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His Defense. It was shortly after midnight. and go colonel had caught Rastus red handed. "Well. Rastus, you old rascal, you," said he, "'ve caught you at last. What are you doing In my henhouse?" "Why, Marse Bill," said the old man, '-I done heerd such a cacklin' in dis k yre coop, dat 1-I thought mebbe de ole hen done gone lay an aig, an' I-I wanted ter git it to' you' breakfas' while it was fresh, suh."-Harper's Weekly. Deserved the Shoes. The weary wa farer leaned over the fence and watched the housewife do lag her chores "Ah. lady." he said, tipping his hat. I' used to be a professional humorist. If I tell you a funny story will you give me an old pair of shoes?" i "Well, that depends." responded the busy housewife: " ou must remember that brevity is the soul of wit." "Yes, mum. I remember that, and brevity is the sole of each of my shoes, mum." Aon) III ILl UP THE SYSTE8 the~ Old Mtaouard GoRV5BW TATTILayt il Tlo' Yu know what you are taking. M "formula Is plalnly iirlntrd on every bttle. . goll ait Iwslmly ( ulnine and Iron tn a taute e Corm. The ýIulnue drives out ti malaria tne Iron bulld Q p tbe o6yster. bold by all1 ý"la for II yer. rls c nPý t It's up to a man to choose between two evils when he Is asked to beat the carpet or take care of the baby while his wife does it. AFTER SUFFERING ONE YEAR Cared by Lydia E. Plnk* bam'sVegetable Compound Mlwakee. Wis - "Lydia E. Pink. I bar's Vegetable Compoum d has made me a well woman, t and I would like to , tell thewholeworld of it. I suffered fromfemaletrouble ' and fearful painsin t S myback. Ihadthe best doctors and i -T they all decided that I had a tumor in addition to my female trouble, and ' advised an opera. tion. Lydia E. m's Vegetable Compound made me a well woman and I have no more backache. I hope I can help others by telling them what Lydia E. Plnkham's Veable Compound has done for me'- Maau ExAIt L s, 88First St., Milwaukee, Wis. The above is only one of the thou mads of grateful letters which are eonstantly being received by the PinkhamMedicine Company of Lynn, Mass.,which prove beyond a doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from roots and herbs, actually does cure these obstinate dis ises of women after all other means have failed, and that every such suf sng woman owes it to herself to at mstmgive Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound a trial before submit. tig to an operation, or giving up boe of recovery. Mrs. Plnkham, of Lynn, Mass., lavites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health and her advice is free. CURES SWINNEY. IM. . S. Shlm.o of Hil. N.C. writ.m "I used Mticnan Mustang Liniment on a very valua le horse for swmney and it cured it. I alwavys keep it in mnystabland thmnk it the bhet 1n men t for rubs and galls" Mexican Mustang Liniment is made or'the best of oils and pene trates straight thru flesh and nmus cleto the bone. Containsno alkohol and cannot sting or torture the flesh. Buy a bottle to-day and be ready for any emergency. St..50 . $1 ahttle at Dres & C.alStm. Don't Persecute your Bowels CARTER'S LITTIL UVER NULS ' eaulaeo h. Signature IEW MADRID SEED CORM nylayYleeted, extra clean nd pure. Both - nd yellow. Put up in even weight aseks Cr r Lot a Specialty. U as--- - C, Slew M Me SNTyourt Id°e.s,- na_- boot and *.._ Ii_-- C ~OuM . O L D--Sa, Wme ,e, COUGHS 0 COLD0 TO VARY THE ME'dU SOME SIMPLE DAINTIES THAT ARE EASILY PREPARED. Ice Cream That Takes But Little t Time to Get Ready for the a Table-Rice Water Jelly- For Lincoln Pie. Fine Ice Cream.-One plot milk, f)e cup sugar, two tablespoons flour, mne eiltspoon salt, one egg, one pint 0o one quart cream (or milk), one ialf to one cup sugar, one tablespoon ,lator; boil the milk. mix the sugar, ;hour, salt andl egg and cook 20 min itt s after egg. sugar, flour and salt are a.led to the boiling milk. This is ('Leap and fine. Fowl in Batter.-Take the remains if a col fowl, divide into neat joints, Smolve all skin, dip each piece into Sasone~ l flour, rub over with a little -alad oil and set aside. Prepare a ,uod tIring batter, dip each piece of ius I into it and fry in deep fat. Serve roulld a pile of peas or French beans. Rice Water Jelly.