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Consumption Certainly Curablo Don't Try to Rao Away from Consumption You CannotThe Wiser, Safer Plan Is to Stay at Home and Fight It OutWe Offer You Permanent Release, Not Temporary Relief Remember There Is No Expense or Obliga tion Attached to the Offer of FREE Trial Treatment If Afflicted Write the Company Today. Don t buy a piano player until you have Been and heard the Cecilian at S W Rau denbush i. Co s new parlors Dayton block, 710 Nicollet avenue, second floor A, HARK S A MIL E Hfi?FHjg Elaborate Ceremonies Arranged for i h Inaugural of President Sall i mon of Carleton, ' ______ No Such Word as Hopeless NowCon* umptives May Be of Good Heart and CourageThe Way to Health I Clear i f Here Is a Cur e Offered FREs E Tha t Distinguished Educators of Many Has Brought New Strength or Perfect Health to Hundreds, Among Them Con gressman Nelson Dingley's Son. ' O. K. BUCKHOUT, Chairman Kalamazoo Tuberculosis Remedy Co. (Ltd ) Member of British Tuberculosis Congress Member of National Asso ciation for the Prevention of Consumption. Consumption not only can be cured, but Is beinc cured every day by Antldotum Tubercu losa It is a home treatment that exterminates very germ and rebuilds, restrengthens, and re vitalises the entire Bystem The cures stand as proof The hundreds Antidotum Tuberculose has changed from shadows to strong men. from mere wisps of women into plump, full chested maidens and matrons, the new lease of life for the thin pale, hopeless sufferers in the very ahadow of the tomb, form a wall of proof against which there can be no contention There is hopeunbounded hopefor all Not false hope or vain delusions, but well grounded belief in the certainty of a cure Medical science does not stand still It is advancing always It is constantly correcting the mis takes and brushing aside the theories of yes terday Just as certain as that germs are the cause of Consumption Is It that the remedy that will kill these germs will cure it Cure it, mind you, not relieve it, or lessen its pangs, but rid the system of it for good and all That remedy is Antidotum Tuberculose (a Trial Treatment of which is offered Free to every inquirer), the deadly enemy of the Consump tion germ If it were not all and more than is claimed for it the company could never have won for its chairman Mr O K Buckhout, a member of the National Association for the Prevention of Consumption, of which H R H the Prince of Wales is president, Lord Lister vice president and His Majesty King Edward of England honorary president You know that all this misery the hollow cough, the blood spitting, night-sweats, weakness, and wasting away result from colonies of deadly germs that cluster about your vitals and are literally eating away your life The slightest bymptom that tells of the presence of these germs is nature's warning and should be in stantlv heeded If you already have consump tion or merely fear that you are contracting the disease if you have that horrible heritage a death taint in the blood which will sooner or later prove its presencedon't put off for a single day writing to the Kalamazoo Tuber* culosis Remedy Co (Ltd ),73 Main St, Kala mazoo Michigan, for the FREE Trial Treat ment and the plain and comprehensive litera ture which they will gladly Bend you, all charges prepaid Remember the trial treat ment is absolutely FREE It Is your sacred duty to stop the encroachment of this terrible disease before it is too late. As you value Ufa and death, writa today. 60,000 MEN OUT Several of the Strikes, However, Are Not Serious. | J Chicigo May 2 About 50 000 men went on strike in the Urited States yesterday A large strike is reported from Toronto, Canada, swelling the total to 60 000 men quitting work Many of these hoTie-ver, are not seri ous strikes and the men aie expected to be back to work In a short time The threatened strike of the marine engineers which has affrighted New York for the last few days, was nipped in the bud by the action of the railroads and the marine engineers in their employ asrreeing to sub mlt their differences to arbitration ) CAPITAL CTJLLINGS For the ten months of the present fiscal year f3*1 overnment receipts exceeded expenditures by 419,646 Th war department his adopted a new set of stnndirds and legimental battalion and other colors for the army The cise of the United States In the Alaskan boundarv dispute has been delivered at the Brit ish rmbassy It makes u volume of 650 pages Commissioner Richards leaves for Minnesota tir'\ next wees and will exnmine into the -work that has been done in classifying the timber on the Chippewa reservations The republican members of the subcommittee of the