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maim miru m'i -,iH , f.m 111 ryt MM ifttKa" MWWMwhMll mTvP I t THE STAWFtlW IWTEBIOW JJUMIAL, JTAHFlrrt, KENTUCKY FRIDAY. IEPTEHHER , HI2, u f H ill Itf Farm for Sale! If You Are Looking for a farm priced right (for immediate sale) Don't overlook this; 6-room frame dwelling with well at door and never-failing spring 50 yds distant. 150 acres in grass, 50 acres young timber; new wire fence; new stock barn; new tobacco barn; 36x120 feet. Ideal for grain, hay, tobacco and stock: abundance of water; fruit trees; in good neighborhood, on turnpike, about 2 1-2 miles from R. R. station and good town with graded school, churches, etc. 1-2 mile from district school. Fall seeding privi lege and possession January 1, 1913. For further information, address, T", care of INTERIOR JOURNAL, Stanford, Kentucky. FARM AND STOCK NEWS Having decided not to farm this fall I will have a sale of stock at ray place the middle of October. See advertisement ater. J. C. Bailey, Crab Orchard. For Sale. Aberdeen Angus cat- tle both sexes; mules from colts to four year olds; thoroughbred boars ready for service. R. H. Crow, Shelby City, Ky, Ky., phone 8 two rings, Junction Ex. Cu-tf. I will take stock on the Hail pas ture from now on until Jan. 1st, at $r.50 per months. W. C. Shanks, 76-tf. I will also sell 8 good mule colts at my sale. P. L. Beck. 76-tf. Two stray hogs are at my place; one black barrow, weigh about 150 and the other a white sow weighs about 125 pounds. Owner can get same by paying for keep and this ad W T. Tucker, Stanford. 76-3p. For sale. Thorougbred Duroe gilts and boars, the old Ohio Chief strain, no better bred anywhere. A. J. Adams. Hustonville, 76-tf Now is the time tio have you to bacco insured. Get a policy in the strongest company in the world from Fish and Bromley. 76-2, W. C. Shanks will sell 50 hcs-J of mules, brood mares and Jerseys. Oct. 1, 1912. 73-0. Large sow came to my place Aug. 1st. Owner can get same by paying for this ad and her keep. John Pow ell, Moreland, Ky., R. F. D. 1. For Sale. One nice, coming three year old, Peacock filly, beuutiftl bay with two white feet and star; good size. Call on or address. Mrs. Sim Owens, Morelnnd, Ky.. 8t-p. For Rent. My farm of 80 acres, 35 acres for small erain, 10 acres for corn. 10 acres for crass, good orchnrd and tobacco land if they will clean it off. A. L. Thompson, Stanford, R. F. D. No. 3 77-3p. Stray, white and black spotted hound dog came to it" place about a month ngo. Owner can get same by paying for keep and this adv. J. J. Belden, Stanford. 77-3. For Sale. One pair of good work mules three vars old, three good cows that will give milk all winter, three calves four shoats that will weigh about 80 pounds, and one Onima Chief Separator good as new. A. Ii. Thompson, Stanford. R. F. D. No. 3. 77-3p John Richardson sold two wean ling mnre mules to J. B. Pettus at $75 each. J. S. Davis sold a bunch of hogs, of 100 to 200 pounds weight to Geo. O. Spoonamore at 6 1-2 to 6 3-4 cents. Lutes and Sharp are feeding a large herd of swine for the Cincin nati market, and hope to have them ready for shipment about the last of this month. They have 90 which hnve been doing nicclv and putting on the corn. They have recently sold to Greeley Lutes for' shipment to the city a part of a load of shi" they bought from Wm. McCormack. W. S. Wigham, the popular Moto lnml farmer and coal dealer, lost two very valuable mules last week from some peculiar disease. It It seems to affect the hybrid like -paralysis does the human system. These nnnnals were easily worth 330. Other farmers in that section ire hoping that the peculiar disease will not nrove contagious. F. J. Conn, on Rural Route No. 3 out of Lancaster, sold A. J. Scot. of the Buena Yista neighborhood. n pucklinjr calf for $20. PREVENT CHOLERA Every year thousands