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ft 1 Rattle wanted to pasture I have (i pasture of about fl(H» acres, •fenced with three and four wires, it is known as the Abbott pasture, is located in Indian Lake. There is a floe grove oa the binks of the lake. Large per cent, blue grass and clover. The terms tor the season are fi for calves and yearliugs, old er cattle $2.25 colts #3.50 The cattc will be salted and looked after. A. A. Abbott, Route 2, Wor thington, Minn. TjTU CURES RHEUMATISMI LUMB180, sciatica! NEURALGIA and KIDNEY TROUBLEj "S-DROPS" taken internally, rids the blood of the poisonous matter and acids which are the direct causes of these diseases, Applied externally it affords almost in stant relief from pain, while a permanent care is being effected by purifying the blood, dissolving the poisonous sub stance and removing it from the system. DR. 8. D. BLAND I Of Brewton, Ga., writes: "I bad bean (offerer for number of ym I vltb Lumbago tod Rheumatism In my anna I aad len.and tried all the remedle* that 1 could I oather from.medical works, and also consulted I I with a number of the beat physicians, bat foond I I nothing that gate the relief obtained from I "S-DROP3." I (ball prescribe it in my praoClee for rheumatism aad Kindred JJmmss I If yon are suffering with Rheumatism, I Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any kin fired disease, write to us for a trial bottle I of "••DROPS." and test it yourself. "8-DROPS" can be used any length of time without acquiring a "drug habtt.'" I as it is entirely free of opium, oocaine. alcohol, laudanum, and other similar ingredients. Large Size Bottle, "5-DROPS" (IM Dases) I S1.00. Far Sale by Oracgists. mitoa RNIUMATIB com COMMIT, I lc»t. tee Lake treat, Ckleac*. Set acquainted with SMITH'S If SMITH S MAGAZINE and you are strangers we will send you the magazine free three months that you may get acquainted. flj SMITH'S is the biggest illus trated magazine in the world— 1 70 pages of reading matter and pic tures, the same size page as the big standard magazines like Harper's and Century. •2J SMITH'S is made up of the bsst of everything—best stories that can be obtained, best illustra tions that clever artists can draw, and the bsst spacial articles, written by writers who know their subject thoroughly and write as entertain ingly as they are instructive. 5 SMITH'S also prints every month a fcore or more pretty portraits, in colors, of beautiful wom -n. Taken ail in all, there is no better magazine tliah SMITH'S— fact, nane nearly as gcod, no matter vi\jX the cost. 1 Write to-day. A postal will da. AJJress Dept. F, Smith's Magazine, S3 Seventh Avenue, New York City wuishy Muf-eta The tHfferencebetwecn Hitting awtMissing Isthedlf fereTice between an Accurate and ail Inaccurate Arm, ChdbsC, wisely—discriminate! Get a STliVENSrl Forty years of expericnce is behind our tr.ud and proved line of RIFLES, PISTOLS, SHOTGUNS Rifle Telescopes, Ktc, \sjcyourdealeraad insist on theSTRVH&S. If you Send 4c in stamps fo-140 page catalog describing the entire Stbvens line. Profusely 1 lustrated, and contains points on Shoot* !ng. Ammunition, Etc. cannot obtain, we shipdi rect, express prepaid&ti receipt of catalog price. to Beautiful three-color Aluminum Hanger will be fot" warded for so cents !a stamps* J. STEVENS ASMS AND TOOL CO., P.0.B0X4096 Chicopbb falls,Mass., U.S. A. teiic: STATE NEWS Sanborn lias a new opera house. Ten applicants for liquor license appeared at W illmar. Chokio has voted $10,000 to en large its j^hool house. The state grand lodge, I. O. G. T. meets at Tyro Harbors June 17-20. William Molander was drowned at Crookston by the capsizing of his boat. The Great Northern railway depot at St. Joseph was destroyed by lire. H. D. Cutler, formerly post master at*Stillwater, is dead at Grand Forks, N. D. August Krumpleman, of St. Paul is missing and his family have asked the police to find him. The Mankato lire department had a busy time Tuesday, having four runs to