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legal notices. IN 1’ K' 'HATH MiMTi'WiK-CorsTV C’ornr. In the matter of the of Michael Mullins deceased. To all whom it may conaern: Letters testatmentary on said estate o t Michael Mullins ha vine been issued to W illiam Mullins on the 6th iiav of January A I). 1903 ami six months from and after said day lung allowed and limited for creditors to present their claims for examination and allowance, notice la hereby Riven that the undersigned will, on the first Tuesdays of June and July A 1) IWH at the Prolate Office in the City of Manitowis' in said Connty. receive, examine and adjust all claims and demands of all persona against said deceased. Dated January 6, 1903. JOHN CHLOI’PEK. County Judge J P. Anderson. Atorney. Publish Jan. K, 15, 22, 29. Classified Ads. H. E. BAHR, D. 0. Osteopathic Treatments Gi>en Rheumatism and Chronic Diseases. Consultation free. Calls made. Ger man spoken. Hours- Ift to 12, 2 t.) 5. 7to H, Oyer Schmidtman’s store. Manitowoc. THE NATIONAL BANK. Manitowoc, Wisconsin. CAPITAL SIOO,OOO. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. L. D. MOSES. President. LEANOEU CHOATE. VI. e President FRED T. ZENTNEIt, Cashier i F< )R SALE A three horse power engine and boiler. Just the thing for a Hinall shop or for a farmer who wants a small power and a boiler that can be used for a steam cooker, water heater or other purposes. Will he sold cheap. Apply at the Pilot office. (IMI *’ Jws_ HOYER BROTHERS MERCHANT TAILORS. MANITOWOC WISCONSIN Dont Be Fooled* ©The market I. beliic llimdcd With worthlcaa Imitatluna o' ROCKY MOUNTAIN To protect the public we cat capeclalnllentlontoour Iriut mark, printed on every pack age. Dcsr-nd the genuine. For bale by all Druggists ■H CHICHESTER 8 ENGLISH Pennyroyal pills eOrlflinl ind Only (tfnulnr. IFF. Aiwa ■ rtiltbi* I ><!(<•> a I'furftst for CHICXIENTEK’H I m.I |s|( •i‘ UK l> ni CiuM trial it .<• I in •••iri • llh i. u* riM" I akt mi other. Kr fuat- Hn'ifr-ioui unl linltu Ilona Huy of j "iT llrtifgial nr n.nl l > •Uii.j>* f..r rartl'-ulitpi, I aMm<iiiluln *n I " If <|| f for I ii.llr*,” in Mrs- r f turn %lwll. 10.000 I aiirr mih S' lif Hr||HU I lilrh • l-r < hr mlml I *,, Mrndvii lUi m-ft Kitdliua Hijuarf, I‘llll.A , |*A. FOR THIRTY-NINE CENTS. Haw n \\ n* Illusion Alan \\ u Visile a Lawyer Without Much I 'a rm id i I > , A local busin< 1 s man, who was once the representative of one of the big mercantile agencies t-HU a story of how he became a member of the bar in the state of Virginia a number of years ago t-ays tlie Wa.-hington Star, lie had occasion to go to one of the inland counties of the stale to make an examination of the county records in. order to a set rtain the standing in the county of a number of country merchants. Upon teaching the rail road station he found it necessary to drive a distance of ten miles or more over a road which was a mote apol ogy for a highway. Reaching the v ounty scathe went to tin clerk’s office in the courthouse and proceeded to look over the records as he had done in many other places without any ob jection being i tli ted. While he was still on his first book, he was asked by one of the clerks if he was a mem ber of the bar. “Not in Virginia,” he answered, in a tone indicating that he wa. a,member of the bar elsewhere. “I’m sorry,” said tin young man. “but in this county it i.- against the rules for anybody other than a law yer to handle the hooks." It wa.s explained to the clerk that the b-gai talent in the firm's employ could not be found, and a the law yer lived more than two miles away, he would not hav e time to get him un less he mis.ted the next train. "There will be no trouble in nrrang icg the matter,” the clerk informed the Washingtonian. Entering a private room, the oath subscribed to by attorney s was admin istered, and a certificate -bowing Ho st ranger was a full-fledged lawyer wa -1 landed over to him. “What shall I do now?” the clerk was as.ked. “Pay the fee,” lie ansvvi red, “What is; the amount?” “Thirty-nine cents,” was the clerk’s prompt response. The money was paid and the man from Washington returned home and told bow be became a lawyer for the miuUl sum of 39 tout*. MILLIONS