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HANDS RAW AND SCALY. Itched and Burned Terribly—Could Not Move Thumbs Without Flesh CrackittK —Sleep Impossible—Cuti cura Soon Cured Eciema. “An itching humor covered both my hands and got up over my wrists and even up to the elbows. The itching and burning were terrible. My hands got a’’ scaly and when I scratched, the ■urface would be covered with blisters and then get raw. The eczema got so bad that I could not move my thumbs without deep cracks appearing. I went to my doctor, buUMiis medicine could only stop the itching. At night I suf fered so fearfully that 1 could not sleep. I could not bear to touch my hands with water. This went on for three months and I was fairly worn out. At last 1 got the Cuticura Reme dies and in a month I was cured. Wal ter H. Cox. 16 Somerset st., Boston, Mass.. Sept. 25, 1908.” Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston. Running No Rink. “What,” asks the maiden aunt, “go ing to marry that Mr. Newwun? Why. you hardly know the man, Imogene. In the few* days you have been ac quainted with him you cannot possibly have learned anything of his family or antecedents or habits or personal cir cumstances.” "That is true. Aunt Keturah. But you have always told me that no wom an w’ho knows anything about a man will marry him.” —Success Magazine. Varieties of Diction, There was a man who could not wred— A fact which caused him oft to fret — Because bad grammar reigned, he said, Aftnong the girls he met. From Boston town then came a maid Whose diction was a dream, he vowed; So matrimony he essayed With feelings very proud. But soon his joy contracts a chill, For, though her diction’s passing strong, Her cowiradiction’s stronger still— They’ll be divorced ere long. —Success Magazine. To Ladies Only. The wish to be beautiful is predomi nant in every woman, and none can any •he does not care whether she is beauti ful or not. Dr. T. Felia Gouraud'e Oriental Cream, er Magical Beautifier, elicits a clear, transparent complexion, free from Tan, Fieckles, or Moth Patches, and so closely imitating nature as to defy detection. It has the highest medical tes timony as well as professional celebrities, and on its own merits it has become one •f the largest and a popular specialty in the trade. Ferd. T. Hopkins. Sole Pro prietor, 37 Great Jones Street, New York. For sale by all Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers throughout the United States, Canadas, and Europe. No. 9. Why, Cert! The customer had handed over a check tn payment of his long overdue milk bill. “Is it a certified check?” asked the col lector. “No, and it doesn’t need to be; I’m per fectly good. That’s an impudent ques tion to ask.” “I guess you’d better get it certified.” said the collector. “You insist on having certified milk.” How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Ball's Catarrh Cure F. J. CHENEY 4 CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business trans actions. and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Warding. Kixxax & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. .... Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Noblease Oblige. The youthful Georg? Washington had just declared that he couldn’t tell a lie. “How would it look." he said, “for a future President of the United States to be eligible for membership in an Ananias club?” Thereupon he trimmed the cherry tree he had cut down, and proceeded to make a big stick out of it.—Chicago Tribune. Father Won’t Forget. Mrs. Tyte-Phist—Jimmy needs a pair of shoes. Mr. Tyte-Physt—l know it. Jimmy has been a good boy lately, and I am going to get him a pair for a Christmas gift. F DODDS I KIDNEY PI EL'S THOMPSON’S EYE WRIER iR&IiSO&Si | Throat and Lungs need just the protection against cold •nd disease that m obtained from Piso’s Cure. If you have a couch ! or cold, alight or serious, begin tak- I inf Piso’s Cure today and continue I until you are well. Cure the cough while it is fresh, when a few doses of Piso’s Cure may be all that you 1 Mill need. Famous for half a cen tury. Pleasant to taste. Free from | opiates and harauul in gradients. At all druggists’, 25 eta. ■ ■ ■ - Old Favorites Christmas Bell*. I heard the bells on Christmas day Their old familiar carols play, And wild and sweet The words repeat Of “Peace on earth, good-will to men.” And thought how, as the day had come, The belfries of all Christendom Now roll along The unbroken song Of “Peace on earth, good-will to men.” Till ringing, singing, on its way, The world revolved from night to day, A voice, a chime, A chant sublime, Of “Peace on earth, good-will to men. But in despair I bowed my head “There is no peace on earth, ’ 1 said; “For hate is strong, And mocks the song , Of ‘Peace on earth, good will to men.’ ” Then pealed the bells, more loud and deep, “God is not dead; nor doth He sleep I The Wrong shall fail, the Right prevail, With peace on earth, good-will to men.” —Henry W. Longfellow. Alin of Life. We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breaths; In feelings, not in figures on a dial. We should count time by heart throbs. He most lives Who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best. And he whose heart beats quickest lives the longest; IJves in one hour more than in years do some Whose fat blood sleeps, as it slips along •their veins, Life is but a means unto an end; that end, Beginning, mean, and end to all things God. i The dead have all the glory of the world. —Philip James Bailey. A SEA CHANGE. Bathinff Costume* of Today and Those of a Century Ago. A brisk little old grandmother, cozily established on the beach, chatted rem iniscently not long ago, as she watched her pretty granddaughters, short-skirt ed and sandaled, their heads pictures quely bound with gay kerchiefs disport ing themselves in the surf. “I went in bathing when I was young.” she confessed, "but when I look at those girls today, and remember how I used to look and behave, It act ually hurts my vanity, even now. “My bathing suit was of the heaviest dark blue flannel, made with long sleeves, full Turkish trousers and a full skirt half way below my knees. As soon as I was fairly in the water the skirt flopped and ballooned about me. The trousers sagged around my ankles and my hair, worn free and flowing, whipped my face or clung in wet strands over my eyes I didn’t swim— girls didn’t then. We merely danced up and down and squealed and thought ourselves very brave If we ducked in stead of jumping as high as possible when a wave came. When we came out. looking awful frights, our water soaked toggery was so heavy we could scarcely stumble up the beach. “Yet we girls wouldn’t have worn the things girls do today, pretty and convenient as they are. We should have been shocked at them. But I’m not shocked now. You see, I remember that unprogresslvc people were shocked at us. .My great aunt Ann remon strated seriously with mother on the indelicacy of public bathing and the positive disgrace to the family of a cos tume that was unfeminine and grotes que. Though I don’t think I disgraced the family, she was right about that costume. I’m glad there were no snap shots then.” The old lady laughed, sighed and lifted her opera glass to follow the scarlet kerchiefed heads bobbing far beyond the line of surf. “It’s always good to see young folks having good times,” she said, reflective ly, “but particularly the kind of good times we never had ourselves.” Times have changed, Indeed. But two generations farther back than the brisk old grandmother and Madame de Boigne, a distinguished French woman, visiting Dieppe—now one of the best known of French shore resorts—to take sea baths for her health, found the place a hamlet of fishermen and curious housewives, who thought her baths a mad whim. At first they thought her mad in another sense; they believed her a helpless victim of hydrophobia, whom her relatives in pity for her and precaution for others, had brought there to drown. Grant’* Grandson. When General Grant, one day near the end of his life, was autographing some portraits of himself for the medi cal staff, consisting of Doctors Doug las, Sands, Barker and Shrady, his son said, “Father. I would like you to sign this, also.” The Century Magazine tells the story. It was a letter to some future presi dent, asking him to appoint the gen eral’s grandson, Ulysses third, to West Point. Without dipping bis pen in ink again, the general attached his name to this letter. It was done quietly, but in view of the circumstances, the action was dramatic. Young Ulysses, the son of Colonel Grant, was then a mere boy. We all knew that when the letter should be presented General Grant would have been many years In his grave. It was only a question of months, perhaps weeks, when the hand that held the pen would be ttilled forever. Alto- 2 5 ct o. L— ■ M . _J gether, it was a situation that had in It much pathos. It meant a benediction for the future soldier. I believe the others must have been equally impressed, for after the scratch ing of the pen had ceased, there was absolute silence in the room while Col. Grant