People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 September 1894 — Page 3

THE PRECIOUS METALS.

Gold and Silver Seem Designed by Nature as the Cifcnlating Medium of Mankind* It is saiu in the bullion report laid before the house of commons, England, June 10, 1810: “The most detailed knowledge of the actual trade of the country, combined with the profound science in all the principles of money and circulation, would not enable any man or set of men to adjus., and keep always adjusted the proportion of the circulating medium in a country to the wants of trade.” This problem can only be solved by resorting to nature’s treasury. It would seem that an allwise Providence has designated the two metals, gold and silver, as the circulating medium of mankind for the express purpose of accomplishing this object. During all the preceding centuries they have been money metals, and for this reason they have been known as “the precious metals.” The increase in their yield has never been simultaneous. The subsidence of one of them has been accompanied or followed by an increase of the other, and their joint product has been year by year enlarging and has never exceeded the wants of the commercial world.

During the excessive inflow of gold from the mines of California and Australia there was the same outcry against gold that there is now against silver, and the utter worthlessness of the yellow metal for monetary use in consequence of its impending superabundance was freely predicted. The German- states, including Austria, demonetised gold and adopted silver as their monetary standard in 1557. France was vehemently urged to also demonetize gold. But she did not listen to these appeals, but steadily pursued her course and had the satisfaction of witnessing the vivifying effects of this shower of gold upon her own industries and the industries of other nations.

It is the uniform testimony of history that no single agency has contributed so much to the prosperity and happiness of our race as the enlargement of the world’s money stock by the inflow of the precious metals from its mines. The gradual exhaustion of the ancient mines was accompanied by a corresponding decline in industrial and commercial activity, caused by a Steady and continuous fall in the values or prices of the products of industry. JDuring this period the volume of the world’s money stock, reckoned in our currency, fell from §1,800,000,000 to less than $300,000,000 and we are informed by Dr. Adam Smith that in the year 1455 the price of wheat in England was less than 3 pence per bushel. To this agency more than to any other is attributed by the historian Alison the settling* down upon Europe during the middle ages of the mantle of darkness which separates the civilization of the ancient from that of the modern world. Owing to an increase of its money stock from the treasury of the new world western Europe awoke from its profound lethargy and entered upon a career of industral prosperity and industrial activity it never knew before. Jevons says that from 1809 to 1849 gold rose in its relation to commodities “in the extraordinary ratio of 100 to 345, or by 145 percent., rendering government annuities and all fixed payments extending over this period about two and one-half times as valuable as they were in 1809.”

Of this period Alison in his history says: “If the circulation of the world had remained stationary or declining-, as it was from 1815 to 1810, from the effects of South American revolutions and English legislation, the necessary results must have been that it would have become altogether inadequate to the wants of man, and not only would industry have been everywhere cramped, but the price of produce would have universally and constantly fallen. Money would have every day become more valuable, other articles measured in money less so, and debts and taxes would have been constantly increasing in weight and oppression. The fate that crushed Rome in ancient and all but crushed Great Britain in modern times would have been that of the whole family of mankind. All these evils have been entirely obviated and the opposite set of blessings introduced by the opening of the great reserve treasuries of California and Australia.

Mr. Hunter, chairman of the finance committee of the senate, in presenting to that body in 1852 a measure for changing the ratio in respect to our minor silver coins, by reducing the weight of pure silver in them about 8 per cent, in order that they might be kept here, and not melted down and sent abroad, said in his report: “Of all the great effects produced upon human society by*- the discovery of America, there were probably none so marked as those brought about by the great influx of the precious metals from the new world to the old. European industry had been declining under the decreasing stock of the precious metals and an appreciating standard of value. Human industry had grown dull under the paralyzing influences of declining profits and capital absorbed nearly all that should have been divided between it and labor. But an increase of the precious metals in such quantity as to check this tendency operated as a new motive power to the machinery of commerce.

