Rensselaer Journal, Volume 10, Number 49, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 May 1901 — Page 7

i “ It Seems as though my i j Back Would Break."

'■< I' Is it not true? Women suffer, feel the very life crushed out of them, grow old before their time. Each morning wake up determined to do so much before the day ends, and yet— Before the morning is very old the dreadful BACKACHE attacks them, the brave spirit sinks back in affright: no matter how hard they struggle, the “clutch” is upon them and they fall upon the couch crying : “ Why should I suffer so ? What can Ido ? ” The answer is ready, your cry has been heard, and a woman is able to restore you to health and happiness. Backache is only a symptom of more fatal trouble—heed its warning in time. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will stop your torture and restore your courage. Your pains come from unnatural menstruation or some derangement of the womb. Let those who are suffering read Mrs. Morton’s letter and be guided by her experience. AN OPEN LETTER TO WOMEN. “DIAR Mrs. Pinkham:— l have been so delighted ir ii-J " 'nl withLydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I I thought I would write and thank you. My system I •was entirely run down. I suffered with terrible back- I ache in the small of my back and could hardly stand I upright; was more tired in the morning than on retiring I ? Wl I at night. I had no appetite. Since taking your Com- j|v- gr I pound I have gained fifteen pounds, and am gaining K I every week. My appetite has improved, have no back- I IfiL—i ache, and I look better than I ever looked before. 1 “ I shall recommend it to all my friends, as it cer- 1 WBrrfWrWufTw tainly is a wonderful medicine.”—Mrs. E. F. Morton, Laml'lii IFI rl 826 York St., Cincinnati, O. ||MRSE.F NORTpN| When a medicine has been successful in restoring to health more than a million women, you cannot well say, without , trying it, “I do not believe it will help me.” If you are ill, don’t hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for special advice—it is free. 4f| ■■ B F 188 Ann Owing to the fact that >ome skeptical st B S K B M B ■ KB" IMf nKII people have from time to time questioned sfl I II 111 IV.L VV MUM the genuineness of the testimonial letters w ni|||l| <■» f FtO I I w “‘ P al « *° an y person who can show that the above testimonial is not genuine, or was pulished before obtaining the writer’* special permission.—Lydia E. Pinkham Mkdicinb Co. rTVW.L.DOUCLAS a-* s*s =. Bu, B it rvri Xeat worth of W. 1.. Dougla. !*:t nnd ESSSfc' .hoe. i. !S4 to Sa. My *4 wfSfH \ cut Edge I.lne c nnnot be equalled 7 W' 'A'l, *' / fXr \ ’’X at any price. Bfr.'-VL-V JtJJ u BROCK Tnai!.. It Is not alone the best •’ V "MSS. TST leather that makes a first .FaffiZlTOßfeu r'' - A ''lass shoe it ia tile brains, , J lirat n ; nave planned tlte Iteat J lasts s perfect nodel ::•;£< I of the foot, and the construction or the shoe. Ilia mechanical skill and A knowledge that have made W. L. Douglas shoes the Iwst in the world lot men. Xi WBMjEF-: : :: v / A Take i,o substitute. Insist on having W. 1.. Douglas shoes w'th name .(KSV vKSps’’** and price stamped on bottom. Your dealer should seep them. If he does no(, jSSbfcM vr?.''.' /jAffiSu send for catalog giving full instructions how to order by mail. W. 1.. IHUUUIS, llroekton, ’'a... "-' 7 ' A w*Sl

THE MIDWAY.