-Wash two and a .aif tablespoonfuls of rice in several \aters and cook in a quart of water .or ine hour, or until the rice Is en treyl dissolvel. Addll a pinch of salt. .-w,-etien to taste. Stir in the juice of n,. or two lemons. Strain into a mold tIl when cold serve with sugar and reanr. This is an excellent dish for 'hillren and invalids. Lincoln Pie.-One pint stewed sour dillies, sifted; butter size of an egg, two tablespoons flour, grated rind and juice of a lemon, yolks of three eggs, beaten. Sweeten to taste. Bake with lower cru t. and when done lre-al a meringue of the whites of three eggs, beaten with three table spoons sugar over the top, and brown in oven. Quince Honey.-Pare and grate three large quinces. Make a syrup Of three pints of sugar and 11 pints of i water. Boil together about twenty minutes. Swiss Dumplings. One pound sausage bought at a Ger man delicatessen store, as the others will not do. Remove from skins and to It add one egg, salt and pepper, tablespoon of flour and one-quarter loaf of bread which has been soaked in milk and then pressed thoroughly till quite dry. Mix well together and form in balls about the size of large marbles. Drop in boiling water, salt ed, and cook until they float. Now re move to a dish and make a butter sauce. Melt a piece of butter size of an egg and add a tablespoon of flour. When well blended, add slowly, stir ring all the time, clear beef stock or the liquid the dumplings were boiled in, enough to just cover them. When the consistency of cream, put in dumplings and reheat. A little boiled cauliflower adde, is very nice. Red Pepper Sweet Pickle. Soak the peppers in boiling water about twenty minutes, then lay in cold brine over night to draw out the crude juices of the vegetable. Cut in thin slices, discarding all the seeds and stringy pulp, and make into a sweet pickle, precisely as pears, ap ples or peaches are pickled. A stand ard formula for this is three pounds of sugar, a pint of cider vinegar, two tablespoons each of whole cloves, all spice and cinnamon. Scald all to gether and cook until the pepper is tender. Remove the peppers and cook the syrup long enough to thicken slightly, then pour over the sliced pepper. This is an excellent relish with roasted meat. Bread Pudding. One pint bread crumbs. Ope cup sugar. Grated peel of one lemon. Yolks of four eggs. One quart of milk. Soak the breadcrumbs In the milk about 15 minutes, then add the yolks of eggs well beaten, the grated lemon peel and sugar. Beat all well together and bake about half an hour. After the pudding is baked cover it with a layer of Jelly and then with the meringue made of the whites of the eggs beaten stiff, with four ta blespoonfuls of sugar. Return to oven and brown delicate ly. Cauliflower Pudding. Break a cauliflower Into sprigs and soak In cold salted water for half an hour. then drain. Cover with sweet milk and boil until tender. Drain, add one cupful of bread crumbs, one-half cupful of the milk. the same of thick sweet cream, the wll beaten yolks of foar eggs, one-half teaspoonful of salt, a pinch of ground mace and a dash of cavenne. two tablespoonfuls of*soft butter and the juice of half a lemon. Mlix well. pour into a buttered pud dling dish and bake In a slow oven un til firm. Chill Pepper Sauce. Twenty ripe tomatoes, six green reppers, four white onions, chop all fine. Add two cups of best cider vinegar. one cup of sugar, two table spoonfuls of salt, two even teaspoon !uls of ground mace, two each of nut meg and cloves and one of celery seed. Boil an hour and bottle while hot. This is delicious with baked beans. A half teaspoonful or less of cayenne gives It the hot snap. Noodle Pudding. Boil a half pound broad noodles in salted water. Place a rich pie crust paste in the bottom of a pudding pan and upon it arrange half the noodles in a layer. Add brown sugar, clnna mon, raisins and apples cut in small pieces, then the balance of the noo dies, and over all a blanket of the pie crust. Bake and serve with ani Ssauce preferred. h Sauce for a Clambake. The sauce used at the ordinary clam bake is simply melted butter seasoned with pepper and a little lemon Juice. SIf you prefer to make maitre d'hotel sauce, cream a half cupful of butter, add a scant teaspoonful of salt, a half teaspoonful pepper and a half