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^r We refer to that boon to weak, nervous, suffering women known as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Dr. John Fyfe one of the Editorial Staff of TH E ECLECTIC MEDICAL REVIE W says of Unicorn root (Hekmias Dioica) which is one of the chief ingredients of the "Fa vorite Prescription "A remedy which invariably acts as a uter ine invigorator makes for normal ac tivity of the entire reproductive system." He continues "in Helomas we have amedica- _..jen." if more or less of the above symptoms afff Pl'eSeht. no invalid woman can 7Tc7 Better I an take Dr. Pierce's"tSvorftg PregcTlbtibhrbrie'ornh'aieading ingredi ents oivvfiictf is Uniftorn root, or Helonias, and the medical properties of which it most faithfully represents. Of Golden Seal root, another prominent ingredient of "Favorite Prescription," Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. D., of Ben nett Medical College, Chicago, says: "It is an important remedy in disorders of the womb. In all catarrhal conditions and general enfeeblement, it is useful." Prof. John M. Scudder, M. D., late of Cincinnati, says of Golden Seal root: "In relation to its general effects on the system, there is no medicine in use about which there is such general unanimity of opinion. It is universally regarded as the tonic useful in all debilitated states." Prof. R. Bartholow, M. D.. of Jefferson Medical College, says of Golden Seal: "Valuable in uterine hemorrhage, menor Ihagia (flooding) and congestive dysmenor Thcea (painful menstruation)." Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription faith fully represents all the above named in gredients and cures the-diseases for which they are recommended. Shall We Tan Your Hide? The average Stock Raiser hardly realli zes the valu' of cow, steerand horse hides when converted into fur coats, robes and rugs. Get the new illustrated catalog of the Crosby Frisian Fur Co., Rochester, N, Y. It will be a revelation to you. And "'Crosby pa /s the freight.' Builds up your whole body. Regu lates the bowels, clears the blood, aids digestion, makes you well from head to feet. That's what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will do greatest spring regulator. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. P'oneer Drug Co A Certain Cure for Aching Feet. Shake into your shoes Allen's Fcot-Ease a powder It cures Corns, Bunions, Pain ful, Smarting, Hot, Swollen Feet. At all Druggi~t= and Shoe Stores. Sampje free. Addre-«, Allen S Olm«tead, Le Roy, X. WEAK MAN RECEIPT Any man who suffers with nervous de bility lo-'. of natural power, weak back, failing memory or deficient manhood, brought on by excesses, dissipation, un natural drains orthe follies of vouth, may cure himself at home with a simple pre scription th.it I will gladly send free, in a plain sea'od envelope.*o any man who will write for it Dr A. E Robinson, 3864 Luck Building, Detroit. Michigan. tf DR. ADDISON JONES The Regular and Reliable Chicago Speci alist will be at DAKOTA HOUSE, New Minn Wednesday, April, 28th. HOURS. 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. One daj only and return each 28 days Piles, Fissure, Fistula, Hydrocele Guaranteed Cured Without the Knife or Detention from Business. Chronic diseases of eye, ear, nose, throat, liver, stomach, kidneys and pri vate diseases successfully treated. Glasses fitted and guaranteed. READ WHAT PLEASED PATIENTS *^^^C^¥tjH| __ after an illness of one 3rear. Judge meat which more fullydrug sensgflons in the extreme lower part of the Hanson thought he was not the man for the place, as he had no practical training as a police officer. Accord ingly he resigned three months after he was appointed. SAY. I I had hemorrhoids (piles) severely for fifteen years Dr. Addison Jones, the Chi cago specialist, said he could cure me without operation and he has done so, and with ery little pain. Have now been well of them for almost a year and feel in better health than I have been in last twenty jears. MARGARET McGINN, Owatonna, Minn. For seven ears I suffered with piles. Dr. Addison Jones the Chicago special ist, has now cured them without opera tion and with \erv little pain I can recommend him cheerfullv A. COWAX Fairbault, Minn. Dr. Addison Jones treated and cured me of lonsr standing stomach troubles and nervousness. I ha\e been free of the trouble for the last six months and feel the best this summer I have for years. I can heartily recommend Dr Jones SAM AMUXDSON, Blue Earth, Minn. I suffered for vears With bronchitis and liver tiouble. Had taken treatment with only poor results until I had consulted Dr Addison Jones He has treated me with excellent results and I now feel well and like a new man "Write to me and 3 Will tell you how much I was benefited. 