Rensselaer Journal, Volume 11, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 February 1902 — Page 3

A DAIRY PARADISE,

When farm land in Illinois, lowa and Southern Wisconsin sells at from $75 to ?125 an acre. Is it any wonder that dairymen are looking for new locations, where ’ land can be bought for a mere fraction of these prices? Northern Wisconsin has dairy lands that cannot be surpassed anywhere In the middle west that can still be bought “dirt cheap." Mr. John Mathieson, President of the Minnesota Dairy Association, In a letter to the Dairy Reporter, says: “I made a trip last summer into the hardwood timber belt on the ‘Soo’ Railway In Northern Wisconsin. I was surprised at the natural advantages offered to dairymen in that locality. There Is an abundance of pure water; clover, timothy and blue graps do excellently. The soil is productive, as Is shown by the crop grown on the lands In cultivation. This section is destined to be a fine dairy region, all the natural conditions, climate, soil, pure water and nutritious grasses are found here.” The location is another advantage, being on the “Soo” Railway. Dairy products are taken in refrigerator cars direct to New York and Boston, where the best prices are obtained. Lands in this region can be had now at very low prices. The sol! is a rich loam with clay subsoil, and is exceedingly productive. If you are interested, write for descriptive maps to D. W. Cassoday, Land and Industrial Agent, “Soo Line," Minneapoils, Mian.

WILL EXHIBIT AT CHICAGO.

Grand Trank Secures Space at the Sportsmen’s Show. The Grand Trunk Railway Company has completed arrangements for an extensive exhibition In connection with the second annual Sportsmen’s Show to be held in Chicago from February 3 until February 22. The Sportsmen’s Snow Is to be held In the Coliseum, a large building admirably suited for the purpose. The exposition will probably be the finest that has ever taken place In America, excelling even that held In Philadelphia during last December. The Grand Trunk exhibit will include the collection of large photographs of scenes throughout the suftimer resort districts situated on its line, including the Muskoka Lakes, Lake of Bays, Magnetawan River, 30,000 Islands of the Georgian Bay, KawaTtha Lakes and Lakes Simcoe and Couchlchlng as well as views on the Portland division, combining land and water scapes, scenes in the White Mountains, and surf bathing scenes taken on the Maine sea coast.

TO THE GREAT NORTHWEST.

The Wisconsin Central Ry. will take you there in proper shape. Daily trains at convenient hours leave Chicago from Central Station, 12th street and Park Row (Lake Front) for St. Paul, Minneapolis, Ashland, Duluth, and the Northwest. Pullman Sleepers are attached, and meals in dining cars are served a la carte. Nearest ticket agent can give you further information. Jas.. C. Pond, Gen’l Pass. Agent, Milwaukee, Wls.

HOMESEEKERS’ EXCURSIONS. On February 4 and 18.

On above dates homeseekers’ excursion tickets will be on sale to all points on the Burlington, Cedar Rapids & Northern Ry north of and Including Abbott, la. These tickets are good for 21 days from date of sale and stopovers will be allowed on going trip in certain territory. Full information relative to lands along this line may be obtained by addressing Messrs. Ilten & Brooks, Immigration and Industrial agents, Cedar Rapids, la. On above dates excursion tickets will be sold at all stations on this line to various points in the south, west and north. All Information on this subject will be cheerfully given upon application to 8., C. R. & N. agents or by addressing Jno G Farmer, A. G. P. & T. A., B. C. R. & N R y, Cedar Rapids, la.

The Handsomest Calendar of the Season.

The Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul Railroad Co. has issued a beautiful calendar in six sheets 12x14 inches, each sheet having a ten-color picture of a popular actresS —reproductions of water colors by Leon Moran. The original paintings are owned by and the calendars are issued under the Railway Company’s copyright. A limited edition will be sold at 25 cents per calendar of six sheets. Will be mailed on receipt of price. F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago.

England to Learn from Us.

At the suggestion of Alfred Moseley of London and Lord Reay, president of University College, London, a special commission will be sent from England to this country to inquire into labor matters and the relations between masters and labor unions.

Try One Package.

