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1% ®r rw*»Ccf* Tr ^32' 2*^:, gr, 5f. '-S-v^vC-Ttc' VA A. KL,6®? ?& _"hJ •«UJH7-^ S* -'M rfft s* 4. iUs C*-l THEThe (. StJp i, "Y,-^ Sk'*' $ v. __ Vs" 7 ,V ,} V/* ,, s£i Pi* too. Of,, ^9® W I SOo. r-^\ Jobs A. Salzer isHJ lite 'c' si & iPr V* ^42 -v- FOR THIRTY YEARS Congressman Meekison Suffered With Catarrh—Read liis Endorsement of Pe-ru-na. CONGRESSMAN MEEKISON, OF OHIO. .JS David McekisQn is well known, not only in his own State but throughout America. He began his political career by serving four consecutive terms as Mayor MnmiVSy?!1]!X V*' olve,3' during which tiuio ho became widely known as the founder of the Meek ..son Bank of Napoleon, Ohio. Ha was elected to the Fifty-fifth ^tfonolthe State lnajol'lty' nn" is the I!uu'.rSd th0 iri approach and teaacious grasp, was his only uncon* jquered roc. For thirty years he waged unsuccessful warfare against this persona? ^^artman as theriSult^m0 t0 th? rescue» season of catching cold is upon us. The cough and the sncezo and nasal twang are to he hoard on every hand. origin of chronic catarrh, the most common and dreadful of diseases, is a cold. This is-thoway the chronic catarrh gen erally begins. A person catches cold, which hangs on longer than usual. The cold generally starts in the head and throat. Then follows sensitiveness of the air passages which incline one to catch oold very easily. At last the person has a cold all the while seemingly, more or less discharge from the nose, hawking, spit ting, frequent clearing of the throat, nos trils stoppad up, full feeling in the head and sore, inflamed throat.. The bast time to treat catarrh is at the Tery beginning. A bottle of Peruna prop erly used never fails to cure a-common cold, thus preventing chronic catarrh. While many people ltuvo been cured of chronic catarrh by a single bottle of Peruna, yet, as a rule, when the catarrh becomes thoroughly fixed, moro than one bottle is necessary to complete a cure. Peruna has cured cases innumerable of catarrh of twenty years* standing. It Is the best, if not the only internal remedy for chronic catarrh in existence. But prevention is far Every better than cure. person subject to catching cold should take Peruna at est 5-r~- once at the slight symptom of cold or sore throat at this season of the year and thus prevent what is ahaost certain catarrh. to end in chronic ONION Largnt gravers of VeittiMt Seadt In tin Vorll Our Prices range from 60 cents to $1.60 per pound, and no better seed Is found on oarth. How to grow 1,200 fausbols Oaioas per aer# with each osnoo order. CaUtsf Si, for (»n CROSSC. W'l WIS. 50,000 AMERICANS WHERE WELCOMED TO Western atrr ., Canada DURING.LAST VEAR. Tbay sra tetllad and settlinc on the Grtin and Gruinf Lands, and are prosperous and satisfied. Sir Wilfred Laurier recently (aid: A new star baa riien on the horizon, and it la toward it that avary immif rant who leaves the land of his ances tori to come and seek a home for himself now turn his fate"—Canada. There" is Room for Millions. »EE Homesteads (iMn away. Schools, Chonbes, Bail ways. Markets, Climate, everything to be desired. Per a descriptive Atlas and other Information, applr to Superintendent Immicration. Ottawa. Can-. ads- or authorized Canadian Government Agent— C. PUhnc. Grand Forks. N. D. We eta SSTO yon middleman'S profit by narlng out own warehouses and feeding yards.- and seeurlng hicbut possible prices for your grain aw" stock. Sand for our rBKK "Hooklet." wsisrsrissla^* Live Stock acknowledged leader of his party In hit otherwise complete success of this rising statesman and ho "I have used several bottles of Peram and I feel greatly benefited thereby from my catarrh of the head, feel encouraged to believe that It I use it a short time longer I will bs fully able to eradicate the of thirty years' standing."—David Meeklson, ex-member of Congress, dictated the following letter to Mrs. A. Snedcker, Cartersvllle, Ga. writes: '•I saw that your catarrh remedy, Pe runa, was doing others so much good, tiiat I thought I would try it and see what it would do for me. My case is an old one and I havo none of the acuto symptoms now, lccause I have had the disease so long that I had none of the aches and pains, but a general rundown condition of tho whole body—sore nose and throat and stomach. I had a good appe tite but my food did not nourish my sys tem. I had come down from 140 to about 5 pounds in weight. I now feel that I am well of all my troubles."