Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 21, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 February 1900 — Page 7
I Had a Bad Cough "I had a bad cough for six weeks and could not ind any relief whatever. I read what a wronderful remedy Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral was for coughs and I bought a bottle. Before I had taken a quarter of it my cough had entirely left me.”—L. Hawn, Newington, Ont., May 3,1899. lIW |l II ■■ lIIIIMHHII—I—I—■ Quickly Cures Colds Neglected colds always lead to something serious. They run into chronic bronchitis which pulls down your general health and deprives you of sleep: or they end in genuine consumption, with all its uncertain results. Don’t wait, but take Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral just as soon as you begin to cough. A few doses will cure you then. But it cures old colds, too, only it takes a little more time. We refer to such diseases as bronchitis, asthma, v/hooping-cough, consumption, and hard winter eooghs,-. T I III! 1111 —i rn lIHMHIW——»c.t Ttm If you’ve just taken cold a 25 cent bottle is all you’ll need. For harder cases a 60 cent bottle is better. For chronic troubles, and to keep on hand, the SI.OO bottle is most economical, low ——"—ni.sreinwj
Rich To-Day, Poor Yesterday.
Choico building lots given away free ot cost for the land to.advertise new American Colony on southern coast of Cuba. Plantations for sale on your own terms. S2OO to $3,000 cleared yearly per acre. Send for free beautifully illustrated book all about Cuba. City and Suburban Investment Co., 253 Broadway, New York.
Lucky, Sometimes.
Longshot—Do you consider horseshoes an emblem of luck? Placer—Yes, when they are on the winning horse.
To Cure a Cold in one Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money il it fails tocure. 26c. E. W. Grove’s signature is on each box. When you speak in your praise you add nothing to your reputation.—Terence.
ouMIPATIOH CURED. A Never Failing Remedy for Every Sufferer. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the New Specific— It’s What They Do, Not What It’s Said They Do. That Proves Their Merit. It s easy to talk. *» Any one can buy space In a newspaper. Many do, and lie about their medicines. Wliat's the use of telling a lie and getting caught at it? Some people advertise on the principle there’s a sucker born every minute. We don’t. < We don't want to do business with suckers. Cascarets Candy Cathartic are all we claim, and sold on their merits. Failure to cure coiistltputlou means your money back. Isn’t that fair? The people appreciate our way of doing business to judge by the enormous sales of Cascarets, the ideal laxative. Cascnrets cure. That’s the truth, backed by an absolute guarantee. They are agreeable to the taste, convenient in form, antiseptic and a line Intestinal tonic. They mukc the liver lively, prevent sour stom ach, purify the blood, brace the brain and make things right us they should be. Go buy and try Cascarets to-day. It’s what they do, not what we say they’ll do, that will convince you. All druggists, 10c, 25c, or 50c, or mailed for price. Send for booklet and free sample. Address, Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago; Montreal,' Can.; or New York. ©This Is the CABCARKT tablet Every tablet of the onlv genuine Cascarets bears the magic letters “CCC.” Look at the tablet before you buy, and beware of frauds, imitations and substitutes. Liver Ills. OR. RADWAY A 00., New Yoax: Dear Sire—l bmv. been nick for nearly two rears, and have been doctoring with some of the most expert doetore of the Doited States. I have been bathing and drinking hot water at the Hot Springe, Ark., bat it ■earned everything fnlled.to do me good. After I sew your advertisement 1 thought I would try your pills, end have nearly used two boxes; been taking two at bedtime end one after breakfaat, end they have don. me more good thau anything else 1 have ever used. My trouble hoe been with the liver. My tkln end eia. ware ell yellow; I had sleepy, drowsy feelings; felt like . drunken men; pain right above the naval, like at if it was bile on top of tha stomach. My bowals were oostive. My mouth end tongue sore moat of the time. , Appetite fair, but food would not digest, but settle heavy on my stomach, and some few mouthfuls of food oome up again. I could only eat light food that digests easily Please send "Book of Advice.” Respectfully. BEN ZAtIUO. Hot Bprlngs. Ark. T>adway’s H Pills Price ®c n Box. Hold by Druggists or sent by Mail. Send to DR. IUDWAY A CO.. H Elm Street. New York, for Book of Advice. Dr. Bull& ■ The best remedy for CJOUSTI Consumption. Care* 4% ® Coughs,Colds,Grippe, SVrilD Bronchitis, HoarseJ » nets. Asthma, Whoopingcough. Croup. Small doses; quick, sure results. DrJSulTi Puli cure Constipation. Trtal.tofar 51,
NO FEDERAL INJUNCTIONS.
