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F<bn MAN AND BEAST. $ For . and Grease Heals, $ Wire Feice Cuts, Sore Ntck' afid P-'-oulders, Saddle Galls,! Contracted and Tender Feet,', Sandcracks, Quittor, Thrush,’ Canker, Laraimitis. Navicklar! Disease, Ftc. Bruises, Cuts, Running Sore, Tat-| ter, Salt Rheum, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, All Skin Eruptions, Piles, Etc. , V.Til heal wounds ‘- here everything ' else has failed. I ; PRTcE7^SrTcHNTS?~^ I SIMMONS MEDICINE COMPANY, RACINE, WIS. M. J. DICKINSON Wabeno, Forest County, Wis., DEALER IN I 3 SUPPLIES. HAY, FLOUR AND FEED. RUSCH BROS MANUFACTURERS •# Lumber L&th - Shingles Etc. WABEXO, WISCONSIN. HIGGLE BOOKS 0 A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical, Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Haud- somely Printed and Beautifully Illustrated. By JACOB BIOOLE ' / r No. 1 -RIQGLH HORSE BOOK f { AM.hoiU Horw I-a Cotmuoo iif I’ Treatise, with over U/ l J. illuatMrtloua a standard work.. Price jo Cent, \ No. a-BIOUI.i BERRY BOOK , \ Alt about grow ng Small Fruit*- read and learn how; jUi 1 contain.cole red lift like rrpttuction<iofatl leadiug J vtrietßa and njo othti Frier, y> Cents. f jKJ 1 No - 3-HIOGLB POULTRY BOOK F . A H***° ut O’: O** bet Poultry Book In exigence . *** ** / colored life-like reproductions j / S r Sl%]rts ,al hrerd*; aith ioj other illustrations. . I 1 rice, $o Cents. 4CVM ; r V _s,| No - 4-mGGI H row bock 1 X Y li All about Cow, .Oil the Dairy Rusinr** • having ■ ,rr,t gL jtT.ar f SHi. *2?,;*“’ *, c 5 ,lo,r, 1 1 >ic liltnrproductloD.ol^.ch Jf breed, wttli i ~oth-r illuMratiun*. Price, joCenU k I• r NO. 5 BlOUl.n SWINE BOOK V T VS 1 I Jurtoul. A t .bout llo*s -Bree<ltua. Feeding Butch % I cr v. etc. CoutHitM over So beautiful half- TY y I lone* ui! olhef euKraviuß,. Price, jo Ceuta. W ' \ The HKKILE ti(H)h,S are uuH]iie o,i,inal l u,rful rounever V S.m Huvlhiou like ll'.r ~ - ictieal.aoaeualble I'hey y w V * r * viu* an rnoitnoua aale -Ka.l West, North un.t f 0R& Every one who keep, a Horae, Cow. Ho, or A- \ ♦ V Chicken, or (!<ow. Small Fruit*. (>ught to ,cna iicht 1 away for the SIOOLE BOOKS. Ttft k 'TARM journal F*KTT* madeforyou amt not a mi6t. Ila yeara k * ‘ h *' f r ee* FoileeUlown, hit theuail-on the-head. - \ U . ft TV y ?r K Vr F * r 't llouaehold papei in -he worhl—the bißmt paper of Ha aite in the railed Rlalea of America—haringover a million and a-half regular readers Any ONF of the BIGGLE and the FARM JOURNAL foXny A r |LLAb , STuT I ’ ,9 °* “ J wUI ** b * “ Sample of FARM JOURNAL, amt circular describing BIOOLE BOOKS free rAR * joratNAK. , CHAS. r. jakkims. PaiLAoncraiA iipily?itWWWWTCva> and Ec*ia ? pr vsiiro • | Dr. Alfred Seelye’s WINTERGREEN OINTMENT ypu get immediate relief aod cured In a short time. It is a scientific prevention for Inflame tory Skin Dieeasee, Cczema, Salt Rheum, Ulcere, Fever Borea/*Weak, Inflamed and Granulated Eyes, Blind, Itching and Bleed ing Plica, and ail Eruptions, anil in meeting with wonderful aucceaa wherever-given a chance. Mahot-a, Orunnsi, .Tan. 3,18. * Da. A. B. SertTK A Cos., I received a bo* of Wlntergreen Ointment at low \ Park, Te xa, to ue for piles It Is the best medicine I have ever used and I have tried every thing I could get hold of. 1 Intend-d to be operated on for Hemorrhoids at Vernon, To*•■, but saw jour adv. and ti nt for jour olntuteQt, received It two days before the time let tomhc operation, and It has helped me so much I eesartnded to give up the oiieraUon and give tils wlntergreen Ointment a chance. It has worked wonders so far and I think another box will rare roe. My bowels move regular now, but before using your Ointment had to take pllfs or Injections all the time, bend me another box by return wall. Yours, U. K. Dover. Askyour Druggist for Dr. Seelye’s Winter green Ointment and insist that he