Rensselaer Journal, Volume 11, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 November 1901 — Page 7

THE CZAR AS A FARMER.

Besides being “Autocrat of all the Rnssias” and head of the Greek Orthodox faith, the czar has always evinced a desire to he the leader of his people in matters of industry. As president of the Trans-Siberian railroad he often presides at the meetings of its directors, and it is bis pride that with his own hands he drove the first spike in its construction, eight years ago, at Vladivostok. Under his rale Siberia has become the garden spot and hope of the Russian empire. American seed grain has been introduced, and Yankee methods of agriculture are taught by specialists who travel from district to district. Model farming villages have been built by royal command all through Siberia and money advanced to the new settlers, to whom every opportunity has been offered to become independent farmers. With 90 per cent of his 140,000,000 subjects depending on the soil, the Little Fhther at St. Petersburg naturally gives much of his time to the consideration of different plans for the amelioration of their condition. The Russian mu jilt, or peasant, is not progressive; moreover, he is hard-headed, prefers his primitive plow, which, without much exertion on his part.

may be made to scratch the soil; looks with, horror on innovations unknown to his fathers, and absolutely refuses to alter his methods, unless at express command of the czar. No Russian would disobey the White Father, any more than he would commit sacrilege, or show disrepect to the Ikon, or holy picture, which bang in the room of every. Russian, high or low. Evidently the czar relies on the force of example for carrying out his reforms. Everywhere on his appanages, or private lands —which embrace thousands of square miles in various parts of the empire—every known agricultural improvement has been introduced; further still, on these great plantations are, maintained numerous experimental agricultural stations. In Central Asia it is tobacco and cotton seed from America that are experi-mented-with, and the peasants are sent to learn the best methods of cultivating the new products. In the Trans-Caucasus, tea-growing has been successfully Introduced, and the peasants are being initiated by Chinamen into the art of preparing the leaves for the market. In the Caucasus

and the Crimea, the vineyards are being brought to perfection. Royalty has organized a temperance movement on a grand scale In the large cities, where free, open-air concerts are given, at which tea and soft drinks are served. Temperance restaurants have been established, aijd in summer great barges take the people out on river excursions. The temperance movement is growing, yet there are whole districts in Siberia that are deserted, simply because the bread made from the wheat growjf in the damp climate, ferments to such an extent that It causes a light f/>rm of intoxication. : J The czar spares neither 4ffort nor expense in placing object' lessons before

SCHOOLBOYS RECEIVING A LESSSON IN AGRICULTURE.

his simple folk. Immense barges, a thousand feet in length, on the open decks of which experimental farms are dperated, float down the great streams of Russia, stopping at every village. The peasants are Invited aboard, and there given practical lessons in modern farming, and in this way new methods and pl&nts are introduced. Children of the N.. peasants attend schools where, In addition to reading, writing and arithmetic, they learn valuable lessons in practical agriculture. On Arbor Day they plant various kinds of trees, over which they are expected to watch, and in summer they assist In harvesting and in haymaking. —Alexander Hume Ford.

Reaction In England Against Dust-Rais-ing Garments. Is there going to be a reaction at last against the long skirt trailing on the ground? The English were the first, a good many years ago now, to protest, to give effect to their protests, and, indeed, to> change the fashion. But the change did not last long. Short skirts produced pretty boots, and we heard a great deal about common sense. But common sense and

BRINGING IN THE HARVEST.

ladies’ drees do not always combine. Paris restored Jhe trailing dress, and English ladles abandoned common sense, not for the first time, in favor of the Paris mode. The Parisians, indeed, knew what they were about. As a rule, they have not pretty feet, but they have a peculiarly graceful way of catching up their dress from behind, and It is an art which our countrywomen have never mastered. English ladies inelegantly clutch at and bunch their petticoats, while the French wellconsidered grip Just lifts the rim of the long dress from the ground and gives a pretty disposition to its folds. Now, however, comes the change, and it comes not from England, but from America. In Switzerland this year many ladies are wearing short —indeed, very short —skirts. Of course, for ascents, or even for small climbs, the gain is considerable. When you are trusting to your alpenstock you have not time to think much about the rim of your petticoats. And you don’t. But perhaps that is not all. For, though American girls constitute a very fair proportion of Swiss tourists, still they mostly keep in the val-

FARMING IN SOUTH RUSSIA.

leys, where they are seen to great advantage, and rarely do much' in the Alpine peaks. But the Americans are a practical people, and short skirts are obviously the sensible thing to wear. —London News.

la la New York City, and la Worth •1,000,000 an Acre. This year’s abundant hay crop filled with rejoicing the hearts of Fifth and Madison avenue residents in the exclusive neighborhood of the 70s, New York. The hay field of this section is on a one and a half acre plot, valued at $1,000,000 per acre. It yielded a particularly good crop, and hay Is

THE SHORT SKIRT.