Principal Amnaement Feature* of the Fan-American Exposition. The Midway of the Pan-American Ekrpositlan far surpasses all amusement features at former expositions, both In quality and novelty of attrac--1 tlons. The following are the principal concessions: Esquimaux Village, Glass Factory, Trip to the Moon, Aerio-Cycle, Old Plantation, Beautiful Orient, Miniature World’s Fair, Around the World, Cleo/patra, Colorado Gold Mine, Living Pictures, Dreamland, Moving Pictures, War Cyclorama, Philippine Village, Alt Nurnburg, Panopticon, Streets of Mexico, Darkness and Dawn, Burning Mountain, Darkest Africa, House Upside Down, Water Sports Carnival, Gypsy Camp, Golden Chariots, Johnstown Flood, Infant lucubators, Fair Japan, Bostock’s Wild Animal Arena, Ideal Palace, Jerusalem on the Morning of the Crucifixion, Indian Congress, Bazaar Building, Scenic Railway, Venice in America, Dawson City, Miniature Railway, Pabst on the Midway.

Woman as Truant Officers.

At least two women are serving as truant officers in school districts of New York State— Mrs. U. C. Walker, of Watertown, Jefferson county, and Mrs. Helen M. Coe, of Scriba Corners, Oswego county.

Hall’s Catarrh Cure

Is a constitutional cure. Price. 75c. The Adventists In Detroit will establish parochial schools. Mr*. Window’* Soothing Syrup. For children teething, (often* the gums, reduce* Inanimation, allay* pain, cure* wind colic. 35c a bottle. The man who is lazy never has time to do anything.

New Cruisers for Russia.

Among the newest constructions of the Russian navy to engage the energies of the' shipbuilding plant at Nicolaieff will be a new cruiser of 13,000 tons, 17,000 horse power and 18 knots speed. Besides this, the same yards will launch a protected cruiser of 6,400 tons, 19,500 horse power and 23 knots speed. a »

Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O!

Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. the price of coffee. 15c apd 25 eta □er package Sold by all grocers. One day recently the amount of mall originating in the Chicago postoffice was 154 tons. FITS Permanently Cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE 92.00 trial bottle and treatise. Db. R. H. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa. The Roman roads, according to their importance, were from eight to thirty feet in width.

Coe’s Cough Balsam

junnsnm I* the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker than anything else. It is always reliable. Try lb A woman’s lot is made for her by the love she accepts.—George Eliot The well posted druggist advises you to use Wizard Oil for pain, for he knpws what it has done. r If you bestow a favor, forget It; If you receive one, remember it. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an InfaUible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. Samuxl, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. IT. 1900. Pens are polished with emery powder in a large revolving drum.

CHANCE FRIENDS.

peerfbllltles of Congenial Companionably in Persona We Do Not Know. It makes one homesick in this world to think tha: there are so many rare people he can never know; and so many excellent people that scarcely any one will know in fact One discovers a friend by chance, and cannot but regret that twenty or thirty year* of life, maybe, have been spent without the least knowledge of him. When he is once known, through him opening is made into another little world, into a circle of culture and loving hearts and enthusiasm in a dozen congenial pursuits, and prejudices, perhaps. How instantly and easily the bachelor doubles his world when he marries, and enters into unknown fellowship of the, to him, continually increasing company, which is known in popular language as “all his wife’s relations.” , Near at hand daily, no doubt, are those worth knowing intimately, If one had the time and the opportunity. And when one travels he sees what a vast material there is for society and friendship, of which he can never avail himself. Car load after car load of summer travel goes by one at any railway station, out of which he is sure he could choose a score of lifelong friends, if the conductor would introduce him. There are faces of refinement, of quick wit, of sympathetic kindness—interesting people, traveled people, entertaining people, as you would say In Boston, “nice people you would admire to know,” whom you constantly meet and pass without a sign of recognition, many of whom are no doubt your long-lost brothers and sisters. You can see that they also have their worlds and their Interests, and they probably know a great many “nice” people. The matter of personal liking and attachment Is a good deal due to the mere fortune of ass elation. More fast friendships and pleasant -acquaintances ar« formed on the Atlantic steamships, between those who would have been only indifferent acquaintances elsewhere, than one would think possible on t voyage which naturally makes one as selfish as he Is Indifferent to his personal appearance.—From Backlog Studies, by Charles Dudley Warner.

WORDS OF WISDOM.

