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J* 4 ,\ A Bold Step. To overcome the well-rgrounded and treasonable objections of the more intel ligent to the use of secret, medicinal com ?ounds, Dr. B. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. '., some time ago, decided to make a bold departure from the usual course pursued by the makers of put-up medicines for do mestic use, and,so has published broad the whole world, a full list of all the Ingredients position of his widely es. Thus he has taken trons and patients £nto cast and and comp entering celebrated his numerj his movi nost the: Thus too he has re- edicines from among secret doubtful merits, and made ies of Known Composition* Tiv this hold sten Dr. Piercp—hjm shown *e irn«iitnifinTiTntii-guj[t^yraiWAWji wl he js pot afr.a» ^hpfniipst. scrutiny. nm J.O siipject tnem plot »nly does the wrapper of every bottle of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the famous medicine for weak stomach. Did liver or biliousness and all catarrhal diseaSes wherever located, have printed upon it, in plain English, a full and complete list of all the ingredients composing it, but a small "book has Been compiled from numerous standard medical works, of all the different schools of practice, containing very numer ous extracts from the writings of leading practitioners of medicine, endorsing in the strongest possible terms, earji and every ingre dient contained in Dr. Pierce's medicines. One of these little books will be mailed free to any one sending address on postal card or by letter, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y., »nd requesting the same. From this little Tjook it will be learned that Dr. Pierce's med icines contain no alcohol, narcotics, mineral agents or other poisonous or injurious agents and that they are made from native, medici nal roots of great value also that son* of the most valuable ingredients contained In Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for weak, nervous, over-worked, "run-down," nervous and debilitated women, were employed, long years ago, by the Indians for similar ailments affecting their squaws. In fact, one of the most valuable medicinal plants entering into the composition of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription was known to the Indians as "Squaw-Weed." Our knowledge of the uses of not a few of our most valuable native, me dicinal plants was gained from* the Indians. As made up by Improved and exact pro cesses, the "Favorite Prescription is a most efficient remedy for regulating all the wom anly functions, correcting displacements, as prolapsus, anteversion and retorversion. overcoming painful periods, toning up the nerves and bringing about a perfect state of health. Sold by all dealers la ggdlclnes. MAGAZIN E READERS flTJTTSET MAGAZINE keAUbfullyilliutrtted,good stories and araclw About California and all the Far W $1.50 a year CAMES A CRAFT devoted each month to the ar tunc reproduction of the best $ 1 0 0 work of amateur and professional photographers. a year KOAD OF A THOUSAND W 0 N E 2 S a book oi 75 pages, containing 120 colored photographs of tje picturesqoe spots ia California aadQrajfpo. ________ Total $3.25 All for $1.50 Address all orders to SUNSET MAGAZINE Plead Building San Francisco DR. ADDISON JONES the regular and reliable Chicago specialist will be at The Dakota House, New Ulm, Minn., Wednesday, April 29th Hours: 9 a. m. to op. m. Oue day only and return each 28 days. uuies permanently the cases he undertakes rnd sends the incurable home without taking a iee from them. This is why he continues his VHits year after year, while other doctors have made a few visits and stopped. Dr. Jones Is an eminently successful specialist in all chron ic diseases, proven by the many cures effected in chronic cases which have baffled the skill of other physicians. His hospital experience and extensive practice have made him so proficient that he can name and locate a disease in a few minutes. Treats all curable cases of Catarrh and Lung Diseases, Consumption in early stage, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bowels, Gravel, Rheu matism, Paralysis, Neuralgia, Nervous, Heart, Blood and Skin Diseases, Epilepsy, Goiter, Appendicitis, Rupture and Bnght's Disease. Diseases of Bladder and Female Organs. Absorption treatment given for Cataract and Granulated Eyelids. Special attention given to all Surgical cases, and all diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Cross Eyes straightened without pain. Glasses