Newspaper Page Text
LEGAL NOTICES. IN PROBATE Manitowoc County Court. In the matter of the estate of Katberenn Erickson, deceased. tin reading and filing the petition of Henry Mulholland. Executor of the estate of said deceased for the adjustment and allowance of bis administration accountiand tbe assignment of the residue of said estate tosnch other iiersons as are by law entitled to the same:) It is ordered, that said account Is- examined adjusted and allowed at a general term of said court to Is- held at the office of the county judge in the city of Manitowoc, in said county on Tnesdav. thesthday of May, A . It is further ordered, that upon the adjust ment and allowance of such account by this court as aforesaid, the residue of said estate by the further order and judgment of this court, assigned to such persons as are by law entitled to the same. ..... It is further ordered, that notice of the time ami place of examination and allowanceof such account, and of tin- assignment of the residue of >aid estate Is- given to all persons interest.si by publication of this order for three sue- -s --dive weeks, lief ore said day. in the Mamtow.s* Pilot a weekly new-sjiaiH-r printed and published at the city of Manitowoc and state of Wiscon sin. Dated April Ist, IWO. By the Court. JOHN ('HU lI’PEK. Comity Judge. A. E. Hougen. Attorney. Publish April -. 9, W- IN PROBATE Mamt-w, I NT* COCBT * In the matter of tho estate of .J e Hammond deceased . n.n On reading and filing the petition of Bell. Hammond, administratrix of tho estate of said deceased for the adjustment and allowance o her administration a-count (and the assignment of the residue of said estate to such other per sons as are by law entitled to the sain*-). It is orden-d that-aid account in-examined, adjust.si and allowed at a sia-.-ial term of said court to Is- held at the office of the county judge in the city of Manitowoc, in said county on Tuesday, the USth day of April. A It’is further ordered, that upon the adjust ment and allowance of such account by this court as aforesaid the result!.• of said estate lie by the further order and judgment of his court assign.sl te such persons as a-e by law entitled t<> thi> ramo , It ih further crdcriKl. that notice of the time mid ida'-.- nf examination ami allowance of Hindi account, ami of tin- assignment of tin- residua of sail! dilate lie ttiveii t all IHTSOIIH inteniHted by publication of this order for three su.-ces* ivVweekH. In-bin- alii day. in the M a 111 to, Woe Pilot, a weekly newspaper printi-d and imhliati eil at the city of Manitowoc and Htato of v Ih conain . , liat.-d March tilth, IJot. By the Court. JOHN i'Hl.i iI’PEK, County Judge Puh Mar M. Apr 5, 12. IN PROBATE Manitowoc Cocntv Court I' In the matter of the nutate of A. 1) M | nreaiiiniMi filing the i-tltion of Eli/aU-th Midendv. administratrix of the i-alate of aald de.-ea-.HI for the adjiiHlimmt and allow anee of her admintatration account (and the assignment of th- residue of said eHtate to such Other iH-raona as are by law entitled to the Kamo). , , . , It in onli*ri*fl th.it Njiifl account In* cxaixiin<*<l adjusted and allowed at a apodal term of aald court to I-- held at the office of the county judge n thi ■ •j of Man t/iwo< In mtd county on Tie la th day ol April A U It'ia further orderiil that iiimui the adjust mont and allowance of stn-h account by this court as aforesaid, the residue of -aid estate U liT the further order and judgment of this court assigned to Much [lemons as are hy law entitled t-i the same. It is further ordered, that notice of the time and jdace of examinat ion and allowaneeof aueh aceount and of the assignment of the residue of Haul estate Is- iflveii to all person- interested bv i.ablii iitioimf He order for three siiccoss iv-e weeks ls*fore said day. in the Manttiiwis Pilot a wis-klv newspaiwf prlnttsi and publish •and at the city of Manitowoc and state of Wis c. ins in Dated March 241 h, IWtt. By the < 'oiirt. JOHN I HIJHiPKK, Comity Judge Pub March 1. April 8. Classified Ads. H. E. BAHR, I). 0. Osteopathic Trealmenls (liven Rheumalism and Chronic Diseases. Consultation free. C.tllh made. (h-r man spoken. Hour* 10 to 12, 2 t.) 5. 