senal flnaicp committee will meet at Hot Springs Va next week to consider plans foi giving elasticity to the currency The man who leads a sed entary life frequently believes he is the victim of some serious malady. Do not alarm yourself. So many things that seem like "serious trouble" are only some form of Indigestion. If you are anxious about your healthmake sure at first that the trouble is not Indigestion or Constipation, it must be something else if IRON-OX Tiny Toiaic Tablets do not make you well. I I ? Little aluminum boxso chocolate coated tabletsfor a quarter For sale in every Minneapolis drug store. If you live outside the City and cannot get Iron-Ox Tiny Tonic Tablets, send your address and drug gist's name to The _ Iron-Ox Remedy Co., SO \ Detroit, Mich , / 2 5 _ . . . \ and one full size # *...- Tablets \ package will / Cents States Will Be PresentFea tures of Day's Exercises. Special to The Journal. Northfleld, Minn , May 2 The inaugur ation of Rev William H Sallmon as pres ident of Carleton college to succeed Re\ James W Stiong, will take place on Wednesday The e\ent marks an era in Carleton s histoiy The trustees have laid extensive plans for the entertainment of \ isitors Following is an outline of events connected with the inaugural. 9am Meeting of students in Willis hall Addresses by students and by visit ing delegates 10 30Gathering of alumni at Memorial library 11 a m Reception by the president of the boaid of trustees, the president emer itus and the president to official and visit ing guests at Gridle hall, with luncheon 1 p mInauguial procession formed at Giidley hall in the following order St Olaf college band, students alumni, in structors, professors, superintendents of schoolb, normal schools and academies, clergy, cit officials, presidents of col leges and university, trustees, speakers., governor of the state, president and presi dent emeritus of the college In case of rain the procession will form in the parlors of the church 1 30 p m At the First Congregational chuich, installation services, consisting of processional, addresses by Irwin Shepaid, Ph D , Professor Eugene W Ljman, H A B D , A J Nason, B S , President Cyrus. Northrop, L L D , Anson Phelps Stokes, Jr, M A , secretary of Yale uni \ersity and President Sallmon, two hymns by Professor George Huntington, M A , the installation, response by the president, installation prayer by president emeritus James W Strong, D D , L. L D , choral response, recessional 4 30 p m Interclass field and track meet at Laird field 8 p mReception by the president of the college and Mrs Sallmon at Gridley hall, with inauguration ode by Professor Huntington, and music by the Carleton Glee club 10 p m Torchlight procession of stu dents and illumination of campus A great many invitations have been sent out, not only thruout the northwest, but even to California and east to Con necticut Invitations were sent generally to the presidents of the large universities and colleges, to prominent and represen tative clergymen, to superintendents of public schools and county superintendents, principals of high schools, to the alumni and a large number of old students In vitations were also sent to prominent men not engaged in educational work, both in this state and in other states Among the long list of visitors whose acceptances have already been received are the following President Cyrus North rop, University of Minnesota, President E J James, Noithwestern university, Evanston 111 , President Webster Merri fleld university of North Dakota, Grand Forks, President Kildahl, St Olaf col lege, Northfleld, President Charles A Blanchard Wheaton College, Wheaton, 111 President Wahlstrom, Adolphus college, St Peter, President S B McCormick, Coe college, Cedar Rapids, President E A Day, Parker college, Win nebago City, Minn , President Cowper, Mankato normal, Mankato, President Millspaugh, Winona normal, Winona, Mibs Louisa H Richardson, dean of Wes ley college, Delaware Ohio Professor Prederick D Tucker, principal state ag ricultural school, Professor T B Veblins of Chicago university Oberlin College will be represented by Dr Leonard, Shattuck by Rev^ James Dobin of Faribault, and Pillsbury acad emy by its principal, Rev Mi Ford Among the visitors not engaged in edu cational work will be Mr and Mrs Fred erick Trubee of Bridgepoi t, Conn, the parents of Mrs Sallmon, Mr S W Bald- | win president of the Connecticut National bank of Bridgeport, Conn Mrs Sall mon's grandfather, and her sister, Mrs Henr P Davison of New York city Governor Van Sant, who is to attend the opening ceremonies of the Louisiana Purchase exposition just prior to May 6, has accepted on condition he can return fiom St Louis