If “Defiance Starch” does not please you, return it to your dealer. If it does you get one-third more for the same money. It will give you satisfaction, and will not stick to the iron.

Herbert Spencer in Good Health.

UVra4l.il, -Herbert Spencer is said to be in won-

derfully good health. A change Of air from his Brighton home to an inland place wrought a striking improvement in his condition.

Landseekers' Excursions

to Virginia, North and South Carolina. Good farm and stock lands cheap. No tornadoes or heavy winters. For pamphlets and excursion rates address W E Conklyn, N. W. P. Agt. C. & O. Ry. 234 Clark St., Chicago. ’ An engine of the Great Northern, railway in England, which was built in 1870, completed in August an aggregate of 4,000,000 miles, breaking the English in this respect. The fifteenth concert to be given by the Thomas Orchestra, Friday afternoon, Feb. 7th, and Saturday evening, Feb. Bth, bids fair to be one of the most popular of the series. Be ng a “Request Program,” it will contain many of the finest selections of their repertoire. By the census of 1900 only two states "had more .foreign-born than nativeborn male residents of voting age— Minnesota and South Dakota. • ♦■^J r «^Ji*D n ' S i, F ¥ nouß Buckwheat makes the finest Buckwheat cakes. Ready in a moment. Ask for Mrs. Austin's Buck wheat. Refuse substitutes There is one titled person to every hundred untiltled persons in Russia. Garfield. Tea, the herb medicine, cures constluatlon, elck headache and liver disorders. v Try me just once and I am sure to come again. Defiance Starch. v

"GO TO THE ANT."

Am* Learn of Bor How to Be an Ideal ’ _ ' Socialist. "It now being past noon and Formica’s thoughts turning to refreshments, she hied herself to the outskirts of thenest, where the family cows were pastured. These cows, or aphides, were feeding on the leaves of-the daisy, into which they plunge their proboscides and suck all day long, filling their bodies with pleasant juices. Our ant came up behind an aphis and stroked it gently with her antennae, when the little creature gave out a drop of her sweet liquid, which Formica sucked into her own crop. There were thousands of these aphides pasturing on the leaves and thousands of ants milking them. Most of the ants took more of the juice into their crops than they needed; and, on the way back to work, gave up a part of it to friends whom they met going to the cows, thus saving the others’ time and enabling them to resume their occupation more quickly. The ants were making the most of the aphis juice during the summer days, knowing that the supply would fall off later when the aphides laid their eggs. (Note here the superior mental equipoise of the ant, which neither betrays surprise nor writes to the newspapers when her cows begin to lay eggs.) These'eggs the ants would store over winter, tending them with the utmost care until spring, when the young aphides are brought out and placed on the shoots of the daisy to mature and provide food again during the hot weather. This far-sightedness is unexampled in the animal kingdom. Other insects and animals put away stores for the winter, to be sure, but the ant is the only one of them that breeds its own food supply. Having taken her fill of the sweet juice on this particular day, Formica noticed that the aphis which she had been milking was in a position on the leaf which might expose it to observation of some aphidivorous insect. She Immediately descended to the ground, when she obtained a mouthful 'of earth, and, again climbing up the daisy stalk, built a tiny shed over the cow, going back and forth several times to bring up sufficient material.”—Frank Marshall White in Pearson’s.

Historic Roanoke Island.

The historic spot where the first English-speaking people landed within the boundaries of the United States is Roanoke Island, N. C., and the date was 1584. The people who settled there had been sent over by Sir Walter Raleigh, and they wrote such glowing letters home and made such attractive maps that in 1585 and 1587 the colony largely increased. It was at Roanoke Island in 1587 that Virginia Dare, the first Anglo-American, as Senator Simmons, of North Carolina, calls her, was born. She ought to have a monument, says Mr. Simmons, and he wants Congress to appropriate 125,000 for this purpose. Besides this, he has introduced a resolution asking Congress to appropriate $50,000 to aid the North Carolina people in an exposition, which is to be held next July and August in celebration of the landing on Roanoke Island. At this exposition there is to be a remarkable display of ancient manuscripts, maps, relics, curios, etc., which will illustrate an almost forgotten chapter in American history.— Kansas City Journal.