7to H. Oyer Si hiniiUrnaii M atom Manitowoc. THE NATIONAL BANK. Manitowoc, Wisconsin. CAPITAL SIOO,OOO. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. L I) Ml iSKS, Phkkiiiknt, LKANDKB CHOATE, Vice-President FRED T. ZKNTNEK. Cashier F< >K SALE A three horse powei engine ami boiler. Just the thing for a small shop or for a farmer who wants a small j tower and a tauter t hat can he used for a a team cooker, wafer heater or other purposes Will be Hold cheap Apply at the Pilot office y /A* '' p ,> HOVER BROTHERS MERCHANT TAILORS. MAN! T< AV OC W 1 S( X )NHIN AYER FULLY ANSWERED. Aa Ak<-.i STgro'i Arronal of th. Lord's Goodness to I'ulrlck lien rjr. Some Phlladetptiians visited Jilch mond, Va., and, asking as toibe use of this and it,at large building, were told in every case that H was a tobacco factory. An aged negro gave them the Information; and they, tiring of the monotony of the reply, pointed to a white frame building on a hill, and asked whose tobacco factory that w as gays the Dedroit News-Tribune. The old fellow replied: “Dat, sail, am no facl'ry. Dat am B’n John’s 'Piacopal church, where Marse Patrick Henry done gjet up an' ax de Lawd gib him liberty or gib him deaf.” “Well, uncle,” asked one of the trio, “which did the Lord give hlmV* “ ’Pear* to me yo' must be stranger* hereabouts,” he answered; “else yo’d all know dat. In due time,, de Lewd gab* Mare© liewy boffc." SLAP AT RAILROADS. President James Declares They Are Very Badly Managed. Head of Northwestern University <■ Address at lioalos Says Official* la Charge Are lii com petent. "Three-fourths of the men In charge of the railroads of the coun try do not understand their business and have managed their roads so badly that bankruptcy is always staring them in the face, and more business awaiting them than they can handle,” said President Edmund J.James,of Northwestern university, the other day In an address at the Colonial theater at Hoston, where he appeared as lecturer in the Twentieth Century club course. His subject was the need of commercial education. “A freight car,” continued Dr. James, “starting out from Pittsburg to Chicago is like a sailing vessel of a half century ago setting out from New York to London. Nobody knows when she will arrive or where she is on her journey. It may take her a week or it may lake her a month. "We bear of tho vast combina tions of capital. Men talk of trusts and of the accumulation of ail in dustries in the hands of a few men. We hear of Morgan and Rockefeller as the great financiers of the world. TTow are these men enabled to do these things. Not because they arc such very big men, or because the average business man is such a small fellow. The average business man is ignorant and inefficient and coward ly. He is uneducated and unlearned in his own business. He Is helpless at a crisis. And it is because of his lack of qualities which are imparted to the technically ti u.-ed man in his own profession that 1* goes down in a crisis.” President Janies boldly advocated the teaching of business by the uni versities, not merely a course in tbe business college of to-day, but a training which shall produce great leaders in business, as the technical schools develop great leaders in sci entific professions. SOCIAL LEADERS AT ZOO. Mother Ilnboon *ai Her flaky Form the Star Atlractioa at New York AnluiaA House. The animals In the zoo park in the Bronx which are most like folks Ju.si now are the long armed mother ba lloon anil baby. The mother and child hold the center of the stage in a primitive house and attract even n larger crowd to their cage than the nnfcamny laita that eat, slcc.j) and fight with their bends hanging down and their claws gripped to the wire overhead. A monkey is never more human than when it has an un weaned baby. The long armed mother ia proud of the child, for she sits as close as she can get to the front of the cage so that all visitors and tho jealous childless race of suicide monkeys across the way can see her baby. Hie Infant has an excellent appetite and after each nursing goes to sleep on its mother’s shoulder. The moth er baboon’s kisses are ns humanlike as anything In the show and the baby hears all the "ootsey wootsey" 1a 1 k 1 