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mfi -&• a I ..? feu. "V '£&£&• lite SO1 /1 1 ~vv 1 A Baking Powder of Surpassing Cream MAILED TWELVE YEARS AGO. A Postal Card. Which Reached Its Foreign Destination After a, hong Delay. A postal card which has been to Europe and come back has just been turned in at the postoffice department in Washington, to give the officials there a chance of discovering who is responsible for its long delay in trans mission. It was mailed in Washing ton late in December, 1881, addressed to a bookseller in London, directing him to send to the writer a large num ber of books which were even then suf ficiently rare not to be readily accessi ble in this country. The card reached its destination late in May, 1892. The bookseller, apparently without notic ing the disparity between the date written on the card and the date of receipt, filled the order, after taking time to hunt up the books, which, in the course of ten years' interval, hgd grown still rarer. The surprise of the author of the card may be imag ined when, so long after Having con cluded that the dealer could not fill his order, he suddenly had this large supply of literature dumped upon him from the postoffice. When he charged the dealer with neglect, the date of the card appears to have been examined for the first time but it was pleaded t&at a dealer would be justified in filling such an order in spite of the an tiquity of the written date, because he would have a right to assume that his customer had himself been careless about dating the card, a slip of the pen making 1891 read 1881. The New lYork Evening Post thinks that the card must have got into the old post office in Washington, been postmarked and then lost, slipping possibly into one of the many cracks and crannies of that office. When the office was moved from its old and shabby quar ters into the building it now occupies some one doubtless came across the card, and, not noticipg itg date, dropp^J it l?to Too Trivial. Judge Chase of Vermont was a man of excellent sense, and a great stickler for the dignity of courts. At one time a case of very trifling im portance, which had well-nigh rim the gauntlet of adjudication, came before the highest court in the state. The counsel for the plaintiff was opening with the usual apologies for a frivolous suit, when the subject matter, "to wit, one turkey, of great value," caught the ear of the judge. "Mr. Clerk," he called out, 5n an irate tone, "strike that case from the docket. The supreme court of the State of Vermont does not sit here to deter mine the ownership of a turkey!'' His Object. Bingo—Well, old man, I'll say good by now. I'm off for the- world's fair to-morrow. Going to take all my fam ily with mo. Kingly—Why, I thought you said you .weren't going. Bingo—I wasn't. But I understand there is a place there where you .can check your children, and I want to see if I can't get a little rest. Many marvel at its rapid strides in popularity. The cause is its marked superiority over every other leaveniflg agent. It is a pure Cream of Tartar Powder. Works quickly. Makes the finest flavored, most delicious and wholesome foo$, Whitest flaky biscuit, Lightest and finest griddle cakes and Pastry and cake that remain moist and sweet. bound for Lofiu6n. -tftle responsibility for the accident is obviously past fixing, and the book seller in London and his customer in America will have to settle their dis pute without the assistance of the post office department. NOTHING FITS your case, if you're an over worked or run-down wo man, like Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription. In any condition of the female system, that will build up, strengthen, regulate, and cure. Every mother needs it. It lessens the pains and burdens of child bearing, insures healthy, vigorous offsprii and promotes an abunds secretion of nourishment on the part of the mother. It is an invigorating tonic made especially for woman, and the only guaranteed uxd ailments. For iodical pains, bearing-down sensations, ilacemente, and all "female complaints" and disorders, if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. Can you ask morel All the war through, and at every stage, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures Catarrh, fio sure of this fact are the proprietors of the medfaftia that they offer $500 reward for any incurable caae of Catarrh. Second-Hand TYPE About2,000 pounds of Benton-Waldo's Self-Spacing Bourgeois infirst-class order in fonts of 50 pounds or moire. A few iron News^Stands at Half-Price. northwestern Newspaper Union ST. PAUL, MINN. Notifr *n»* ojacr Dr. Price's Baking Powder. Steel Buttons. The prejudices in favor of nobility are very strong in Italy, and though family connections are prized so highly there, no man seems