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THE ARGUS. Published Dally and Weekly at 1824 Second avenue. Rook Island, I1L En tered at the postofflce as aecond-clasa matter. , BY THE J. W. POTTER CO. TERMS Dally, 10 cents per week. Weekly, $1 per year In advance. .' All communications of argumentative character, polltlcul or religious, must have reul name attached for publica tion.. No such articles will be printed over fictitious signatures. . ., - Correspondence solicited from every township 'In Rock Island county. Thursday, April 23, 1908. Several beautiful unused designs for municipal water wagons are now for sale cheap. ' One of the most absorbing features of this millinery eclipse is the prices which are. almost as large as the hats. When a woman is using a gun it is a. poor time to do any innocent by htanding. as was proven to a Pitts burg man who now wishes she had shot at him and hit the dog. A Saline, Kan., woman thought the assessor, when he called, was a news paper reporter, and gave the valuation of her household effects at $4,000. When she discovered her error, alio reduced the estimate to $250. "Why Is a man beautiful only in youth?" asks Klla, Wheeler Wilcox. The Houston Chronicle rebels at the suggestion and says: "Surely there are some old boys who are beautes." The Springfield Register suggests that ITnele Joe Cannon belongs In this class-. Speaker Cannon has put an end to nil hope for relief' from the paper trust by offering a resolution provid ing for an inquiry into the subject, by a commit tee. This comes after the inquiry has been, made and the facts all put before congress. There -is a moral here that even republican news papers ought to be able to discern. The fact thai the house of repre sentatives is not a deliberate body has long been conceded; but, under Its newest rules, revised and approved by Speaker Cannon, the Indianapolis News considers that "not deliberate" Is not expressive enough, and dubs it "a predigested body." iki IClhicM of Borrowing;.' - i V r A dispute Involving the ethics of borrowing is going on in Pratt. Kan. During the winter a woman borrowed of one of her neighbors a dozen eggs, which at the then-going market price were worth 24 cents. Prom forgetful ness or other reasons she did not re pay the loan for three months, and when she brought back a dozen eggs which are now quoted in the market at 12 cents; the other day. the borrow er refused to take them as equivalent for the loan and demanded two dozen. The borrower insisted tfcat the consid eration of money value did not enter Into the matter at all; she had bor rowed eggs and' was returning eggs, Kays the Springfield News. The wo men in the neighborhood are taking tildes, and their husbands are pretend ing " to, so that in Pratt, Kan., the burning question is ,wben is a dozen eggs not a dozen eggs. Most -.city housekeepers nowadays arc deprived, of the joys of ruuning out to the neighbors and borrowing a handful of salt, a-enpful of flour, or enough butter or milk to do for the family breakfast, but there is enough of borrowing still going on even in the city to make the question as to which party is right in the Kansas dispute of some interest as settling a nice point in the ethics of borrowing be I ween families. : Governor Johnson in Demand. Governor Johnson is in the greatest demand an over the country as a speaker, but his duties as the chief executive of Minnesota prevent him from accepting but few of , the invita tions he receives. Duty, however, call ed him to deliver the oration at the dedication of the Minnesota monument on Shiloh battlefield in Tennessee on April 11, and since then he has deliv ered several addresses. He will be here shortly and is assured of a warm welcome. As the friends of Governor Johnson are'pnshing him for the dem ocratlc nomination, his speeches are being spread broadcast by the press His apearance here, It Is understood. "will be in a strictly non-partisan ca paelty. "Potatoes as Aid to Grass. ; New York City, it appears, is going into truck farming on ground that is worth $1,000,000 an 'acre." Everyone familiar with city parks will, have no ticed the difficulty experienced in se,-ouring- good grass.. Small ..boys and - large picnic parties. . city grime and incompetent gardeners are a few of .the explanations Indiscriminately glv ;en for. lawns that wither and turn i brown long before the dog days, but -ft appears, that the real "cause is none of these, but soil "exhaustion. Grow Ing ' grass year after year- is just as CTRAOES rlVg? C0UNCIL apt tojmpoverish the ground .'is grow ing grain or any other crop. The authorities of Central. park, New York, have -noted for. several .years that, In spite of every enort, the grass was going from bad to worse, and at last