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l(£/V I SHORT ROUTE FAST TIME ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS TO ALL POINTS IN THE NORTHWEST AND ON TUB PACIFIC OAST. Information from representatives of the Great Northern Hallway at NEW YOltK, 413 Broadway. BOSTON. 211 Washington tit. PHILADELPHIA, 836 Clieatnut St. HUFFALO. 408 Prudential Hulldlng. PITTSBUllli. 902 Park Building, 5to Ave. CHICAGO, 220 S. Clark St. MILWAUKKli, 60 Wisconsin St. DETROIT' Nor. S. S. en's Dock. CINCINNATI, 5th and Walnut Streets ST. LOUIS, 803Carletoii Building. ST. PAUL, 832 ltobort Street. MINNEAPOLIS, 300 Nicollet Avenue. Pite! Piles! Piles! Dr. Williams' Indian PileOintment Will cure Blind, Bleeding, Ulcerated and Itching Plle3. It absorbs the tumors, allays the itching at once, acts as a poultice, gives instant relief. Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment Is prepared only for Piles and Itching of the private parts, and nothing else. Every box is guaranteed. Sold by druggists, sent by mail, for 50c. and •1.00 per box. WILLIAMS'M'F'G Co., Prop's Cleveland, Ohio. For sale by Shuttleworth Drug Co. 07yl When you haVe an appetite that nothing seems satisfy9 to it's a sign Uneeda Biscuit There's nothing too good for your Baby. SoflfSolcs, K0 different hlyluH, nil color*. Drop I'OKtnlforCutfilojnio N'o. 4 to tho li. Meyer SIlOC CO., WATJIIiTOW.N WISCONSIN. Wo can give yon iuat what you want. I'oav uoweis Wirli Ca8ouwc» Candy Cathartic, cure constipation torev6* ill ffin ii u. C. £aluadi&ooa* soda biscuit that nearly all nutriment. Id everywhere at five cents a package. NATIONAL BISOUIT OOMPANV MORNING AMD EVENING, -r.Ui^DAY THE, LATEST AND FULLEST NE.WS. THE BRIGHTEST EDITORIALS. Uneeda Biscuit A A THE TWENTIETH CENTURY NEWSPAPER HEARST'S CHICAGO J&T-R.Z ONB CBN T. FIVE CBNTS. THE SVtfVAy ISS17E COJVTAIJVS Separate Grea-t Magazine of Illustrated information. A Humorous Weekly Printed in Colors. Magazine of Current Thought and Opinion Written by the Ablest Men and Women Thinkers of the World, and a Separate Sheet Music Folio Containing the Latest Popular Songs. OU'DEH*- TWROX/CH YPY/V. SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Payable In Advance) Morning or Evening (Without Sunday). Sunday Edition. One Year $3.00 One Year $2.50 Six Months 1.50 Six Months 1.25 One Month 25 One Month 25 iss Laoraiue Mead Pupil of Wm. II. Sherwood, Chicago, TEACHER OF PIANO PLAYING ASSISTED BY MISS GENEVIEVE DiSSMORE Pupil Of W Wm. llates ot' Taittou: "WITH MISS MEAD- Term 20 hr. lessons $12.00 20 J-hr. 10.00 20 hr. 6.00 WITN MISS DISSMOKE. Term 20 hr. lessons 810.00 20 hr. 8.00 20 hr. 5.00 Beferences: Miss Mead is a conscientious and intslligent music teacher.—Fin. II. Sherwood. Miss Mead studied in Boston one year, part of the time was under my immediate instruction in the branch of piano. Miss Mead is very studious and her progress was entirely satis factory. She has had experience in teaching and it affords me great pleasure to recommend her.—J1. M. Davis, Professor of Piano and Violin, Boston Training School of Music. Kodol Dyspepsia Curs Digests what yoss eat. It artificially digests tha f-«ds nd aM» Nature iu strengthening and I'econ structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It is tlio latest discovered 1 inst ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in stantly relieves iind permanent cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Hunt-burn, Flatulence, Sour Stomas 1, Nausea, Sick Headache. Gastralgia,' hathpsand all other res its of imperfect digestion. Prlco50c. and *1. Largo size eonti.iiiS times small size. Jiouk ill aboutdyspeps anutiledfretf Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & CO.. Cblcaao DOEM'T BE FOOLED! Take the fei:uinc, original ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA «»i»UTUitu tut®. Atk your drujfgU*. THE BE.ST ILLUSTRATIONS. THE FUNNIEST CARTOONS. |.| |.| |1 A in Every Home THE NEW AND ENLARGED WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY Sherwood and Suyder. E.DITION OF WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY A Dictionary of ENGLISH, Biography, Geography, Fiction, etc. New Plates Throughout 25,000 New Words Phrases end Definitions Prepared under the direct super vision of W. T. HARRIS. Ph.D., LL.D., United Suites Commissioner of Edu cation, assisted by a largo corps of com petent specialists" and editors. Rich duelings 2364 Quarto Pases I SO00 IlJ-Jiotratlons 5 A first in LS!)0,*MCIE(lint/ the The New and Enlarged .Edition of the\ International was issutd IN October,I 1900. CM the LATEST ami brxt. Wo ti! Webster's Coliesiata Dictionary with Glossal'}" or Vilt is'j Words and l'liniscs-l I 1100 Pages. liOO liiii.itJiiUvi.'