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The Journal Times from Racine, Wisconsin • 3

Publication:
The Journal Timesi
Location:
Racine, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE KACIXE DAILY JOURNAL, FRIDAT AFTERNOON, JUNE 21, 12,000 PEOPLE ATtEHD. Number of Recorded Admissions at Wallace Circus Yesterday. HunVredPhysicians in the race, but the gold modal was won by Dr. Koweostrot, whose treatment is different from anybody 'a; who prefers tbe poor to the rich and gives cosultatlon free to all. THEYSTAND BY THE MISTER Table and Kitchen Practical Suggestions About What to Eat and How to Prepare Food.

Tin matter will be found to be en tirely different from and superior to thu usual run of food articles, in that every item is a nugget of culinary wisdom and eminently practical. KIRST VOLl'ME. Conducted by Lida Ames Willis. Mar-ouette Building, Chicago, to whom oil inquiries should be addressed. All rights reserved by tanning Bed Bugs arc not the cause of comfort on a summer night.

I I IVhy not exterminate them. Now is the time, before the arrival of a crop. Use PERPETUAL MOTION OTTO HAS A NEW RIVAL. ante Haller, of aiii-r. Kenoaha County, Confident That Htupendotia Problem IIa 1 tee Solved.

KENOSHA, June 21 Haller, a Dune residing in the town of Someru, claim to have invented a perpetual-motion in.chiiie, and he ha been granted a patent on the design by the patent bureau at Washington. Haller has been at work on the machine for the past thirty year, but let no one into the secret until the machine was tartpd for it eternal run nix months ago. He refused to show the machine or allow it to be photographed, bvit many people claim that it has been in constant motion for more than six months. The model is made entirely of wood, and Haller states that he worked for more than a year on one single wheel. Haller is highly educated and was a machinist for many year-.

Many people are backing him in his invention and claim that it is a suc-ce in every manner. If possible the model will be sent to the Pan-American exposition within a-ew days. WKDDED IX ZION CI TV. The first wedding to take place, in "Zion" city at which the general overseer presided and performed the ceremony took place Wednesday afternoon at the summer home of Dr. Dowie.

The contracting partieR were Elliot DueRen-bury, aged 40, and Estella Applegreen, aged 20. The regular marriage ceremony, a prescribed by law, was used by Dr. Dowie. ILL CONTEST FATHER'S WILL. The will of William Kenem of the and bake in a rather slow oven for at leart 25 minutes.

It must be thoroughly done, but not baked too dry. THE FILLING. Select a very ripe sugar-loaf pineapple, pare and remove eye and core, chop a fine as possible and then pound to a paste; add sugar enough to sweeten the pineapple to taste and spread between the layers quarter of an inch thick; or cook the pineapple and sugar together until you have a thick, marmalade; this will prevent the juices from running away from the pulp while the meringue is baking. When the cake put together, cover it with a meringue made by beating the whites of three eggs to a stiff froth and adding three tablespoon-fuls of powdered sugar and a tablespoonful of lemon juice. Bake the meringue very slowly in the oven for ten minutes; if it cooks to fast it will be spoiled.

SATURDAY. BREAKFAST. Fruit. CereaL Cream, Chipped Beef in Cream, Baked Potatoes, Hot Rolls. Coffee.

LUNCH. Panned Tomatoes, Cream Sauce, Sardines and Potato Salad, Cheese, Wafers, Cocoa. DINNER. Tomato Bisque, Veal Cutlets, Brown Gravy, Mashed Potatoes, Teas, Asparagus, Cherry Pie, Coffee. 1 SUNDAY.

BREAKFAST. Fruit, Cereal, Cream, Broiled Whitefish, Creamed Tomatoes, Waffles, Maple Svrup, Cofree. DINNER. Tomato Bouillon, Smothered Chicken. Peas, New Potatoes, Asparagus, Crab Salad.

Fruit Tapioca, Cream, Cake. Coffee. SUPPER. Crab Meat Sandwiches, 1 Grilled Tomatoes, Strawberries, Cake, Tea. MONDAY.

BREAKFAST. Cereal, Cream, Broiled Salt Mackerel, Creamed Potatoes Heated Rolls, Coffee. LUNCH. Shredded Dried Beef with Egg Saucs, Quick Biscuit, Coffee. DINNER.

Green Pea Soun, Broiled Sirloin Monk, Siuce Bearnaise, New Potatoes, Cream Sauce, Asparagus Salad, American Cream, Cake. Coffee. TUESDAY. BREAKFAST. Fruit.

