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iff1® Ssi? m* !#tl IS&Si 388* taM% l-mM mm MY KMITIFtlL BABY WY •W«pk Vonn Mitt Biprt Zordto & V„ FlakhMfa Taf«t*-*« Compound ii Xcttora. bNi Two Who How Slav* ». ,• ^6pia Has. Pt**aAM'—It my Imrdent desire to kave child. I had 3$g married three years and wu •Owrote to you to find out the reason. After fol lowing your kind ad vice and taking Lydia B. Pinkham's Vege table Compound, I be came the mother of a beautiful baby' boy, the joy of our home. He is a fat, healthy baby, thanks to your medi cine!"—MRS. MINDA FINKLE, Boscoe, N. Y. From Orateful Mrs. Lane DEAB MB8. PtSKHAM I wrote you a let ter some time Sfo, stating my case to you. I had pains through my bowels, headache, and backache, felt tired and aleepy all the time, was troubled with the whites. I followed your *advi8e, took your Vegetable Com pptind, and it did me lots of good. I now have a baby girl. I certainly be lieve I would have miscarried had it sotbeeh for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. Ihad a very easy time was sick only a short time. I thiak your medicine is a godsend to Women in the condition in which I was. 1 recommend it to all as the best medicine for women."—MRS. Mint liASX, Coytee, Tenn. Tworthirds of the "sugar consumed throughout the world is produced from beets. 1 FITS P«nkB«otl7Careu,1l61ltoornprTousnesflaftei Ant day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer* 8®n4_for KR"BE #4*00 trial bottle and treatise* -ft*. B. H. tunt. ¥AJ..fl3l Arch St.. PhiUd«lt»hl». P*. When domestic affairs grow stormy the prudent man hides out. Do Tour Feet Ache and Barn? Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot* Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Ambition is laudable, but sometimes qui to dangerous: U»rt Family Medicine. tif^es the bowels each day in or. der to be. healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. Apples of discord are not a desirable fruit. jSp Mri.' WlaSlow** BootMng 3y**p. "'1 Forekllilt«n teething, (often* the gnma, redoee* Tir tammaUou, kUaj* pain.cures wlndcollc. So about*. The snail doubtless considers his .. ipeed marvelous. Send for Choice Reelpe* IbT Walter Baker Co.. Ltd., Dorchester, Mais., ^juOiea free. Mention this paper. New York city has 206 Veterans of th* Mexican war,-seven of the Indian ^"W«rs and 15,000 of the civil war on the .'aj GOOD NKiHTl Sweet Soothing Slumber' Man's /. Greatest Blessing. .Motblsf Kills so Quickly as Loss of Sleep. Rest Needed for Repairs. How to Otitis It Without Fail. -Vflienyoii don't sleep well,/look out for yourself. Nothing breaks down a person, so quick ly as loss of sleep, that boon of mankind which gives the exhausted system rest for repairs. No time for repairs means destruction of the machinery. It is so with the human body. You are nervous, have a load on your chest, are troubled with unaccountable anxiety and forebodings of evil, and roll and toss .all-night. Towards, morning you have fitful naps from sneer exhaustion, awake in a cold •weat, uiirefreshed, pallid, trembling, with a bad taste in your mouth and a feeling of great weakness. It's your stomach, your liver, your bow els. .Keep your' digestive organs all on the move properly and your sleep will be rest ful and refreshing and all repairs will be attended to. The way to do It is *o use a mild, posi tive, harmless, Vegetable laxative and liver' Stimulant—Casearets Candy Ca thartic. They make the liver lively, pre vent sour Stomach, purify the blood, regu late the bojvels perfectly, make all things "iht as: they should be. buy. and try Cascarets to-day. It's 5 .what they'do, not what we say they'll do, that will please you. All druggists,* 10c, •Be. Tor SOc, or'mailed for prloe. Send for Address, Ster- .... igo 'Montreal, Can. or New York. This is the CASCARET tab let. Every tablet of the only raw" genuine Cascarets bears the magic letters "C C." Look at the tablet before you buy, and beware of frauds, imlta- Hons and substitutes. Two heads may be better, than one, but the big head is usually enough. Factory to USER. ONE Profit. Our HIGH ARK MELttA Sewlnc Machine has all the tJp-to»Dqte Improve znents, necessary Attach* meota and Accessories, with choice