upon thousands of farmers lose their hogs with cholera. You can save your hogs from this dread disease if you will begin at once and give them BOURBON HOG CHOLERA REMEDY Use it in the food and drink and your hogs will never have the cholera. Don't wait until they get sick. Begin giving your hogs this medicine now. It is the only remedy in the world sold under a Guarantee Bond to prevent and cure hog cholera. For Kent. 20 acres of wheat land. M. B. Lytic, Phone 169 Y. 78-80 A. L. Thompson sold n good milk cow to Mr. Young of Wnynesburg, for $35. Judge A. Tribblc is getting to gether n drovo of 100 hogs to feed nt his farm on the Crab Orchard pike, for the fall market. W. It. Cook, of near Garrard, has lately bought CO head of cattle av eraging from 700 to 1,000 pounds in weight, nt from nbout 4 to 4 3-4 cents er pound. IS. A. Arnold, of Gnrrnrd, bought 6 boviues from Mend Tenter, weigh ing from 600 to 1,000 pounds at from 4 to 6 cents. G. A. Brown bought 7 head of 700 pound cuttle from n local trader nt 4 3-4 cent. J. P. Ballard bought nt the Wnl kei sale in Gnrrnrd 47 flock ewes at $2.35. George W. Lunsford, of Rowland, bought n score of sheep from John Moer. of Morelnnd, last week, which cost him $72. L. K. Perkins, of Gnrrnrd, boucht of Thompson & Bnllnrd 27 500 Donnd short yearling: steers at $23. The same firm sold 1,000 bales of mixed liny to Hudson & Hughes, of Lancaster, nt $12. The threo-lccced chicken report ed in these columns recently, which belonged to Mr. V. M. Davis,- of the East End, is dead. After a hard shower he was found in n mud hole where he hnd mired up and was drowned. Up until its death it was ns sprightly ns nnv of its compan ions not so well stuinlied with pedal extremities. Bird Matheny out on the Somerset pike, tins sold his yearlim mules to Morrison, the Lexington buyer. He got $93 n head for the bunch, of which there were 20 head. E. T. Pence, near Rowland, sold to the snme buyer, delivering him 10 yenr lings and two-ycnr-olds for $175. B. D. Holtzclnw, the local shipper, has purchased 45 head of shoats from Jim Woods, for shipment to the Cincinnati market. They will be weighed up and go the first day of November. t Mr. Holtzclnw shipped in n car load of butcher cattle to the city market last week, which he picked up, mostly on court day, at from 2 to 6 cents, according to the class of the stuff. He bought several of the bunches from Pleasants Bros.. La tham and Burton. Gianville Lutes sold to W. M. Logan, of the Gilbert's Creek sec tion, n bunch of 10 stock hoes at 7 1-4 cents a pound. They weighed 110 pound". Mr. Logan intended to feed them himelf. but J. D. Ends. iff tilt) DnliVllie (like. MlW tlirm uliil bought them from Mir. Logan nt n slight profit. Faulkner Kennedy of the Preach ers ville npighboihood, sold to T. W. Jones last week a couple of rows and their calve. for $50. Mr. Ken nedy bought threo fat heifers from Ed Jones, near Cedar Creek, paying him $60. John Kennedy, of PreacherbVilIe, returned from Bell county last week with the hi'cond car-load of hogs he hus bought in the mountains with in tnc past couple v.xclcs. tic handles them fust and makes u good profit on las trades G run ville Lutes, who does most of his buying in the south and west part of the county, purchased fe bunch of 15 ewes from It. L. Murphy of Cusey county, last week, nt $3 a hcud. Mr. Lutes also got nine ewes from Jee Lay, of the Yosemite section, nt the same figure. Mr. Lay also delivered him three head of shipping fill Lie at 4 cents a pound J. T. Jiuney, of Unrrard, has sold his fine farm, known as the Ander son farm, lying on the new Danville pike, to J. V. Sweeney, the popular Lancaster liveryman. There are 155 acres and it sold at $120 per Z. T. Riec sold 118 lambs to Woods and Ross, of Paint Lick, at G 1-2 cents. Bourne Bros., near Lnncnstcr, sold 300 bales of liny to Banks