—Mrs. A. Sedeker. Mr*. I KKB^ A SOX HANDVI ii piece of land. Sho U«r Iculea Stump FnUfr pulls .I vt stump, lave* time,. Uborand nooej. Cslalos FBXE.BtrculMKfg.Ct., 2ptSM,OeaUr^lU,I«* —NO. 8— PISO'S CURE FOR .v time, fiofd by droasfstt. O N S I O N V- A. Snedeker. Send for free book on catarrh, entitled "Winter Catarrh,"} by Dr. Hartman. "Health and Beauty sent free to women only. If you do not derive prompt and satisfac tory results from the use of Peruna. write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state ment of your case and he will be pleased to give you his vatuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartmau, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. (oles (aiholisalve butanthr ftop* the pain of Burns and Scalds. Alw*jr«he*]iiwJthont«o*fab f)6«nd60cbydrogffUU,or milled osr*Mipfiot prioobyJ.W. Cole ft Co., Black River ^Ua,Wu To certain number of eon- snmcrs buying A A A ST I N and Bending us before October IS, 1901, the closest estimates on the popular vote for tho next President. Write us or ask a dealer in Atabaatlne for the easy condi tions imposed in this contest, which Is open ALABASTINE Is the only sanitary wall coating. Any one con apply it. Mix with oola water. Not a disease-breeding, out-of-date, hot water, glue kalsoraine. Sample Cant free. Mention this paper. AI^BlolwN.tJ?%f.,aN?w ?Sk"dlt"tC,,• CAPSICUM VASELINE ,{PT7T VP IK OOt.LAl*SIBL« TTBBS) A substitute for and superior to mustard or toy othor plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and rctieve head* ache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all rheumatie, neuralgic and gouty complaints. trial will prove what^we claim for it,.and it will be found to be invalu able in the household. Many people tay "it Is the best of all your preparations." Price 15 cents, at all dhiggists or other dealers, or by sending this amount tons in postage stamps we willsend'you n-tube by mail No article should be accepted by the public unless the seme carries our label, as otherwise It is not genuine* CHBSEBROCGH MFG. CO., 17 State Street, New York City* am MEXICAN Mustang Liniment onrca Cute, Burne, Brnlaeo. $20 Is Enough Money To make a start in speoulatlon. Write us to-day regarding the market We want a tew reliable agents In theDa kotas. —Union Grain C3o., 20 to SO Corn Exchange Bldg^"' ^C-. Minneapolis, Minn. Bneeesafallr town tot nearly lfaoantuzy. BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH SYRUP torn awcfai awl coHta. orth Dakota ubbins A A Lisbon wants an artesian well. Westhope Is to have a new hotel. Carrlngton is to have a creamery at 'ast. The Palermo postofllce has been en larged. The boost In the price of wheat Is carrying flour up, too. A farmers' telephone company is wanted out of Omemce. Tho First National bank of Gran rille has been organized. Wllliston 1b to have a sale of thor oughbred cattle March 15. A two-round prize fight was pulled off at a Granville livery barn. An effort will be made at Bottineau to organize a farmers' elevator. Edmore people called a meeting to organize a business men's club. There are rumors of a new time card on the Jamestown Northern. The Standing Rock Indians seem to be getting along nicely this winter. The Dickinson postoffice Is too small for that rapidly growing town. A Reynolds man wants to evict a tenant who permitted a dance in the house. Whisky cases formed the grcatei part of the court proceedings at tho Bottineau term. The state medical board is aftei some pill peddlers who are practicing without licenses. Jamestown and Dickinson arc stil. hoping the Great Northern will give them new depots. The war between the Wimbledon business men and the band seems to ?row more bitter. The ownership of the State bank at Bowbells has recently been transferrer to Eastern parties. Dickinson banks made their usuai good showing, notwithstanding the financial stringency. The severe weather does not seen, to have prevented large audiences at *he