serious blazes. The Minnesota grand lodge, K. of F., will hold its sessions at Minne apolis May 8th and 9th. Conductors on the Northern Pacific are to be required to wear white vests after July 1st. Olivet M. E. church, at St. Paul was burned Monday night the fire was the work of incendaries. Bell Plaine plums itself on the fact that it has $1,300 in the village treasury and does not owe a cent. Peter Shatka, a police officer at Eveleth is in jail charged with robbing prisoners whom he arrested. Incendaries are making life a burden to property owners at Crookston, Four fires were set Tuesday night. James Keegan, of Mendota,. engineer on the Chicago & Great Western, was killedin a wreck near Nora Springs, Iowa. Dakota county is having a red hot county seat fight. Farmington is trying to wrest the seat of government from Hastings. Harry Halland attempted to bribe a juror at St. Paul, and will have five months in the gail to ponder over the sinf ulnes of getting caught at it. William Davidson, managr of the Keystone farm near Crookston, dis appeared February 6th and his body has just been found. He committd suicide. The state live stock and sanitary board has condemned a herd of thirty cattle in Washington county on account of the prevalence tuberculosis. Newton W. Meyers, switchman ih the railroad yards at Wilmar, was run over bj* cars and killed. His foot caught in a guard rail prevent ing his escape. William Bannon clinchd an argu ment with Adolph Carlson, at Minneapolis by pounding him on the bead with a sledge hammer. Carlson will die. While Rev. R. Brockmeyer*, of St Clements church, Duluth, was writing a check in a bank, a sneak thief made away with hie hand satchel containing $107. Eva M. Myers jiltd Homer H. Hoyt, at St. Paul and now Homer has brought suit to recover tiorse, diamond^, etc., which he had given her during love's Sweet dream. And the cat came back. Carl Holtz, of Rochester shipped ~a cat by express to his son in Waseca, and the animal walked back, covering the 60 miles in about ten days. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Withee, of Red Wing, were guests of St. Francis hotel, San Francisco at the time it was destroyed by the earth quake, but escaped without injury. Albert H. Strond, of Hastings, loved pretty Violet Geisser, of St Louis, but her parents frowned upon the lovers, so they eloped to East St. Louis. You can't beat the Minnesota boys. Lieiut. Jensen, of the Minneapolis tire department aspired to be a captain an offered an alderman $100 to secure the place for him. He doesn't get the captain's job but loses the one he held. What good does it do you to eat if your stomach fails to digest the -food None. It does you harm causes belching, sour stomach, flatulence, etc. When the stomach fails a little Eodol .Dyspepsia cure after each meal will digest what you eat and makds the stomach sweet. F. M. Hickman. Washington Notes Washington D. C. April 19, 1906. Quite the most important mbye of the goverment recently was tike announcement of the Attorney General this week that Chi9 B Hughes of insuranoe investigation fame, and Alexander Simpson Jr.. a prominent lawyer of Philadelphia, had been retained as special oounsel for the government in the o%5es about to be instituted against the coal and oil roads for various anti-trust laws that the Department already has in its possession facts. that warrant criminal prosecution of a number of the big trunk lines for violations of the Inter-state Commerce Law, the Sherman Anti Trust Law and the Elkins Anti Rebate Law. The prosecution on is to be directed principally against the so called (hard coal combine" in the Pennsylvania anthracite region and the "soft coal combine'.', around Pittsburg and south wax ]. It is promised that the testimony will be a revelation as to the enormous profit that the railroads have made out of the transportation of the coal that they practically and in many cases actually own. Some of the facts have been in the possession of the