“Production was stimulated by finding the advantages of a change in the standard upon its side. Instead of being repressed by having to pay more than it had Stipulated for the use of capital it was stimulated by paying less. Capital, too, was benefitted, for new demands were created for it by the new uses which a general movement in industrial pursuits had developed; so that if it lost a little by a change in the standard it gained much more in 'the greater demand for its use. which added to its capacities for reproduction and its real value.” He denounced the adoption of either one of the metals alone, saying: “The mischief would be great, indeed, if all the world were to adopt but one of the precious metals as the standard of value. To a lopt gold alone would diminish the specie currency more than

one-half, and the reduction the other way, should silver be taken as the only standard, would be large enough to prove highly disastrous to the human race.” —Henry G. Miller, in Chicago Times.

STILL AT THE FRONT.

The Money Question of Paramount Importance—All Other Issues of Secondary Interest. With the tariff question practically disposed of by congress, the financial question will continue to grow in importance until it is settled in the interest of justice and equity. While congress has been discussing the tariff the people have been discussing the money question. The result is that, to-day, the remonetization of silver has become the paramount issue in the mind of the public. Selfish interests have tried in Vain to ignore it, and ignorance has done its best to muddle it, but all to no purpose. It overlaps and overreaches party lines. The republicans are trying hard to put themselves in line with the people on this great issue. The populists hav* adopted it. And even the prohibition* ists, who have heretofore dealt only in questions of morals, have taken it up, and in two states of the northwest they have declared for the free coinage of silver.

In a great many states the politicians have succeeded in smothering the money question with other issues, and in momentarily diverting attention from it, but it has grown and is still growing and by the time the next congress meets it will have complete possession of the country. All other issues will be subordinate to it. and for the best of reasons. The people will discover as the days roll by that no tariff measure, no matter how radical, can afford any relief so long as the standard money of tde country—which is gold —continues to increase in value as compared with the products of human labor. People will discover that there can be no relief in tariff measures so long as falling prices compel those who own money to keep it out of business.

The cheapening of products by means of tariff reduction is a healthy and wholesome process so far as the people are concerned, hut the cheapening of products by means of the constantly increasing value of standard money is a process that kills all enterprise and depresses all business. There has been a little flurry in the stock market as the result of the passage of the tariff bill, but this is purely speculative, being based wholly on the expectations of those who are waiting for a turn in the tide that the settlement of the tariff question will restore good times. The Constitution has never led its readers to believe that any measure of tariff reform would at this time tend to restore prices and business to the old level of prosperity. That result can only be* brought about by the settlement of the financial question—the restoration of silver to its old place as a part of the standard money of the country. In this direction only will producers find good prices, laboring men good wages, and merchants good business. The single gold standard means European wages, European prices, European conditions, and the enslavement of the people by the money kings.—Atlanta Constitution.

The Production of Gold.

Those who ascribe the depreciation of values and financial and economic disturbances to a decrease in the production of gold will get no encouragement for their theory from the report of the director of the mint. This states the value of the world's output of gold in 1893 to have been, in round numbers, §>155,000,000, an amount but little less than the average value of the world’s output of both gold and silver for several years before the passage of the act of 1873 stopping the coinage of standard silver dollars. It is estimated that of this production 500,000,000 was used in the arts, 5525,000,003, the product of Russia, remained in that country to be hoarded, and 53,003,003 was imported into India, leaving an amount of gold available for the new coinage of civilized countries, Russia excepted, of $07,000,000. According to the most trustworthy calculations this exceeded the amount of both gold and silver available for coinage in the years 18001873, which is stated to have been a little over $00,000,000. —Omaha Bee.

Slander Refuted.

In refuting the charge of certain gold-bug writers that the panic was brought about by distrust of the country’s ability to maintain all its currency equal to gold, the Denver News asserts that “there is not a shadow of basis for that fling at the credit of the United States. There never was a moment during the panic when gold had a preference over other forms of money. People who hoarded away cash valued one kind just as much as another. As for silver dollars, they brought a premium over gold for weeks in the city of New York.”

Currency Lacking.

A southern exchange says that “under the present system of contraction men in fairly good circumstances find it difficult to exchange their products because the medium of exchange—currency—is lacking. The great west and the great south have to depend upon New York for the money to move theii crops, and when the moneyed men of the metropolis decide to hold to theii currency, business and industry throughout the continent are paralyzed.”