table spoonful lemon Juice. Lastly add one half tableepoonful finely chopped pas tly. DELICATE DISH OF CHICKEN s Something a Little Bit Out of the Ordinary-Hint for the Young Housewife. This is a very pretentious and yet easy dish for the young wife to at tempt Choose a good roasting fowl pl of about three and a half to four bý pounds. Dismember it and soak after in thorough washing in clear, cold wa ter. Dredge the pieces slightly with fo flour, salt and pepper lightly and tb brown delicately in lard or olive oiL Then put them in a deep saucepan and cover with the stock, which must be prepared beforehand by boiling 6 the neck, giblets and feet of the bird at in water with an onion and savory n< herbs. Set the vessel over a slow fire hi and cook covered, adding, when a quarter done, one large ripe tomato, a green pepper denuded of seeds and quite a quantity of paprika. Half a clove of garlic cooked from the be ginning with the chicken will add to 1! the taste. It must be thoroughly " tender when done, but not in rags, O and plain boiled rice flanks the dish admirably. Marmite is the name of the earthen crock in which French cooks prepare chicken in this man ner, and sometimes the fowl is put P into it whole after the preliminary browning. RECIPE FOR PRESSED BEEF a Home-Made Preparation Equal to Anything That Can Be Bought a in the Shops. Take three pounds of lean beef and cook carefully in boiling water until tender; do not allow ft to boil after the first ten minutes; just allow it to simmer. When tender remove the meat from the water and when quite cold chop finely. Add one heaping teaspoonful of salt, half a teaspoon ful each of allspice, ground cloves, cinnamon, quarter teaspoonful grated nutmeg, quarter teaspoonful of white pepper, good pinch of paprika; mix thoroughly. Dissolve three heaping tablespoon fuls of powdered gelatine in three cupfuls of the stock in which the beef was cooked, add one grated onion and quarter teaspoonful of celery salt Stir over the fire for a few minutes. Strain this into the meat mixture and pour into a plain square mold that has been dipped in cold water; allow to stand over night Brush over with glaze, garnish with parsley and blocks of aspic jelly. Serve thinly sliced. Gelatine Compound. For any gelatine compound that is unknown in the average household soak a quarter box of the powdered 1 gelatine in a quarter cup of water. Put in a small skillet four table spoonfuls of water, allow this to boil, add two squares of unsweetened choo olate, three-fourths of a cup of sugar, and stir until smooth. Now pour in three-quarters of a cup of boiling wa ter and boil all fre minutes. Pour this over the dissolved gelatine, stir, strain and cool. To it add four table spoonfuls of cooking sherry, a tea spoonful of vanilla, and as it begins to thicken fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. Mold it and let it stand over night Serve with cream. Curried Tomatoes. Scald and skin eight large, firm to matoes, then cut fine; pare and dice two large sour apples, chop fine two small white onions. Fry the onions in a scant tablespoonful of butter; when tje color begins to change add the apple and cook slowly for five minutes. Pour in sufficient veal or beef stock to cover, add one teaspoon ful of curry powder, one tablespoon ful of lemon juice or vinegar, one sweet red pepper chopped very fine and the tomatoes. Heat slowly and when simmering stir in one pint of boiled rice and salt to taste. Simmer until the moisture is absorbed. Serve Sin cases made of hollowed out tome toes. Prune Jelly With Almonds. Soak one pound of prunes over Snight and stew till tender in the wr Ster in which they have soaked. Re Smove the stones and sweeten to taste. Soak one-half box of gelatin in a lit tie cold water, dissolve in hot water, Sand add to the prunes while hot Lastly put in the juice of one lemon and two tablespoonfuls of blanched almonds cut into small pieces. Pour I this jelly into molds, set it on ice to Sharden and eat with cream Removing Fruit Stains. To take fruit and tomato stains Sout of any linen or dress goods (witl Sthe exception of silk) apply a paste of corn starch. Let the cornstarch re ' main on the stain for half a day, then t shake or slightly rub it off. This treatment will