they -called in two experts from the department of agriculture at Wash ington to diagnose the case and pre scribe a remedy. The experts came, delved a bit, conferred a bit, and sol emnly announced "potatoes.';' Then to the surprised park officials the experts explained that the soil of the park had been exhausted by years of grass grow ing. Tlie ground could be resurfaced, of course, and the evil checked in this way by the expenditure of' perhaps $2,000,000 or so, but a crop or two of potatoes or corn preferably potatoes would do as weil. So New York is going into the po tato business and of course the Cen tral park tubers will be the finest ever grown. But that is not the point. New York, after attempting to run the en tire country, will now be forced to ho; its own row- laick in a landslide. Most Americans who read about the great mountain of anthracite coal re vealed by a landslide near Alberta Canon, in the Canadian northwest, were doubtless surprised at this re port, and many may quest ion its ac curacy. : There is good reason, however, to accept the report at its face value. Geological surveys conducted by the Canadian government and various private parties have disclosed the fact that on the eastern slope of the Canadian - Rockies, in the province of Alberta, there exists an undeveloped coal field probably much larger than the entire state .of Pennsylvania. Should only a fraction of the deposits prove to be of high grade and acces sible, the vast northwest districts of both Canada and' the United States would bo greatly benefited. In com bination with the enormous water power of mountain streams out there. the coal supply may, at some not dis tant day, fill those grain, cattle and timber lands with flour mills, packing houses, canning factories and lumber mills. - The landslide near Alberta Canon revealed the possibilities. DUSTIN FARNUM IS SUED Actor Mentioned in Gould Divorce Case Made Defendant by Wife. New York, April 2.5. Dust in Far- r.um, the young actor who was men tioned by Howard Gould in his answer to the suit brought by his wife, Kath erine Clemmons Gould, for separation. is being sued by his wife, Agnes John ston Farnum. for absolute divorce. v The papers were handed 'to Justice Howling in the supreme court yester day and in response to the requests of counsel fcr both sides former Lieu tenant Governor M. Linn Bruce was appointed referee. Every possible ef fort to keep the- matter quiet was made, the style of the suit being "A. Johnston Farnum vs. D. Lancy Far num." The young leading man's mid dle name may be Lancy. but no one ever called him by it. "A. Johnston Farnum" is not at all suggestive of Mrs. Dustin Farnum. NEW LINERS ARE TO BE THE BIGGEST YET BUILT White Star Company Will Have Ves sels with Tonnage of 45,000 to 50,000. . . V Liverpool, April 23. The White Star Steamship company has announced that the keels of two of the largest steamships in the world would be laid down in the yards of Harland & Wolff at Belfast within two months. They will bo not less than 840 feet in,length with a beam of 78 feet. Their ton nage will be from 4 5,000 to 50,000. They will be fitted with both turbine and eciprocating engines and will have a minimum speed of twenty-one knots. THE NOISELESS GUN. Smokeless Weapon Is to be Tested at Sandy Hook. The United States government has completed arrangements with Fred Bangerter, Inventor of the new noise less and smokeless gun. whereby one of these -destructive machines is to have a thorough trying out at Sandy Hook, with the ultimate view of the guu being taken over by the ordnance department. . . This gun, which is fired by some mysterious power which the inventor declines to divulge, but which he sttys is neither powder nor other explosive nor compressed air, is capableof dis charging 2,000.000 bullets nn hour without recoiling or becoming " over heated and with absolutely no danger of bursting. After a two hour visit from Colonel Birnie aud Major Dickson of the army ordnance board, recently, at which the merits of the Bangerter guu were fully discussed, the two officers requested the Inventor to build one of his guus for a tryout at Sandy Hook. "Mr. Ban gerter recently confirmed the uews;at his home in Brooklyn. The new gun. he said, will be of such a character that for the preservation of life and property It can only be tested on the target range at the Hook. 1 am arranging now," said be."to build a gun that will Bend a half Inch ball a distance specified by Colonel Blrnle aud with sufficient velocity to kill or dangerously wound a man. Th , new gun will be made of steel and the parte will be perfect, so'that the gun cao be worked to the highest speed re quired to fulfill the maximum demands. The gun I have at present Is made of brass la all Its parts, aud some of the parts- are -worn, ; so severe have been the tests to which they have been sub jected. ; " "Brass is a much softer metal than' steel and will therefore not stand the work that steel -will. The bullets I use now are solid steel, and, belug much lighter than lead. 