Tot 36 years Mr, Sidney Price, 416 Lk arena, Bacin. suffered with a tumor near her left eye. The location rendered ita removal a difficult operatlou. She often wished to be rid of lr bat dreaded tha knife. Dr.

Kowen-atrot, 408 Main etreet, removed it without knife or pain. She did not have to take chloroform and there are bo ecars to tell the tal. Mr. Joseph Chlrherk, 1108 Mound Barine, for many yar had (rowtb on lip and Dr. Kowenatrot cured her without in-convenienc- Anna Berg.

805 La Sail atreet. Baclne iufler-ed greatly with ruptur and associated dia-ie. Dr. Koweostrot cured her without an operation. Hend a stamp to the doctor for a loaf list of the greatest caret the world erer saw.

TPan-lmerican Special Equipment the best that the Pullman and Michijran Central shops can turn out. Elegant sleeping cars, dining cars, buffet cart, and coaches. Via Niagafa Falls TO THE Buffalo Exposition Commtncing Sandap. Jane 9, 1901 Lv.Chicag;o daily. pm, aerringr dinner Ar.

Buffalo nt morning, 7. am. Lv. Buffalo daily, 8 jopm Eastern Time) Ar. Chicago 9.30 am, terving breakfast.

Michigan Central Tf Slagara Fatts Kot. The Onlv Line runninjr directly by and in full view ol Xlacara Kail, utoppin? it day train at Kali View Station. Other train from Chicago, to. 30 am, 3.00 pm, arid it. yy pm daily.

Send 4 cent postage for beautiful Pan-American Souvenir Folder. O. W. Ri'ggles, G. P.

Chicago. Owen E.McCarthy Is now connected with The Belle City Furniture 220-222 5ixth H. Q. PRESS ER, PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. ESTIMATES FURNISHED.

Citlz.naTel.46a1. taio North Chatham I A SWELL TRAIN Excelled Anything Kver Seen Bare The Show Cl.an and One of the Best on the Road. Twelve thousand and six hundred people attended the Wallace circus yesterday afternoon" and last evening. The crowd last night was without an exception the largest ever seen under a tent in Racine. Eight thousand is not too high an estimate.

Such a jam of people it would be hard to describe. Not a single seat in the targe tent was vacant and hundreds stood or sat between the seats and the ring. Attaches of the show certainly handled the' crowd nicely and so far as known there was not an accident, a cae of robbery or ungentle-manly conduct. It speaks volumes for the hianagement of the great show. The program showed a large list' of circus attractions.

The horses are way ahead of anything ever seen here before and the ponies are beauties. The elephants and camels and in fact all of the animals in the menagerie arc clean and healthy. Among th special features of the show are the Nelson familj. a famous ten brother and sister act in icrobatics which the management claims is unsurpassed anywhere; Mike, Rooney and Or-rin Hull is, bareback Vinjersaxilt and fancy riders; the Livingstons and a host of others in aerial bar and trapeze acts, and all the usual arid some of th unusual things that go to make up the small boy's delight and his father's too at the first big circus of the year. One of the special features of the show-is the statue posing and bareback acts of Miss Blanche Reed who has been called the Lillian Russell of the ring from her beauty and grace.

She and her husband, Hermann Greggs, do some acts together. Miss Reed travels with her little baby, eight weeks old, which in the pet and pride of the show. When the child was only four weeks old nhe was back on her big ring horse. The hippodrome races were fast and furious and it was a miracle that some one was not hurt, for the overflow of people were crowded into the rings and any old place to make room for the horse. The concert after the "show, under the management of Eugene Beaugrand, a well known Racine boy, was up to the best of them.

"Gene" is a great favorite with the circus people and they all swear by him. MAN OF MANY PARTS. Confession of One Who Wa a Baseball Umpire. Detroit Free Press: A pale, emaciated man sat in an olwcure corner of the hotel His features were drawn and haggard, and apparently he preferred to be alone with his thoughts. Finally a communicative individual took an adjacent seat and made a timely remark about the weather.

The pale man was slow to respond. He made an inarticulate reply that did not seem to entirely satisfy the talkative person. "In trouble, I reckon," observed the latter. nothing unusual," was the re sponse. "Family matter?" "No," was the short reply.

