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V. A1 i«"fr ATTORNEYS.^ v: ". J. A. TOWK M. J. TONB8 fe. WORTHINGTON Q. w. fy 4?!:'-' &v WILSON, VETERINARIAN. DR.J.N.GOULD, Veterinary Surgeon. Office at Western House. THE BRECK SCHOOL AMD BVSlNCSSjCOLLKGt A home school for boys and girls. For full particulars write the REV. W. HENRY POND, Wilder, Mian. CARRIE M. KINLEY, Graduate Nurse. 1:' Residence at Frank Glasgow. kL Phone 37. A. J. OLUNO A I O N E E Sale* cried and satisfaction guaranteed. S. KINDLUND, Clerk Phone, line 2. 2L BIGELOW TWP. OLIVER 6 MADISON Qeneral Dealers in LIVE STOCK Thoroughbred Breeding Stock See as Before yep Buy or Sell Worthington. Minn i% Office over Citizens National Bank J. A. TOWN ATTORNEYS AT LAW MINNESOTA Attorney at Law. Office over Bank of Worthington. DENTISTS. J)K.L. R. GHOLZ, D. S. Dentist. Office next to Globe Printing Office. 'r PETTIT'S for your Bacon, Lard and Sausages OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THESE TRY US! Hubbard & Palmer Elevator Co. Dealers in Grain and Coal J. C. Ager, Mgr. PHONE *332, Worthington, Minnesota HfMlUMtMSMStM A. Oberman & Son Proprietors^of Livery&Feed Stable Beat turn-outs in the city. SHIPPERS OF LIVESTOCK 2d Av. Wortkington, Minn. Baggage, Transfer and Dray Line FRED ROSE, Prop. Baggage hauled any time during day or night. Residence Phone 170 Office Phone 188 •UJ" Whir vou pleaae you to know how well we do o! and dyeing—how qulokly—and how umslhe cost trial Will prove a delight, for no natter what the article majr be from flimsiest lace to oloth ing, draperies or rags, our At- ciuttee are unsurpassed, and satisfaction is guaranteed. not send a trial bundle jr. c. •'•w LOCAL NEWS. WANTED—Young lady to learn to set type, at Advance office. Will Bartlett drove down to Ocheyedan Tuesday.' FOR RENT—Four large living rooms. Enquire at this office. For Sale—Several stands of healthy bees. Price reasonable. C. J. Burn ham. Rt. 1, Bigelow. FOR SALE—Set of Ecyclopedia Brittanica. Address El, this office. For any pain, from top to toe, from any cause, apply Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil. Pain can't stay where it ia used. W. L. O. Bartlett, the cigar man. made a trip to Elilworth and other points last Saturday returning on Monday. Doan's Regulets cure constipation without griping, nausea, nor any weakening effect. Ask your drug gist for them.' 25 cents per box. Geo. Meeser, of the Ramage transfer crew, has been laid up sev eral days by an injury to his back, oaused by a strain while at work. Itching, bleeding, protuding or blind piles yield to Doan's Oint ment. Chronic cases soon relieved, finally 6ured. Druggists all sell it. WEAK KIDNEYS, WEAK BODIES Kidney Diseases Cause Half the Common Aches and Ills of Worthington People. As one weak link weakens a chain, so weak kidneys weaken the whole body and hasten the final breaking down. Overwork, strains, colds and oth er causes injure the kidneys, and when their activity is lessened the whole body suffers from the excess of uric poison circulated in the blood. Aches and pains and languor and urinary ills come, and there is an increasing tendency towards" dia betes and fatal Bright's disease. There is no real help for the suffer er except kidney help. Doan's Kidney Pills act directly on the kidneys and cure every kid ney ill. Worthington cures are.the proof. Frank Kerchner, flagman, former ly living near the Omaha depot, Worthington, Minn., ^says: "My back ailed me for years with a deep seated heavy gnawing pain. I had to give up firing an engine on ac count of this trouble for the jarring and bending over simply tortured me I had to sit down to wash my face and hands because 1 couldn't bend over. The aching often awoke me'at nights. 1 tried no end .of remedies but none did me any good until I got Doan's Kidney Pills at F. M. Hickman's drug store. They relieved me from the start and after I had used three bq^es, the pain had left me and my back was strong again. I have'nt had a touch of this old trouble for along time now." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mi lb urn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for^the Unit ed States. Remember the &ame—Doan's— and take no other. The Western Implement Co. has sold several McCormick corn bind ers this year. Owing to the high price of hay some of the farmers are going to take care of their corn fod deer this year. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they can not reach the diseased portions of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caus ed by an inflamed condition of the mocous lining" of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling'sound or im perfect hearing, and when it is en tirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflamation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are causd by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inaflmed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dol lars for the case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for cir culars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. ''wWi jit, ?mm --V Error, of (*ra® a Telegraph Operator .Costs Twenty-five Lives. AS MANY OTHERS INJURED Express and Freight. Train® on the Boston and Maine Railroad Col lide at Canaan, N. H, Canaan, N. H., Sept. 16.—By a col lision of a freight and an express train on the Concord division of the Boston and Maine railroad.'near this place twenty-five persons lOBt their lives and twenty-seven others received injuries. According to a statement Issued by the railroad officials a blun der in handling train orders was the cause, but the identity of the employe responsible for the error remains to be determined. The following is a complete list of the dead: A'. Timothy Shaughnessey, Manches ter Mrs. Timothy Shaughnessey, Man chester George Southwickt Worces ter, Mass. Fred M. Phelps, Ochiltree, Tex. Mrs. M. E. Warden, Haverhill, Mass. Mrs. Adolph Boisvert* Concord, N. H. Miss Annie BariVjtt, Manches ter Augustine Royer, Manchester Richard F. Clarkson, Lebanon, N. H. Frank H. Lowes, Ipswich, Mass. Mrs E. S. Briggs, West Lebanon^ N*. H. John M. Congdon, Bethel, Vt. Leon 8. Cady, West Lebanon Domin'.ck Soston enoit, Lowell, Mass. C. gj, The injured persons Berby, Mrs. L. C. Blake, Sojmerville, Mass. Leila Hould, Manchester, N. H. H. D. Stevens, Muquoaoboit Har bor, N. S. Annie St. Pierre^ Isle Verle, Que, .• iii' Awno were taken to the Mary Hltchock- hospital at Hanover are all reported to be doing, well, with the eiceptibri of Miss Allina Juron of Nashua, N. who is internally injured. Fearful Result of 'Mistake. The southbound train was-made up at Sherbrooke, Que., where It' picked up two Bleepers from Quebec ^and two more on the way down.' It Consisted of the baggage car, passenger coach and smoking car in that order, with the sleepers in the rear. :2 The train left White River Junction at 3:50 a. m., forty minutes late, and was followed twenty minutes .later by the Montreal express over the" Central Vermont railroad. The Quebec train is known as No. 30 and the Montreal train as No. 84. In the meantime a northbound train known as No. 267 had arrived at Canaan on- time. According to the division superintendent, W R. Ray, J. R. Crowley, the night train dis patcher at Concord, sent.:a dispatch to John Greeley, the night operator at Canaan, that No. 34 was one hour and ten minutes late. The order which Conductor Lawrence of the freight train showed after the accident dis tinctly states that No. SO, instead of No. 34, was an hour and ten minutes late. Conductor Lawrence, believing that he had sufficient time in the hour and ten minutes to reach the sidetrack at West Canaan, four miles beyond be fore No. 30 reached it, ordered his train ahead. FOR THE AMERICA'S CUP. Sir Thomas Llpton Has Issued An other Challenge., London, Sept. 13.—Sir Thomas^ Up ton will make another attempt iar 1908 to regain the America's cup for Great Britain. This announcement has been made by Sir Thomas in London and by the secretary of the Royal Irish Yacht plub at Dublin. The challenge, which goes to the New York Yacht club in the name of the Royal Irish Yacht club, was mailed from Dublin Friday. The details of the challenge 'were arranged when Sir Thomas visited Dublin recently in the course of a yachting cruise around the British isles on board the Erin. He told, a friend months ago of his intention to challenge, but having until the end of September to take action he deferred challenging until the eleventh hour It is not known why Sir Thomas decided tb challenge through the Royal Irish Yacht club instead of the Royal Ulster Yacht clpb, which issued the previous challenges in his behalf, un less it is that he thinks that a change of luck may follow his change*'of clubs. HIS AIM IS DEADLY. Dying Man 8hoots and Kills Two of a Gang of Assassins. Pittsburg, Kan., Sept. 16.