Department- of Justice for sometime past and there are others' that have been elicited since the Inter-state Commerce) Commission has been hearing testi mony in Philadelphia and Balti more on the subject of the coal and' oil roads as directed by the Tillman? Hickman. Gillespie resolution. These heaaf-1 ings are just started and will be^ continued at Washington, Pittsburg and other points where Che Com mission thinks there is information worth getting. The information, will finally be turned over to the Department of Justice to aid in titer prosecution of the cases, but the President is determined that there shall be no such fiasco as wound up the cases of the Beef Packers who escaped prosecution with the plea of having furnished the goverment with the information on whioh it intended to base its, cases.* There is revival of the third ternjf talk in the case of President. It is Mr. Guttersen's Position. The St. Paul Dispatch is pleased with Mr. Guttersen's platform ex cepting that part of it which relates to the tatiff. The Dispatch finds faulFwith the word "conservative" as applied to revision and says that it may mean a revision upward. People generally \frill not construe it to)mean that, as they could hardly expect an opponent of Mr. McCleary to take such a position, inasmuch as the-present incumbent is the high-priest of standpatters. Besides Mr. Guttersen declares that he is in favor of the removal of the tariff from trust-made goods, and up to date Mr. McCleary has not so declared himself in fact he is not favorable to such a proposition, and If' it oould not violation-of It is said of Justice being said that his recent utterances' ^j^tjnent. At any drug store. on the subject of an income and an inheritance tax, the special message to Congress on the failure of the law in the packers cases and the prepara tions for the coal road prOiBecutions are all intended to enhance hie popularity and force the Republican party to press on him the Presi dential nominaion in 1908. What may develope by 1908 is very hard to tell. But up to date the Presi dent has laughed at all of the third term talk and put it aside with the remark that lie had made one an nouncement on the subject of a third term and that he did not in tend to make any more. In rela tion to the income tax speech, how ever, there has been a remarkable industry displayed on the part of many people who were not authorized to speak for the Presi dent, in explaining that he did not mean at all what he said in the now famous speech. This is not tne impression that has been gained by visitors to the White House who have talked with the President. He haa not forced his ideas on any one, but to alljnquirers, he showed that he Was calmly convinced that what he said was all right and that the country would come to his way of thinking, in fact that the country was already of his way of thinking, and that the only change of front that would be necessary was on the part of Congress which would see the necessity Of seriously consider ing the legislation that he had suggested. be expected that he Would go back on the masters he has so faithfully served. The only out-and-out declaration that' Con gressman McCleary has made rela tive to the question is that one in whioh he favored a revision upward, piling on more tariff Mid thus en abling the trusts to further plunder the people. Mr. Guttersen is op posed to this polioy and would remove the tariff from trustmade articles and relieve the publio from a burdeq whioh they are now suffer ing. In other words Mr. Guttersen would properly revise the tariff. He is a supporter of the Roosevelt idea that The Dispatch refers to, and if the people of the second district elect him as their represent ative he will gladly favor those wise policies advocated by the president which, if put into practice, will be beneficial to the whole people. Mr. Guttersen believes that conditions are now ripe for a change mj-he schedules, not a re vision upwards, but downwards, not along free trade lines, but a wholesome revision that will lift burdens, and at the same time give industries that need protection a full measure.