'are not capable of acquiring the velocity of the heavier metal by a large percentage. The bul lets that will be used in the real trial at Sandy Hook will be lead Incased in steel. They will be heavy enough to do the work proierly." The inventor said he told the officers everything about the-gun except the power which is used to discharge It. He said they talked a long while about it, but eventually admitted that they' could not even venture a conjecture as to the power. Mr. Bangerter made the interesting disclosure that the Russiau government may take over the new in vention if the United States does not show a disposition to move in the mat ter.' Said he: 'I know what I have. No individual can buy the secret, because it would take too rawli money to pay for it. Only a national government could af ford to buy such a thing, and I am not going to'diyulge the secret until I can get an assurance from a power able to compensate ine as I think I should be. I have had all kinds of offers made to Induce me to tell how I project those bullets, but i have also received a proposition from a wealthy promoter of New York city who proposes to go to Europe within a few weeks and lay the matter before Russia's war minister. This gentleman offers to pay his own expenses and to furnish $25,000 with .which to build a complete, gun, mounted mi an auto truck and equip ped with the necessary motive power to oterate truck aud gun that is, a hundred horsepower motor. He has transacted business with the Russian government and is well acquainted with high officials there." Other governments are also after the gun, according to the Inventor. He Is disposed to give the United States the first chance, he said, but he added: 'It Is the experience of all who have any invention to offer to the United States that the delay is disheartenlug. l nave nail an extensive cable corre spondence with . London, iu which 1 am offered $3,000,000 for the world's tight, provided the gun will stand the British .government test. A month's option y?as requested by cable, but out of 'courtesy to the chief of the United States war ordnance board I declined to give an option to the Englishman. I cabled him that I would consider the proposition. You see, there are several good reasons why I am anxious to get some kind of an intimation from Uncle Sam that he will do business If I can provide the gun I describe. Of course. even after the transaction reaches the stage where an appropriation is asked for, by General Crozier, It will take congress mouths if not years to pas upon It. and the delay might so mili tate against consideration . bv other powers rliatl may be prevented frdih making any kind of a deal with eitlier one of them." - No date has yet been fixed for the trial of the new gun at Sandy Hook. The new gun can be operated by two men. and one striking feature of It Is that, whereas it costs $20,000 to fire 1.000,000 bullets for the present serv ice guns, the total cost using the Ban gerter guh would be $10. Honor. For Noted Presbyterian. A. monument Is to ' be erected at Holdens Creek. Va., to the memory of Francis Makemie, who founded Pres byteriauism in the United States la 1706 and was first moderator of the general presbytery. EUREKA 1 Yes, I Have Found it at Last. . Found what? Why that Chamber Iain's SalvO'- cures . eczema and all manner of itching-of the skin. . I have been afflicted for many years with skin diseases. I had to get up three or four times every night and wash with cold water to allay the terrible itching, but since using this salve in December, 1905. the itchimr has stoD- oed and has not troubled me. Elder John T. Ongley. Rootville. Pa.. For sale-by air druggists. , . All the news all the time THE VROTJS. People Grow Thin and Weak BECAUSE NEW TISSUE IS NOT MADE AS FAST AS IT IS USED. THE INGREDIENTS OF FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINEr ARE THE EX ACT KIND OF FOOD ANn Mm i - . . . , w w a1- ISHMENT BLOOD AMD TISSUE'ARE MADE OF.' " " FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE IS FOR SALE BY T. H.THOMAS. Humor on? Philosophy By DUNCAN M. SMITH PERT PARAGRAPHS. When ycu find a man who la inclined to be quarrelsome with his fists, do yourself the pleasure yf introducing him to your pet enemy. Worry may have Lil!