fitted and guaranteed. Piles, Fissure, Fistula, Hydrocele Guaranteed Cured "Without the Knife or Detention From Business. Nervous Debility Are you nervous and despondent weak and dpbilitated tired mornings no ambition lifeless memory poor easily fatigued excit able and irritable eyes sunken, red and •blurred pimples on face restless haggard looking weak back deposit in urine and drains at stool, distrustful want of confidence lack of energy and strength? Special Diseases of Men and Women a Specialty lood Poison, Syphilis, Strictur", Gleet, Sper matorrhea, Varicocele, Hydrocele, and the effpcts of early Vice or Excess,, producing De bility, Nervousness, Defective Memory, etc., whicu ruin mind and body, positively cured. Wonderful Cures ft Perfected in old eases which have been neg lected or unskillfully treated. No experiments or failures. We undertake no incurable cases, cut cure thousands given up to die. Consultation Free and Confidential. ^Reference, Drexel State Bank. Address ADDISON-JONES 1 4 5 Oalcwood Blvd. Chicago. mmmm A 'BOG'S EVIDENCE. [Original.] The country homes of the Rudds and our family adjoined, and Walter Rudd and I grew up together, bosom friends. Walter was fond of animals, I of books. Among his pets was a yellow collie, the most intelligent being of the brute creation I ever knew. They are talking nowadays about animals not having any reasoning powers. If that dog didn't reason I don't reason. I remember especially an instance in evidence of this. One rainy day. need ing exercise. I concluded to walk around the bouse. Dick, the dog, was with me and, seeing me getting on my hat and coat, inferred that I was going for a stroll and was rejoiced at the prospect of going --with mes? There were two gates to the place, and when I came to the path leading to the near est Dick was there. I kept on. Dick looked up, surprised: but. inferring that I was intending to go out of the other gate, immediately went to it. Wheu I passed the path leading to that gate, loo,- Dick's astonishment was beyond bounds "What does the fellow mean?" he said plainly with his attitude and expression. Then, seeing that I was not leaving the grounds, he went away disappointed One morning I was awakened by a scratching mingled with a dog's moans at our front door. I went downstairs and found Dick. He ran down toward the gate, indicating that I was to fol low him. 1 was not long in under standing him and after getting on some clothes went with him to a wood sev eral miles away. He led me- to a point near a brook, but when he got there looked about him surprised and disappointed, moaning piteously. Then, putting his nose to the ground, he fol lowed a scent to the brook, where he lost it. All this was unintelligible to me. After waiting developments and get ting none I went home. I found there a messenger "from the Rudds to ask if Walter had spent the night with us, since he had not come home. At once I began to suspect that something was wrong with him and the dog's action might be an explana tion. Possibly there had been foul play at the spot where Dick had led me and some person or persons to con ceal their tracks from the dog had gone away, walking in the brook. I took Dick back to the spot and led him both up and down the stream in the hope that he would pick up the scent, but notwithstanding a patient effort on the part of both of us he- failed. The case of Walter Rudd was one of those mysterious disappearances that occur every day, the bulk of them nev er being explained. Dick, being de prived of his master, adopted me as such, I being that master's most inti mate friend. I became very fond of him and never went anywhere I could take him without doing so. The first winter that I went to the city I left him behind but the caretaker of the house wrote me that he was pining away, and I was obliged to send for him. I inferred at the time that he had transferred his affections from his late master to me. Walter Rudd had been teller in a bank. The cashier was Edward Grif fin, a young man who a couple of years later became rich as a promoter. 