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\£?. & I je I* \'.£^v-V?£ Ai COULDN'T LIFT TIN POUNDfc ftMRt KMrny nih SreusMStrength ami Health to the Sufferer, Malt. Ing Him FmI Twmty-nvi ". i.r: Yaara Ysssgahgr' 'Sfe ^MlrC'orfTOS. J. a. Gorton, (irmir and lumberman, of Depp*. N. O, Myi: "1 suffer ed tor yea with my back. It was so bad that I could oot walk any dis tance nor area ride in easy buggy. I do have raised ten pot believe I could 'paiinds of weight from the ground, the .WPvmrijbjBr seveiafciyTfaia waalur con* aitlonwflo 1 begjgPiising Doana Kid ney Fill*. Theypiiickly reilevj^fne. rind now I amjjjg|s$er troubled' aft sj*a* Ky baclpip/'itrong Mid I can "$C:,walk or ride m&lBg distance and Mel as. atraaM' I WttMtigfc* ^•ara.ago. #«k.^^^||ji'a Sidney ply or the remedy (o i:*om«^iir' my neighbors and they hive also found good results. If you can sift anything from this rambling note that will be of any fcen^^e to you, or to any one kidney trouble, you -ve •{'liberty to do so." TIMAij FREE-Address 1'oner Milturn Co.. Bu"alo, N. V. For sale •by 11 dealers price, 60 Not So Serious. SsSfesSMs1 the train in great Excitement. The conductor came running through* 6 train In ffrpaf "Prepare for the worst!" he shout- "What's up?" gasped the passenger. "Thfetrain robbers are going to give, us a brush." "ThanK goodness, it's not so bad, after all.{ I thought you were about to say the. p«llma& car porter was going to give 6s a brush."—Chicago .New*#' PATENTS. of patents Issued Last Week ta No Mat forthweatern inventors. Joseph p. Barry. St. Paul, Minn., vestlbulecurtyin catch Nels B. Egge, Welcome, Minn., cooling means for gals engines Carl P. Jolltz, Pine Island, Minn., Ice creeper ^William. K Law, SU Pa»»l. Minn., hay" carrier? George H. Mlelke, Duudag, Minn., wire stretcher Arthur W. Swanberg, Mln: neapolis) Jfthn., non-reftilable bottle John ^Taylor, Bozeiman, Mont., lid' "ipr syrup cups. V1?^.°5L^ Johneon. patent .lawyers-Sit js«w 912 Pioneer Press Bid*., Sti .Paul. Struck a Snag. Northern? Acquaintance:-r Colonel, \f 'they say. a Japanese scientist has dis iffi cbvered a serum that isan infallible JWpre for rattlesnake bite, is it likely will ever displace your famous Ken :|^cky reinedy? Eminent Kentuckian—To what fa- moits remedy do chjldrea.taetk you allude, sub?-— MOWS SowtMag Syrma. (St eoftani.tha nw, mini t* pua.eare.wta4ooUl. Meaton*. Swelling the Bill. »aid *4dMa tj^plce grew hard and cold, "I wlfl farii SU at.every burner and let it ft*w unrestrained." "Mercyl maiden. SjKi'l'S#?-" s4kaj- ..i'Would you Mil' "yoiirself?'* I "No," cried the youth, "but I'd do ^y best- to bankrupt your father.'r— SonvBondout, 5. T., Mr frw mipii botnai .When a woman tugs at a ma&'a Burse strings it is apt to pucker his ^--iSlieart strings. I am sure Pise's Cure tor Consumption saved «»y life three ye'nrs ago.—Mrs. Thos.Kosuaa, Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, IMA. Of the two' evils, men choose the Ia|it-r-iinleg8 there is more money la the other. rjlka "MaMae E Itemed/ Co., CUcage, Semi B|e Buok free.. Wrlie turn about four «yw •It is easier iTor a woman to set ak«a than It is for a. jnan to set a goodi«X' ample. h« «t VsvK Hwin iMliiilttoRtMa 'gM. HUMP A MX HAMBV whit#, bubblft&f doogti, But Bo you want ubbins A A Holiot^af -MMmardk are^made to cut weedi. a bucket shop f-tQ:'have 1 Himter- this fall,£ A colony from Rugby may locate in Georgia. Thieves broke into a store at Aber- •jvTh^'~Ca.yaltcr"cminty-.crops are the best ever,' ""Allot o&ijirj^Mrtiave .bj^iSestroyed ^t Grandiii. county eeeiml a bo- Sear de^plteictm lipfepulai county lands... tilled. MM rested.,- Wfaae Tekalea are the tort *t« *»«loia» aver w»l«. A zjM.BIUIM-«( itaa «m e«a eeUi la tka OaUeSaWMla brMtk, Mr* throat, aa* iri iMMTM or puU in their- ..work commit- ilaim a ^wiir'lttuni Crpps around Kathryn were dam aged .^o.^Miiiiie- es^t by hail. ^.^eEsendea voted for .incorporation oy'an o^erfthelining mayirity. Kids. have" been swiping K-jvs from (jOBtt^ffice^boxes *tt DiclcinEon. vTh^^ge'^a£!^^|Bp|t.