Old Needlework.

The needlework picture seema to have made its first appearance in the first years of the reign of Charles I, for although Elizabethan and Jacobean are said to exist, one with an absolutely unimpeachable pedigree is yet to be found, and the costumes in the oldest specimens the writer has yet seen certainly indicate that they cannot be assigned to a date before 1630. The earliest Stuart pictures are worked with silks on coarse, irregularly woven brownish linen canvas, in the fine, slanting stitch taken over a single thread, which is technically known as “tent stitch,” or petit point This method of working produced an effect much resembling that of tapestry, by which, indeed, the embroidered picture was probably suggested. * • • As time went on the simple stltchery was elaborated, portions of the design being wrought in silver “passing”—a fint, metallic thread passed through the material instead of being applied; hence its name.—The Connoisseur.

A Thackeray Anecdote.

A correspondent kindly contributes the following amusing anecdote of Thackeray’s stay in New York, and vouches for the authenticity of a retort courteous which we seem to have met in other connections. “Your reminiscences of Thackeray’s visit to America recall another. While here he was very much attracted by the beauty and brilliancy of Miss 8., and, in accordance with the foreign custom, made a morning call when she did not expect any one. Hearing some talking in the lower hall, she leaned over the banisters and asked the servant who it was. ‘lt’s Mr. Thackeray, ma’am.’ ‘Oh, damn Thackeray!’ replied Miss B. ‘No,’ said Thackeray, who could not but hear the remark, ‘it’s not Misther O’Dam Thackeray, but Mr. Makepeace Thackeray.’ And with a laugh Miss B. came down. P. S.—ls Miss B. is alive still, she can confirm this.” New York Evening Post.

To Irrigate in California.

Baltimore capitalists, headed by General Johh Gill, “president of the Mercarftile Trust and Deposit Com pany, are to company to develop an irrigation system to California. It is said that 37,000,000 has already been put up and that a tract of 140,000 acres in the Rialto Plateau San Bernardino county, bar'been selected for working.

A MOORISH CITY.

The Narrow Streets ct Fax, and Its “Rivar of Pearls.” never touches the ground in Fez, except in a few isolated spaces, owing to the narrow streets, the height of houses, and the habit of stretching trellises covered with vines across from side to side. The consequence is that its naturally dark-skinned citizens, being rarely exposed to the full light of day, have complexions resembling partially decomposed potato sprouts in a daf-k cellar. The so-called streets run in straight lines the entire length of the town, an dare all paved with round stones the size of cocoanuts, worn smooth by the tread of generations of slippered feet. As these lanes are never swept, and every householder throws his slops and refuse out of uoors, one must pick his way with exceeding care. The Wed el Jubai (“River of Pearls”) divides the city into two parts, the new and the old. The “River of Pearls” is fordable In every part, the resort of every four-footed and two-legged beast- in the place; it receives all the drainage of the city, and is the general source of the drinking water supply.

Farmer Finds A Friend.

Nadeau, Mich., Feb. 3d. —Mr. Nelson De Rosier of this place, a prosperous farmer, sixty-one years of age, has suffered for years with Kidney Trouble. He has tried many medicines, but found nothing to relieve him until he began to use Dodd’s Kidney Pills, and he has found this remedy to be a friend indeed. He says: “I thank God that there is one medicine in the world that does help weak and sick humanity. I would earnestly advise every one who has Kidney Trouble to use Dodd’s Kidney Pills. They have given great satisfaction in our family.” Wherever Dodd’s Kidney Pills have been used according to directions, they have not failed to cure all Kidney Troubles, Bright’s Disease, Dropsy, Rheumatism, Lumbago and Backache.

Chinese Superstition.

As an example of the superstition prevailing even among those in authority in the Chinese empire, the following extract from the Hongkong Daily Press is printed: “The Tartar General of Canton has been troubled by an evil influence in his yamen, which in one month caused the death of his wife and daughter, as well as of a former Tartar general. A sung shui professor was finally called in. He looked over the city, and decided the evil influence was the roof of the library of the government school for foreign languages. The roof, which was a peaked one, was at once removed and la now being replaced by a flat one.