COSTLY HAY FIELD.

high this year. The owners look forward to getting all of $22 a ton for the hay. This is said to be the most valuable hay field in the country. It is part of the Lenox library property. It can be improved only for library purposes, and, consequently, has been left as a field, as the library building is sufficiently large for present requirements. It has 200 feet frontage on Madison avenue, 800 feet frontage on Seventieth street, and 300 feet frontage on Seventy-first street. The Lenox library and its yard occupy the Fifth avenue frontage. The hay field is particularly valuable, real estate men say, because it is one unbroken plot and occupies an entire block, with the exception of the library building. Twen-ty-five foot lots the same distance from Fifth avenue have recently brought SBO,OOO apiece. The plot would make twenty-four 25-foot lots. It Is in a neighborhood of fine houses. In the immediate vicinity are the houses of Joseph Eastman, G. H. Benedict, Charles Weisman, Henry O. Havemeyer, H. A. C. Taylor, Richard M. Hoe, E. P. Swenson and Adolph Hlrsch. St. James’ Protestant Episcopal church is on an opposite corner, and the Presbyterian hospital just across Madison avenue. From the ward windows the patients have been gazing eagerly ever Biuce the harvesting began. To them the hay field was long the most entertaining feature of the neighborhood.

About Modern Americans.

"But the American army is much larger than it was. It seems to me it grew very quickly. Only a short time ago I read it was less than 50,000, now it is 100,000 or more.” I told him that 100,000 was the maximum; that the minimum was much less. “But you build great battleships—the best in any nation.” I agreed to this. “It is a pity you think you need any battleships. Alter the Pleiad the writers America produced in the civil war you can now only show as your most brilliant brain, Carnegie, the millionaire. (He pronounced the word Carneji.) You had Thoreau, Ballou, Emerson, Longfellow, Whittier and Walt Whitman. It was your Homeric age. Then rose the Achilles among statesmen, Abraham Lincoln. All these were a giant constellation. Your war fever is over, but gold has you now. Your great men are your millionaires.”— Count Tolstoi.

Mean Trick.

Not long ago, relates the Kansas City Journal, the wife of a western Kansas politician asked him to lay aside politics long enough one day to dig the potatoes in the garden. He agreed to do it. After digging for a few minutes he went into the house and said he had found a coin. He washed it oil and it proved to be a silver quarter. He put it in his Jeans and went back to work. Presently he went to the house again and said hb had found another coin. He washed the dirt oft of it. It was a silver half dollar. He put it in his jeans. "I have worked pretty hard,” said he to his wife; "I guess Til take a short nap.” When he awoke he found that his wife had dug all the rest of the potatoes. But she found no coins. It then dawned upon her that she had been “worked.”

Native Population Growing.

The ceilsus returns show that the' native white population of the United States exceeds the foreign-born element in the ratio of more than five to one, there being more than 66,000,000 whites against a little more than 10,000,000 foreigners. Of the natives something more than 41,000,000 are also of native parentage. A more striking fact brought out is that since 1890 the native white element has increased 23 per cent, and the foreign white element only 12. If this ratio continues the foreign element must steadily become a smaller proportion of the entire population, which Is only another way of saying that the population will become more homogeneous as time passes.—Washington Times.

How Detroit Drinks.

“A Detroit woman has been trying to see how many drinks she could absorb without being infected by the stuff.” “Something with water in it, r suppose?” “Water? No. Don’t you know that Detroit is the. City of the Straights.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Not a Missing Link.

YTm glad I’m not green like you,” tainted the monkey to the parrot. "I may .be green,” , replied the parrot freezingly, “but I’m glad I’m not a missing link.”—Exchange.

That Settled It.

