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& A Wonderful Record? As made up by improved and exact jrocesses Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip j*i is a most efficient remedy for regu- 4 (. Lng all the womanly functions, correct ,%« displacements, as prolapsus, antever lon and retroversion, overcoming painful enods, toning up the nerves and bring ng about a perfect state of health. It ures the backache, periodical headaches, —be dragging-down distress in the pelvic egioa, the pain and tenderness over wf abdominal region, dries up the elvic catarrhal drain, so disagreeable nci weakening, and overcomes every ?rm of weakness incident to the organs stinctly feminine. "Favorite Prescription" is the only ledicine for women, the makers of vhich are not afraid to print their formula on the bottle wrapper. thu3 taking their patrons into their full con fidence. It is the only medicine for women, every ingredient of which has the strongest possible endorsement of the most eminent medical practitioners and writers of our day, recommending it for the diseases for which "Favorite description'5 is used. It is the only put up medicine for women, sold through druggists, which does not con tain a large percentage of alcohol§so harmful in the long run, especially to delicate women. It has more genuine cures to its credit than all other medi cines for women combined, having saved thousands of sufferers from the operating table and the surgeon's knife. It has restored delicate, weak women to strong and vigorous health and virility, making motherhood possible, where there was barrenness before, thereby brighten ing and making happy many thousands of homes by the advent of little ones to strengthen the marital bonds and addand sunshine where gloom and despondency had reigned before. Write to Dr. E. V. Pierce. He will send you good, fatherly, professional advice, in a plain, sealed envelope, absolutely free. Address him at Buffalo, N. Y. '4 Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets do notmoner gripe. They effectually cleanse the sys tem of accumulated impurities. The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, by Dr. Pierce, 1008 pages, is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the cloth-bound volume. Address as above. '•WISDOM IN BUYING IS TO BUY ONLY THE BEST' A $ure Way To IncreaSeYourDollars We always have a good $tock of $ea$on able Fruit$»received fre$h every day. -S*3^9^^^?S^ If you are looking I for profits buy from US. We sell only the Be$t nd makeprice$ right aA Red Front Grocery p^e.43 Bierbaum & Backer NINETY MILLION BUSHELS! —That's the WHEAT CROP in Western Canada this Year. This, with nearly 80.000,000 bushels ol oats and 17.000.00C bushels of barley, means a continuation ol Cood Times for the Farmers ol Western Canada. Free Farms, Big Crops, Low Taxes, Healthy *. Climate, Good Churches and Schools, Splendid Railway Service. The Canadian Government offers 160 acres ol land free to every settler willing and able to com ply with the Homestead Regulations. Advice and information may be obtained free fron: W. 0. SCOTT,Sup'tof I immigration,Ottawa, Can., or from Order for Hearing and Notice of Application for Appointment of Administrator. STATE OF MINNESOTA, 1 E a O N O O W N \~b In Probate Court. 'i Special Term, August 24th, 1906. In the matter of the estate of E Duetsch deceased. On reading and filing the petition of George Deutsch of Linden, Iinn., rep resenting a other things, that Kune Deutsch late of Linden, Minn., on the .... day of April^A. D. 1906, at Linden, Minn., died intestate, and be in a resident of this County, at the time .* r. of his death, leaving goods, chattels and V'estat within this County, and that the ... said petitioner is a son of said deceased, •"*'J* and praying that administration of Saicured estate be to George Deutsch granted: It is ordered, that said petition be heard I before the Judge of this Court, on Thurs., I. the 20th day of September A D. 1908, at 10 I o'clock, A.M., at the office of the Judge of I Probate in the city of Ne Ulm in said county, £, Ordered Further, that notice thereof be given to the heirs of said deceased, and to all persons interested, publishing a copy of this order once in each week for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing, in the N Ul Review a weekly newspaper printed and published at Ne Ul in said County. Dated at Ne Ulm Minn., the 24th day of Augus A. D. 1906. the Court, (Seal.) S. A. GBORGB, v-.