-d a cat, but none of iu descendants wear the badge. It Ls usually left to his wife to get out the injunction atralmit the lazv man. ' There may be plenty of room at the top, but the rental is too steep for most of us. Constant versatility and readjust ment Is the price of anything like peace. If you earn it. cook It and eat It the dinner is undoubtedly yourself good.' Where Its parents mind the baby all the time it isn't to be wondered at that the baby doesn't mind any of th.? time. Sympathetic people may have loose purse strings, but the purse is too apt to be empty. The Cheerful One. The optimist ls he who sees The side that's surely Bound to please. He always knows It might le worse And Injure more Ills heart or purse. A silver lining Trims his cloud. Though It may thunder Long and loud. , When he is haltered, In a wreck He s glad it didn't - - Break his: neck. The optimist May miss a meal And nothing in His pockets feel Like coins or thing That go to buy Of food a fine And large supply. No Job may be At his command His flattened wallet To expand Or furnish him With daily, bread. But still he.ifcnows He might be dead. ' - -. s The optlmlsf". i Is fine" to meef. It ls his hobby To keep sweet; But. knowing him, ' Don't be so rash . As to let down , And lend him cash. For the Minor. "He is oue of our minor po ets." "What do you think of his po ems?'' "Back to the mines for him!" The Only Way. "TIow . Is the best way to write a love letter?' "Go to the phone." "Yes." "Call her up." "Yes." "Tell her you are coming to see her." "Yes.,,, "Then make a bee line for the house." "But, hang It all, I said write a love letter!" "I know you did." Still Useful. "I would like to have on of the tar gets used by the fleet in their prac tice." "What do you want it for?" "To take home." "As n souvenir?'. . "No; as a sieve." The Sine Qua Non. "She is always so polite.M "Always?" -"Yes." "I seel What is it?" ' "What?" "Her favorite lie." Load For Hayrack. "What do you think new pring hats?" ... ' "Great 1 could only suggest one lm provement" . : "Suggest it." . . -"Kach lady should be provided with a light cart on which to haul the hat around." ' ; " When No One Is Looking. -Tou see the cowbov on the stare ( Strut round and strike a pose. "V ioes ne act that way aU the time I -Out home, da vnti .nnnntp? - l : Oh, no: he couldn't stand the atrlat Ue act lOca you and me ' Or like a common hired man 'l When no one's there to aee.. vMp j of the. v:;;:Pigt That Food " Every symptom of indigestion is due to undigested food. To food that ferments- and forms gas; to food that hardens and irritates; to food that decays and poisons. To stop those symptoms, let Kodol digest that food. We guarantee the action of Kodol. Please note the offer below. . ,. '. x We claim that Kodol does all , that a Wealthy stomach can do. That it digests any food, at once and completely. Please prove this at our risk. Eat what you need of the; food that you want,' and note bow Kodol acts. Note the absence of pain, of fermen tation, of gas. Don't doubt facts that mean a great deal to you, when they are easily proved. There are many ways to digest part of the food""T but Kodol alone digests all of It. Pepsin digests albumen, but not starch or- fat So the many digesters depending almost solely on pepsin are only partial helps. A complete digester must be a liquid, for some of the needed elements can't be given dry. They must be preserved in glass. . That is why Kodol is liquid, like the digestive Juices. The result is, its action is Instant. It even begins in the mouth, by starting the flow of saliva. The cure of indigestion requires, above all, that you relieve the stomach. Tonics and stimulants only spur It to action, like whipping a tired horse. Weak organs never gain strength by forcing. But digestion is necessary, else the food grows hard and irritates the stomach lining. It fer ments, and forms gas, and breeds germs. It de cays, and loads the blood with poisons. And all the food that fails to digest fails to nourish you. Your digestive powers- are bound to grow weaker so long as those condition? continue. Slergus Daily Sljort Story "Improving on Instructions." - By Taylor White. (Copyrighted, 1908, by the Associated Literary Press.) Ben Uur.yoii regarded with amuse ment if not approbation, the diminu tive applicant for the vacaut post of oflk-e boy. The lad's tluent talk, heavi ly flavored with the slang of the mo ment, was diverting even while it loosed his tiulitness for the place. "I'm afraid It's no deal. Llppy." he said, his tone tinged with kindly re gret "You don't quite (ill the bill." He turned back to bis desk, but a grimy hand grasped his coat sleeve. "Forget It boss." pleaded Llppy (he had confessed that to le the only name he knew). "I'iii In wrong. Get that? I dou't live wld me fader and mudder. but It's 'en use I ain't got none, see? What ef I do live In a lodgln house aud ain't gut uie pants pressed? I'll DON'T UEM3HUN IT, MUTTERED LIPPY. BACKING