1 know Griffin, but had only a speaking acquaintance~with him. One day while in the city walking with Dick on the street I saw Griffin^approaching. Sud denly Dick gave a growl, darted for ward, jumped upon Griffin, and only great effort on my part kept the dog from taking the man by the throat. I caught Dick by the collar and dragged him away, striking him with my cane at the same time. Griffin seemed very much affected by the encounter, paling and trembling like a leaf, but I was not surprised at this, as it is no light matter to have a dog suddenly spring at one's throat. I did not have an op portunity to apologize to the man. for Dick was so eager to get at him again that I was obliged to drag him away by main force, and Griffin hurried on. Had Griffin been some rough un known man I might have suspected that the dog's action had something to do with the mystery attending Walter Rudd's disappearance. As it was, I put it down to one of those unaccount able dislikes a dog will take to some especial person. But some months after this, when Griffin's schemes turned out bursted bubbles and he no better than a common swindler, the thought came upon me that while he and Walter were in the bank together the cashier might have had some reason for getting rid of the teller. I asked the president of the bank for information bearing on the case and was confidentially informed that dur ing the time referred to Griffin hat' been carrying a large defalcation, which was discovered only after it was made good. After consultation with the Rudd fam ily I was authorized to employ a de tective to get evidence, with a view of confirming our suspicions. V^£* It turned out that Rudd knew%f Griffin's defalcation and had told Griffin that his 'duty required him to inform the officers of the bank. Grit* xin made an appointment to meet Rudd in the wood to talk the matter over. •:riffin murdered the only man who knew his secret and left the body where it lay. He came back and found the dog with it. But the dog went away, and Griffin carried the body far ilown the stream and buried it. Griffin, learning that a detective was working on his case, committed sul fide. Dick is still my companion, though be is very old. ALBERT G. BENXLEY. OBLIGING PEOPLE. Quaint Methods of the Early Daya^of, New England. In the early days of the settlement of. New England the custom of sending packages by neighbors who journeyed! to different parts of the country was' an established one The notebook of, Schoolmaster Joseph Hawley of North ampton, Mass., when he started on a trip to Boston was filled with such varied items as: "Captain Partridge, a dial and a dish kettle "Son Joseph, One came with a dress she wanted to send to a daughter at school one brought patterns of dry goods, with a request that Mrs Lyman would pur chase and bring home dresses for a family of five And would she go to the orphan asylum and see if a good child of ten could be bound out to an other neighbor? Would Mrs. Lyman bring the ichild back with her? The neighbors walked Into the li brary, where the packing was going on. and when all the family trunks were filled my father called out heart ily, "Here. Hiram, bring down another trunk from the garret—the largest you can find—to hold all these parcels!" A little boy came timidly in with a bundle nearly as large as himself, and "Would this be too large for Mrs. Ly man to carry to grandmother?" "No, indeed Tell your mother I'll carry anything short of a cooking stove "Another trunk, Hiram," said my fa ther, "and ask the driver to wait five minutes Those were the times when people could wait five minutes for a family so well known and beloved. Our driver had only to whip up his horses a little faster WORKED WHILE ASLEEP. of Curious Incident In the Career Novelist Crockett. S. Crockett, the novelist, told a rather remarkable story of an incident that befell him in his early writing days, before fame and fortune had come to him and while he struggled on for a living. At that time he as obliged to write for very small ms Indeed, and a the publications to which be contributed columns and half columns as the St James' Gazette, a London penny evening newspaper. One morning the postman brought to Mr. Crockett -a letter from the editor of the St. James' Gazette containing a small rheck as payment for a con tribution Mr. Crockett that nothing as due to him, that he had been paid for all his articles, and—re markable man—he did the check up in an explanatory note a returned it to the editor Th next day back came the check from the editor remarkable an with a note saying it as due. The St. James' Gazette had published an article from the pen of Mr. Crockett which had not been paid for hence the check. Again Mr Crockett—re markable man returned the check, and still the remarkable editor refor warded it, this time with the article cut out of the columns of the St James Gazette. N comes the curious feature of the incident. W Mr. Crockett clap ped eyes on the article, he as aston Ished