-./:.'35-37 Judge of Probate. Professional JDfsnlty. "What wages do yon expect?" asked Mrs. Randolph of Aunt Pbronie. who had come to hire as' cook.' "Well, Ah tell yon. Ef Ah cooks an* waits on de table, too, Ah 'spects $2 ebery week Ah lives, b-u-t ef 70* all has family reach at de table an* Ah jes* nab ter cook,-den Ah charges er dollar an* fo* bits."—Pittsburg Dis patch. Starving: to Death. Because her stomach was to weakened by useless drugsinfr that she could not eat, Mrs. Mary Walters, of St. Ciair St., Columbus, O., was literally starving to death. She writes: stomach wa* so wesik from useless drugs that I could not eat, and my nerves so wrecked that I could not sleep and not before I WHS sfiven up to die was I induced to try Elcctiic Bitters with the wonderful re suit that improvement began at once, and a complete cnre followed." Best health Tonic on earth. 50«\ Guaran teed by O. M. Olsen druggist. A A KngMah" WortcbotuM. In the records of St Thomas hos pital, London, is an entry of the year 1570 to the effect that "in consMeratian of the bote tyme of the yere" the poor be allowed **every one ft day three pyntts of Bere for two months," a quart at dinner and a pint at supper, at the end of two months return to "there olde ordinary allowance, wyche is one quarte." The food at this ancient workhouse was to be dealt wtth as liberally as the drink. The al and steward were to "bye no byffe but of the best, without bones and in speciall without the marybon, and none other to be bowgbt,"' No one would buy a sailboat with sails that could not be reefed. Tnere is always that possibility of a little too much wind that makes a cautious man afraid to go unprovided. The thinking man, whose stomach sometimes goes back on him, provides for his stomach by keeping a bottle of Kodol For Dys pepsia within reach. Kodol digests what you eat and restores the stomach to the condition to properly perform its functions. Sold by EugeneA. Pfefferle. Tike Golf Ball A collector of evidence on the subject maintains learnedly. that the golf ball 1B the most perverse of human Insti tutions. Herb is a list of strange lies noted by a follower of the ancient game: In another player's pocket, where it had dropped after traveling 200 yards In a cow*s mouth on the roof of a clubhouse behind the glass protecting a painting hanging on a cottage wall in a clump of daisies, which it so resembled that it was not found for an hour. When it fell in the coWs mouth the frightened animal galloped 276 yards nearer the hole and then restored the ball to Its owner. He promptly claimed to have driven it 337 yards and the right to play it from where tt lay. The Breath ol Life. It's a significant fact that the strong est animal of it's size, the gorilla, also haa the largest lungs. Powerful lungs means powerful creatures. How to keep the breathing organs right should be man's chiefest study. Like thousands of others, Mrs. Ora A. Stephens, of Port Williams, O., has learned how todo this. She writes: "Three bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery stopped my cough of two years and cured me of what my friends thought consumption. O, it's grand for throat and lung trouble*." Guaranteed by G. M. Olsen druggist. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. So Guarantee. A sporting paper recommends a cer tain way of avoiding the bites of a dog, however savage. All one has to do is to stand perfectly still and hold one's band out The dog, says the writer, will take the hand In his mouth, but will not bite it. But what guarantee have we that the dog knows this?—London Globe. Stifl^t Needed. It Is best to be courteous to all, even to the man that you dislike. You may want to borrow money from him some fay.—Boston Globe. In these days of rush and hurry courtesy is often forgotten. In theand mad, pell mell rush of our life little things are done to offend that we rather remained undone. A hastily eaten meal and its reluctant headache may cause us social or financial loss. The wise man* or woman is the one who relieves little ills of this sort by a little dose of Kodol For Dyspepsia. It di gests what you ea^ and puts your stomach back into shape. Solb by Eugene A. Pfefferle. This I Different. **Loveomakes the world go round." The world seems to go round, but love makes your head swim. That's the explanation. Hoiv to Beautiful "What do you do to keep so beauti ful?" they asked the butterfly. **I? I do nothing," she replied. A deep, genuine sincerity is. the first characteristic of all men in any way leroic.—Carlyle. Bow's Tbis? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. E N E & CO., Toledo. O. We,the undersigned, have known F.J Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm.ggi WALDIXG, KlNTNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Care is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and muc ous surfaces of the system Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Famil Pills for constipation. T±» wagea-of sin tirofnofexafrterlany changed to iome-thoafland* of St Lotilt GrobeDamacmt .. "To Cure a Felon**......., :s.,_..,., says Sam KumUll, of PhiJlipsburg,Kan. "just cover it over with Bucklen's Arni ca Salve and the Salve will dp the rest." Quickest cure for Burns, Boila, Sores, Scalds, Wounds, Piles,5 Eczema, Salt Rheum, Chapped Bands, Sore Feet and Sore Eyes. Only'25c at Q. MvJ&sen,'6 drug store. Guaranteed. "^%$3$2|&-^ The earliest known mentfarv of shav ing is in the Bible (Genesis xllv, 14), "And be (Joseph) shaved himself and came before Pharaoh,'5 Shaving the beard was Introduced by- the Bomana abomVSOO B. C. T*h* Optimist. Small Boy—Pa. what is an optimist? Pa—An optimist, my son, is a man who doesn't care a blank what happens, so that It doesnt happen to Mm.—life, sff A bath cleanses the skin and rids the pores of refuse. A bath makes for better fellowship and citizenship. Not only should the outside of the body be cleansed, but occasional use of a laxa tive or cathartic opens the bowels and clears the system of effete matter. Best for this are DeWitt's Little Early Risers. Pleasant little pills that do not gripe or sicken. Sold by Eugene A. Pfefferle. Tike Ar 0 be Parasol A well adjusted parasol enables you to hide blushes you dont want people to see and to hide the blushes that aren't there If yon want people to think they are, and it enables yon to cut people who deserve to be cat and to avoid people whom yon daren't cut, but whom you particularly don't want to see.—"The World and His Wife." Well Worth Trying. W H. Brown, the popular pension at torney, of Pittstield, Vt., says: "Next to a pension, the best thing to get is Dr. King's Ne Life Pills." writes: "they keep my family in splendid health." Quick cuie for Headache, Con stipation and Biliousness. 25c Guar anteed at O. M. Olsen's drug store. Obeye Orders. "v Sir Henry Roscoe tells this of the scientist Faraday and his assistant, Sergeant Anderson: "Anderson was the sole assistant to Faraday and of course was utterly uneducated in scien tific matters, but he could obey orders, which is not always a characteristic of an educated man. One day Anderson was told by Faraday to keep stirring a pot containing some chemicals over a fire until be returned, Faraday being hi the habit of going upstairs to tea in his rooms and coming down directly afterward to work in the laboratory during the evening. For some reason he was prevented from coming down again and forgot that he hadtoldAn derson to watch the pot. On coming down the next morning he found An derson still stirring the pot, having been at It the whole night and thus car rying out the order which was given him." When you have a cold it is well to be very careful about using anything that will cause constipation. Be par ticularly careful about preparations containing opiates. Use Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar, which stops the cough and moves the bowels. Sold by Eugene A. Pfefferle. Life S a in at Ftves If lives are in danger at a fire it Is a universal rule that life saving takes precedence over fire fighting. If fire escapes are lacking or seriously ob structed all hands devote their entire energies to the work of rescuing by raising ladders, by forcing a passage through smoke filled hallways or by other emergency means. Life nets are spread and held ready for those who have not the nerve to wait for their resetters. Life saving consumes vain able time which could be appliedtoad vantage in fighting the flames, and the probable necessity for expending this time, governed as tt is by many con siderations, plays an important part in studies of underwriters. Occasionally pompier ladders or window scaling lad ders are used in emergencies far mak ing rescues. These furnish thrilling incidents for the newspapers, but are less efficient, slower and a great deal more dangerous both to the firemen the rescued than the plain or ex tension ladders.