$100 Reward, $100.

The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon tne blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of Testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY * CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by druggists 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best

Growth of Chinese Towns.

Vladivostok, which forty years ago consisted of four Chinese fishermen’s huts, is now a flourishing city of 50,000 souls, and Khabarofsk and Blagovestchensk are not far behind in wealth and population. No chromos or cheap premiums, but a better quality and one-third more of Defiance Starch for the same price of other starches. A newly Invented fountain throws rice grains and glass balls under the play of colored electric lights. Of the bodies of people who died in New York last year more than 10 per cent found their way to the morgue. Silver and gold are not the only coin; virtue, too, passes current all over the World. —Euripides. Ido not believe Piso s Cure for Consumption has an equal for coughs and colds.—John F Boyxb, Trinity Springs. Ind.. Feb. 15, 1800. More people have died from colds than were ever killed in battle. FITS Permanently Cured. No fits or nervousness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. Bend for FREE 82.00 trial bottle and treatise. Da. B. I L Kuma. Ltd.. SSI An h St.. Philadelphia, Pa. It naturally follows that when a nose is broken it hasn’t got a scent.

Stops the Cough and

Works Off the Cold Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 25c. Opportunity with ability makes responsibility.—Bishop Hurst. Send to Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. T., for samples of Garfield Tea and Headache Powders—two invaluable remedies. A young man who weds an heiress knows the girl is well off.

Matt J. Johnson's 6088

has cured thousands of rheumatism. It will cure you. Try it. All druggists. > Sorrow is a bitter pill that all must swallow sooner or later. _ Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.’ For children teething, softens the ghms, reduces Inflammation. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a joctle. When a man is paid for playing he calls it work. Garfield Headache Powders are e-peclally adapted to the needs of nervous women. Tr. them. ' Drunkenness is said to Le diminishing in Italy.

A PETRIFIED FOREST.

Almost everyone has heard of the petrified forest in Arizona, but few know that it is comparatively easy of access to visitors. The distance from the railroad is but seven miles and at the station Adamana, on the Santa Fe. a few miles east of Holbrook. Mr. Albert Stevenson maintains a small inn, accommodating about ten people and provides a spring wagon outfit and several saddle ponies for those who desire to visit the forest. The old pioneer, Adam Hanna, who, in the sense that John Hance made the Grand Canyon, made the Petrified Forest, has moved away. At the forest there are hundreds of sections of tree trunks of various sizes and in variegated colors lying exposed on the plain or half buried in the hillsides. There are several extinct volcanoes in the vicinity of the forest and about two miles from the railway station are the ruins of an old Aztec settlement and curious hieroglyphics carved on rock. Stop-overs are granted at Adamana on through railroad and Pullman tickets where the holders desire to visit the Petrified Forest.

Sargent Paints Fine picture.

John S. Sargent, the American painter, now in London, has been painting many portraits this winter, including several of the Wertheimer family, whom his canvases have already given world-wide fame, and a group of three young women named Hunter, which is proclaimed veritably his masterpiece by those who have seen it in his studio.

Our Counterfeiting Cases.

The average number of counterfeiting cases now handled annually in tnis country is aoout 600, and of thia number nearly 50 per cent are those of persistent and habitual violators of these laws.

Florida Excursions

via Virginia and Carolina Winter Resorts and Charleston Exposition, Hot Springs, Old Point Comfort, Southern Pines. For information address W. E. Conklyn, N. W. P. Agt. Chesapeake and Ohio R’y, 234 Clark St., Chicago. Speaking of the responsibilities that riches bring, no sooner have our wealthy classes learned to pronounce “chef” with confidence than “chauffeurs” begin to come in.—Puck. Don’t you know that Defiance Starch besides being absolutely superior to any other, is put up 16 ounces in package and sells at same price as 12-ounce packages of other kinds? This country consumed last year 87,000,000 gallons of distilled spirits, 80,000,000 gallons of wine and 1,220,000,000 gallons of malt liquors. It was only an average year. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not stain the hands or spot the kettle (except green and purple). Sold by druggists, 10c. per package. Circumstances do not make a man weak, but they show what manner of man he is.—Thomas a Kempis. The greatest of professional athletes use Wizard Oil for a “rub-down.” It softens the muscles and prevents soreness. When Tammany vacated, four men and a foreman were discovered, assigned to the care of one horse. The profit on a cocoanut tree is $1 a year. V - Garfield Headache Powders! 4 Powders are told for 10c. 1 Powder cures a headache. A word before is worth two behind.