Brinkerhoff—l thought you intended to become a piano virtuoso. Beecro/.t I did; but my barber says that I will b« prematurely bald.—Brooklyn Eagle.

GETTING MUSICAL PITCH.

gblleltous Care Is Kxerelsed In Preserving the Standards. Musical pitch has a curious tendency to creep in. It is said that Bach’s music sounds much differently now from what It did when Bach wrote it, because the Instruments are now pitched higher. In 1882 it was found that the pitch of high Aat the Vienna Court Opera had crept from the prescribed 435 double vibrations a second to 443, and in 1885 this number had further increased to 450. Accordingly a musical conference was held, and a resolution was taken to re-establish the old pitch of 435 vibrations, per second. Upon this announcement the Reichsanstalt, the Imperial Physical and Technical Institute of Germany, set up standard instruments, and has since tested and corrected many hundreds of tuning forks, shortening them it they are too low in pitch, and thinning the arms if they are too high. All the military orchestras of Germany are pitched alike, and the Reichsantalt keeps the tuning forks correct. And this solicitous care of the government in preserving standards is one reason why the world now goes to Germany In musical matters. —Pearson’s Magazine.

CANADA’S CAPITAL AROUSED.

Never Wai There Sneh Excitement — I’hyvlctun*' Association Trying to Explain. Ottawa, Canada, Nov. 25th.—This city is stirred up as never before. Some seven years ago the local papers published an account of a man named George H. Kent of 408 Gllmour street, who was dying of Bright’s Disease and who at the very last moment after several of our best physicians had declared he couldn’t live twelve hours, was saved by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. People who know how low Mr. Kent was refused to believe that he was cured permanently and the other day in order to clinch the matter the papers published the whole case over again and backed up their story by sworn statements made by Mr. Kent, in which he declares most positively that in 1894 he was given up by the doctors and that Dodd’s Kidney Pills and nothing else saved him, and further that since the day that Dodd’s Kidney Pills sent him back to work seven years ago, he has not lost a single fnlnute from his work. (Ho is a printer in the American Bank Note Printing Company.) Mr. Kent is kept quite busy during his spare hours answering inquiries personally and by letter; but he is so grateful that he counts the time well spent. Indeed he and his wife have shown their gratitude to Dodd’s Kidney Pills in a very striking way by having their little girl—born in 189C—christened by the name of “Dodds.” Altogether it is the most sensational case that has ever occurred in the history of medicine in Canada and the perfect substantiation of every detail leaves no room to doubt either the completeness or the permanency of the cure. The local physicians have made the case of Kent and Dodd's Kidney Pills the subject of discussion at several of the private meetings of their association. The Falls of Qlomen, in Norway, are to be utilized for the operation of an electrical generating plant almost sa large as the one at Niagara.

I *« 1 I lT 13 ReFRESHIf And Ac 74 S S !TA“®t a^ ASWLY "?G Efmy - 1 ToOVHWie 11 pERMAHEM-n.^ f B Witli many millions of families Syrup of, Figs has become the W& ideal home laxative. The combination is a simple and wholesome jrf one, and the method of manufacture by the California Fig Svrup *3 Company ensures that perfect purity and uniformity of product ® M whlch h^ ve commended it to the favorable consideration of the £ : 2 m ° st cement physicians and to the intelligent appreciation of all 5 i Wh ° * re well mfo rmed in reference to medicinal agents. ft Syrup of Figs has truly a laxative effect and acts gently with- 5 out in any way disturbing the natural functions and with perfect G? fjl treedom from any unpleasant after effects. «£ gr In the process of manufacturing, figs are used, as they are |S$ pleasant to the taste, but the medicinally laxative principles of the £ JK combination are obtained from plants known to -*<t most beneIV facially on the system. Qj i| TojJet its beneficial effects— $ PI bviy -the by | 6> t jr Louiavill®. Ky. S * n Mew YorMIX PJ row py A u dsuopists price sot few bottle

A Celebrated Case.

John Douglas of Melvern, when a young man, swore at a murder trial In Illinois that he saw one man stab another by the llsht of the moon. Abe Lincoln, who was attorney for the defendant, showed by an almanac that there was no moon on the night of the murder. Douglas has never yet unraveled the mystery of the defendant’s acquittal.