—Insurance Engineer ing.. When two strong men come to blows, even if they are well matched, it is not a pleasing sight, but if the man who gets the worst of it will use DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, he will look better and feel better in short order. Be sure you get DeWitt's. Good for every thing a salve is used for, including piles. Sold by Eugene A. Pfefferle. TAX snKn—«SJO» -BOBS eq) jo £ia#tfn 3tn marj eofA ut ejBunsqo eunoeq snpaqEL '£xmd V* 0tL£8aoBd 3tn £q anjjjA oa paSunoo -U3 susi rrefwj, isunsrp are Saqj, *eBTBxd pus .fjacRKQ arrgap isnm 9M 'Ti I offer 25,000 acres Selected Prairie Lands in Southern Al berta, near Taber on the Can adian Pacifiic Railway at 1? $9,00 per acre liberal terms. Railroad fare from Minneapolis rebated to buyers, Write for maps and excur sion rates to E.L.CAMP, 515 Guaranty Bldg., IDnneapolis, Minn. IUdB*t-Beloma? to Goterada. W^-Jy^ In the early days of Leadville tnere was a singular character living. by the name of Major Martin McGinnis* The major was the Important man of the camp, and when any distinguished parties came to the city they were received by Major Martin McGinnis and presented with the freedom of the camp (to a gold ptete|g]2The French government serit three mining engi neers over to examine and to report upon the mineral deposits of this lo cality. They were received by Major Martin McGinnis, who put them in car riages and took them around the camp. As they were going up California gulch the Frenchmen suddenly Jumped out of the carriage and commenced to hammer and chisel upon a large black bowlder that lay alongside the road. The major watched them ges ticulating to one another, and he final ly said to the interpreter: "What do they mean? What are they talking about?" The Interpreter said, "They say that rock don't belong bere." The major said: "The deuce It dont! You say to those foreigners that I wont stand for them coming over here and running down our country. Tell them that they can find anything anywhere in Colorado." The Frenchmen were right, however, for tills black rock was a meteor and had fallen from the skies.—Leadville Herald-Democrat. he Firs a in Machine There does not seem to be much doubt that the first bathing machine was seen at Margate and that it was the invention of a worthy Quaker named Beale. who placed his hopeful invention on the Margate beach in 1750. "The public are obliged to Ben jamin Beale, one of the people called Quakers, for the invention," writes the author of "A Short"Description of the Isle of Thanet," published in 1796. But it was the old story, the public be came grateful after the inventor had been ruined by his enterprise. His successors had reaped the harvest. Old Benjamin Beale's widow could re member in her last days the first fam ily that ever resorted to Margate for the purpose of bathing being carried Into the sea In a covered cart In 1803 Beale's machines were one of the in stitutions of Margate. It was alarm ingly claimed for them that "they may be driven to any depth into the sea by careful guides.'*—T. P.'s London Week ly. ,,.r..... ,.. ...,,:' he Street I he W West street in New York presents a network of piers and docks for its whole length. Most of the great steamship and railway transportation companies have their pier terminals there, and other steamship companies have built their terminals on the New Jersey shore opposite, so that all trans atlantic and a large share of the con tinental travelers must cross West street in coming to or leaving the city. When one considers the great number of short trip travelers, including com muters, who daily make their way in and out of the metropolis across this busy thoroughfare a faint idea of Its Importance may be gained. Manhat tan Island has thirty-two miles of wa ter front—John P. Fritts to Leslie's Weekly, ^-~€*&3tBgE&ggm&& Thto W as 1824 English opinion of the United States in 1824. from*the standpoint of the fashionable London set, is shown In the extract from the correspondent of John WMshaw: "You must have read some time smce in the papers of a few young fashlanables,, Mr. Stanley (Lord Der by's grandson), Messrs. Wortley and Denlson, ministerial members, and La bouchere, a nephew of Mr. Baring, having sailed for New York with the intention of making a tour of the United States. The scheme was thought very wild and much disap proved of by the west end of the town, and disappointment and disgust were universally predicted." •'b-' Supenrtltiona of is English herring fishermen are, many of them, remarkably superstitious. For instance, on some fishing boats whis tling is forbidden, and neither milk nor burned bread is allowed on board Furthermore, not even the name of that unlucky animal, the hare, may be mentioned, and a common method of punishing an enemy istothrow a dead hare into his boat Some of the fisher men believe in luck attending an odd numbered crew, but the good fortune may be neutralized should one of the number have red hair.