liat, is good for him from the women in front of the cage. Tho mother has not lost interest in the social doing* and the quarrels of tlie primitive house as a result of her other cares. There was a fight the other day between two noisy baboons in tbe next cage. Heads were out in tene merit house fashion nil along flic line of cages. The long armed baboon was kitting with her back to her quarrelsome neighbors when the row began, and the baby bad just gone to sleep. Rbe unwound tbe little fellow with her left arm, gripped the bar in front of her with her right hand, and then stood up slowly and care fully faced about tbe other way and sat down again where she could see the fight. The baby did not even stir. RARE BOOKS COLLECTED. Minneapolis Man llrturnlnK with Ma terial for a Temple of Literature. James Carleton, a young men of Minneapolis, has just passed through I’uris on his way to America, after hav ing kjient Minus time in Europe collect ing material for the temple of litera ture which he proposes to erect in his native city. He has visited all the prin cipal publishing houses in Europe, and lias brought many manuscripts of fa mous authors. For two weeks he was the guest of “Carmen Hylva," the queen of Ilournunia, who took keen in terest in his search for literary treas ure*, aiding him materially with her knowledge as a connoisseur. It is said that young Carleton got a series of d’Annunzio manuscripts, and that n birge number of books were ob tained from two fashionable French novelists, every volume being an au tograph presentation copy from sonu notability of the literary world. Tfce IVu on Oleomargarine. Ten cents a pound tax on color in oleomargarine has reduced its manu facture from 30,000,000 pounds in the quarter preceding the act taxing it to 13,000,000 In the subsequent quartet year. American Woman t’ndnr Fire. Dr. Lorenz says the American worn an can’t cook, it might be added say* the Chicago Record-Herald, that •he won't learn, either. PAY OF SCHOOL TEACHERS. Differences Shawn in Pedscoffl* Compensation In Vsrlsiis Parte of Mis Country. "The people have douo more for the teachers of New York city than has been done for ray body of teachers In the world," writes Prof. McAndrew, principal of ths girls’ high school, in the World’s Work. As for teacher* In general, the rec ord Is usually after this fashion: “Crates, of Mallos, was the first to teach grammar in Rome.- Having had the misfortune to full into a se-wer, thus breaking his leg, he was thence forward considered good for nothing but to be n teacher.” Horace mentions Orblllius, the most famous teacher of his time, only to confer on him an Immortality of con tempt. The first American schoolmasters, say the historians of education, were also grave-diggers, street-sweepers, and were employed In other occupa tions similarly looked down upon. Maine, in cities of more than 8,000 in habitants, pays teachers $448 a year upon the average. The cities of this state pay $863 (o the average teacher; the cities of Massa chusetts, $728 a year; the cities of Pennsylvania, $528. In the latter state, as a whole, women average $304. The average (monthly) salary for the country is $47 for men, $39 for women. Lewis Elkin, of Philadelphia, has just left a fortune whose income is to lie used in pensioning worn-out teachers. In that city this work Is no longer to lie left to cliance or left undone. HABITS OF SOUTHERN BOYS. Two ( bttraclrrlatle Marks by WhlcA Their Home Section May bs Determined. “I’ll bet that boy it from the south," said a man, as he saw a lad of about 12 come in and take his place at another table In the dining-room, relates the New York Sun. “Have you heard him speak?" asked the other uian. “No; that is not necessary. You will notice that bin hair is correctly brushed in front, while behind it looks as if it had been tumbled up In a west ern tornado. "It is a southren hoy's way. I never knew one who brushed the hair on the back of his head, I do not know why, nor do I know why a southern boy who has to shine his own shoe* never puta a polish on the heel*. He will labor in getting up a mirror ihlne on the front of his shoe* and leave hi* heels untouched until they become ru*set in