of oak or wal Both Branches to Deal with portant "Bills, EIF- 'ING SHUT TLE. By one movement the shuttle 1* threaded ready for service. The MEEBA hu the patent .Automatic BOBBIN WISEiK, and a 0MPU5T a WMtker wrapped and orated, is aboot —lipped at rate. The freight will about|Qo within 800 mlieaof (Alcago. Tha ntal, tto •Bvmdrawe«* »nd oov _ED and UdiblnidM, having f^PXATKO BinilMawer Poll*, eto. laueUnele ouwnlb Mtdnton iHtlw onr fetvUl ship this DwohineCaO. l^e w. KB" OAT AjSuOVE of 1|MS UlnaGtated Ion reoeiptof owta,*Ueh —. and will be refunded oa sirmiw.il JOBSHtHTTH OO, Ml. 1N-1MV. lMba It, WwtjlttlUlbAll CHIOAM.1U, bothttter*nd»ft44fep«r» tte lurtest storm* PUERTO RJCAN MATTER FIRST. Senator Maaon Will Ben«w Effort* la Behair of Boors—Doubt* a* to Statu* .of Quay Report—Iioad Potter Reform. —Sb Xoali Fain Washington, March 20.—Pending ac tion on the Puerto Rican problem two appropriation bills on the calendar Will receive attention In the senate this week. These are the legislative and the Indian bills. There is one amend ment suggested to the legislative bill by the committee on appropriations whLh may arouse consldeiable debate and open up the Philippine question. This is the item providing for the es-. tab'ishment of a hydrographlc office at Manila. Opposition senators recognize he possibilities of this amendment as a basis for discussion, but they are not Cully decided to avail themselves of it. In connection with the Indian bill the expenditures authorized to be made by the Dawes commission probably will be discussed. Senator Mason has given notice of renewed effort to get up his resolution of sympathy with the Boers on Mon day, but says he does not desire to speak upon it. The senate leaders con sider his. resolution unwise at this Juncture. There Is a difference of opinion as'to whether, under the agreement to take up the Quay resolution for considera tion on April 3, it can be called up, oven for speeches, in the interim. It .is probable, however, that some addresses may be presented on the subject dur ing the present week if no other matter presses for consideration. An effort will be made by Senator Davis to get up the Spanish claims bill. In executive session there will'be an attempt made to secure the confirma tion of W. D. Bynum as appraiser at New York, which attempt does not promise to be immediately successful. The Hay-Pauncefote treaty wyi be considered if opportunity permits, but the present indications are against an Early move in that direction. Monday is District of Columbia day In the house. Tuesday the Loud bill, relating to second-class mail mat ter, will come up under a speoial order seeing aside Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday for its consideration. Fri day, under the rules, -will be given to private-pension legislation unless that order is superseded by the army appro priation bill, which is on the calendar, Gen. Joseph Wheeler may present himself at the bar of the house to be sworn in some time during the week. So far as can be learned there is no objection on either side to his admis sion if hiB resignation as a brigadier- general, in the army shall have been accepted before he presents himself. The case, however, may be referred to a committee. The St Louis representatives are for the world's-exposition Ut -si«9)rata the centennial anniversary 'of the 'Lou isiana purchase in 1903, but thus far they have failed to secure the consent of the powers that be in the house. Rewards for Generals* Washington, March 20.—Gen. Jo Wheeler may be placed upon the re tired list of the regular army, as it is the intention of the president to ash congress for special legislation giving him authority to retire Gen. Wheeler, Gen. Fitzhugh Lee and Gen. Wilson, with the rank of brigadier general. This will be done, it is said, as a reward for the excellent services of these three officers, and in Gen. Wheeler's caBe be cause of the friendship existing be tween the president and the gallant lit tle warrior. The Alabaman is, there fore, in doubt whether he should, after all, take his seat in the house. A,\ yr'- Uncle gam Protector of Tntnllana. Washington, March 20.