carefully folded the letter and gently led his father away. The note was dated and signed on April 3, 1885. General Sherman in dorsed it on February 1, 1887, and eleven years later on March 30, was written across the bottom: “>I direct the aixpointment to be made. “WM. M’KINLEY.” FOR THE GIRLS’ GUEST ROOM. Timely SnjnrcMtionß Which Will Help to Make the Visit Pleasant. Every girl cannot afford a guest room into which she can put her friends, but if possible, she should al ways arrange one room in the house for a guest, says the New York Times. It may be her own room or that of some member of the family. In it she can put all the attractive knickknacks that make a room attractive to any oc cupant, then she can go into a smaller or less comfortable room when the guest arrives. It Is much nicer for a girl to share a room with some member of her fam ily than share it with a guest. There are very few visitors who like to share a room with any one. They may not object to it in their own house as much as they do in another’s house. It is not an easy matter to accommo date one’s self to another person’s way of living or sleeping or dressing. No matter how well a girl knows her guest, she should give her a room to herself. If she vacates her own room, which Is often the case, she should see to it that enough bureau drawers and clos ets are left empty for the guest to ar range her clothes In them. In the closet should always be four or six suit hangers. Possibly there is no one small thing which a guest ap preciates as much as this. True, there are collapsible coat hangers now which come in small boxes, but the majority of visitors do not possess these. The large hangers are inconvenient to put in a trunk, or a dress suit case, and therefore they are gratefully re ceived when found hanging in the closet A girl should not only empty the closet and the bureau drawers for her guest, but she should have fresh paper laid In both. It is not pleasant for a visitor to have to put all her nice ac cessories and clothes over shreds, dust, crooked pins, and possibly a soiled handkerchief or collar. The girl who does not empty the closet for the guest and expects her to hung up her nicest clothes on any hook or in any crevice she can find among other people's clothes is a careless host ess and does not deserve the visits of interesting friends. Another thing that a girl should al ways provide for her guest is enough light Every one has possibly gone through the experience of being shown up to the guest room, where one is to live for a while, and finds, upon trying to dress for dinner, that the light is dim and badly placed. One can’t see in the mirror or how to fasten a frock. She is conscious of the distressing fact that for the entire time of her stay she will never know how her hair looks and whether her gown is fastened upside down or not. In these days of easy lighting a girl should see to it that each mirror in a bedroom has the proper light at the side or above it. If she can’t manage this she must be sure to get two or four candles, put them in any kind of can dlestick and place them in a row in front of the looking glass. She should put a half-dozen fresh ones in the room so that the visitor will feel sure of having enough light. Her Friend. . There is nothing like a stanch friend. At a “home” in the country which the children of the slums are allowed to visit for a short term in the summer the following incident occurred. A party of a hundred of the youngsters were on their way back to the city. The attendant noticed that one of the girls, Rosie,. was walking clumsily. A writer in the New York Tribune tells the story. When the attendant heard a chorus of gibes all aimed at little Rosie, she saw that the girl was wearing a pair of shoes of large size. Then the attend ant remembered that Rosie had had a new pair of shoes and the little girl was asked about it. “Well,” said Rosie, “you see the shoes ain’t mine. They’re Katie’s. I know they’re awful big, but her mamma ain’t had any work lately, so she couldn’t buy her a new pair. She just gave her own shoes to Katie. “Katie felt awful bad about it and cried all the way to the station. The girls all laughed at her, so I just lent her my new ones and took hers. “You see, teacher,” said Rosie, rais ing her eyes to the attendant’s face, Katie’s my friend.” Oyster Shells as Medicine. Ground oyster shells were given by the mediaeval doctors to children suf fering from rickets and scrofula. Now it appears that they w’ere right The shells contain lime, nitrogen, flour, bro mide, phosphoric acid and lodine, all excellent for feeble children. They say that if growing children were to take powdered oyster shells in their food the teeth would be Improved.