Let Us Act.

Why should we wait for an international agreement to restore bimetallism? When England demonetized silver she did not seek other nations to co-operate with her. France enjoyed great prosperity for many years under the bimetallic system in spite of the fact that she was surrounded by gold standard countries.

What Would It Be Worth?

With an accumulated stock of gold, sufficient to supply the arts for the next sixty years, how much would gold be worth if it was everywhere bereft of the money functions? It wonli not be worth 3u ccuu an ounce.

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

Joh?i Phillips, a prominent yonng farmer of Princeton, died a few* days ago of dropsy. Mr. Phillips was well known over the state. A bicycle club will be organized at Michigan City. The citizens of Bristol are protesting rigorously against another saloon being located there. Another nest of coniaekers, composed of Bill McCombs, Jjill Clemmans and A. W. Cornell, are in the toils, and the other night were taken to the Knightstown jail. , Postmaster appointed the other day: R. E. McCleury, Folsomville, Warwick county, vice C. P. McCleary, resigned. A joint campaign has been arranged for the democratic and republican candidates for secretary of state in Indiana. Meetings will he held during October in each congressional district of the state. Twenty-five thousand people witnessed the races at Crawfordsville the other day. Mont Armstrong, the deputy treasurer of Tipton county, who escaped in July, 1893, when his father and brother Calvin were arrested for embezzlement of $43,000, has been located in Santo Mazetto, Mex. The health officers claim to have located a factory in Lake county where sausages and dried beef were made from carcasses of Chicago street car horses. A broken wheel caused a disastrous wreck to a Panhandle freight train at Knightstown which totally demolished eight cars and cost the life of Head Brakeman E. T. Heady. Horace Loomis, of Kokomo, who recently assassinated his cousin, James Gregory, who at midnight was giving medicine to the murderer’s sick mother, has been ordered to the insane asylum. A farmer near Shelbyville is the possessor of a six-legged pig. Earl Brown, 10, near Edinburg was drowned in a rain barrel. James Conner is in the county jail at Goshen, charged with arson, and the officers are close on the trail of his accomplice, John Rees, of Ligonifer. Rees has turned state’s evidence on himself and Conner, bqt escaped from the officers on tbe way to jail. At Noblesville Policeman John Harris was shot and badly wounded by burglars who were robbing the office of Metsker & Co. lumber dealers. They escaped. Dr. Wm. E. Chamberlain, of Oberlin, has been chosen Peck professor of chemistry and mineralogy in Wabash college. On the night of the 4th of ber, 1864, a well-known Elkhartan, named Charles Harding, disappeared under peculiar circumstances. A few days ago an alleged confession was found, written twenty years ago, and stating that Robert Ivarney had murdered Charles Harding and then committed suicide in Simonton lake. Immediately steps will be taken to investigate the authenticity of the confession. A new post office building will bo erected at Winchester. Very little fall plowing has been done around Madison. Michigan City will establish free kindergarten schools. South Bend has a city ordinance prohibiting the peddling of produce in the streets. The Seymour Incandescent Electric Light Co. and the Seymour Gaslight and Coke Co. have consolidated.