"If you must known I am a baseball umpire. That means I'm several things. As Shakespeare says, 'One man in him time plays many But I don't think Shakespeare knew what he wrote, else re would, have given the baseball umpire especial distinction. Talk nlout your anatomical vbnder. If I could do half the feats that the kind bleachers assign to me I would endeavor to please patrons and players.

Kindly mark the different, roles that are assigned to me and then wonder why dime museum managers do not grab i "There's a man on third, a member of the home team. A ball is knocked e'ese to the base1 line, and I see it foul. Some of the wild-eyed bleacher, whose vision is distorted by prejudice, madly dispute my decision. That is where I am a "Another close decision comes up a few minutes later. A howl is and amid the cries the fondest one is 'Thief and This is what they call a 'hold-up' and 1 am denounced as a "I have sometimes been called a 'banana a 'cheap a 'the worst that ever happened, and a Occasionally, where I lavor the home team, I am a I very M-ldoin assume that form, however- It would take me until midnight to enumerate my titles.

Now, what's making me thin is to discover just what I am." "I guess you're It." laconically remarked the communicative individual. Felix Hogenmiller, who is now 75 years old, has taught school in the same room at Ste. Genevieve, for more than fifty years. FAKE HAIR PREPARTIONS. Do Hair So Good, But Often Canseifto Fall Out.

Many hair preparations are "fake" been use they are merely scalp irritants. They often cause a dryness, making the hair brittle, and finally, lifeless. Dandruff is the cause of all trouble with hair. It is a germ disease. The germ makes cuticle scale as it digs to the root of the hair, where it destroys the hair's vitality, causing the hair to fall out.

To cure Dandruff, the germ must be killed. "Destroy the cause, you remove the effect," Newbro's Herpieide is the only hair preparation that kill the dandruff germ, thereby leaving the feaic to groTV. lyxyxyujtly, Tt Members of the Congregational Church Express Opinions. BELIEVE REV. RICHARDSON A MUCH PERSECUTED MAN ilBut MtUn( to Held June 26 Committee May Appointed to Makean InTeatlfBllou-PaiitoT's Year Expire In September.

There appears to be but one sentiment. among the members of the First Congregational church of thi city in regard to Henry L. Richawlaon, the pastor, who recently figured in the sensational divorce auit brought by hi wife. It to that Mr. Richardson is a much maligned man, persecuted by a wife and father-in-law without reason or right.

Prominent members of the congregation interviewed yesterdiy afternoon expressed themselves freely, and they ttand by tie minister. Whether any sort of an investigation will be made it not fully determined, but it to intimated that there may be. The annual meeting of the' church will take place on June and it is probable that a committee will be appointed to looktinto the niattor. Mr. Richardson's year, for which he waa engaged, will not expire until Sep-taniber 1, and no-action will be taken tintil that time, no matter wlwit the de-crsionof Judge Elliott may be in the dhroree case, VIIAT Tnw MEMBERS THINK.

The Milwaukee Sentinel Bays: "Jlr. Richardson is a noble, high-minded man," declared D. J. Morey, one of the trustees, -with xome degree of warmth. "lie is wronged wronged irretrievably.

I was one of the trustee who opposed his being called here a year ago, a' I did not hUve he ww the man to heal a breach thaJ nad spiutig up during tho rejrinie of the Rev. James McLaren, bin predecessor, Hut now I believe in (standing by him. The feeling member of the church, ajnongtthonfr who know him intimately and are In a powirron to le thoroughly conversant with the fa'ts, is that the actiom Hgint him has been brought the purpose of besmirching his fair name. But th people here know vhat an able, upright man he is. Of course, the decision is opt to have some bearing upon the question of his re-engagement, for although I know that it would not hHke the faith of these who know him, it might place the church in a quandary.

There probably is no married man who has not exchanged confidences with his wife, which could not be flaunted in public; but they have brought into this trial the moat sacred and private subjects and used them in an effort to show that he i-t a low-minded man. It is an outrage, I say." KO OPPOSITION, SAYS E. B. KTL-BOURN. "I have not heard one member of the congregation take sides against Mr.

Richardson." said E. B. Kilbourn, teller of the Manufacturers' National bank and a trustee of the church. "We all think one way, and that is that our pastor is a victim of persecution. His conduct ha always Iwon beyond reproach, and all this) testimony being used against him ha not served to make anyone change his views.

