was less exuberant than the Crown Prince of Cripple Creek, who sang as he stepped the sensuous measure, his pleasure was not less. He joyed to observe that these men of incredible mil lions had no hauteur. "I do not," wrote the baron to his noble father, the marquis, that night, "yet un derstand their joke: why should it be droll to wish that the man whose coat is of the best should also wear boots of the best? but as for what they call une promenade de gateau. I flnd.it very en joyable. I have met a Mile. Bines to whom I should at once pay my addresses. Unlike Mile. Higbee, she has not the father from Chicago nor elsewhere. Quel diable d'homme!" t-*liK*-.-y(.^in:^rflfe CHAPTER XVI. The Patricians Entertain. To. reward the enduring who read po litely thro the garish revel of the preced ing chapter, covers for fourteen are now laid with correct and tasteful quietness at the sophisticated board of, that fine old New York family, the Milbreys. shaded candles leave all but the glowing table in a gloom discreetly pleasant. One need not look so high as the old-fashioned I stucco ceiling. The family portraits tone agreeably into the half-light of the walls the hugh old-fashioned walnut sideboard, soberly ornate with its mirrows,- its white marble top and Its wood-carved fruit, towers majestically aloft in proud scorn of the frivolous Chippendale fad. Jarvis. the accomplished and incom parable butler, would be subdued and scholorly looking but for the 'flagrant scandal of his portrwine nose. He gives finishing little fillips to the white chrysan- | themums massed in the central epergne on the long silver plateau, and bestows a last cautious survey upon the cut-glass and silver radiating over the dull white damask. Find ing the table and its appointments faultless, he asm*es himself once more that the sherry will come on irreproachably at a temperature of 60 degrees that the Bur gundy will not fall below ,65 nor mount above 70 for Jarvis wots of a palate so acutely sensitive that it never fails to re cord a variation of so much as. one degree from the approved standard of tempera ture. How restful this quiet and reserve after the color and line tumult of the,Higbee apartment. There the flush and bloom of newness were oppressive to the right minded. All smelt of the shop. Here the dull tones and decorous lines caress and soothe Instead of overwhelming the imagi nation with effects too grossly literal. Here is the veritable spirit of good form. Thruout the house this contrast might be noted. It Is the browtf-stone. high stoop house, guarded by a cast-iron fence, built in vast numbers when the world of fashion moved north to Murray Hill and Fifth avenue a generation ago. One of these houses was like all the others inside and out. built of unimaginative "builder's architecture. The hall, the long parlor, the back parlor or library, the high stuc coed ceilingsnot only were these alike in all the houses, but the furnishings, too, were apt to be of a sameness in them all. rather heavy and tasteless, but serving the ends that such things should be meant to serve, and never flamboyant. Of these relics of a simpler day not many survive to us, save in the shameful degeneracy of boarding-houses. But. in such as are left, we may confidently expect to find the tra ditions of that more dignified time kept unsulliedto find, indeed, as we find in the house of Milbrey, a settled air of gloom that suggests insolvent but stub bornly determined exclusiveness. Something of this air, too. may be no ticed in the surviving tenants of these austere relics. Yet it "would hardly be ob- t ^ J ^%-s^^ .,',tS-T?-"*^?