remove stains from fab . rics of the most delicate colors with . out fading them in the slightest and without leaving a rim. Potato Croquettes. Take two cups of cold mashed pots II toes, season with a pinch of salt, pep r per and one tablespoonful of butter; beat up the whites of two eggs and work all together thoroughly, make it Sinto small balls tightly flattened, dip them in the beaten yolks of the eggs, then roll either in flour or cracker Scrumbs; fry the same as fish balls. Sweet Potato Pudding. Mix one pound of raw sweet pota toes, grated; one-half cupful of me lasses, two well beaten eggs, one ta blespoonful of butter, two of sugar it and enough milk to make a thin mix Sture. Add one teaspoonful of ginger and spice to taste. Bake for one and Sone-half hours. Rents in White Goods. e For darning a rent in fine white ' goods, use one strand of No. 80 spool cotton, untwisting the thread. This makes a lea apparent dress darn thas does the finest twisted thread. It is, Stn fact, actually invisible if properly done. Pl ickles Without Brine. rWash the cucumbers and pack tin Jars; to a quart add two tablespoon Sfuls of whole cloves, mustard seed and other spices, covering with seald aing hot vinegar and close securely, t in cannin. STONE IN BUDDER REMOVEO"' IN REMARKABLE WAY ` A year and a half ago I was taken with a severe attack of kidney trouble that pained me to such an extent that mor- Od phine had to be given me. Was attended tin by a doctbr who pronounced it as stone Ij in the bladder and prescribed Lithia Water. I took Lithia Water and tablets ror for some time and received no relief from them. I stopped taking medicines for some time and having some Dr. Kilmer's ga Swamp-Root in the house, I decided to the try it and felt much relieved; while taking Ne the second bottle commenced to pass ha gravel in urine until I had passed in all at least a half a dozen or more and have net not suffered the slightest since and in all have taken one bottle and a half and feel very grateful to Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. Yours very truly, H. W. SPINKS. Camp Hill, Ala. vo Personally appeared before me this ma 16th of August, 1909, H. W. Spinks, who subscribed the above statement and made qu oath that same is true in substance and vo in fact. In A. B. LEE, Z ~.Z. Notary Publia. pr a,. aw a h .. maln.m, . T. do Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send to Dr. Kilnier & Co., Bingham. " ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will ge convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. re For sale at all drug stores. Pries ffty- ra cents and one-dollyr. w1 W of m Getting a Reputation. There is a desk in the senate par tocularly convenient as a place from which to make speeches. It is next to the aisle and almost in the center li of the chamber, and affords an oppor- w tunity for the speaker to make every body hear. Il At least a dozen senators, accord- wr ing to the Washington correspondent v of the St. Louis Star, have borrowed this desk when they had special utter ances to deliver to the senate. This b led, not long ago, to a mild protest from its legitimate occupant. "I am perfectly willing to give up my desk," said he, "but I am afraid people will think that the same man is talking all the time. I don't want to get the reputation of constantly filling the enate with words."- y t Youth's Companion. g AWFUL BURNING ITCH CURED ' IN A DAY II a "In the middle of the night of March o 30th I woke up with a burning itch in fi my two hands and I felt as if I could s pull them apart. In the morning the h d itching had gone to my chest and dur- o ing that day it spread all over my a body. I was red and raw from the top i of my head to the soles of my feet and I was in continual agony from the 1i e itching. I could neither lie down nor u sit up. I happened to -e about Cut d cura Remedies, and I thought I would I Sgive them a triaL I took a goodbath with the Cuticura Soap and used the , Cuticura Ointment I put it on from t I my head down to my feet and then went to bed. On the frst of April I felt like a new man. The itching was almost gone. I continued with the r Cutleura Soap and Cuticura Ointment . and during that day the Itching com- i Spletely left me. Frank Grldley, 