1 heartily recommend him to others E. E. BOT.TWELL, Kasota, Minn. This is to certifv that I suffered with piles for manv years and at times they were so severe, I had to quit my work. I used salves which did little or no good I consulted Dr. Addison Jones, who said he could cure me. He has now done so and mv piles are well. Consult him and he will treat you right C. MCALLISTER, Mankato, Mum. NOTICE. These testimonials are genuine. pleased them, they are all thankful and if your case can be cured I can cure you. If I treat you I will do my best to please and cure you as my pleased patients are my best advertisements Call and con sult me. Tou are welcome even though you do not take the treatment. WONDERFUL CURES Perfected in old cases which have been neglected or unskillfully treated. No ex periments or failures. "We do not under take incurable cases, but cure thousands given up to die. Consultation Free and Confidential. Reference, Drexel State Bank. A DR A I S O N O N E S J&145 O a Chicago Cores Woman's Weaknesses. RANDALL HANSON IS DEAD' TONNAGE TAX BILL VETOED Eariy Chief of Police of Minneapolis Dies in California. Judge Randall W. Hanson, the sec ond chief of police in Minneapolis after St. Anthony and Minneapolis united and one of the prominent Ma sons in the Northwest, died at the Masonic home in San Gabriel, CaL, answers the above Hanson's ripnth wa? rliiP tn a stroke purposes than any other with which I am uea was Qu to a strode tinted. In the treatment of diseases ce llar to women it is seldom that a case is seen which does not preseiyb some indication for this remedial agent." Dr. Fyfe further says: "The following are among the leading indications loi Helonlas (Unicorn root). Pain or aching in the back, with a leucorfhoea: atonic (weak) condltlcft\of the reproductive "organs of ltomen. mental depression and ir ritability. associated wit»chronic diseases of -f the reproductive oigans of women constant sensation at heat an the region bl the kid neys: menprrhagid (flooding), due to a weak1 ened condition of/the reproducttve system: amenor/nmytsurpressed absent monthly period/yaW&irni^rom oruaccompanying an abnofmtfl condition of the digestive organs and Mfemic (thin blood habit dragging of paralysis and during his illness he was practically helpless. Minneapolis politics were in a cha otic condition when Hanson was ap-tthethbillegislature.eHormaintained pointed chief of police in 1872 bythat George A. Brackett, who was then mayor, Mayjr Brackatt outlined a pol icy of municipal reform. Judge Han son and Mayor Brackett held differ ent opinions on many questions and though the police followed the or ders of the executive to the letter At the time he was made chief oi police Judge Hanson was compar atively wealthy, but was unfortunate in business, and his fortune was lost before he left Minneapolis fourteen years ago. ITALIAN KILLED AT ST. PAUL Assassinated on the Street in Broad Daylight. Although forewarned and forearmed Vincenze Meyna, an Italian, was as sassinated by four of his fellow coun trymen in broad daylight at the crowded corner of Seventh and Neil streets, St. Paul. Gestinat Meyna, a brother of the murdered man, escaped death by a hairbreadth, the bullet fired at him striking a money belt at his waist following it around his abdomen. The murderers escaped to the near by railroad tracks and eluded th« police. The cause of the tragedy is not known, but the police hold to the Black Hand theory, although some be lieve that the killing was the sequel to an old feud. Meyna died in the police ambulance while being taken to the city hospital. The muiderer and his three accom plices are known to the surviving brother and the police are confident that they will be captured before long WOMAN SAVES THREE TOTS Breaks Into Burning House in the Nick of Time. Battering down a locked door Mrs Mary Thompson of Minneapolis saved the three children of Mrs. John Gor don from death in their burning home in the Mill City. Mrs. Gordon went out pn a shop ping trip and, to prevent her children from straying, locked the doors be hind her. In the house were Francis, aged six years Nellie, his four-year old sister, and Frankie, the baby, two years old. In their search for amuse ment Francis and Nellie discovered some matches and in striking them soon started a blaze. Mrs. Thompson heard their cries and attempted to break in the front door, but failed She then forced tne back door and carried out the children just in time to save their lives. The house was practically destroyed. HOGS BRING RECORD PRICE Sell for $7.25 Per Hundred at South St. Paul. Kogs were high at South St. Paul on Saturday, so high that to get a lot that were billed in by the Johnson Hardware company of Hector to the Van Dusen-Harrington company a buyer paid $7 25 a hundred pounds, which is a record for this year. The average weight was 265 pounds. Old timers in the live stock trade pronounced it an extraordinary price, but remarked that since wheat has had its fling and potatoes are mount ing skyward it is only natural that porkers should cost more. Nobody has cornered hogs. It is just that they are scarcer than usual. MANY STORES DESTROYED Verndale Business Houses Burned to the Ground. Fire at Verndale destroyed a large part of the business section. The total loss is between $45,000 and $50, 000. The chemical engine failed to work and the fire was checked finally by a bucket brigade. Women ren dered good assistance. The Farmers' Mercantile company is the heaviest loser. About seventy five farmers were interested co-opera tively in this store and ail will sus tain losses on account of the fire, as the insurance was only half the value of the stock. Youth Ends His Life. After discussing anatomy with a friend and speculating on the surest means of inflicting death Henry Nelson, nineteen of age, of Tyler, committed suicide by shooting himself in the temple. Contrition over a recent indulgence in liquor at a dance is supposed to have