farmers' institutes. Sheriff Welch of Burleigh county reports three pairs of twin calves have been born on. his place. There are said to be many viola tions of the law against fishing In tho Turtle Mountain country. Steele people held an enthusiastic creamery meeting and will endeavor to get the necessary bonus. The promoters of incorporation at Rugby are undaunted by the adverse action at the mass -meeting. The optimistic people of the state Insist that cold weather and deep snow is a sure indication, of a big crop. Local pride causes people in most town,3 that have a mill to use the home-ground flour, which helps some J. O. Baughman, the erstwhile boni face at Devils Lake, announced his candidacy for treasurer of Ramsey county. A lot of people are saving their coin to be ready to pay real estate taxes March 1, before they become de linquent. The friends of Martin Walsh ot Srand Forks fear he will not recover from the stroke of paralysis he suffer, ed last month. W. H. Carr, the man who had a ter rible fall from a scaffold at Mohall, has been removed to Mlnot to have foot amputated. Kidder county has more snow than for six or seven years, and the farm ers and ranchmen are certain of good crops this summer. A suspected bootlegger was recently arrested in Lakota. He had his nerve after the recent roundup of booze dis pensers in that town. Washburn had a well attended creamery meeting and a committee was appointed to push the project of establishing a creamery there. The Devils Lake bank purchased the bonds sold for the Pelican Point bridge and will be the heaviest los ers by the supreme court decision. The grains and grasses from Town er county have been shipped to Fargo for placing with the rest of the state exhibit for the 8t. Louis exposition. A Cheyenne preacher has thirteen children and a letter from the pres ident commending him on the large but unlucky number of his progeny. By the burning of a bam at Rose bud(f Morton county, Paul Reuther's barn was burned, togethe rwith two horses, cow and calf, harness and oth er" stuff. Now it is reported that the North ern Pacific will extend from Denhoff to Coal Harbor, bridge the Missouri and run branches through Oliver and Mercer counties to connect with the main line. J'' Noonan township In Ramsey county lost in A suit with a road grading con cern. The farmers of the township voted down, a proposition to buy a grader but the supervisors purchased one anyway. The court holds they had authority to act and the township must pay. A report comes, from New Salem that seventeen head of cattle belong lag to A. V. Schallern were frozen during the recent storm. The man who had them -in charge was driving them from the barn to a spring when they got away and were frozen. Some farmers who have stock that are liable to be short of hay before the new grassB comes have contrived home-made snow PIQWB, with two planks put together'Vedge shape and properly braced. They hitch enough horses to this contrivance and run it over the ground where! they know there is plenty of grass. It displaces most of th6 snow, and cattle will fol low the swath bo made, thus saving the demand on the rapidly-disappear-' ing haystacks. -»\4S9?S ». STEELE NOW SINKING SHAFTS. NORTH DAKOTA EDITORS. Three Started in the North Dakota Town for Gold. Work has been begun on a four-foot shaft on a block west of the residence lots where the gold dirt was found in a well at Steele. A sample of tho sand taken out was examined by an expert from the West, and he pro nounces it as rich as anything found in the Klondike. Two more shafts have been started by P. J. Lyons anO. E. S. Elliott of the Republican.. They have erected a house over their shaft and are pushing the work. An East Indian astrologer and palm ist has been here for two or three days and some of the mining men have been closeted with him with a view of getting at the truth of the mineral problem. A prominent citi zen consulted him and it is learned he was advised to embark in thr? new en terprlse. Some citizens announce the belief that the astrologer is none other than a person sent here from Washington to investigate the mine matter. Oth ers think there is a good deal of en thusiasm thrown away. But the orig inal mine discoverers