Thompson’s green bottle factory and the Sheldon-Foster flint bottle factory have both begun operations at Gas City, each with about 150 employes. The United States glass factory is also running with 250 employes and the American window glass factory will start October 1 with 250 employes. Gov. Mellette, of South Dakota, was given a grand reception in Muncie the other night at the home of F. W. Heath. Mr. Mellette was formerly editor of the Muncie Times. The Craven’s Corner schoolhouse, just south of Milan, was burned to the ground. There is no explanation of the fire, excep' that it was set afire. John Dailey was arrested at Logansport and taken back to Columbia City to answer to the charge for burglary and attempted murder on the night of August 22.' News was received at Greencastle that David Ader, the father of Hon. F. D. Ader, of Greencastle, dropped dead on his farm near Groveland. He was one ofthe wealthiest men of Putnam county owning over 3,000 acres of fine farm land. Sneak thieves are stripping grape arbors at Knightstown. Florence Boots won first prize in the oratorical contest at Crawfordsville. An elaborate counterfeiting plant ia thought to be in operation at Elk* hart. Madison expects a boom this fall. The new militia company of Franklin is a crack one. The Guilford pioneers’ association held their eighth annual reunion at West Fork church, near Guilford. The Irondale Tin Plate Mill, which has just been erected in Middletown at a cost of $200,000, has started. Ax. Leli», a prominent young man of Anderson, in attempting to jump from a moving train, was thrown on his bead and probably fatally injured. At a dance, at a beer hall in Anderson, John Oates stabbed Omcr Holey several times, inflicting probably fatal wounds. William and F,dward Hathaway, the last named of Terre Haute, while painting the smokestack of the street railway power house at Indianapolis, were both thrown by the slipping of a hook Edward fell on the roof of tl o building. William struck the pavement fifty feet below and was killed. At Muncie, over a month ago. Harry Ilobbs and Miss Anna Austin, of Albans, were secretly married by Rev. Ashy. She thought it was a mock wed* ding and now wants a divorce.

Take no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia.

Bachelor Housekeeping. He Is a bachelor pro tem., His wife’s away. And meanwhile—you can make a mem.— 5. Life Isn’t play. He sleeps in all the beds in turn. ’Twould make his wife’s face set and stern If she could see how things are mussed Since she went off, in placid trust That things would stay where they were left While her dear hubby was bereft. The bureau drawers are half pulled out, With shirts and socks strewn all about The floor, because he tried one day To find a shirt she’d put away. The parlor hasn’t once been swept, His old cigar stumps he has kept Upon the center table, where There chanced to be a small peace bara. Out In the kitchen In a pile Are the dishes gathered, while Her Indolent, though loving spouse Has been a bachelor keeping house. The pile will grow without a doubt Aa long as the supply holds out; Then he’ll brace up, whon need confronts, And wash the whole lot up at onco. The whole house has a musty air Of stale tobacco; everywhere Newspapers litter up tho floor— And I could tell you of much more Which, if his dear wife knew of it, Would make her fall down in a fit. Oh, things have gone to wreck and wrack While she’s away, And you can bet whon she comes back Life won't be play. —Somerville Journal. Opportunity. The rising sun, with golden light The birth of day declares; But ore wo think, tho solemn night Steals o’er us unawares. So thus when man is in his prime And honors o’er him shower, Along will come old Fathor Time And wilt him as a flower. ■ A lesson then for me and you As on through life we speed; Now is the only time to do— Tako warning then and hoed. “ Another day” may nover come Nor opportunity, And this day’s work when it is done May be the last for me. —Percy Smith, In Ham’s Horn.

Home Seekers’ Excursions.

The Missouri, Kunsas & Texas Rail wav will sell tickets on Sept. 11, Sept. 25 and Oc£. 9, at greatly reducod rates to all points in Texas, to Eddy, New Mexico, and Lake Charles, La., good returning twenty days from date of sale. For further information address H A. Chenieo, 12 Rookery Building, Chicago, Ill.: T. B. Cookerly, 508 Locust st., Des Moinos, la., or Jumes Barker, G. P. and T. Ag’t, St. Louis, Mo. Wife— I “That new girl sleops like a log, and I never can get her up in the morning.” Husband (struck by a bright idea)—“Let tho baby sloop with, her."—Good News. Mrs. Upperten (to conductor of the band) —“Oh, Mr. Kapellmeister, please play that adagio a little faster— tlie soup is ready to be served.”—Fliegcnde Blatter. ■ “I love to listen to the patter of tho rain on the roof,” said tho miserly poet. “I suppose you do.” said his wife, “it’s cheap amusement.”—Harper’s Bazar. Deacon Parker— “ Did you smell onionsl” CoL Korn—“Not till you spoke.”— Life.

THE MARKETS.