—Mankato Free Press. Don't tie a cough or a cold up in your system by taking a remedy that binds the bowels. Take Ken nedy's Laxative Honey and Tar. It is different from all other cough syrups. It is better. It opens the bowels—expels all cold from the system, relieves coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, etc. An ideal remedy for young and old Children like it. Sold by F. M. at Local News. In wood Stock farm has two pure bred (milking Durham) bull calves, fired by $500 and $600 bull. For sale. These calves will go at a great bargain if taken at once. tf Geo. O. Moore & Son. For Rent -The Burlington hotel, located near Rock Island depot. Address D. W. Chute, Reading., Minn. 4-23 Stops itching instantly. Cures piles, eczema, salt rheum, tetter itch, hives, herpes, scabies—Doan's a mild, easy action of the boppaB, a single dose of Doan's Re^lfets is enough. Treatment oufti| habitual constipation. 25cents a bo$. Ask your druggist for them. To Let. Li_' l. on 6GC9 lOO acres of breaking lfr Ltaitik Enquire of John Ramage, Wor&ihgtpn, Minn. 6-27. fedClover syke Clover I# Clover Kentucky Blue Grass ftetree Lawn Grass ifct seed llipe seed 1|jfeld Seed Corn Yankee Seed Corn Peep-o'Day and Ever green Sweet Corn Pumpkin Seed Chick-Food 11 Chicks •V5 1 Js* Our Railway tUMAMtl OOIN6 SOUTH Mo. IS 9 Oop 3 4S« 3 OS a .for CALL ON JSIC. STITSER orthinc{ton, Minn iWttt to tka name to kxk for whan 1 to to buy Witch Huel Salt*. .WTtt'a Wlteh Hazel S*Ira la th« Iftnal and only tenulna. In fact iwM'ita tb« only Witch Hazel Salva it ia mada (ram tha vnadultaratad Witch-Hazel i'ABokkaraara eounUrfaKr—baa* Iml diaap and worthlaaa—«*an Ba. DaWitt'a Witch Haul Sahra a afwetflc for niaa Blind, Blaadlnt, (andProtrndlntPiles. AlaoCuta, Brulaea, Spralna, Lacerationa, ..tona, Boila, Carbuncles, Eczema, r» Salt Rhaum, and all othar SkM nururaiT E»C.DsWitt4 Co., Chicaf STt :-rr F. M. HICKMAN. Lumber, Shingles, Lime, Plaster, Pofilcitul Cement, Cedar Fence Pbsts, Woven Wire Fence, and J.-j 4 lBp 6 SOp 3 55 SUMMER WOOD vf Stock Let Figure on Your Next Lumber Mil OLE SWAHSOItJflgeni E S A S E HIDES, FURS,WOOL,' Dl f?F. ljS AMC 5 AVE Sf-'ALL DLALcP. !OP MARKET PRICES, I IMMEDIATE. CAoH RLiL, W E O I E I 5 A N S I I N A READ THE ^bler. Stonx City. It— 406 am 4 03 pm 425 am 4 IS pm 1.00 pm, 5 05 am 4 45 pm 8 80 am 5 45 pm GOING WEST. GOING EA8T 6 20 6 SS 7 25 9 15am Lake Par. 9 50am Sound Lake. 'f'iSS {Worthinjt'n!j 2 00pm ReadlBf. 2 30pm Wilmo'nt. 3 00pm Llamore: 3 30pm Kenneth. 4 00pm Hardwic. NOTE—(a) A. M. (p) P. M. FOUR CHEAP EXCURSIONS SOUTHWEST .... On January 2 and 16, February 6 and 20. One way and round trip tickets sold from nearly all Rock Island points in the North and Central West to practically all points. Southwest. S' -"Rcr BERGMAN 6c O ST, PAUL,MINN. THE- NEWS Mo. S No. 1 No. a 9 40a 8 OOp It St. Paul, ar 7 35* Brewster. 8 30p 1 OOa Worttalagtoa, 2 27a Org. slow. 11 3Sp 10 55a 7 OOa 7 SOp WORTHINQION* SIOUX PALLS BRANCH. GOING WEST GOING EAST Ko. 77 Kb. 9 Mo. 13 No. 14 No. No. 11.30am. 3 30 am 8 40 pm Worthington—ar 1 40 pm 13 45 am 9 40 am •nfr am' 4. n3 Tita Ruabmore 110 pm 13 20 am .. Adrian. 12 55 pm 12 05 am LuTcrne^ Sioux Palla. Rook Ivland SyHtem. 77? Time Table*. OOIMO NORTH No. 4 Mo. 8 No.lO Ko.ieV 7 40p 4 15p 8 00«! 203p lOOOa.: 1 20a. 1 48p O 47al0 SOpl 00a 9 8Sal0~Z0p 9 28a 10 lOp 9.13a 9 SOp 14 BO Ut 1* vu 12 25 pm 11 35 pm 8 30 am 1120 am 10 80 pm O. MORRISON, Agent. 4 85 pm .4 05pm 8 80 pm 10 40 am 10 10 am 9 40 am '9 SO am 8 40an 8 10 am (ar) arrive. (Iv leave. Rate about half—in many' cases less th8Bi"~half—the' r^ular.fare. Try your luck Southwest— thousands of people are succeeding and making money here. Special Tourist sleepers on our Southwest 're trains these dates Full information from A. W. LITTLE, Agent Worthinflton, Muin 8 20 am 7 50 am 715 am A. W. LITTLE, Afem. •jm# i'Oii