INCREASE, Wages Throughout the United States Show a Big Aggregate Advance. Great Ha 11 rund and Inilusirlal Incor porations Will Pay o Employra Over Thlrty-ElaM Million More Dollar* Than hnai Year. Wage-earners throughout t he United States will receive, by many millions, more money dining 1003 than ever be fore in the history of the country. In creases in wages granted by the great railroad and industrial corporations within tlie last two months show that during the coining year 056,W>0 em ployes will receive $38,350,000 more than they did last year. Negotiations are now in progress by which 110,000 employes of various railroads in the west and south will receive increases aggregating $1,000,000 annually. Scores upon scores of small corpora tions or business firms, each employ ing a few hundred men or women, have made wage advances. There is no way of computing exactly the number of these or the employes or the amounts involved, but a conservative estimate of the grand total of employes who will receive higher wages during 1903 is 900,000, and the sum involved will be in the neighborhood of $50,000,000. Kail road men receive a more gener ous share of the increase in wages than any other class of workingmen. There tire about 1,200,000 men em ployed by the railroads of the coun try, including everybody from the la borer up to the president. Of these 1,200,0iK) over 600,000, or more than one half, will receive on an average 10 per cent, more in wages than they did in 1902. Not only have direct increases in wages been granted, but other corpor al ions have devised schemes by which employes will be able to share substan t.ially in the profits. Stockholders in the railroads which have made the in creases will not suffer. In fact, the in dications a re I hat they will gain mate rially by the increase, ns it) was em ployed as a reason for advancing freight rates from to to 20 per cent. GREAT INCREASE IN RENTS. The I’roprrly of the Crown In London Now llrliia* In l.nrKe Sum* of Money. Among the great ground landlords in London the crown is one of the g'i a lest, owning properties in various 1 *arls of Ihe capital yielding in ground rents $2,300,0(10 per annum. Fifteen years ago the estates pro ■lni '-d >i,oo(),ooi); but many leases have fallen in within that time, and the in jreased rents have been exacted fur renewal lines or for new leases. Jlif < mlton hotel is a striking in stance of the increased value of ground in lyondon. Formerly the site on which the hotel stands was held from the crown for a ground rent of $: 1,500 per iinniifli; now $21,000 y i arl \ has to he paid. In IS'.ui Karl Spencer, when renew ing lln lease of his house in St. James’ place, had to pay sl,llOO per annum in place of $l5O under the original lease, while Lord Salisbury, who up t lsi)s paid only SSO for the garden of his house in Arlington street, has his ground rent raised to $230, which is still far from exorbitant as ground rents go. In recent years judicious invest ments in ground rents on behalf of the crown have been made, and when all exi ling old leases fall in and come to be renewed, it is ex)M-eted that more t hun $5,000,000 per annum w ill be re alized. tyUICK TRIP AROUND WORLD. Aiislrljin O litem I Hn)n That It \\ 111 lie I'liMilitr ,\r( Ie r la Aeeaui lilixli Journey In i''orl.v !>), The director of the sleeping cur company of Austria says a journey around the world in the course of the next year may be accomplished in to days. When the rails of tin Si berian line are all relaid, it will be pm- ilde oft the first through trains to go from Moscow to Irkutsk in six day-, and from Irkutsk to Vladivos lock of Port Arthur in three days. The lime table around the world will then be; Paris to Vladivostoek, I t days; to Yokohama, 3 days; to Van couver, 13 days; to New York, via the Canadian Pacific railway, 4 days; to Cherbourg, (I days, and to Pans in less than half a day. Director Nagelmackers says he is now receiv ing letters from Peking by way of Siberia in from 30 to 33 days, INCREASE IN LUNATICS. Th* To In I NvMnhiT of I pforha muli’i in I ult|*d li inl**l ohi in lIMI2 The lunacy returns of Kngland show an appalling increase during thi last generation and a