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, - * ST .'*'" Y * '-'-' *w ' 18 I Chicago. Mllw'kee, Madison ) p m ChicagoAtlantic Expres..l 10:20 pm Dulutti, Superior, Ashland..) *7:35am Twihght. Limited { 4:00 Duluth. Superior, Ashland. ) p m Elmore, Algona. Des Moines Jilmoie, Algoua, Des Mpines NetvL'lin, 'XTacy, Watertown, Sioux City.Omaha. Blk Hills .4-1 Su City, Omaha, Kan. Cy, Watertown, Huron, Kedfleld Worthington. Mitchell, Su V 1 Omaha Limited Sioux City, Oniaha. Colorado Su City. Omaha, Kan. Cy..| m WE ARE CHAMPIONS OF SHOE QUALITIES AT RIGHT PRICES! llinowouch & Sons So. wash. 1 f and Men's Buckle Ardtics, only Electric LightedObserva- tion Cars to Portland, Ore., via Butte, Spokane, Seattle, Taconia Pacific Express Fargo,Helena, Butte, Spokane, Seattle, Taconia, Portland Fargo and Leech Lake Local CH1C4G0 GREAT WfSTERNKY. Rook imtantf System ?&: TRAINS TO DULUTH AND SUPERIOR - Daily. fx. Sunday. NOTE.All trains ue the Union Station, St. Paul, and Union Station in Minneapolis. TICKET OFFICE ^MMftS.: Office, 300 Nic. Leave ii Winnipeg Express *ugot 8eun4 Express 1 ! if I ^FRIDAY EVENING, Arcade Shoe House vp . - - 'y'-y-i. $1.98 Men's enamel lace, double sole Men's imported enamel lace, The Washing- fc R A tonian 3N* iOW Men's box calf, double sole winter. Shoes,. 4*4 f t f only...... Ladies' Felt Shoes, 20 styles, $1-48, $1.19 QOA and ,.,....:*** ** Ladies' glazed kid lace Shoes, patent tips, IfiL ^ JLSt only ^-*0. Ladies' Jenness Miller's Boots, 60 styles, all ftQ R A shapes, only...vOOW v Men's Sandal Rub 49ct bers, only Men's storm Alaskas,QOg% only 3JOU Men's Felt Shoes, $1.98 Ladies' felt and leath er sole house slippers. 40 styles, $1.48 98c Ladies' storm 10:45 St. Cloud, Little Falls, Braln ero, Walker, BeniidJI, Fargo.... Fergus Falls, Wahpeton, Moorhead, Fargo, (Jamestown Dally Ex. Saturday), Crookstou, Grand Forks. Urafton. Winnipeg am |5:20 Phone No. 225. St. Louis Depot. aKx. tJivnday. Others Dally. | Leave. Arrive. Wstertown and Storm Lakel I Express .,..,,.,... |a 8 S7 atn|a 5:15 pm Omaha, Des Moines, Knii-| ' I - - tias City. Mason City and| I Marshalltowu |a 9:35 amja 6:40 pm Esthervule and Madison. . . KOKTH STAR LIMITED" Chicago and St, Louis, Peoria Limited Omaha and Des Moines Limited .. Phono, Main 860. Daily. TEX. Sunday. Union Depot Arrive. t 9:00 am S t Cloud, Fergus Falls, Fargo, +10:00 am .. .Tintah. Aberdeen, Fargo... *11s01 am +10:00 am + 3:05 pm + 6:10 pm *8:20 pm * 6 sOi pin * S?:40prr * 8:40 pn * 8:40 pn * 9:3 i an *ll:.7pn t 4:55pm Flyer- to Paolfio Ooast j Willmar, S. Falls, S. City, ( {Watertown,Brown8 Valley 1 ..Princeton. Milaca. Duluth.. . ..Wayzata and Hutchinson... t 5:40pm 10:10 716 . .Montana and Pacific Coast.. Breck., Fargo, G. Forks /Villmar, S.Falls, Yank.,S. City Minnesota and Dakota Express 3:05Sleepe:r.Minneapolis pn Uopher Mate Lxpress'. I for 11:47 train at p.m. MQRTH-WESTERN llNE iLjc: ^T P.M.& O.RY *- + Ticket Otflce. 600 Nicollet. Phone, 3*0. Main. Ex. Sunday. Others Daily.| Leave. I Arrive. Chicago, Mllw'kee, Madison. 7:50 am ChicagoFast Mall I 6:00 pm North-Western Limt'd / 8:0O 6:30 pm 8:00 am ?:35 am "The Mapfe Lal Route." City Ticket Oftice, 6th and Nicollet, Minneapolis. Depot, Washington and 10th av 8. Tel. M. 202. _ _ . Tayfteld, Mclrtpre, Oelweln.l 7:40 ami 30:35 pm ft" Dubmiue, Cblcago and! 8:00 pm 7.56 am liiaHt | lo: 15 pm| 1:15 pm Cedar Falls, Waterloo. Mar-| 10:00 am halltowD. Def Molnea,| 8:00 pin St. Joseph, KanHaa Ctty..