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i \ ..OLEIfZ “ IpnnfMfct I ; For: MAN AND BEHEST. LFor Scratches and Greas/Heals, | ' Wire Fence Cuts, Syfre Neck* i ar.d aulders, Saddle Galls',! Contn.:ted and Tender Feet,! Sanders cits, Quittor, Thrush, 1 i Canker, Laiuimitis, Navichlar! Disease, Etc. ■ , | | Bruises, Cuts, Lunninj Sore, Tfat-! ter, Sait Rheum, C..appfcd' K inds, Chilblains, Corn*, Ail! Skin Eruptions, Rites, He. ! WJ'J hr.al wounds - here ever^thinj; elsefcas failet, I ' | ; .50 1 S1S!0H? HEDICItiE (SOMpS*: RACINE, WSS. > . 1 Crown extract . ? GQbitcVarnUa The only Vanilla that never discolors the cooking, double the strength, goes twice as far and unexcelled in flavor* Strictly pure H trial will convince you that it ia the best. . * * IFOMtAIM Mr lmvaoiHXH anj> OROCJZRH. Don't be put off with something your S**l*r claim* ia jut as good. Insist 00 having CROWN EXTRACT WHITE VANILLA. MANUFACTURED BY The CROWN CHEMICAL COMPliil, 830 First Avenue, MINNEAPOLIS, - MINN. * ** • * WHY NOT BUY THE BEST? Payne’s Phosphate ....Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE, j* Try Payne’s Extracts ALL FLAVORS. Payne’s Liquid Bluing GOES FURTHER AND IS THE BEST ON THE MARKET. For ale by QIIOCEHS . PAYNE EXTRACT CO., Kirksville, Mo. BIGGLE BOOKS O A Farm Library of unequalled value-Practical, Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive— Hand l/H** = ***' X somely Printed and Beautifully Illustrated. f _ By JACOB HIGGLE I ' ' ?/T No. I—BIOGLE HORSE HOOK 'V f ' v > .9 I All about Hoi net—a Common Srnw Treatise, with over j|y u 7 I 74 illustrations , a standard work Price, 50 Cents. Till i \ No. 2—BIOOLE BERRY BOOK f “ “ \ AH about groiriuff Small Fruits—read and learn how ; M 1 1 contHins.il colored tile-like reproductions of allleading | I varieties aud mo other illustrations Price, jo Cento. Wx \ No. 3-HIGGI.E POULTRY BOOK Ia I All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in existence , I pflnf / tells everything ; withaj colored life like reproductions I / of all the principal breeds, with tej other illustration*. mm I Price, 50 Cents. I /V . No. 4-maULE COW BOOK JL yLyr f U All about Cows ami the Dairy Business • having a great § W W sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions of each I- I*r 1 * r breed, with other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents. \ P No. 6-BKIQLB SWINE BOOK I Just out. All about Hogs - Breeding, Feeding. Butch* % I try. Disea ***, etc. Contains over so beautiful half* TV I tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Ceuts *■l \ The BKKILH HOOKS are unique,original.useful—you never 1 saw anvthing like theinso practical, so sensible They f \ ! * haung an rnortnous sale—Kast West, North and # r South Kvery one who keeps a Horse, Cow, Hog or w cT> \ W. r Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to send right JL BICIULE BOOKS. The JOURNAL I. your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It is years u old; it IS the (treat boiled-down, hit-the nail on the head,— S Quit nfter-you-tiave-aaid-it, Fa r m amt Household pai.er in ‘.he world—thr bigges' paper ol its sie in Ihr Tinted State* of Ameri.a -havingover r million and n-half regular reader, Any ONE of the BIGGLE BOOKS, and the FARM JOURNAL 5 YEARS (remainder of iSo i,>. i,>oi, i,*i and lore) will be sent by mail to any address lor A DOLLAR BILL. Sample of FARM JOl RNAL and circular describing BIDDLE BOOKS free iviLMF* ATKINSON Address, FAUit JOt HNAI. CHS*, r JKNKI.N* i uu.*Ol£L*lA Cure D1 zzi n e iousness. nor n■■ ueg' p r 1 ctß-, r„iojh Stops that and Cures Bronchitis,'toughs,! Colds, and all Bronchial affections. PRICE, 2Bc. The above Remedies are for sale by all ■ru,and they are authorized to - l i’.ntee.thcm, or will be sent by us on .receipt of price. ROHMER DRUG CO., ’.TTLWA TTTCTITI, _ WTS. WILSON’S AUTOMATIC STOCK FOUNTAIN. ffUtera 150 to 200 Roga Daily, Kills Rog Cholera. FREE! FREE! FREE! Guaranteed for five yearn, all repairs or breakage free, for there la nothin)? to get outj of order or break. Satisfaction guaranteed or looney refunded. No float to stick in mud or bulb to freeze up and break. No spring or nose sc nemo. Governed by gravity valve Has the right size cup. not a large double drink<ng cup, to hold a lotof hot filthy water before a fresh supply comes down ('an be set to water two pens at once and can be attached to tank Jjarre! or pitw In ten minutes. Has taken nil first premiums. No mud holes We can make your hogs healthy, weigh more and save you 8100.n0 a year In labor, for an investment of $5!.75 which Is the price of fountain, guaranteed to work for five years. You cannot afford to lie without one. Order through your dealer or direct of manufact urers. Catalogue of 35 farm novelties free Agents wanted. WILSON IRON WORKS, bj-bfl S CANAL ST., ■ CHICAGO, ILL. ' *** ~*"'*V*'* j^***.