—Lon don Answers. What has become of the old-fash ioned school in w’hlch the pupils tried to whip the teacherT COUGHS AINO COLDS 1 Took Pe-ru-na. JIR.SjO.S'EPH 604 TENTH ST.ffi' ,V| ‘"WASHINGTON- D-C-W J Penina Drug Co., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen:—l can cheerfully recom mend Peruna as an effective cure for coughs and colds. You are authorized to use my photo with testimonial in any publication. Mrs. Joseph Hall Chase. 804 Tenth St., Washington, D. C. Could Not Smell Nor Hear. Mrs. A. L. Wetzel, 1023 Ohio St., Terre Haute, Ind., writes: “When I began to take your medicine I could not smell, nor hear a church bell ring. Now I can both smell and hear. “When I began your treatment my bead was terrible. I had buzzing and chirping noises in my head. “I followed your advice faithfully and took Peruna as you told me. Now I might say I am well. “I want to go and visit my mother and see the doctor who said I was not long for this world. I will tell him it was Peruna that cured me.” Peruna is manufactured by The Peruna Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio. Ask your Druggist for a Free Peruna Almanac for 1909. Looking; Back Upon the Present. We who are used to flight can hardly realize the crawling life of men before the twentieth century. They were bound to roads and railroads. They could not ride direct to any given spot. They were confined by roads and rail roads, and they were a hurried race that chafed at -these restraints. Im agine, then, this race suddenly relieved of such vexatious barriers, entering into a new realm, as free as the sea, and reaching all men alike, so that every man’s farm or factory was a harbor from which he could sail as directly as the wind would let him to any spot in the world; and, bear in mind, from the first -with a rapidity that equaled that of the ordinary rail road trains of the day and surpassed any speed permitted by law to pri vate vehicles on their crooked roads. It was indeed this advantage of speed which encouraged as much as anything else the commercial development of the flyer.—Success Magazine. An Unburied Picture. Rossetti secured permission in 1869 to reopen the coflin of his wife in order to secure the manuscripts of some poems which he had buried with her seven years before. Some such incident might have oc curred in connection "with J. M. W. Turner if his desire to be buried wrapped up in his own painting of “Carthage” had been carried out. There was some difficulty in selling the painting, and the artist kept the canvas by him. lie always said he would be wrapped in it when he was buried and even went so far as to ask Chantrey if as his executor he would fulfill his w’ishes on that point. “No doubt,” answered the sculptor. “I shall bury you rolled up in your pic ture if it is one of the conditions of your will, but I would take you up next day and unroll you!” Conclusive Evidence, “See Jinx lately?” “Saw him yesterday. He was hunt ing trouble.” “How do you know?” “He asked me if I had seen any thing of his mother-in-law.” —Houston Post. THEN AND NOW. Complete Recovery from Coffee Illa, “About nine years ago my daughter, from coffee drinking, was on the verge of nervous prostration,” writes a Louis ville lady. “She was confined for the most part to her home. “When she attempted a trip down town she was often brought home in a Gfb and would be prostrated for days afterwards. “On the advice of her physician she gave up coffee and tea, drank Postum, and ate Grape-Nuts for breakfast. “She liked Postum from the very be ginning and we soon saw improvement. To-day she is in perfect health, the mother of five children, all of whom are fond of Postum. “She has recovered, is a member of three charity organizations and a club, holding an office in each. We give Postum and Grape-Nuts the credit for hvi recovery.” a Reason.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Well ville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter ? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. UNREST IN INDIA GROWING. Malcontent* Continue Vigoron* Prop aganda. Against Great Britain. Possibly because India is afar off and local topics are more immediately interestirg; possibly also because the subject is disquieting, we are only now realizing the extent of the disaffection in India, which, contrary to a popular impression, is not limited to Bengal, says the Boston Transcript. The In dian correspondent of a London news paper expresses astonishment at the irisuudeistanding of the situation ex hibited in England as evidenced by the belief that only in one division of In dia does sedition stalk around. He thinks perhaps this error is due to the prominence given in dispatches to the bomb-throwing conspiracy in Bengal. Englishmen at home have leaped to the comforting conclusion that in that province only has the unrest become militant, whereas the truth is it men aces Madras, and Bombay even more. Very few prosecutions for sedition have bc« n before the courts of Bengal, and the extreme penalty they have imposed has been two years’ imprisonment. In Bombay, Madras and the united prov inces—Agra and Oudh, in the north west —severe sentences of five, seven, ten years, or for life, are becoming the rule. Nor does the personal popu lar! 'y of governors or other high offi cials deter printed or spoken attacks on the British rule. The assailants discriminate and declare that the best intentions of magistrates are frustrated by the policy it is their duty to en force. The character of these attacks and of the assailants may be inferred from an extract from an article which caused the arrest of Subramania Iyer, one of the best-knowm of the native journalists of Madras. He wrote and published of the English in India: “They beat us, kill us and treat us most insolently and even prejudice the government against us. It is not jus tice alone but equality and liberty, too, that the people require.” Oddly enough, the proceedings against this offender were dropped in the ground of his ill health, but pre sumably because in certain contro versies he had shown a knowledge of the social economic conditions of India which it would have been inconvenient to have him exploit on the witness stand. He had in the course of an edi torial discussion demonstrated that the normal income of the Indian peasant is but a penny a day, and on this he based arguments as to the beneficence of the British rule, the repetition of which is to be deprecated. Over-sensitive. A brewer’s dray had collided with a heavily laden milk cart and sent can after can splashing into the street. Of course, the world assembled to watch the great event. A small man. coming up late, had to stand on tip-toe and keep dodging his head from side to side in order to see past an enormously stout woman who was just in front of him. “What is it? What is it?” he kept asking. At last he caught a glimpse of the shattered cart and the fresh white milk streaming through the street. “Goodness he exclaimed. “What an awful waste’” The stout woman looked at him. “Mind your own business, sir,” she said. “I have a right to as big a -waist as I like.” HURT IN A WRECK. Kidney* Badly Injured and Health Serloumly Impaired. William White, R. R. man, 201 Con stantine St, Three Rivers, Mich., says: “In a railroad collision my kidneys seemed hopeless. voluntarily. Two months ago I began taking Doan’s Kidney Pills and the improvement has been wonderful. Four boxes have done me more good than all the doctoring of seven years. I have gained so much that my friends won der at it.” Sold by all dealers. 50c a box. Fos ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind. Bleeding or Protrud ing Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50e. Information. Mrs. Chugwater—What is this “bread line” they talk about so much, Josiah? Mr. Chugwater—You’ve seen one of these long ropes of macaroni, haven’t you? Well, that’s it. Only One “BROMO QUININE** That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used the Werld over to Cure a Cold in One Daj. 25c. Privileged. “O, but wasn’t Tennyson a great poet I” “You bet! He could violate every rule of rhyme or rhythm without being called down for it.” It’a the judgment of many smokers that Lewis’ Single Binder 5c cigar equals in quality the best 10c cigar. The first pipe organ was made by Ar chimedes in 220 B. C. Mr*. Win-lnw’* Bootking Stxup for Oh 11 ire* teething; foften* the (umi, reduces inflammatioa, al lays pain, cr.ras wind colic. 26 cents a bottle. 