| 10:45 pm Red Wine, Uocbester.Osage Kenyon. Dodge Center. Hay field. Austin. Lyle, Mason OFFICE, 322 NICOLLET AV. Phones, N. W., 2147 T. 0., 625. Trains leave and arrive Milwaukse Depot Daily. |Leave for|Arc..front Albert I.ea. Cedar Hapids. Davenport, Rock Island, Moline. cnicaga, Bur lington, Qulncy and St. , Louis Th v TOUCH the L I V I Genuine Wrapper Printed on '- RED PAPER BLACK LETTERS vb^ J*&?ZZLs ^ -$. wiiiTE^tmT^i^iisra 5:20 pm 5:00 pni "ROMANIC." Dec. B, Jan. 16, Feb. 27, Ap. 0 "REPUBLIC" (new), Jan 2, Feb. 13. Mar 26 "CANOPIC" Jan. 30, March 12 (Send for rates and illustrated booklet. These steamers are the largest in the Mediterar.ean service. First-class, ?75 and $80 upward, according to date of sailing. * 9:35 pm 7:10 am 7:30 pui M:05 am 7:lo am 9:05 am 8:!i0 pm 8:30 p 8:10 pm 8.30 am *(:1 ii 8:10 am 810 pm *: 7:30m am ^m^^m:^^^7^ TlfcE MINNEAPOLI^JOUBNAL/I&^fl 69c Alaskas Ladies' Superba,kid lace, welt ed soles, patent & 9 JL A tips **"- ^ * MILWAUKEE OXVOZ. Cfcicago, Miiwaikees si. pan eaiiwij.' Dakota Express, dally ....17:30 am ..Rhlnelander Local, ex. Sun.. 6:05 pm am 2i15 pm * 6:55am * 9:55am * 6:55am * 7:59pm * 6:45am WISCONSIN CENTKll BY. " ^ MILWAUKEE awl CHICAGO Leave 7:25 a. m. and 7:05 p. m. daily. Arrive 8:50 a. m. and 5:1.0 p. m. daily. toready Duluth.9 . ) H2:40pm OCEAN STEAMSHIPS 10:20 pm 10:00 am BOSM tO LiVerpOOl QueenVStown. S::}! um p m 8:10 CRKTIC Dee. 10, Jan. 14, Feb.. 11 CYMRIC Dec. 24, Jan. 28. Feb. 25 First-class, |65 upwards. For planB, etc.. address WHITE STAR LINE, 77-81 State St, Boston, or to 8:30 pm a m 8:10 am O E. BHECKE, Guaranty Bulldlnq. AMERICAN LINE. NEW YUKKSOUTHAMPTONLONDON. Lln'polls.[Min'jpolis Leave I Arrive ATLANTIC TBANSP0RT LINE. NEW YORKLONDON DIRECT. DOMINION LINE. PORTLAND LIVEttPOOLShort Sea Passage. 8:10 pm 7 :B5 am 1:15 pm RED STAR LINE. NEW YORKANTWERP PARIS. 7:55 ami 7:Sopn 4:55 pm| 10:65 am 7:40 aip WHITE STAR LINE. NEW YORKQT.'BENSTOWNniVKRPOOL. BOSTONQUKENSTOWNLIVERPOOL. 7:30 am 4:35 pm En^le Grove, Fort Dodge,| Carroll. Co. Bluffs, Omahal 11:20 am 7:30 am Slu pin BOSTON Boys' Buckle Arctics Children's Buckle Overshoes (June 14, 1903.) Ticket office, 928 Kioollet nv. PUone, 128. Lear* 10:45 Arrive Daily. aEx.Sunday._xEx.Sat.| Leave. I Arrive. ~ am 1:50 pin pm Dakota and Manitoba Express 7:05 am t 9:10 put * 8:35 "Mitt Short Line" pm *6:50 am m * MEDITERRANEAN 7:3t) pm| 7:40 ami 7:30 am 8:10 pm STORA tquaJrt ttdUtiM and lowest rotes* 9:10 am - Packing or experienced ma. fisyi Iraniamp cm in. m TlaphrtiM 6:30 pm ABSOLUTE SECURITY Genuine CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS must bear Fac-stoile Signature of 4:55 pm 8:40 am Uaia eaeboui xntoaoeds. ITTLE IVER Absolutely Clire BILIOUSNESS. SICK HEADACHE. TORPID UVER. FURRED TONGUE. INDIGESTION. CONSTIPATION DIZZINESS. SALLOW SKI N: , ^ 1 r tkVrAft&fi&Bill^ *i !__ k^I^k&^Mi^kMM r LARGE FROG Found in Woman's Stomach Was Swal lowed as a Tadpole. New York World. Harry Goldsmith, of Hempsted, Mr s. L. I., -was. in the mpuutains of .northern New York some months ago and with some friends spent a d.ayv in the woods. Being thirsty she leaned over the edge of a stream and drank from it. She noticed that she swallowed what appeared to be a small piece of grass. In a day or so she had entirely forgotten the circumstance. Mr s. Goldsmith has been having an in creased appetite for the past six weeks and has been constantly thirsty. Doctors' remedies all failed and she continued to become weaker and to lose weight. Her husband, who is a druggist, decided to.study her case himself and finally con cluded to administer an emetic. T o his surprise a. la.i-ge frogr was dislodged from - 7.r50am|*10:36p MinPiCAPfLIS fi ST. LOUS t E m * 2:20pm |* 3:20pm * 6:45pni| tt:UUpm|* 7.354m *10:25pm|*12:01pn * e:2tttmi* 0:20pni * 8:50pm * 9:25am z 7:15pmJBll:15am z 7:5Uam|zlU:30pm t 9:30aniijs 0:00pm * 7:00pm|* 7:15am \% 7:5laiuizlO:45a as 6:40pm|al0:10pm Chicago, La X., Milwaukee.. Mllw'kee, La Crosse, Winona Chicago, La X., Milwaukee..| CHICAGO, "P10NKBK" LTD Chicago, La X., Milwaukee.. Northfleld, Faribault, sK. City Chicago, Faribault, Dubuque.. Nortbtleld, Faribault, Austin. La Crosse, Dubuque, Rock Is. Ortonville, Milbank, Aberdeen Ortonrllle, xFargo, Aberdeen' Faruilngton, Mankato, Wells. Farintngton, Mankato, Wells. Wati. aa Men. A.v* McoUtt lltUf? Corner. his wife's stomach. It had been there for months, was in perfectly healthy condi tion, and after being placed in a jar swam around. She swallowed it as a tadpole. Her condition shows marked impovement. THE MONARCH AND THE AUTOCRAT. 8:35 pm Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie LT. Depot, 3d and Washington avs S. p m 9:45 am 6:3.