ashamed if ije has no family to boast. In "Glimpses of Italian Society" the author says that she was astonished to hear a well-bred clergyman say gravely to a friend, also a man eminent for talents and fortune: "Yes, there is a grand invitation at such a place to-night, but I don't go be cause I am not a -gentleman and the master desired I would let you know that it was for no other reason that you had not a card, too, my good friend, for it is an invitation for none but people of fashion, you see." At all this no one stares, no one laughs and it is accepted as the proper thing. A woman of quality, near whom I sat at the fine ball Bragadin made in honor of the season, inquired how I passed the morning. I named several churches I had looked into, particularly that which they esteem beyond the rest as a favorite work of Palladio, and called the Redentore. tTd fgry light," said she', "to look at our churches, as you have none in England, I know but then you have so many other fine things, such charm ing steel buttons, for example," press ing my hand to show that she meant no offense. Pushing: Trade. It is not alone in America that bar bers show extraordinary persistence and ingenuity in pressing their wareS upon customers. An American who hafs been traveling in France relates that in Paris the barber who was shaving him stepped two or three times upon the side of his foot. At last the customer called out: "Please cfbn't do that any more! I have a corn." "Exactly what I was trying to finjJ out, monsieur," said the barber, bland ly. "We have an excellent preparation for removing corns, for sale at one franc per bottle!" Help Wanted. Bank Cashier—I have ventured to call on you, sir, to state that you have a very small balance in the bank, and in the hope that you may be able to make a rousing deposit. Senior Partner—Well, what if we have. The account is not overdrawn, is it? Cashier—Oh, no. But I am going on my summer vacation to-morrow. A caterpillar contains more than 2,000 muscles. The total number of colored troops in tie United States army during tho ci7il war was 186,017. Geo. Benis & Sons, are the sole Owners and bottlers of Uucle Sam's Monogram, which has by reason of its merit and quality in a short time become the leading brand of whisky in the North west. A trial will convince you of its su periority to most whiskies, and that it is excelled by none. Ask your druggist or retail dealer for it. The standing army of Hawaii consists of sixty-four men, three of whom are generals. When Traveling1, Whether on pleasure bent, or business, tabo on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectually on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sick ness. For. sale in 50c and $1 bottle by all leading druggists. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. The grey matter of the Drain is built of at least 600,000,000 cells. If Yon Feel Miserable in General take Allen's Iron Tonic Bitters. All genu ine bear the signature of J. P. Allen, Drug gist, St. Paul, Minn. There are in the world 261 bliud asylums and training schools with 11,789 Inmates. FBEE TO INVALID LADIES. A lady who suffered for years with uter ine troubles, displacements, leucorrhea and irregularities, finally found a safe and sim ple home treatment that completely cured her without the aid of medical attendance. She will send It free with full instructions how to use it to any suffering woman who will send her name and address to Mrs. D. L. Orme, South Bend, Ind. Fight counties in Missouri are named in boror of presidents of the United States. If ike Baby Cnttln* Teetk, Be sure sad use that old and well-tried remedy, Hu WiKBixrw'8 SOOTHIHQ 8TBCP for Children Teething. Men aie more' liable than women to in sanity and' die sooner after becoming in sane. ICKAPOO 2 'INDIAN 1 SACWA* 2 miSam The greatest Liver, 5 2 WHHH Stomach, Blood and Kidney Remedy. 2 WSSmhB Made of Boots, 2 ••mi" mi *»—I-., and Herbs, 2 is Absolutely if.i i*. Free FromZ All Mineral O Harmful In redients. Nraggists, #12 per bottle, 6 bottles tor |6.J 9 Laughing Dog, agttebyrs. 5 liekapoo ladlaa Medietas Ce., Seal? Blgelow, Agents, Sew Hares, Ct xwr*--^ i"-"- THE FARM AND HOME. ffORMS OF .