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Image provided by: Minnesota Historical Society; Saint Paul, MN
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-t 1 «r & •f* I DO YOU WANT THE NEWS? If so, Here is a Chance as Cheap as the Crops Have Been Poor. The Worthin)ton Advance with the following paj ers at. the prices given below St. Paul Weekly Di«p .tch... $1.50 Pirux Citv Journal $1.75 MinneapilH Tiibuue St. Paul Daily News 2.75 Twice-a W. -k 175 St. Pnnl Daily Dispatch 3.75 or, will give d»auce-pn.\iiiJA' euln-cribeis 100 sheets of ptper and 100 imlop'S iith your jiuuie printed upon it. These rates are open to new Si AT PLY PAYING IN ADVANCE. If we don give more local news 'Success dm'I konsist in never makui blunders, but in never makin' the A. M. RENNER If the last Buggy that you bought did not wear as well as you thought it should, why buy another "just as good" when you can buy a genuine Velie Wrought Iron Vehicle for about the same price. We are the people who sell them. We also sell the Deere Line of Buggies we are, Yours for Business Western Implement Company MANAGERS} i. and old •hrivted in the county, your money will be refunded. fhese are "HARD I II\1 ES RATES. if you take a pater. take the one that gives the most for vour money the same as in making anv other purchase. If not a subscriber drop us a postal card and we will send it to you a short time, for examination, FREE. Can yqu beat these proposition sf TE10S. DOVCRY, Publisher subscribers alike, by than any other paper T. H. THOMPSON I/ Borrowing of the French. The Pennsylvania Railroad Co. has borrowed |S0,000,000 on its bonds from the people of France. Bow did the people of France get enormously rich For this $50,000,000. be it noted, is but a drop in the buoket of their surplus money. They have loaned $1,000,000,000 to the Russian government and hundreds of millions elsewhere in Europe. Do you remember what financiers said when France agreed to pay the big idemnity to Germany following the Franco-Prussian war? They said the burden of that debt would be felt by many generations of the French people. But this people paid the vast sum in one generation. John D. Rockefeller, now in France, tells the secret of French thrift: "Ihe people save their money." The common people of France permit uo waste of any sort. They have learned through generations of saving ancestors the merit of close economy. Forty acres is a big farm over there. The man with five acres and a family gets rich and has money in the bank. Americans are a very prosperous people. They get more money for their efforts than any other people. But they spend more. Whether the earnings are large or small the surplus demands upon the measure of economy. Our grand fathers got ahead because of their frugal habits, not because of their earnings. But the times have changed since the pioneers blazed their way through the woods and made the prairies blossom as the rose. Even a quarter of a century ago the family was accustomel to "come to town" in a big wagon. Now every beardless farm boy must have his top buggy. It is alright for the the boy to fZWSfa Mellow Mont rr T*. have his shinning vehiole. He earns and deserves it. It is all right to enjoy prosperty. Only it must always be remembered that the way to both individual and national wealth is the way of economy and industry. Rather startling, is it not, that the Pennsylvania company must go to the little country of France to to get the mony on its improvemnt bonds?—St. Paul News. A sweet breath adds to the joys of a kiss. You wouldn't want to kiss your wife, mother or sweet heart with a bad breath. You can't have a sweet breath without a healthy stomach. You can't have a healthy stomach without perfect digestion. There is only one rem edy that digests what you eat and makes the breath as sweet as a rose and that remedy is Kodol for Dys pepsia. It is a relief for sour stom ach palpitation of the heart, and other ailments arising from disorder of the stomach and digestion. Take a little Kodol after your meal and see what it will do for you. Sold by F. M. Hickman. Cash Road System. (Farm, Stock and Home) It is surprising that HO few towns in Minnesota have taken advant age of the road law that permits any town to decide by vote whether it will do its' road work in the old method of working out the road tax, or by paying the tax in cash and hiring the work done, under contact or otherwise by hired labor. It is surprising becauso the towns that have adopted the cash system have found it a great improvement over the old method, and have no thought of returning to the la6t. The advantages of the canh system are many. A chief oae is that roads can be worked earlier in the spring than farmers can do it, by reason of the other work that presses them CIGARS Yon smoke the real life of the tobacco in "Inventors" Cigars. ywfniHgait Hmiriiing retains all the natural aroma—proper curing increases it—end expert blending makes the aroma delicious. Inventors are not heavy—don't nauseate nor rack the nerves. They're m3d but yet have body—delicately fragrant. They smoke evenly, smoothly, and must draw well —because they are each one all hand made. All sizes. Same quality. B. M. 8CHWARZ CO.. MAKSRS. NEW YORK Biothkxs & Cutlbk, St Paul, Minn.. Distributor! in the Northwest. La Salle Street Station In the Very Heart of CHICAGO Jf ycu are going to Chicago, by all means take the Rock Island, for it lands you nearest the center of the city—in L* Selle Street Station. Closely adjoining the business section—within easy walking distance of the shopping center and all principal hote's. Only railroad station in Chicago on tbe elevated loop. Not necessary to descend to the Btreet to reach North, West or South sides. Direct connection with fast trains for the East. Convenient cab, car riage and bus service to all other stations in the city. The dangers and pelays of crowded are eotirely avoided by entering oi the Reek Island, through the La Salle Street station. Let me ticket you to Chicago next. ~—IT hard until the first half of June, delaying road making until that time whioh is too late for best re sults. Roads should be worked earlier before the soil has become dry and hard, and the making of huge mud holes and deep ruts pre vented instead of attempting curing later on. As the number of towns that adopt the better system inore^ea road-making experts will develope, and by tfte systematic and uniforms methods of working will be adopted, and one man under such conditions will be as effective as three unher prevailing conditions and methods. A prominent farmer in a south Minnesota county estimates that two men with six horses, a road grader and a split-log or plank drag can keep the roads of a whole town in better condition than they are kept by make-believe road work that is now the rule. This great efficiency will be due largely to the ability of the hired road makers to get at their work when the roads require it, instead of waiting till the spring's farm work is done, by which time much labor is required to do a given amount of effective work. Britain's Accumulated Capital. An estimato of the accumulated capital of Great Britain puts it at $60,000,000,000. Try a little Kodol for Dyspepsia after your meals. See the effect it will produce on your general feeling by digesting your food and helping your stomach to get itself into shape. Many stomachs are over worked to the point where they refuse to go further. Kodol digests your food and gives your stomach the rest it neede, while its recon structive propertied get the stomach oack into working order. Kodol relieves flatulence, sopr 6tumach, palpitation of the heart, belching, etc. Sold by F. M. Hickman. Make A. W. LITTLE, Agent Worthington, Minn .,