% pm| 8:15 am 7:25 am ...Pacific Kxpress, dally. .Atlantic Limited, daily Depot, 5th and Washington avs N. t 5 40pm tl2:40pm t 8:55pm reason completely. . You were buying your Winter Clothes. You don't need to wait until the winter is half over before preparing for it. You may expect rseal cold weather now GET READY Select all the apparel you want, fit out yqyir entire family and pay us as you earn the money A little amount each week SERVICE AZORESGIBRALTARNAPLES(JEN0A. O. E. BRECKE, Passenger Agent, . Guaranty Building. Minneapolis. K(W m Men's Stylish Overcoats in Kersey* -1 and Friezes, $15 and $12 Men's All Wool Suits. Cheviots and Worsted $12 and $10 Men's Fleece-lined Underwear 50c Men's New Style Hats. Deriby or Fedora $1.50 Ladies' Swell Winter Jackets. Mil itary Styles......... $15 and $12 Ladies' Fashionable Tailor Made Suits, $18 $15 $12 Boys* and Girls7 Empire Credit Small Pill. 8mall Dose. Small Prlct. '*"'-' Ji-^412 Nicollet DID HE *fil THE OTHER WORLD? \ .?, Story of a Kansas City Han Who Had 3,300 Volts of Electricity Shot Isi Thru His Body in the Westinghouae Power PlantHe Claims to ... Have Visited Hell and Heaven iVtstf Strange Recovery. Nicoiict Boys' Box Calf Lace, "double extension .* '"'.'dfe A k soles ... .N - ** ^ Boys' Duro Calf Lace sizes 9 to 5h Misses' Vici Kid Lace double soles .j.....-:-:.. Misses' Buckle ,, Overshoes. -.V. Ladies' Storm Alas kas, spring heels Ladies' vici kid, lace, year welted, with patent tips Wet Clothing a Conductor. It was a sweltering August after noon. Men and clothing steaming with perspiration were perfect con ductors of the avvful current, and. there was no time to shout for help. But Mallory was an expert. He knew what to do. Instantly, like a cata pault, he hurled himself headlong against the paralyzed burning man, broke the circuit, and they both tumbled to the fibor, together. Mal lory himself was. badl^- shocked and burned in the contact, "but He was saved. This hero, Mallory, staggered to his feet and shouted for help. - A dozen electricians leaped to his side, took in the situation, and while Flad was still roasting and smoking, seized his arms and began the resuscitation move ments used in cases of drowning. Six of the men "spelled" one another, keeping up this artificial breathing processpumping air in and out of his lungs by working his arms and chest. There was no sign of lifethe heart had stopped beatingbut they worked incessantly, never relaxing: for a *no- ment. The thing to do in such cases is to excite the heart's action. A shock must be produced to start it beating again, just as one jogs a watch to set the balance wheel groins when it stops. New York Sun. George 111. innocently wouderfed how the ap ple got into the dumpling. 'liegorra," announced the cook, "if it's any insinuations you're makln'. Ol'll be aftuer laviu' at once." 5:30 p n 7:45 pm Terrified by this threat, tuq monarch lost .his Injection of brandy int$ the veins is one way, but there was no hypodermic syringe at hand nor ,.any brandy. Strong ammounia was used again and agrain, and still there -was no response. The spark of life had evidently fled. Scene in the Power House. While the men were manipulating the arms desperately a young- evan- gelist of the neighborhood, the Rev. G. Bert Carpenter, hurried in, fell on his knees in great emotion and began praying, and continued praying while the men pumped in the frenzy of des peration. - The Fordham hospital ambulance, which had been telephoned for when Flad fell, was going at full speed, two * miles away, the horse hr gallop tear ing- down .the lone hilKs 'above the river. I t was a race for life. Never had such traveling been " seen in that" neighborhood." People, rughed to the streets, and the news went up and down the avenue that a dreadful acci dent had happened at the power house. At last the ambulance ap peared in sight, a little, bobbing ve hicle, fully half a mile-.away, on the last long, stretch of road that sweeps down to the Harlem. The men working Flad's arms were fearing the poor man was beyond help, when suddenly his frame heaved. Great knots of muscles twitched con vulsively and Flad tried to leap into FOR IT."'