half. The number of registered lunatics in the I riled Kingdom in 1851) was 47,1)03; in 1003 the number had increased to 148,031, of the e 110,7111 being in I '.upland alone, where the yearly In erea e Wot 1 out about 3,000 victims. The official view Is that the increase is more important than real; that the ease is rather one of accumula tion; that if there be an increase it is not out of proportion to the in creuse of population. *ll Hr ha on for *slrldc*> Another man him killed himself be cause he feared that he was going to hoc his mind. In most of these •:oi s, say: the Chicago Chronicle, tin decca>cd had mighty Hub mind t o lose. THE FLOWER OF THE ORIENT. Courtesy and Addendlveneaa of the Japanese Araiing Them selves la ChurmluK. It is still true that westward ihe course of empire takes its way, but eny one who disdains the teachings of the east must be n superficial stu dent of human life and mannerr, says Youth’s Companion. A company of Japanese, a baron and baroness with their suite, have been visiting the United States for flip study of certain commercial con lions. As they sailed away on a great ocean-liner they showed to marked advantage among the throng of American and English tourists. They were short, swarthy, plain of feature, as we count plainness, save for one extremely pretty young woman. Hut they had the manners of great nobles. They were gentle of bearing considerate of the claims and the pleasures of others, low-voiced, unconscious—or seemingly uncon scious—of rude stares or noisy com ment. \ 'lheir courtesy among themselves was beautiful to watch. It was no ticeable that the radiant girl was not more devotedly attended by the men than were the middle-aged wom en, who had no slightest pretension to beauty. Among the crowd of loud-speaking, pushing, self-satisfied dwellers in tin’s western hemisphere this little group of easterners were like some white, still bloom of one of their own exquisitely blossoming trees—• the final product of ages on ages of the cultivation that forgets notiiing, omits nothing that may enhance the charm of social life and intercourse. METEORS MAY END WORLD. TJierr* App Many Tnavpllnx Thpouiih Space t llnlp of Hundred Mllpm Second. The earth is moving l around the snn at the velocity of 1H miles a second, while the sun, with nil its attendant planets, is being hurried on toward the great fiery constellation of Her cules at a far greater velocity. The very fact that small meteors exist proves the possibility of the existence in space of meteors of inconceivable magnitude—even great, black, dead worlds may lie in our path, like break ers in tbe path of a ship. Fifty miles a second is not an un usual velocity for heavenly bodies, and some are known to move at a speed even in excess of 100 miles a second— -500 times the speed of a rifle ball. Small meteorites, which reach the earth at a velocity of from 120 to 00 miles u second, are instantly consumed by the friction generated witli the at mosphere. Large meteors, however, occasionally reach I lie earth, escaping destruction from their si/.e, but are found to have their surfaces fused from heat generated by the passage through the atmosphere. Although it is not probable, says the Pittsburg Qa/elte, still it is possible that the earth may some time encoun ter such a shower of small meteors, perhaps in the form of a comet, that the heat of combustion from friction with our atmosphere and the poison ous gases thereby generated might de stroy all terrestrial life. GREAi. WEALTH OF BASLE. toviinft Clly Im lh* Ith'lifAt of l(* Size lu Kuropr If >ot in 4 In* \\ oriel. The richest city in Europe and prob ably in the world is Easel or Jlasle, as it used to appear in the school geographies in Switzerland. The re turns published by the lax administra tor show the assessed valuation is more than $ 110,000.000 and the total population is 134,000, an average of more than $1,400 for each man, wom an and child in the city. The assessed valuation of Basel cijuals the total rev enue of the 88,000 houses and buildings in Paris, says the New York World. Of the 131,000 inhabitants of Basel, there are iso w ho are rated as million aires. Inasmuch as the amount is reckoned