shade. ‘There is another thing that you will notice about a boy who has been raised in the south—he rarely parts hi* hair in the middle. It ia either [girted on the *ide or reached. "I don’t know what has become of the boy with what we used to rail the cowlick on his hair, but at one time he was very numerous. I haven’t seen a boy with a cowlick since the war, but when I lived in the south he wu* often seen." THE NEED OF~CATHEDRALS. Ttey Stand as Permanent aaff Power ful Mentions on the Subject of llellaione Faith. In New York there Is under con si ruc tion a cathedral that is to cost $10,000,- 000 or more. Its site is unsurpassed by any cathedral-site in Europe. The bishop of New York says commerce builds to itself palaces; the church must do the same. A danger exists in the extreme of material wealth, but a danger also exists in an extreme of material poverty, says Eugene M. ( amp, in Woman's Home Companion. Young people’s organizations are not few in number that have started out well, but have already written the final chapter of their history. The Young Men’s Christian association is an chored by its $30,000,000 accumulation. The cathedral of Rt. John the Divine, crowning the highest hill of America’s metropolis, already preaches by its single unfinished arch eloquent and powerful sermons on the subject of faith in th* (j08(>el a>i a solvent for hu man ills, and during the coming years, finished or unfinished, It will proclaim Jesus Christ further and better—shall 1 claim so much? —than all other churches in New York put together! World's Most Eminent I’nriou. 'Hie thousand esteemed and most eminent persons of the world—emi nence being determined by the prom inence given them in encyclopedias— arc grouped according to nativity by Prof. Cattel in Popular Science Monthly. France leads, followed closely by Great llrltain. Then there is considerable fall to Germany and Italy. Greece has produced more prominent great men than Germany. Of the 18 greatent composers of mu sic, Germany produced 12 and Italy six. Russia has to her credit hut nine men who are eminent. In the 1,000 hut 32 are women. Miles of Bess. Eggs are usually sold by the dozen, but the receipts in Philadelphia arc ho heavy that they are measured by feet and miles. Speaking of the re ceipts In the local market one day lately, a Philadelphia paper says: "If strung end to end In one continuous line, th# egg* would reach over 712, ■ 71ft feet, or a trifle over 184 milca. The total receipt# were 288,120 doz en. Using one egg as a basis, 3,421,440 omelette* could be made with this supply." Inspection of Food A aim ala. The post-mortem Inspection of food animals by the government in 1902 numbered 88,903,028, and 61,980 car casses were condemned. WATCHES ARE LIKE WOMEN. Moat Be Tenderly Cared for and Nat Bxyowd to Sudden Change* of Temperature. Every owner of a watch should con sider that the delicate piece of mech anism belongs to the feminine gender, and, like a sweetheart ora wife, must be tenderly cared for and not subject ed to sudden changes of temperature, says a Journal of the trade. Many a man who would not think of letting his wife go out in the evening without some kind of wrap about bar shoul ders will wear his watch next to his warm body all day and let it He at night on a cold mantelpiece. Then he wonders why it gains or loses time. Cold causes contraction of the met als composing the balance wheel and Hs parts, and the watch consequently gains. When the parts expand under the heat of the body the pivots, bear ings, etc., tighten up and the watch loses. Getting the steel parte of one's watch magnetized is another fre quent cause of.trouhle; while chang ing the position of a watch, such as putting it down horizontally, is also apt to affect its action. It Is well known that a watch will stop for some unexplained reason and go on again if it is given a slight jolt. The same trouble may not recur for years. This is due to the delicate hair spring catching either in the hair spring stud or in the regulator pins. The cause is a sudden jump or quick movement, which gives a jolt to the balance-wheel and hairspring, and thus renders the catching possible. WALK ON WHITE-HOT STONES. Hcmxrlcxble