^ *-. THE^MINNEAPOfJS^OUBNAL. MINNEAPOLIS TESTIMONY SIXTH STREET LYNDALE AVENUE R. Kennedy, a packer at the Minneapolis Flour Manufacturing Co.. 1103 Sixth street south "I had awful pain in my back. In the morning I could hardly stand when I first got up, and on arriving at the mill I could hardly get around. I procured Doan's Kidney Pills at Voegeli Bros.' Drug Store, corner Washington and Mennepin Av enues, Minneapolis, Minn., and in a short time the backache which had bothered me for over a year disap peared." served in this house on this night: for not only do arriving guests bring the aroma of a later prosperity, but the hearts of our host and hostess beat high with a new hope. For the fair and sometimes uncer tain daughter of the house of Milbrey, after many uncertain mutterings, delays and frank rebellions, has declared at last her readiness to be a credit to her train ing by conferring her family prestige, dis tinction of manner and charms of person upon one equipped for their suitable main tenance. Already her imaginative father is rav-r ishing in fancy the mouldiest wine cellars of continental Europe. Already the fond mother has idealized a house in "Million aire's Row" east of the park, where there shall be twenty servants instead of three, and there shall cease that gnawing worry lest the treacherous north-setting current A W^LL-TIMED RAI D COMMANDEDBY SERGEANT CHUB The Rexall Soldiers score another victory over their enemy, Dyspepsia. It has been Mr. Boarder'^ habit to take his meals at all times and places, wher ever he might fancy. Being a strong man. he felt no ill effect for some time, then his appetite became irregular, and his food distressed him. and finally the mere sight or odor of food became nauseating. At this-time he be gan to realize that he was a captive of Dyspepsia, and try as he would he could not break his bonds. His weight fell off. he became nervous and irritable, could not sleep, and his suffering was intense. REXALHf DYSPEPSIA- TABLETS Warranted to cure all forms of Indigestion and Dyspepsia ,, . or money will be refunded. Price* 25c, 46c and 89c. VOEGELI BROS. DRU G CO. *s 1\rOTs* TTriATiir WTiAit a stitclii twitcKf or crick in the back never Jkuow wneii fa bad back strike you at any time. iKidneys will g wrong, and wlien ithe kidneys fail the back generally fails too ibusy man, to the mechanic, the laborer, to women, old and young to all 1 who have sick kidneys, and kidneys are no respecter of persons, time or i place, they will get sick when you overtax them. . MMS KBIE Y nasi CURE Mrs. J. C. Rickard of 1528 Lyndale avenue, says "Mr. Riokard was much troubled with pains in his back for some time. We procured Doan's Kidney Pills at The Voegeli Bros.' Drug Go,, Washington avenue and Hennepin and a course of their treatment end ed the pains. I also used this remedy, with the best of re- sweep them west-of-ttre park Into - one of those hideously .new -apartment-houses, where the .halls ar6 dbne'ul marble that seems to have been sliced from a huge Roquefort cheese, and where one must vie, perhaps, with a shopkeeper for the favors of an irreverent and materialistic janitor. - V ..* (To Be Continued.) . -*i - To Los Angeles or San Franglsco and Return, $50. The Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad will sell, on May 3d and 12th to 18th in clusive, round-trip tickets to Los Angeles or San Francisco at $50, 'with final return limit to July 15th, 1903. Passengers have privilege of diverse routes going and re turning and stop-overs in each direction. Call on W. L. Hathaway, city ticket agent, No. 1 Washington avenue S. The Rexall soldiers rescued Mr. Boarder just in time, and took him to their head quarters, * * * * store, where he was supplied with Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets... To the surprise and joy of Mr. Boarder he has gained strength and weight his appetite is remarkable his sleep is peace ful he is happy, and soon expects to take up a man's full work again.' To the cura tive properties of the Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets alone he attributes his release from Dyspepsia. , .' ,. -*' '*" .