are going along with their work. Several head of sbeep were lost in. the east end of the county during a storm. They were smothered by get ting in the lee of a high fence and be lng drifted under. It is about settled that Steele will have a good-sized creamery in oper ation in the spring, as the necessary bonus of $500 has been guaranteed and 400 cows have been promised, or 100 more than were asked for. A creamery at Dawson is also among the reasonable probabilities, as citizens in that section are getting active. L. C. Pettibone, a leading citizen ol Dawson, attended the launching of the Dakota at New London, Conn. IMPROVEMENTS AT THE POST. $110,000 Expended at Fort Lincoln Buildings Almost Ready. Constructing Quartermaster Kitts. in charge of the building at Fort Lin coln, which has been in progress the past season, expects to turn over all of the buildings except the barrack building in tho course of a week or ten days for tho uec of the post. The new buildings erected are the admin istration building,, post hospital, new lieutenants' quarters, new captains' quarters and guardhouse. The lieu tenants' quarters are uniform with those already erected and occupied. The captains' quarters are much larger and more, commodious, and were erected at a cost of about $24, 000. They are modeled after the lat est plans adopted by the quartermas ter's department of the army, and are modern, and up to date in every way. containing large' parlors and recep tion rooms, two bathrooms, four bed rooms and other conveniences. The barrack building Is completed except the plastering and Interior fin ish, and it will not be po's'slble to complete this until warmer weather. An extension will probably be granted the contractors on this building. The buildings erected at the fort the past season represent an expendi ture of about $110,000. The bills for the post exchange were rejected by the quartermaster general as being excessive, and new bids will be ad vertised for. Bids have been received for cisterns for the new buildings, and the completion ot' all the work now under way, even aside from the actual buildings, will require some time. A CHEAP COURTHOUSE. Fargo Will Have to 8hulfte Along With It. After much discussion the Cast county commissioners have deter mined to give the people a cheap court house. The plan to Issue )200, 000 bonds was defeated at the recent special election. There is about $40, 000 Insurance, and the commissioners will make a two-mill levy, increas ing'the fund to $70,000 to $80,000, which will be used to erect a new building on the foundation of the old one. The plans will be changed con siderably, but the building will be about the size of the old one, which was entirely too small to accommo date the offices. NEW WARD BUILDING. Fargo Will Have to Provide It-* Schools Overcrowded. The rapid Increase in the number ot pupils In the Fargo schools has placed the board of education in a quandary for room. It is probable that at least one more new ward building will have to be erected in. the summer. All the buildings are overcrowded and the high school, which was enlarged two years ago, is again too small. MARSHALL SELLS. Northern Trust Company Passes to Ed Pierce and Holllster. Congressman Marshall, who has been at the head of the Northern Trust Company of Fargo, has disposed of his interests to Banker Ed Pierce of Sheldon and Mr. Hollister of Farso. Mr. Pierce will be president, and after his return from a winter's trip in the South will spend a greater part of his time in Fargo. Jesse and Eiqll Buckmaster of Far go, ten and twelve years of age, have been, sentenced to the reform school till they reach their majority. The elder boy has been mixed up in petty thefts and the mother thinks the lat ter is a confirmed cigarette fiend, and has pleaded inability tio control either. The value c/l North Dakota farming land was demonstrated in a Fargo National was 1 $66 recent transfer of a farm north of Fargo by W. W. Gamble to President Hector ot the bank. The an acre. price The land Uea on the Red river and Its proximity to th« city makes it valuable. Tourists Drop Off at 8t. Paul and Are Royally Entertained. The members of tho North Dakota Publishers' association who are mak