A WAT. be Joljnny on de spot and wort' a doz en dude kids. Len' me free Iron men and I'll be back here wld de glad rags jin a half hour. Is it a go? Give a rellera chanct. will yeri' Lippy tried hard to keep a stiff up per Hp. but the nervous twitching be trayed his anxiety, and there was a pleading look in the sharp greenish eyes, nunyon drew a nve dollar bill from his pocket and banded it to the !xy. " "It's a go." he agreed. "Now. far heareu's sake, get a decent looking suit! Dou't come back here looking like a prize fighter's sparring partner, and hurry up." With a muttered "T'anka" that was meant to be brusque, but which spoke. whole volumes of the boy's delight, Llppy sped from the office.; .. He was back within the prescribed half hour. A clean shirt and a paper collar had. replaced the tattered garment that once bad been his bod V coverine. A suit well worn, but clean, and a pair of (shoes described by Llppy as "new sec ondhand" completed the outfit Llppy was Installed. : . For a few weeks things went well in the Runyon office. Llppy learned the rudiments of a more conventional (speech, and his alertness brought many a smile of approval from Run- lyon. Lippy was Keeping nis promise to be "Johnny on the spot Then came a blue Monday, when all went wrong. Bunyon came to the (office with the temper of a bear. He oafsed Llppy with a, curt od and A weak stomach must have rest Treat it like a lame ankle. Don't tax it. Don't allow un digested food to disturb it. Let Kodol, for a little time, do the stomach's work. Then note how quickly nature cures, when it has the chance. Some people try to relieve the stomach by diet ing, but that means partial starvation. The body requires variety in food, and when you limit that variety you are robbing some part. That Isn't the way to gain strength. A person who suffers from indigestion needs nourishment. Needs it more than a well person. The right way is to eat the food you need, then let Kodol digest it Please don't judge Kodol by any other form of digester. In Kodol alone are all the needed ele ments brought into combination. . Nothing else does all that the healthy stomach will do. Noth ing else brings complete relief. Our Guarantee The power of Kodol is easy to prove. Ruy a large bottle, and ask for the signed guarantee. If it does all we claim, think what it means to you. If it doesn't, take the empty bottle back with the warrant, and your druggist will return your money. This offer applies to the large bottle only, and to but one in a family. That is enough to prove. Then please tell your friends what. a help you have found. " Kodol is prepared at the laboratories of E. C DeWitt & Co.. Chicago. The $1.00 bottle contains 2Vi times as much as the 50c bottle. (shut himself in the private otnee. whetfee presently, came a demand for the typewriter. Lippy reported that she had not yet arrived and pointed out that she still bad fifteen minutes Jgrace. But the hrteen minutes stretcn- cd to half an hour, aud still the gin 'had not come, while Kunyon's temper grew more savage. I Theu came a telephone message .Miss Blake had been married the day ! before and had gone on her honey moon. Her mother hoped that It would not Inconvenience her employer, but her fiance had been. ordered west and the girl bad accompanied him. What am I going to' do without .Miss Blake?" stormed Bunyon. "There are important papers to be got out I can't trust them to a public typ? .writer.". ; "Get auther girl." advised Llppy jsagely. "The man what makes the ma ( chines keeps girls in cold storage Phone him and he'll push oue down .here special delivery." j "No go." dlsseuted Kunyon. "I must have one In whose discretion I car trust The only recommendation those girls require is that they use the me ichlne." "Ain't joti th bep gamoosb to som- dame wit th hurry fingers?" suggest ed Llppy. "Your fren or your fren's jfren?" U tiny on started. , "it may do some good." he told him self. "It will show that I am not d'.s j posed to hold anger. Take this card and ask the lady if she can come down at once." he added to Llppy. handing the boy a card which be drew from his 'vest pocket. '. Llppy was out of the omce Mice a , whirlwind, and presently he was 'standing In front of a handsome bouse In the residential district debating with himself if - this could be the ad dress. Ills debate was short. To Llnny orders were orders. He climb ed the steps and soon was standing in the hallway, while the butler went off to find the girl. "You have a letter Crom Mr. Run yon?" she asked us Llppy was ushered into a room ail sweet smells aud soft toued colors. Lippy shook his head in a negative. "He didu't have no time to write." he explained. "He couldn't wait fr that. He told me to hot foot It up here and tell you he couldn't