New York, Sept. 12. LIVE STOCK—Cattle 83 50 © 5 40 Sheep 2 00 © 3 50 Hogs 000 © 0 30 FLOUR —Minnesota Patents. 340 © 360 City Mills Patent 400 © 4 15 WHEAT—No. 2 Red 58‘/ a © No. 1 Northern (W*/ 2 © 64‘i CORN—No. 2 00 © f f)/j September e 3%@ <H OATS—No. 2 34 © 34>4 RYE—State 53 © 54 PORK—Mess, New 15 50 © 10 00 LARD—Western 9 35 © 9 40 BUTTER—State Creamery.. 15 © 24 State Dairy 13!4© 17 CHICAGO. BEEVES—Shipping Steers.. 310 © 025 Cows 1 25 © 300 Stockers 1 4,0 @ 2 75 Feeders 2 00 © 335 Butchers' Steers 2 86 © 350 Bulls 1 50 © 3 25 HOGS 640 ©0 70 SHEEP 140 © 3 70 BUTTER—Creamery..... 14 © 2354 Dairy 12*4© 20 EGGS—Fresh 15 © 16 BROOM CORNWestern (per ton) 80 00 @llO 00 Illinois, all llurl 9) 00 @llO 00 Illinois. Good to Choice.... 90 00 t-/110 00 POTATOES—(per bu.) 70 © 85 PORK—Mess 14 25 © 14 37(4 LARD—Steam 8 90 © 9 00 FLOUR—Spring Patents 3 20 © 3 50 Spring Straights 2 20 © 2 GO W inter Patents 280 @ 290 Winter Straights 240 © 2 60 GRAIN—Wheal, No 2 Red... 53%© 54(4 Corn, No. 2 50%© 57 Oats, No. 2 30)4© 1-044 Rye. No. 2 47 © 47*4 Barley, No. 2 55 © 50 LUMBER— Piece Stuff 6 00 @ 9 25 Joists 12 25 @l2 50 Timbers 9 75 @lO 00 Hemlock 625 © 6 50 Lath. Dry 1 70 © 1 75 Shingle's 1 25 © 2 00 ST. LOUIS. CATTLE—Texas Steers ?2 75 © 3 20 Native Steers 3 50 © 4 25 HOGS 525 © 0 15 SHEEP 2 25 © 2 85 OMAHA. CATTLE—Steers 82 00 © 4 00 Feeders 225 © 2 05 HOGS 625 © 6 10 SHEEP 250 © 3 10

f —\ , CHTLLINESS, when other people feel warm aaVjQTP enough, is a sign of btliouaBgr ness, or of malarial poisons W VNBv/ i\ —B° fe a furred or coated W »7 l tongue, loss 1 of appetite. K. CM 7 //J headaches or giddiness, and /A ? dull » drowsy* debilitated // 1\ feeling. It’s your liver that’s | |T/ / '@£»y. at fault. You want to stimulate it; anci invigorate it 'IJ with Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant pfnr* tL) Pellets. With every trouble I . M ff of the kind, these tiny little \vj V things act like a miracle. You can break up sudden attacks of Colds, Fevers, and Inflammations, with them. They’ll give you a permanent cure for Indigestion, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Sick Headache, and Dizziness. They’re the smallest, the pleasantest to take, and the most thoroughly natural remedy. You ought to be warned against the maltreatment of Catarrh in the Head, with poisonous, irritating noetrumy. They can’t cure it. They simply remove it—drive it to tho throat and lungs. For a thorough and complete ettre of Catarrh, take Dr. Cage's Catarrh Remedy.