Fent That Is Performed by Flit Islanders With out Injury. Col. Gudgeon, British resident at llaratonga, is one of the few oiurope ans who have performed the remark able feat of walking on the white hot stones with the Fiji fire walkers, says an article on “Fire Walkers of Fiji,’’ in Leslie’s Monthly. In a communica tion to the Polynesian society he says: “I can hardly give you the sensa tions, but I can aay this, that I knew quits well I was walking on red-hot stones, and could feel the heat, yet I was not burned. I felt something re sembling slight electric shocks, both at the time and afterwards, butthatla all. I do not know that I should rec oinend every one to try It. A man must have inspiration to do it; if he has not, it will be too late when he ia on the hot stones of Tama-ahi-roa. "To show you the heat of the stones, quite an hour afterwards someone re marked to the priest that the stones would not be hot enough to cook the food. Uls only answer was to throw his green branch on the oven and In a quarter of a minute It was blazing. My feet alao were very tender. The really funny thing is that, though the stones were hot enough an hour after wards to burn my green branches of the tl (dracoena) the very tender skin of my feet was not even hardened by the fire.” THE PLAYING-CARD SUPPLY. It Amounts to Ten Cards x Year fos Each Inhabitant In the Country. One of the internal revenue taxe provided by congress to meet the ex pense of the Spanish war was a tax of two cents on each pack of cards manufactured in the United States. The usual pack contains 52 cards, or, with joker, 53, but for the sake of uniformity the number was fixed by congress at 54, aays the New York Bur. The government revenues from the war tax on playing cards amounted to about SI,OOO for each working day, and assuming that all the packs were full decks the average number manu factured In each year was 15,000,000 packs, or 780,000,000 cards. The popu lation of the United States Is, approx imately. 76,000,000, and there were ten cards manufactured each year for each man, woman and child in the United States. To the total revenue of $300,000 from playing cards, Ohio contributed $140,000, New York following with SOO,OOO, and Michigan and Illinois with $40,000 each. These four states have a practical monopoly of playing card making in the United States. Hew KlMtrleel Hoveltjr. Tlie game of sylphs is the moat re cently devised form of amusement; it is in reality electric battledore and shuttlecock. The two players hold a wand each, these wands having been electrified by friction. The shuttlecock is represented by a but terfly made of collodion. The butter fly is thrown into the air, and one or other player approaches the tip of his wand to the so-called sylph; the electrified wand repels the but terfly, which skims away as the wand draws near. In this way the but terfly is sent flying hither and thith er without being touched. Avery good game, with the proper rules, is made from this idea. What Tesla Promises. Locomotive* propelled by electricity drawn from the air without cost, and ocean liners racing over the ea by the agency of the electric' current drawn inexpensively from the same source, are promised for the near fu ture by Tesla. It la to be done on the principle of wireless telegraphy. Gatlias Paras Machinery. The late Dr. Gatling, who insisted that his famoua rapid-fire gun was influential In shortening,if not in pre venting war, was also interested in rapid-fire agricultural machinery. In his youth he invented drills lor sow ing cottonseed and grain. DAILY VACCINATION. Frequent Application of Vlrai Corea Severe Coseo of Smallpox lx Short t'ae. Smallpox Is by no cleans an inno cent disease, though the ancient sta tistics of mortality have been long since done away with. Yet a mortal ity of from 15 to 18 per cent, is not rare, even in vaccinated persona, and various complications are often met with, says the New York Medical Jour nal. Hubert (1800) found that repeat ed vaccination was useful in the treat ment of smallpox, but only In the prodromal stages of the disease. KotowschikoiT went further than this. He found that repeated vaccination, performed daily for a