|jieau county .'air gave general satisfaction. There ere sum« damage Suits in Wardf j»uBty from prairie fires, .A^M»Ot Mnpman went to sleep oy! the top of an electric^light oole. Bismarck seems' fb hive' its siiare of toughs and .hobos this summer. Stage'.iiiiys 'broitif ojten -a" box of, oodafifi dS^pbtl it Hannaford. VVhif^L .^potters,::strnck. Minot the blind plgF aos^'d ii'p' in'iihdrt order. ..The people of Cleveland have a new depot.and now. they want an agent. B. I\ Osborne may give up his lease on ihe 'Occidental hotel at Casselton. A petition has been circulated at' 3atfdti¥v: the .... blind pigs Sonie Minoters Want a grand jury sinnmoHed'^td investigatjei: local condi tions.- 1 S ^^fcdiarmitory r^vrili be added to the St. John's academy at James 4u*uv The tower of the new Catholic church at Mandan will be 114 feet TiSe ,y (.ls,,dlfgculty in )Ut f!c fin" of' tfte BO'tt theua fourteen-year-«ld 4S^8W8.M• A-Canuck book agent at Neche was arrested for not having a peddler's ,li cense. .. The farmers' elevator company at Ke^lti^ffod bought an old line ele vator. ,-There at Kenmare over the location'of t&e site .for the water aciiis oi^ ^n Kidder ^pptyv A Minot womaii was hit by a berth #)$He riftin^n a sleeping car. It fell on her:' It is claimed that the poison put out for.gophers has killed a.lot of birds in ^his state.- A farmeit!g flft*^ir? company .. at Rugby has purchased one of the'bid Ilaa.lify|w V:K6nr N. P. Rasmussen in of ,C|ty has invested' Valle Mercer some J*. f. i*' Patieats have been recsnftly taken to the asylum from Richland and Sar gent counties. "The postoftice at Fort Tottdn lr.iiy be removed to the store sit? And the old ro ended. Judge floss, the nominee of the Re publicans in the Eighth district,, is only 82 years "did. Mail order houses and groc-.y ped dlers have d»A# big, business In many ifc The organization of the small mill ers of' the state will result in a Sot ^i^:i.^l^t:. .b^stoeB»r .... The fi#' over the drainage ditches in Tralll oounty promises to eclipse Towuer-walttts•'* chief of police who WiU^iiliJtorce the ordinances the new city conhci lis to enact. being located Keyontt Mohall on tho extension of the Great h^ch., A- town in Montana is named after Judge ^Aan'" of Devils Lake, who is intereftedinthetownslte. A lot of^ex'tra deputies have been appointed, in the. norttoarn half of the WAf^en '^'^f^^^rstowri:':£':man'wa^ on suspicion., of having stolen a horse it Mo^aead,'biit he could not be iden- man objected to -the head with a hiikiraMallant ar- Neft of Devils Lake has been ,tU........ Southe DakotaV road for To^'a ahd North A nuinber of elevators over tue ctate will not be open for business t|sjt faiijU.the result of the: damage 'fey :ruat^ ..-'-'-: i..- Cashljnr Gfady of Valley City dsove into the. oouhtry and lost dUutond is Another reservatlon openlng ln that section of the'.'country.' ,,. Attorney Campbell of Mandan Is endeavoring to get some hall suit pases transferred from Richland to |(ortoa county. 1 It seems-qulte certain that Willia(t Craham, whose body was found iu Ward county, had' suicided after mui- Farmers are planning to burn theu frkeat telds and begin plowing. WiUi |Ue heavy growth of traw danaerouii Instead ora tiriillon btisheis, as was wood,- •$ji« Ray has organized an orchestra. Wheatland boasts of the new depot. The Eagles organized at Valley City. Two drains have been ordered at Mayville. Eddy county stockmen want a dip ping tank. Blind piggers have been chased out of Mohall. Harvey had a successful shooting tournament. Williston continues to secure new enterprises. Early settlers in Ransom county may organize. Roads leading into Park River are I to be improved. Devils L.ake had a narrow escape from a bad lire. Some Scotch emigrants have locat ed near Mandan. The creamery agitation at Rugby has been revived.. Illegal shooting has been reported in Pierce county. Many new residences arc'tfieing con structed atjjLakota. Pembina is well satisfied with her gas light|ng plfiit. Litch'vlllQ gets a new elevator, de spite- adverse crops. There.la^a big scrap on at Esmond over Sunday- baseball. Farmers around Hamilton suffered considerablyfrom hail. The grain commission house at Park RlvCr was discontinued. A brlck.