Deafness Cannot Be Cured

by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the ear. There Is only one, way to oura deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an Inflamed condition of tho mucus lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing. and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can bo taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, bearing will bo destroyed forever; nine oases out of ten nre caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucus surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. „ F. J. CHENEY & ca, Toledo. (X Sold by Druggists, 7t>c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. %

Ban on Chickens.

In I,oa Angeles, Cal., there Is an ordinance imposing a fine of $5 for allowing chickens to run on the streets and other people's property. The success of the ordinance is such that the city of Oakland will adopt one Blmilat to it. There is no trick in dyeing. Yon can do it just, us well as any one if you use PUTNAM FADELESS DYES, foiling the goods for half an hour is all there is to it. Sold by druggists, 10c. package. Tho first glass made in this country was manufactured In Jamestown by the English colonists in 1609. For something good, try Mrs. Austin's I* unions Pan fake Flour, ready in a tilTy Your grocer has it on hnnd. Friends of a rich man have a hundred hands.

"VAN’S "BUCK WHEAT NOW READY. Ka»y to VAir«I BUYI “ IB Easy to •»n*»ni7jwO 111 MAKE! ts 2k Kaater to i¥s| eati w_ MB Buy a i'm k- « LOITB HHI uif« TO-DAY ■— -•Hi*.- and Heell UKOCKHB.

I 1 t i It Doo*lm tt.OOand for atyle, comfort and w««r itftH extolled ail other I KvAu-V I makes at these pri«**u. Jhim excellent reputation has betui won t»y merit I 'v SkiSlii 6 ' i * t* suoes have to iflve In-imt satisfaction limn other ij u>urnl ■ rniitlS btSCAUWS hl# reimUtlou 101 Ulti ton *3.uo ana su.io shot s rmutto 1 Jf .Hold bu M Doit ala» ft torn in American rttiet sellina direct from lacloru to » I J wearer at onr proju; and best shoe dr aura teller e % V J J acior V to * Al. M w. L.DOUGLAS mM •3.2° SHOES ’922 ZS&2 4 i —s——■ *4.00 Olit Edge C "MIWU Mtw it tr%., Line Cannot Be iiiims——ra - Equaled at Any Price. lntlw wsuYl’ u h J|",%^*,Ws»' that the wearer receives mors vslus for his money nutm Aiun nnd tarn shoes than hft can iret elsewhere. >V. |„ DnuirlM makes and Mils OXO * BX ° thttn ttny other lwo hianufaeturers In the world. Vast Color EyVtou I ..fn.i.- ~ i' Y' .?;?' 00 "■I" 1 shoes are made of the same high-grade Si., SB leathers use<l Tu M OOan.l 0(1.00 shoes and are just as gonal in every wayT MttUdf on b^tD.*™ 1 * having TV. 1.. Donglas shoes with name and price stimpwl iwrrlaa* ivi. w ‘ nt »uywhero on receipt of price and 2T. ••ente additional tor r gO^*J' :,; :j| wlrtth*fi!u«.llv k , [r! ll ' nU " f , foot S" * hown ! Hat* ntyls desired; slxe amt xV.rN CATALOG 'FREE* "° r Cap l0 ® : heilT,r ' medluni or light win. li VJ i k W. L. DOUOLAO, Brockton, , ,

iwisMisiMiaiisiisiisiisiSHai »» f iiimio WE HAVE HEARD i OF IT BEFORE Thera Is no necessity for us to suffer pain »nd endure useless agony. There Is s remedy for all aches snd pains—for Rheumatism, Gout. Lumbago, Neuralgia., Sciatica. Pleurisy, Soreness. Stiffness. Headache, Backache, Pains in the Limbs and Pains In the Feet, that remedy Is St. Jacobs Oil It never fatle. It sets Uke magic. | Instantaneous relief from pain always follows. It has cured thousands of cases which had been clven up as incurable One trial will convince any sufferer that St. Jacobs Oil Conquers Pain Price, 35c and 50c. SOLD BY ALL PKALKHS IK MtIUCIX*. 'imeiewtsneieiewnetewiiwieieie, n iwnsMewnm «Ut SHUtS I input of a factory, v mail e I CC dy.... vliUv FINE VICI-K ID IATHER SHOES laco or button, Kid or patent tip. C. D. E or EE slitost to 8 These are up-to date, snappy Shorn. auto also, width and tii desired, unil inclose II t». Money refunded If not satisfactory. Address SCHLABQEI BROS,, P,O. Box 202,Pomeroy, 0. ©...CUR kb... FISTULA. POLL fVIL, In 4to 1(1 weeks. When Jus; formluy usually cures wiilinir disrlutryluy. 11l fhur w«H*ks lluniMiie and easy to ylve AO cts. By mall, (Hi cU Treatise upon appllcatloi CLODSE & STAMM, CkemistF 2H Bmt BT.,QfNE»rn. ii» HOWE SGALES BEST AIL KINDS FOR In The World ALL PURPOSEB .«n 1,1 ...... Write P.JIFBL or frrnr •'’ c.u” K The only scale with ball bnarlsga. BORDEN & SELLECK COs^.Sfgy nRODQV NEW DISCOVERY; gives 1 quick relief and cures worst esses. Book of testimonials and 10 DAYS' treatmeni rKKB. UK. 11. 11. UftMCN’* HONS. Ilnx K. AllaaU. Os. Farms for sale cm «any rorrns, or erninn 'e, In la •aeb.. Mlnu. or h. 1). .1. MuUiall. Hloux City, low*