ing tho trip to Mexico stopped off In St. Paul, on the way to Chicago, and were given a good time. The members of the association were met by a committee from the St. Paul newspaper associations and the newspaper supply housea, consist ing of John. J. Dobson of the North western Newspaper Union, A. L. May, C. I. Johnson, John Brandtjen, F. (i. Leslie and Mr. Webster. With the visitors they boarded street cars and visited the principal points of Interest. The feature of the afternoon, was a thorough inspection of the new cap itol, the beauty of which much im pressed the North Dakota visitors. The party enjoyed an informal din ner at the Commercial club late in the afternoon, following which short talks were made by Frank Wilson ot The North Dakotans will ty Bath gate, N. D. Wellington Irysh. man ager of the association's excursion J. J. Dobson of the Northwestern Newspaper Union, and S. C. Thies. The party disbanded at 7 o'clock, the association members seeking their ho tels to prepare for the first stagi! of their long journey into Old Mexico. The party left at 8:30 in a private ear attached to the Northwestern Limited over the Chicago, S(. Paul. Minneap olis & Omaha line. bo direct. to New Orleans to attend the Mardi Gras, and El Paso and Mexico Ci'? will follow next in order. It. was originally intended to reli:n. to St. Paul on Feb. 29, but the party may decide to extend the jo rn^y for another two weeks and visit oihei points in Mexico and the Southern United States before returning. No definite decision had been reached before the editors left. The members of the association's excursion party are: Mr. ar.'l Mrs. C. A. Patterson, Advocate, Linton: Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wells, Bulletin, Llt.eh viile Mr. and Mrs. F. A. WiilE.in. I'ink Paper, Bathgate Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Perry. Record, Ellendale Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Goddard, Leader, Ellen dale Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Mitchell, Journal, Mi:i.to Mr. and Mr3. A. R. Wright, Republican, Oakes Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Beeman, Herald, Fir.gal Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Lindstrom Repub lican, Langdon Mr. and Mrs. 'f. A. Luros, Public Opinion, Crary Miss Agnes Ray, Recorder, Dickinson. Miss M. E. Glidden, Leader, Ellendale Miss Mattie Irwin, Record, Ellendale J. H. McCollum, Reporter, Hampden E. O. Keene, Pioneer, Hope W. Irysh, Eagle, Wheatland E. A. Smith, Free Press, Devils Lake H. L. Boardman, Mail, Edgeley. TELEGRAPHONES ON SOO. New System of Instant Communica tion Along the Line. Owing to the long distance between telegraph stations on the Bismarck branch of the So line and the frequent necessity for communication between train crews on the road and head quarters, the Soo road ih installing a system of telegraphones. Each train is equipped with one of the devices, which is the application of the princi ples of the ordinary telephone. A box about a foot square contains a telephone receiver and transmitter, with a bell alarm. A jointed bamboo rod like a fish pole contains a wire connection which is fastened to the ordinary telegraph line of the road by means of a snap at the end of the pole, which is twenty-five feet long. Connection is then made to the tele phone instrument, nnd any station along the line may be called up from the train. This will be of great value in c£ses where the trains become snowbound a long distance from tele graph stations. Tests were made from Supt. Der rick's office In Bismarck to Wishek, eighty miles away, and the telephone worked perfectly. Current i3 fur nished with a dry battery of four cells. Telephoning and telegraphy may be carried on at the same time over the same, wire without Interference. In case a train on the road gets intc trouble," the conductor may take his fish pole, snap it over the telegraph wire, attach the connections to his In strument in the baggage car, and call up any station for assistance. HAD KILLED HI8 MAN. Death of G. B. Norton on a Train Be tween Oakes and Ludden. G. B. Norton died from heart fall ure while on his way home to Ludden from Oakes. He was the man who shot J. W. Shelton in the early nine