—Commander B. H. Tilley, commandant of the Pago Pago coaling station, and senior offi cer of tlite United States in the new Samoan possession, has officially noti fied the personal chief of Tutuila, on which Pago-Pago harbor is'situated, of the transfer of that and adjacent smaller islands to the authority of the United States, and promising protec tion and assistance to the inhabitants. Hegro Shot by a Mob. Atlanta, Ga., March 20.—A mob oi masked men, numbering about 150, marched to the jail in Marietta at 1 o'clock Sunday morning, battered down the door with crowbars, awakened John Bailey, a negro charged with attempted outrage, marched him to the center of the courthouse square, and fired fully fifty shots at him, leaving him for dead in. the spot where he fell. Flllplno~Bandlts Condemned. Manila, March- 20.—The militate, commission appointed to try the'jLa drone leaders, Morales and Gonzales, who were accused of murdering Filipi nos, has found the prisoners guilty and sentenced them to be hanged on March 30 near BayMnbang. This action, is intended to suppress outrages by bands of outlaws, but as the Insurgents have some sixty American prisoners in their hands, they may retaliate. Gen. Harnten Is Dead. Madison, Wis., March 20.—Gen. Hen ry Harnden, department commander of the G.«A. R., died at 7:30 Saturday night of pneumonia. He had a bril liant military record, and commanded the detachment that effected the cap ture of Jeff D0''*-. DINSMORE IS FOUND GUILTY. 18,000. K.braiks I Jury Recommends That t&a Hypnotist Bet Hanged Lexington, Ky., March 20.—Frank Dinsmore was declared .guilty. of, the murder ot Mrs. Dinsmore and Frank Laue on Saturday, the Jury recom mending that he be banged. Several months ago Frank Laue of Odessa, .a prominent grain merchant, who occu pied a double house with: Frank Dinp moro, .was* found dead In his bed, shot, •through the brain. In the adjoining jgoiji was Mrs."Frank Dinsmore He* |*M» UMIU1 MUlMU UWU Wtuyuai Dinsmore awoke neighbors at 3 o'clock in tiie morning, Baying fcaue had com mitted suicide, after inducing Mrs. Dinsmore to take poison. Mrs. Laud, who'soon after the crime was commit ted married Dinsmore, confessed to knowledge of the crime, and said Dins more exercised some peculiar influence over her which she was unable to re sist, and she was unable to repeat her story in court until she had been grant ed permission to put on colored glasses to shade her eyes from the glance of Dinsmore. HW0RE SMALL&OX-AT YALE. William David lSrenuan, a Beuior, Stricken with the Dlimia New Haven, Conn., March 20.—Will iam David Brennan of St. Paul, Minn., a senior in the Yale Sheffield scientific 3chool, who rooms in a students' board ing house at 113 Wall street, a block away from the Yale campus, is ill with smallpox, making the fourth case among Yale students in two weeks. About a dozen students were boarders at this house, but only two and the pa tient are in the building at present. Over 100 other students have left town, among them thirteen students living at the chapter house, In which Rufus Parks of Washington, D. C., is con fined, suffering from varioloid, for their several homes. Parks was a boarder in the house where Perkins, who was first stricken, a week ago, resided, and it is from that source he developed the symptoms of smallpox. Besides Bren nan and Parks, four other students are now Quarantined. Brennan is one of the leading athletes in Yale university, and he is said to be about the fastest mile runner at Yale. None of the cases is &t all serious. KILLS GIRL AND mMSELF. Harried Alaa Jealous of Boy's Intimacy wltH His MlstreNti. Chicago, March 20.—Moris Goldflus shot and killed Jennie Lisb Saturday night at the hotel Vendome and then killed himself. Both were well known In the Jewish community thereabout. The murderer was 27 years old and the girl was 15. He was married. They had registered as. S. Cohen and wife. They had been keeping up their liaison for some time, unsuspected by Gold flus' family. Jealousy over the girl's intimacy with a boy of her own age is believed to have caused the tragedy. Burglars 'Play Bagtlme Tunes. Chicago, March 20.