in France this means that the wealth of these 180 persons ex ceeds $300,000. There are 175 who have between SIOO,OOO and $300,000; 170 who have SIOO,OOO and 805 have from $30,000 to SIOO,OOO. Within 15 \ ears the wealth of Basel has increased $00,000,000, and the population has al moi,t doubled, which is a most remark able showing for a town that is 1,500 years old. It bus always been famous. It was th' important stronghold of 11 el vet ins in the elev ent h cent ury, aml Erasmus died there in the sixteenth century. Mexican Military ( rllle*. Crilies within and without the Mex ican army must henceforth be care ful about the remark* regarding the military establishment of that coun try. The penal code has lately been so amended that it will cover all stieh criticisms in the broadest possible manner, under the head of "insults, defamation and calumny," and the lightest penalty inflicted for such offense is two months in prison. This new law is especially directed against the newspapers, which have lately been sharply criticizing the conduct of military attaint in the neighbor ing republic. Hr frenliinent tar B|o-ker. It is a custom in the Belgian parlia ment, when a member is making a long speech, to be supplied with brandy as a beverage, at the expense of the government. No AViil.tllnit In line non Ayres. Any person caught whistling in I lie streets of Buenos Ayres is liable to be arrested. The police alone have the right to whittle. ALL FROGS GOOD TO EAT. There <*mn. (o He Xo Special Variety for EaitluK. Hut the Toada Are Barred. The demand for frogs is great. It has increased with the years until now at almost every banquet of importance the dainty is on the menu. All of the larger dining-places use from six to ten dozen per day. Of these creatures, which according to a scientific paper, are waiting to be classified by law as to whether they are fish or animals— just as women had to wait for centu ries to find out whether or not they had souls—there seems to be no es pecial variety for eating, says a Ran Francisco exchange. They are caught anywhere, and, as a small boy said; “All frogs are good to eat if they are not toads.” Boys and girls with nets much like those used in catching butt erfliea, only much stronger, can be seen making for the small streams and ponds that spot the fields about San Francisco. The average s*nn!l boy is an expert in catching, killing and dressing the pal atable creatures. It is no unusual sight to see away off in the field from the car line a jolly little bonfire around which a few sturdy young sons of America are busy preparing a feast. They broil the tender white flesh, which they sprinkle with salt, and baste with a bit of butter, carried perhaps in a cinnamon can in a pocket along with fishhooks, keys, marbles and string. The frogs may not lie served on silver shells; they may be garnished only with a spray of fresh watercress, but 1 wager they are en joyed as much by the youngsters, who are their own chefs and waiters, as a similar dish otherwise cooked and served would be by grown-up bewhis kered epicures. WOMEN IN JOURNALISM. They Start In nn Small IViyand Have to Work Vf% Hard to Gala Advancement. Said a clever woman, whose signa ture is seen daily in one of New York’s lending papers: “When I came to this city I did general house work in journalism. That is why I am a housekeeper-in-chief to-day. You’ve got to scrub floors before you can become superintendent of scrub bers. In plain English, I slaved to gain my present position. I posed models for illustrations, and, if-the models failed, I posed myself. When anyone disappointed the editor, I was behind the door ready to pop out and step into the breach. When people talk of my weekly salary in three figures ns if it were a gift of the gods, I long to tell them of the days when a ten-dollar assignment meant my earnings for two weeks.” At a recent gathering of women who held edit(i£ial positions it was found that nearly every one in the rom had started at a salary of ten dollars or less a week, says Woman’s Home Companion. One had been obliged to work a month for noth ing, just to convince the editor that a woman reporter recognized a news item as quickly as