-. Slao T.JOsS WJ itchus. Tii'gt-chissia quality. yocoiul-chiss in size." Specimen pages, cto. of both bociis sent on application. *G.£C. MERRIAM CO. UJCTia PwMs&liera, Syr-jiRgfield. Mass. LADIES! afflicted with Female Weak ness can procure FREE a 50c package of "BALM OF FIGS" Nature's own remedy, by ap plying to MRS- O- S. MULKS, Lock Sox 577 Ricevillo, Iowa- FOR SALE! haw mvr i'iOOO acres for sale in U.o Bol iiiver Valley i.'i North Dakota iind Minnesota (the IH'SI agricultural lands lit Hie world) at very ronsiutaM'.- Prieis and besides over 14'tao aeri'.- 'if 'iij vii lan.l. 1 also have oyer noi'.'o acri's ,ij' lU'" I.1—1. ii'i't./ii rjiaziiii hmds. Twelve Fins Sections of Graz ing Lanes ai $3 per acre. If you want to huy luiitls, call or write to E. Made only by Madison Medi cine Co., Madison, Wis. It keeps you well. Our tra.lo mark cut on each package. Price, 35 cent5. Never laid In bulk. Accept no «ubitl« G. M£LLEM, ScatidinavUiu American Bank bid#., Cor, 6tU and Jaokson Sts., 77t4 bX, l'AUI., MINN, E A in 3 O S Th? hv rV 5.,.i rywhere, *?•»".r .11 i«r a 1:1? in air, i' i.« r.... r. Kr.nwn fcuive Ood alor.e. II I'.cildffh n:.»ni or. ros^ii, Nor knowoth new. nor»ld l':.dcr liund, aj? os-o»ns bloom, 5?o tin the worlds unfold Wiih nolilu-r r.olsa- i:or ti'.raln of strength From tcr.gth i«i ler.Bth. IIis sut5(tnnco doth not full, nor spoil, Nr. r-hrc.a.'lln^" I.li th upon Ills tlivk-ss toil ht» builds thi* irnl\vrt ll' knows not hhavinv^s, nor haste, Nor want, nor wa^tc. IIow beautiful He bulldeth all The- heavens and earth recite, Though slow as creeps through crannied wall The unreluctant light Our hearts let in, as 'twere distress, Life's loveliness. He hnth no lack for any child, Nor here, nor anywhere Who seems to lack hath beeji beguiled Par from the gates of prayer Where all may enter without stealth Into God's wealth. Wo have bot glimpsed A hall-way here, Yon tapestry of Death, Though wrought with curious forms of fear, Is lifted with a breath. And lo, His parlors stretch away For aye, for aye. —Robert Whltaker, In Christian Work. I A a a f^esoutfee By JHARY GHUflT. FAR as the eye could seo stretched the spinifex, yellow as a cornfield, and the illusion was heightened by the desert oak dotted here and there—neat busy trees such as one may see any day in a gentleman's park in England only John Weston knew these were no Eng lish oaks, and the thorny spinifex cut his mare's legs cruelly. Overhead was the hard blue deep ening to purple, and there was not the smallest fleck of cloud in the whole expanse. The sun poured down his fierce rays on the young man's head, till the heat seemed to burn through his hat and deaden his senses. "Surely," he muttered to himself, slipping off liis tired horse, "the sta tion ought to be hereabouts. Fifty miles to the westward, 20 miles back from Lonughan's Kidg-e—I reckon, old girl, we must have done that," and he patted his mare's flank and took oil the water bag that hung at her neck. There was only enough water left to wet his mouth, and the canvas up at the top was dry as a bone. He could not afford to let that precious water dry uy as it was doing in the fierce heat, and he drained it to the last drop. The mare whinnied pitifully as the smell of water came to her nostrils, and suddenly she turned and snatched the empty bag and tore it between her teeth in a vain endeavor to extract some moisture from the canvas. Weston stood appalled. Suddenly the full significance of the situation dawned upon him, and a sweat broke out on his forehead. He hod left the water-hole at mid-day yesterday, and he had seen 110 water since. He should have reached Wonga WTonga out-sta tion last night, and yet here he had been riding since dawn, and there was not a sign of it. He had left the rolling red sand-hills behind, and entered on the strip of spinifex country which lay between the water-hole and the dut station—a belt, they said, not more than 20 