Hud son nt $13 er ton. Pool PerkitiM, of Gnrrnrd, bought 20 head of 600-pound steers from Jnmes Roberts nt 4 3-4 cents. II. V. Bnstiu, of Lancaster bought 4 cows in lower Gnrrnrd nt $50 per head. J. M. Cress, of Prcnchersvillc bought 40 head of cnUle running in weight from 700 to 900 pound', from J. II. Owens at 5 cents J. Walker Cozntt. of the Parks, ville neighborhood sold to Samuel Caldwell Walker n nice Shropshire buck for $12.50. Pence Bros., of tho same section pinrngcd 0" liend of cattle to Simon Weil, of Lexington, to bo delivered in December with n weight of 1,300 pounds per nniuinl nnd' to bring 7 and 7 1-1 cents. D. F. Rankin, of the Marcellus section, sold 50 head of cattlo to Simon Well, of Lexington, for De cember delivery, tho boviues to reach the 1,300 pound notch end to ltd nt $7.2o Dor hundred. J. C. Fox nnd Wl S. Carrier the Garrard shippers shipped n car-load of cattle, 37 head in the consign ment, to Green nnd Einbry, of Cin cinnnti; n number of thee they had been feeding for some time nnd tanging in weight from calves to 1,000 and 1,200 pounds. J. ('. Fox bought 8 head of steers weighing from 600 to 1,000 pounds from Mead Tenter, at from 4 to 6 cents per pound; Mr. Fox aUo pur chased 0 cows from Z. T. Rice av eraging 600 pounds per head, nt 4 cents. Local mule buyers were interested in the prices thttt the hybrid brought nt Mt. Sterling court) last week. The southern buyers teemed particularly active, nnd paid prices for good stuff. R. M. Ratcliff. buy inf for the Pulaski Mule Co., of Pu laski, Tcnn.. paid $80 around for n load of medium mule colts and $100 n head for a load of cotton colts. Gentry nnd Thompson, the Lex ington mule men, hnve just sold their great tenm of show mules to Ira Sharp, of Sharpsburg. III., nnd got $800 for them. One of thecc mules wns bought from J. II. Baugh man, of this city, nt his big sale in 1910. She won at the State Fair in 1910. 1911 and 1912, and i said to hnve probably won more money than any other show main in suiie. Senator Hubble lias found a heal thy demand here for tho mules he bought in Missouri a week ago. and if he sells many more, will go back to the "show me" state for n couple more loads. He sold a drove of 14 to J.ee ICunkin. the southern market feeder at $155 each, nnd disposed of n nice team to Les Withers for T.JoU cleaning up n neat profit on each trade. It. K. Young, n prominent Adair county stock man who frequently brings stuff to the market here, has been trading actively Intel'. He paid J. E. Lewis, of Cumberland county $600 for 200 head of sheep. In piutiieishiy with J. H. Goff and lluiin ho sold to Fox and Lillaid, of Boyle 270 steers, which went from 800 to 1,100 pounds at 4 1-3 to 4 2-4 cents. Mr. Young still has 270 uo.)d ones now which will go on the niaiket this week. He sold to J. C. Durham ic Bro., of Campbellsville, 50 head of 2 year old heifers at 4 1-4 to 4 1-2 cents per pound. Also to Wilson Bros., of Cave City 150 head of 900 to 1,100 imuml steers nt 4 1-2 to 5 eels. dipt. T. D. English, of Dnnvilln. reports the sale of the 50-acro farm belonging to the heirs of the late John B. McGinuis, to James H. Mc Ginnis, at $100 an ncre. This land lies in the Nest end of Boyle. Capt H. it. Hwihelirond bought a cow ftom Reuben Moss nt $52. For Sale 175 bushels extra clean winter turf oats; nho some flue seed wheat. J. M. Remolds, Wnynesburg, Ky. 70-3F. For Sale. 11 cattle nnd 2 venrs old, i ster-rs nnd 4 heifers, 1 good old farm horse, work nnywhere, gen tle for women to drive. Call on mo nt Highland, Ky. J, S. Young 754. Lost. Pair black horse mules one 5 mid one 6 years old, ono has while spot on back. Please return to Clms. Knukin, Hcdgeville. 