80111 HBK Bl IM You pay no interest. We pay all taxes AND IF YOU DIE before the farm la all paid for. we wUI deed It to your heir* at once FREE OF CHARGE. Fee full particulars, write today te 9. F. BANBORNGOMPAMT, D£PT. 4, ▲BHL AN D, W I S.. must have been hurt, as I passed bloody urine with pain for a long time after, was weak and thin, and so I could not work. Two years after I went to the hospital and remain ed almost six months, but my case The urine passed in- tap’s Balsam Will stop any cough that can be stopped by any medicine and cure coughs that cannot be cured by any other medicine. It is always the best cough cure. You cannot afford to take chances on any other kind. KEMP’S BALSAM cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip, rsthma and consump tion in first stages. It does not contain alco hol, opium, morphine, or any other narcotic, poison ous or harmful drug. SICK HEADACHE 1 a —Positively cured by v these Little Pills. la A|\ I ■ HlO They also relieve Dte tress from Dyspepsia, In- SPITTLE digestion and Too Hearty 11/ F D Eating. A perfect rem- I V l edy for Dizziness, Nausea, PILLS Drowsiness, Bad Tasto I gjg In the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side. I tor Pin LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE Genuine Must Bear ■■ittCe Fac-Simile Signature (ML" ™M_lrefuse substitutes* JUST DOUBLE H 320 ACRES Instead oi I 160 ACRES As further inducement to settlement of th* Wheat Raisins' lands of Western Canada, the Canadian Government has increased the area that may be t aken by a homesteader to 320 acres —l6O free and 160 to be purchased at $3.00 per acre. These lauds are in the grain-raising area, where mixed farmins is also carried on with unqualified success. A railway will shortly be built to Hudson Bay, bringing the world’s markets a thousand milea nearer these wheat fields, where schools and churches are convenient, climate excellent, rail ways close to all settlements and local market* food. **/t would take time to assimilate the revelations that a visit to the great em pire lying to the North of us unfolded at every turn.” — Correspondence of a National Editor, who visited Western Canada in August, 1908. Lands may also be purchased from Railway and Land Companies at LOW PRICES AND ON EASY TERMS. For pamphlets, maps and information as to low Railway Rates app y to W. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or C. J. Broughton, Room 412, Merchants’ Loan and Trust Building, Chicago, Ill.; E. T. Holmes, 315 Jackson St., St. Paul, Minn.; M.V.Mclnnes, 176 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich.;T. O. Currie, 180 Third Street, Milwaukee, Wis.; W. H. Rogers, 3rd Floor, Traction Terminal Building. Indianapolis, Ind., Authorized Govern ment Agents. Please say where you saw this advertisement. HEADACHE "My father had been a sufferer from sick headache for the last twenty-flve years and never found any relief until he began taking your Cascarets. Since he has begun taking Cascarets he has Dever bad the headache. They have entirely cured him. Cascarets do what you recommend them to do. I will give you the privilege of using his name.” E.M. Dickson, 1120 Reainer St., W.lndianapolis, lad. Best For w Jlr The Bowels gwccaod CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c,50c. Neyel sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped COO. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 59S MHUfILSLLE.TEH MILLION BOXES TO&nJUimEPTC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting and deodor- f izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex- , 1 ■x ■ cellence and econ- ILoVij| omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and I« T ’ uterine catarrh. At I i drug and toilet 11 stores,,so cents, or L by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH “HCALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK BENT FRKK THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mass. NO MONKEYING If you U». Our Evei -Ready Self-Adjustable igja Wra Household, Farm and Mechanics'Wrench. Theharde. you ‘ 'f jgSiwjlrfjwa »rib it holds, no small, how badly battered, what shape or size or condition the nut, ’ oltor pipe, is in, the wrench is ready and does the worh quicaly. Sample 12-in. Wrench, sl. Express charges paid. Me chanics, Farmers, etc., wanted as agents. Big Money; universal teller. The Lake Superior Wrench Ce., Saulto Ste. Mario, Mich p INSIST ON HAVING nifUN Dr. Martel’s Preparation Wf OMEN The Standard Remedy. (At Druggists) Send for book "Relief for W omen. ” FRENCH DRUG CO., 80 W. 82d St., N. Y. City C. N. U. No. 2—1»OO WIEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE SAI n yss saw the advertiiciaeal i* this paper. Do bualneas direct with us and avoid paying big commissions to agents. We own land in Vilas county, Wisconsin, and sell it cheap Fertile Soil. Invigorating Climate. Good Roads. Ac tive. Ready Markets. Schools and Churches. Near to Railroads. Many tracts have valuable hardwood timber, easily and profitably cleared. Ml DOWN ftNO 1A MONIH