Peace hath more victories than strife. Gratitude is the rosemary of the heart. Suspicion is born either of envy or contempt. To be loved is pleasing, but to be honored is rarer. It Is not our poverty as often aa our pride that hurts. If practice costs no more than precept, to live were cheap. To borrow is no harm; the disgrace lies in forgetting you did. A sunny nature has he who can eat and be merry before noon. There is a vast hiatus ofttimes between laughter and mirth. Whining has a habit of defeating its own object Sorrow and pain are still. In order to conquer Hope, Time often has to cover her with many feet of earth. If we have an object In life the petty jealousies and gnat bites will pass unnoticed. A boy’s manners reflect his mother’s teaching, even as his morals do his ancestors’ living. A little maiden “playing house” gives a photograph of her mother’s domestic methods.—Philadelphia Record.

Keeping Track of a Vacuum.

There was once a chief engineer in the British Navy, a patient man who had spent so many nights by the bedside of an expiring boiler, which never expired, but kept on bursting blood vessels and getting a death rattle iy its thousand throaty, that he had become reconciled to knowing that he would be called upon to stop leaks at all hours of the day and night for the rest of his natural life. His only envy was the man who could sleep undisturbed through the whole night This man was Bulstrode, chief engineer of another ship. , One night the assistant engineer sent a man up to Bulstrode to report the gradual disappearance of the vacuum in the air pumps. Knocking at the door the man sang out: “Please, sir, the vacuum is decreasing.” The answer came back in a drowsy voice: “All right. Report to me if it gets lower.” Half an hour later the man rapped again at the door. “The vacuum is much lower, sir.” “Very good. Tell me if it gets still lower.” After another half hour: “Mr. Bulstrode, the vacuum’s gone, sir.” “All right; report to me if it comes back.” —Waverley Magazine.

What He Desired to Know.

A man wa being tried recertly In New South iVales for stealing a watch. The evidence was conflicting, and the jury made up their minds to retire, but before they left the hall the judge remarked that if there were any points on which they required information he would be pleased to assist them. Eleven of the jurymen had left the box, but the twelfth remained standing, with ais eyes fixed downward, as if absorbed in thought. “Well, sir,” said the judge, “is there any question you would like to ask me before you retire?” “I would like to know, my Lrd,” tame tne reply, “if you could tell us whether the prisobv stole the watch?”

THE SASKATOON DISTRICT.

ONE OF THE NEW WESTERN CANADA DISTRICTS. The Great Advantages of Settlement Where the Sell la of Unexampled Fertility. During the past year or two a largo sumber of American settlers (those going from the United States to Canada), have made homes in the Saskatoon district in Western Canada. They have found the climate all that could be desired and their prospects are of the brightest. In writing of it a correspondent says: The lands for sale are choice selections from a large area, and every farm is within easy distance of a railway station. Experience has shown that this district enjoys immunity from sdmmer frost, from cyclones and blizzards. The South Saskatchewan, flowing through the tract, is one of the finest rivers in the country, being navigable and having an average width of stream of 1,000 feet The agents of the Canadian government, whose advertisement appears elsewhere in your paper and who will be pleased to furnish full information, tell me that within the limits of tho tract there are two distinct varieties of soil. One is a rich black loam, and the other is a somewhat lighter loam, containing a small admixture of sand. There appears to be no appreciable difference between the fertility of these two kinds of soil. Both are alluvial in their characteristics, both are marvelously productive, and both rest upon a subsoil of clay. The advantage of this formation is that it retains the heat of the day during the night, and is favorable to the early maturity of crops. Every kind of crop will here attain the highest perfection of quality. The land is admirably adapted for stock-raising and dairy farming, as well as growing grain. Some idea of the richness of the natural grasses of the prairie may be formed from the fact that more than 200 tons of hay were gathered within a short distance of Saskatoon and stored up for use during the winter. A growth so luxuriant demonstrates beyond all possible question the suitability of the land for pasturing cattle, and no doubt this important industry will be largely carried on. Nature has been lavish in her gifts to this territory. Not only is the soil of unexampl<»d fertility, but the climate is delightful and healthy. Such is the testimony of every settler, and this testimony is confirmed by enthusiastic opinions from every traveler, explorer, missionary or newspaper correspondent who has ever visited this farfamed Saskatchewan Valley. In former years vast herds of buffalo came here to winter from the elevated storm-swept regions south of the United States boundary line, proving thereby the adaptation of these rolling prairies to the purpose of raising stock. The land is dry, with sufficient, but not excessive raififall, capable of early cultivation in the spring, and free from summer frosts. The configuration of the country renders artificial drainage unnecessary, and prevents the accumulation of stagnant pools; mists and fogs are seldom i, The days of summer are full of sunshine, under the genial influence of which crops rapidly ripen. Autumn is characterized by an almost unbroken succession of fine weather, during which the crops are safely garnered. In winter it is cold, but extremely exhilarating and pleasant, owing to the wonderful dryness and bracing qualities of the air. The winter is a source of profit as well as enjoyment to the people, being far healthier than a humid climate. Water and fuel—these two prime necessaries of life are plentiful throughout the district.

