Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 Apr 1902, p. 7

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#«A"v» 5** ».**•• au|« tor Tuf«t PnetlMk, •"-• ;>;.*.Utoder a recent order the nearest range allowed for target practice in the Mediterranean fleet (British) is 5,- 000 yards. The maximum is set at 10,000 yards. Tn Cm Get Allen's Toot-EAI* Free, Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Lo- Boy,N. Y.,for a FREE sample of Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures sweating, damp, swollen, aching feet. Makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Chilblains and Frost-bites. At all druggists and shoe stores; 25 cents. It's a poor plan to promise to pray for yoar pastor and then to pinch him on his pay. Ho trouble to get breakfast quick if JJ® Mrs. Austin's famous Pancake Wow. Your grocer waits to supply you. Tbs poor and taxes we hays always with. us. The Best Insurance Vogdet's Curative Compound furnishes die best insurance at a very small cost. The CCres which it has made of blood, nerve, •kin, liver and kidney diseases, are most marvellous. It insures protection against die development of those every day ailments, Which are a menace to life and happiness. A few dos^s of Vogeler's, when dyspepsia, constipation, headache, or nervousness appear, will insure good health. A free sample bottle will be sent on appli­ cation to the proprietors of St. Jacobs Oil, Ltd, Baltimore, Md. Sold by all druggists. The HigKer Sacrifice. | i By MYRTLE CONGER. (Oopyrigbt, 1002, Daily Story Pub. Co.) in Providence Road, Gorleston, Gt. Yarmouth. I have used St. Jacobs Oil for several years for lumbago and sprains and find it die greatest pain reliever before the public, I had a severe sprain on my right ankle which I received last week, and by using half a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil it'is thoroughly cared. It acts like magic. All my friends in Gorleston, through it having cured me, are using it when occasions require, and say it is worth its weight in gold James Smith. CREAN BUCKEYE CREAM SEPARATOR Separates ALL the Creuiu. without attention or labor on ynnr part. SELF-OPERATING, CHEAPEST," BEST. Hifrhfst points scnred on I3utter. Catalogue uud particulars FlIKe. A G E N T S U / A N T E D , BUCKEYE CREAM SEPARATOR CO., OBERLIN. OHIO. "YOUR MONEY IS NO GOOD" and will be refunded to you If after using ball a bottle of THE FAMOUS RHEUMATISM and BLOOD CUKE fOO are not satisfied with results. This is our guarantee, which goes with •very bottle. For sale by flrst-class druggists or direct from manufacturers, Matt J. Johnsoh Co., 161 E. 6th St., St. Paul, Minn. L I F E S A V E R and NERVE BUILDER mUlLDS YOU UP. i Pamphlet sent for the asking. Write TO-DAY. Cures absolutely Weakness and all Nervous Troubles. Young and old should S8« It One bottle often cures. Price Sl.OO or six bottles for S5.00. Send for bottle to­ day. Should your druggist not have It, send to GERMAN MEOiCINE CO., •snutine Dept. B, 109 Randolph St. CHICAGO. ILL. DIVIDENDS -NOT PROMISES. Robber, Sa(tr Cane and Cattle. Tropical agriculture yields much larger re­ turns than home investments; property rights equally secure in Mexico as in United Slates First mor guife T'S 10 year Ciold bonds, price Oft and accrued Interest, security 3 for 1, fin­ est tropical planlation, in midst of United States colony; also dividend paying shares in plantation fur cash or monthly installments. For references and full particulars, call or send name and address to COMMONWEALTH MEXICAN PLANTATION ASSOCIATION, R 508, 115 Dearborn St., Chicago. WRITE TO i#S BORDEN & 8ELLECK CO. CHICAGO. * ft A Tropical Farm Pays Far better t'lHii faruj'nic here. Choose a ftrong, well- •laaaxrd • ompmi. with vears <.f experience >n tr>»- tn«. «<)R* «»J (Mis, like THE OAX ACA ASSOC I AT . O N, of Chicago, aod lnTeti now and then In Its tio.i-0 Guaranteed *i/- Tear Income Klrtt Mortgage Bonda, pajtng 7H't to a* high as 4St ia'er on. Can b« reiold br lMtf at 930 to S40 per bond sure. IOTAL