miles wide. Twenty miles? He must surely have ridden 40 miles through this spinifex, and he looked at the mare with the canvas bag in her teeth. It looked as if— Heavens! Was it possible? He sprang to the saddle, put. spurs to the lior#e, o-nd turned on the back track. He felt a» if lie must ride like the wind. The only water he knew of :24 hours behind him, li-is own til rout parched and dry, and his mare frantic with thirst. He had never seen steady old Jess behave like that be fore. and he had bred her himself in the cool, wet country down in the south of Victoria round Warrnambool, and brought her with him when Fate decreed lie should visit his property here in central Australia. For a moment or two he galloped the mare was flecked with foam, and then Weston drew rein. JS'o need tp get in a panic that would never mend matters, lie rode tip to a tree. There was no spinifex underneath its branches, and there was some little shade from the burning sun. lie dis mounted. and tying the old stock horse's rein to the stirrup, laid him self flat on his back and pressed his liat down over his eyes to shut out the garish light. Host—born bushman as he was, he knew he was lost but where had he missed his way? The thought of the water-hole filled him with longing, and his wife's fair face pushed itself unbid den before his mind's eye. What if he were to die here and leave her and the boy! But 110, now was not the time to think of her. lie must have missed his way some time after leaving the wator-liole. He had been riding west, therefore—he thought- of the well known tendency to bear to the right he must be too much to the north. Eas ily put right surely—if only—if only— horse and man could hold out. lie must start, he must, the precious minutes were wasting away but should he go backward or forward? Forward, of course he must go for ward with the nearest water 24 hours behind liiin he dared not turn back, and tiie out-station must be away to the southwest. Solve arose, mounted, took a good look at the sun, and set out in that direction. They went so slowly, it seemed, so terribly slowly and he would have ridden, had he dared, at full speed. It was phiying with life, drivelling it away to creep along like this, but the mare could go no faster if he dis mounted and walked he could go no faster, and i'olly would break her heart if he did not coone back. Poor little Polly! The spinifex came to an end at last, and before him stretched the red sand with hardly a sign of vegetation upon it. Here -was a little patch of dried salt bush, and he looked eagerly for Bome portulaoa or "pic's face," .whioh would have been as good as a draught of water for horse and man, but there was not a sign of it. Still wearily horse and rider plodded on. There was noth ing else for it. To sit still was death, and ho might as well goon, for he knew now that lie had completely lost, him self. Tf lie turned back he could not be making the water-hole he had left so lightly yesterday. Tlien the suit went down, and the moon, round and red and hot, rose in the cant, and he took oft saddle and bridle, for he felt the marc must rest. How the. night passed he could hard ly have told. It was like some terrible dream when haunting, cruet memories tortured him. Ilis wife, his boy, his mother came to him, and when he would have spoken and implored them to help him they vanished away. Wheli morning dawned and the long night was over, he found that the mare was gone Jess had deserted him and had gone to look for water on her own account. It was his own fault, of course, and he wondered that a few lvnurs' thirst should have demoralized him So. Ho understood now Why men went mad—it was the suffering and the aw ful loneliness, and he rose to his feet and walked steadily on in the direction of a line of posts that were going straight across country. He must walk in one direction he might as well walk towards them as in any other. They gave him a sense of—* Grertt Heavens 1 Was he mad al ready? Surely any one but a madman would have recognized the trans-con tinental telegraph line.. Here was safety within his grasp and he did nit seem to understand it aftd, with a great dread that his reason was indeed HE WAS UPSETTING THE NEWS OF AUSTRALASIA. going, he ran on and stood underneath the Wire that stretched away north ond