—Musically in clined burglars entered the home of Mrs. Annie Roberts, 8G3 Carroll ave nue, Sunday afternoon, during her ab scence. Strains of "I'll Leave My Hap py Home for You," "All I Want Is My Black Baby Back," and many other ragtime ditties were heard issuing from the home, and persons living in the vicinity believed that Mrs. Rob erts was entertaining company. When she returned home she found her hot^se in confusion. A piano cover and Attmoatiy laboring to secure conaidera- ference of a number j^f leaders in the Propsy treated it tion for a bill apropriatln& "Brckwn demo'cratic faction to~determine" Xttettla, $1.50 were all that was missing, but the bur glars had made a thorough search for richer booty. .. w. r# __ Conquest. Brown Damoamta Ready for Louisville, Ky., March 20. ference of -At a con- ti.e future of -the political crowd known as the anti-Goebel democratic organization, it was unanimously agreed that the state central committee of the Brown democrats should assem ble as soon as possible and make ar rangements for a state convention for the purpose of electing delegates to the national convention at Kansas City, July 4. ,-:'y Short In His Account*. La Crosse, Wis., March 20.—A. O. Black, postmaster, merchant and town treasurer of the village of Holmen, in this county, was arrested Saturday evening, charged with embezzlement. Black was at one time treasurer of many religious organizations and se cret societies.- Recently his busines3 fell off, and the funds belonging to the government, county and village were used. The shortage will amount to Cats Oat Old Ballet with an Ax. Lone Tree, Iowa, March 20—John Carson, an old-time resident of this place, accidentally shot himself in the groin July 4, 1876. The surgeons were unable to find the bullet. The wound healed, but .Carson has bees troubled more or less ever since with pain. Sunday morning Carson was chopping wood when accidentally he cut himself severely Jn the calf of the leg, and from the wound the old bullet dropped. W& Dies at the Age ot 119. •, Knoxville, Tenn., March 20.—Fannie White died in the Home for Friendless Negro Women Sunday. The certified records show, her age as 119. She was a daughter of a Cherokee Indian chief in North Carolina, and left the tribe when the westward movement of the race began. She claimed to have been a servant in the family of Andy John son when he was a child. French Parliament to Adjournp"4 Paris, March 20.—It is expected that the French parliament will be pro rogued on April jB until May 15 to al low the ministers to receive royal vis itore to the exposition. Kokomo Woman Weighed 5S0 Ponnds. KokOmo, Ind., March 20.—Mrs. Lula Greycraft, the largest woman in In diana, died suddenly at her home in Russiaville Sunday, aged 32 years. She was sitting at a table with her hus band, Joseph Greycraft, playing domi noes, when she fell from hef chair dead. Her weight was 550 pounds. Elghteen-Tear-bld Boy Killed, boxing. Santa Cruz, Cal., March 20.—Frank Cass, 18 years old, was killed at Levi Lakes Sunday In a friendly boxing bout With Bert Whidden. In the eighth round Whidden struck Cass with a six ounce glove on the left side of the neck. Death resulted in half an hour. Cass weighed 170 pounds, being^ twenty poupds. heavier than Whidden. City of LonlttUl* Beseaed. Hit Joseph, Mich., March 20.—The .aterijmer City of Louisville, which had bejei?, fast in the ice fields some •Ave mllea off this shore some thirty-six hours,^arrived in the harbor here at 4 O'clock v(Saturday HB LIKES w£sTl£ftN CANADA. Duhamel, Jan. 24, 1900. Dear Sir and Friend—We had a lucky trip, made good connections and got to Wetaskiwln Monday afternoon stayed there all night, bought a pony and saddle for the boy and hired a three-seated rig for tbfe 'balance of us, and got home to dlhner next day caught the boys cleaning up and get ting ready to come after us. Wednes day the snow was all gone an (J we had bare ground and bright sunshine for a month, and it has been pleasant weather ever since. The ground is frozen about two feet and about six inches of snow—just enough for good sleighing. We had one cold spell in December. The thermometer went down to 32 below zero, but we did not suffer with the cold at all. We have .worked every day all winter, are all well and feeling well have built a log house 18x18, two log stables 16x18, and are now busy on a well. We have 10 cows, three other cattle and six head of horses. The boys send their best respects to Mr. Huchison, and say they will talk to him enough to pay for not writing when he gets up here will write you again next spring and tell you all about the winter. We all unite in sending you and family our best wishes and respects and hope this will find you all welL Yours very respectfully, (Signed) THOMAS TATE, Duhamel, Alberta, Canada. P. S.