-m^tcing plant is in* success ful operatjoy at Mandan. The .bulling for the postoffice at Minot "is almost, completed. Visiting Indians' are traveling over the northern part of the state. t}»vaiier county won prizes on high bred atofcl^at the Winnipeg fair. Grain mehsbave been making trips over- the state pn special trains. The new jnilf at Forman will make that point a better wheat market. Hobos are said to be unusually nu merous along- the Great Northern. Inkster Is to vote a third time on a $6,000 bond issue for fire protection. Attorney Plerson of Lisbon, for merly of Sanborn, will locate at Bow bells.' S. W. Adams has resigned as° the private secretary to Congressman Mar shall. Flour is advancing In price since the balloon ascension In the prices of wheat. Hunters are beginning to secure li censes in anticipation of the opening slaughter. Barley yields have been good in al most all sections where threshing has been done. One of the triplets born to Mr. and Mrs. Thaler of Cavalier county re cently died. A hobo at Devils Lake borrowed a quarter from a business man to file for a homestead. Jamestown sportsmen raised a fund to prosecute any offenders for prema ture shooting. The festive bumblebee has- made life a burden for the haymakers., on the slope ranges. The story of the murder in Morton county by Nathan Ashner, a Jew, in dicated remarkable brutality. La Moure expects to have hfeh-class fire protection when the artesian well and water mains are completed.- A lot of foreign-born residents of the state are getting their naturaliza tion papers so they can vote this fall. Bert Powell of Towner county was arrested and fined on the charge of killing a prairie chicken ahead of time. Ward county farmers have a lot of macaroni wheat and the Minot mill is fitted especially for grinding the grain. Orchestras' are beink organized in some of the smaller towns in the state to furnish music for the dances this winter. Railroad Commissioner Schatz was left at Hope while the train made the trip up the rest of the line without, the official aboard. y. It is understood that a good athletic director will be secured and the May ville normal will give fitting promi nence to clean sport. Kdmorg had a blind pig raid. One of the men slipped out of the back door and the officers had to chase him a mile to effect hia arrest. I An undertaker In the northern part of the state ia offering bargain coun ter rates on coffins, but thereneems to be no rush for the snaps. Ward county people have fine coal beds and claim the aoil is full of oil, gas and gold. The .top part also comes in nice for raising big crop*. Litchville blind plggere were prose cuted by a minister, and they had him arrested on the charge of intimidating an employe, but the action was dis missed. Hobos broke Into the residence of Father Kenny at Grafton. The rev erend gentleman has been In Europe for two months'and his house .was not tenanted. The Phillips academy, erected, by the Congregatlonaliats .at New Rcckford, ia nearing completion and pronciises to be a factor in North Dakota'* educa tional life. The Great Northern will extend, its branch line fronr Walhalla to jthe ce ment mines and clay beds and another good town is assured in that section of the state. There Is a protest at ChurcVs Ferry' because the banip gives no open air concerts. The people may be lucky and not know It, if the bald is like some that have punctured the atmo sphere. Lieut. Gov.- Bartlett is again on duty at the North Dakota world'* fair exhibit after a' short visit at borne, and is doing nome good work in show ing up the resources of the state._ A field of shocked grain on tho state insane asylum farm at Jamestn«n bad narrow escape from annihilation by a prairie fire. Prompt worU on tbe part of the hospital people finally saved tin greater portion of it.. The Red River Valley XJ. at Wah- peton will take a prominent ?wrt in attfetteithip year .and Capt. Steiliscy ui the A..C, football team will be the athletic director. MAY CALL OFF MEAT STRIKE •KILLED WORKMEN WILL QO BACK ON TERMS OFFERED •Y PACKER8. CONCLUDE THAT FIGHT IS LOST EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 16. SUM MONED TO CHICAGO TO COM PLETE 8URRENDER. CONrtRENCfS WITHOUT RESULT ABSOLUTELY NO PROSPECT OF AN AGREEMENT BETWEEN PACKERS AND MEN. Chicago, Aug. 28.