."' the air. It took five men to hold him to the floor. The contraction of his muscles and the terrible convulsions which were now writhing him were enough to -break every bone in his body. It was on the second gallery, with hundreds of live wires, and the men were afraid that Flad would break fromtheir grasp and tumble on the dynamOs below. Finally he be- will do vTo Buy ca "Vi, Quieter, his heart began "to beat a. little, -very faintly then froth bub oi e d on his lips, blood appeared and To Pay the heartk began to beat stronglj'. . T ,', ,Than God-" have seen and lived." At this Flad went into another con vulsion and it was many long days be fore he would speak of the subject or explain what he meant. A. reporter was present when he told the story in detail: - "I-remember I was handling some conduit pipes for the wires that were being installed in the second gallery back of the big switch boards in the powerhouse, i knew that I was in a dangerous position, but thought I was afi, right until I stepped too far on one side and felt the plank slip on the sawhorses, which were four feet above the flOor. As I was getting my bal ance I shouted to Mallory, 'Look out!' From that moment'I remember noth ing of what happened until I awoke in hell. ' "There I found myself in a vast^ifpl canic plain of rocks and hills with tremendous buildings of massive, con struction towering on every side. They looked like fortresses, almost as big as mountains. But they were full' of fire and flames came out on all sides. Between the buildings and out in the open country, everywhere, were rivers Apparel, Footwear. Millinery, Furs, etc. of blood, tumbling and dashing over cliffs and... breaking! in whirlpools around those dreadful buildings. "I was naturally dazed for a mo ment, but coming to my senses, found myself walking and slipping, partly thru space and partly on the ground, going over stones and hills very slip pery, for blood was eyerywnere. But this was not ay,."- ^njlvery direction Clothing Co. as far. as I could see -weee-- millions of scaly green devils of all sizes. Most Defective V While He Was "Dead"His x ^ - ,, - , &/ - ' ' " '- S *J/ '.^ (.Kansas City StaV."1 Ifa'lrpast 3 o'clock on the afternoon of Aug. 11, Frederick : FlaWestinghouay d of Jerse City.! employed by the e Electrical company at the Kingsbridge power-house, had half the voltage of the entire plant shot thru his body 3,300 volts, of 265 amperes. , He was holding up a joint of, Iron pipe conduit for' containing electric wires at the time, which a Workman, Mallory, was measuring, when the plank on which Flad stood tipped. To save himself from falling bri a nest of deadly wires below, he threw up his arms to get his balance, touched other wires, and, like a thunderbolt, twice the voltage required for electrocution in Sing Sing prison shot thru the inr sulation and thru his body. Flad straightened up and as he stif fened like a corpse his head came near enough to still other wires above to, form a complete circuit. Mallory saw a stream of 'blue native 1 8 Inches long Good- and 6 inches wide roaring out of Flad's head with the noise of a trolley car. He saw this flame melting the iron pipe above and the molten metal drop ping white and hissing on tne back of his head. How could the man be saved? To put hands on him, to pull him away meant death. . of them were dwarfs and hunchbacks, little and big brownie-looking crea tures, but all monstrous and horrible. EViery face was wrinkled. There was a malignant leer, a sort of maniac laugh on every side. "I saw them dancing and gibbering as they caught their victims crawling from bloody pools, and hurled them like ninepins into furnaces. Near me were groups of these tortured ones, with their tongues out, half blinded with blood, and as they were dragged to the furnaces they bit their arms in agony. All this I saw at a sweep