REAL ESTATE, FARMERS WANTED »;. e .r K 2S?S close out at very low prices, ranging from es.oo t» t12.n0 per sore; where Alfalfa grows to perfectkma Wheat, Oau, Barley, Cofflr Corn. Cane, Broom tors and PoUtoes ere principal prodacu snd *• Cam (• King,” being In tho famous com belt of the folk parallel, the beat achoule, cburcbes, water, cllmat* snd the beet .oil, being from 1 Vo X test deep, la make, the fanner Joyou. to work .nch sotL Stock rat.ing It prodtably carried on by the inexperienced. Stock ranche. a • penally Correspondence solicited. J. O. LANK A HONS, PhHllpehurg, Kens. SOUTH DA KOTA Faraia for sale cheap. Best part of the State. Block Ksnchet end Dairy Farina special* ties. Map. and Information furnished. Correspond* sneo solicited. Come and aee for yoiiraelf. Fare refunded if you bny of us. This is God’s country. Writs Fsalfc Cwaty iVslrsst Ca„ PaalVtoa,».P. CIIMK Wmt FRPF we give sway, absolutely free, one ■ n “" IsUlw lot to each party. In Gants Bsa, Florida, or Wsverley, Tennessee, No re-trlctlons—-perfect title— lois worth giw.ou. All we change Infos making out deed. Limited number. U. 8. I.ANU HYNDICATU, 15« Washington St.,Chios*o. K |\j SltlA YOU BETTER LAND ol VRII any kind In the beet cltmatei In tbs beet fruit country) In the richest lead end xtnc district In ths U. s„ for loss money than you era -g| the eeme values lu anr other part of the 0. 8. Write H. B. WEST, Mans Held, Mo. 10 ACRES ORAN6E AND OLIVE ORCHARD Just beginning to bear. Trees In fins oondtston, best varieties', owner must sell) will sell cheap; also a lot on Capitol HUI, Ball Laka City, 4 blacks from the Temple. Address C. 8. UICHaHoBON, Halt Lake City, Utah. KANKAKEEVAILEY from ?b* ol^iHioaoo* 1,000 it'Rls rich block 1011, Improved and unimproved in tractsof S to 080 acres, price from •Lit to (40 poracre. Hsfe for Investment. Kxoeilent for bmoea. For psrtlculers, eddress lisab Keller, Xwtb Jadsea,ts«. Clin PHI C—Part Crab, balance Time MIK sllll r Pine Dairy snd Rtoclc Farm, Mos I Wll UrlLa. a mile fmm railroad town; SdO acres of the richest lend In Faribault county. Minn. Particulars, titate Bankof Ahlen, AlUen.Mfain. FUR 9il F— or therWk I UII OHLL lAnmO region Shout Shenandoah. lowa, »u<> Property In that Bvo town. Writ* A. 8. LAKE, Hhqnantloah. lowa, AO7 ACRICH, Improved farm, Howard Co., garden • spot of Missouri, Ad. UsSSIK a SUITM.Wamaa. u«. 29.000 scuta. kslsarTrsds, Improved A unimproved. os.vo t. eto. Write ASPS a, uminass, awmsm, ». p. IRRIGATED FARMS FOB SALE ON TH3B GROUND FLOOR PLAN* Ft»« Irrlsatioa <mu»*L w»U*r rapply anltniUMl. YV« c«ivtrol 60,000anrwi lith !rrtirat>lt» Uud. DmiiiK prelfiuHi•ry oolonleation will uf\\ lluiltnd number f«nm, Un-o» or •mall, at antual eo*t to un. Water right* k.