—All the members of the executive committee of the' Amalgamated Meatcutters and Butch er Workmen's union have been sum moned to Chicago by telegraph, and It is reported the purpose of this move. Is to call off the strike. According to this report. President Donnelly on'd the other Chicago lead ers have reched the conclusion that they have lost the struggle, and that a prolongation of the strike would he folly. It is said that the laborers will be thrown overboard, while the skilled workmen will be instructed to go back to work on the terms offered by the packers. Terms of Packers. These terms include a wage sched ule equal to that In effect at the time of the strike and the reinstatement of the men as fast as the packers can find work for them. President Don nelly refuses to confirm these reports. Donnelly said in the telegrams sent out: "Negotiations may be opened at any time. "Prospect of settlement good." This is taken to mean that the strikers are ready to give in. Mon day morning the board will seek a di rect conference with the packers and try to learn on what terms the con test can be ended. The packers have never said they would not meet with Donnelly, al though they Have Refused to Listen to overtures made by outside parties. They have said repeatedly tliey will not enter into an agreement with the butcher 'workmen while the present strike lasts, and there are no indica tions now that they ave changed their minds on that point, but they might agree to a conference as a pre liminary step to calling off the strike. The conferences of the council com mittee appointed earlier in the week to attempt a settlement rif the strike with the parties in dispute sgsuited in nothing. -There is no preienC pros pects that they will reiuiit: in any thing in the future, and the chances of an agreement between', the. packers and the strikers appear very meager. ItliNK THEY ARE ROBBERS.' 0 .* Police Capture 8?x Men Witti: Safe cracking T'ool*. La Crosse, Wis., Aug. 28. Armed with Winchesters, a I'svty of city of ficers capturoil six supposed bank robbers yesterday camped on the banks of the Wisconsin river. Upon them were found all sorts of burglar tools and a safe blowing outfit. They gave their names as Joseph Sheldon, James Smooth. William Murphy, John Morgan, Fred Kingiey aiid Frank King. The police believe the gang is the most desperate captured here for years. FOUND A FAMOUS MINE. Death at Dea Moines of Robert Par rott—Vast Wealth Went to Cihera. Des Moines, Iowa, Aug. 28.—Robert Parrott, discoverer of t\i famous Parrott copper mine at Il'.itte, Mont., died here yesterday !-i moderate cir cumstances at the age of seventy-five. As a young man Fzr.-ott went West, and while prospecting discovered the great copper mine which bears his name. His discovery started a spec ulative fever, which makes possible such stories as Thomas Lawson's "Frenzied Finance." Parrott did not profit greatly by his discovery, and his estate will not exceed |6,000. He sold his mine in a few years to Mar sus Daly. ROBBED BY MASKED MEN. Operators at Columbia Falls and Bear Creek Relieved of Money. Helena, Mont.. Aug. 28.—A masked robber .entered the Great Northern depot iat Columbia Falls and at the point of a revolver, compelled Opera tor Luttrell to turn over the contents of the cash drawer, about $90, and escaped. The operator at Bear Creek was also held up and robbed of a watch and a small amount ,ot money. Terminated Her Career. Norfolk, Neb., Aug. 28. Mrs. Kroioa, a Bohemian woman living at Niobrara, stood on a chair, put a rope around her neck, jumped off and was found hy her children. She, was eighty years old and despondent.' Sell* Stricken With Paralysis. "Columbus, Ohio, Aug,. 