Judge Taft Refuses to Interfere in Behalf of Kentucky Republicans. Judge Taft of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals at Cincinnati refused the temporary injunction asked for in behalf of the Republican minor State officers of .Kentucky, filed by ex-Gov. Bradley and others. Judge Taft held that the Federal Court had no jurisdiction. He did not go into the merits of the case outside of the strictest interpretation of the Federal laws and constitution. After reviewing the case further, he denied the injunction on the ground that a court of equity has no jurisdiction to entertain a bill for the removal of a public officer from his office. When informed that Judge Taft at Cincinnati had refused jurisdiction, Gov. Taylor gave out the following signed statement: “The decision of Judge Taft to-day, holding that his court has no jurisdiction in the case of the minor State officers, does not affect the merits of the case. He does uft determine that the petitioners had no merits in their cases, but only that his court could not take jurisdiction and right the wrong. If he had held that he had jurisdiction it would have all been over, for the outrages were so glaring that' the Republicans would have won, ‘hands down.’ The decision in said cases, does not. in the least affect my case.” r-\ Gov. Taylor issued an address/to the people of Kentucky, reciting his position on the present conflict. He reviews at -length the obstacles the Republican candidates met with in the election on Nov. 7, and charges that nearly 50,000 votes were stolen from him by the partisan, unfair, brutal actions and rulings of the election officers and the contest board. He says sufficient of the militia will be retained to preserve the Gov. Taylor concludes with a detailed recital of his course in the peace conference proceedings. In short, he says that though he would have been reluctant to sign away the rights of the people, he would have done so had he been given assurance that a fair election law would be substituted for the one which has brought so much distress to the people of Kentucky. Gov. W. S. Taylor, in an attempt to anticipate similar action by the Democrats, filed, a suit in the Circuit Court at Louisville, seeking an injunction to re.fttrgin _J. C. W. Beckham from attempting to perforin the duties of the office of Governor and Gen. John B. Castleman from attempting to discharge the duties of adjutant general.
ANTI-TRUST PROPOSALS.
Government Ownership and Free Trade the Leading; Features. The National Anti-Trust Conference at Chicago adopted a long address to the public, in which the people are urged to organize to deprive trusts of their power. It declares that the conference is not making war on business combinations to reduce cost and augment productive efficiency. It charges that oppressive trusts hamper the production of wealth. The Standard Oil, the Meat, the Anthracite Coal, the Sugar, the Paper and the Steel trusts are denounced by name. It charges that a Banking trust is threatened, which w r ould dictate the volume of paper money and reduce all bankers to servants of itself. It declares that the tendency is toward a few great trust's which w’ould become absolute masters of the American people. It declares that the only remedy is the abolition of legalized privileges of every kind, and especially those created by tariffs, by the granting of the money issuing function to private corporations and by private ownership of railroad and telegraph lines. The address holds that no one can object to the abolition of tariffs which foster trusts. It declares that the trust magnates control the banks, and. with control of the volume of the circulating medium, they would absolutely dominate the commercial life of the nation. It holds that the telegraph is a natural adjunct of the postoffice, but' in private hands it has worked vast evil. It declares that private ownership of railroads has furnished the basis of nearly every great commercial trust with which the people to-day are cursed. The coal trust is vitalized by railw r ay privileges; the oil trust' could not have acquired its power without them; the beef trusts and the grain elevator trust depend upon them; they make the steel trust flourish, and from express combinations down to newspaper agencies, from hack rights at depots to freight discriminations a host of minor trusts suck in all the vitality they have us monopolies from railway privileges. The conference udopted the following resolution introduced by Congressman Sulzer: “Kesolved, That the members of the Anti-Trust League shall give practical effect to their antagonism to trusts by refusing to purchase, so far as practicable, any goods made and controlled by a trust, and shall employ the weapon of ostracism against those who support with coercion and violence the monopolies which oppress the people.”