did a man. A MIGHTY AUTOCRAT. The Power of Ihe Tr of All the Hu a too Ml-I'reva Ulna in IIIm W l<lc Domain. No one can grasp the fundamental state of things in Hussiu without real izing that there the will of the czar is as the will of (iod. His land ami his subjects arc his, to dispose of as he may. In a Russian battle, not so long ago, the artillery, imperatively needed in front, was stopped by a deep ditch. The soldiers (lung' themselves in until Ihe ditch was full, and the artillery galloped over their bodies, says Yout b's Companion. In Ihe world of business it is quite the same. A Russian administrator was discussing witli Sir Henry Nor man the military capabilities of the Trans-Siberian railway, and Norman said; “There wouldn’t be rolling stock enough to convey masses of troops in a short time." “Every engine and carriage in Rus sia would be put there if necessary,” was the answer. “But that would disorganize the whole commerce of the country, and bring tens of thousands to ruin.” “You don’t understand," said the official. "If the czar gave the word in take every railway carriage in Rus sia, and run it across the Siberian rail way and throw it into the China sea at the end, who should prevent him?’” Mice In Her llait. A New Vnrk street cur incident a few days ago should furnish a dread ful warning to women who wear last year’s hats. A tolerably young ami charming woman boarded a subur ban ear mi the other side of the river, anil after having seated herself dis covered that her hat was alive. The next instant saw the millinery on the floor and ihe woman standing on the tlniir with skirts lifted rather iiulo eorniislv high. Four mice scampered around the floor of the car in grefit consternation at having been diirpos sessed of their tenement. After the mice were killed the woman explained that the hut was an old one which sh had not worn for a year. Mimlril Ballot Box. A French genius has invented a novelty in the form of a musical box. t his instrument plays popular tunes at intervals fur the amusement of electors while the polls are open, who will ibus be persuaded not to neglect to vote. When flic hundredth paner lias been dropped In the instrument will play a certain tune. The two hundredth will start a second and different melody, and so on. WHEN INDIANS FEASTED. The? Had Mead and Vegetable* Id Great Variety In Aboriginal Tinea. What did the Indians eat? Gabriel Thomas writing 1 in 1696 tells up that “they live chiefly on Maze or Indian Corn roasted in Ashes sometimes beat en boyl’d with Water, called Hominie. They have cakes, not unpleasant; also Beans and Pease, which nourish much, but the Woods and Rivers afford them their provision; they eat morning and evening, their Seats and Tables on the ground.” Mr. C. C. Abbott tells in “Travels in a Tree-Top” of other veg etable foods known to the Indians; the roots of the golden club, arrowleaf and ground nut, besides various ber berries and nuts. It is well known, says Youth’s Com panion. that extensive orchards were planted by these people. It may be added that, in all probability, the tu bers of that noble plant, the lotus, were used as food. It is clear that the Delawares were meat-eaters. It needs but little dig ging on any village site to prove this, and from a single fireplace deep down in the so! 1 have been taken bones of the elk, deer, bear, beaver, raccoon, musk rat and gray squirrel. The remains of deer were largely in excess, and as this statement holds good of every village site of the In dians, doubtless they depended more largely upon the deer than upon all the others. If individual tastes varied as they do among us, we have certainly sufficient variety here to have met every fancy. THE AMERICAN GIRL. She !