—London Stand ard. be Honors are being stolen from most of the great men of former days. Gal ilei was said to have discovered the law of isochronism of the pendulum while pursuing his studies at Pisa in 158L Now we learn that the pendu lum was used as a correct measure of time among the Arabs as far back as the year 3 G*e*t Suitor—I cannot boast of wealth, but I have brains. The members of my literary club will tell yon that you'd have the smartest debater in town for a son-in-law. Father—And I can assure you, my dear fellow, that you*d have the greatest lecturer in. the town for a mother-in-law. Jones—Smith says that ft is tbe Mils that make the echo. Brown—80 they do. Jones—And here I've Hved all: these years thinking tt was the boiler, —New York Times. Khas Delivered to all parts of the city- .lf.. -. TO READERS OJVTHE ttPresc^iption.,, .This experience of Dr. Smith was corrob orated by the standard Medical Authorities, oT the several schools of practice, endorsing' the various ingredients in the strongest terms. Dr. Smith being asked to name some of these authorities as to the curative value of the above roots read from the standard works._such as the United States Dispensa tory The American Dispensatory Organic Medicines, by Grover Coe, M. D. Materia Medica.b: Bennett Remedies. Chicago Text-Book of Therapeutics, by Dr. Hobart A Hare. Prof, in Univ. of Penn'a Laurence Johnson. M. D», Prof, in University of New York Prof. John King. Author of "Woman and Her Diseases" Professor John M. Scodder. M. D.. Author of a treatise on "The Diseases of Women Horatio C. Wood. M. D., Author of "Therapeutics" Roberts Bartholow. A. M.. M. D.. Professor of Materia Medica. Jefferson Medical College of Phila. All these recognized and standard authorities praise, in the strongest pos sible terms, each and every ingredient which enters into the "Favorite Pre scription of Dr. Pierce for the cure of woman's peculiar weaknesses and ail- H. HELD 505 Center St. Flour, Feed, Express, Draying. Orders taken for woodsawing CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH, PENNYROYAL PILLS BATHES Ask your Druggist for CHI-CHES^TER'S FELLS in RBD and GOLD metallic boxes, sealed with Bine4 Ribbon. TAKE NO OTHER. Buy of your Druggist and ask for Cm-CHES-TEVS ENGLISH PILLS, the DIAXOHD BKANO, for twenty-five years known as Best, Safest, Al ways Reliable. Sold by Druggists everywhere. CHICHBSTBR CHBlftCACcaTpfflL PA. I WHIP mmm Ma J. JOHNSON'S t: (musingly)—Adam and Eve lostU paradise, poor things! She (captor ootrV-Bot we found tt, didst we, darllngT—Pock. yr-:%jfi:ty-^:T Has cured thousands^ Our guarantee Is evidence of that. If you are not satisfied after taking half of the first bottle, you 62f TOSS I0HEY BACK Read what the oldest printer in Min nesota says it did for him: EDITORIAL EIDORSEmT •The readers of the A. O- TJ. W Guide who may be afflicted with rheu matism are hereby informed that we have used this remedy, 6088, in our family for two years that a single bottle cored rheumatism of the arm of six months' standing, and rheumatism of the feet of a year's standing, after experimenting with several regular prescriptions and receiving no relief. "DAVED RAMAXEY, "St. FauL/* Sold and guaranteed by •V LADIES'HOME JOURNAL: S Did yoti read the article published by The Ladies* Home Journal in May 1904, attacking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription? Have you seen the statement more recently made by Mr. Bok, the Editor of that'magazine that his company "has not paid a single penny to Dr. R. V. Pierce's concern in settlement of any suit»? "We wish you to know the truth. The facts are these S .•'• Four days after the article in May 1904, appeared. Dr. Pierce's company sued- The .Ladies' Home Journal publishers for libel. The trial was had in April last. Dr. Pierce proved that the attack made byspj The Ladies' Home Journal was false. He proved that Dr. Pierce's Fa-|gf vorite Prescription does not, and never did contain either alcohol or any . of the injurious drugs which The Ladies' Home Journal felsely stated^ it did contain. r-This was so conclusively shown that the attorneys far|?J The Ladies' Home journal were forced fo admit it. The jury rendered a verdict against The Ladies' Home Journal in favor of Dr. Pierce's company for $16,000.do. This was a complete vindication of Doctor Pierce and his "Favorite Prescription.n It judicially established that' the libel was wholly false, and without any justification. Dr. Pierce, however, believed