We feel that Mrs. Richardson and father are entirely at fault. Of course, I cannot say whether Mr. Richardson will be retained, although I am sore that no action will be taken before a thorough investigation." "If there are any who are opposed to Mr. Richardson 1 have not leen able to find them," declared Clarence Harney, one of the active members of the church.

The sentiment is all one way praise for the man and blame for the woman and her father. I have heard many expressions of sympathy for him." "Mv personal opinion is that it has been a case of persecution, pure and simple," said Lund, another trustee. "As iar as Pcan judge from views that I have overheard, the congregation as a whole take a similar position. 1 presume a committee will be appointed to investigate." Wlipnnaln Penalona. June '21 Original-Edward F.

C.owdy. I -a Crose. In-crMse Ezra W. Button. Geneva Junction, Andrew Savior, La Crosse, $12; Henrv Ludorf.

Milwaukee. $10. Reissue Special, June Mc Harry. Na-J tiona! home, Milwaukee. Orig-imyf widows Special account, June 8, Eliza K.

Rice. Osceola, Anna Iverson. Charlotte, Smith, Louisville; Emily Truey, Pay Settlement. War with original Joseph Mott, Kieamlon Rate's to Milwaukee. Via the Northwestern lino.

Tickets will be sold at reduced -rates June 27 to 30, inclusive, limited to return until July 2, inclusive, on account of Biennial State Turnfeat. Apply to agents Chicago Northwestern Railway ion ml on Tickets to Ml? Xee. Via the Northwestern line, wih at retlu.ed rates 22 to -ive, with return limit until June elusive, on accountof German Veterans association. Apply to agents Chicago 4 Northwestern R'y. The C.

M. St. r. Ry. will sell Home-aeeker excursion tickets June 18, July I and 16.

Aug. 6 and 20, Sept. 3 and 17. jjKjuire for particulars. SOME NICE DKMSERTS FOR 81MMF.R From our German eooks we may obtain a great variety of recipes for desserts made in the form of cakes and thin, light breads.

The cakes' very nearly resemble our pancakes and are usually of goodly sire, so that one is sufficient for each serving. The batter is made of eggs and flour, cooked in a hot pan and transferred to the oven to be finished. They are served with powdered sugar and quarters of lemon, or are spread with preserved fruit before they are put into the oven and glazed. GERMAN PANCAKE. Sift and then weight half a pound of flour.

Beat three good-sized eggs until light, make a well in the center of the flour and gradually work the eggs into flour until you have a smooth batter free from lumps. Add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar and gradually half a pint of cold milk. Beat the batter again until very smooth and light. Heat a frying pan and when it is hot brush it wel with melted butter and pour in the batter. Cover with a pint of preserved pineapple or preserved apples and set in a hot oven for 12 or 15 minutes or until the batter is thoroughly cooked through under the fruit.

Then slide it carefully out of the pan onto a hot plate. Sift fruit jam and roll up quickly. Serve at once- ROLLED PANCAKES. Separate four eggs, beat the yolks until light, add Hi cupfuls of milk, measure one cup of sifted flour and sift with half a teaspoonful of salt; add the eggs and milk to flour and leat until smooth. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and stir slowly into the mixture.

Put a tablespoonful of butter in a frying pan and when hot pour in enough batter to cpver the bottom of the pan. Bake a delicate brown on under side and then turn and brown on the other side. When done spread with marmalade or fruit jam and rod! up quickly. Serve at once. KOTLATSTIIEN.

Rut one cup of milk in a saucepan with two ounces of butter, three level tablespoon fuls of sugar and a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt; us soon as the milk boils throw in four ounces of sifted flour, stirring rapidly and conMantly until a smooth paste is formed which loosens itself from the bottom and sides the saucepan; transfer this to a lwvl and set away to get, cold, stirring ocens-ionaly. Then add one whole egg and the yolks of four. Drop the mixture by spoonfuls on buttered tins, placing each portion two inches apart: brush over with beaten egg and bake in rather a quick oven until a light brown and perfectly light to the touch. When done, brush over each with one egg mixed with a tablespoonful of milk and one of sugar; sprinkle with chopped almonds and return to the oven for a few minutes. When they are coJd cut an opening in the side of each puff and fill with whipped cream and strawberries.