* HHH ■‘ * Y .- ’ Fat - r. wu. HIMLKr ‘ tmr f'" r ln ~ -< ■u brief. Wfr WAR AND PEACE. Otis has declined to receive a peace commission from the Filipinos. General Plo del Pilar is reported to have offered to betray Aguinaldo for $500,000. General Funston, In a lecture, says the friars are at the bottom of the Fil ipino Insurrection. A cable announces the death in the Philippines of Major Guy Howard, son of General O. O. Howard. He was killed in action. Admiral Dewey occupied a box at the Columbia theater, Washington, on in vitation of Francis Wilson, who is playing Cyrano de Bergerac. Brigadier General Funston has wired the war department of his acceptance of the appointment of brigadier in the newly formed volunteer service. Captain Chadwick of the flagship New York says it was at his suggestion that the demand for the surrender of Santiago was made, and that he draft ed the letter. Director of Posts Vaille has sent to Postmaster General Smith a letter en tering an absolute denial of a pub lished charge of censorship of the mails at Manila. The transport Senator, regarding whose safety there has been some ap prehension, arrived safely at San Fran cisco from the Philippines with the lowa regiment aboard. The war department has been in formed by General Shatter that the date of the muster out of the twentieth Kansas volunteer regiment has been changed from Nov. 2 to Oct. 28. Admiral Dewey says the American policy toward Aguinaldo should be “straight from the shoulder,” with plenty of force behind it. He says he did not tell Gridley to fire when ready. He does not want to be president. Colonel Charles Denhy and Professor Dean Conant Worcester, special com missioners to the Philippines, passed through Chicago on their way to Washington, where the formal report of their observations in the Islands will be presented to the president. Aguinaldo sent to foreign consuls in Manila copies of letters from Admiral Dewey, General Anderson and others. No pledge of independence was given, but Consul Wildman urged Filipinos to give Spaniards a taste of real war” and to be less tender with Spanish prisoners. DOMESTIC. Chicago October wheat, 68%c. Nine men perished in a blizzard in Teton county, Mon. At Honolulu Dr. Charles M. Hyde, missionary, is dead. Bicycle manufacturers organized against the trust. Ex-State Senator Joseph Reinhardt is dead at Peru, 111. Otto Knue3li, city editor of the Ger mania, is dead at Milwaukee. At New York the total registration in greater New York is 476,717. In Chicago the New England trans fer elevator burned. Loss, $lOO,OOO. Sir Thomas Lipton will again chal lenge for the America's cup in 1901. The Duluth-Superior harbor is crowded with lumber boats as never before. Gold-bearing sand assaying $l7 to the ton has been found near Council Bluffs. Miss Fanny Langdon, instructor of zoology at the University of Michigan, is dead. Columbia defeated Shamrock by two thirds of a mile in the third and de cisive race. The absorption of the Wagner Palace Car company by the Pullman Is con summated. President McKinley closed his tour at Youngstown, 0., having made about 80 speeches. Secretary Gage denies the story that he is to become president of a bank at New York. Thomas Skelton has been arrested at Princeton. Ind., charged with murder ing his wife in 1884. Major General Nelson A. Miles is at Omaha on a tour of inspection of the military posts. Senator Foraker nominates (McKin ley for the next president and Roose velt for 1904. Mr. Bryan started for Ohio. In a speech at Louisville he upheld the cause of the boers. William H. Appleton, head of the Appleton publishing house, is dead in Now York, aged 88. Alexander Taylor, Jr., banker, phil anthropist and lover of sports, is dead at New York, aged 51. John R. McLean, in introducing W. J. Bryan to Ohio audiences, pledged fealty to the Nebraskan. Edward S. Gage, one of the oldest settlers of