—At Crow burg, a new mining camp in the north ern part of this county, two persons were killed and two fatally wounded as the result of a grudge held by the Italian miners of the district against a mine boss. Charles Gardner, a mine boss, and his sister, Mrs. George Rexford, were waylaid on a lonely road while returning home by a num ber of Italians and shot and fatally wounded. Gardner returned the Are and shot and killed two Italians, names unknown. Five Hundred Miners Strike. Greensburg, Pa., Sept. 16.—Five hundred miners employed in the West moreland Coal company's mine at Claridge, Pa., are out on a strike, giv ing as the cause the refusal of the company to discharge a weighmaster, who, the miners allege, did not report the weights correctly. 4^ SAYS IT LEADS TO ATHEISM ft!*, iPope leeues Encyclical Strongly Con demning "Modernism. Rome, Sept. 18.—The Osservatore Romano, organ of the Vatican, lias issued an Important encyclical of Pope Pius X. oii "Modernism." which really is a completion of his recent syllabus,! The document sets forth that Modern" Ism is a serious danger to the church, refers in detail to the various features of Modernism, condemns it as danger ous in philosophy, faith, theology, his tory, criticism and reforms and-arrives at the conclusion that Modernism is a synthesis of all heresy and must- log ically lead to atheism. The encyclical makes the following provisions First—The teaching .of philosophy, positive theology, etc., is to be carried on in the church schools and univer sities but in a Catholic spirit. Second—Modernists are to be re moved from professorships and the direction of educational institutions. Third—The clergy and faithful are not to be allowed to read Modernist publications. Fourth—A pommlttee of censorship is to be established in every diocese to pass ifpon the publications which the clergy and faithful shall be per mitted to read. Fifth—The encyclical of the late Pope Leo. XIII. prohibiting the clergy' from assuming the direction of pub lications without their bishop's per mission and providing for supervision of the work of ecclesiastical writers is confirmed. Sixth—Ecclesiastical congresses, ex cept on rare occasions, are prohibited. ATTACK LEAVES HER BLIND Mrs. Cassie Chadwick 8uffers Nerv ous Collapse. Columbus, O., Sept. 17.—Mrs. Cassie M. Chadwick, noted witch of finance, who, posing -as Andrew Carnegie's natural daughter, swindled Ohio and Eastern banks and capitalists out of millions in loans on bogus securities, was stricken with a nervous collapse at the penitentiary which has left her blind. •••... BY MORE THAN SIX HOURS New Turbiner Lusitania Low ers Queenstown Record. New York, Sept. 13.—The giant tur biner Lusitania of the Cunard line came into port on her maiden voyage with a new record of 5 days and 54 minutes between Queenstown and New York. The Lusitania failed to lower the hourly speed average of 23.b8 knots made by the Kaiser Wil helm II. of the North German Lloyd line, though she covered the distance between the ports in an average of 23.01 knots, which is a record for maiden voyages. Captain Watt said that when the time comes for record making, after her machinery is in thorough order, the Lusitania will be the empress of the seas. The Lusitania's time was 6 hours and 29 minutes faster than the previ ous record from Queenstown, held by her sister ship, the Lucanla. The Lusitania, the largest ship afloat, was given a royal welcome on her arrival here and it was a contin ual ovation from the time she sped past the Sandy Hook light vessel and made her way through the Ambrose channel, the first ocean liner to enter the new fair way, until she was safely wharved into her dock. The^Lusitania was never pushed to her top speed during the entire voyage, according to her officers. She encountered pleas ant weather from port to port and arrived here almost at the hour des ignated by the directors of the Cunard line. FRANCE HOPEFUL FOR PEACE 8he Is Encouraged by the Improved Situation in Morocco. Paris, Sept. 19.