TO EXTEND GREAT STRIKE.
All Men Working for Chicago Contract* ora to Be Culled Out. At a meeting of the business agents of the Chicago Building Trades Council a committee was appointed to make arrangements to declare strikes on all buildings in the United States and Canada where Chicago contractors taking part in the lockout are interested. . The union officials claim that contractors have failed to get competent non-union workmen. The contractors have advertised for men throughout the United Stntes. Present indications are that the struggle will not open up in euroest for some time to come. Both sides are strengthening their forces in preparation for a long struggle. Both the Building Trades Council and the Building Contractors’ Council have established pickets at all buildings in the process of construction. It is not probable that the trouble will end until either the contractors’ organization or the union is disrupted.
This and That.
Jas. Slaughter, 30, Danville, Va., goes to the pen seven years for forgery. Man named Giles was killed by the explosion of nitro-glyeerin pear Lima, Ohio. The ports of Rio Janeiro and Santos were officially declared free of the plague A large number of Britons residing in Berlin, under the age of 30, have received orders calling them home for military service. A decree han heen issued announcing that the bubonic plague bus disappeared from Oporto and that the quarantine of that port hae been robutd.
HIS MAIL WAS OPENED
FORMER CONSUL MACRUM CRE. ATES A SENSATION. Says British Censor Read American Official Mail—Cables Also Were Held Up—Other Reasons for Wanting; to leave His Post at Pretoria. Charles E. Macrum of Ohio, the former consul of the United States at Pretoria, South African Republic, whose home
C. K. MACRUM.
the sinking of the battleship Maine has so stirred political and diplomatic circles in Washington. .His assertion that official tyail and cable dispatches passing between him and his Government were held up and opened by the British censors has aroused intense indignation. Mr. Macrum strongly hints at the existence Of a secret alliance between the United States and Great Britain, and practically accuses Secretary Hay of the State Department of conniving at the suppression of the facts and keeping the American public in the dark as to the causes which forced Macrum to throw up his mission. In his statement Mr. Macrum said: “The situation in Pretoria was such that, first, as an official, I could not remain there while my Government at home was apparently in the dark as to the exact conditions in South Africa. Secondly, as a man and a citizen of the United States, I could not remain in Pro toria, sacrificing my own self-respect and that of the people of Pretoria while the Government at home continued to leave me in ; the position of a British consul and not' an American consul. “It was over four weeks from the time the war opened before I received a single mail dispatch from my Government or a personal letter. The mail for the Transvaal had all been stopped at Cape Town by order of the high commissioner. “When this mail was finally forwarded to me after Col. Stowe, the. eonsul general at Cape Town, had secured its release, I had the humiliation, as representative of the American Government, of sitting in my office in Pretoria and •looking upon envelopes bearing the official seal of the American Government opened and officially sealed with a stick er, notifying me that the contents had been read by the .censor at Durban. I looked up the international law, but failed to find anywhes that one military power can use its own discretion as to forwarding the official dispatches of a neutral Government to its representative in a besieged country. “The mail service from Delagoa bay to Europe was continually interrupted by the action of British men-of-war at that port. The service was over two weeks longer than by the west coast and there were continual rumors that that port would be closed and communication with the outside world entirely cut off. “The cable service for the Transvaal was absolutely cut off. I filed one cable in the interest of an American in Pretoria, which was refused absolutely by the censor in Durban. “When I accepted my post as consul 1 knew nothing of any secret alliance between America and Great Britain and have seen nothing in the regulations which make the consul of the American republic subject to the whims and caprice of an English military censor.”