of the eye, but it seemed of hours' dura tion. their cjaws into me, dragged m e * o a big furnace, belching fire from roof and windows. They got me so near that I was scorched, my hair on fire, and I thought the end had come. Just as,they were tossing me into the flames I must have prayed for helpat any rate, help came. I saw the bloody landscape and the green monsters fading as in a dream, as the most beautiful music ever heard by man came wafted to my ears. "To say that I was entranced does not half express it. At first it was like a murmur, a soft, whispering melody coming in wa.ves thru the air, in fact, from every place, from the ground, from the clouds, it was like, cathedral music, only a million times more beau tiful. My joy was so great after my struggle* with the fiends that I nearly collapsed. "Then my wandering eyes saw pal aces coming out of the yery sky. They arose on every side, with domes and pinnacles soaring into the clouds. These palaces were of crystal, clear as glass and glittering like diamonds. Then I said to myself, 'I am in heav- en.' I had heard much of the other world, but what I saw was beyond any man's power to describe. "There were avenues as wide as a city. The pavements were of solid gold and dazzling to the eyes. Meanwhile the rnuslc was changing every minute in beauty and sweetness. Far up in the sky I saw palaces, and beyond them r were palaces the scene like a fairy pictureand yet I was there with my feet on gold pave ments. Instead of walking, I had but to wish to be in a place and I was there. I saw a group of temples at the end of a golden avenue wider than the others. 1 wished I could see it and instantly found myself under its crys tal arches Avith the corridors resplend ent with heavenly light, The music grew sweeter every . moment. I ex amined everything minutely, but to my surprise did not see a living crea tureneither angels nor hum an beings tho I searched thru miles of temples and corridors. The scene -was always changing, always more beautiful, and the,music becoming grander." r - Believes H e Was in Hell. Such was the narrative told by the man who died., For. many days aftei this in the midst of-conversation with friends he would faint or go into con-, vulsions, but all the while the ghastly" wounds in his head and arm where the electric flame had burned flesh arid skull to a cinder slowly healed. An expert said after some figuring that the voltage which had shot thru Flad's body was three times greater thalv the current required to run the elevated trains. - "No man can make me believe that I was not really in hell. I know I was there. I have had the experience to prove it. I also know that I was in heaven, and that I heard angel music and experienced the rapture of paradise." It is not surprising after his fearful, ordeal that the man' should have periods of fainting and delirium. One day when telling his experiences to a visiting friend, a bollermaker of ath letic strength and giant frame, Flad suddenly gave a scream, leaped from bed and began swinging his long arms, shouting that he was going to smash things, and the boilermaker fled from the room. Only Flad's young wife, a pretty girl of not more than 18, with an in fant a year and a half old, can handle her husband, wlio is 6 feet 1 inch high and considered one of the best con ditioned men of the Westinghouse works. cried the preacher. Bless the Lord! The dead is coming to life. But Flad sank away until his heart barely fluttered. Fortunately the ambulance was at hand, the sur geon took charge of the case, putting the man into the vehicle, and away they dashed for the hospital. The case seemed hopeless, but when they were half way up the hill Flad opened his eyes and in a faint, agon izing cry gasped, "Pray for me, Jack." Then to the ambulance surgeon "Dear doctor, I will be good. Tell me what to do and I'll obey." Then the man fainted and did not come to himself again until 3 o'clock the next morning in the Fordham hospital. He seemed to wake out of a hor rible, nightmare. He stared