28. Peter Sells, the well known showman, suf fered, a stroke of paralysis yesterday morning. His physlclaiu regard his condition as critical. He Is flfty saven years (rid. ~T-i-i HOLDING HIS.'OWNy/'i"-"- No Marked Change in Senator Hoar's Condition. Worcester, Mass., Aug! 2S.-^Te8t«r* day afternoon Senator Hoar's sob gave out the following statement: "The senator slept this greater por tion of the day. His pulse, though weak, has been moi-e even. There has been no marked change in hia condition. There has been no further setback, and it looks now'a* fee would hold his owa." .rr Simply H«(f, ftufos Choate .one of the most con servative men of the time as to the slavery question, is said to have ex pressed the opinion, as the result of careful study, that he had no reason to think that the industrial condition of the slave, all tilings considered, was worse than that of the laboring popu lation In most European countries, but that for the colored woman the con dition of slavery was "simply hell."— A Little Girl's Loves. Bessie (aged Ave) was accustomed to come to her mother's room before tho family was up. One Sunday morn ing, while making the customary visit, the odors of breakfast in preparation managed to reach the sleeping quar ters. Bessie, with her arms around her mother's neck, nave one or two vigorous sniffs, then, with an air of anticipation, announced: "Mamina. there's two flngs 1 dess love nios' of enyfing iu do world.'' "What are they, Bessie?" asUeil her mamma. "Ciod and baked beans," Hessie re plied, smacking her lips.—I.ippin colt's. Kentucky Man's Duty. Jamboree, Ky„ August 29 (Special). —After suffering for years with pain in the back Mr. J. M. Coleman, a well known citizen of this place, has found complete cure In Dodd's Kidney Pills. Knowing how general this dis ease Is all over the country, Mr. Cole man feets it Is his duty to make his experience public for the benefit of other sufferers. "I want, to recommend Dodd's Kid ney Pills to everybody who lias.pain In (he back." Mr. Coleman says. "I suffered for years with my back. I used Dodd's Kidney Pills and I have aot felt a pain since. My 'ittie girl too complained of her back and she jscd about half a box of Dodd's Kid ley Pills and she is sound and well." Backache is Kidney Ache. Dodd's Xldney Pills are a sure cure for all Xidncy Aches, Including. Rheuma tism. HAD AN EYE FOR BEAUTY. But It Was the Glass Eye That Look ed at Her. Yesterday afternoon a woman in a Sixth avenue "L" car sat lacing a man who with one eye, at least, seemed to be staring fixedly at her. She became indignant, and said, sharply: "Why do you look at me so, sir?" re The man raised his hat gallantly and replied: "i beg your pardon, madam, but it's this eye, Is it not?" lifting his finger to his left optic. "Yes." "Well, madam, I'm hardly responsi ble for the action of that eye. It's a false one, madam. But upon my word I am not surprised that even a glass eye should be interested in so pretty a woman." The explanation and the compliment combined overwhelmed her with con fusion and she left the train at the first station.—New York Press. Tried to Tip General Manager. The general mauager of a steamboat company was standing on the gang plank of a steamer one day last week when a lady, accompanied by a maid, approached. She asked the general manager if the maid could go aboard with her satchel. "I'd rather she'd stay ashore, as the crush is so great now that she might not be able to return," he said. The lady replied that she desired very much to get her grip on the steamer, and the general manager of fered to take it aboard for her. He did so, and when he returned the lady held out a 5-cent piece. "Here, my good man," she said, "take this." The official, rather astonished, and half a mind to take the coin and then give the lady his card, thought better of It and declined the proffered nickel. Later he acknowledged that the Joke was very much on him.