—It has not been down to zero this month. It is 22 above now. The man in a hole is not apt to take abroad view of thinps. Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at oncc delays are dangerous. Vigilance is frequently the price of property. "Oh I How Happy I Am." "HOW HAPPY I AM to be able to say that I am free from pain after five years of severe suffering from neu ralgia," writes Mrs. Archie Young, 1817 Oaks avenue, West Superior, Wis. "I am so thankful to be able to say that your '5 Drops' is the best medicine I ever got in my life. When I received it from you last November, I used some of it right away. The first dose helped me. It is impossible to explain how I was suffering from neuralgia. I thought no one could get worse and that death would soon come. I was very weaa, and I hardly thought I could live to see my husband come back from his daily labor. Now I can say that I am free from pain, my cheeks are red, my appetite is good and I sleep well all night Many of my friends are sur prised, and say they will send for some '5. Drops.'" Sample bottles of this Wonderful remedy 25c, large bottles, containing 300 doses, |1.00. For In formation write Swanson Rheumatic Cure Co., 164 E. Lake street, Chicago. Men used-to bury their money, now they sink it. Piso's Cure for OoDirtimption has been a God send to me.—Wm. BwMcClellan, Chester, Flor ida, Sept. 17, 1895. I Food for thought is not suited for the stomach. Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's Ga. M'he gTRtbut dfopsy specialists in the world. Read their adver tisement in another column of this paper. Wealthy Russians, after death, seek repose in glass coffins. Are Ton OTLDG Allen's Foot-Ease? It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes: At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. One pound of cork will support an ordinary man in the water. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not stain the hands or spot the kettle. Do not sacrifice your principle what ever happens. A KNOCK OUT There is more disability and helplessness from LUMBAGO r, than any other muscular ail ment, but St. Jacobs .Oil II has found it the easiest and promptest to cure of any form LAME BACK p^\V :CORN afternoon having been rescttefl by the tug Andy of the tirabam' & Morion liM, 1 DR. ARNOLD'S COUGH KILLER CURES COUGHS AND COLDS. PMEVENTS CONSUMPTION. All Drwcelsts. Z5e. |oAL*LKWIWi a*«,#srll«t, 1 At Drunlftta, or we Express it prepaid on receipt of price* SUOO per bottle. (,T I BIO FOUR OATB ytoMi 150 bu.»fir an, sai jaa •Mbwttkstl 1 pSObvt. MONEY (or Union soldiers and widows of soldiers who made homestead entries before June 22,1374 of less than 160 acres (no matter if abandoned or relinq ished if they K&ve not sold their additional homestead rights, should address, with full particulars, giv ins district. &c. HEKB7 N. CO??. WifUaston, S. nkd Mra *111 rinPH Uonlnaoro gr«wtf, Is rflWrfl WW,in UfrmesotA.tfObw.p«r MI«. 4iV- &"k "3 perSPELTS Mre. Greateat grmln tod hay food thlMMe of tbe eurel 1 I BAKUSY, BEARDLESS. I jUldi 121 km. la N.T. WondtrMU I KAPE tUf. A TON I OITM rich, green food for e*ttte,' I sheep, twine, pooltrj, etc., attSa. 11 a ton, W# etll ntae«tentfc* of tiM 1 B*(« teed weed In the V. B. BROMUSINEBHUS I Greatest graaa on earth. Grova la I perfection In America arcrrvbere. 