Whip a half cup of good sweet cream to a stiff dry froth; add half a cup of fresh crush ed strawberries sweetened with powdered sugar- APPLE CAKE. Measure two cups of sifted flour, add two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and half a teaspoonful of salt and sift again into a mixing bowl; make a well in the center; beat whites of two and yolk of one egg until light, add grated rind jf a lemon, one tablespoonful of melted butter and a cup of milk; mix it gradually into the flour until you have a thick ter or very soft dough, Spread this on shallow, well-buttered tins, having batter not more than an nch thick. Pare and cut into eighths enough large, tart apples to cover the top of the cakes by lying the pieces closely together in rows, pressing the sharp edges into the dough; brush well with softened but not melted butter, sprinkle thickly with granulated sugar and bake in a hot oven. When done dust with powdered sugar and cinnamon, i PEACH CAKE. Make a good, rich baking powder biscuit dough and roll out until not more than an inch thick.

Place in long bu-cuit pans; brush well with butter and cover the entire top of each cake with sliced peaches, arranged in nymmetrical rows. Sprinkle generously with granulated sugar, cover the pan wtth a tin lmking; sheet or another biscuit pan and bake for 25 or 'M minutes. The idea is to cook the fruit thoroughly without reducing it to a pulp or dryfhg it up and to retain the shape. If peaches are well ripened they may be cut into halves and placed with rounded side up. These cakes are very simple and make plain but ddieiou desserts when fresh fruits are in season.

They closely resemble the American open fruit pie, but are more wholesome than the rica pastry of the pie crust, AMERICAN PINEArPLE CAKE. This makes a delicious summer dessert. For the calce part beat threa eggs without separating until very Ught and foamy. Add 't eupa of sugir and juice of half a lemon ami beat again until it is a foamy m. Then beat in a scant cup of cold waier (not ice-told) measure two cupa of sifted flour, add two tea-spoonfuls of baking powder and sift again.

Add this to cake mixture and beat until the batter very smooth. Spread" thrJbatter iai two larftjcale, tins. B. never fails. Fifteen cents a pint.

For sale only by Kradwell- W.AXrotsenburg Artistic Designer and Manufacturer of MONUMENTS, TABLETS, CORNER ETC, ETC. OFFICE. WORKS AND RESIDENCE, no FIFTH STREET. Should any cemetery improver ment be contemplated I would respectfully invite you to calT and examine the finest and largest assortment in the city. Having no agents, I can give patrons benefit of commissions.

W. A. Crotscnburg. j. r.

XIELSJEX, 332 MAIN STREET, Over Lakeside Office Hours 8 a. m. to 9 p. m. DR.

L. E. HALL. DENTIST. Room 304-5 Office Hours: 8 m.

Rablnaea Bik. i to 12 1:30 to 5 p. m. CITIZENS 'PHONE NO. 070.

All Work Fully Dr. H. C. Morris, DENTAL 2ii Sixth Racine, Wis. ABOVE WASHBURN A JOMNSOI CUT THIS OUT AND TAKE IT TO WAGNER'S 217 Sixth Street, and tt glass of Anheuaer Busch Budwelser Draught Beer.

Zahn Artz. Cor. Fifth and Mori. Sq. J3 town of Brighton waa filed for probate Ltoday.

The daughter, Mrs, Elizabeth of Clinton, contented the Khe was not mentioned as a bene ficiary. The property in litigation is -valued at about POWERFUL LIQUOR. How it KBacted of the Residents the Town of Mt Pleasant. Farmers of the town of Mt. Pleasant are telling of an agent who visited that section of the country recently and sold bitters and whisky that beat anything ever known.

It was disposed of in two gallon lots, the bitters coming in small kegs and the whisky in jugs. "The power of that said a farmer, when it was mixed together and the manner in which it affected a man who drank the combination, was something lieyond belief. I know of one young farmer who filled up on the beverage and fifteen seconds after he was making an effort to turn hand springs, imagined he could lift a house and when he yelled the people thought it was an Indian." Another farmer ventured the opinion that wild men were not in it with people taking a few drinks of the fluid. A man drnnk a half bottle one evening and three minutes after he had capsized the supper table, turned over two wagons and had a kicking match with' a horse, but the horse laid him out. Other stories ore tcld of the wonderful liquor and what men aid who had the nerve to drink it.

MAKES SAFE PASSAGE THROUGH HELL GATE NEW YORK, June 21. Without the assistance of a pilot and to demonstrate that a first-class battleship could be navigated through Hell Gate successfully, Captain Henry M. Manney took the big battleship Massachusetts through the tortuous rock-bottomed narrows yesterday. It was the first time in the history of the navy that any comma nder of a war vessel of this class ever dared attempt the feat, and river craft and shores were filled with people gathered to witness the trip of the Massachusetts. The passage of the mammoth fighting machine through the dangerous waters of Hell Gate successfully proves conclusively that in case of hostilities with a foreign jiower a battleship of the same draught as the Massachusetts, if she passed the fortifications of Willets Point and Fort Schuyler, could repeat the performance of the Massachusetts.