south to civilization and home and happiness. He clapped his hands, ho shouted, and his voice sounded hoarse and strailge, and then he prepared to walk along the line but the first station might be.a hundred miles away, for all he knew, and he could not walk ten. His only course was to interrupt com munictition and bring help. But how? There stretched the wire over his head, o"ut of his reach. The poStB wera stout and strong, but his head was in a whirl, his knees felt weak, he knew he could not climb up them. He took out his knife but the wood was hard as iron. And then he bethought himself of his watch, autTh(5 used the glass as a burning-glass. It was tedious work, and lie was desperate with thirst yet before his eyes, in blurred lines, was priirted the announoement in the morn ing's paper—in many morning papers —that telegraphic communication was "interrupted again somewhere north of Baker Springs, and therefore we have no cSbles from ifurope this morn ing." He was upsetting the news of Australasia—and a little curl of smoke appeared' beneath his glass. At Baker Springs they understood it all. "Must be a lost man, bother him," said Jack Cameron. "There's been no storm to bring down the posts, and the niggers, bless 'em, however much they fancy the insulators, aren't likely to be between here and Conindie this dry weather. It takes a white man to make a fool of himself that way." And at nightfall tlicy'found John Westoil, who had forgotten he was John Weston, in his shirt, folding up the rest of his clothes, which he found too heavy to bear on him, preparatory to starting out into the desert, be cause he was convinced he must reach his home in far-away Warrnambool before another day dawned.—Pear son's Magazine. 'the Wealth of Nations. The year book of the London Daily Mail, estimates the wealth of the United States as more than equal to the combined riches of France anH Kussia as twice that of Germany and as greater by $22,000,000,000 than that of Great Britain. In round num bers it appears that the wealth of the leading nations is: United States JSl.660,000,000 Great Britain 59,030,«)0 0W Franoe is.tso.ooo.ow) Germany 40.260.000,x* Russia 82,135,000,ooc The percentage of debt to wealth is: United States, 1.4 per cent. United Kingdom, 6 per cetit. Germany, 8.1 per eeait. Russia, 11.1, and France, 15!.8 per cent. NATURE'S I uRj^ Pain in Head, Side and Back. For yearS 1 suffered with pain In the head, pain In the side, and in Uio small of the back. 1 was nervous and constipated and could not sleep. Tho pills and other medicines tried only made a bad matter worse. Tlien I tried Celery King. One package cured tne and made a new woman of me.—Sirs. Til. Klee hammer, Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. Celery King cures Constipation and Nerve, Btomach, Liver and Kidney Diseases. 2 Wanted! 100 horses 5 years and upwards, weighing 1000 pounds and upwards, for the Eastern markets. Will be at Ruddy's barn during the spring and summer. 58tf E. ANDERSON. KNEW AND WAS NOT AFRAID. A Dying Mother Gaiua Oonrnse for Kler Jonrney Away from ller Little Dnngliter. A touching and most unusual little Incident of a young mother who was hopelessly ill, but quite unconscious of her condition, is described by tho Boston Courier. One afternoon the physicians held a consultation, and afterward an nounced to the husband and sister of the patient the sad fact that she had but a short time to live. It was questioned whether it would be advisable to tell the sick woman or not. They talked the matter over quite unmindful of little Edith, the five-year-old child of the dying wom an, who was quietly playing with her dolls, apparently unconscious of what was going on about her. In a few minutes the little girl left her toys, walked slowly up the stairs and went directly to her mother's room. With the aid of a oh&ir she climbed on the bed, kissed her mother's pale oheek, and then asked her in low, tender tones: "Mamma, are you 'f'aid to die The mother was at first startled by the question and asked: "Who told you? Do they think—" "Oh, mamma, dear," murmured the child, "you needn't bo 'f'aid at all. Hold my hand tight shut your eyes close. I will stay by you, and when you wake up adain it »vill be all right." The eyes were closed, the hand tightly clasped for a few minutes, and when, a