GUARANTEE A INVESTMENT OO. HoyaJ Insurance Bide.. Clucauo. Ifaflirterf wirh ^Thompson's Eyt Watsr WHEK ALL ELSE FAILS." I Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Id tloiA, Sold by dnuslstfl. The sound of gay voices came faintly from the distant campus. He looked at her and smiled. "I wonder if they recall any part of The Higher Sacrifice' they heard this morning?" she asked as she re­ turned his smile. "Not now, I think. The lecture was not for the campus grounds, tfhey may remember it after awhile. Some years hence, perhaps." , "But doesn't it seem that anything affecting life so deeply must be re­ membered all the time?" "No; I think not. You, for instance, are the dearest part of my life, and I'm afraid I don't remember you al­ ways. In mf laboratory, for example, in my work before those eager young men and women, I forget you, Elinor. My demonstrations are never mixed with thoughts of this couch with its cool pillows and you." "But you do. not really forget me. You may not remember me in that way, perhaps, but you are conscious of me all the time, just as I am of you. when my class and I go creeping inch by inch through the Inferno, shrink­ ing and quivering before the sights that confront us there. One's con­ sciousness doesn't need to imply couches nor pillows nor any objective things at all, need it?" He laughed happily. The voices on the campus grew gayer. "There," he said. "They're filled with the consciousness of The Higher Sacrifice.'" She smiled a little. "I think he made it beautiful," she said. "He made it too beautiful. Sacri­ fice--real sacrifice isn't like that It Is harsh and horribly commonplace, though it is not common. I don't think it especially productive of the qualities of character he described. It makes character neither sweet nor great. On the contrary, it makes hard lines, both mentally and physically. It\ages and embitters. Look at Miss Loswell. She has sacrificed. I don't know of any one more unloved or un­ lovely. She always makes me feel an andercurrent of sarcasm or pessimism or something equally disagreeable in the smallest things she says and does." "Winfred." "Well, dear, I thought you wanted my opinion." "Yes, of course." "Well, it isn't much longer^ I wasn't much Impressed by the lecture at all." "You don't believe in sacrifice?" - "Yea, I do, but I don't believe it's either attractive or beatific, and I don't think it should be presented in that light to those who know so little of life. Sacrifice is difficult and for- bidding." "To me it is beatific," she said. He patted her arm tenderly. "Play for me, dear," he said. "Sing to me." She rose and went over to the piano. He settled back into the cushions. She played. She sang. It grew dark. She had sung all the songs he loved best. "How good you are, Elinor," he said. Come here." She went and sat down beside him, where he had made room for her with­ out raising his head from the pillows. She smoothed back his hair with her hand. She kissed him. Oh, Winfred," she whispered. "My love, how I love you." He drew her closer to him and closed his eyes contentedly. The voices died away on the cam­ pus. The moon came up. He slept. She did not stir for fear of waking him. She sat looking out into the quiet night, thinking of the lecture they had heard that morning and of the divine sublimity of the high­ er sacrifice. II. They had been spending their vaca­ tion together 'with her mother at her cottage in the mountains. Her cou­ sin Lucie was with them. And the time was near when they all must return to the busier world. On one of the last days, Winfred and Lucie went off to the cliffs togeth­ er. He begged Elinor to go with them, but she had some reason for remain­ ing. Neither could ever remember what reason she gave, but then human affairs do not turn upon reason. After they had gone, Elinor's moth«^ spoke to her about her lover and her friend, but Elinor only smiled. She knew that it would come and she had pre­ pared to smile. When they returned later in the evening Lucie's face