FRICK BEGINS HIS SUIT.
Sensational Churges Are Made Against Against Carnegie. Henry C. Frick and Andrew Carnegie, for years business associates and partners in the gigantic iron and steel concern at Pittsburg, are uow opposed to each other in a court of law. Mr. Frick has begun suit against the Carnegie Steel Company,
Andrew Carnegie, Henry Phipps, Jr., L. C. Phipps, Geo. Lauder, C. W. Schwab and others to recover $10,238,000, which he represents to be his interest in . the big corporation. Carnegie is said' to have offered Frick $0,000,000 for the latter’s holdings in the com-
patty, which are worth three times that sum when based on the offers that have been made the steel company by prospective purchasers. According to Frick’b story a London syndicate wanted to purchase the plant for $250,000,000 in May, 1811!). and paid Carnegie $1,170,000, which amount is still in the iron king's possession as a bonus for a ninety days’ option on Carnegie’s 58% per cent interest in the concern. This interest Carnegie valued ut $157,950,000. On this basis the plaintiff figures that his 0 per cent interest is worth the sum he has prayed for. Carnegie, it is alleged, forced Frick out of the management of the steel company for personal reasons. According to the latter’s story the immense profits of the company nre largely the result of his efficient financiering. He asks that the court appoint a teeeiver for the steel works, that the debts be paid and the surplus distributed among the partners, large and small. Frick says that if Carnegie is permitted to manage the business u loss will result. The business from 1898 to 1900 was remarkable. In 1899 over $21,000,000 was netted. Frick charges that he is the victim of a scheme and that he is unwilling to part with his holdings for one-third of their value.
PORTO RICO'S GREAT NEED.
Rioting May Follow Failure of Prompt Relief by l onnreaa. Advices from Porto Rico indicate that there is a possibility of rioting there unless some measure shall be speedily adopted by Congress to afford relief to the planters by furnishing a market for their product. The sugar and tobacco producers are being reduced to |»overty, and the condition of the laborers is becoming pitiful through their inability to obtain employment. Patronise those who advertise.
coming during the war at his own request has been surrounded by so much mystery, has given out a long statement, in which he tells why he left Pretoria. Macrum’s statement has caused a genuine sensation. Nothing that has occurred since
U. C. FRICK.
BIG CROPS ON ARID LANDS.
A Dakota Farmer Perfects n Scheme Which Beats Irrigation. Can the arid lands of Western Kansas, Utah, and other States subject to drought be made to raise regularly year after year, and that without irrigation? H. W. Campbell, a farmer, formerly of Brown County, South Dakota, claims that they can. He has originated a method of cultivation which, he asserts, never fails to produce crops in the sunbaked territory, no matter how dry the season may be. His plan is based upon the theory that droughts are caused not by lack of sufficient fall of moisture, but by a too rapid evaporation. He plows the soil deeply and sub-packs the lower portion, thus forming a shallow water reservoir under the surface. The top strata of earth is then pulverized as flue as dust and kept so by frequent stirrings, forming a line dust, which chokes the pores of the soil, cutting off evaporation and leaving the moisture in the earth to be drawn on by the roots of the growing plants. Should Campbell’s claim prove trustworthy It means that hundreds of thousands of acres now uncultivated can be made-productive at little expense. A system of irrigation, when it is practicable, costs about as much as the land before It can be made effective. J, P. Pomeroy, a Boston man, now of Colorado Springs, Colo., who has large landed Interests along the Union Pacific In Western Kansas, and a multimillionaire, has established a model farm at Hill City, in Graham County, Kansas, to demonstrate the utility or merits of the Campbell method of cultivation, and has secured Mr. Campbell to personally direct the work upon his farm. A large orchard will be set to apple, plum, peach, apricot, and cherries; also all kinds of crops grown, such as corn, potatoes, wheat, oats, barley, broom corn, and a great variety of garden vegetation. This farm will be run for a number of years, and every possible effort made ; to bring people to it during the growing season, and instruct them in the science of soil culture. The whole system will be put to practical test, and results shown to the visitors. Mr. Campbell claims that this move on the part of Pomeroy will result in completely revolutionizing the present sparsely settled condition of that country, to again repopulate it. but on a safer basis, with all uncertainties apparently in the past.