get it for you or send aj cents to the Laboratory and receive a box by return mail. But try the druggist first. Dr. A. 8. Seelye A Os., Manufacturing Chemists, Abilene, Kansas.! Dry Goods, Groceries, Clothing, Footwear, Hardware, DEALERS II Dry Goods, Groceries, Shoes, Hardware, AND Lumbermen’s Supplies. Northern Wisconsin AM& Entered at tbs Post Office in WiU. teteA aaeood-class mai'. matter. | rabllalted every Thursday at Wateaa £ Forest County, Via/-' CORDIAL a. HIMLJtr, Kdijtor stud Proprietee Subscription tl SO per year in adreaaa km pic copies free. TELEGRAMS IN BRIEF. BPANISH-AMERICAN ISLANDS. Aguinaldo Issued 13,000,000 of paper xioney. A decree has been issued by the Filipino authorities compelling the registration of all foreigners in their territory. The census proclamation of Presi dent Mckiniev has arrived at Santiago de Cuba and has been officlaly pub lished there. Aguinaldo has appointed Senor Mabini as president of the Filipino supreme court and Senor Gunzaga as attorney-general. The Dewey naval parade will be seven miles long, witn 100 steam yachts In the line. Dewey will reach New York Sept 26. Volunteer soldiers of the war with Spain, representing nearly every state, held a convention in Washington, the purpose of which was to form a na tional organization. Representative Foss of Illinois ad vocates the creation of a naval policy board, with Admiral Dewey as presi dent, to systematize 'the building of warships by this govem'nent. The quarter.laster’e department has landed 630 head of horses and mules in Manila. There are 2,500 on tae sea, and arrangements are about com pleted to ship 2,400 more within a few weeks. It Is reported that General Miles, who Is anxious to be assigned to duty In the Philippines, may succeed Gen era! Otis in command. Secretary Roqt is said to be <n .avor of sending Miles to the Phi’!; pines. Adjutant General Wm. C. Liller of Lancaster, Pa., Spanish veteran, re ceived a telegram from Miss Helen Miller Gould, who was unanimously elected national sponsor of the Span ish War Veterans’ association, an nouncing her acceptance of the honor. Agents for a company of Spanish capitalists announce that arrange ments have been completed for the building of a modern railroad line in Luzon that will connect Manila with all the important towns along the west coast of the island as far north as Lacag. Quintin Bandera still remains in Havana, purchasing the plant for the newspaper he intends to establish in Santiago de Cuba. His Stay causes no little trouble among the leading Cuban politicians of all parties, owing to the news of the formation of a negro party in the eastern provinces. Moreover, Gual'berto Gomez, by his threat to form a third Havana party, has forced a premature union between the Cuban National League and the Cuban Na tional party, DOMESTIC. Ex-Poss John Y. McKane’s funeral was held. Yellow fevei was brought to New York from Key West. James B. Eustls, ex-Ambassador to France, died at Newport. There wil be an international medi cal congress in Paris next year. Dr. George churchill, principal of Knox academy, died, aged 70 years. The opening of the national export exposition at Philadelphia occurred. Albert D. Shaw of Watertown, N. Y., was elected G. A. R. commander-in ch lef. A Canadian barge was wrecked on l.ake Huron and five persons wore drowned. C. A. Towne of Duluth will stump Ohio for McLean, democratic candi date for governor. New York republicans and independ ents are plnnning a fusion ticket against Tammany. The American Bankers' association adjourned after electing Walker Hill of St. Louis president. Andrew Carnegie, it is said, will be the next liberal candidate for parlia ment for Sutherlandshlre. Ex-President. Cleveland Is a stock holder In a company which will build a hotel at Norwalk, Conu. G<>orge F. Hinkins of St. Paul was elected president