number of days, had a marked significance upon the course of smallpox, not only in the prodromal stages, but also in the be ginning of the disease. Since then various authors have written on the subject. In order to test the thera peutic value of rej>eated vaccination in smallpox, the author tried this mode of treatment in eight cases. The ma jority of these patients entered with a smallpox rash fully developed—five in the papular stage, one in the puru lent stage and two at the end of the prodromal period. The vaccinations were made twice daily, three scarifications being made each time, and were performed in the two patients that entered during the prodromal period only after the rash hud fully set in. The test was, there fore, directed solely to find the value of repented vaccinations in the ad vanced stages of smallpox, not in the early part of the disease. Of the eight patients, two had a mild form of the disease from the start, the others a severe form. In general ,the use of repeated vaccinations gave more or less favorable results. In the severe cases the improvement was ap parently connected with the use of repented vaccinations, yet it is diffi cult to say whether the cases would have taken just such a course if no vaccinations had been made. The author concludes that, In smallpox, repeated vaccinations should be used, the earlier the better, and that the largest usefulness could be expected from this treatment In the earlier stages of the disease. A larger num ber of cases should be observed to determine its value in the later stages. AN AUTOGRAPH COPY. The Only Inducement That Sold a Picture for x Hxrd-Vp Mm. The man who undertook to cross the continent “on the hurricane-deck of a donkey,” and earn hla expenses as he went, was sure to have experiences worth something to himself, if not to anyone else. He had photographs made of himself and the donkey. These he sold for 25 cents each. At Yonkers his purse wag light, and his bills were heavy, relates Youth’s Companion. 4 T resolved to rise at dawn and sell enough pictures to pay my hills, If I had to sell them at cost. I set to w ork. Hy one o’clock I had visited every shop, store and Chinese laundry, and was talking hoarsely to a corner grocer, who sat on a keg of mackerel sampling Limhurger cheese. I offered a picture for 15 cents, but the reduction in price did not interest him. “ ‘I vant not a picture at any price I* he declared. “ T lack 15 cents of the amount of my hotel bill,’ I urged. ‘I am In dire straits.’ “His reply was weak, but the cheese *as strong enough to helphlmout. My mental magazine had but a single charge left, and I fired that. “ ‘lsn’t it worth 15 cents to know a fool when you seeone?’ “ ‘Ye-e-es, I dink it eet,’ answered the man, ‘and eef you vill write it on the picture, I buy him.* ” COMMERCE GOES WESTWARD. Savina of Time Tarns Travsl asd Traffic Through the Western Hemisphere. The European mails and passengers already go from London to eastern Asia by way of Canada, because it is shorter, and there is a saving of teu days in time. The limits imposed on cheap freight traffic from Europe to Asia are; The tolls through the Suez canal, thosize of ships that can pass the Suez canal, the cost of coal along the route and the distance, says the En gineering Magazine. Tolls may be aboished, but this is not likely. It will take years to deep en the canal if this project should be advocated. The cost of coal along the route, as well as the distance, will always be a serious drawback. There is abundant and cheap coal in Great Britain, on the Atlantic sea board, at Puget sound, and all along the line of the northern roads, and there are an unlimited number of empty freight cars west bound. By building the largest ships in the world, even though they run under the more expensive American regis ter, by filling the west-bound cars at a rate little more than cost of hand ling, Mr. Hill knows that he ctn turn the export trade with western Asia from it'j SO'-yea .