78-3 W. M. Enson, three miles from McKiiiucy, up Green river, sold n couple of two-yenr-old steers to Greeley Lutes, for $71 Mr. Lutes shipped them to tho city market. Lilian! ami Fox, the Boylo buy- ers, accompanied by A. S. Walters, . f Lexington, went down ln4o Cum berland county Inst week nnd bought 300 beef cattle nt 4 3-4 to 5 1-2 cents n pound. C. It. Martin, the Danville butch er, bought for his trade seven 280 pound hogs of Mrs. Hnrris Craig, nt 1-2 cents, four veals from Ilobcrt acre. Mr. Rnney takes the-livery English nNo sold the old Woodson CSSeMMeteBeeLeeWf. HUTS THE HOG READ THIS LEITEI BOURBON REMEDY CO., Leiington, Ky. . "Blod fad photo of a hoK that wu cured of cholera with your Bourbon Ho Chakra Remedy. The hoe wai ilrao.t dead before uiing this medicine and then wai entirely cured weept the Iota of tin. tail, etc. The hK i, owned by Mr. Skil. Kwtef , Bowling Green, Ky. H. wil be glad to give you a tegmental and I wj (U get awrwal mora if you wast them." " JENKINS-SUBLETT DRDG CO., Bowling Greta, Ky. GUARANTEED OR MONEY BACK Tki woaderful remedy U alio guaranteed to prevent woreu, thump, tcour all lira ditordari. It regulates tht bowcli, aldi digtrtioa and cauatt hogi tea litmiy. vm n u gn your money Dace it you don't find It tht bett hom COfIS ONLY FIVE CENTS Kl MONTI POI EACI 100 NOnCSt-Thta to lk mmiy tby art all try tag! (0 lamtuu. ml l-itoito.it Amk yawitit tot- itwtta Chtd.r tvaa atctat ummm bat BOVMON. atowawt Caatara aaaay stable of Mr. Sweeney which 'is vain ed nt $,000 us part payment for the faun. Fred Foray the, of Mercer, sold twenty-one thoroughbred colts iu the Lexington sale and the bunch uver aged $350. One colt brought $1, 350, which wus the burliest priced unttied colt in the sale. James For sytho sold u colt in the same salt ut 41,025, uiid Col. J. P. Chinu also sob! u number ut u fuir price. The third annual sale of register ed Jersey cattle by James F. Mid dleton ut Maple Grove stock farm, ShelbyviHe, realized $0,150 for tho fifty. one head offered, composed principally of young heifers and calves. The largest prices paid were $350 for Dierottcs Fairy, an imported cow, and $300 for a daugh ter of Lady Mury. Both were sold to E. W. Btickert, Martinsville, Ind. G. F. Northoott, Meridian, Miss., bought n young calf from Lady Mary for $170. The following sale of real estate in Mercer county ore reported by the Hnriodsbiirg Herald: The Jack sou farm, near Bethel church in Mer cer county, was purchased by Mrs. Mollie Cannon for $2,700 and tro Suit River furm of 110 ucres wus taken down at $611 per ncre. A milk eow sold for $70; a buggy mate brought $205 and u brood ton re Hold for $205 and yearling mules aver aged 4-110 cr head. Old com sold nt $-1.75 in the crib; new corn at $2.20 at the heap. Sam 1L Graves sold his farm of 114 acres near Huririn to Robert AiVfViiin fur 3 . 1 500 cash. Arnold farm lying in the nxtrm We-.t End of Bo.vle containing 80 acres, for Sam Campbell, nt $38 an ncre. At the Wulter Sevier sale he sold the Jackson nlace. f-ontiiininiF 30 acres, lying on the Harrodsburg nnd Perryville nike nt $90 an acre. Tho Harvey Vnnarsdnll furm, be longing to Mfc. Sevior. wns witli dinwn nt $09 nn acre. Old corn sold at $4.75 in the crib, new corn $2.20 per barrel at the heap. One buggy mare sold to Lunsford Yan dell nt $205. Milk cows $40 to $75. The Dnuwllo Messenger reports the following sales at Mm Rrl- pens there court day: 1'reston & Price 3 800-pound ent- l u II .... . i.c iu uiim jiuins m .) cents, same I can to John Uonaliiio $23. sumo II 420-pound cattle to Mitchell Tay lor ut 4 cents, suuiu 3 400-pound cuttlo to John Wood at 4 1-2 cents, sumo to John W. Webb 7 700-pouiid cuttle nt 4 1-4 cents, same 0 400 ifound cuttle to J. I). Whitehouse at 4 cents, 11. C. Bottom 20 600-pound cuttb to W. G. Rankin nt 5 1.4 onu J. D. Wtiitohouse 2 bull calves to John ood at $17 each, same 1 heif er to I. S. Tevis, II. C. Bottom 12 400-pound, heifers to W. II. Thur mond ut 3 3-4 cents. E. McCormack and 6on 50 ewes to F. T. Logan, Ed