of the National Rail-, way Blacksmiths’ association. The Grand Army encampment at Philadelphia closed with a naval re view on the Delaware river. D. W. Hand, late major of the fif teenth Minnesota, was appointed < ap taln in the volunteer army. In a collision between two electric street cars at Cleveland, six persons were seriously Injured. , At Salt Lake City. Heker J. Grant has pleaded guilty to tie charge of polygamy, and paid a fl> of SIOO. Francis M. Knight, once a New York j millionaire, now poor, sms taken to Ihellevue suffering from iener&l break down. X The American BankersSassociatlon. in session at Cleveland, passed a reso lution In favor of the gold Vtandard. Yellow fever is said to bespreading at Key West. Fla., where thrfce deaths were reported and a total of I Oil cases. The Denver Smelting an/ Milling company has let comraflM&r build- ‘ a hicli the •• berahlp of the G. A. R. is decreasing. The next encampment will be Chicago. president McKinley was elected' a member of the Bricklayers’ and Stone masons’ International union, No. 21, of Chicago. In a rear-end collision on the Balti more and Ohio railroad at Connellg ville, Pa., 50 persons were injured, some seriously. The amount of gold cerTTteates with drawn from the several ♦ übtreasuriee in exchange for gold since Aug. 7 last is $44,277,830. Rear Admiral Henry F. Picking, commandant of the Charlestown navy yard, dropped dead at Boston. He was 59 years old. At the thirtieth annual convention of the United States Bee-Keepers’ Asso ciation, E. I. Root of Media, Ohio, was elected president. James J. Dailey of Philadelphia died of apoplexy, aged 55 years. He was foreman of the composing-room of the Public Ledger. While digging a well on Lookout mountain G. H. Jarnagin and others discovered a vein of gold quartz which promises to be very rich. The Union Cement Company, with a capital of over $2,500,000, has been or ganized in opposition to the recently formed cement combine. It is estimated that the challenger Shamrock will have cost Sir Thomas Llpton $1,000,000 when she sails her first race with Columbia. General Tracy, before tne Anglo- Venezuelan boundary arbitration com mission, made his argument in behalf of the Venezuela case. Henry Morganthau is on his way to Europe to lay before William Waldorf Astor a proposition to incorporate his estate into a stock company. The Astronomical and Astrophysi cal Society of America was organized at Williams Bay, Wis., by members of the Astronomical conference. The cruiser Detroit has been ordered to La Guayra. to protect American in terests, on account of the disturbed condition of affairs in Venezuela. Hugh McLaughlin, the Brooklyn dem ocratic leader, has been subpoenaed to tell the Mazet committee what he knows of the Ramapo water scandal. Mayor Van Wyck of New York has been subpoenaed to appear before the Mazet committee and tell what he knows about the Ramapo water job. The American Pomological Society, the oldts. - association of fruit growers in the United States held its twenty fifth biennial meeting in Philadelphia. The Charge d’Affaires of Venezuela in Washington received a dispatch from his government denying that a revolution has broken out in Venezu ela. It is believed that Consul Bedloe, who was stationed at Canton, China, will not return to his post, and that the charges against him will' be sus tained. William C. Pape, general superin tendent of St. Louis parks, was shot and instantly killed at his home by Henry Fry, a huckster, whom he had refused a license. Newport witnessed a novel spectacle In the way of an automobile parade, felven by Mrs. 0. H. P. Belmont. There Ivere 17 beautifully decorated 'auto mobiles in line. Dr. E. M. Rosenkranz, owner of the 5 elroee flats, in the burning of which ist December four people lost their 1 ves, has been arrested in Chicago on t le charge of