Whiteside county, died at Prophetstown. aged 85. The National W. C. T. IT. convention j opened at Seattle, and Mrs. Stevens ' president, gave her address. Henry G. Hilton filed notice ir. New York of contest of the will of his father, ex-Judge Henry Hilton. The Chinese minister u*. ged the re peal of the exclusion act at the Phila delphia commercial congress. Admiral Schley is expectea to take v i first degree in masonry Sacurday LBYNIS ' :mon will join a waaniugiui. sements aroused the %vll service commission to take action to protect government employes. Captain J. B. Ross of Union City has been appointed receiver of the First National bank of Newport, Ky. The body of an lowa young woman was found in the river at Des Moines her death being a mystery.^ l Mrs. Robert Farcon of Chicago has been re-elected president of the Illinois Federation of Women’s Clubs. V At Kansas City the Lombardi Italian Grand Opera company has dis banded because of poor business. Sixteen members of the republican national committee are said to be op posed to McKinley’s renomination. Of 21,000 farmers polled throughout the United States nearly two-thirds fa vored independence for the Filipinos. Senator Depew positively denies the report that there would be a contest of the late Cornelius Vanderbilt’s will. Mormon leaders are said to be trying to induce Brigham H. Roberts, con gressman-elect from Utah, to resign. The modus vivendi on the Alaskan boundary is agreed upon and signed by the United States and Great Britain. Northern Montana has three feet of snow. Twenty people are said to have lost their lives in Teton county alone. A Mississippi negro was burned at the stake for tying a woman and four children together and burning them to death. Albert Jester his been held to the grand jury at Paris, Mo., on the charge of having murdered Gilbert Gates of Chicago. Captain Oberlin M. Carter will ap peal from the decision of Judge La combe in dismissing the writ of habeas corpus. At Cape Nome, Alaska, typhoid fe ver of virulent form has broken out. The hospital is crowded with 250 pa tients. Mrs. Thomas R. Mercier is dead at Milwaukee. She was prominent in the Society of Colonial Dames and wom en’s clubs. Football: Yale 6, Wisconsin 0. O’Dea of Wisconsin (lid the most mar velous kicking ever witnessed on the Yale field. Montgomery, Ala., labor unions have boycotted the street fair there because colored laborers were refused a place in the parade. At the Texas industrial convention Former Minister to Siam Johu Barrett of Portland, Oregon, made a strong ex pansion speech. A SIOO,OOO fire occurred in a five story brick building, No. 398 Broad way, New York. It was occupied by commission men. At Miami, Fla., five cases of yellow fever have been discovered. There are two new cases at New Orleans and one at Jackson, Miss. Two of the men alleged to be con cerned in the holdup of the Union Pa cific train at Wilcox, Wyo., on June 2. have been captured. The Chicago branch of the Comptoir National D’Esco.npte de Paris, the Bank of France, has been discontinued because of local taxes. William Eugene Dougherty, former ly a Chicago newspaper man, died at New York, aged 57. He was the father of Mrs. Stuart Robson. W. J. Bryan will make the most elaborate canvass he has ever made in Nebraska, not excepting the year he ran for the presidency. It is proposed to create a woman’s committee, with Helen Gould as chair man, to aid the permanent Dewey arch movement in New York. Ephriam D. Sayre, president of the Kentucky Bankers’ association, and one of Kentucky’s leading financiers, died at Lexington, aged 79 years. •Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Deering of Chicago, who had been lost in the snow in northern Colorado for a week, have safely reached a ranch on Williams river. Harry Elkes, the professional bi cyclist, had an arm broken and leg badly lacerated by being thrown from his wheel. He was endeavoring to lower the world’s hour record. The people of Marion. S. C., the home of Lieutenant Victor Blue, presented the gallant young officer with a silver loving cup. Lieutenant Blue In now at Marion on his honeymoon. Talk of jury fixing enlivens the opening of the trial of ex-State Treas urer Booker of North Dakota on the charge of making falie returns while president of a Grand Forks bank. Through the efforts of Mrs. W. N. Mitchell of Atlanta a