A Curious Mistake.

Word comes from Hawaii of a curious mistake that arose there through “America” and “God Save the King’ being set to the same music. A British war ship called there, and the commander made an official call on Governor Dole. The government band played “God Save the King” as the visitors came up. The Hawaiian house ol representatives was in session, but the members did not know what was going on outside. When the music began one member suggested that all stand up while the national anthem, “America,” was being played. The idea was promptly adopted.

South Dakota Farms

Is the title of an illustrated booklet just issued by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, descriptive of the country between Aberdeen and the Missouri River, a section heretofore unprovided with railway facilities, but which is now reached by a new line of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. Everyone contemplating a change of location will be interested in the Information contained in it, and a copy may be had by sending a twocent stamp to F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111. The carrying power of British shipping, including colonial, is now 30,300,000 tons, against 3,400,000 tons in 1850. Some articles must be described. White’s Yucatan needs no description; it’s the real thing. The” national ‘debt of Norway amounts to about $60,000,000.

LOSS OF APPETITE

and nervousness, quickly cured by DR. CRANE’S QUAKER TONIC TABLETS. A promise should be given with caution and kept with care.

THE TRIALS OF GENIUS.

Sometimes when Pm vworkin* jest —y very level best To write a high-toned poem, I feel terribly distressed To have to lay my pencil down an* go to doin’ chores Jest like a common mortal, while my fancy soars an’ soars. It’s kind o’ worryin’ to have a high-born genius while You don’t possess the wherewithal to run the thing in style; An’ when I put my writin’ by, some lowly task to do, I ask myself. “Did Shakespere uster to have his trials, too?” I fancy I c’n see him, now, a-workin’ on his plays, An’ runnin’ up agin’ the snags I find these later days. I S’pose jest when he’d strike a thought h« knowed was somethin’ good He’d have to leave it, then and there, an* go an’ split the wood. An’ when some big, inspirin' theme was jest about to dawn I calculate that that’s jest when he’d have to mow the lawn. An’ when the muse was soarin’ high—l’ve been right there, you know— The garden needed terdin* an’ he’d have, to use the hoe. A genius hain’t got any.right to have to putter round A-doin* all the common things that everywhere abound: His hull big lifework ort to be to sort <r , rest an* wait An* kind o’ let his hair grow out an’ think o’ something great. That’s what I tell Eliza —she’s my wifehut, no-sir-ee! Fer thirty year that woman has been jest a-houndin’ me; An’ when I tell her genius ain’t no hand at doin’ chores, She smiles an’ says, “Well, genius, then, ’ill have to sleep outdoors!” —Nixon Waterman, in Puck.

HUMOR OF THE DAY.