was flushed and there was a light in her eyes that Elinor knew. It was the light her own had held when Winfred kissed her for the first time. She went up to them and took La- hid her white face against the girl's warm cheek. She felt that Winfred was looking at her, and she dreaded the happiness in his eyes. Lucie freed herself. She took a step toward her lover, then stopped and held out her hands to him. "Why, Winfred," she exclaimed, delightedly, "they have guessed it." He looked past her at Elinor. Their eyes met. The soul of the woman looked out of them, calm in its agony. "Elinor!" he said. His impulse was to go to her. The old da^s could not die. "Elinor." "But Lucie stood between them. He felt her hands upon his breast. He felt her silky hair against his throat. He heard her 'laugh softly. "Why, Winfred," she was saying. "I do believe you are frightened. Were you never in love before, you great, grand man?" Elinor had turned, and passing her arm through that of her mother, left the room with her. Out of the Past, rose the voices on the campus, submerging that of the little girl who clung to him and Korea Md Blectrlcitf. Near the center of the city of Seoul there is a beautiful marble pagoda that was brought from Pekln about 1300 by one of the Mongol Queens, who came as a bride to Korea. Her people at that time were shaking the whole known world, and, tinder lead­ ers like Genghis, Kublai and Tamer­ lane, were upsetting all the thrones of Asia, so that Korea still speaks of them with bated breath, and the smallest children know them by name. The marble pagoda still stands, A silent witness before the world of the great Mongol conquerors; but past its stony ear whizzes an Ameri­ can electric car every ten minutes at ten miles an hour, regardless of all the Mongol shades. Along this main street of Seoul, one of the oldest streets in the world, stretch Western wires charged with something that defies all the curiosity of the east to pronounce upon. A few days ago a broken strand hung temptingly from one of the poles, and the Far East determined to get hold of it to inves­ tigate, with the result--one live wire, one dead man. A government notice was posted up: "If anyone is caught fooling with these thunder and light­ ning strings, let him be padded."-- The Outlook. "Were you never in love before, you great, grand man?" laughed because of love. And in that still, far-off night, he heard Elinor speaking, "To me. it is beatific." THE CIVIL WAR. 8trlfe Be-Soathern Idea of the Great tween the 8tates. The New York Evening Post rebukes Gen. Grosvenor for the bitterness dis­ played in his declaration that he would call the civil strife of 1861-65 "The War of the Rebellion" to his latest breath, and also take exception to the term chosen by Oen. Grant, viz., "The war between the states," on account of its length. In the interests of good feeling and brevity both, it decides in favor of "The Civil War" as the most becoming title for that unhappy period of conflict. The Post's position Is undoubtedly the proper one. In 1861 secession--a*s viewed by thousands whose opinion upon any subject was worthy of all respect--was as much a constitutional right as trial by jury or the exercise of the elective franchise, and to apply the term "rebellion" to the govern­ ment t"hat these men set up mere­ ly proclaims a combination of ignor­ ance and prejudice. What a similar movement would be now is a very different matter. The question was submitted to the arbitra­ ment of the sword, and was by that weapon decided? in the negative, and that decision stands for the future. But in 1861 it was a war between states, and as such history will re­ gard it--Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle. k Water with Fixed Air. A magazines published in 1823 gives the following method to improve water for drinking: Let the water, wnen boiled, be put into a common barrel churn, where it may be agitated to any degree that may be wished for. In the course of its being thus agitated it will absorb atmospheric air, and other elastic fluids with which It may come in contact. It will thus become a liquor, safe, palatable and whole­ some, to be obtained with little trou­ ble and expense, and accessible in its utmost perfection to the poorest in­ dividual. Those who wish to drink this wholesome beverage in its utmost perfection should, after having it boiled and filtered, cause it to be churned as above directed, then bot­ tled, with a couple of dried raisins in each bottle; this will give it a suffi­ cient quantity of fixed air. If then used it becomes truly delicious. Threw Bli Canee Away. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., April 7th. Mt. C. L. Smith of 309 Anne St, the Secy, of the Trades Council has writ­ ten this startling statement for publi­ cation./ "I feel it my duty to make public the facts of my recent illness and recov­ ery. I was very sick and sore, and had to walk with the aid of two canes. It was a very painful attack, but I don't know what it was. Some said it was Lumbago and others that it was Sciatica or Rheumatism. "I was told to take Dodd's Kidney Pills, and began a treatment. After I had used one box I could walk with one cane, and after two boxes were used I could walk without any help. I kept on and three boxes cured me completely. "I am now well and happy without a pain or an ache and I can very truly •ay that Dodd's Kidney Pills are worthy of my greatest praise." Hot Milk as a Tonic. *"*' The stimulating effects of hot milk are not yet sufficiently understood. One metropolitan physician uses hot milk and nothing else as a gargle in cases of acute tonsilitis. For an anemic per son, or one recovering from an illness, nothing better builds up and restores the tone of the system than a cup of hot milk between meals and before retiring. The milk should be hot, hut not boiling, and should be drunk as soon as it is Jieated. $33.00 TO PACIFIC COAST Chicago & North-Western R'y; dur­ ing the months of March and April $30.00 from Chicago to Helena, Butte, Anaconda, Ogden and Salt Lake City; $30.50 Spokane; $33.00 Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Ta- coma, Vancouver, Victoria and a large number of other points. Tourist Sleeping Cars daily to the Pacific coast. For maps and particulars apply to nearest ticket agent or address W. B. Kniskern, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, III. His Request Tacitly Withdrawn. A tramp rang the door bell of Dr. Mary Morrison's house the other day, and when a pleasant-faced woman came to the door he asked her if she would be so kind as to ask the doctor if he had an old pair of trousers to give to a needy man. "I'm the doctor," said the smiling woman. The tramp fled.--Philadelphia Times. SOME WONDERFUL CROPS Df WESTERN CANADA. The Territorial Gorernment Report* Show Results Beyond Belief. Regina, Assinlboia, Canada, January 10th.--At the Agricultural Statistics Branch of the Department of Agricul­ ture for tne Territories, reports are now being received from grain thresh­ ers throughout the Territories, for statistical purposes. The reports are somewhat delayed this year, owing to the extensive crop and the delay in getting it threshed. The Department of Agriculture is leading the way in a new departure, with regard to the collection of crop statistics. In the older provinces, crop estimates are based entirely on the opinion of per­ sons Interested in the grain business who ought to be, and no doubt are, well posted upon the probable yields. Still the reports are simply a matter of opinion, in which a mistake may easily be made. The Territorial De­ partment however, has adopted the system of returns of crops actually threshed, upon which 1:> base their teports. The accuracy of the reports cannot, therefore, be gainsaid, for they represent a compilation of actual threshing results. In this connection. It might be mentioned that the De­ partment is organizing a system of growing crop returns, which will be in operation next summer. The infor­ mation thus obtained, with