wildly at the nurse and asked where he was. Then he fainted again. Yet he gained strength slowly, and Anally was strong enough to talk intelligently and real ize that a miracle had happened. The faithful young evangelist re joiced greatly and assured the suf ferer that the Almighty had saved him and that it was a warning to the unconverted. Flad, with a wild, far away look in his eyes, said to the par son: "You can't tell me anything I don't know about the other world." I have been'there. I have been in hell and coming out of hell I've been in heaven. No man has seen what I Flad said electricity was still com ing out of him, and friends declare that when standing on a wet pavement if they touch him they are shocked. After the accident every muscle stood out like cords and ropes all over his body. His back was a mass of knotted muscles, and for a week they had to swathe him in tight bandages to re duce them. -NOVEMBER ' , A Nightmare Race. "Finally the monsters made a rush for me. It was a nightmare race to get away. Many a time I was far in advance, when a cloud of devils swooped out of space and cut off my retreat, dancing and making hideous grjmaces. I managed to escape, until at last a squad of fiends, more crooked and greener than the othefrs, caught me in their long, slimy arms, on which the scales fairly rattled, and sticking menstruation, and did not know what the trouble was until the doctor* pronounced it inflammation of the ovaries, and proposed an operation. . . "I felt so weak and sick that I felt sure that I could not survive the ordeal, and so I told him that I would not undergo it. The following week I read an advertisement in the paper of your Vegetable Compound in such an emergency, and so I decided to try it. Great was my joy to find that I actually improved after taking two bottles, so I kept taking it-for ten -weeks, and at the end of that time I was cured. I had gained eighteen pounds and was in excellent health, and am now. " You surely deserve great success, and you have my very best wishes."Miss Sw,ft, - * AU sick women would be wise if they would take Lydia E* Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and be welL THE PEELS. Judge. With majestic grace the stately ship cleft her way thru the fog. All, y - ^ , BECOGNIZED IT, v? .- - : - ... Judge. : - " "This." smiled the fond young wife as she passed a plate of desert to her husband, "is cottage puddlpg. .1 made it myself.-? The man tasted it. "I'd have known it was cottage puddinsr." be asserted. "You would?".she asked, delighted.. - "Yes. I can taste the plaster and the wall paper. What did you do with the shingles and the bricks for the chimney?" indeed,waso happiness oboard. Suddenly peel after peel and* hailed light and a tu s t her Sid e "too you need assistance? of the tug. "No,"' askedththesteamern captai owT? re ^ the . ca P ta, n o ' e , fhi^ i y theB e country escnrsionists throwing their banana peels overboard." * WITHOUT DRUGS Hyomei Medicates the Air You - Breathe, Kills the Germs and Cures the Disease. Hyomei cures catarrh thoroly and permanently, because it reaches the smallest air cells in the head, throat and lungs, kills the germs causing the disease and drives it from the system Hyomei goes to the root of the dis ease, destroys the cause, and makes permanent cures which can be ef fected in no other wajK Breathe it for a few minutes four times a day and benefit will be seen at once, Con tinue this treatment for a few weeks and Hyomei will have cured you. The Hyomei breathed thru the neat pocket inhaler furnished with each outfit mingles with the air you breathe. It is a local and direct treatment for eradicating till catarrh germs in the mucous membrane and tissues and in this way cures catarrh in any part of, the system. Used in connection with Hyomei Balm it lias been successful in curing the worst and most deep-seated cases of ca tarrhal deafness. The complete Hyomei outfit costs $1.00 and comprises an inhaler, a bottle of Hyomei and a dropper. The inhaler will last a., lifetime