325 SEast 43rd Street, New Ydrk City, Apr. t 27, 1909." Cutlcura Remedies are sold r, throughout the world; Potter Drug a t Chem. Corp, Solo Props, Boston, Mass. d Planning a Desperate Revenge. r The haughty, Imperious beauty handed him back his ring. "Now that all is over between us," she said, "I suppose you will buy a revolver and put an end to your wretched existence?" '"Worse than that!" he hissed, being careful to Introduce the necessary sibilant; "far wors-s-e! I shall steal a revolver! And I shall shoot your Smeasly little sore-eyed poodle!" A wild shriek burst from her lips. She fell upon her knees and But he had gone. Sames rome O T sR TesmO. I Lucas CoDvUT. s v 1awm J. csnu ma eu alt taw me II wS It St ( SW sr a V.D J. Csmnsbr & c".. gD S1 tI 017 Taol. oa osty sAd asO mi. a d (W m irm u ather m a P oa HUIaDInD DOLLRS tas rma sa sew a wem ear m tiol mee m emnus oe e tri as L;ay 555 te bo Gund at io. 1A 3to do.- CHN. sriy tol sebo° dlmd o w w tabe thote oodi serD, pickna out tbS toli by tal Drwlul. o r tt S Laying tho For adatlon. "Why are you always m careful to ' ask advice about what you are going to dot" "So that if things go wrong I can say 'I told you so.' Some people treat the sermon as a table d'hote dinner, picking out the things that will not ares with th. is. Revenge is better than a p'es '7 kind of gratitude. 1IUG 01 VIrL uUU. I UýOM1M N ýMý ýý ý ýý AMý . ON LA O týO00" I Ul pORr 53 M HIS LIVELIHOOD AT STAKE Certainly Candidate for Governor Could Not Expect to Get That Vote. An incident in which former Gov. Odell of New York figured as the vic tim was told by Col. James Hamilton Lewis at a recent banquet. "When Gov. Odell was last running for office." said CoL Lewis, "there had been a great deal of talk about Nia gara falls and the electrical power that could be conferred on all parts of Newt York. One day an old negro halted Mr. Odell and said: "'Mr. Odell, is yo' runnin' for gov' ner, asha " 'I am,' answered the candidate. "'I guess yo' want my vote, den.' said the old colored man. "'Well, I would like to have your vote, Zeb. I have known you for so many years.' "'Well, I jist want to ask you a question, Mr. Odell, befo' I give mah vote to you. Are yo' for electric lights in dis town?' "'Well, Zeb, I am for all modern im provements,' said Odell, with a slight flourish. "'Well, ash, I cain't vote for you.' said Zeb with firmness. 'Yo' done for gel dat I is a lamp lighter.'" "Off Day" of Favorite. Chapley-How did she happen to refuse you; I thought you were her favorite? Washley-Well, the favorite didn't win, that's all. LOOK TO YOUR KIDNEYS. When Suffering From Backache Headaches and Urinary Troubles. They are probably the true sourge of your misery. To keep well, you must keep your kidneys well. There is no better kidney remedy than Doan's Kidney Pills. They cure sick kid neys and cure them perma nently. Ernest UI bright, Kel logg, Idaho, says: I was nearly dead with kidney trouble. I pass ed quantities of Iblood and lost 16 pounds in weight in three weeks. My bladder was so full of gravel I could not hold the urine. I passed several stones as large as a pea. I rapidly improved under the use of Doan's Kidney Pills and was soon well and strong." Remember the name-Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. One of the Best Rest Cures. Is a good story. To many women it is as good as a trip away from home. When you are tired out and your nerves are on edge, try going off by yourself and losing yourself in some good story. You will, in nine cases out of ten, come back rested and in d gorated. One woman who has passed serene ly through many years of hard work and worry that go with the managing , of a house and bringing up of a large a family of children, said that she con I sidered it the duty of every busy s housekeeper to read a certain amount of "trash," light fiction, for the rest f and change to the mind that it would Sgive. Try it, you who lead a strenuous life, and who sometimes grow exceed r ingly weary of the same. SFree Cure for Rheumatism and Bone SPains. s Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures the worst cases of rheumatism, bone pains, awollen muscles and joints, by purifying the blood and destroying the I uric acid in the blood. Thousands of Scases