little later, the other members of the family entered tho room the mother was quietly sleep ing, and the child said: "I told mamma, and she was not Tald to die." The sick woman opened her eyes and Baid: "Yes, I know, and I am not afraid." A SPINNING GHOST. Upon Investig-atlon Proved to Be a Rat Enjoying a Ron Around the Wheel. On the post road in southern New Hampshire stands an old house which was once famous for its ghost. It had been a tavern, owned and man aged by two brothers and two sis ters named Mason, relates the Youth's Companion. The youngest of the family, Han nah, had been jilted in her youth. After her desertion she never entered any door save that of her own home, but gave all her strength to hard work. She would hatehel flax for weeks, spin unceasingly and weave on a hand loom, without apparently a thought of rest. She died after a short illness, and still travelers said that their slum bers were disturbed by the whir of the wheel. Soon it was whispered about that the Mason house was haunted. Strange sounds were heard from the garret where Hannah had always worked, and plainest of all was the hum of the great wool wheel. The brothers heard the story, and at once set out to solve the mystery. Joseph went to the garret and watched. After a time the wheel be gan to revolve. He struck a light. On the rim of the wheel was a great rat, running around. Frequent visits to the garret ren dered this rat so tame that he would come out on the spinning wheel by daylight, and several others were oc casionally seen to take a spin in the wheel, as if it were a pleasant recre ation. A PRINCE'S EDUCATION. One Thing That Little Edward ot York Rebelled Airalnat But Bad to Learn. The present idol of the British pub lic is Prince Edward of York, eldest son of the duke of York, grandson of the prince of Wales, great-grandson of Queen Victoria, and heir in the direct line of the crown of Great Britain. Prince Edward, having been born on June 23, 1894, is now well into his sixth year, and regards himself as quite a big boy, says Youth's Companion. His brother Albert is a year younger, and the two princes have had, perhaps, their share, but no more, of brotherly "scraps." The duke of York is said not to have interfered with their small wars, sayuag that to "let them fight it out will make them better men." But he has interfered successfully with an other weakness of Prince Edward. It is customary for the royal chil dren, in meeting the queen, to kiss her hand and not her cheek but Prince Edward did not like to do this, and ob jected strenuously. One day he heard some one speak of "her majesty." "I know who 'her majesty' is," said he "it's just granny!" "And who was the naughty little prince who would not kiss granny's hand?" "That was me," said Prince Edward, unabashed, "and I'm not going to kiss granny's hand!" But when he had arrived at the age of five he felt himself quite a man, and began to do as other men did—kissed the queen's hand and always doffed his cap in her presence. Performed a Filial Duty. Joe was such a pathetic little man. He came from a quarter of the city where crime and misery had formed a background for the five weary years of his unnatural little life. He was late to kindergarten one morning, and was asked to sit by the door until the morning exereiscs were over. Before being restored to grace the teacher asked him why he was so late. "Well," replied Joe, "the patrol came after my mother, and I waited to sea hev off." —Chicago Tribune. Leads Them All- "Que Minute Cough Cure beats all other medicine I ever tried fur coughs colds, croup and throat and lung troub les," says I). Scott.Ourrin of Loganton. L'il. One Minute Cough Cure is ihe only absolutely safe cough remedy which acts immediately. Mothers ev erywhere testify to the good it has done their little ones. Croup is so sudden in its attacks that the doctor often arrives too late. Ityieldsatonce to One Minute Cough Cuie. Pleasant take. Children like it. Sure cure for Ito grip, bronchitis, coughs.