A man lately conflnod in a Scotch jail for oattle-steallng, managed, with five others, to break out on Sunday, and, being captured on one of the neighboring hills, ho very gravely remarked to tho officer: “I might have escaped, but I hud conscientious scruples about traveling on Sunday.”— Titrßits. “Some men,” said Uncle Eben, “is so soured on human nature dat when ’er friend returns a borrowed umbrell’ dey t’inks it am a reflection on deumbrell’s quality.”— Washington Star. “JEf I give you your dinner,” asked Mr. Haiseod, “will you turn the grindstone awhile?” “Naw,” said Dismal Dawson. “I ain’t no crank agitator.”—Cincinnati Tribune. Etiikl— “What made people think they were husband anl wife?” Frank—“ Why, whenever he related a good story sho always interrupted him by saying he’d left out something.”—Tit-Bits. “Georoe, father has failed.” “That’s just liko him I I told you all along, darling, that he was going to do all he could to keep us from marrying.”—Life’s Calendar. “Her religion is very much likelier dress; she can put it on or oil, iust as sho pleases.” “Yes, and like her ball dress, at that; there isn’t very much of it.”—Life’s Calendar. Prophetic.—“ Has sho given you any encouragement?” “Oh, yes! Bho says sho will get all of her father’s money when he he dies.”—Life's Calendar. Glenn’s Sulphur Soap is a genuine remedy for Skin Diseases. Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye, 50 cents. ■ • Wife— “ What can I do to please my own little hubby on his birthday to-morrow?” Hubby—“rfoll the piano.”—Truth. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75c.

DU'.' .(il' lll't'.il( you only insist upon it. They are made for cooking and heating,ln every conceivable stylo and size, for <vty kindof fuel and with prices from ♦ lo to * 70. Thegenuliie All hear this trade- |S mark and an* told with a written | guarantee, first-class merchants H everywhere handle them. Q Hi* MiiNgan Stove Company. B B USIKT MAKWI Of HOVIS AND RAfIM* !rt TO! WOULD fi Bfi MTmn, CHICAGO. BUffAlO. NEW VO>SC CITY. H "in miiiniiiiimumii iiiiiiiuhiiimiuh

sm&r No Soap will do the S|pP> WORK HALF 50 WELL AS Santa Claus Soar tONETRIAL WILL PROVE THIS FACT. SOLD EVERYWHERE. “sthe N.K.FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago.

to new york AiH old-fashioned way Hi MILES iCT* of getting there. Slow and safe, but hard nj work. Most women, have got beyond this kind of traveling—found something better. (u if Now, why can * you look at t^at ot^er °ldv| K fashioned proceeding in the same light—y&yf washing things with soap and hard rubbing, that's slow enough and tiresome enough, / everybody knows, and it’s not as safe as with Pearline. It’s really mJL destructive, in fact, the wear of that M) constant rubbing. Break away from these antiquated ideas. Use modem -tsj /nsse' \v| fPj methods. Pearline saves at every <4 Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you “ this is as good as* OCIILi or "the same as Pearline.’’ IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled,)! to | and if your grocer sends you something in place of Pearline, bo 11 JIScLCK! honest —send it back. JAMES PYLE, New York. THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.

CREAM BALM CURES RIeSOCEMTs! ALLORUSCISTsIkiii

Has An Annual Sale of 3DOOtons. TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXES. THE ONLY PERFECT PASTE. Morse Bro strop's. Canton,Mas* The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, ail within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from tho first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. Biffi EXCURSIONS SEPT. Ilth, SEPT. 25th, OCT. 9th On those dates Round-Trip Tickets will be sold from Chicago, I’eorla, St.. Louis, and other stations on the 0. B. & Q. It. It., to the principal cities and farming regions of the Northwest, West and Southwest AT LOW RATES Many connecting railways will also sell ITarvest Excursion Tickets, on Name terms, over this T, ou . The undersigned or any agent of the Burlington Route, and most ticket agents of connecting railways east of Urn Mississippi ltlver, will supply applicants with Harvest Excursion folders giving full particulars. P. S. EUSI’IS, Genl Pus’rtad Kokst Agent, .OHM Aa 18*. CHICAGO, ILL. SALESMEN WANTED. To soil Hardy Northern Grown Nursery Stock. Large assortment Ilnost goods grown. Cash every wont. TUB JICWELT,NUttSUKY CO, N 0.314 Nursery Ave., Luke City, Minnesota. Ra » r .j WANTED to sell hardy Nursery Stock, our own growing. Wo pay salary or commission Address with reference# L. 0, BKAUG A CO., Prop., Union Suroorloo, Kojuiuoo, Bleh. •VNAMS THIS PAPSB ...» lino Ton wrtto.

A. N. K—A 1517 * WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEAII ■tale that you saw the Ad.ertUemeat la tkla