An Awful Disappointment.
“I don’t mind sayin’ I’m disappointed in that boy of mine,” oserved Farmer Brumback. “Pve spent mighty nigh $3,000 matin’ a first-class doctor of him, and when I asked him the other day what would cure a wart I’m blessed if he could tell me.”
Barnacles on Ocean Cables.
The recent investigations for cable laying in the Pacific Ocean have revealed “the fact, that if not upon rock bottom, they become encrusted with seaweeds, heavy enough to break them. This is like dyspepsia, which grows until it breaks down the health. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will cure it, as well as indigestion, liver and kidney troubles.
Similar.
Teacher—l just gave you the proverb: “The burned child dreads the fire.” Now, can any one of you tell me a similar proverb? Pupil—l can, teacher. “The washed child dreads the water.”—New York World.
Nasal Catarrh quickly yield* to treatment by Ely's Cream Balm, which is agreeably aromatic. It is received through the nostrils, cleanses and hea’s the whole surface over which it diTns-s itself. Druggists sell the 50c. s : ze; Trial sice by mad, 10 cents. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment. Announcement. ’ To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for catarrhal trouble*, the proprietors pr»pare Cream Balm in liquid form, which will be known a* Ely’s Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the ■praying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mv'l The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of (he solid preparation.
At the Mission School.
Teacher— Why was Rebecca at the well? Little girl—l guess because her husband wouldn’t £et the water for her.— New York Press.
Medical Book Free.
“Know Thyself,” a book for men only, regular price 50 cents, will he sent free (sealed and postpaid) to any male reader of this paper, mentioning this advertisement, inclosing do for postage. Address the I’eabody Medical Institute, 4 Bultim h street, Boston. Mass., the oldest and best institution of its kind in New England. Write to-day for free book.
Obstinate.
He—How foolish of you to resist me, and all for one little kiss! She (with determination)—l don’t care! I will, every thne!—Puck.
What Do the Children Drink?
Don’t give them tea or coffee. Hare you tried tbe new food drink called GKAI.N-OV it is delicious and nourishing. and take* tbe place of coffee. The more Graiu-O you give the children tne more health you distribute through their system*. Grain-O is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grade* of coffee, but costa about V 4 as much. Ail grocers sell it. 15c and 25c.
What W[?]r M[?]ans.
During the last two years 41.375 men have been killed in battle.
Lane [?]s Family Medicine
Moves ilit* bowei* each Uaj. lu order to be healthy tbi» i» necessary >Act» .gently on the liver and kidneva Cure* «ick headache I’nn ,r » and fio. It Is sometimes difficult to get any information through a cloud of witnesses. VTTAXJTY low. debllltatad or exhno"t*d oared by Dr. JUine’e Invigorating Tonic. FRJ£K $1 Trial Bottla containing 2 weeW treatment. l>r. Kline’* InaUtuta. vQI Arch fttraac. Philadelphia. Founded lhU The Persians did not punish the first offense of murder.
MRB. POLLY EVANS, A LIFELONG FRIEND OF PERUNA.
“My wife {Polly J. Evans) says she feels entirely cured of sys> temic catarrh of twenty years' standing. She took nearly six bottles of thy excellent medicine, Peruna , as directed, and we feel very thankful to thee for thy kindness and advice. She did not expect to be so well as she is now. Twelve years ago It cured her ot la grippe, i want to tell thee there has been a great deal of Peruna used here last winter. Peruna does not need praising, ft tells for itself. We can and do recommend It to anyone that is afflicted with catarrh As ever thy friend, John Evans, South Wabash, Ind.