arson., The thirtieth regiment of volunteers, 1809 men all to’.d, Colonel Gardner cAranuuttllng, passed through Omaha route for SSiT Francisco, prepara tory to sailing for Manila. R. A. Haigh and S. S. Angus have complete arrangements which will give a niw electric road from Toledo to Bui alo, and it will be the longest road of j :s kind in the world. A : San Francisco William Jennings Bryan stated that ha did not favor the withdrawal of the United States troops from the Philippines before a stable government is established. The Garden City Hotel, owned by the A. T. Stewart estate In New York t ag burned. The hotel was built In 3873. at a cost of $125,000, its furnish ings having cost $30,000 more. Six French painters employed by 1.. B. Wright’s Iron Painting company, Chicago, were discharged summarily as soon as the verdict of the court martial at Rennes was known. A story has been circulated that W. J. Calhoun is to resign from the interstate commerce commission to pj-actice law In Chicago. Friends of \jr. Calhoun say the story is true. At Mattoon. 111., Charles Wilder, a cigarette fiend, fatally shot Arlington Hughes. He offers no excuse for the shooting other than that he warned to know where Hughes was go itig. At Pekin, 111., one of the spans of the wagon bridge over the Illinois river collapsed, precipitating five men and two horses into the river. Four men 3 ere resched uninjured, but the fifth ill die. A program for the reunion of the Spetety of the Army of the Cumberland ia Detroit, Sept. 26-27. has been adopt ed by the chairmen of committees hav ing charge of the event. The princi pal public gathering will be addressed b>- ex-Congressman Charles E. Belk nap and the reunion will conclude with tae annual banquet. Edward M. Newman, who forfeited his bond in New York thirteen years ago under indictments for forgery and larceny, surrendered. He had ac cumulated a fortune since his disap pearance. lAt Wilmington, Del., Rev. Geo. O. Hall, of St. John's Episcopal church, married a Philadelphia couple, receiv ing as a fee a cheek for *lO. The clergyman learned that the check was worthless. Professor Edward Charles Pickering , of Harvard r .ils for Rome, having I located the probable site of Harvard's I northern hemistKierfc -ofctervatorv, | complimentary to the southern obser- [ vatory id Peru. Clark 6f Montana has bought for $145,000 the home of-Seh ator Stewart in Washington, known as “Stewa'rt eaartle.” He will build a mag nificent structure on the site of the present building. Richard B. Leech of Brooklyn died suddenly last night at the conclusion of his address at a banquet of the forty-eighth New York volunteers, held at Brighton Beach. Mr. Leech was 54 years old. , M. Benard, the Parisian architect, has been awarded the first prize in the competition sponsored by Mrs. Phoebe Hearst, who offered prizes for the best plans for new buildings for the Uni versity of California. The Georgia commissioner of agri culture 0. B. otevens, w r ho returned to Atlanta after an inspection of the crops throughout middle and south west Georgia, states that cotton will be a* least half a million bales short and that in order to realize 75 per cent, of the crop of 1899 conditions will have to remain favorable for some time to come. WILSON’S AUTOMATIC STOCK FOUNTAIN. Waters 150 to 200 Bogs Daily, Kills Bog Cholera. FREE! FREE! FREE! Guaranteed for five years, all repairs or breakage free, for there is nothing to get out of order or break. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. No float t<j stick in mud or bulb to freeze up and break. No spring or nose scheme. Governed by gravity valve Has the right size cup, n<W a lffl-gp double drinking cup, to hold a lotof hot filthy water before a fresh supply comaadown. Can be set to water two pens at once and can be attached to tank, barrel or pipe in ten minutes. Has taken all first premiums. No mud holes We can make your hogs healthy, weigh more, and save you SIOO.OO a year In labor, for an investment of $2.75 which is the price of fountain, guaranteed to work for five years You cannot afford to be without one. Order through your dealer or direct of manufact urers. Catalogue of 35 farm aovelties free. Agents wanted. WILSON IRON WORKS, 63-65 S. CANAL ST., • jjpfCAQO, ILL. WHY HOT BOY THE BEST ? - pACNfS ElSs' . 'F't tor tale hy GROCERS. I am a farmer located near Stony Brook, one of the most districts in this State, and was bothered with malaria for years, so I could not work, and was always very constipated as well. VPn years 1 had malaria so bad in the spring, when engaged in plowing, that 1 could do nothing but shake. I must have taken about a barrel of quinine pills besides dozens of other remedies, but never obtained - any permanent benefit. Last fall, in peacetime, I had a most setibm. attack of chills and then c mmenced to take Risers Tabules, upon a friend’s advice, and the first box made me all right and I have never j been without them since. 1 take one Tabuie each morning and and sometimes when I feel more than usually exhausted 1 take threiß ? a day. Thev have kept my stomach sweet, mv bowels regular have not had the least touch of malaria nor splitting headache #r.e l commenced Using them. 1 know alsp that I sleep better and more refreshed than formerly. 1 dorl't know how’ many R’pans Tabules will help, but I do kriow thev will cure any condition 1 was. and 1 would not be without them at honestU consider them the cheauest-priced medicine in they are also the most beneficial and the most Ia n twenty-seven years of age and have worked hard all same as most farmeis, both earlv and late and in all kinds of and ! have never enjoyed such good health as I have since lasted; in fact, my neighbors have all remarked my improved condition and have said, " Sav. John, what are vou doing to look so healthy ? ’’ %V AN IED.-A qMe of bad health that Kl Fa .VS not l*neflt. They banlih Min and proton* iif*. One Rivet MUef. Sk© th© w.Ttl K I F A V 8 on the package and accept uO •MbetUute. RIP A’NB, R! for 5 cents or twelve packets for cents, may be hart at any tlrua tor®. samples ana ope thop. sand testimonials will lie mailed to any address 5 oents, forwarded to la# Ripens Chemical Cos., Na Ju Spruce to.. Nee York. • - Byustngthc R o 9 Cmotl t Radiatordi^^ “ The Popular Kind ’• •orkJHH Can be connected to any i- ,. J kind of stove. Saves time, By tjie use of a damp lUj heat on or off '.x ’ll powi; is wondeß "t . ; ‘; r I great amount .. Ihv rioNci. wvii< - Payne’s Phosphate ....Baking Powder j* ABSOLUTELY PURE, jt Try Payne’s Extracts ALL FLAVORS. Payne’s Liquid Bluing GOES FURTHER AN? IS THB BEST ON THE MARKET. PAYNE EXTRACT CO, Kirksvllle, Crown RUnte Vanilla The only Vanilla that a ever discolors the double the strength, goes twice as far and unexcelled in flavor. Strictly pure ) H trial will convince your that It la the • • * FOB SALE BY DRVGtiISXS AMD GROCERS. Don’t be put off with somethinWyokr dealer claims is just as good. toßt ois having CROWN EXTRACT'" 1 ' J WHITE VANILLA. MANUFACTURED Tbe CROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, 530 First MINNEAPOLIS, - '^MINN. ROEMER’S - % Household Remedffc. Hoe liter's Headache Poolers Cure' Headache and Neuralgiai in 15 minutes. -i' j PRICE, I 00. and 25cJ Chocolate Constahs M , 'll Cure Constipation, IndigeatioOL Dizziness, Torpid Liver and l|flß iousness. They neither aeul nor nauseate. PRICE, 1 00. i:-.u lin r’s Ctitit/h V/ nip Stops that tickling tHB and Cur-j Bronchitis, Colds,and all Bronchial affeoWns. PRICE, 25c. The above Remedies are for sale by all druggists, and they are authorized to ‘guarantee them, or will be sent by us on receipt of price, ROEMER DRUG CO., MILWAUKEE, - WT% 1 p%