^POTATO BLIGHT AND ITS REMEDIES. Spraying With Fungicides Is a Cure for trie Fungus Disease—Keep the Best Lambs—Sugar Beets for Sugar—Farm Notes and Home Hints. Potato ((light. i". Professor E. C. Green of the 'Ohio experiment station, writing to the Country Gentleman, says there are two entirely different diseases that are known as potato blight and are very destructive to the crop. The first, which is best and longest known and has been most fully de scribed in the Phytophora infestans, is a true fungus disease, the other is abacterial disease which has been very little studied, but w|hich, it is believed, caused fully as much if not more loss to potato growers than the phytophora. It is not easily traced and its comings and goings are not well understood, but its effects are very serious.. Professor Jones of the Vermont experiment station, calls this comparatively new disease a "bacterial blight," and Professor Halstead of New Jersey, believes it to be identical with the "southern potato blight." Professor Green nar rates his own experience with these two diseases and in doing so de scribes their different effects quite fully. He says: "My experience with these diseases has been of such a character as to give me much interest in them. In the year 1883 I put out a field of about four acres of potatoes on fairly good land without any special prepar ation. The season proved quite fav orable, with plenty of rain during the latter part of the season, and the yield was nearly 300 bushels, per acre. But when I came to dig them I found there were many rotten ones, and after digging they did not stop rotting. In one pile of 90 bushels, after lying1 two weeks, fully one-half were spoiled. This was my first ex perience with wh&t I am now certain was the fungus disease. In the years 1885-6-7, I increased my acreage about ten acres each year, but in not any of these seasons was there the least trouble with rot ten potatoes yet I did not succeed in getting a yield of over 100 busiels per acre, and one year much less than that, although the crop was put out with great care on land well adapted to potato growing and quite fertile, for the wheat which followed the potatoes gave an average yield of about thirty-five bushels per acre for* the three years. Each year the crop would start out in fine shape, but about the middle of June, during the rapid growth of the vines, a tender shoot here and there would be seen to wilt, and then, notwithstanding favorable weather, thejr growth would come to a standstill* the leaves showed black patches near the (es and in four to six weeks the vines would be standing straight up. with the dead leaves hanging around them' in a melan choly way in a few weeks more they would be dried up, and by the first of September the cop would be ready to dig. The late potatoes lasted only a week or two longer than the early ones. No signs of rot could be seen on the contrary, the potatoes kept exceedingly ^yelL The only sign of disease was a slight discoloration of the flesh near the stem. This is bac terial disease, but the loss is not felt as much, because to lose a thing be fore we get it is not so bad as to lose it when we once have it in our pos session. As to the fungus disease it yields measurably .well to spraying with fungicides, but for the bacterial dis ease no remedy has yet been discov ered upon which reliance can be placed. Some fepaliatives, however, are given which appear to have val ue. Good soil, good seed, good prepa ration of the ground and good after cultivation give the plants resisting power which enables them to a greater or less degree to live through the attack if it comes. It is also believed that the bacteria appears quite regularly at its appointed time in the season, and that therefore quite early or quite late planting will, in many localities, give com parative immunity by reason of the plant in the one case getting far enough along to resist the effects of the attack on the one hand, or not being far enough advanced to "con tract it on the other. Something, too, may be gained by careful selection of the seed, says the Kansas City Live Stock Indicator. As the germ lives over the winter, advantage is found in rejecting all seed'that show any indications of blight, however slight. There is also believed to be a very substantial difference in the capacity of different varieties to resist blight, and one noted agricultural writer of France has divided the varieties of that country into two classes using their resistant or non-resistant power as the basis of. classification. Professor Green thinks that the Rose family owes much of its loug life to its power of resisting blight, while on the other hand the smooth, round white class, such as the Snow-flake and Charles Downing, have a much lower resisting power. The^e how ever, are only tentative hints as to the means of' protecting the potato against blight having a bacterial origin, and much work remains to be done before immunity from its at tacks is received. ... Horse Power In the Garden. Why not have more horse power to cultivate our gardens? Mankind and womankind don't like the hoe. ^An exchange says that if the gardens could be cultivated with a horse hoe flilli -A." ippppppll one-tenth the labor. Of course this is not practicable where the vege tables are grouped in beds ten feet square. Instead of having the garden in the usual shape, let it be longer and