WESTERN CANADA'S Wonderful wheat crop for 1801 now the talk of the Commercial World Is by no means phenomThe Province of HmNPTv.RVSm I Manitoba and districts l of As «lnibola, SaskatISaUraata 88*2 A I ohewan and Alberta are S I moat wonderful producing counI Wr ,n the world. In I r stock raising they also li , the highest positlon. Thousands of Americans are annually making this their home, and they succeed as they never did before. Move Westward with the tide and secure a farm and home in Western Canada. .Low rates and special privileges to homeseekers and settlers. The handsome forty-page Atlas of Western Canada sent free to all applicants. Apply for rates, Ac., to F. Pedley, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to C. J. Broughton, 927 Monadnock Block, Chicago, E. T. Holmes, Room 6, “Big Four” Bldg.. Indianapolis. Ind., or H. M. Williams, Toledo To.. Canadian Government Agents, CAPSICUM VASELINE ( PUT UP IN COLLAPSIBLB TUBBS j A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all rheumatic, neuralgic and gouty complaints. Atrial will prove what we cluim be found to be invaluable in the household. Many people say “it is the best of all of your preparations.” Price IB cents, at all druggists or other dealers, or bv --“inf amou “ t postage stamps we will send yon a tube by mall. No article should be accepted by the public Unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not f-nulne. CHESBBROUGH MFC. CO.. 17 State Street, Naw took Cut. BENTLEMEN 7,“.* PRIZE LIST I “ y H 0U ar ,* hot married, marry ac heiress. We send, sealed, tho names, addresses and doscrin--B?J.te“JadleßJ adleß 71° ’ rlßh w “"ry. for »iA ages 17 to 49, worth SIO,OOO to $25,000: or, we wUI send our special prize list of twebre ladles, ?£ r^/™“**0’ 0 «> u ’»800.000, for 12.00. send for both lists, and take your choice. Earliest Offers the most favored. IFAy not marry rich t Address CONESTOGA CORRESPONDENCE CLUB. Drawer 677, tancaster, Penn’s. CM A tn TEX., ARK. and LA. LANDS. Good water, healthy climate. VlVssl V Ranches, farms and bottom lands, , . . .. A. Truck farmsand ! n a* ,r ? m of ,B ’ oo0 >* 10 P«f A. Wild lands 22.50 per A. Rivals Calif, for fruit and vegetables. Values Increased last year 50% and will double this. Send stamp for list describing railways hRHPfi V NEW DISCOVERY; gives ■w ■ % I quick relief and cures worst eases. Book of testimonials and 10 bars’ treatment Wu. PS. IL a. »Uin SOTS. Sax ■■

To the housewife who W sot yet become acquainted with the new things of everyday use in the market and who Is reasonably satisfied with the old, we would suggest that a trial of Defiance Cold Water Starch be made at once. Not alone because It is guaranteed by the manufacturers to be superior to any other brand, but because each 10c package contains 16 ozs„ while all the other kinds contain but 12 ozs. It is safe to say that the lady wht> once uses Defiance Starch will use no other. Quail'y and quantity must win. Alice—l believe Maude’s fiance says that what he most admires tn her is her marked independence of judgment. Irene —Yes. She was the only girl in her set who would accept him.—Harlem Life. Mrs. Austin's Buckwheat Is the real tnlng. gives you the real genuine old buckwheat flavor. Be sure and get the genuine. Paper twine stockings at three cents a pair are the latest thing in hosiery. Garfield Tea cures constipation. Peru has a coast line of 1,660 miles.