■ Adaptable to an Aalonlahltin Degree and In Unharmed by Self-Co nne louan (na. The American girl is admired and liked at home and abroad, because she is the happiest, healthiest ami friend liest of girls. Usually unharmed by any self-consciousness, she is not apol ogetic and morbidly sensitive, as are many girls brought up in the close, conventional air of European civiliza tion. She likes the world, and is alive to everything beautiful and good in existence. She is easily pleased, and her unstudied, fresh enjoyment of sim ple pleasures gives happiness to every one around her by its simple, whole some expression through her face, fig ure and voice, says Woman’s Home Companion. American girls, when you study them critically, are not more beautiful than English or French girls, but some how an American girl always con trives to make a pretty picture of her self, and neither she nor anyone else can explain how she does it. She is adaptable to an astonishing degree, and she can dress for a walk, an out door game, a dinner or a ball sons to make the impression that in each par ticular garb she is at her best. This power to change her appearance so as to look almost like another person is one of the Americangirl’schief charms, and she owes it to her keen apprecia tion of the people and circumstances around her. She has imagination and intuition, and a genius for titling her self to the hour. WASH THE BANK NOTES. Treaomry Official Ailvlki>m Bankers <o Clean Them nidi Soup •ml Water, “If the bankers of the country only knew the great difference a lit tle soap and water makes in a dirty bank note there would be more clean money in circulation,” said a treas ury official recently. “If you have never seen the operation, just spread a soiled note out upon a marble slab and use a small brush that has been well soaped, and go to work scrub bing, lightly, of caurse. lint a few strokes is necessary to secure a clean note. I give my persona) attention to all the paper money brought into my household, and I tell you I feel re paid for the little work it causes. “I can see every reason why there should be a person employed in the banking houses for this particular duty,” continued the official, accord ing to the New York Mail and Ex press. “Certainly the neglect in do ing so gives ample cause for com plaints from the patrons concerning the dirty, oily notes that arc too fre quently handed to them. They may be full of germs, which, of course', arc dangerous; and this risk could be easily eliminated by the simple use of soap and water.” AMMONIA FOR BURGLARS. A Drooklyn Drufftrlal’a Kneonnlep SuKKealn • W eapon W hich lie coaiea Popular. A druggist in Brooklyn was held up in his store and happened to have a gluts of ammonia on the counter which he dashed into the visitor’s face, and the fellow ran, smashing through a glass door, doing himself great mis chief. He had a companion so amazed he hesitated when a second glass of the elixir hit him squarely in the nose with another dose of the aromatic fluid and paralyzed him with pain and terror on the spot, so that he was taken a helpless prisoner. The drug gist advertised bottles of liquid fire prepared for burglars, and the med icine became fashionable, says a re cent report. The holdfast robbers were for awhile discouraged. The burglar bomb ought to be prepared for action by an enterprising firm, the bottles of assorted sizes and used ac cording to directions, which might be blown into the glass. The bunks should be equipped with the bomb. They are at sheet range much more certain to go to the right spot than pistol shut*. DR. TURBIN Of Berlin, Germany, the Expert Specialist and Surgeon Who haa visited Manitowoc for the past SIX YEARS, Once a Month, will again be in Manitowoc* Friday, January 30th AT THE WILLIAMS HOUSE. DR. TORRID, Tit Specialist CURES ALL CHRONIC CASES Why? Because be gives his entire attention to these cases. All Cases He Undertakes Guaranteed. VnilNin MFN I' you are troubled with IvICIe nervous debility, stupid ness, or are otherwise unfitted for buslnes' or study, caused from youthful errors or eicesses, you should consult this specialist at once. Don't delay until too late. MIDDLE-AGED AND OLD M AMKINIH There are thousands of you IvlrtlvUXllxLf troubled with weak, aching backs and kidneys and other unmistakable signs of nervous debility. Many die of this diffi culty, ignorant of the cause. The most obstinate oases of this character treated with unfailing success. A| ( DKFACFt delicate nature—ln (laminations and kindred t-oubleg—quickly cured 'without pain or inoon t science. fAT A DDH which poisons the breath. 