produced a condition of melancholy. Girl Commits Suicide. Mary D. I. Morris, seventeen years old, killed herself by eating the heads of a bos of matches in the apartments of Miss Frances John son, a school teacher, at St. Paul. It was her second attempt to end her life. An unhappy love affair is thought to have impelled the girl to self-destruction. Governor Johnson Disapproves of the Measure. Governor Johnson has returned to the legislature without his signature the Bjorge iron ore tonnage tax bill. This matter has aroused great interest in this state for many years, but never, before has a bill carrying the idea into effect received the approval of the legislature. The executive's reasons for the veto were fully explained in his message that was mor less uncertain, it was an ill-digested experiment and that it was not fully understood even by those who favored it. In the message it was said that the bill threatened *to violate the fundamental principle requiring a uniformity in tax ing the same class of subjects. In regard to the effect of the meas ure upon the prosperity and develop ment of the country affected, the gov ernor believed that it would strike a severe blow as well on agricultural, manufacturing, commercial, financial and educational growth and success, and that it as a detriment to any one investing in the lands of the northeastern or northern part of the state. He maintained that the people were actually afraid of it. Sectional hatred is also feared, the executive believing that the measure would make "state taxation the mere football of partisan and sectional pol itics." Favors the Present System. The present system of ad valorem taxation is highly favored by the gov ernor in the message. quoted at length the revenues raispd on ore lands and the steady increases of taxes during the past few years. Urging equalization of taxation, the executive says that one part of the state should not contribute more than another that at present many coun ties were drawing more from the state treasury than they put in that the northeastern part is already paying a number of times more taxes than any other part, and that the present sys tem of taxation is so flexible that the mining country taxes can steadly be raised according to the demand for money In conclusion, the governor says "I believe that the bill, providing, as it does, a double system of taxation on one xlass of property, is wrong in principle, and for this and reasons stated I herewith return this meas ure." When the message as read in the senate and the house it was loudly cheen d. Planning Minnesota Census. Tentative plans for the organiza tion of the census enumeration in Minnesota have been completed at Washington. There will be nine supervisors appointed, one in each congressional district, and the census districts will conform to congressional lines There will be 1,700 enumer ators appointed and they will be un der the direction of the supervisors. Love Cause of Suicide. Despondent over an unfavorable turn taken in his love affairs E. R. Beaupre of Minneapolis stuffed the keyhole of his door in a boarding house with a handkerchief and turned on the gas. He was found dead in bed when the door was broken open. Shipping of Iron Ore Begins. Shipping from the La Belle iron mine at McKinley and the Mil ler iion mine at Aurora has started. The Mahoning mine, one of the larg est on the range, is being placed in condition to ship and will begin shortly. Mill and Elevator Destroyed. The Montevideo mill and elevator, containing 8,000 bushels of wheat, have been destroyed by fire. The fire started from a hot bos. The loss is 60.000, with about $50,000 insuiance. I Love Shep,and Shep Loves Me A Story of a. Boy and a. Dog, By F. A. MITCH EL. [Copyright, 1909, by American Press Asso ciation I love to think of those happy days now far agone when we were boys. There was Abe and Sam and Ned and myself, all of whom lived within a mile of each other and were insepara ble. While we were out of school we were together and when in school VTP were thinking of one another. When we were told to write compositions on subjects of our own choice we wrote about what we loved, most usually ei ther a cat or a dog or a horse or a lamb or our swimming hole or the cir cus. W were only from six to nine, and our good teacher did not expect us to soar higher. I remember one of the essays was upon the subject of a dog called Shep herd, the name being abbreviated to Shep. There was a sentence in it that I have never forgotten. I delight to nurse it in my heart as an. epicure will roll rare wine on the tongue. It was this: "I know a dog by the name of Shep. I love Shep, and Shep loves me." Could there be anything more touching? Alas, how rare, how brief, is a real affection of a human being for an inferior animal! I can never be as real as in childhood. We boys all lived along a road that led toward a city. An omnibus passed every morning to take people to town, and I can hear today the bugle notes that served for a signal ringing out clearly as Josh drove by, picking up the passengers. W all knew Josh. and many a~Iree rifle"ne'gave us. One of the regular passengers used to stand at his gate every morning when the stage was late with his watch in his hand. Josh used to call him Colonel Minute, but his name was Colonel Ringgold, a veteran of the Mexican war. had been shot all to