in time The annual interclass track meet of Carleton will be held on Laird field on Monday and Wednesday The list of events will be divided between the two days The four College classes and the academy will participate and a cup will be piesented to the winning team The junior society of the Baptist church will have a rally Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock Paterson Man's Pumping Station Is Well Eqipped. I Paterson N J May 2 John Firman, 25 years old living here, has two hearts beating in his own breast He is a fine specimen of physical manhood and con stantly enjoys good health In 1898 it was disovered that he had a double heart when he was examined for enlistment with the Second regiment at Paterson Since then Firman has been more or less interesting to physicians An x-ray photograph shows the most I peculiar heart formation the doctors of I Paterson have ever seen or heard of WINS AT CLEVELAND Beloit, Wis., Orator Awarded First Position in Interstate Contest. Cleveland, May 2 The auditorium of the Euclid Avenue Baptist church was crowded last night to hear the interstate oratorical contest between representatives of eleven colleges The winners were First prize Washington Irving Maurer, Beloit college, Wisconsin, "The German Monreichst", second prize Abraham J. Muste Hope college, Michigan, "John Sobieske' , third prize Edward Hislop, Baker university, Kansas, "The Spirit of Inquiry " be sent you foi 25c 1 . S si*- ^stev^ as? Jsv KILLED THE BARTENDER. Chicago May 2 John Hamilton, a bartender, was shot thru the eye and fatally injured in a fight with two men who attempted to rob the cash drawer early to day Hamilton opened Are on the men who fled after firing the fatal shot A man answering the description of one of the thugs was later captured by the police TOLD IN A LINE Stanford University Cal Miss H C Oscher a student from the University of Minnesota, died yesterday of typhoid ChicagoAn inquiry as to the sanity of Otto Helm author of threatening letters to President Roosevelt will be held San FranciscoDaniel T. Hodges, formerly a millionaire of Sioux Cltj died in his bath tub from heart disease aged 65 PittsburgThree sheet metal workers were killed tnd two injured by the breaking of a scaffold at the Union station ChicagoThe fashionable district of Evanston is terrorized by a negro "hugger " and women are afraid to venture out after dark unattended New YorkJoseph Trepani was convicted of defrauding life Insurance companies by foisting deaths upon companies for persons who had been insured St Johns, N F French and British warships are expected at Bay St George N F , next weak to aupervise the annual opening of the fishing season Elmira, N Y. Five hundred workmen affili ated with the building trades council are on strike for recognition of their unions by em ployers increase in wages and au eight hour working day New YorkJames Swann, member of the cotton brokerage house of Inman & Swann of this citv and president of the Atlanta, Ga , National bank, is dead at the Buckingham hotel, here The body will be taken to Atlanta for Inter- ^m T CAUSESijp e 12 . Reports Show Farmers Will Lose Millions as Result of Qold **- " Weather. Thousands of Aores of Corn in the Southwest Must Be Re planted. ' Chicago, May 2Heavy frosts with biting wintry gales prevailing over many sections of the country, and the coldest May 1 weather seen in many years, have caused a loss of millions of dollars to farmers, fruit growers and market gar deners Reports from many states Indi cate that the general fruit crop Is sei iously cut down, while in Michigan, Mis souri and Indiana wheat has suffered se verely Corn Must Be Replanted. The corn crop has been damaged even more seriously than wheat In the south west the unprecedented cold weather has blackened the corn and withered it to the earth Thousands of acres will need replanting and as seed corn now is scarce, the farmers of that section are heavy sufferers Strawberries and such early vegetables as tomatoes' are ruined in parts of Illi nois The peach trees have escaped faii ly well In Berrien county, Michigan, a high wind prevented a still frost, which is ruinous to the blossoms, altho other parts j gia(jiy recommend it to all persons re- of Michigan were not so fortunate. Apple trees generally have escaped Cold Wave Spreading. The cold weather has spread eastward and severe snow storms are reported from -various points in Ohio, New York and Pennsylvania The temperatures gener ally thruout the country are almost the lowest on record for May 1, and the in dications are that the cold spell In many sections Is not broken IOWA WINS FROM MINN. Debate of University Men So Close That the Judges