1 Balzer warrant* it ITIIE MILLION DOLLAR 1 Htatola tbe mon* talked of po. [tato on earth, and Saber Hlz weekat hothwlil make JOB rich. Laxgwt grower of Potatoea and I Farm Seeds In tbe world. VEGETABLE SEEDS Liriett, ekoteert U» la D. H.I Onion Seed,Me. lb. Bverythhie wrute^ioirMr, ttakaiaN •tpJd, HM. I Saat re won Oaialnt and JO pk| I OatatagataM.5o.pl JOHNASALZEfjt CRQS"" P-U 1.1_ 1 E I I N A :*0" CE'NT5- The Chief Justice of Samoa Says Perona is The Very Best Catarrh Cure, & Court Soom Scene where Judpe Chambers maintained the supremacy of the United States in Samoa. la a recent letter to The Peruaa Medicine Co., Chief Justice Chambers says tbe following of Peruna: "I have tried one bottle of Peru na, and I can truth fully say it is one of the best tonics ever used, and I take pleasure in recommending it to all sufferers who are in need of a good medicine. I can recommend it as one of the very best remedies for catarrh AND SCARLET FEVER ARE °ANGEROV)s BUT PERFECTLY HARMLESS IF YOU USE MUCO-SOLVENT Scarlet Fever and Diphtheria toth begin the some way, in a sore throat doctors are frequently unable to dioimnse them aorrectly uiitil tbe disease has developed. MIICU-SOLVENT cures tbe tSfc throa* and absolutely prevents devel opment by destroying the germ. Our book "Chats th Mothers" contains lnformat on that every parent should knovr. OLD SOLDIERS SENT FKBB PAST HIUCO-SOUVENT CO. 356 Dearborn St. CHICAGO, ILL. WANTED SOLDIERS' HOMESTEADS The a idressus of all Federal Soid.ers. their widows or bolrs, who made a HOME bTKAl) 11LING on less than 100 acres on or before June 3 8T4, no mutter wliother KINAh PltOOK was mado or not 1 will buy Lhnd Warrants, address Comrade W. K. MOSJS8, lioi 1335, Denver, Colorado. HUMORS! Sott tiuoofffeottt tiw world. FOTTZB flit our a y'r: .• I JS10N I/AS'. Ui CHIEP JUSTKB CHAMBERS W. L. Chambers. Write CAPT. O'FARRELL, Pension Aeent, M25 New York Avenue.<p></p>PECK'S SAliER S MILLION DOLLAR Complete External and Internal Treatment Consisting of CUTICURA SOAP (25c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICURA Oint ment (50c.), to instantly allay itching, irri tation, and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and CUTICURA RESOLVENT (50c.), to cool and cleanse the blood. A SINGLE SET is often sufficient to cure the most torturing,' disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humors, with loss of Jiair, when all other remedies fall. D. ft C. Co*?., Props^ Boston. HowtoCura Spring Homoe* tot 5§r S.V3 fiet your Pension D00BP E QUICK PENSIONS WASHINGTON. D.C. Uncle Ike and the RED HEADED BOY, by tbe author of Peck's Bad Boy and His I*a. Over 2(X pages of "laughs fuli-page comic plcu urea. The funniest ibtnK out. Paper covers 2Ac,«*]otb 5uc. For ealo by all booksellers and newsdealers, OP sent pOBipnfd on recclpt of Jricc by JAMIESON-HIGGINS CO.. Publishers, 3?A Dearborn St.. Chicago. EXCURSION RATES to Western Cauada and particulars as to how to secure 160 acres of th» be he at in Kind on the continent can be secured on appli Ii'ut'on toSupl. of ImmU I K-ration,Ottawa.Canada lor tbe undersigned. Spe cially conducted excursions will leave St. Paul Minn., on the first and third Tuesday in eao& month, and specially low rates on all lines or railway are quoted for excursions leaving St. Paul on Mnrch 26 and April 4 for Manitoba, Assinlboia, Saskatchewan and',Alberts. N. Bar tholomew. 306 Pi'th St.. Des Moines. Iowa. W. L. DOUGLAS 83 A 3.SO SHOE8 Worth S4 to $6 compared. f\ with other makes., Indorsed by over l.OOO.OOOVfCi* The oenufne Save W. L. I DougW ^name and price I stamped on bottom. Take! no substitute claimed to bo as good. Your dealer should, keen them—Md not,"we Will sendajuOrJ on receipt of price and 25c."" extra for carnage. State kind of leather, size, and width, plain or cap toe. Ca€ free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE GO., Brockton, Mm mmc#i£TS yilMIMIHHMMIH FOR 14 CENTS! We wish to pain thiejear 900|9C6' new oastomers, and ence offer I .1 Gjirden Beet, Ito 1 Pkg Earl'tft Emerald CncnmbeH6o 1 Lacrosse MarketLeitneo«lAo btrawberry Melon, ISo 13 Day Radish, 10o -ir 1 Early Ripe Cabbage, lOo I Karly Dinner Onion, lOo I Brilliant Flower Seeds, 16o Worth $1.00, for 1£ eenia. $1,MI 1 Above 10 Fkgs. worth $L00» we will mail yon free, tog ether with oar 1 great Catalog, telling all about 1 POTATO oponrecerpt of this notice A|4ct 1 •tamps. We invite yonrtrade, and ^4, know when yon once try Salter's Sseeds you will never do without. *#$00 Prizeson Salter's1VO0—rar* est earliest Tomato Giant on earth, wan— JOHN A. 84LZBK BKED CO., LA CRORSK, WIS. W.N. U., Des Moines, No 12—1904 ii dUHr MEDICINAL O I 1 6 I P.tiK z§: WW*- E «,