cured by B. B. B. after all other treatments fadiled. Price $1.00 perlarge bottle at drug stores, with eomplet diree t tions. Large sample free by wtis Blood IBalm Co., Atlanta, Ga, Department B. His Luck. S"I know a man who is always up Sagainst it" "Who is he?" "The paper hanger when he has to ix a new wall." TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY - or Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes a andGranulatedEyelids. Murine Doesn't 8mart--8oothes Bye Pain. Druggists r el Marine Bre Remedy, Liquid, 25c, Oc, $1.00. Marine Eye Salve in SAseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books y and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murino Bye Remedy Co, Chicago. The Exception. "Doesn't your husband like cats. Mrs. Binks?" "No, indeed. He hates all cats ex cept a little kitty they have at his club." Contrary Issues. "So Binks has had his income cut down T" "Yes; that is why he is so much ma ct up." A good haonet medy for Rheumt..m, Neuralgia and Sore Throat ias Hamlina SWizard Oil. Nothing will so quickly drive out all pain and inflammation. That observation which is called knowledge of the world will be found much more frequent to make men cuna to nig than good.-Dr. Johnaon. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES MNgM i WIIb a/s Ie b hih~s u seu s Map iIUM. eM Iý M eMi m M l~ buss MsI' _e ub beam s ass _ _ lsm u w aln. Wgs r kekus istIbU . W 355. U M /s pM1 .. Mrs. 'h t you think I look plump In this gown? Thyr--TeY. Did you have It made Anssi-a l often temporarly ms tksm horirtus S CASTORIA o Infants and CWId. The Kind You Have Attabk preparatiounf.rAs. sim in rooaander.u t- Bears the ,t I)e Slomacs anlBowels d Promotes DistionCheerful ness and Rest.Conlains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARC OTIC M.prras Awarma$er *o Aperfect Remedy forConslps US 0 .Inc ,soimie s.natn 4 ranteed under the F C A T Mrs. Cook Says There is not much pleasure In life," writes Mrs. J. D. Cook, of Crane, Mo., if one has to be sick all the time. So many women suffer from girlhood on, all through life, who could be spared such suffering, and live in comfort, if they would only try Cardul, the woman's tonic, as I did. I was only 16 years old when I first took CarduL Now, I am 30. Whenever I was poorly or felt real bad, Cardul always brought me out all right I have faith In it. I know what it has done Ior me, and I have seen what it has done for others." TAKE CARD UI OO S The Woman's Tonic Nearly everybody knows what Cardul will do for weak women. For more than 50 years, It has been Ina success ful use in the treatment of women's ills. Thousands of enthusiastic, truthful, unblued wquen have written to tell of the help this remedy has been to them. Do you still hesitate to take Cardul for your troubles? If so, why? Read what othlbers say, and at least give it a trial. It may be just what you need. W. L. DOUCLA 3'3"& 84HOOESIWJU1 Sm., rS8s eS2.oo,s2.So&f.@O. sO a muvWomW.ni or yes eata moe t hasve bee d t h fe e mo e ra am yersen t oe I aame dll - mr Sea*s medm See LA OR DOLLAR, I GUARANTEE E 0o et hdt * olee. o amm . wamo. emo wa, w .m..a as hvSAo Semaematb y will be seavmOh please_ beemmae Insomnia "I have been using Caesrets for In somami, with which I bve bees sElmed for twenty yema, sd I can my that Ca.. carets have ggi a mom dli than any other remeyI Ihaever tried. I bll certainly maommei them t my frlen r being all that Te.they arerq sds Ta.. OUd RIgin, !m. o Good Nevor _ s. Waor tslo. lt. Neer e aulk. T ob me b tdbletstapedCCC OmGsd to s ora your mea so. w ROOSEVELT'S OWN BOOK Wen brt tboemade !r Christme esal Nw Yr .e takeokt Wo t.laai~lisi oo .. 1ona vy o id and hi h Com aistJ2L the src c ace and write or propset wenas to CHARLIS SCRIBNB'S SONS. an (L S.) lrith Avees. New York. I-a a .. wa..ts; I Daemsan ý, C. WANTED «-,, , ,- iS ' DISTEMPER r A ' sIpo MEDICAL CIS., 40W S NoL . . . ILLA Arkansas Directory BEAT THIS ~ N.. 3 ýa1S lvine.l I.m.iN ý.r !.r w. 11w · r ov-... - rM Qieor old vwmU.10. SS a Umdwwodir b14 em Ur GOTTON GINS W. as amt1 w o.ýM..ý+.- Tminb KODAK FIIISHINU" lDmu darloo uh to d5-4 ezrpeW . I air rail; u .:o W rolL u.s.r., ' UssL ha ""s~Y ~ su+rr Nhmal. rord .194 sb om.p JUNOKIUD PHOTO COMPANY W. N. U., Lttle Rook. No. 46-191d