* willstrike all kidney complications. Backache pains and the early symptoms are readily relieved with a few doses. Continual use of this greatest of kidney specifics rights all resultant conditions of deranged kidneys and bladder, such as impure blood, rheumatic pains, headaches, sleeplessness, nervous troubles, in- flammatory conditions of the kidneys and bladder. Dangerous neglect of any kidney sickness leads to a score or more of serious bodily ills, that once they have a hold on the system, 'tis one long drawn-out struggle to get rid of themto get well. One remedy will do this, and it is easy for you to prove, its merit. THIRTEENTH AVEWUE ^M. Garving, of 1114 Thirteenth Avenue southeast, says: "It is al most impossible to give Doan's Kid ney Pills the praise due them. I commenced having kidney trouble some fifteen years ago, and obtained little or no benefit from any remedy, I used. The trouble grew more and more presistent until 1 could not straighten because of the sharp twinges of pain which caught me. Hearing the wonderful value of Doan's Kidney Pills I procured them at the Voegeli Bros'. Drug Co., and the first box did me so much good that I continued the treatment until all the trouble, was ended. I have had slight returns, but resort to Doan's Kidney Pills never fails to ward off the attack." : , No taste, no odor can be given in glass of water, tea or coffee without patient's knowl edge. White Ribbon Remedy will cvre or destroy the diseased appetite for alcoholic stimulants, wheth er the patiuut Is a confirmed inebriate, a 'tip- pler," social drinker or drunkard. Impossible for any one to have an appetite for alcoholic liq uors after using White Ribbon Remedy. Indorsed by Members of W. C. T. U. Mrs. Moore, press superintendent of Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Ventura, Cal., writes: "I have tested White Ribbon Remedy on very obstinate drunkards, and the cures have been many. In many cases the Remedy was given secretly. I cheerfully recommend and in dorse White Ribbon Remedy. Members of our union are delighted to find an economical treat ment to aid us In our temperance work." Druggists or by mail, $1. Trial package free by writing Mrs. A. M. Towosend (for years sec retary of a Woman's Christian Temperance Union), 218 Tremont st, Boston, Mass. Sold In Minneapolis by DILLIN DRUG CO., 101 Washington Av S. THE- North American Telegraph Company (ORGANIZED IN 1886) Continues to furnish the same efficient service that has made the venture a GREAT SUCCESS. "Kmg of oil Bottled Beers." Brewed from Bohemian Hops. SOLD BY C. 8. BRACKETT & CO. Wholesale Sealers, CHICHESTER'S PILLS ^*7-'zz~^ you# $heo ^che A TRIAL FREE This coupon good for one free trial box of Doan's Kidney Pills. Write plainly Name and Address. Send to Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and a fre trial -frill be sent you promptly. f FREE TO READERS OF MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. Name Street and No. Place. State The simplest remedy for indigestion, constipa tion, biliousness and the many ailment* arising from a disordered stomaoh, liver or bowels Is Rlpans Tabules. They bave accomplished won ders, and their timely aid removes the necessity of calling a physician for many little Ills that be go straight t trouble, relieve the distress, cleanse and cure the set mankind. The. y go straight to the seat of the affected parts, and give the system a general ton ing up. The Five Cent packet ' binary occasion. The family SUBSTITUTION jOristaal and Only Genuine , A Standard Remedy d for S5 10,00 0 Testimonial. . Indies , u k DruggW for CHIOHESTKK',SMiKN6LI8yeiInt M RED *sd Sold witallio boxe, sealed with bins ribbon. Tko no other. Reftoao Substitutions andImitations. Ankrour Druggist, or(end 4 eonto to atamps forJPor tteulare, TeoHmonials and Booklet for Ladles, brj-.tura Malt. Sold bj all Draggiiu. Okleaoetor Chemical Co^ Hadlaoa Sannre. PB1XA.. PA- STORAG *S5 Household goods a specialty. Un equaled facilities and lowest rates. Packing by experienced men. Boy-Transfer & StorageCo., 46So.31S] Telephone Mala 656both exchanges. The FRAUD of the Day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand (IMS Little Liver - Pills. The only perfect - Liver PilL Take mo other. Even if "--: Solicited to do so. Beware of imitations of Same Color Wrappers, Cures ^|$ V Colds in the Head- v nUrr o THE QUICK CUEAN COME ForColdintheHeadoVonthe Lungs, Bronchitis, Sore Throat or Quinsy. At druggists,25c and 60C ,: Is the worst disease on earth, yet the easiest to cure WHEN You KNOW WHAT TO DO. Many' have 'pimples, spots on the skin, sores in the mouth,. ulcers, falling hair, bone pains, ca tarrh, don't