that his company is justly entitled to a verdict for a much larger sum. Through his attorneys he has,, therefore, applied to the court for a hew trial of the case. For this reason, and for this reason alone, has The Ladies' Home Journal not yet paid a single penny to Dr. R. V. Pierce's concern.n Dr. Pierce has simply chosen not to collect the judgment until the motion for a *W: new trial has been decided. f-m^"^ In the light of these facts does not this boastful statement that it not paid a single penny to Dr. R. V. Pierce's oftneern look a cheap and common bluff, a half truth intended to mislead you During the trial of the libel suit against the above mentioned publishers, Dr. Lee H. Smith, Vice-President of the World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, stated under oath that the ingredi ents of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion were wholly extracted from the following nattvajoots Golden Seal, Bine Cohosh, LOT'S Slipper Black Cdrosh and Unicorraw means of pure gly\ence of proper siifngth. He wasfor askeu how he knew, as AJphysician and experienced medical man^hat the "Fa voritePresCriptkn was a\ure for the diseasesv peculiar to woiqan^ach as "female catarrhal sion, irregular anoTpainral other diseases of the womanly 01 and he stated that he knew the fact because of bis professional ex perience and the many thousands of women whose ills, to bis personal knowledge, had been cured by this Books, magazines, novels, newest, latest, best, always on hand, every thing to suit vour taste. Andrew J* Eckstein, Pharmacist. v. THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP For all Coughs and assists in expelling Colds from the sys tem by fenny moving the, bowels. A certain relief for croup and whooping-cough. Nearly all other cough cures are constipating, especially those containingOpiales? Kennedy's Laxative Honey 4 Tar moves the bowels, contains no Opiates. rC%^£ ments. In fact the "Favorite Prescrip- -j^^«^ taon" stands alone as being the omySyggf" medicine for woman's special ailmentsjP*r#ff which has anysuch professional endorse-Tvjl^ ment of its several ingredients which '/^t^** fact is generally recognized as entitled''i.'^ixj to much more weight than any amount Hj^Sfi of lay, or non-professional testimonials. *^p?.~^&$ The "Favorite Prescription'' standi $~*TMi$ alone as the only non-secret, medicine --1 woman's ailments. Its manufact-* ,*' 0$pz, urers are not afraid to publish its in-~ y~A?£§? gradients, as they do, broadcast—thua^/'^^^g courting the fullest scrutiny. ':uV'rPS^fim The Favorite Prescription has been jZJ^^* on trial in court and came out fullyfi {i'^rm vindicated as containing no harmful at\ -1"~ x4^^ habit-forming drugs. 3 What other medicine for women could stand such a test No invalid women can afford to accept a secret nostrum of unknown composition for this tried and proven remedy OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. Lead ing physicians often prescribe it because* they know exactly what it is made of and that the ingredients of which it is composed are the very best known to medical science for thejcare oi woman's peculiar weaknesses'' and delicate ailments. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptionis not advertised as a "Cure All" but admirably fulfills a singleness of purpose, being a superior and most positive remedy for one class of diseases only—those easily recog nized weaknesses, derangements, irregu larities and painful disorders peculiar to women. It is a powerful, yet gently act ing, invigorating, tonic ana strengthening nervine. For weak, worn-out, over-work ed women—no matter what has caused the break-down,—whether it be from too frequent bearing of children or from much worry, care, or over exertion of any kind. "Favorite Prescription" will be found" most efficient in building up the strength, regulating all the womanly functions,* banishing pain and bringing about a reg ular and healthy, vigorous condition of the whole female system. A REAL BALL GAME can't be played without real bats, real balls, real catching masks, and real gloves and mitts. It doesn't make any difference whether you like Spaulding or Reaches' goods—I have them. A new, complete stock: all kinds Of goods, all prices. "t* E The Red Clover Blos somand tho Honey See is on every bottle. KENNEDY' S ii HONEY-TTAROCOBTADOS g|g^i*»tPA«*l AT lABOKATOKY OFL** O. DeWITT CO.. CHICAGO. U. & A. E. A. PFEFFERLE 12 M. A. BraeHAM. A. W. BIHOHAM Bingham Brosn DKAXKBSXN HEW ULM, MINlltf No charge for sewing and laying our carpets. H. FOHSTEB. U-fct