Chinn 1 800-pound steer to J. C. Caldwell ut 5 3-4 cents, same lot 850-pound heifers to C. P. Cecil ut 5 cents, same to M. J. Karris 3 heif ers at $25 per head. J. U. White house 13 400-nound cattlo to E. E. Buster at $4.90. J. R. Johnson 12 500-pound cattlo to M. J. FarrU at at an average J 4 cents. pound. Burke, nt 5 12 cents, nnd 3 cattle nt the J. C. MeConnell sale nt about 5 to 5 1-2 cents. T. L Nnylor, of the Judson sec tion, of Garrard, sold A. J. Coddcll Monday a suckling horse mule for $75. Senator R. L. Hubblo wns nt Lan caster Monday ami bought u 5-year old hurso mule from fernll Lnyton. of Garrard, for $150. He later sold him to T. C. Rankin for $160. F. F. Fitxpntriek, the popular nnd hustling young mule buvcr of Hedgeville country, secured it total of about ten head in Stanford last week. They averaged him $70 a head. Tho Danville Advocate says that Senator Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas, purchased seven head of verv fine registered Shorthorn cattlo from J. G. Cecil, tho prices ranging from $,)(! to $100 per head. Senator Bat ley secured the cattle for his fine Fayette county fnrm. Le Sloan, and Jop Rankin, of Hubble, sold their hogs to T. W. Jones ut 7 1-4 and 7 1-2 cents a IMiund. They hnd 30 nice porkers which averaged nbout 200 pounds each. Mr. Jones put them aboard for the Cincinnati market. J. S. Pettus, of the Prenehersvilio neighborhoun, paid Jno. Richardson, of the same section, $150 for a cou ple of nice mure mule colts. He hIko got nn extra mare mule colt from Ilayden Xaylor that cost him $95. Alfred Owens, of the Preachers ville section, hns been nuyiug mule colts to feed this winter. Ho hus already gotten together eight or ten, which have averaged him about $70. He got five from J. M. Cress nnd one from Sam Ramsev. Lilburn and J. M. Gooch. of Gil bert's Creek section, sold to Luwson & Brown, the Garrard buyers, 75 160 pound hogs at 8 cents, They went to the Cincinnati market. They wore mighty pretty bunch of wrk crs and ought to command top prices in the city. A. T. Nunnclley, the iiopulnr stock yards man, sold to T. W. Jones last week a small bunch or ten luitVis nt4 1-2 cents. They weighed about 075 apiece. Mr. Xuiinclley dispos ed of u flock of ewes to W. C. Shanks u mile south of town, nnd to J. F. Freeman, out on l)ix river. He sold 49 to Mr. .Shanks and 33 to the latter farmer. They went at n figuie .'lose to $4 a head. Nm.-Koyston. of the Point Leavell section, sold a three-year-old mule to W. It. mk. of Lam-lister, for n -a . . . . ' i tfiuo. .Mr. Koynttm bought lrom Will Denny, of the same county, a two-year-old niaie mule, which cost him $225. He paid Walker Guyn, of tlie J'aint Lick section $110 for a nice mule colt. At the Walker sale last week, he gac $80 for u lilly colt. J. II. Woods was at Lancaster .Monday and bought n pair of well niiitehed three-year-old mules from an, unknown Garrard man, for $50. They will probably be taken to Hie southern market by Jake Robinson. Mr. Woods recently sold to John G. Lynn n four-yeur-!d draft horse lor -M2.), which Mr. Lynn will work on his recently purchased farm, six miles west of Stanford. W. B. Burton, the hustling voung Lancaster buyer, picked up u few choice mules ut'Coust hero Monday. He bought n five-year-old mute mule lrom WiUe Rogers for 18.'i. Mr. Burton wus in Lexington the other day and bought u bunch of nine from Oentr.v uiid Thompson, unu sont them to Wilson, North Curolinu. with u shipment of twenty two in ull. He uveraged $207 a read tor the entire shipment, but they were all first cluss animals. Thoru were 300 or 400 cattle on the market ut Lancaster Monday, most oi it medium gruite slutf. Buy ern were quite active, however, iitul most of the offerings changed hands ut from 3 1-2 to 5 1-2 cents n pound for the best. T. Wl Jones bought u huie dozen heifers from C. W. La tham, of