know it Js BLOOD PQISOJ^ Send to Dr. Brown,, Arch st. Phi deluhia, for BROWN'S' BLOOD CURE $2 per" bottle last's one month. For-sale ogly A* VOEGELI BROS.' DRUG STORE. $ painsof "Backachesand comes to the Medical Advice to All. Gall or The Guaranty Doctors w n g . w 'Alns a supply for a year. All druggists, sel m ml,,theu W for an or- eents , con- EXAMINATION FREE. VISITORS to th city who do not know the best doctors are especially invited to call be fore paying less skilled doctors a higb price for examination. The Guaranty Doctors' offices are -- the largest and finest in Minneapolis. They have ' ' the BIG X-RAYS to find diseases. , LOST VITALITY VSsrs&n cure every case in 15 to 45 tlays that has not reached the stage of epilepsy (fits) or in sanity. Seminal weakness, any results of youthful indiscretions, atrophied organs, or any, ^ other signs of early decay, permanently cured. Villi HIS I I Ell Thousands have been lOURU ill E H lent a helping hand and saved' froiu' reckless destruction of their own lives, from insanity, consumption and epilepsy. You MUST- be cured. Don't, let your ignorance deceive you another day. Consult the Guaranty" Doctors they bave cured thousands like yon. IfADIAAAElE Itching, painful, knot- ffAltlUVV CLE ted and twisted ap- ' pearance of the veins indicate this dreadful life-draining affliction. Permanently cured by: The. Guaranty Doctors. Ndo cutting.n ' - D l AAII If III : Goodrich & Jennings, Anoka, Minn.' K! BLOO D POISON PROPOSALS FOR INDIAN SUPPLIESDE partmeat of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, Washington, D. C. Warcu 4, ISO?.. Sealed proposals, Indorsed "Proposals for blankets, woolen and cotton goods, clothing, etc.," as the case may be, and directed to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Nog: 110-121 Wooster st, New York city, will be received until 1 o'clock p. m. of Tuesday, May 19. 1003. ' for furnishing /or tho Indian Service, blankets, woolen aud cotton goods, clothisg, notions. IIHU arid cops. Bids must be made iu on govern ment blanks. Schedules giving all necessary Information for bidders will be famished- on application to the ' Indian - Office. Washington, D. C : the United States Indian warehouses, 119-121 WOoster st. New Xork City 205^207 South Canal st. Chicago, 111. 815 Howard t. Omaha, Neb. C02 South Seventh st, St. louls. Mo. the commissaries of subsistence, U. S. A., at Cheyenne. Wyo.. and SI. Inl. Minn. the - quartermaster, h. S. A., Seattle, Wash.: the postmasters at Sioux City, Tucson. Portland, Spokane and Tacohia: and the Manufacturer*' and Producers' Association of California. San Francisco, Cal. Bids will be opened nt the hour and days above stated, and bidders are invited to be present at the opening. The de partment reserves the right to determine the point of delivery and to reject any and all bids or any part of any bid. W. A. Jones, Commissioner. Patrons of Journal want columns are requested, to have their copy In the office by 12:30 o'clock on Satur- , day in order toMneure proper classifi- * cation In ^.narC!feye'n1r.g's Issue. - 1 . i, J ' v~v'' ! Bloo Poiso n i any stage , DLUVUf dlMH contracted or inherited.' cured witaout mercury by our new method' quick er than at Hot Springs. Sctema, eruptions, ail cured by the new method. - HfllCO ? need kHUIEw rul-u irregularsuffemenstruation-painmfrortno , headaches, backaches, falling of the womb, ner vous hysteria. Cured, by electricity, Prjyate parlors. [ - . -'i^^^KJ$ i ^r" The Guaranty Doctors LINIMENT 230 HENNEPIN AVE.. MINNEAPOLIS. - HOURSDaily, S a. m. to S p. m. Sunday mornings, 9 to 1 p. m. : .^i^. ^ Cured. All form*""-of ca tarrh treated by Electro Medicated Vapor Treatment. Call to-day. Growths in the nose removed. That constant dropping from the nose to the throat stopped. - " That offensive breath cured forever. f| C ft El! E Ringing noises, discharging UEHrUkdO ears, nerve deafpess. any form of deafness cured. Hundreds ofc testimo nials on file at the offices. HfDlTE PERMANENT CURBS are ob it. Ill I C tained by the home treatment. For examination (free) by mail, write for syinp^ _, toms blank and book free. i- it CATARRH A m li I