ties in what is known as "Little Utah" in the southeastern part of this county. Shelton was intimate with Mrs. .Norton afld finally induced her to livo with him. The two men "mixed," and Norton shot and killed bis adversary. Norton was acquitted on the plea of self-defense. FOUND DEAD IN HIS ROOM. Sturnecke of Fargo, Related to Pre tender to Polish Crown. Fred Sturnecke, who has been & draftsman in the office of Fargo archi tects for eleven years, was found dead in his rooms. He came here Just after the big fire. He was a Polack Jew and was closely related to the pretend er to the Polish crown. A son, who is a dentist in Brooklyn and a daugh ter In Illinois survive. Heart failure is thought to have been the cause of his demise* For Yankton Extension. Sioux City, Iowa, Feb. 12. It is stated here that F. A. Seaman, claim agent for the Willmar ft Sioux Falls branch of the Great Northern, has been .commissioned to purchase the rights of way in Nebraska, nouth from Yankton. Dies of Wounds From Explosion. Albert Lea, Minn., Feb. 12.—Mrs. D. S. Curley, who was burned by an explosion of gasoline while kindling a Are, is dead. She mistook the gaso line for kerosene. ^'5^ •m^wm -.tiu I-othrop & Johnson, patent lawyers, 911 •tn't yti I'ioneer l'ress Mrs. Haskell, Worthy Vice Templar, Inde pendent Order Good Templars, of Silver Lake, Mass., tells of her cure by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* Deaji Mns. I'inkham: Four years ngo I was nearly dead with infiam (nation and ulceration. I endured daily untold a^ony, and life was a burden to me. I had used medicines and washes intern ally and externally nntil I made up my mind that there was no relief for ine. Calling at the home of a friunrt, I not i-?ed a boti.lccf L.vdin, K. Pmlcliiim's Vegetable Compound. My frit-mi emlorsed it highly unci I dn itied to (tire it a trial to see if it would l:::lj pjn. Jt, look i).' ?.ie.!i"e and porKovcrer.-.v fur I whk in li.-'d condition, and 1 i:.-icd LyilUt H. Viilkhaiii's Vo.jretJtl'.lc (.'oinpouiiri for nearly 1tc montha V"!\ri2 1 was cured, but wlmt a eli:1..-!-^-. from despair to happiness, from misery to the delightful exhilarating fee'ir.jj health always brings. I would not change hack for a thousand dollars, anil your Vegetable Compound is a grand medicine. "1 wish every sick woman would try it and be conneed." Mrs. Ida TIa.skbi.1., Silver Lake, Mass. Worthy Viec Templar, Independent Order of Cood Templars. When a motllcine has l»eeii successful in more than a million cases, is it justicu to yourself to hiy, without trying it, "I do not believe it would help me" Surely you canuot wish to remain weak, and lick and dis couraged, exhausted with each day's work. You have some derangement of tho feminine organism, and I,ydin 13. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will help you just as surely as it has others. nrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D., says: 500 VIRGINIA FARMS PATENTS. Cist of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Henry A. Feltus, Minneapolis, Minn., liidx., St. Paul. No man has the heart to say "No" (viicn a girl asks if he really and truly loves her. OR. J. H. RINDLAUD (Specialist), Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Fargo, N. D. You don't always use strong lan guage when another liaugs upon your I words. I PEKBIN'B PILK SPECIFIC. The Internal Remedy that will cure absolutely any case of Piles. Insist on getting it from your Druggist. Most of tho conclusions a man reaches theoretically arc practically useless. PIso'bCure is tbobest mulleins ire ever used far all affections of the throat and lungs.