to find it one of his dreams materialized. One night, going to bed extra tired, he dreamed that a good idea for a St. James Gazette column had occurred to him that he then and there sat down wrote it and posted it Nex morning he remembered his dream and made up his mind some day to write the article exactly as he dreamed he had written it, when to his astonishment, came article and check from the newspaper. writ ers earn checks while asleep A Good Definitional v. »&. A foreign journal says that a small boy who had been playing nearly all day with a newly arrived acquaintance of the family, a gentleman who had nearly reached his fiftieth year, said to his father when the gentleman had gone away: "When will that young man eothe again ''Young man!" exclaimed the father. "He's older than I am! Will you please tell me what 'a young man' means to you'" "Why, a young man," answered the boy—"a voting man is one that has a good time'" Poor Papa! "I am not at all certain," said the father, "that my daughter loves you sufficiently to warrant me in intrust lng her to your keeping for life."* "Well," replied the young man, "per haps you haven't had the same advan tages for observing things that I have Very Little Jar. Prospective Buyer Heavens! It must be a ^terrible experience to run over a human being! Auto Demon strator (smlllnglyHNot with this make of car, my boy. It's equipped with the best shock absorber on the market Brooklyn Life .-! Et€LSy Pfi oney. speckled red ribbon, whistles, buckles the other vocations he put in honest and fishhooks "A shilling worth of plumb and spice "Two psalters, a ba son and a quart pot" In "Old Paths! honest and Legends of the New England Bor- r^h^e der" Katherine M. Abbott says that it' was the same even as late as Judge Lyman's day ffp His daughter, Mrs Lesley, writes of it in "Recollections of My Mother:" There were no expresses then, and so when it was known in the village1 of Northampton that Judge and Mrs Lyman were going to Boston—and they always took pains to make it known— a throng of neighbors were coming in the whole evening before not only to take an affectionate leave, but to bring parcels of every size and shape and commissions of every variety [Copyright. 1907.3 It was because the clothing store in the east in which he was employed made a cut in salaries that James Halpin went west During the next six years he was cowboy, miner, pros pector and teamster. As a prospector he made a miserable failure of it. In work for his money Among his ac quantances he was spoken of as an man and was often trusted, were men who sneered at his principles. For instance, when he dis covered the $3,000 nugget in the dump at the Golden Lion mine and turned it in to the company as its property he was sneered and laughed at on all sides. The company did not even hand him out a cigar for his probity. Uf Then there was the case of the train holdup. The robbers got the express all right, together with a big lot of registered mail, but in their hurry they I abandoned a mail bag and dropped two or three packages. Halpin found them among the rocks and sagebrush. There was over $20,000 in all. The express company started out to reward him, but finally ended up by notifying him that he ought to be glad that he had not been arrested as one of the sus pects. Uncle Sam received his mail bag and said nothing and did nothing. As a prospector Halpin discovered the Double Cross mine and told a friend of it in confidence. The friend hastened to the land office and located the mine in his own name and within two months had -sold it for a quarter of a million dollars. He was a man without "sand," and Halpin could have gone to him with a gun and at least made him divide, but he did nothing of the kind. It thus came about that the men who knew Halpin* had two saying to fit his case. One was "As honest as Jim Halpin" and the other "As big a fool as Jim Halpin." He was simply trying to be a square man. It was in his blood, and it took a long time to convince him that all the rest of mankind was on the make and that he would get the worst of the deal every time. He had to be reduced to rags and hunger before he would be lieve it. One day Jim Halpin woke up. He had traveled over a good part of three western states and was familiar with the better portions. He got the loan of a suit of clothes and a few dollars in cash and brought up in the town in which a certain member of congress was living. They had a talk. They consulted maps.' They made a bar gain. Halpin wasn't to be fooled again, and the