portrait of the late Robert E. Lee will be hung at West Point among those of other su perint •r.dents of the academy. V>'hy softer with Piles, Sore Eyes and Eczema ? bt usisa • Dr. Alfred Seelye’s WINTER GREEN OINTMENT you get immediate relief and cured in a short time. It ii a scientific preparation for Inflama tory Skin Diseases, Eciemt, Salt Rheum, Ulcers, Fever Sores, Weak, Inflamed and Granulated Eyes, Blind. Itching and Bleed ing Piles, and all Eruptions, and it meeting aith wonderful success wherever given a chance. Maxocm. Oklahoma. JSW X, 18M. Do. A. R SntLTK * Cos., I received a box of Wlntergreen Ointment at lowa Park, Texas, to use for r4lea It is the best medicine 1 have ever used and I have tried every thing I could get hold of. I Intended to be operated on for Hemorrhoid* at Vt-ruvtu, It A.a N but t**. >*.u* . u.*! Akntfor your ointment, received It two days before the time act for the oprmtion. and it has heljied me to much I concluded to give up the operation and give the Wtnte;green Ointment a chance. It baa worked wonders to far and I think another lox will cur*- ue. My bowels move regular now. but before using your Ointment had to take pills or Inject ions idl the taut*. bend xue another box by return uuuU You re. H. £. I>ever, Ask*your Druggist for Dr. Seelye’s Winter green Ointment and insist that he get it for you or send 23 cents to the Laboratory and receive a box by return mail. But try the druggist first. Dr. A. B. Seelye & Cos., Va**; 'arturing Chemists, Abilene, Kansas.! '.' * \ 1 am a farmer located near Stony Brook, one of the malarious districts in this State, and was bothered with malaria for years, at times so I could not work, and was always very constipated ror years I 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 pilis besides dozens of other remedies, but never obtained any permanent benefit. Last fall, in peach time, 1 had a most serious attack of chills and then commenced to take Ripans Tabules, upon a friend’s advice, and the first box made me all right and i have never been without them since. I take one Tabule each morning and night and sometimes when 1 feel more than usually exhausted 1 take three in a day. Thev have kept mv stomach sweet, mv bowels regular and I have not had the least touch of malaria nor splitting headache since I commenced using them. I know also that I sleep better and wake up more refreshed than formerly. 1 don’t know how many complaints Ripans Tabules will help, but 1 do know thev will cure any one in the condition 1 was and i would not be without them at any price. 1 honestly consider them the cheapest-priced medicine in the world, as they are also the most beneficial and the most convenient to take. I am twenty-seven years of age and have worked hard all my life, the same as most farmers, both early and late and in all kinds of weather, and 1 have never enjoyed such good health as 1 have since last fall; in fact, my neighbors have all remarked my improved condition and have said, “ Say, John, what are vou doing to look so healthy ? ” w ANTED. -A case or bad liealih that HIP AN S will not benefit. They banish pain anil One gi. eg r tiler. Note me word K 1 P A N S on the package and accept no substitute. K 11 r a. b-in 10 for 5 cents or twelve packets for 48 ceuta, may be had at any drug; Mor* Tea (jft •and testimonials will lie mailed to any address for 5 cents, forwarded to the Ripans Cbomioai Spruce Bt.. Ner York- # M. J. DICKINSON •• ' \ Wabeno, Forest County, Wis., { DEALER IN SUPPLIES. HAY, FLOUR AND FEED. ROSCH BROS MANUFACTURERS 9F Lumber Lath Shingles Etc# WABENO, WISCONSIN. By using th* Roaemont Radiatorah^To^ yy I'lfT- m\ kind of stove. Saves time, fuel and money. jHfifSix ■Hfljp By the use of a clamper you can turn the ®f%• J gij jf heat on or off as desired. Their he-, mg 1!| ! i l|| 1 power is wonderful. Easify cleared. The* I i| ,1 1 S IS great amount of heat usually passing out llfi j IT I of the chimney is arrested and made tc do jf. JfcS- ,y IBr IB *ervice in place of another stove. ■ifl tf tffj. &&WLLI ROSEMONT RADIATORS are teat A.-**a3sf2gs^ > and attractive. Prices reasonable. Lend , ly~ xa aq. foe circulars, prices, etc. Liberal diso unt Manufactured by Floyd, Wells & Cos., Royersford, I’a. Dry Goods, Groceries, Clothing, Footwear, Hardware, DEALERS II Dry Goods, Groceries, Shoes, Hardware, AND Lumbermen’s Supplies.