2 teas n.l.ssies.waai.eiiiiiaia'MsSiiiliiiiiSwi nr uain ■—ll'llll u >i.—■in,ii'iMixilliix I THE CHILDREN ENJOY Life out of doors and out of the games which they play and the enjoyment which they receive and the efforts which they make, comes the greater part of that healthful development which is so essential to their ■ happiness when grown. When a laxative is needed the remedy which is '/WSfc, r / / g‘ ven to them t 0 cleanse and sweeten and strengthen the internal organs /// ° n which acts ’ Bhoul<l be such as physicians would sanction, because its /' /7/ component parts are known to be wholesome and the remedy itself free from K 1/7 every °bjectionable quality. The one remedy which physicians and parents, / j'j < ||| well-informed, approve and recommend and which the little ones enjoy, AvA 5 * Ml because of its pleasant flavor, its gentle action and its beneficial effects, is— ,£» Syrup of Figs— and for the same reason it is the only laxative which should be used by fathers and mothers. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy which acts gently, pleasantly and naturally without griping, irritating, or nauseating and which cleanses the system effectually, without producing that constipated habit which results r from the use of the old-time cathartics and modern imitations, and against jTY '"yi' M which the children should be so carefully guarded. If you would have them xSnT /J grow to manhood and womanhood, strong, healthy and happy, do not give .xthem medicines, when medicines are not needed, and when nature needs ' rCYassistance In the way of a laxative, give them only the simple, pleasant and r gentle—Syrup of Figs. J***' l ua P t y * s d“ e n °t only to the excellence of the combination of the i f&i' laxative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic syrups and juices, but w also to our original method of manufacture and as you value the health of $ the little ones, do not accept any of the substitutes which unscrupulous deal- ’ •&'" J '1 ers sometimes offer to increase their profits. The genuine article may be P■ ? \ \ •fi?" bought anywhere of all reliable druggists at fifty cents per bottle. Please ,1 ■y. to remember, the full name of the Company— ''i\ CALIFORNIA FIG SYR.VP CO.- i» printed on SxS XvX'-’Hv. the ,ront of every pack- ... V'Y'9 aße ‘ ln urder t 0 get its 'X\ beneficial effects it is al- P ’ ' tea'A,'. :V. way “ Necessary to buy ,r<£Vf t CT A the ,renuine on,y ’ /• V 5: fJRLY - - wOfeY

IC Al I VICTORIA RAPE £. I IBWhZWiiIMMMtitOnHBw make.lt poul bio to grow iwino and dwp 1 is|Sng£W»i and cattle all over America at I■-. a Ib. It la SSMEFTW A/CCiSZX- ■ marvelously prolific. Balzer's catalog tells. ■ ■w Si, S'ix'- v*«MQ Produces a luxuriant crop three feet tall ka- t a a M ■ S within «'* w«<*» "iter seeding and lot. |M -A!/ :)< J) 1M ■IVd JHtajS tidHHHi o , f .,^ tar “g« » 11 ">mm« long llta . jA* l!k J 7 /IM ■\W ulrt cbeftp. XwMMTitt ! M SJ® ffllwF Gra «®» Cloven and Fodder Plants Saber’s Grass Mtatores ■ Yielding e tons of magnificent liay and an endless amount of pasturage on any farm In America. ■ ■ Bromug fnermls—6 tons of Hay pop Acre ■ 1 re&ptof samples,upon I JOHN A. SALZER SEED COMPANY, La Crone, Wu. 1 Has No Equal. *v T ****.. ***** \ ** Onezthird more starch—a better starch—that is >,* 6>ot the whole story, Defiance Starch, 16 ounces for 10 HhJF*9LKwWHni cents, REQUIRED NO COOKING 1H WCW PREBARED FOR I fIMLUNWYiWOSEOIIY SSSJ Don't forget it—e better qual/ Masnctic Sta%chM Co “ MbW dlb