bargain or agreement was ironclad. The congressman would have left loopholes by which he could later on swindle the man who had come to him as they had planned to swindle Uncle Sam, but he had to aban don this part of the programme. When all was ready Halpin set forth to lo cate lands. They were fertile valleys, timbered lands, coal lands and hills filled with iron and coal. They were entered under different names as home steads, desert lands, soldiers' lands and other trickery, and in one year they had gobbled up more than a million dollars' worth. Then Halpin sold his share for a hundred thousand dollars rather than wait longer. He also had other plans he wanted to carry out, and he needed the money to do so. Jim Halpin with a hundred thousand dollars to his credit in the bank was no longer sneered at. He had be come a man to take off the hat to. They dropped "the honest as Jim Halpin." They knew that he had made his money by sharp practice, but they thought all the more of him for it. The man who can make a fortune and just escape the law in doing it receives more praise than an honest man who toils a lifetime to get $25,000 together. The "Jim" now became "Judge" or "Colonel" when men addressed him. In lpcating the lands Halpin had not played square with the congressman. He had left out certain coal fields. He now located them for himself. Ho was even generous enough to pay the gov ernment $2 50 an acre for land worth perhaps a hundred thousand per acre, and thus he had nothing to hide. The coal lands were in the mountains and the towns and cities on the plains. To carry out his plans the two must be connected by railroads. Mr. Halpin went to three different legislatures. A few members could be made to see what a great thing it would be if this and that town could secure coal at the price of buffalo chips, and they were ready to grant a charter. A number of others saw it only after they had been paid from $500 to $1,000 apiece. Land grants were obtained with the charters. By selling half the acreage the roads were built. The price on the remainder was doubled to make even. There was cheap coal for a year then the price doubled. Consumers howled and went to the legislature. There was no agreement as to the price of coal, and so nothing could be done. Mr. Halpin is a millionaire now. He is not a member of congress, but it is not his fault. He could have had the nomination and election, but he did not want them. He wanted a grand man sion on the Hudson he wanted a steam yacht he wanted horses, carriages, servants and statuary and pictures he wanted trips to Florida in the winter and to Europe in the summer, and he got them—got everything—and is today referred in th papers as "that emi nent and liberal Mr. James Halpin, the eelf madte man.'e M. QUAD. CROSSING THE LINE. Old Neptune and the Ancient Order of the Deep. The ceremony of "crossing the line" Is a very much more elaborate affair nowadays than it ever has been despite the fact that Neptune day is so old a celebration that it« origin is lost to history When old Neptune, impersonated by a sailor, makes his appearance on an American battleship nowadays when the vessel reaches latitude 0 degree. 0 minute, 0 second, to initiate the jackies who have never crossed the line before into the mysteries and membership of the Ancient "Order of the Deep he is accompanied by his wife, Amphitrite, another sailor They are both dressed fantastically in clothes which have been designed and worked upon ever since the vessel sailed. How they get on board is un known, at least to the captain, who meets them and gives them permis sion to go ahead. An immense tank made of canvas is rigged up, and here the initiation of all the candidates takes place. Devices for getting the candidate into the tank vary on dif ferent ships and on different occa sions Often he is simply picked up and thrown in Frequently he is made to sit down in a "Sarber's" chair close to the edge of the tank, and when as much soap as possible has been put into his mouth and eyes he is tipped over backward. Generally the soap has been mixed with tar, coal oil and many other ingredients and is impartially applied from the waist up, so that the bath is needed. In the tank the candidate is attend ed, sometimes by "bears" with shaggy coats made- of unraveled rope and sometimes by "cops" who act as the king's assistants and see that the can didate is, held under water long enough to know it It is a great frolic, prepared for days in advance, and when it Is over the certificate is issued and the candidates are free to get themselves as clean as they can before the next roll call.