estimated acreage, will be available for business men, banks, railway companies, and other interests which have to discount the future in making provision for the conduct of their business. The crop reports already to hand show some remarkable cases of ab­ normal development In the Regina district, many returns are given of crops of wheat running from 40 to 45 bushels to the acre. J. A. Snell, of Yorkton, threshed 28,000 bushels of oats from 450 acres, an average of 63 bushels per acre for a large acreage. W. R. it'otherwell, of Abernethy, threshed 2,650 bushels of wheat from a 50-acre field, an average of 53 bush­ els per acre. In the Edmonton district, T. T. Hutchings threshed 728 bushels of wheat from a ten-acre plot, ai average of nearly 73 bushels per acre. S. Norman threshed 6,950 bushels of oats from 60 acres of land,, an average of 116 bushels per acre. The publication of the actual yields or grain threshed will likely open the eyes of the people to the great capabil­ ities of the Western Canadian prairies. Advantages of rin(-Pon(, It interesting to find ping pong hand in glove with the teetotallers. Thanks to the game, it is no longer possible at most dinner tables for meu to sit over their wine as formerly, as the table must be cleared for action-- In other words, for ping pong.--New York Evening Sun. Many School Children Are Sickly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Chil­ dren, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's Hoine, New York, cure Fever- ishness, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At ali druggists,25c. Sample mailed free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le lloy, N. Y. Good Roads Are the Cheapest. One main fact of the whole good roads question deserves to be empha­ sized--the permanency of the high­ ways after ihey have once been well built. Tne first cost seems large, but the money is In the end wisely in­ vested. Hov'i Tlilal We offer One Hundred Dollars reward (or any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and llnaiu'hilly able to carry out any obliga­ tions made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Tlrnggtstn, To!e<io, O.; \v aiding, Kliinau & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, aot- lng directly upon the blood and mucoussurfaces Of the system. Testimonials sent free Prloe Vbc per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Hall's Family Pills are the best. EARLIEST RUSSIAN MILLET. Will you be short of hay? If so, plant a plenty of this prodigally prolific millet. 5 to 8 Tona of Rich Hay Per Acre. Price 50 lbs. f 1.90; 100 lbs. $3. Low freights. John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,Wis. W Bad Effect of Charity Work. According to the London Lancet, it is quite exceptional to find In a child bred in parochial charity institutions that healthy individuality which is characteristic of children who have been boarded out in the freer and more natural atmosphere of family life. Sensible Houtekeepers, will have Defiance Starch, not alone because they get one-third more for the same money, but also because of su­ perior quality. When a woman makes up her mind to be logical she brushes her hair flat and sits primly in her chair the way she does when she is expecting a c&ll from the minister. If you don't get .the biggest and best It's your own fault Defiance Starch is for sale everywhere and there is pos­ itively nothing to equal it in quality or quantity. Those who attain to any excellence commonly spend life in some one sin­ gle pursuit, for excellence Is not often gained upon easier terms.-- Johnson. Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces In a package. 