Nell—“A scientific man declares that kisses are full of electricity.” Belle—- “ Perhaps that’s why some people find them so shocking.” “Credulous?" said the girl in the tan coat “Credulous! Why, mamma actually beiieves the epitaphs on tombstones.”—Washing n Post. Wigwag—“is that a paying investment of yours?” Sappehead—“Yes; that’s the trouble. I’ve been paying assessments ever since 1 went into it.” “A little earning is dangerous thing,” Mr. Hardup said philosophically when the landlord seized his office furniture for rent.—Montreal Star, I saw a sight that filled with awe My soul and made me quiver. *Twas wondrous strange, I swear I saw A shad roe up the river. —Philadelphia Press. “Say, pop,” said little Willie, “what’s a running account?” “One that you have to chase after, my boy,” replied the old gentleman u .mily.—Philadelphia Record. “Why, what possible objection can you haze to Miss Withers? She is a saint if ever there was one.” “Stick her in the calendar, then, but don’t ask her to the house.”—Brooklyn Life. Let’s build a few more libraries, The world more jovial looks! We’ll all quit making trouble soon, And go to making books. —Washington Star. tourist—“l suppose I can’t get a train for three hours?” Station Agent —“Oh, yes; your train leaves in five minutes.” tourist—“ That’s a great wait off my mind.”—Ohio State Journal First Scientist—“l near that your dog went mad and oit Professor Snagroots. Any serious results?” Second Scientist—“ Yes, the poor beast s barking in Latin and Greek!”—Chicago News. “Oh, yes, he’s traveling in cog. They say he’s a knight in England—a knight or baron of something.” “He’d better be careful or a night in New York will make him barren of everything.”— Philadelphia Press. “Oh, pa!” exclaimed the dear girl, her sapphire eyes brimming over with tears. “How can you say Society is hollow?” “Why shouldn’t I?” retorted pa, with a coarse, throatty laugh, that betrayed the fact that he paid more attention to making money than acquiring pol’ _. “Why shouldn’t I, when I have to pay the bills for feeding the gang that you have here at your blow-outs?”—lndianapolis News.

His Amazed Daughter.

The wife of a Gordon Highlander received some time ago an invitation to visit him at the barracks in Scotland. She did so, taking with her their little six-year-old girl. When they arrived, as it happened, the husband was engaged on sentry d-ty, and so they could not approach him. The child eyed her “daddy” with a rather sorrowful but amazed express sion, as he paced up and down the square shouldering his rifle and wearIng a kilt She had never before beheld him thm arrayed, and for a few minutes the spectacle seemed to be quite beyond her; but for no longer could she keep silent. “Mamma,” she said, in a voice that betrayed a trace of childish covetousness, “if daddy finds the man what stole ’ees trousers, will he gimme dat little frock?”—Tit-Bits.

A Fish-and-Lizard Story.

One afternoon I thought I would go down the river and troll. I had on my hook a live minnow, and in little while had a strike and I hooked my first fish, which seemed to be quite a large one. I reeled him where I could see him and found it was a large pike* twenty-five or thirty inches long. I pulled him up to my boat, but when I lifted h m irom the water he was as light as a feather. I measured him and found he was just thirty inches long, and should have weighed eight or nine pounds, while be only weighed two. He was just skin and bones. I killed him, took my knife and cut him open, and found a live lizard, five Inches long, in his stomach. The reptile was as black as coal and very lively, living twenty-four hours after I took him from his prison.— Field and Stream.

What Changed His Life Current.

When Henry Ibsen. was in his teen* he took up the study of medicine and read for examination in Christiania. In the course of his study he read “Sallust,” and the character of Cattaline so took his fancy that he wrote a little play, introducing him. It was so successful from a literary standpoint that the young author’s life current was changed at once. By a vote of 129 nays to eighty-six yea* in the Massachusetts house of representatives has defeated a bill to permit golf and other sports on Sunday.

A Month's Test Free.

If you have Rheumatism, write Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wls., Box 143, for six bottles of his Rheumatic Cure, express paid. Send no money. Pay *5.50 If cured. The secretary of state for India has sanctioned a scheme for five large central asylums for the insane in India.