— Philadelphia Record IF SNOW NEVER FELL The Effect Upon the World's Crops Would Be Disastrous. If all the condensed moisture of the atmosphere were to fall as ram and none of it was snow hundreds of thou sands of square miles of the earth's surfa^p non- yielding bountiful, crops would be 1'tt'o U'ttrr than a desert The tremoudons economic gain for the world at largp whh-h results from the difference between snow and rain Is seldom realized by the inhabitants of fertile and well watered lowlands. It is in the extensive regions where irrigation is a prime necessity in ag riculture that the special uses of snow come chiefly into view. All through the winter the snow Is falling upon the mountains and packing itself firmly in the ravines. Thus in nature's great icehouse a supply of moisture is stored up for the following summer. All through the warm months the hardened snow banks are melting gradually. In trickling streams they steadily feed the rivers which as they flow through the valleys are utilized for irrigation. If this moisture fell as rain it would almost immediately wash down through the rivers, which would hardly be fed at all in the summer when the crops most needed water. These facts are so well known as to be commonplace in the Salt Lake val ley and in the subarid regions of the •west generally They are not so well understood in New Jersey or Ohio, where sno\v is sometimes a pictur esque, sometimes a disagreeable, fea ture of winter In all parts of the country the notion prevails that the snow is of great value as a fertilizer Scientists, however, are inclined to attach less importance to its service in soil nutrition—for some regions that have no snow are exceed ingly fertile—than to its worth as a blanket during the months of high winds. It prevents the blowing off of the finely pulverized richness of the top soil This, although little per ceived, would often be a great loss.— Chicago Tribune The Power of Advertising. The power of advertising is told by a manager of the toilet department of a large New York department store. "We have six different makes of one toilet artielp," he said, "and they are so near alike in quality that even ex perts can't tel'* the difference between them, yet we sell as much of one as we do of all the others together, just because the manufacturer is everlast ingly advertising it The other five sell in proportion to the amount of ad vertising given to them If there is any difference in quality it is in favor of the poorest seller.'*—New York Her ald No Deadheads. Mandy was a young colored girl fresh from the cotton fields of the south. One afternoon she came to her northern mistress and handed her a visiting cord "De lady wha* gib me dls is in de pa'lor," she explained. "Dey's annoder lady on de do'step." "Gracious. Mandy," exclaimed the mistress, "why didn't you ask both of them to come in?** "Kase. ma'am," grinned the*girl, "de one on de do'step done forgit her ticket "—Argonaut Not Exclusive. Nellie (aged five)—Our family is aw fully exclusive. Is yours? Bessie (aged four)—No. indeed! We haven't any thing to be ashamed of.—New Orleans Tfmes-Democrat. Those who know the road tat some times lose their way. .Hr-.Twm.ni ii LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.. Order for Hearing on Claims. STAT E OF MIXXESOTA, Cotrx O O W S 8 In Probate Court. Special Term, April 4, 1908. In the matter of the estate of John Huh deceased. Letters of Administration on the estate of John Huhn deceased, late of the County of Brown and State of Minnesota, being granted to William Huhn. It is ordered. That six months be and the «ame is herebv allowed from and after the date of this order in which all persons having claims or demands against the said deceased are required to file the a me in the Probate Court of said County, for examination and allowance, or be forever barred. It is further ordered. That the first Mon day in November A 1908, at 10 o'clock A. M., at a General Term of said Probate Court, to be held at the Probate Office in the Court House in the City of N Ul in said County, be and the same hereby is appointed as the time and place when and where the said ProbateCourt will examine and adjust said claims and demands An it is further ordered, That notice oi such hearing be given to all creditors and persons interested in said estate by forth with publi-hinjj this order once in each week for three successive weeks in the J\ew Cl Review, a weeklv