10 cents. One-third more starch for same money. CONSUMPTION "Play for me, dear," he said. ele's hands in her own. "You may as well tell us, you two," she said gently and steadily. "Winfred, my dear friend, am I to wish you happiness? The mother here has been questioning me. She was afraid that you and I--. that you were more than my friend, but I have told her that you are free, free to love my cousin Lucie. I saw It long ago. Before you had begun to dream of it Winfred. Before either of you had, I think." Bhe took Lad* in her arms. She Epigram on CI aba. The immense growth of London clubs ana of the opportunities afforded for games of chance may serve to re­ call an epigram which "Bentley's Mis­ cellany" attributed sixty years ago to Sydney Smith. He was at a Sunday dinner at Hol­ land House, when the hostess said that woman's passion for diamonds was surely less ruinous than iqan's pas­ sion for play at his club. Thereupon Sydney Smith took a card and wrote the following impromptu: Thoughtless that all that's brightest fades, Unmindful of that knave of spades. The sexton and his subs; How foolishly we play our parts! Our wives on diamonds set their hearts, We set our hearts on clubs. An Esteemed Contemporary. A one-horse Republican contempo­ rary run by a one-jackass power men­ tal dynamo says that the only sllver- ites now in Nevada are office-seekers. We are willing to bet his head against a pumpkin (the most even odds we can think of) that if there is any non- silverites in Tonopah he is the one. And if good writing means good- thinking he really doesn't know what he is; the idea that two and two makes four being yet in progress of filtration through the slum deposit he fondly imagines to be a brain.--Virginia (Nev.) Chronicle. Reading for the Blind. The largest library for the blind In the country is said to be In Philadel­ phia. It contains about 2,500 vol­ umes. The membership is at present 100. Storekeepers report that the extra quantity, together with the superior quality, of Defiance Starch makes It ne*t to impossible to sell any other brind. The French Ava assign to Marechal Vlllars, taking leave of Louis XIV., this aphorism: "Defend me from my friends. I can defend myself from my enemies." Dealers say that as soon as a custom­ er tries Defiance Starch It is impossible to sell them any other cold water Starch. It can be used cold or boiled. Childhood may do without a grand purpose, but manhood cannot--J. O. Holland. Evasion Is unworthy of us, and Is always the intimate of equivocation.-- Balzac. A cruel story runs on wheels, and every hand oils the wheels as they run.--George Eliot. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color more goods, per package, than any other. Sold by druggists, 10c. per package. When you have the devil under your heel don't be scared by his bellowing. PIso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as Scough cure.--J. W. O Bkixn, 822 Third An, H-. Minneapolis, Minn.. Jan. A. 1900. Dynamite can't blow a man In pub­ lic life so high as too much talking. To Cure a Cold In One day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 85a To find fault Is easy; to do better may be difficult--Plutarch. Hamlin's Wizard Oil battles suc< fully against pain from any cause what­ ever; why should you be without itT Being a financier Is letting somebody else make money for you. If you love your wife, make It easy for her to get breakfast. Take homeMrs. Austin's Pancake Flour. Let thy discontents he thy secrets.-- Benjamin Franklin. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrap.' Wot children teething, coftens ilie gumi, reaaees In- (UAmMlon. allay* pain, curei wind colic. 25ca!>ottte Genius Is Longfellow. Infinite painstaking.-- SURGICAL OPERATIONS How Mrs. Bruce, a Noted Opera Singer, Escaped an Operation. Proof That Many Operations for Ovarian Troubles vq Un* necessary. M Deajb Mrs. Pixkram : --TraWTHnff for years on the r'Kui irregular meals and 6leep au 1 ilam > broke down my hcr«V;i so o c W two years ago that ti.e ;. >~s advised a complete rest, and w.u»a 1 Uai gained MBS. G. BRUCE. sufficient vitality, an operation for ovarian troubles. Not a very cheerful prospect, to be sure. I, however, was advised to try Lydta E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound and San­ ative Wash; I did so, fortunately for me. Before a month had passed I felt that my general health had im­ proved ; in three months more I was cured, and I have been in perfect health since. I did not lose an engage­ ment or miss a meal. " Your Vegetable Compound la cer­ tainly wonderful, and well worthy the graise your admiring friends who have een cured are ready to give you. I always speak highly of it, and you will admit I have good reason to do so."