0 C lAJ A E> n wlll be P uld w i S” “ *” ”*• for acaßeof I I backache, nervousness, sleeplessI I I ness, weakness, loss of vitality, Inpl I*ll I clplent kidney .bladder and urinary disorders that can not be cured by the great kidney, liver and blood medicine. SOe At aU Druggists. Write for free sample. Address KID-NE-OIOS, St. Louis, Mo. Pacific Coast Lands Farm* in Washington and Oregon, improved and unimproved, suitable tor stock and dairying purposes, or raising fruit, vegetables, hops, cranberries, wheat, oats and other cereals, are sold by us on liberal terms, either all cash or on small cash payments, balance time. The time to buy is when you buy cheap. For further information write to TllE SYNDICATE CQMPANY, No. 209 California Bldg , Tacoma, Washington.

Match f Starts fAeAfee/\ K If Yow i/>se & \ I Wickless nLAME | c Oil Stove f ™ your dealer W No Fuss GbM 33,.. g fTSW,'' >-wk the neareel No Muss M * nar or ~WXIII s-jT- £Tr |rf standard ■ ]||g|L 13L

—V POOR LITTLE JOHNNY! AND HIS “TUMMY”! 3B 54b Small boys, and many times large ones, fUB I 3 ;//l 'A u suffer terribly from convulsive pains or 10/fr/ uX “cramps” in the bowels and stomach—’sSj*sXx3a C/I ' 50 v i°l cnt that it “doubles up” the CZ v I ones attacked, and makes it impossmle for I — —I.. them to stand up. Yf/! R Sr. Some people call ft colic, but moct honest, Vy//^plain-spoken people call it “belly-ache** and very f ) i hX \ fwoperly, sos the seat of the trouble a in the £dK i/» tT bowels, and caused by the violent efforts of the JrV YrS*/ \ bowels to rid themselves of something which FZ/ v\ * doesn't belong there. The small boy usually I!.< / \v \ horn overrating or from eating forbidden Il / \\\ \ VjßstsS fruit, and suffers mostly in the summer time. I S y /X I n WwM \ r A fo* war ‘” the boys and girls and the big \//l Hiw ’ bTI li jaJjS folks, too, for that matter, clean out the dogged rT m 'O « | channels filled with winter bile and putrid undiL,s/ Q £ yj> J -s&BST I gested food, strengthen the 30-feet of bowel - | canal, liven up the liver, and “summer belly* lehrs'* will have no terrors, because they won't The way to make the body ache-proof is to use sweSXgrant CASCAREIS, the perfect system cleaners and bowel strengtheners. For fear that anybody in the family should ever be attacked by belly-ache, keep a box <3 CASCARETS in the house always, and remember that all pains and troubles in your inside* are QUICKLY CURED BY LIVER TONIC JOC.^_— 25c - never ALL DRUGGISTS. ■ B M ■ HI ■ SOLD IN BULK.

Kall bowel trouble*, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowel*, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimple*, pain* after eating, liver trouble, sallow complexion ana dizziness. when your bowels don’t move regularly you are getting sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It is a starter for the chronic ailment* and long year* of suffering that eome afterward*. No matter what alls yon, start taking CASCABETS to-day, for you will newer get well and be well all the time until CsYs??* I 2« h *» Take our advice; start with CAsCAHETS to-day, under an absolute guarantee to euro or money refunded.

LAND SALE. I want to sell you a farm In the Corn Belt of low* or th* Wheat Belt of Minnesota or Dakota. If you thould have small or large meant to Inyett, write me Statlag what you want. If you have a farm for sale, write me full particulars and price. Liberal terms arranged; small cash payment, balance time. Cheaptat good land in lowa. B.K, Lucas, Anthon, lowa. SIXTY DOLLARS wor l h .°!„ ,taple Bood » free ** vias ■ wvkkHllu one intelligent man or womw j T’ ,e qu !S?’ Al£ w JERSEY MFG. CO., Jersey City, N, J.