Puluski county ut 4 1-2 cents. From Geoige Biummett. of KockciiblJe, ho got four steers ut 3 1-2 cents. Mr. Junes, with his partners, shipped out three loads of live stock from Rowland lust week. cattlo und hogs, to the Cincinnati raarhet, -the cattle being secured ut from 3 to 4 1-2 cents nnd the hogs of 7 1.2 cents a SCHOOL UPPLIES Headquarters for Tablets, Pencils and Ink LUAMtS, Crab Orchard, Ky. J. II. Baughnmn hns reserved the dnte of Oct. 2d for his Third Annual Sale, of horses, mules, brood mares and cattle. Yic I.cnr, the Garrard buyer, paid John Smith, out on tho Slhnford nnd Lancaster pike, $110 Monduy lor n nico mare miilo colt. For Rent. My farm of 250 acres 35 neres for corn, 30 for wheat or oats, 50 ncres in meadow, biiliiliOu ill Kiass. Also 1ms kimmI dwelling house, barn and all out buildings. For further information address Mrs. Geo. Logan, Stanford, Ky., West Main street. 74tf R. C. Arnold, the local stock buy. er, scut in n car load of stuff to the Cincinnati market last week. In the shipment win a fine bull he bought from Jim Woods on Knob Lick pike, nt 4 14 cents n pound. II(. weighed 1,420 pounds, too. 5Ir. Arnold bought threo hogs from J. W. Beyl, of this city, at 7 12 cents. They weighed nn nvciage of 160 pounds. Hejioiight five from It. C. Hooker nt 7 cents. They were lighter and only went to nn average of 120 pounds. Dr.' J. T. Morris, of the Snufley neighborhood, delivered u calf for $11; T. J. Carpenter, of Casey, sold him n heifer nt $22.50; Boyce Hunn, of this city, sold him a calf for $8; Green Young, of High land, n 900-oiind cow nt 3 12 cents, nnd N. W. Sampson, nlso of the Sauflev section, delivered four sheop to Mr. Arnold nt 3 cents n pound. B, I). Holtzclnw, hnd a number of nnnnals in the shipment In the bunch were 18 heifers he bought from George W. Carter, out on the Hustonville pike, nt 4 3-4 penfa a pound, and which weighed about 700-pouuds to tho head. Mr.. Car ter also delivered Mr. Holtzclnw 90 liend of sheep nt $3 nnd he bought from Joo Murphy, off tho Huston ville pike, nine 209 pound hogs at S rents a pourM. For Sale. 50 bushels of peed bar. ley. Apply to R. O. Pettus, R. p. ft, 2, Crab Orchard. Ky. 77-2p For Rent. My farm of 126 acres on Hanging Fork. Mrs. Jessie Stngg, Stanford. 78. Every stock buyer in Lincoln and most of them in tho surrounding counties rends the Interior Journal. You can cover five counties com pletely by advertising your sole in it. Keichenbncli Bros., nenr McKin ney, sold to G. E. Lutes last week, u flock of 100 stock ewes nt $4 a head. They delivered to Mr. Nave. the well known farmer of the west end. n hnndsome mnre mule colt, for which they got $110. Ray Ball has rented J. Xvin Car ter's fnrm near McKinney for next ear. and will pay $500 rash rent for it. This is the old George Given place nnd n good one. Mir. Ball Imught n five-yesr-old work horse from Mr. Cnrtcr this week for which he paid $140. When you want first-class FIELD SEEDS and at right prices, call on T. D. NEWL AND, opposite Court House School Shoes for Boys and Girls. Parents, it will pay to look at our line before baying. We have been selling shoes for 35 years. Why not profit by our experience? W. E. PERKINS Crab Orchard, Ky - H- I I MM Just for the Gentler Sex j Timely talk on seasonable toilet goods is not amiss. Our stock comprises all the needed and desired toilet helps the necesssities and the luxuries. We sell every known toilet preparation for woman, miss, child, infant powders, creams, toilet waters, bath goods and sachets. Of perfumes we have a particularly excellent line: all the newest floral odors and combinations, as well as the old favorite real flower odors. For the newest and best of any toilet article or per fume, come here first you won't waste time. At PENNY'S, The Rexall Store. .- -- .,, ''1, -fc.. JtfcA, ; .?--.alJ '"Ait --.f - , - L '-h