>Ul for whort parlmlat ifitiatly r«HliH‘od prtcr«. No ohurjoi fop future water rontet we deed Irrigation e&nat to our t'Uftbemof lftiidA Uilng it. rilniaU) une«inailed. Writ* now for pictorial decor-ipttou and full detaila. Oorreiia poiulen* • ebuerfully aiuwd. Ad, THORPB BItOtJ, da CO.. Bxel'ave Agta. ,414 Reaper Blk, Chicago. XU. KANSAS LANDS ? t>K lupek.'. IVnfIOHO LflHllg MtH sere., smooth, rleli. level bottom, MSS tnecrei 180 seres rich, level bottom, «0A sn sere; S4O acres of gross land. IS(1.000; 30 acres of bottom, •tt.BOO; 220 acre, level upland, «n,not); asiOsctea bottom snd slope,BUO per IVITC. PSTSK q TnOMfeOK. em Ksa.s. S,.,,lwirs». saa«. FIFTY ■MPHOVtUrsßUH.ennltnlUKfromeeteetOaerw. I It I I located in Nsrthera lasiuis, fnrsa'e on |. ng tlsne and easy payments. Write for our descriptive circular for particulars. STluca, scskmusn a co, las. —>———————————————^ AGKNTS. VOUR PHOTOGRAPH on a Button, I0o» Btlck ■ l’lu or list Pin, StOc; copioil from any lUutuie, which we return uninjured; jnsltbe thing for holiday present. Bpeclal lndueeitiants to ageuu. lUmunUea Catslogne of Huttons. Pins, Medallions and Jewelry, tree. At UK I'llOIQ UITTUV HTIIPIn, i t H. (lark Ut-, Chief SIM PI C—OF UHKAT UtUIT, sail Fills s LosgFslt gsat. aimrkt Bossy, every woman who aeee onr new household novelty. Atoms should get In on the ground floor st ouoo. School boys, here la a chance tu make money. (Sample uud ctrculara, 100. run Wken-FFHaasa C 0„ SSII taeas Aval,., BT. HOI.IS. Me. cqifl.OO EASILY MADE In M MOKTUO on a Capital Of SO.OO. Bond 4c-Meiup for postage on sample worth 290 and full mintmat lon. Address L. W. KHTKB, Manager, opposite U, M. Treaanry, Waalilngton, P. C. AGENTS WANTED SSZs tyred president, Wm. McKiNUtv. Sample snd prices, itOc. The Watte Printing Co., Can ten, Ohio. 00 A nAY—*»««*> WRITKRM wanted •ww m tin • to do corresponding for ua at homo and engage In honorable and Intorcotkig occupation. No peddling or canvassing. tCneJoeealamped envelope. V. a. nrrgMSOK.iist'r, tss.(]tsAta.,Uhtei».. i fif-UTS MfANTFD fur the ngwr pooit tariTON " Bcn »* HRBICH ssd WKSTUXB HTIUPOn the market, Write at once for particulars. Bead 80c for full-sir,.sample mi'Hflrr HfJtwtaCO., Uaawsri. UtsS. WANTFn « Ladies to address us and get one of flHßlbll our elegant GO Ruga free, NosaHcttkig. LOGli, BLOCK it Co., ms 814 g., (Slnctanatt WANTFn“ OAI - K#M,N - M " l » l T or coiumlaeiom HAW ILU usvKami sraraaf co,, awarasr,». x. nimfl fllllhc Korm tme. have delightful, social study UIIIIB bIUUS meets. Save so# of coat. Oath la first Inquire re, stamp, B»IWU», 44 Klag, WsslSelg, Rass, Affonie Wnnt All Bell gents soild gold cued watchH&CIII9 nailllfU ee guaranteed ten veara. Bpensel ofler, sample 4.1. M also pearl rolled gold end enameled society buttons. Sample‘idc. Write for Tkpage catalog containing fall line of Jewelry,Cutlery, Watches. eto, puiTsaui g-ru CO,, WsH aeseiwsy, gfw w> Wanted good patent right men end agents, i’hsise experienced In the churn business preferred. 4230 M per mo. guaranteed. 