MFite «T^ e

ST. JACOBS OIL Comforting, Soothing, Kills Pain Instantly, Nothing So Good! . > n™ DON’T STOP TOBACCO R 9JL S LvIIJh Suddenly. It Injures the nervous system to do so. Use BACO-CURO EVfiSwwFrcS and it will tell you when to stop as it takes away the desire for tobaccos MESBI M§ H You have no right t 0 ruin y° ur health, spoil your digestion and poison njMjIKBJS your breath by using the filthy weed. A guarantee in each box. Prien SI.OO per box, or three boxes for $2.50, with guarantee to cure or money refunded. At all good Druggists or direct from us. Write for free booklet. EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., - La Crosse, Wls» SIO.OO EREEV SIO.O0 SPECl,L moucEiiEin we have no agent). I'V Ell Ell ■at wholesale nrices "our 'wse—? ERI and ELEVATORS. SHOVELING BOARDS. “BRANT" CORN SMELLERS. wlul ToLlJAjr tor Catalogues, Prices and particulars. WILLIAMS MFG. CO., Decatur HL

RHEUMATISM, » t h H J^o7m ; J? W per bottle. For circulars and testimonials, Flnut. Medicine Ce.,7M-7N Valencia St., Ban Francisco, Or',. FOR LIST OF RHEUMATIC BUFFCRIRB and addresses will send beautiful picture EBERL P. M. CO., 2140 Wabash Avenue, Chicago.

AEEXTH. AGENTS Tsagoar co, ,UOS Mitchell Bt.,Hoxbor6«gh,Fblte FW. Wantaii MEN *° takeovers tor nne Kentucky Whistles nfllllVßl . case or lug lots, from the family trade. N» WANTCD-AOENTSIVKHYWHIH3 te eell the wonderful “Ltghtnlng Calculating Perndl,” a penes that will think for youi all problemi solred t noaaia, takes possible: to show Itls to sell it | large proftss. AM so other fast telling articles. Bond to-day for sample l"rew™ , kgbert, , w‘c“fcoo.V>H'i”!cedar B ta” l £. l Ti BAIL-BEARING udtennaji Aaents noaWraly Malta Money r f 7* w '* k * LADIEH f, K t j <tl A* *»<«aSKS» I w Introduce our Poultry Mixture. Straight eureka S'ra WE PAY S2O a Waak and EXPENSES MO FAKE SALARY olTer ' bu ‘?*“ i *► NpostryMi>t«rrWrLTL t SUCtIKSS MFC. CO., Dept. N, Eastßt. Loul S9fl A WKK K straight salary and «o> VGU ponses to men with rig to Introdne*pur Poultry Mixture In country! year's oo»Monuri’li M ’-Z MIUC EL LAMEO Utt. <« CLASIVtHw.ro.MciK r vsnrunynxißßaJ* ** Flushes sediment and stalo water out from bottom, good water keld. Ths Israer'alluCy Oats, Simple, cheap, dumblo: b««t •• wsrS.u Address with stamp. The atACg BATE ft CISTERN 00, Ft, PILE OINTMENT in » hours or mom r, “S until I ey refunded. Postbald BOm GREAT J. A. Z. CO./columbus, Plano and Guitar i»eif-taught. someibtn* THE CIRCULATION MANAGER 51 E o D I??iX desires to enter Into correspondence with those who may wish to work for the By our pfaa. one may add materially to bls tor her) Income with a minimum of time and labor. Only those wboeaw furnish Orst-cla«s references need apply. For perDON’T READ THIS! Remedy in Kvery Home. Send Stamp for further particulars. MADAM WORTH, No. I«7 Vam Buren Street, Ohlcago. 111. If) 111 A P 4ve F° u * nute, account. JudcmeeiC 1 ' 111 IN U interest In any esuite, land; or claim few V. damages against any pereon-or corporation In lOWA that you desire turned into oaahF We can do It. No charge until collected. Glvejpo. Oculars. Free Information. Address lowss cSleotlon and Trust Co., Dea Moines, lowa WONDERFUL -P 16 e»t«rri> Belief InbaMß; WURUtnrUL «»'• iw. w- vttiUAUU, NO. 6, 1902. When Answering Advertisements KindQl Mention Thia Fanen.