wait s'leveti sec r iids wlt'out you. You're to come down wit' me." ' "What's the matter?" she asked in astonishment "Mr. Hunyon is lu some trouble?"; "Up to his neck." declared Llppy. "Say, If you dou't get down In a hurry he'll go dead nutty. He was mss' bug house when -1 went away from there wit Bomethin f tell you." , . "Wait In the hall. I'll be right down." she promised, while her trembling hands toyed nervously with a ribbon. "1 I did not know it was so serious that he would take It" this way." - Serious!" echoed Llppy. . "I'll bet we find two cops and the ambulance doc In th" ptace If we don't get there pretty quick." .. - ine girl rang the bell for her maid. and Lippy went down to the front halt to spend a pleasant teu mluutes lu Im pertinent couyersatlou addressed to the butler with the delightful knowledge that the staid functionary did not dare hit back.. ; Tbeu the girl came' down the stairs looking eveu. more attractive In uer heavy furs. a,nd IJppy wonderiugly fol lowed ber luto the automobile that stood at the, curb. This sort of tje-. writer wan uew to uliuv .'.. The ride was all too short and .the girl pressed after bim' as Llppy raced down the hall and proudly threw oieu the door with a shrill "1 got ber. boss." Runyon came out of bis private office and baited as be looked at the girl. "You have come. Aline? You for give?" he asked hoarsely. "The boy said you were nearly dis tracted." she explained. "I should not have come if he bad not led me to be lieve that you were ou the point of committing some rash action." "1 sent him for that typewriter you recommended." explained Runyon. "My girl got married yesterday and left town, ihad the address of this girl of whom you had spoken. Lippy, let me see that card." Llppy produced the now battered pasteboard. It was one of Aline Bre val's own cards with a peuciled ad dress on the back, but the pencil mark were almost obliterated through fric tion with other papers. "I did not notice that the pencil ad dress was blurred out" explained Runyon. "1 suppose that Llppy did not even notice t he marks. He Is re sponsible for thetrouble to which you have been put But dear, eau't you see the hand of fate iu the develop ment? Won't you believe in the sincer ity of my penitence and forgive my ill humor?" Lippy. catching the drift of the re mark, searched the girl's face. His quick perception saw in ber clear eye the dawn of forgiveness long before his employer read his answer, and he plucked at Runyon's coat "Say. boss." he shrilled. "I'll go out and get me lunch." And as be departed be Innocently slipped the spring latch that these two. who were oblivious to all else than themselves, should uot be disturbed by the intrusion of boos agents or peddlers. It was an hour before he showed up again, and Runyon was working fever ishly at bis desk, while Miss Breval sat by the window enjoying the panorama of the city spread before ber gaze. Runyon handed bim a letter. "Take that to this address." be said smilingly. "It Is the address of the uew typewriter. When she comes, give ber these spt-itications to copy. 1 shall not be here when you get back, i shall not le back until tomorrow.' "I'm sorry I didn't get ber th first time." said Llppy hypocritically. "It's all right" assured Runyon as be added a five dollar bill to the envelope he still held out "You improved upon Instructions, and we. Miss Breval and myself, are very much obliged.'" . , "Don't menshun it" muttered Lippy. backing away, for Miss Breval was smiling upou bim. and the radiance of that smile abashed tbe buy's assurance for tbe first time In bis eventful young life. " The action of Kodol is instant. Take it after a meal, and indigestion stops. There is no other way to digest all foods, and give the stomach complete relief. Note, the guarantee. ' '' Don't Uoar - A - tT9 mm a w Brookf Aoptlaace I sew eleMtae 4ticoTtry wttn btomuie Mr ewk- !om tbtt arm th brakes Pru together and b:4a them h ton would a bro ken llmb It ebeototelr bold armly aad eomton aMr and saver slip; alwejt Uiht aad cool aad coaiormi to every mere meat of the body wltboat chaODCorbarUac. I make H to roar measure aod tend It to yen oa a etrlct gear aatee at aattafsctloaor money refaaded and I have pot my price ao low that anybody.rlch or poor, cab bar It- - BememberA make tt to joor order aead tt to joa tob wear it ana 11 n aoeeai eatmr yea. joa aend tt bacx to me aad I will refund nor moaeT. Tbe banks or ear reipoailUe dtliea In Maiahall will 111 you tbet Is th way i do baitaeeii elway ab lutely on the quare and I hire told to thoosaaaa of people this way for tbe peat fire year. Bemember, 1 ate no ealTea, no haraeaa. no ilea, no fake. 1 Jatt BlveyoaeatralKbtbastaeaidoalataraaaunable price. C BROOKS. 1132 Bmk Bids., MaiietO, Mich.