Divided in Opinion. HAS TWO HEARTS Special to The Journal. Iowa City, Iowa, May 2 Minnesota and Iowa universtiy debaters met here last night The question was "Resolved, that the adjudication of disputes between em ployers and their employes should be made a part of the administration of justice, granted, that special courts, with appro priate rules of procedure may be estab lished if desirable, that labor unions may be required to incorporate, if necessary " The Iowa team affirmed and the gophers took the negative. The hawkeye speakers were George E Hill of Burlington and C H Edmondson and E R Johnston of Iowa City The Minnesotans were H Les lie Wildey, Irwin A Churchill and War ren O Williams The presiding officer was Former Con gressman Joe R Lane of Davenport The judges were Professor Benjamin Terry, Chicago university, Professor M B Ham mond, University of Illinois, and W D Gustavus JFullerton Ottawa, 111 The two teams were evenly balanced and each debater made a brilliant speech The decision was close, two judges voting for the affirmative and one for the negative The debate makes the score between Iowa and Minnesota stand three debates for Minnesota and seven for Iowa Iowa argued that the necessity for pre venting strikes had been demonstrated to every citizen by the recent coal strike, that every person In the United States was affected by strikes and that the depart ment of justice should make their preven tion one of the objects of its existence Minnesota held that compulsory arbitra tion was impracticable and that strike questions were being solved without It. IS BRANDED FOR LIFE Grand Rapids Student Will Carry Scar " '03" on His Forehead Till Death. New York Sun Special Service. Grand Rapids Mich , May 2 John Mo Pherson, president of the junior class of the Grand Rapids high school, bears an ugly mark on his forehead in the form of the figures "03 ' firmly imprinted there, he alleges, with hot branding irons by members of the senior class McPherson was inveigled into a vacant lot surrounded by bushes where three or four conspirators were waiting to dec orate him and where a fire built in a hole in the ground heated the irons He was firmly bound and then two young men who wore masks applied the brands It is declared that they were chosen to do the work by a vote of the senior class, and their names are kept secret After he had been freed by his assail ants, McPherson hastened to a physician who counteracted part of the effect of the blisters but he is marked probably for life He has been urged to make com plaint to the authorities but refuses MEN (Mv NATIONAL FAME USE PE-RU-NA FOR CATARRH s ^ .-s ROUGH RIDING OUTFIT Cheyenne Has One Picked Out for the President. Cheyenne, Wyo , May 2 The citizens of Cheyenne will present President Roose velt, on his visit to this city on May 3, with one of the finest rough riding out fits ever seen in the west It will be com posed of saddle, bridle, quirt, spurs and Navajo blanket and will cost $400 Steer roping and rough riding will be a feature of the celebration In Cheyenne NEW CHIEF OF POLICE, Cleveland May 2 Captain Frederick Kohler has been appointed chief of the Cleveland police department to Bucceed George Corner, who has been retired on a pension because of physical disability Drunkenness IS A DISEASE! "Will-Power" Will Not Cure It. Drink is the greatest of mankind. Many a young Pe-ru-na Cures Catarrh Wherever Located. Consul Barnes Says: "Pe-rn-na is a ^hti Excellent Tonic for DeMi 4ateJ Systems," " ^mjt Hon, Almont Barnes, late U S Con sul to Venezuela, S A , ex-chief of Bureau of StatistJc^ of State Department, now in pureau of Statistics in Arglculture department, Washington^ D C , writes. ** Peruna Is not ^only a remedy for catarrhal troubles, but equally as effective for colds and aches arising from the same. * it Is a most excellent tomlc for debili tated systems. |$y ^ ~ ''Many of my friends have used It successfully, and I have no hes itation in giving it my recommen eation.Almont Barnes. Congressman Mark H, Dunnell, National Hotel Washington, D C , writes ' Your Peruna being used b myself and many of our friends and acquaintances not 1 only as a cure for catarrh, but also as an adrnirab i e tonic for physical recuperation, quiring such remedies " nell W e have letters of recommendation from over fifty members of congress, besides scores of other ietters from men of na tional prominence, attesting to the virtues of Peruna as a catarrhal tonic Among the prominent men who recom mend Peruna are General James Long street of Washington, D C , Register of the Treasury, Judson W Lyons Hon J M Morgan, U S Consul to Australia, and W S Smythmeyer, Architect of the famous Congressional