narrower, and at each end leave a strip six feet wide unplovved to turn upon. This should be seeded to grass. Cabbages, [beets, onions and lettuce will grow in long rows just as well as in beds. So will cucumbers, squashes and melons, if the rows are wide enough apart, while currants, raspberries and blackberries will flourish better for occasional hoeing. Thus labor and time will bp saved at the time when it can least be spared. Not only so, but the garden will receive cultivation more frequently. The advantage of a frequent stirring of the surface is admitted. A much larger garden can be easily cultivated in this way. The farmer who has a garden large enough is the exception, —Journal of Agriculture. Sugar Beet3 for Sugar. Although the great bulk of sugar in this country is made from cane, either of the sorghum or old-fashioned sugar cane of the South, it is not so in other parts of the world. More sugar is now made in temperate climates than in those near the equator, and the beet is the staple basis of its manufacture. The sugar beet has been greatly improved in its saccharine qualities since the first Napoleon forced its introduction into France. It was long called the French sugar beet, as the best va rieties originated in that country. At present, however, the Germans make more sugar from beets than any other people in the world, and their product is said to have doubled the past year.—American Cultivator, Farm Note). Make a roller during leisure spells if that important tool is not on the farm already. Unless ground is very rich two stalks to the hill is enough to leave. Nothing pays better than thinning corn if it is too thick. A good way to have dui:able fence posts is to split them in August and let them thoroughly season before putting them in the ground. If cultivation is thorough from the beginning, there need not be much trouble in keeping the weeds down, if the land is thoroughly drained. Farm systematically, and keep the farm looking as neat as possible. A man thinks more of himself when his surroundings are pleasant and inviting. It is worth considerable outlay to keep the horses from being pestered with flies in summer, and yet nets and screens in the doors and windows of the stable go a long ways' in do ing it. Some think that mule breeding is to receive a new impetus, and the reason given is that horse breeding has been overdone. High prices may have been overdone but th^reis room for plenty of good horses yet. It is not good business methods to buy artificial fertilizers, and let the manure of the farm go to waste. Whatever commercial fertilizers are used should be supplementary to natural fertilizers of tne farm. Hogs should always be sold for what they are worth', and not be sub ject to dockage, after sale, the dock age being .estimated by some .one ap pointed by the buyer. That sort of business is nonsense and worse, it is robbery. A writer says: "If I wanted to formulate a plan to make a man "poor for life, it would be—work early and late, utilizing every moment at hard unceasing toil with the hands, and never stop to think or read the thoughts of others." Home Hints. Put a pinch of cayenne on a piece of lemon before you squeeze it over Little Necks or Blue Points, and en ^joy the combination. If shelves and floors of closets are wiped with water hot with cayenne pepper, and afterward sprinkled with borax and alum, roaches and other vermin are kept at bay. For a cough, boil one ounce of flax seed in a pint of water strain and add a little honey, one ounce of rock candy and the juice of three lemons mix and boil well,then drink as hot as possible. A small paint or varnish brush, costing five cents, says a house keeper, is a useful accompaniment to the larger stove-polishing brush, as it can be made to reach into corners where the other one will not go. It is said that the use of smelling salts is one of the most prolific causes of deafness, operating by weakening the olfactory nerves, and through them the auditory system. All strong or pungent odors should be avoided as far as possible, especially those which act upon the secretory pro cesses, and, as the popular expres sion goes, "make the nose run." Some housekeepers can lemons when they are cheap. A writer for an exchange gives the following plan: Pare, slice and remove the seeds, add one pound of sugar to one dozen lemons. Let stand until, a liquid forms and then heat to a boil ing point. Put them in 'cans, and they are ready for use immediately, or they can be kept as long as you wish. A general rule for. making a syrup for fruit ,is one and one-half pounds of sugar to a pint of water boil it ten minutes. Rhubarb cut into inch lengths and dropped into this, cook ing only till tender, or barely twenty minutes, makes a delicious compote. Pineapple is also very