FRAGRANT fio/ODONT a perfect liquid dentifrice fer the Teeth «nd Mouth New Size SOZODONT LIQUID, 25c fhf"* SOZODONTTOOTH POWDER, 25c /R* Large LIQUID ud POWDER, 75c WW. At all Stores, or by Mall for the prioa. HALL&RUCKEU New York. NORTH WISCONSIN & MINNESOTA LANDS RAPIDLY INCREASING In value—at least 50c per acre every six months. Don't go too far West, consider advontages of good water, plentiful rainfall and nearest the best markets of the world. Large tracts for Investors and all sizes for farmers, at 12.50 per acre up. Easy terms. Reduced railroad fare and freights. Write for particulars. La»S * Lsb«r Bxehaa<«, SOI Plosesr Fm,BUg.,St.P,al,Sla*. SALEHHMI Twelve Acres English Walnuts In bearing $4,000 Twelve Acres Mission Olives in bearing 4.000 Fourteen Acres Oranges & Lemons in bearing. 7,500 In Ilrst-class condition, fine location and choice bargains. Liberal terms arranged. 11. A. UNRUH, Arcadia, Los Angeles County, CaL

b'-ATmr With rig to sell oxir Poviltry Mixture; straight se.le.ry $15.00 per week expenses: year’s contre.ct; weekly pay. We fvirrvlsbi bank reference 3 reliability. Address with stamp. EUREKA MF’G CO.. Dent. 55. East St. Louis. TIL

GUARANTEED similar medlelse la the worM. This 1* absolute proof of great sserlt. and ear beet testimonial. We have faith aad will sell CASCAMET* aheelntely guaranteed to ear* er money refunded. Go buy today, two Me boxes, give them a fair, honest trial, as per staple directions, aad If you ar* not satlsded, after using on* Me box. retar* the anaeed Me box and the empty box to ns by mall, or th* ir.rflil from Whom you ■archns*d it, aad get year money bnefc fbr both boxes- Take oar advice—no matter what all* yea star* today. Health will *ulekly follow aad yoa will blocs the day yon drst startsd th* use orC A*C ABETu. Book free by matL Addremi UTEBLLNG KEMEDT CO., NIW TO kA or CMICAOO.

*1 Do Yoi Wait w ■ send stamp to L. T. Grkut, patent atty, tlO mb Bt-l N, E., Washington, D.C., for Free Handbook on PatentZJ

IN 3 OR 4 YEARS IN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED nil you take up yowr home in Western O* ada.the land of plenha Illustrated pamphleta, giving experiences of fanners who have become wealthy in growing wheat, reports a|, delegates, etc.,and fun information as to reduced railway rales san bi had on application to the Superintendent «f Immigration, Department of Interior. Ottawa, Canada, or to C. J. Broughton, 1M Monadnook Block, Chicago, or E. T. Holmes, Boom #, Bi* Four" Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. w - • HOLLYHOCK POULTRY FARM MA 54-page Illustrated Poultry Cataiorna The secrets of successful poultry fataIng told tn plain language; all about taIMr cubators, brooders, poultry houses, bow a/W® 4 to hatch and raise every chick, what, MUTst when and how to feed, forcing hens to T3#w- lay and hundreds of valuable subjects contained Is s» other catalogue. Tells of M voaF eties popular thoroughbred fowls and quotas* •remely low prices. Send 4c in sta trips for posts* Hollyhock Poultry Farm. Box 1467. Des Moines. la. Nature’s Priceless Remedy Rheumatism, Nesrab DR.O. PHELPS BROWN'S 0«a. Weak Back. Sproiea, DDrnifMlQ Bums. Soree and all Paia. Address Dr. O. P. Brown. 08 B'way, Newburgh, M. X

Div. i, 517—14th Street. WA>HINGTOM, D?Ct Branch offices: Chicago, Cleveland aad D*trotb W. N. U. CHICAGO, NO. 20, I®O|* Whes Atsweritg Advertiseseats Kiadij) Mention This Taper.