library of Washing ton, D. C. HON. ALPMZO HART Hon Alphonzo Hart, ex-Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, In a recent letter from Washington, D C , says The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio: Gentlemen"I have been using Pe runa for Catarrh, and can cheerfully recommend it to all as a cure tor the same, and it is also a good tonic." A. Hart. Charles B Scott, County Clerk, Floyd county, Ind, writes from New Albany, Ind "I have tried Peruna as a tonic and have found it of inestimable value to in crease the appetite and induce healthful sleep It seems to relieve the system of all waste matter and to tonf up and strengthen the nerves in a remarkably short time In comparing It with other nerve tonics an the market I consider it vastly superior, and so do manj others who have tried it "Hon Charles B Scott ofeigreatescurse t promise has foundf the grav or a drunkard instead o an honorableman place n society . 4 Physicians have long recognised that con tlnued indulgence In alcoholic stimulants causes the stomach and digestive organs to become diseased In the vast majority of cases there fore, habitual drunkenness is a physical dis ease, and no amount of mental resolve or "faith cure" will cure it. "OHRrNE" WILL POSITIVELY AND PER- MANENTLY CURE THE DRINK HABIT. We guarantee this and will refund the money Should the remedy fail But it never does fail' 4'ORRtNE" is tasteless, odorless and color less, and can be given without the patient's knowledge in tea, coffee, water or milk It tones up the diseased stomach and gives a hearty appetite and good digestion Members of the W C T U , clergymen, phy sicians and public men all over the land endorse this wonderful remedy. - _ _, _ ..,, Eev. Thoa. 0. Easton, D.D., 62T B Capitol St., Washington, D. O, writes "I can safely-a*. Ann, from cases nnder my personal observation, that ORRXNE Is a marvelous and permanent remedy for chronic inebriates " $1 per box, 6 boxes for $5 Securely sealed postpaid Sealed booklet mailed free on re quest * , 3 "TTT-N vigoi to the or ganic nervous system C D Taylor, Supt of Health. Clerk City Board of Health Jacks onville, Fla , writes "The health of the poor of a large city is always a ques- tion of \ital in terest jiot only to the city officials but to every citizen It has been a source of much satisfaction to me to find that so large a number of working people in mod erate circumstances have accepted Peruna as their familv medicine It has cured a large number of cases especially of catarrh of the head lungs and stomach and for building up the general health it cannot fail but prove a help and a blessing to any community where it is generally adopted and used I have found it an honest re liable remedy and am pleased to Indorse it "C D Taylor Clerk Board of Health J H Hipplegate, Superintendent of Public Works, 61 West Sixth street, Lex- Ington, Ky, writes "I find that Peruna is an excellent medi- I inent men an3 women.who use Peruna cine, especially for catarrhal affections and all diseases leading to consumption, bronchial troubles or stomach troubles It also acts as a preventative and keeps the system in a healthy condition so that it easily throws off disease It is an ex cellent tonic and a great appetizer, and as a large number of those who have been using it speak very highly of its curative powers I am satisfied that my opinion of JA Peruna cures catarh because it reaches the source of catarrh Peruna keeps the system in a fine, healthv condition, because it restores the functions af every organ, and brings . rM. ^i:.:" ^- ?&r-'-9a* " rn AGE AND PURITYJ "nw Building , t ^YOEGEII BBOS. DBTTG C0j% Z& MINNiAPOLIS^MlNN. 0 it is correct and that it is deserving of high praise"J H. Hipplegate Charles F Jenkins, Venerable Council of Garland Camp 2922, Modern Woodmen of America, writes from Aurora, 111. Bea con Office, as follows '/ endorse Peruna because I have found by personal experience that It is not a common patent medicine, but a scientifically prepared medicine which simply cures catarrh and cleanses the the blood of its impurities, keeping the system in a fine, healthy condition. "I consider it as rather a carefully pre pared physician's prescription, and ha\e never found any which acts as promptly and permanently as Peruna. "It deserves the highest praise, and I know that those who have tried it ha\e perfect faith in it "C F Jenkins Peruna cleanses the blood of its im purities because it regulates those orgaiio that make blood Mr Jenkins is right Peruna is a care fully prepared prescription prepared bj one of the oldest and best known physic ians in America This is why it acts promptly and permanently A book containing testimonials of prom- sent free by The Peruna Medicine Co Columbus, Ohio If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to giv,e you his valuable ad vice gratis Address Dr Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio mmm AGE AND PURITY . MAKE SUNNY BROOU 3** ~\*\ i' n ti*n - SUN NY BROOK IS DISTILLED IN THE GOOD O LD - :HONESTWAY , : - SK&V-? KEYNOTE ./.