—The French gov ernment is greatly encouraged by the improvement in the Moroccan situa tion and strongx hope is entertained that the rebellious tribesmen, whom the delegates who conferred with Gen eral Drude on Sunday are now con sulting, will agree to the peace terms, which include: First—The punishment of the au thors of the Casa Blanca massacres and the ringleaders of the'movement. Second—An agreement that no tribesmen shall enter with arms with in a radius of twelve kilometers of the city. Third—The acceptance In principle of the payment of a war contribution, the amount of which will be fixed hereafter by negotiations between the Moroccan government and France and Spain. Fouth—The surrender of hostages to insure the fulfillment of these con ditions. HENRY H. ROGERS ILL Standard Oil Official Need Not Appear In Court.'. Boston, Sept. 17.—Upton the evi dence of members of the family of Henry H. Rogers and the family phy sician that Mr. Rogers suffered a stroke last July, and has since been unable to transact any business, Judge Hammond in the supreme court an nounced that it would be cruel to sompel his attendance in court and dismissed a motion to that effect. The condition of Mr. Rogers was disclosed in the course of a hearing on a motion to show that he was incapable of at tending the trial *of a suit against him for $50,000,000 brought by C. M. Ray mond of Somerville for alleged conver sion of certain royalties in connection with the production of petroleum. -i Trial Bottlas, 15c. 8 os. Bottles, SOc. 20 os. Botttaa, $1.00 AboaoMia Half-gallon a»4 Gallon Can* for Vatariaary ii«'4w' --"v .'.»'*••,! *k ••.'tf* \-vt}/-.v T: v\. ,"V 1 ••-.•. -i .. *.• -i. "f ALCOHOL 9 KB CENT. Awgetabte I¥eparationkAs stmilatlng tbeFboffandRegutat ting die Staa^aailltattflf INFANTS ,-THILDKKN nessandR^mtauisiKnr OT NARCOTIC. ^oemtksamamR BrndmSmi' MMhUb- Air* ApoftctMmedvror Hon,SourSto fteSMt NEWMOBK. Copy ofwrappee. UM. Read the Advance for Bargains CACTUS EN Every family has frequent use' for a good liniment and none can be fotmd I that equals in penetrating and healing power»,4bejoldelmb^? Kil|€rCAfi'Ti^ OIL. Since 1888 it has sold on its merits until it is how used from tlie Atlantic,to the Pacific. KING CACTUS OIL is, thoroughly antiseptic^ and heals a wound from j: the bottom, thus preventing blood poisoning and healing without leaving a ,, scar. It speedilv heals CUTS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, OLDSORES, SWELL- .. INGS, CHAPPED HANDS AND ALL EXTERNAL HURTS.' As a rubbing liniment for the treatment of RHEUMATISM* LUMBAGO, and kindred aii-,, ments, its wonderful penetrating qualities mala: its action prompt, and the pain quickly subsides. For Veterinary use KING CACTUS OIL stands supreme. Itisjnvtduablefor BARBED WIRE CUTS, HARNESS AND SADDLE GALLS, COLLAR SORES, ,, SCRATCHES, GREASE HEEL, MANGE, ITCH, and All External Disease* If jroor drunitt doa* not tall Kinc Cactu Oil taka nothing el*a, but ramit to ua and wa will otmnte andChUdrtiui .. Bears the NMI In For Over it prapaid. 0LNCY a McOAID, Sol* MaufactMrars, 113-117 Fifth Av«HN«t CLINTON, IOWA.' Dean'sSweatOintmentCuresSpavin,RingboneandCurb.AtDrigglsts, 50cpir Mttli,: I Your Independence FOR SALE BY ••l"! 'I'•! '»I"!"!"!1ififrfr* H. S. MYERS. Your Success is Assured IF YOU BUY LAND OF US in southwestern North Dakota Here are raised the largest crops of WHEAT, OATS, FLAX CORN, HAY, etc., and' they always command the highest market prices. GOOD BfCH {SOIL EXCELLENT WATER fuel at your very ducement offered door. We own by anyone. We over 200,000 acres can also locate of the very finest you on aFREE land in Billings HOMESTEAD and aji jWEl^ of 160 acres- ad-', Co es, and joining-land you to $12.50 per acre Buy Now, in with our liberal less than-five a in he be or $ 8 6 the greatest in- See What a Fortune You Make Investing Now Send for our free maps and booklets. Joih one. of our special? Wednesday- excursions. WBITB CS TODAY THE WESTERN LAND SECURITIES CO. M3-M7 Endicott Bldg., ST. PAUL, MINN. A. M, GREGORSON, Local Agent an & "•$£' Mo. 278 Guarantoad undo tha Food and Drum Act, !-V -.10 Juao30, 1906. Olnay ft McDakU Clinton, Iowa. g.K aQ T'.i: Vrv-v acre* for. further information.,: CURED WITHOUT THE KNirCt Fistula Fissure, Bleeding, Itchinr, Ulcer ation, Constipation and all Rectal Diseases a specialty. aBRMAN'AMBRICAN, Socialists. Til I pimPf) 612 Fourth Srteet,~ SIOTJX CITY, IOWA. I ILL UUIICU HO MONEY AS* Defective