—Shuttle worth Drug Co. LI kills, not necessarily suddenly, b.:L EUiruLY. It preys upon the intellectual powers more than we realize. It consumes the vitality faster thnn nature can replenish it, and we cannot tell just what moment a temporary or complete aberration of the mind will result. Headache and pain should bo promptly re moved— but properly. Many pain cures are more harmful than the pain. Bewara. If you would be safe, take Miles' Pain Pills. "As a result of neuralgia I lost the sight of my right eye, and the pain 1 have suffered is Incomprehensible, be ing obliged to take opiates almost con tinually. A friend (jave me one of Dr. Miles' 1'ain ''ills and it promptly re lieved me. I then purchased a bo* and now my trouble is pone. They have also cured ray daughter of nervous headache, and I heartily recommend them to others."—W. J. CORLEY. Bre niond,Texas. Sold by Druggists. 25 Doses, 25c. Dr. Mileo Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. THE NEW YORK. WORLD Thrlce-n-Week Kilitlnn. The Most Widely Read News* paper in America. Time has demonstrated that the Thrice-a-Week World stands alone in its class. Other papers have imitated its form but not its success. This is because it tells all the news all the time and toils it impartially, whether hat, news he- political or otherwise. It is, in fact, almost a daily at the price of a weekly and you cannot afford 10 be without it. Republican and Democrat alike can read tho Thrice-a-Week World with absolute confidence in its truth. In addition to news, it publishes first-class serial stories and other features suited to the home and 11 reside. 'Die Thrice-a-Week World's regular subscription price is only $1.00 per y^ar and this pays for 150 papers. We tier this unequalled newspaper and the PLAIN LMIALISU together one year for $1.70. The regular subscription price of the two papers is $2.00. Spring Fever- Spring fever is another name for bll iousmss. It is more serious than most people think. A torpid liver and in active iwe'is mean a poisoned system. It neglected, serious illness may fol low such symptoms. DeWitt's Little Early ilisers remove all danger by stimulating the liver, opening the bowels and cleansing the system of impurilies. Safe pills..Never gripe. "I have taken DeWitt's Little Early Ris ers for torpid liver every spring for years," writes R. M. Everly, Mounds ville, W. Ya. "They do me more good than anything I have ever tried."— .Shuttleworth Drug Co. To All Whom It May Concern Tlie Commissioner appointed to relocate a 11 ijliway. eoinineucintr at the south-west eorn of section No. 12 in towasiiip No. 93, North r.iuge No. 13. West ot the 51U Principal Merid ian, In Howard township, Howard county, Iowa, runnliifrtUenca Nortli-e isturly and terminating 011 the East and West center line of said section l-', where said road joins road No. 20 and at its western terminus be altered as follows: Com mencing on tUo line of said highway at the South-west corner of said section 12-98-13, run ning tnence north on tne section line between sections 11 and 15, a distance or one half mile and terminating at the west quarter corner ot said section 12 011 said highway and tliat all that poitlon ot said ltoud No. 5, lying between the oiunieuci mcnt and tPi-minus ot Hie above alteration be vac ited lias reported in tavor of the relocation thereof, and all objections there to 01- claims for damages must be tiled In tho Auditor's oilice 011 or before noon of the 3Ctli day of July, A. 1), 1902, or such Highway will be lelocated without further reference thereto. BatedCresco, Iowa, May 27,191)2. T0W4 GEO. L. C11AVPL1N. County Auditor. A MYSTERY TO ALL Expliiiued by tiie Root and Herb Medicine Co. •Alio are at Cresco to stay, with a full line of pure medicines for the treat ment of all diseases the human body is heir to. Come or order by N. I. 'phone 22U. Remember in these pure medicines there are no carving knives corrosive poisons to just lull your pains at preseut. Remember 30 years'experience talks Sold by Prof. Caswell & Co.. Cresco, la- You pay IO cents for Cigars not so good AS LEWIS' SINGLE BINDER CIGAR STRAIGHT^ F.P. LEWIS, MANTIS PEORIA,III. u. M, & ST. P, TABLE GOING RAST, -iiiflugo I'&ssenger ana Kxprens 1:15 .p ra for Ctliour 1:40 a. in S:00«,ui 11:25 .a in ijOlKi WEST -1 i'asai ,.gor tor St.1'HUI, Mi:U:-:ipolli-. «:23it. in 5 1 i.ii! sr' -«i'c 12:48 p. for AneS'ii 1:60 p. 8:50p. in .r iy, oscept Sur.d.i/, tor 1ft 1.••-.".1 r:iic"\,i, U1 eucopl Sunday. jl'.-iw.# «.iu Hid b&Mtage ebeoked '.r-juitu -..I iioiii.t. H.J. Wkidi, Agent, y,*G i'V-'CUSAIHhitatheta•c\N .. .i iaxuj.a:.: growth. .. Restore Or*9,