-SUCCESS ' { , IS ITS INDIVIDUALITY.A UHlrORMITY PREVAILS IN EVERY FEATUREo"HfBREWING. UNE0yALED*N*URITY - IAND GOODNJESS - - J'ALWAY S TH E^SA M E, - '^ATONIC 1 FOR OLDANO YOUNG.' , v : ' . ALL OHUGGISTS V VAlBtATZ.'BRWB-COiMILWAUKEE, MINNEAPOLIS Restores Eyesight i ^ Actina," a "Wonderful Discovery Which Cures Diseased Eyas, No Matter Whether i Chronic or Acute, Without Cut- ^ ting or Drugcing. "^ There la 110 need for cutting, drugging probing the eye for any form of disease, for a new system of t-eating afflictions of the ey has been discovered where by all toiturous and bar barous methods are eliminated There is no risk or experimenting, as thousands of people hare been cured of blindness,A* failing eyesight, cata racts, granulated lids and other afflictions of the eye throjgh this grand dis covery, when eminent oculists termed the cases incurable Here are the names and addresses of a few test cases and the names of the disease cured Miss Reed, 500 Prospect av, Kansas City, Mo , eyesight restored Robert Baker, 80 Dearborn st, Chicago, 111 , blindness prevented. A O T Pennington, Mass Bld^ , Kansas City, Mo , cataracts, cured W. W Lauber, Aledo, 111, astigmatism cured R W Randall, Chicago, 111 , blindness prevented W W Owen, Adrian, Mo , blindness prevented. Geneial Alex Hamilton, Tarrytown, N Y , neuralgia of eyes cured. Hundreds of other names can be sent on appli estion "Actina" is purely a home treatment and self-adminlstci ed by the patient, and is sent on trial, postpaid. If you will send your name and address to the ie York and London Ele** trie Association, Dept 319 Walnut st, Kansas City, Mo , you will leceive absolutely free a val uable book, Prof Wilson s Treatise on the Bye and on Disease in General WES T SUPERIOR %n And All InfermsdiatfiL-i Peinfe OVER THE NEW CONNECTING LINES OF THE Twin City Telephone Co/ RATES- From MlMM|Mllt md St.Pavl DAY40 MIGHT3* 0 Cents Thrve Mlnmtai 1 Centi eaoh additional mlaat*. Cents Three Mlatj fie MQ additional mlrat* D R .IMfr SUITE 3, 4 AND 6. 230 Hen. av, Minneapolis. The Oldest and Most Reliahle Specialist in the Northwest for the cure of f CHRONIC, NERVOUS AND* PRIVATE DISEASES. M EN suffering trom evil effects of youthfnJ H indiscretion later excesses recent expos ur e nervous debility, varicocele, unnatura. discharges lost vitality failing memwry, nnflf - Sess to marry blood, skin, kidney or prtrate d i p elws are speedily cured Dr Wyatt amplr ' the most approved methods, and wUl atte g you personally and complete a peifect cure * J strict confidence, at moderate expense. 1 .?.:* L ADIES suffering from any form of Femuk i Weakness Painful or irregular Sickuefli are nermanentlv restored to health Dr Wyatt has had 30 years' experience, an. been located In present offlres 17 years prov tag himself an honorable, reliable and skllUu pbj sician F REE Consultation Call or write for lto of Questions Home treatment safe *m sure. No exposure No delay from Iwlstat* OFFICE HOURS9 a. m.ta 8 Sunday, 10 a, m. to 12. J | p . IT V 1 Every Womai Is interested and should b -it - Marv elknow*r $* (touch ASK YOUR DBC6G1STFOBIT. If he cannotsupply theHABTKL, accept no other, but send stamp for illustrated bookemled. tfi%es full particulars and directions inval uableto ladies. MARVEL CO., Room 332 Times Building, Sent by mall or express 10 any addre prepaid, by E. H. WEINHOUD, DRUGGIST, 528 Nicollet or West Hotel Drug Store, ^.4 g- Hennepin avenue. THE UNION MORTGAGE, BANKING M. i TRUST COMPANY LIMITED. B Notice is hereby given that the creditors OJ^| above named company aro req llred en or oer j the 23d day of September next, to send m\ names and addresses, and the particulars of t| debts or claims and the names and d|J*| of their solicitors, if any, to the &*&*{ able John Young D L , J P , of Eldon bui* ings. 16 Eldon street Liverpool street, London CT England the liqnidatoi of said oempany, % if so lequlred by notice in writin ism- itt.:itav . said liquidator or by their 60lIcito,|,S-g . town and prove their said debts or claims at such V i * and place as shall be specified in weh noUces 11 in default thereof they will be excluded from - * benefit of any distribution made before deTt are proved Dated this 18th day of July, lg2 A&hhurst, Mortis, Crfcm * Oo\ 17 Thorogmorton avenue, London. E ,, land, solicitor* to the above named UttuM*! fromwtJs ft