A Trade Murk Salt Involving- aaft.OOO Heeentlr Derided by the I nlted Court of Appeal. The I'. S. court of appeals has handed down a decision or far-reaching importance to the paper trade. The suit was brought by the Albany Perforated Wrapping Paper of Albany, X.

against the John Hoberg of Green Bay, to recover damages for a claimed infringement of thirteen different trade marks. The apellate court sustained the decision of Judge Jenkins in said action, holding that the brands, though fanciful or arbitrary in character, are not technical trade marks; that such marks wero used to distinguish the different grades of paper, with reference to quality, and the size and shape of the sheets, packages, and that for this reason a monopoly of such marks could not be acquired. The court of appeals not only held that the Complainant cannot monopolize any of the brands involved, but also fully exhonor-ated the John Hoberg Co. from the charge of unfair competition in trade, and dismissed the bill for want of equity. The case was comm-noed five years ago and was hotly contested, testimony having been taken in New York.

Iloston Albany. Milwaukee and Chicago. The Albany Co. was represented by three different firms, respectively of New York. Milwaukee and Chicago, and the John Holerg Co.

was defended by the Milwaukee patent law firm of Erwin Wheeler. The Siamese government has asked for American bids for the construction of a plant for the manufacture of arumuni-iion in that oqub try. Kambach's Cash Shoe House 300 SIXTH STREET, COR. rVSCOVSA. Special Offerings For Ten Days Only.

120 pr. Ladies' Pateut Leather, Oxford, manish laat, Goodyear well, aizes gmr 2fr to 7, A CD A width, regular price 2.50 and 2 00, close ont 1 )0 120 pr. Ladies Patent Leather Strap Slipper, hand, French heel regular price 1.75 and 1.50, close at 1 120 pr. Ladies' Kid Strap Slipper, torn new toe, regular price 1.50 and (P. Art 1.25, close at.

1 One lot of men's Basaian Calf regular price (3.50 and $2.50. First-class Repairing at Lowest Prices. prA4 Inmhorfi Chiropodist Parlor In Connection. TlCUe lYrtlllUdCll Cereal, Cream, Broiled Sweetbreads, Cucumbers, Corn Fritters, Coffee. LUNCH.

Deviled Beef. Fruit, Tea. Toast, Corn Pone, Cake, DINNER. Okra Soup, Hot Veal Loaf, Tomato Sauce, Stewed Onions, Rice, Cold Slaw. Banana Cream, Coffee.

Very Low Rate to X. E. A. Convention, to he Held at Detroit, Jul) 8-12. Via the Northwestern line.

Excursion tickets will be sold at greatly reduced rates. For dates of saJe and limits apply to agents Chicago Northwestern R'y. Application of eatln-Skln cream followed by Satin-Skin powdr srtve charming effect, a perfumed satin- complexion. 25c. Krad Oo.

Half Rate to Madison, Via the Northwestern line. Excursion tickets will be sold at one fare for round trip, June and 20, limited to return July indusivc, on account of Farmers' and Dairymen's excursion. Apply to agents Chicago Northwestern R'y. Kver fall In love? Keen away from Rolne If you wish to avoid It. So many grtrls um Satin-Skin cream and powder they're lrrealtUle; heart puncture cer- tain.

Kra1well-Thlen Co. PURE FOOD. None but thoroughly reliable, pure and healthful foods, so proven by actual chemical analysis, will be accepted for these columns. Sold by you 'your cer. urocer.

Battle CreeK I Szmtarium V. Pood Co. iMiu 0 Anticipating July In ventory WE WILL SELL SOLAR BICYCLE LAMPS at MAJESTIC, GAS LAMPS at $1.35 GOOD OIL LAMPS at 75c I SPENCF VY. vl JL-flX cor. College Ave.

and Sixth St. AWNINGS! AWNINGS! Made In any color to flt jour windows. Protect your veranda with a veranda roller awning. Our prices are right. The Langlois 5" DR.

FEDERSPIEL, Dentist. Office open evenings until 3. Phone 495 W..

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About The Journal Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,278,330
Years Available:
1881-2024