4sXT«g CHinta co., ums4Qd, 4kl» $3.00 A DA Y fiSSS Invented. Everybody boysi sells for ISct atos.ifisen, hoys,girls can sell U by onr new method. PaoA borrow money to hoy. You can't fall. Sample ul B*rtleulars life coin, tom— ■TOCO., tmik -—' -m -, tae Men, Women Wanted asSSJSflaisife iVoye,' (flrla and Lodlra make money (aai|rampie, IQcenU. I|T*«»A»P kro eo., WlrtNa, Iraq tixi* Wsaisi everywhere |ootilt rf.so returaoMa. gam. pl»» mailed »«. L BOSOVag, StSi Wb to., Urn ha MISCICLLAmBOUM, SKUNK other lure. Beud stamp to M.. 1. Jewett, Redwood, Jaffereon Qo,, Nww York. FfiRQFS !or fanner*, warranted, eat price for I unut.4 quick selss-ik & Ckapsue a laseeUs^Msa Fifty Thousand; Write today for prices. Finest fowls, lowest prices,. ' " customers always satisflsd. Nn ssiWkMrastw, Wto. ftHOTO BUTTDII IWfflWßfflWlSt tlful bond-painted 1M Inch Pboto-Butum, round or oval, taken from any picture. Fifty Cento, Batlaftsctlon guaranteed. Picture returned nnlnjured. Bend for catalogue, h. K. align, sstl Ls»,u swu, ■—- n - ui. Lovers of Freedom! published, sub..emo*.,Bflc!»eegiMisi!!Sia,a.,a£^. FOR VUlcWou Ittohuked rvii Cedar,M feet ead shorter, telnphano pules, FIX AX VIAL. PUT YOUR MONEY IN BHEEP Largest dividend payer upon oapltal Invested. Havo"‘/tJaawbaiit pays? If not, then acquaint ynurIhlormaUon. B 0«, yea. frequently rail o'*' 0 '*' potPo* organlilngaotoeeautlusIrely sheep corporation and grant yon privilege of subscription. Bbsrta 4100 each. Big here now rad no stock eta be bonghL Why? When we ere reedy shall, expect your money to be sent to bank hero, lu meantime mutt know whet we can depend upon. Delay will rg* IS*. *“d parMomera. JAS^F^BALBBDRlfj^Rtswltoej^Jwjwmlngj, BUMIXma CHAXCEH. M ONEY Enally, Quickly andTegkTl "■ U l l , l K * metofy Made. Over 80* aye of acquiring wealth; partfculars FBF.K Address ichxxa gru. co., \i» «. eta at., g— «, ci- ii^aaie. STOCK 2°°? f'S’ 00 ? ofooh Ciothlh* and • ■vvng an t|i Purnlehlnge, In ciiirorSii,utg» -population; bate large cuah traue, doing prod table business; will dltoount liberally for cash; If you have the tnouey ;no trader, need write) and moaa bnetness, address P. O. Hex 218, Knox villa. Ten a. DO YOU stock pfan. m !lilLm!m! * tOUTSST, AivUory Brehass, SSVIa Belle ,1 Pllllltid and Dnp»tented Inveotiana*J"lsLlLljLr hadlulHU. Lass.aCs.,ll4.Lsqfr. Uq. WANTED ««■»•»« SK-js;' ■■ "" ■ getle men to sell our high grade lino of lubricating oils, greases, roof, barn and holier pslins. white lead, etc., either exclusively or se a side line, local y or traveling, on aommlßslon INDUSTRIAL OIL k SUPPLY CO.. Ckvrfaed. Ohio. I S 85 Varletlra hy mall 230. Hlieiie OLH ontLLO lor wlrelawolry workers, aod.lm.lu huU list for beginners. Address J.v.l'„ai.« u t, ( „.ui A Dll I |U| Hablu. Specialty 30 years. Fress' Vr lUlfiTrlsl l>r.Marsh.(iulnoy,Mich. ~vt. N, U. CHICAGO. NO. 49. 1901. Vben Ansbcrinq Advertiaeoeata Kindly Mcotioo This fipef.