When catarrh has reached the chronic stage, of course It has gone beyond the reach of all local remedies. Nothing but a systemic remedy can reach It. Peruna is the/mly remedy yet devised to meet such cases. Peruna eradicates catarrh from the system. It does its work quietly but surely. It
E ff Mf\M\ **’• the tram test career end Mr** food am aurth. ftelser mya bo. 1) Bf r\ Tp^V Jff yKm \ M TteM* bua. richer fraiu thau corn aud 4 ions straw hay. better than LimoLkT. U WV j&F/GSL MT Bis Four Oste— Sworn yield 2ijU bus. and ysu. Mr. fanner, ■r_ can best tbatl Its the best osteon earth. Halier says set jCSS W filljCWPi 8-Ezred Karllest Core will resolution ire corn crowing. Ba)zer sajsaa. MHHHPp I * ”jF J ' Broesua InermU— Greatest grass on earth. 4la 6 tons fi I \ l/M Hepe- Cheapest food on earth for sheep, hogs and cattle. Will Cauea I HBf An Li im/WL V sheep at a lb. Costs bat 2oc. aWn to grow. Sailer says so I W II f f \ Ma «k Vegetable*—Largest growers. Onion seed only 80e. a lb. M II mt 1r5j1Ed%, 35 Pk « B - Earlle,t Vegetables, postpaid,SLOP. 0t..? H IfTY - THE MILLION DOLLAR POTATO »-H«HLU. «srlit»t poms os WtS Klp« in P #fc days. q^aSfßSSt H Far JOe. Stamps and tkls N stirs we send dwHSZlSElijah H m mOn ni I C rEH A 10 Mi*»ud l“,r«£e Farm heed, wortti SIO Is U ■ W OU DUN. »i<t xrr.l »..<! >«Ulor, l-lllnf ;ou »li .hout »<-,,« ■ j I .. ’ Rare Mwi. o.er 50 kind, clc.er. ,ui TMSiots, wHt!yO»eSr B
[*; DO YOU 1 tCouch I I don r delay ■ KEMP’S I I BALSAM I
It Cure* Colds Coughs. Sera Throat, Craup. Influenza Whoop ngCough.BronchitisandAsthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once You will toe the excellent effect after taking the first dose Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles 26 cents and 60 cents. j£l Hi SLICKER » WILL KEEP YOU DRY. Don't he tooled with a mackintosh or ruh-er coat. If you wantacoat jKg' yiPJW, that will keep you dry in the hard- Tf®** est storm buy the Fish Brand r ”* Slicker. If not for sale in your SMP- town, write for catalogue to J^^i^JNTWVEß^stor^Mass^ B®®9®<gxg)^isXi®s)<By» SESgy- j r I W I ime and address on a rill send you our 1 56- gj atalogue free. ® lEPEATING ARMS CO. 1 ® 180 Winchester Avenue. Hew Haven, Conn. ® Carteßsink Buy it of your storekeeper
cleanses the mucous membranes of tbs whole body. It produces regular functions. Peruna restores perfect health in a natural way. No one should neflect to procure one of Dr. Hartman’s free books on catarrh, sent free to any address by the Peruna Medicine Company, Columbus, Ohio.