newspaper printed and published at Ne Ul in said County. Dated at Ne Ulm, Minn., the 4th daJy of April, A. D. 1908. By the Court, (Seal.) E O. O S S 1°-1« virtue of an execution. Issued out of and undeo thh Seal of the District Court, £5 5 of Brown and state of Minnesota, upon a judgment ren «f ^L?. eted in the said Court, on the 12th day of March 1908. in an action wherein L. A. Fritsche is Plaintiff, and Caroline Schleussner, formerly Caroline Windland is Defendant, in favor of said plaintiff and against said defendant, for ($S0J.lo Dollars, all of which is still unpaid and due thereon, which execution was di rected and delivered to me as Sheriff in and for the said County of Brown, I have this 13th day ©f March A D. 1908, levied upon all the right, title and interest of the said defendant in and to the foliowin a described Real Estate property to-wit: I art of the Soutti Bas Quarter of the South West Quarter and of the South West quarter of the South Eas quarter, all, of Section. No. Twent (20), Township &°# S I State of Minnesota, County of Brown. US* Ijidge of Probate. Sheriff's Sale. (H») North. Rang No. Thirty-three (33) West, more particu larly described as follows: Commencing at the South West corner of the East halt of said South West quarter of said Section. thence at a variation 10 degrees East run nin North 1 degiee East, 20 chains thence South 82 degrees East, 20 chains and 12 links thence South 1 degree West, chains and 50 links thence South 89 de grees east. 15 chains: thence South 1 de «ree West, is chains thence North 89 de grees West. 35 chains to the point of be ginning, containing 60 Acres more or less. ihHrown County, Minnesota. Notice is hereby given, That I, the ersigned, as Sheriff as aforesaid, will sell the above described real propertv to the highest bidder, for cash, at public auction, at the fiont door of the Court house in the City of Ne Ul in the County of Brown and State of Minnesota. °«n a the 1st day of May A. D. 1908, at 10 o'clock A. of that day to satisfy the said Execution together with the inter ests and costs thereon. Dated March 13th 1908. w. J. JULIUS. .,,_ Browa County, Minnesota. AlberA Pfaender, Attorney for Plff. Ne Ulm, Minn. 12-17 District Court I Ninth Judicial District. Security Trust Company, a cor poration,.,— Plaintiff vs. Charles Eidam, J. H. Carleton, W. A. Dennison, Farmers Sav ings Bank of Grimes, Iowa, and George Lane Defendants The State of Minnesota to the above named Defendants: You and each of you are hereby sum moned and required to answer the com plaiut of the plaintiff in the above entitled action, which has been filed in the office of the Clerk of the above named court, and to serve a ropy of our answer to the said complaint on the subscriber, at his office Rooms 409, 410 and 411 in the Nation al German American Bank BuiMin in the city oi St Paul. Ramse Countv, Min nesota, it days after the ser vice of this upon vou, exclusive of the day of ^uch service and if ypu far! so to answer the said complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintift will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint, together with its costs and dis bursements in thisartion. AMBROSE TlGHE, 1*19 Attorney for Plaintiff. To have perfect health we must have perfect digestion, and it is very im portant not to permit of any delay the moment the stomach feels out of order. Take something at once that you know will promptly and unfailingly assist digestion. There is nothing better than Kodol for dyspepsia, indigestion, sour stomach, belching of gas and ner vous headache. Kodol is a natural digestant, and will digest what you eat. Sold by Eugene A. Pfefferle/ He Got What He Needed. "Nine years ago it looked as if my time hud conic, "says Mr. C. Farthiug, of Mill Creek, Ind. Ter." I was so run dowL that life huag on a very slender thread. It was then my druggist recom mended Electric Bitters. I bought a bottle and I got v. hat I ne« ded—strength. I had one foot in the g.ave, but Electric Bitters put it back on the turf a«:ain,and I've ben. well ever sirirv."' id under guarantee at (). M. Olsen'* iJ.-u^ store. HollisterV ky Mountain Tea never fails tone the stomach, purify the blood, regulate the kidneys, liver and bowels. The greatest soring toi.ic, makes and Keeps you well, doc. Tea or Tab lets. Pioneer Drutr Co. Too Wide. Kind Xiady—My poor man, your coat is full of rents. Here la a needle and thread. Gritty George—No use, mum. Dem rent* are too big to be collected. Health— **jur* Economy Calumet Baking Powder .Best by Test l-A., -"3