‘-old way past India to the direct Pacific sea route past Alaska. A Self-Pcoteetlnar Envelope. An American has Invented an en velope which records of itself any attempt to tamper with Its contents. The flap is Imbued with some chem ical composition which, when oper ated upon by a dampening process or any other means of penetrating to its Inclosure, records the transaction by causing the words “Attempt to open" to appear. It it thought that the Inquisitive will think twice be fore pursuing their researches la face of such as Invention. DR. TURBIN Of Berlin, Germany, the Expert Specialist and Surgeon. Who has visited Manitowoc for the past SIX YEARS, Once a Month, will again be in Manitowoc* Friday, April 24th AT THE WILLIAMS HOUSE. Di|. TURBIN, Business Men tm mm gL A €‘S3 CHRONI3 respect, end th Why? most prominent LuT.T. b who“m s h"’Lt All Cases He Undertakes Guaranteed. YOU Nr. MFN ,f you re troubled with *■—*w nervous debility, stupid ness, or are otherwise unfitted for buslnes". or study, caused from youthful errors or excesses, you should consult this specialist at once. Don’t delay until too late. MIDDLE-AGED AND OLD MANKINFI Thera are thousands of you ITimvmHUtS 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 cases of this character treated with unfailing success. Al I HKFAtFt delicate nature—tn uiJLnJLJ (laminations and kindred foubles—quickly cured ‘without pain or iucon t jnience. CATARRH w hloii poisons the breath, 1 •‘'•V’V • stomach and lungs and paves the way for Consumption, also Throat, Liver, I 7RV POINTS 1 l at ~Thp doctor gives his O ion IVinikll ud—All business Id—Names and pictures never published unless are his friends. WRITP your troun ' e > if living away from city. Th msands cured at home by oorrespondenen II HI ID and medicine sent as directed. Absolute secrecy in all professional dealings. Address al' letters, giving street and number plainly. Send stamps for list of questions. DOCTOR TORBIN, 103 Randolph St., Chicago, 111 te.oo M). j| Iftsjso^.ooiL 2.5 *2-25 \l FOR MEN- a W2.50*2D0 m m *'- 75 wt ml bovs flßßH l It willpay you to examine theW. M I L. Douglas Shoes, and see for M 1 yourself that they are just as good in every way as those for H which you have been paying Jf li $5 to $7. For style, com %fort, and service, they ff be surpassed^ % by custom-made & \^ FOR SALE BY HENRY SPOENTOEN DAILY EXCURSIONS TO CALIFORNIA Through first-class and Tourist Sleeping Cars to points In California and Oragon 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 oar* 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. Heart, Kidney, Bladder and all constitutional and internal trouble!; also Rupture, Piles, Fistula, Dyspeps'a, Diarrhoea and all dlsaasta of the stomach and bowels treated far In ad vance of any institution In the country. BLOOD AND SKIN JJaVVIiR Scrofula, Tumors, Tetter, Eczema and Blood Poison thoroughly eradicated, leaving the *ys tern in a strong, pure and healthful state, i AHIFC If you are suffering from persistent IgfL/ILJ 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 3feat many have taken treatment of tbit spe cie.lst, and he can refer you to those who have been cured by him. Give the doctor a call. Ha can give ail tho encouragement In the world and will cure you If you trust yourself to bit care. personal attention tc each individual ease. on a professional basis and strictly confidential. requested to do so. 4th— The doctor's patients CITY LOTS We have desirable residence lots on easy terms. MANITOWOC LAND & ALT CO. Dealers in Coal, Wood and Masonry Supplies. Quay Street, East of Eighth St PHONE 37. —m Dont Be Fooled! @The market la being flooded With worthless Imitations ol ROCKY MOUNTAIN To protect the public we call especial attention to our trade mark, printed on every pack age. Demand tha genuine. Pot Sale by all Druggiatt. ■I CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH Pennyroyal, pills ■ y*—v Original ind Only Genuine. Aiwa"* reliable Lb<llc*. mI Dmijlil > r ' CHIOHKSTKR’S KNGLISH U* in KUO and Gold metallic boiaa. aealad with (flue ribbon. Tube no other. HnfuM Ihinccroiiii HubslltuUona nnd | / ~ Of llonM. Huy of your OniKgiMt. or end 4. in I W •tamp* fur I’nrtleulurw, TeutlMunlals V D ail “Relief for Lndlea,** in l ettm. by ru- P turn Mull. 10.000 TmilmonUla. A*l4 by all I)rug*itn. ChlohMtf r ('Nfaitpal O#., Mention this paper. Mudlaon *<juure, I'll I LA.. PA. The Pilot for job work