Rslser’s Raps Speltsglrex Bleh, Wksiisltl |f«* XtUilH 1 * tltlflK. Cstslot SEEDS^k lalmt'i Mi Wifinh* te friM. TOi 4*7 M ah lon Lather. E.Troy ,fa.. aatwaisbed the wtrMlA Jf by growinff 2Gobeshels big f our Oats; J Hreuler, WM Mishleou. Wis„ 173 bos. barley; and H. Lot-jev. mm KedWiag, Milo . by f rowing 320btuh. halxer'sC'/m WM per acre. If yea doubt, write them. We wish to faia WM . V 300.000 new customers, beace will send on trial H IO OOLLAVIB WORTH FOR 100. Q ■B 10 pk(! or rare farm seeds, Balt Bash, the S eared |B Corn—Spells, prodocing »obosb. food and 4 tout bay EM M per aero—above oats and barley. Bromui laermls —the greatest crass on earth; SnU*r tape to Yw\ Spring Wheat, ke., ineloding ear mam- jNhf moth Plant. Froltmod Seed Catalog, telling all Ajf VA about Salter s4l reel Mill lea D«U*r jkj yp Peiate, all mailed for lOe. postage; /W positively worth flO to getmtimrt. JLSW ykMla* Feiataea $ 1.90 a bM. and Pl**** phf* earl lest Tegeia■and CntSlgf sdr. with slows,ic, 10*. to Sslxer. IN 3 OR 4 YEARS AN INDEPENDENCE 18 ASSURED R yoo take op you mmrt r RKTiJ I homes in Western (jsaIcRIl I gdg. the lmnd of plenty. flllvTPiod I Lffixmod pgmphlets, A DfLd giving exporienceg at *s|J Hyfd farmers who hove bo. w* come wealthy in growing wheat, reports of del-- ; gstei. etc., and roll information aa to reduced railway ratea can be had on application to the Saperintendent of Immigration. Department of Interior. Ottawa, Canada. Writ* to F. Fedley. Supt. Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or the undersigned, wbo will mail yoo atlaaea. pamphleta. etc., free of coat: C. J. Broughton, 12-3 Monad nock Bldg., Chicago; N. Bartholomew, 306 6th St., Dea Molnea. Iowa; M. V. MeInnea, No. 2 Merrill Block. Detroit, Mich.; J. Grieve, Saginaw, Mich.; T. O. Currie, Stevena Point, Wla.; E. T. Uolmea. Indianapolia, Ind., Agenu for the Government of Canada. i eeg"\nn>nnessessnneseeeee I lljj FOR 14 cents: 1 W» Wish to (Sin thia tsar 1 I I nsw sostom-ra, and heDCSofar i I < l ImhmßSi 1 PVg- Cur Garden Brat. talc i ! , naagyatW I Ptx Karl'.l KnirraldCnrnnbsrltr , . , tY’jWM I ” LaOrors- Market Lsttnca. Uc . ' ' raAICT 1 “ Strawberry Meloa. Us 1 ’MTmW > " 1> Dar Radi.b, Ms 1 'fßlMl > ■ Ksrly Rips ('sbbsgs. Eg I 1 I IflffifMh 1 ’• Early Dinner Onion, Me < I \ iklnSuiHr 1 “ Brilliant Flower Saida. Its , lilHB tv .rtk e 1.00, r.r 14 wests. fra I 1 1 Ky Iu Abors 10 Pkga. worth sii», wo will 1 1 I I Ml ■ mail yon fr-s, together with on I I 1 i Mi ■ great. (Catalog, telliog all abost 3/ m SAIIEt $ MIUISS lAlaa St TATI I| El ■ npon receipt of thia notire A Idc, , ■ ■ atainps. We inritsjorir trade, and ■ ■ A know when von ones try «*.■»»»>. WSoESm nrrdm W,U “•»« <>o without. 1 I ' *»"•**■ o*oo Prizsaon Bstzsr's t»WO_rar I I | sat sariieat Tomato Giant oa earth. C.S.— i I i xom t. eiLxan aaao to., la tsoMta, wig. , issssssssssssssssssnsssss HDHDQV HEW DISCOVERY; fivM • aJ awVw ■ v 3 ■ quick relief A caret eme* case-. Book oftsetlmonisla and IO IkvTM* treatmsot riIKE. Or. It. H. Gres. -s».„*. It., a. Attests, tae. I A DU DO* THROAT CANDY one of Im H Iwl □ O the bestronlacttona fcrrvocalisls. piiblk* spftkert, ®U\ S«nd 10 c#nls to ths Lamb Mlg. Co.. Ottawm, Canada, for sampto boat IT*. 11. No. 8-IUOU ’tyHEN WBITINO TO ADVERTISERS El CASE SAY 1 ’ rea are tbs advefttaemenl la iMa aasor MwWliMnnE-z f ll - fmoFW (ts?iAißr™Wr B 9 Best < ..ugh Hyrnp. Taetee Good. Qee |f| i liiilme- Sold by drunciata, K »