--Mas. G. Bruce, Lansing, Mich. 96000 forftlt tf abovt testimonial It not genuine. The fullest counsel on this subject can be secured without cost by writing1 to Mrs Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be entirely confidential. SHOES UNION MADE BBAl, EST ATI FOR Q A I p 180acre farm, poodballdfnfa, • V/r\ ^ fralt, ».?5 per acre. SO *cre »50; U0*. 150; WO. Qcnotfl Alden, Lawrence, F O R S A L E A FINE ESTATE OB STOCK FARM v In TEXAS of 7 , 2 0 0 A C R E S . •WITHIN SIXTY MILES OF THE ABMOUB avd s^nrr million dollar pickeries NO'? U N ii CON'STKPCTION AT FT. WOBTH. Finely lrapr .v»d, improvement! costing *20,000; lo- rhi-i'on * ru.i'isd. Abnut 500 acrei of rich black <r«cK ra'ioT Uud In cultivation that w! 11 grow alfal­ fa' MiiniV; 1 •; into nine pastures. §prins» In every pa*"'.r«! t>u •v'ndnillig and deep we Is and 2% mtfe* of ruun're water. Fourteen tenant houses and Urue e barn. Fifty miles four-wire fencing and telei'lione i-onnectlon. Located within the rain belt. Population of county 35,0u0, one of the largest fanning counties la the atate. Only one othar large pasture In count*. Farmer*' calve» are purchased from *5 to »10 and when raited to three-year-old* bring »30. Cattle will winter wit n out feed, or at coat of 50c per head. Hu paid me 912,000 a year net ?roflt* past three years. Each survey has erc'.'gs and estimate there are fully 9,000 acres in pasture. Land In cultivation rent* for enough to more than pay running expenses, leaving growth on thecattla clear prolH to the owner. SALUBRIOUS CL1MATK AND FINEST Git ASS IN NORTH TEXAS. PTIC® •72,000; 832,000 cash duwn and 85,000 a year for ten years at G% Interest, or can arrange to ault. Considering Its nearness to market this land Is rery cheap. AH titles haclcsd br p:>t';nt3 and land U on the rite. Place wlp carry i.ljOO head cattle with ease. Address OTHQ 6. HOU8TQH, Owner, Stephenville, Tex, Pres. Flret Nat, Bank. m W E S T E R N C A N A D A ' S Wonderful wheat crop for 5901 nor- the talk of the Cnnitnereiai World Is ty no me&s.s phenozn- cnni. The iTovince at Manitoba ai:d districts of Assiniboia, Saskat i hewao and Alberta are the most wonderful grain producing coun­ tries In the world. In stock raising they also held the highe>t posi­ tion. Thousands of Americans are annuully mak­ ing this their home, ami they succeed as they never 0. id before. Move Westward w itta the tide *nd secure a farm and home in WesternCanadk Low rates and special privileges to homeseef- era and settlers. The h:n dsome forty-page Atlas of Western Canada sent free to all appli­ cants Apply for rates, Ac., to F. Pedley, Su­ perintendent of Immigration. Ottawa. Caniuja, or to C. J. Broughton,927Mona<!nock Block, Chi­ cago. E. T. Holmes, Koom B, "Big Four" Bldg., Indlannpolis, lnd., or H. M. Williams, TfT Bldg., Toledo,O., Canadian Government Areata. Map of Iowa. with large lint of Iowa farms for sale bv oa. This is the latent Map of Iowa published, shov­ ing every section of land, post office, villam, railway, and stream. Send twenty cents fiot postage and packing. MKIIAN CO., 209 Crocker Bldg., De» Moines, leva I by 63 I ><>ugUs Stores in American cities, and the best 1 retail shoe dealers everywhere. Caution I The genuine have W. L. l>oug!as' name and price stamped on the bottom. • itirrmt'of tales ia toto* belomr I 74S.70(1 r.lrt. Pair*. 1901 mr 1,566,720 Pairs. Business mors T!;an Doubted in Fo"f Years. \V?f,.P>ouKl;i?mi5:e»and sells more men's S-i.PO and H.r.0 Sluu-a than any ol her t woiiianulartun i s. W . I >ou^l:is$:l.OO and $:t.r>Q siloes placed nidi' In- siiiu with S5.1K) and $0.1X1 shin-s of other makes i<n- found to be jtiKt as good. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary $.t.OO find $3.60 shoes. Made of the best leathers, including Patent Corona Kid, CoronaColt and Nutionat Kangaroo. Fiu-t Color an.I Alirnys Blu.-t, Honks Tied. W.l.Kouulas 94 "Cllt I.laV cannot be •quailed. Choi's l»y mail. !i.'» cls.exlra. Catalog free. W. 8 . l>«)I'(;i.\S. l'trocklon.'tlass. CAbWOFMJSf Tinrr J ALL X ICJuJCa, 1 &Wtif/?/rJM/lTM£CaiMAmntxCu. HOMES IN OKLAHOMA.-Buy thOM la tho great Wheat Belt that ha* made Oklahoma famous. Come to Reeding, anew town on railroad, where you can get bariralns In tKBi lands, also business open In;* and town lot*. IRA. iMAXSON. Itenl IC-itate. Keeiling, Okte. T A V f t A I C T 7 , 0 0 0 A C R E S e x t r a g o o * • Farm Land In best part Kan­ sas In tracts t > suit purchaser. On lorn; ttma at low rate. i. 0.80UXHA-&D, Alien, Lyon Co., ~ A a i:s rs. For .>ur Double RnM-erFlcTfllesnet and Talti'-up 1 rei-ently pat.) nothlac ou hale like It, easily sold, good profit. NEVIUi MFG. CO., M«6 CHAITEAC ATI., ST. LOt'lS, BO. MTSCKT.f. A \ EOUS. From the Ballroom to Hell |gj Read by million*. «mhI >r*ed bv all. HOUSEHOLD SP£CIALTY CO.. K. St. lomi.W. P I L E S MNO «. .O., 1 f v«>u are a sufferer send forth* ANO PILE CURE. Imme­ diate relief. Prepaid 50 ceatu CHICAGO, ILL, SI2.00 per 10) made collecting names. Expert- enre unnScessurv. Position permanent. Blank book and fu.l liisirucilon" mailed upm receipt of ISc pon- at?e. Cole Name Agency. :!$"> L^Salle Ave., C hicago. CONSTIPATION-- \ lite ttrce euro gaaranU postpaid 10c. K. H. PAKKER, Memphis, Tenn. Qu r~i ™ at onre for a fine niece of Kaxl* O O i l U v l w l / can Drawn Work",sure topleaaa any lady. SUTTON, 219 Beiden Ave., Chicago, 111. rnPCITTC Best on Earth, sent p. pd SI. Spiral bUtfaLld „rrln>. st¥ei8 liever i-reak. WAJITID. K. DAKLIHG, 62 N. Clark St, Chicago W. N. U* CHICAGO, NO. 15, I90>7 Whea Answering Advertisements Mention This Capet. WE WILL TURN YOUR PgWWgt INTO DOLLARS ONE PENNY OIL CO. otmrnmumont, Tmxmm. Capital Stock, $1,000,000 SHARES, ONE PENNY EACH, Full Paid and Non-asstsMbl* Our Holding*. Ono &eml by Whloh Wo Mmrkot 240,000 Bar­ rel* of Oilm Thdicontract was signed to-day by the One Penny Oil Company for the sale of 20,000 Barrels of Crude Oil per month, to be delivered at the Com­ pany's well on Spindle Top Heights, the first delivery to be made on or%e- fore Jane 1,1902. This contract is to ran for one year and la renewable at our option. One Gasher in block 86, capacity 70,000 barrels; land in block 32, Keith- Ward tract, for 4 wells; in block 36, Hogg-Swayne syndicate subdivision for 2 wells; in block 39 for 3 wells; all located on the famous Spindle Top. We also own all mineral rights in 600 8 miles north of Beaumont. Our lands are all in fee simple; we pay no roy­ alty, thereby saving a large percentage to our stockholders. Send for Prospectus. Write us for price on Oil. Beliable Agents wanted. P. 0. BOX 395 ONE PENNY OIL COMPANY BEAUMONT, TEX. HAS NO EQUAL. u DET1ANC REQUIRES NO C00NN& PREPARED FOR LAUNDRY PtiRPQ5E5 ONCf You get chfomo stedm under all brands and namrs, but they are all the same poor stuff and have to depend upon something to sell them. Use Defiance Starch. No premiums, but 16 ounces of the best starch for 10c. Don't forget ft--• better qotl» fey aod oae'third more olit. ALABASTINE - AMbastlne. the only durable wall coat­ ing. takes the place of scaling kalaominea, i wall paper ana paint for walls. It can be wed an plaster, brick, wood er oanvaa. Alafcastlne can be used onsr paint or paper; paint or paper can be used orer •labastf ne. Buy omr in Ave pound pack­ ages, properly labeled; take no oudbetuute. Many ailments, particularly throat and lung troubles, are attributable to unsan­ itary wall coverings. Alabastine has in­ dorsement ef physicians and sanitarians. Alabastine packages kan foil dlreo- tions. Anyone can brush It on. Ask paint dealer for tint card. "Alabastine JCra tree. Alabastine Cot, Grand Kaptde, ItlA J

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