—WM. O. EKDSMsr, Vanburea. Ind., Feb. 10,1300. Choose your sweetheart with your heart make him your husband with your Judgment. Mrs. Window's Soothing Sjrnu, Porcblldrea teething, toftcni tbogunti, redn fiimmtiinn.fttUy* pftio.curct wind eoJtu. ttc a Ula:: Mns. I'inkiiaii: 1 might have been spared many months of suffering and pain if I had leuown of the elTieaey of l.vdiu E. jPlnk." ham's Vejjfttsthle t'onipovmA a few months sooner, for 1 tried many lcmcdics without find ing anything v.hieh helped me before I tried the Vegetable Compound. I dreaded the approach of the menEtrual period every month, as it meant much suffering and pain. Some months the flow was very bcanty and others it was pro fuse, but after I had used the Compound for two months I became regular and natural, and so I continued until I felt perfectly well, and tho parts were strengthened to perform the work without assistance nnd pain. I am like a differ ent woman now, where before I did not care to live, and I am pleased to testify as to the good your Veget ble Compound has done for me. Sincerely yours. Mrs. Tiixie IIart, Larimore,N.D. Be it, therefore, believed by all women who are ill that Lydia E. Plnkliain'a Vege table Compound is the medicine the should take. It has tood the test of time, and it lias hundreds of thousands of cure* to Its credit. Women should consider it unwise to use any other medicine. Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is Lran, Mass, will answer cheerfully and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. Perhaps she just the knowledge that will help your cuse try her to-day it costs nothing. acres each* at from 95 per acre upwards, with buildings, fruits, timber, water, etc. beatcll* mate in U.S. goodmarkets. great variety of crops, vegetables uud fruits: noted forheallhtulnftaa: future protpcct* bright. Aldrc»« PYLE St D©IIAVEN. ileal Bstuto Agents, Petersburg, V®. 1 self-heating sad irons David France, Hawley, Minn., car starter Randolph Gillette, Little Falls, Minn., rotary valve Charles Groff, St. Paul, Minn., bluing device Hllmer Hanson, Arti choke Lake, Minn., threshing ma chine John McKnlght, Duluth, Minn., ncckyoke Herbert Penney, Minneap olis, Minn., steam generator. ,v Juc«t to 23c SIMIUO. The man who tells you all of his troubles becomes one of yours. Stops tho Cough and Works Off tho Cold laxative BromoQuinino Tablets. Prico23& Write (or our JImI Kttati aid, tf«n scut tree to The B.ltnr of th« Rural N*w Torktr Than whom there la no better Potate Expert in the Country, says: "Salter's Knrliest Potato Is the earliest of SB ear liest sorts, tried by me, yielding 464 bu. per acre." Salzc-r's Barly Wisconsin yielded for the Rural New Yorker 7M bu. per acre. Now Salzer has heavier yielding varieties than above. 8e« Salzc-r's catalog. JCBT SEND 10c IH STAMPS and this notice to the John A. Salzet Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and receive lots of farm seed samples and their big catalog, which is brim full of rare things for the gardener and farmer, easily worth $100.00 to every wide awake farmer. It describes Salzer's Teoslnte, yield* lng 160,000 lb*, per acre, of rich (Ken fodder, Salzer'8 Victoria Rape, yielding 60,000 lbs. of sheep and hog food per acre, together with Salzer's New Na tional Oats, which has a record of SOt bu. per acre In 30 states, so also full description of Alfalfa Clover, Olant In carnal Clover, Alslke, Timothy and thousands of other fodder plants, Grasses, Wheat, Speltr., Barleys, etc. (W. N. U) Hands that arc clapped in the ]oj of triumph are In reality "palms victory." Mouoy refunded for each package ot IMJTNAM FADELESS DYES if unsat isfactory. Doing good by example is a vary slow way of instituting reforms. EftTQ permanentlreored. Keflteeri T11 first dar'u u«e oi There is a way of trifling that costa a heap ot money. Neglect Lumbago and Sciatica I and it may put you on crutches, with loss of time and money. St. Jacobs Oil .. will cure surely, promptly. Price, 25c. and SOe. 1 I amy adores* giving deocrlptlons MO Vlr tf In la. Farms of from 19 to IQfit ~r u' Vf tl .•*,.5. 4 'f -Jf -J of To Wash China Silk OreMM. China sillc Cresses may bequito success fully washed. Remove all spots with bec zino. Then wash in warm soapsuds, rub bing between the hands, rinso through several waters. Use Ivory Soap ana do not rub the soap 011 the dress. \\Mng as dry as possible, wrap In a sheet or oleic cotton cl'it'i aad, v.-he-i partially drv, iiw KLEANOIt R. PAHlCER. When sonic men give a social blow out they never stop blowing abonl whnt they blew in on. the affair. 'i0A, Dr. KHne'* Great Nerve I •r. Send for FUR 12 Sft.O'.) trial bottle eedtteaMA Sa. B. H. Kux^Ud., Arch Street, l*UladelpUft»f7 Some people pray others there be It's easy to explain why other! who repeat prayers. shouldn't mako mistakes. v-.: mm' ., 4 .-'is t*