1 1 stomach and lung* and paves the way for Consumption, also Throat, Liver, AfJDUf DAIUITC I Ist—The doctor gives his IDH ruin 10 : 2 d—All business Id—Names and pictures uevtr published uuless are his friends. WRITP y°" troubles If living away from oltr. Thmsands cured at home by correspondence QHIIu anil medicine sent as directed. Absolute secrecy in all professional dealings. Address all Utters, giving street and number plainly. Send stamps for list of questions. DOCTOR TURBIN, 103 Randolph St, Chicago, lit THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY... of the United States. W. E. TEN BROECK, General Mgr. for Wisconsin and Northern Michigan Suite 602-606 Fabst Building. MILWAUKEE. WIS. "Strongeit la 1h World.” A Good Citizen Provides for his wife and children. Yes —and he goes further He provides for his widow and orphans He provides for his ow n old age Life Assurance forms an ideal investment for th* man of family The Equita-ble 5 per cent. Gold Bonds 111 tbe want. Let me tell you about tbem. A. J. SCHLOERB, District Agent. MANITOWOC, SHEBOYGAN Talk and I’rlnt. English is particularly prolific in slang, perhaps because it has lost the capacity to make compounds, says the London Acadamy. Cast your net in any sea of talk and you will bring up words that have not yet been clothed in calf, and, indeed, are scarcely respectable; but they may yet found families. It was, we be lieve, a bus driver who with a side shout christened the central London railway as the “two-penny tube.” AuU now “tbe lube” is literary. The Pilot for job work DAILY EXCURSIONS TO CALIFORNIA Through first- class and Tourist Sleeping Cars to points In California and Oregon every day In the year from Chicago. 5 PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS EVERY WEEK. LOWEST RATES, SHORTEST TIME ON THE ROAD, FINEST SCENERY, VARIABLE ROUTES. You can leave home any day In the week and travel In tourist cars on fast trains through to the coast. For descriptive pamphlets and full Information Inquire of nearest agent. Chicago & North-Western Railway. Go to The Pilot for Job work. Business Men I realize the fact I that Dr. Turbin can be depended I on to fulfil bis I proJnlses In everj respect, and the j doctor has I among his patronJ seme of the I most prominent I business men, I who are his besl friends. I Heart, Kidney, Bladder and all conatitutlona! and internal trouble*; also Rupture, Flies Fistula, Hyspeps'a, Diarrhoea and all disease! of the stomach and bowels treated far in ad vaoce of any institution in the country. BLOOD AND SKIN JJr.VVIK} Scrofula, Tumors, Tetter. Eczema and Blooc Poison thoroughly eradicated leaving the *yi tem in a strong, pure and healthful state, I AHIFC If you arc suffering from persistent IJSDIL3 Headache, Painful Menstruation. Uterine Displacements, Pains In Back, and feel as if it were impossible for you to endure your troubles and still be obliged to attend your household and social obligations. There are many women doing this to-day. However, a jreat many have taken treatment of this spe cialist, and ho can refer you to those who have been cured by him. Qive the doctor a call. He can give all the encouragement in the world and will cure you if you trust yourself to bis care. personal attention tc each Individual case, on a professional basis and strictly confidential, requested to do go. 4th—The doctor's patients Dangerons Aeqiilelcrnrr. “What was the cause of Yawdvill going to the hospital?’’ asked Fu tilities. “An Irish friend was telling him that the Hibernians of the country were going to put a stop to actors impersonating them on the stage. Vawdvill agreed with him.” “Hut that didn't eaus'e the fight, did it?” “Yes. The Irishman said 1 that the actors didn’t do the Hibernians jus tice—and Vawdvill said no comedian could. When he came to he was in the ambulance.”—Cincinnati Commer cial Tribune. Knew the Sex. Mrs. Shajicleigh--I am looking for something that will enable me to keep my skirts out of the mud. Floorwalker —Yes, ma’am. You will find the fancy hosiery in the base ment. —Chicago Daily .News, CITY LOTS. We have desirable residence lots on easy terms. MANITOWOC LAND & SALT CO. Dealers in Coal, Wood and Masonry Supplies. Quay Street, East of Eighth St PHONE 37