—Balti more Sun. A Very Gallant Author. The Authors' club of Boston devoted a day last month to a visit to the borne of Whittier at Amesbury. As the club members were passing down Amesbury's main street a little girl ran forth from a garden where she had been playing, and accosted gaily her friend, Hezekiah Butterworth, the author and editor. "Mr.1 Bntterworth," she said, as she was taking leave again. "I saw your photograph in a newspaper the other day, and it was so like you that I kiss ed it" "And did it kiss you back?" Mr. Bntterworth asked. "Oh, no," laughed the little girl. "Then, said the author, smiling, "it was not like me."—Cincinnati Enquir er. Newsboy's Limited Permission. The late Ashbel P. Fitch of New York once described in congress an encounter he had had with a Washing ton newsboy. "I was on my first visit to Washing ton,'' Mr. Fitch said, "and naturally I had j^ome little difficulty in finding my way about. There was an alert-look ing newsboy on a corner, and I accost ed him. "'My lad,' I said, 'I want to go to the White House.' "Very well,' said the boy, 'you may go but don't stay more than half an hour."* V'',. •day*Bttseof trial bottl* sad mam* StrMt, rUbuttlfkla, Disfiguration by Matches. Disfiguration on paint from matches that have been left on It may be re moved by rubbing them with the cut side of half a lemon, then with whit ing, and tben with soap and water. OR. J. H. RINDLAUB (Specialist), Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat..,, Fargo, N. D. It is the truths we do and not tho ones we indorse that save us. MINNEAPOLIS. A TftauiLtlOMC DINER. Matt Who Took Away Appetite of th» Other Guests. "See that man coming in," said tho head waiter," heckoniug one of his men. "Get him. In tow quick and lead him to a seat near the window. Don't let him come up here Into the center of the room. Give him a chair facing the street," The unsuspecting cus tomer followed the waiter who met him without an idea that he was being Jed, and was seated as directed. The head waiter breathed a sigh of relief. "That man is a good customer." In said. "I wouldn't like to offend him for the world. Hut he has fallen' into bad habits that work injury to the house If I Id him sit where other guests can see him. .Oh, no. He doesn't put his knife in his month, or anything of that sort. He just makes faces. He grins and stares at the menu card as a cat shows »h teeth to a hostile doK. The trouble is that he can't make up his mind what to order. "Out of fifty-six different dishes on the card it would seem something might strike Ills fancy. But no. Ile'li pull at his mustache und scowl lor ten minutes, giving everybody who looks at him the impression that the whole outfit is bad. Then he'll call me over und tell me lie hasn't any appetite and ask me to pick a dinner for him. He'll eat all 1 send him. too, and perhaps call for more. It's all habit. Then lie is beckoning to me.. now."—New York Press. Anticipated Trouble. Simeon Ford has an able wil which is available on every occasion. Here is a congratulatory telegram sent b.v him last week to a newly-mnrrieir, couple: "May your future troubles lie only 'little ones.' Boston Adevrtiser. Many a man who is cramped for time in this world may have time to burn in the next. Life is the fruit of the past and the seed of the future. iluil "..Ws'niWWlHi.. 7 i'iU:.'11111 inMiiTi.ili"~lii.tifuhV'T,U'.ci:Xlu.' n.li ,,i, .^Vegetable PrcparalionforAs similatiiig tliel'oodnndRegula ling the Stomachs and Bowels of lNBNJ S llll.DKKN Promotes Digestion.Cheerful ness and Rest .Contains neither Opium.Morplune nor Mineral. NOT NAttC OTIC. Umpe If Old Ar SAMUEL PtTQWi Awtw Seal- A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. J) Di jC I EXACT COPY S or WRARPCJL Strenuoua Dyspepsia Cure. "Why, that's nothing," said the waiter in a Fulton street restaurant who nearly dropped a cup of coffee when he saw a man at the next table put a spoonful of horseradish on his ice cream. "Do you see that fellow at the far table? He's a dyspeptic, and he beats anything I ever saw as far as taste goes. That fellow comes in here ev ery day and gets a cup of coffee with his menu. Now, would you believe it, he puts a spoonful of tabasco sauce in that coffee-and drinks it without a wince. He says it's good for dyspep sia,"—New York Sun. Put out the lamp of works antb-yAu lose the light of faith. «H"' BLINDNESS AND DEAFNESS CURED AT HOME Hjrou have weak my**, ht,tranuUud lids, /w** Siai® V,:'' •*. Elizabeth H. Thompson,! of Lillydale, N.Y., Grand Wortlty Wise Templar, and MemberWf YV.C.T.U., tells how she recoV* ercd by the use of Lydia £. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound. Dkaii Mrs. 1'inkiiam -1 !IC ASTORIA am-out* of the many of your grateful friends who have been enrod thronprh th» uf:e of Ljdia E. I'inkhuin'tt Vegetable Compound, und who i:.n to-dev thank you for tho fine health I enjoy. V, hen I was thirty-five years old, I suffered severe backache and frequent beariu(f-down pains in fact, 1 .had womb trouble I was very anxlouSvt'o get well, and reading of thee.nrcH your Coinpouod hud made* I dceided to tiy it. I took only r,i* l]ttles,but it built tic up andeured me entirely of my troubled. My family and relatives vrjtjc naturally as gratified as I was. My niece had heart 1 rouble ,-ind pervonn prostration, and \vi:s considered inCaf ".iile. tociu your Vegetable CiSjn P'mnd nud it cured her in short. tiiw\ :nl i,lie lvo:-.inc well nud strong, and 'r home to her prcat joy and her fvun lvmd's del irfht was blessed with a bahv. 1 l:now of a number of others who have liceii cured of different kindSiof female trouble, and am satisfied that your Compound is the liest medlefna for trick women."—Mr.s. EMZAnrnrll. TnoMPBo.v, Box 105, Lillvdale. N.Vi 95000 forfeit If orlthml of a&otrf Mttf ttnuintneu caimt it produced. 1 For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Use For Over mm tm*«imw mmm. the 0 •kon.. nm to be the Baeet Fateat Leather aide, V. L. Dongas, ImUa, llMS. muom over the eyes or son ||N of atijr klbd, catarrh or deaf&Mtf, rite Cull de scription of vour case and a (rial treatineut will be sent you FREE OF OMAROE. This trial- treatment Is mild and harmless and has cured manr severe cases. Ur. Moor* watt apitofnted'lMr iwoGtorernors.Chi*f KveaodKar Hnrgeon to ilie Mis souri State Institution for the Blind, and was feMorof ttietiyeandKarfntbe MedicalOol-Pro*also American vliileaa method. ISye aod Bar St. ZfOttls* lege. OroMayMstralfehtenedbjrnewiwIiilet writ# to Dk. J. UAAVSY MOOUTBy XaaUtuM, Xulteaa. Oddrellow.'Bldg., I BmSUIHEB 1ITI OBD£iUi FOB FUTURE DELIVERY EXECUTED Woodward & Co., Grain Commisslof L: umu «n. W. L. DOUGLAS S3.50 & S3 SHOES $B.OO $4,00 Custom Bench Wo*k and in all High Grade Leathers. BO Police,Three Soles. $2.60 and WORKINOMCN'8, BEBT IN TMC WORU. $2.50, S2.00 $1.78..Bova, AND Dress and for School wcm. W. I.. Ioticla» make* atul M-lts mora iMii'a S:t.OO und B3.00 •hornthan Any ollieruann fiii'tiira-r In llin world. The rawon they ara I ho uri-ntest neller* In, they *r« made of Oi« beat leathern, hold thuir atiape, fit better, vear longer, :int have more vnlue tbaa any other •hoe«. \V. I,. IHrngla* Kuitr.-iuteei their Tftlne by stamp ing his name ami price on the bottom'. Look fur it take no imlwtlrute. Rotit by alio* dealer* everywhere. Fait Color Kj/clett uied miktivtly. "AS COOD AS $7.00 SHOES." Heretofore haom tna mmarlna Intend tm rmturn to tkm morm mjcpmntlvm thorn*." WM. Gtutr KNOW LBS, Jtut. City Solicitor, Phttm. Brookton Lmmdm thm Mmn'a MHou Fmmhlmmm mt Ihm WtrW, W. I. DohkIu Bhex Coroaa ColUkia la I 8*ixl for Catalog «/«tag full hlafS.SOiihoM.CoroBaCaltlii roared ed I slruetloni how to orthr fr.M purchaamd a pair of W* Z» lW|(t«» J.dJlAorf, which I havm mmrn oumrpdaiffmr four month*. They arm MO taUtfactory I dm mmt iy mall. Benevolence for business only breeds manevolence. WET WEATHER WISDOM! THR ORKINAL tLACK^oa YELLOW |UL KttP TO VwiHK ttxsu TAKCNOSUKTITUTtt eAraiMunracc aHOWIttaTUU. UHC.ar OAHIiCNT* AND MATS. A. J. TOWCR C0.,a0«T0N. ratline MAaa., w.a.A. _TPMCW CAI«API AW QO„tTO., TDIIOWTO, CAWABA, When Answerins Advertisements, Kindly Mention This. Paper. N. D. N. U. —NO. 36— 1904. O N W I C_) N UXL