good, but should be simmered, not boiled, forty minutes. At any time the syrup may be boiled down again richer after the fruit is taken out. by leaving it on the range for another half hour b«for^ pouring it over the fruit THE SHY MAN. If He Still Blnshea He Is Not With out His. Advantages. One of the characters in a modern novel is made to say: "I lov« a shy man. He is getting so scarce." Perhaps that is why he is so really delicious. When he blushes palpably, but with out looking awkward, one is drawn toward hinl by a certain sentiment of affinity, and so long as he is jijst shy enough, but not too shy, he wins more, and more upon one. To draw a really shy man out of Ms shyness is a pleasing task, and the more so he is generally enchanted to give expression to the thoughts and ideas that he usually keep's locked fast away within himself. One comes upon a stray jewel or two now and then in such cases in the shape of an unexpect ed thought that astonishes the discov erer because it seems so different from the person from whom it emanates. I assure you I would think shy men are sometimes very charming, but then one must be a little bit shy one's self in order to appreciate them. Do you know any nice ones, and do you know that they only come out of their shell in a tete-a-tete, and not al ways then, so that there is a pleasing element of uncertainty about them which adds to the interest they in spire?—London Truth. Jfot So Fast. The New- York Tribune reports an anecdote told by a Washington gentle man concerning a city, historically fa mous, which need not be^n named here. It has "fallen behind the procession," as the current phrase is, and it is by no means increasing rapidly in popula tion. Said the Washington man to the reporter: I went over to one evening to make a call. It was dark and I couldn't see the numbers on the houses. After a time I noticed a middle-aged man smoking a pipe on the front steps of a house a few doors away. "I beg yardon," said I, "but will you kindly tell me which way the numbers run on this street?" He took the pipe out of his mouth, slowly knocked out the ashes, and said: "Just got to town?" "Well, yes," I answered, taken surprise. "Evenin' boat?" "Yes." "What number yer lookin' for?" "Forty-nine." "It's the other side, four doors low." I tnanked him and turned to go. "Hold on a minute," he called. "What did you say about numbers runnin'?" "Well, they don't run," he rejoined "they don't even walk. There haint nothin' run in this town sence the war!" During the cholera plague of 1865 the greatest mortality at" Home and Madrid was on Sundays at London and Berlin on Wednesdays at Paris on Saturdays. The death rate from apoplexy is highest at Turin, Italy, 610 in 10,000. I Cure Dyspepsia and Constipation. Dr. Shoop's Restorative Nerve Pills sent pro 2c stamp. Druggists, 25c. Dr. free with Medical Book to prove merit for 2c stamp. Druggists, 25c. W., liacrne, Wis. Female Weakness Positive Cure. To the Editor: Please inform your read ers that I have a positive remedy for the thousand and one ills which arise from de ranged female organs. Not a prescription to be filled, but I will send two bottles of my remedy, free of all cost for the medi cine, ready for use, to any lady if she- will send her Express or P. O. address, -hold correspondence strictly confidential and for ward my replies and remedy in plain wrap per. Dr. J. S. Marchisi, Utica, N. Y. Flints for gun locks French army in 1630. jet*},1' "-f. 3 ^f4it?a Shoop, Box Holland has practicing women chemists. were used in the Tliat Terrible Scourge. Malarial disease is Invariably supplement ed by disturbance of the liver, the bowels, the stomach and the nerves. To the re moval of both the cause and its effects Hos tetter's Stomach Bitters is fully adequate. It "fills the bill" as no other remedy does, performing its work thoroughly. Its ingre dients are pure and wholesome, and it ad mirably serves to build up a system broken by ill health and shorn of strength. Consti pation, liver and kidney complaint and nervousness are conquered by it. The United States has 2.800,000 beehives Germany, 1,910,000 Spain, 1,690,000 Aus tria, 1,550,000. One thousand francs was recently paid for the wooden horse with which Napoleon played as a child. Suffered Every Minute Since I came out o" the war. with catarrah in my head, chronic diarrhoea and rheumatism." says Mr. J. G. Anderson, gcottdale. Pa. "I had pains all over me, my Bight was dim. and there seemed to be floating specks befora my eye i. The food I ate seemed like lead in my stomach. Ihe rheumatism was in my right hip and shoulders. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood's Pills did me more good than everything else. All my disagreeable Bymptoms have gone." Sir. J. G. Anderson. HOOD'S PlI/CS cure Constipation by restor img the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. Watehe*, Gnns, Bnggiei, Huneu, Af I 1*1 A A Bowlo, inline,. £11 -J- I II.M Farn Tools, Ssfm, etc, List HtSB. 411 IUU CHICAGO SCALE CO., Chicago, DL SCRATCHED TEH MONTHS A troublesome skin disease caused me to scratch for ten months, and was cured by a few days' use of HE** M. H. WOLFF, Upper Marlboro, Md. SWIFT'SPECIFIC I was cured some years ago of White Swelling tnmylegbyusingKSRKSHand have bad no eymptoms of n^QQ|tQin q£ the dis ease. Many prominent physicians attended me and failed, but 8.8.8. did the work. PAUL. W. KIRKFATKICK, Johiuoa City, Tenn. Treatise on Blood and DiseaccsmaHed free. SWIFTSkin SPECIFICCOMPAXY, ||£S -Atlanta, Ga.|^4 We will lend yon the VBLOUS and imFAmwa Trench Preparation, CAjLTHOS l^^^brM^ni, sad legally executed guarantee that CALTHO8 will STOP an Discharge*, CUKE YaifaaeeU and KESTOBX Xaai Tic* Use it $payif satisfied. Ven Mohl Co., Impartare, Cincinnati, Ohie. W '". Wjf!-' ASWif?? Flower. Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no. good. I could not'W speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. 1*4 could not sleep. I had taken all, .kinds of medicines. Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's Aug-' ust Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower savedmy life and gave me my health. Mrs. Sarah Cox, Defiance, O. & Thompson's Eye Water. Hfi Men to travel. We pay 850 to $100-' AH I a month-and expenses. STONR & WELLINGTON, Madison, Wis. -PNBTOMLSTOSSIBI iH month. Harm' I',/C RW^eu treatment (by (bypno-pne Tbotuanc ___ o. W. IT. SNYDER. MItctn No itarring.j n, MaiT&ept. $67 Send rti McYieker's Theater, Chicago, 111. Garfield Tea Oh Yes! by results of. bad eating, Cures Constipation, Restores Complexion^ Bills. Sample free. OAaviELDT2A.Oo.,SUw.wui»..a..4 Bares Doctorsv .•i6th8t.,N.yj Cu res Sick Headache Ely's Cream Balm WILLCUBE ATARRU Price KO enti. Apply Balm into each nostril. ELiYBHOS..56\VarreuSt..N.T DUTCHER'S FLY KIIxLER kills flies Instant ly. No danger in handling, it. Every sheet will kill a quart of flies, insuring peace while yon eat and the comforts of a 4ap in the morning. In sist upon Butcher's and secure best result*, FRED'K DUTCHES DRUS CO,, St. Albans, FT, MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THOMSON'S SLOTTED be- CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hanmer to drive and clinch them easily md quickly: leaving the clinch absolutely smooth. Beqniring no hole to be made in the leather nor burr for the Hiveta They are STRONG. TOUGH and DURABLE. Millions now in -use. All lengths, onifonn or assorted, pat up in boxes. A»k jrom* dealer tor them, or send 41c. In stamps for a box of 100 assorted sizes. JUD80N L. THOMSON MFC.Coi Walthkm, Mass. SECOND-HAND TEN-HORSE POWER ENGINE -AND- TWENTY-HORSE POWER BOIL! For Sale Cheap. NEARLY NEW. Located at Aberdeen, Sooth Dakota- Address Northwestern Newspaper Union, ST. PATJI,, MINX. BLOOD POISON AOa ^DFriAl XV Primary, Second. L*Vsl/aL* II* ary or Tertiary Sy philis permanently eared in 80 to 60 days. We elim inate all poison from the system^so that there can never be aretnrnof the disease. Ton can be treated ti-home for the same price and under the same f&rantees, but with those who prefer to come here will contract to care them or refund ail money ^nd pay entire expense of coming, railroad fare and hotel bills, if we fail to cure. If yon hare taken mer cury, iodide potash, and still are aches and pains. Mucous Patches in Mouth, Sore Throat, Pimples, Copper-Colored Spots. Ulcers on any part of the body. Hair or Eyebrows falling out. It is this Syphil itic Blood Poison that we guarantee to cure. We solicit tbe most obstinate cases and challenge the world for a case we cannot cure. This disease hu always baffled the skill of the most eminent physi sians. A legal guarantee to cure or refund money. Absolute proofs sent sealed on application. Addres COOK REMEDY CO., Masonic Temple* Chicago* 111. THE OUR READY SERVICE PRINTS ESPECIALLY WE OUR FURNISH NEWS ARE LEADS ACKNOWLEDGED THE TO BE WORLD THE SEND* I BEST FOR: PRODUCED SAMPLE: ON SHEETS THE ANDJ GLOBE. PRICES*! •.*•& kM- It's a "Daisy" 1 We desire to call the attention of news-^ paper men Especially, and the public general, to the-inside pages or the Sen tin el They contain 26 oolnma Of live, readable, carefully selected, ably edited and flnelyffjl illustrated reading matter. We defy anytlf paper on earth, piinted at home bat using: the ready-set plate matter to get up four pages of as interesting matter as this. The* Sentinel desires to thank the Northwestern Newspaper UnioiLibr its liberal and enter- Northwoatern Newspaper Uni« St. Paul Mint S. Dakota Newspaper Unlon. Aberdeen S. Da* N. Dakota Newspaper Union. Farjfo, N. Dakoti: No. 29—181 it, VA S.JW, N. U. la.