pieces, being minus an eye, an ear, a leg and an arm. I do believe that the only spur that forced Josh to keep any sort of time was the thought of the colonel, watch in hand, standing at the gate, his single eye darting betwe'en it and the driver. We boys were in great terror of Colo nel Ringgold. We told each other aw ful stories about him which we invent ed ourselves, but which in time be came real to us. One was that his house was fortified with an unlimited number of guns, pistols, sabers, and the like. I was averred by one boy that he -had killed a man with his wooden leg. There is no one like a boy for making real things out of dreams, and all we had to do was to fancy these things, tell them to each other and they had happened. Colonel Ringgold was the owner of the dog Shep. Shep was a collie, and the collie is a very intelligent dog. Shep stood, as I remember him, about two feet high, his color being a mix ture of white and brown. During the night Shep was expected to be "in" by 8 o'clock, but during the day he was free to romp with us boys. I think he loved Ned best. That was because Ned loved him best, for Ned, you know, was the boy who wrote the composi tion mentioning Shep so affectionately. We were all very careful that Shep should not get into trouble, first, be cause we leved him and, second, be cause we feared that his owner would blot us from the face of the earth if any barm came to the dog while in our company. Many a bigger dog we beat off when he was driving our com rade to the wall. One afternoon when we were all to gether teaching Shep to jump a rope we saw the colonel coming toward us, walking with the limp occasioned by bis wooden leg. Every boy's heart sank into his boots. Had the whole United States army come down on U3 we could not have been more terrified. What caused us the chief alarm was the thought that he was coming to or der us in future to leave Shep out of our fraternity. I can see the old man now making his way across a corn field, trying to walk erect, his stern countenance making up for his dilapi dated body. W would have all run, but we were paralyzed. "What do you boys mean by stealing my dog?" he asked in his stentorian voice. I scarcely distinguished what he said. I thought it something like: "Column forward guide right. Charge!" Every boy was too fright ened to answer. "Some one is keeping him nights," added the colonel. ''Whoever is doing it shall be put in the—I mean de serves to be punished." Agaiu there was silence, ended by a little trem bling voice. It was Ned's. "I'm the one who has been keeping Shep," he said. "I have locked him in, and he has come up and slept on my bed." "You locked him in! Don't you know that he is not your dog?" "Yes, sirT I knew that "Well, don't you ever do such a thing again. I want my dog in the house nights. Eight o'clock is taps for him-^§ o'clock precisely, not five minutes after 8 or five minutes be fore 8, but 8. As a punishment you," addressing Ned, "are forbidden have anything to do with Sbep in fu ture. Do you understand?" "Yes, sir," came a faint tremolo. "Why did you keep tlfe dog?" "Because I love him and he loves me." The colonel stood a moment looking at the boy, something evidently dawn ing on his bachelor brain. Then he turned away. The next morning he sent the dog to Ned to have and to .hold as his prop erty forever. The Poor Women. "Why does a woman always want another woman to go shopping with her?" "She gets the other woman to make the selections and then takes some thing else."—Louisville Courier-Jour nal. If You Can Get Up. "There's always room at the top." "Yes, but sometimes the elevator isn't running."—Cleveland Leader The more we study the more we dis* cover our ismomn^p ^hell^v mmw~m iWhen you order flour call for ANGELINA^ rr always the same and always good. If you are willing to pay a little higher price for a special patent call for COMPASS The best flour that can be made. New Ulm Roller Mill Co. BURDICK CASH REGISTERS. Th ROYA Call at the Brown County Bank and procure one of these If you wish to save a certain amount each week, the register shows at all times how near you are to the goal. The register cashes value of smallest coin. Low On Way Rates $ 2 6 9 5 to the Pacific Northwest $ 3 0 45 to California In Effect Every Day to April 30, via UNION PACIFIC The Safe road to travel equipped with electric Block signals—trains the finest in the country—every comfort and convenience to travel. All Unio Pacific-Southern trains carry dining cars—best in the world. or information address— H. F. CARTER, D. P. A., 21 S. 3rd St., Minneapolis, Minn "California Raisin Day, April 3 0 re Cal. fornia a is in STANDARD TYPEWRITER THE ACKNOWLEDGED STANDARD OF TO-DAY. Will turn out more perfectly aligned work with effort and with wear on its working parts than any other typewriter made. You can PAY more but you can't BUY more. ROYAL TYPEWRITER CO. ROYAL TYPEWRITER BUILDING NEW YORK. ATT J. JOHNSON'S %MkMSMM A Rheumatism,Catarrh,Backache, Kid WW Emm %Mmmm 98 ney Trouble, or anyotherBlood trouble ^M TO REFUND YOUR O If you mmSmmwSmmmmmSmS not entirely satisfied after talking halfarfeo •"••wawna-ma^^aw A I TC A HAVE r\ My absolute guarantee Is evidence of a*y faith 1 O A A N BEEN in this wonderful remedy. I take all the rick. Sold hf EUGENE A. PFEFFERLE. tfae firgt |j0tt|e A I --*a E at Call- $65.00 "i _? 15-34 '4? t& **s£sj ?m