ana ad ditional bottles of Hyomei can be ob tained for 50c. Stronger than any claims that can be. made in an advertisement, is the fact that Voegreli Bros., corner Henne pin and Washington avenues, will give their personal guarantee with every Hyomei outfit they sell to re fund the money if the purchaser can say that Hyomei has not givsn satis faction. B CURED get just as good for $3.50. !J*AWS 'iss Alice Bailey, of Atlanta, t^lls how she was permanently cured of inflammation of the ovaries, and escaped the surgeons knife, by the use of Lydia E* Pinkham's Vegetable Compounds The universal indications of the appi'oach of. woman's great enemy, inflam- mation and disease of the ovaries, are a dull throbbing pain, accompanied by a sense of tenderness 'and heat low down in the side, with occasional shooting pains. On examination it may be found that the region of pain will show some swelling. This is the first stage of inflammation of the ovaries. "DEAK MRS. PINKHAM:I wish to express my gratitude for the restored health and happiness Lydia E . Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound has brought into my life. " I had suffered for three years with terrib le pains at the time of ALICE BAILEY, Another woman saved frbni a surgical operation by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Bead what she says : gl^S^^^^^^^^^ 50 "North Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga. '"DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:I you enough for what your Vegetable Com pound has done for nie. If it had not been for your medicine, I think I would have died. as longa,s I live, and also recommend the. same to anyone suffering as I "Was." MRS. MINNIE OTTOSO N, Otho* Iowa. "I will tell you how I suffered. I could hardly walk, was unable to sleep or eat. Men struation was irregular. At last I had to stay in my bed, arid flowed so badly that they sent for a doctor, who said I had in flammation of the ovaries, and must go through an operation, as no medicine couldhelp me, , *^2g *r cannot thank butreceived I coul nolittl t do that. 4 d a e book of yours, and after reading it, I concluded to try , Lydia E . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I am now a well woman. I shall praise your medicine HOME THKITST. Chicago News. Smith1 wonder whj your friend Filclier got mad last night when I asked him to take a drink? TonesHow did you put the invitation? SmitliWhy. I merely said. 'Tilcher, won't you take som&thlng?" JonpsThat explains it. You see. he's a klep tomaniac and he doubtless thought you were get ting to personal. Jegal Shoes appeal strongly to the young man who wants style and who must have wear. He gets more style in Regals at $3.50 than he can get in any other shoe xinder $12 a pair. T^ And he gets good solid wear as '^^ell. '"I:,.' 4A third sort of man buys Regal shoes chiefly be- cause they wear wellthey give more serviceable wear , per dollar of cost than any other shoe at any price, and they are comfortable every minuteyou don't have to break them in. v. *.The Regal proposition should appeal to every merchant and manufacturer because it is based on ' economy of production and low cost of handling and selling. It is sensible and susceptible of plain proof. '* 1 A success like this cannot be built on super-heated. atmosphere. Investigate and you will surely w^ar . y Thr it/S fk(\ DAltol Qfftp&it' 20 of them In Greater Nqw York, where the 1 nCTC arp O U KCgai OlOrCS, in our .Minneapolis and St. Paul sttrea at thi same tim as in the New York stores. Other dealers st the same styles a year later. 520 NIoollet AVonue. *, " MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. '. a.rf*.. ST. PAUL, MINN.- '".'_ -^.':-" - " -Another man who. wears Regal * shoes is the business man who can well afford to pay any price he pleases for his shoes, but whose business instinct-*-the sense that has made him rich, will not per mit him to pay $12 when he can - H - yE THAT PROWJE.& s-.'.yi atylts originate. The tiew stylssare ona1* w Cor. Wabasha and 6th 3tM-'-!'